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down of all past-due debts but
were not provided one.
Yannuzzi said Mundie request-
ed a list of the largest debts and
was provided a list.
Cuozzo also said the city re-
ceived $2.2 million in revenue
from the citys water authority,
and only $400,000 of that reve-
nue was includedinthe 2011bud-
get. She wants the administra-
tiontoexplainhowthe other $1.8
million was spent and, adding
the $2.2 million from the author-
ity and the plan to borrow $2.6
million to pay outstanding debts,
if that means the city actually
had $4.8 million in outstanding
bills.
According to the complaint,
Cuozzo and Deakos allege the
city violated numerous sections
of the Local Government Unit
Debt Act. They al-
so allege that the
city violated city
code by failing to
seek requests for
proposals fromdif-
ferent banks, seek-
ing a quote only
from Landstar
Community Bank.
The women also
allege that the plan violates Ur-
ban Redevelopment Law be-
cause the authority is a project-
based authority and the parks
and playground used for collater-
al are not blighted, nor are they
being redeveloped.
According to DCED Deputy
Press Secretary Theresa Elliott,
the city has until July 11to file an
answer to the complaint. De-
pending on the nature of the is-
sues raised, the matter may be
addressed solely on pleadings
and briefs, or, if there are ques-
tions of material fact, a hearing
may be scheduled.
HAZLETON
Continued from Page 3A
To read the
complaint,
visit
www.times
leader.com.
We are not a primary care es-
tablishment. Our goal istoseepa-
tients who have one-time need,
he said.
The Wilkes-Barre and Ed-
wardsville locations are among
33 facilities MedExpress oper-
ates in Pennsylvania. It also has
facilities inColorado, Floridaand
West Virginia.
The local facilities will be open
9a.m. to9p.m., 7days aweek. No
appointment is necessary. Care is
provided on a first-come, first-
served basis.
Alistof insuranceplansthatare
accepted was not immediately
available Tuesday, but Gray said
MedExpress accepts most insur-
ances, including Medicare. It
doesnotacceptMedicaid, howev-
er.
Officials with MedExpress will
holdanopenhouse at the Wilkes-
Bare location today fromnoon to
2 p.m. The event will feature free
hors doeuvres and a chance to
win a Nintendo Wii and Wii Fit
Bundle.
MEDEXPRESS
Continued from Page 3A
Gray said the centers are de-
signed to be a convenience for
patients who otherwise might
have to go to the emergency
room or wait a few days until
they could get an appointment
with their primary care physi-
cian.
Several witnesses told city
police they spotted two men
leaving a house in the 500
block of North Pennsylvania
Avenue at about 4:20 p.m. The
pair ran away when witnesses
confronted them.
Police chased one of the
men, identified in the criminal
compliant as Herron, behind
houses on John and Chester
streets.
Herron removed his shirt
and surrendered to an officer
searching on Chester Street,
the complaint says.
Police alleged they found a
red bag Herron was carrying
behind the house where his
shirt was found. The bag con-
tained two video game sys-
tems, a cell phone, three wom-
ens rings, two mens bracelets
and a watch.
The second man escaped
capture.
Plains Township police
charged Herron with the rob-
bery at the Turkey Hill on
Maffett Street on March 21,
according to court records.
Township police allege Herron
assaulted the clerk inside the
store.
Herron told township police
he blacked out after ingesting
pills and did not remember
robbing the store with a pellet
gun, court records say.
A preliminary hearing on
the latest charges is scheduled
on July 12 in Wilkes-Barre
Central Court.
SUSPECT
Continued from Page 3A
Anthony could get up to a year
behind bars on each count when
she is sentenced Thursday. But
sinceshehas beeninjail for nearly
three years already, she could
walk free. If convicted of murder,
she could have gotten the death
penalty.
Prosecutors contendedthat An-
thony a single mother living
with her parents suffocated
Cayleewithduct tapebecauseshe
wanted to be free to party and
spend time with her boyfriend.
Defense attorneys argued the
girl accidentally drowned in the
family swimming pool, and An-
thony panicked and hid the body
because of the traumatic effects of
sexual abuse by her father.
States Attorney LawsonLamar
said: Were disappointed in the
verdict today because we know
the facts and weve put in abso-
lutely every piece of evidence that
existed. The prosecutor lament-
ed the lack of hard evidence, say-
ing, This is a dry-bones case.
The delay in recovering little Cay-
lees remains worked to our con-
siderable disadvantage.
Anthony failed to report Cay-
lees disappearance for a month.
Thechilds decomposedbodywas
eventually found in the woods
near her grandparents home six
months after she was last seen. A
medical examiner was never able
to establish how she died.
Thecaseplayedout onnational
television. HLNs NancyGraceap-
proached the case with the zeal of
the hard-nosed prosecutor she
once was, arguing that Anthony
or the tot mom, as Grace
called her was responsible for
her daughters death.
AnthonysattorneyCheneyMa-
son lashed out at the media.
Well, I hopethat thisisalesson
to those of youhaving indulgedin
media assassination for three
years, bias, prejudice and incom-
petent talking heads saying what
would be and how to be, Mason
said.
Without mentioning Grace by
name, headded: Imdisgustedby
some of the lawyers that have
done this, and I can tell you that
my colleagues fromcoast to coast
and border to border have con-
demnedthiswholeprocessof law-
yers gettingontelevisionandtalk-
ing about cases that they dont
know a damn thing about.
ANTHONY
Continued from Page 1A
WILKES-BARRE A Ross
Township woman charged in the
July 2007 shooting death of her
husband is expected to enter a
guilty plea to a related charge
next week.
Josephine Werkheiser, 56, of
Creekside Lane, appeared in Lu-
zerne County Court on Tuesday
for a pre-trial hearingona charge
of criminal homicide in the
death of her husband, Charles
Werkheiser.
Judge William Amesbury said
he understood after a discussion
with attorneys that Werkheiser
wished to enter a guilty plea.
Assistant district attorneys
Molly Hanlon Mirabito and Mi-
chelle Hardik, and Werkheisers
attorney, William Ruzzo, said an
agreement hadbeenworkedout,
though it was not clear Tuesday
to which homicide charge Werk-
heiser would plead.
Amesbury said Werkheiser
will formally enter her plea on
July 11.
She had previously avoided
going forward with her case be-
cause a county judge ruled she
was incompetent to stand trial.
Her mental health status was
reviewed on a regular basis, and
in October the Norristown State
Hospital said Werkheiser is able
to work with her attorneys and
proceed with her case.
Amesbury then ordered the
preliminary hearing for prosecu-
tors to again present evidence to
determine if there is enough evi-
dence to proceed.
A hearing had been scheduled
before District Judge John Ha-
say, but Werkheiser waived her
right to that hearing on April 26,
sending the single count of hom-
icide back to county court.
Werkheiser had been charged
with the shooting death of her
husbandsometime betweenJuly
23 and July 29, 2007.
Investigators allege Werkheis-
er shot her husband once in the
head while he was sleeping be-
cause she suspected he was hav-
ing an affair.
Police say Werkheiser then
shot herself in the head with a
.22-caliber handgun.
Guilty plea expected in husbands death
By SHEENA DELAZIO
sdelazio@timesleader.com
C M Y K
PAGE 8A WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
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Furniture deliveries to driveway only.
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Firehouse, watch for our signs.
construction and demolition
should start this year.
Commissioners gave the
countys Redevelopment Au-
thority $6.1 million five years
ago to purchase the building
from businessman Thom Greco
and formulate a design.
The authoritys original vi-
sion a $3.5 million renovation
featuring an
eatery, ban-
quet areas and
possibly an ar-
ea for exhibits
fizzled when
no additional
government
funding or pri-
vate investors
surfaced. The
property has
continued to
deteriorate, at-
tracting stray
cats and the
homeless.
The upcoming $1 million
county allocation should put a
dent in the project, though it
may not be enough to make the
building fit for occupation, Ur-
ban said.
Its a start for now, Urban
said, noting that additional
county community develop-
ment funding may become
available in the fall.
The historic structure is in
really good condition, said
county Chief Engineer Joe Gib-
bons.
I think people will be
shocked at how beautiful the
building is once we remove the
non-historical portions. I think
theyll be pleasantly sur-
prised, Gibbons said.
The canopy visible on the
stations Wilkes-Barre Boule-
vard side is also intact around
the rest of the building, hidden
by the additions. Flooring in an
addition covers original tile in
a mosaic pattern that once dec-
orated an exterior platform ar-
ea.
Wood paneling, built-in book-
cases and molding remain in
some upper rooms of the sta-
tion, though thieves ripped out
some ornamental stair railing
mounts and other fixtures. The
stations stained glass windows
were put in storage several
years ago after an attempted
theft.
Commissioners have asked
Gibbons to help the authority
come up with a plan to restore
the building and make it usable
for county business.
Were going to have a design
that restores the historic exte-
rior and will make modifica-
tions consistent with the his-
toric nature of the project,
Gibbons said. The challenge
will be how much net usable
square footage we can get out
of the building for county offic-
es.
County officials want to
move the tourism bureau, se-
nior center and cooperative ex-
tension offices into the build-
ing because they receive gov-
ernment funding and would
provide a combined $134,000
or more in rental income need-
ed for the stations mainte-
nance and upkeep, Urban said.
The tourism bureau and se-
nior center are located in rent-
ed space downtown, he said.
The cooperative extension is
housed in a West Pittston
building owned by the county
Redevelopment Authority.
Commissioners initially sup-
ported the project to preserve
the station and make the site a
hub for the countys tourist pro-
motion bureau.
County officials also said the
site could become a rail termi-
nal if a passenger line connect-
ing Northeastern Pennsylvania
to Hoboken, N.J., were to mate-
rialize.
The authority-owned parcel
is a little over 6 acres and in-
cludes a strip mall that gener-
ates rental income.
A fenced-in lot at the site had
been installed by the countys
court system for $10,570 to
house probation vehicles, but it
is filled with weeds because the
vehicles are still parked under
the countys nearby Penn Place
building.
County officials plan to use
the fencing elsewhere or at-
tempt to sell it.
Five train cars, a caboose and
dining car also are on the site,
some attached to the station
structure. The sale of the cars
could generate money for the
project, Gibbons said.
STATION
Continued from Page 1A
PETE G. WILCOX PHOTOS/THE TIMES LEADER
Blankets indicate a homeless person found refuge in this room
inside the historic Market Street Square train station.
Built-in shelves and wood mold-
ing grace a room in the station.
To see video,
scan this QR
code into your
smartphone or
visit www.ti-
mesleader.com
O N L I N E
Wilkes-Barre Boulevard in
Wilkes-Barres downtown.
The county Redevelopment
Authority, which became the
propertys owner, performed
two appraisals establishing
the property was worth $5.74
million.
The parcel includes the his-
toric train station, a former
passenger train car and a
strip mall containing four
units.
Another $138,000 of the
county funding was paid to
Quad Three Group, Wilkes-
Barre, for project design and
other professional services,
according to a review of coun-
ty invoices and checks for the
project.
At the authoritys request,
Quad Three put together a
Luzerne Countys planned
allocation of another $1 mil-
lion in community develop-
ment funding for the Market
Street Square train station
renovation would bring the
project total to $7.1 million.
What happened to the first
$6.1 million?
The lions share $5.8 mil-
lion went to two companies
owned by local businessman
Thom Greco to buy the
roughly 6-acre property at the
corner of Market Street and
design creating a banquet ar-
ea and retaining a green-
house addition.
About $60,000 of the coun-
ty funding went to United
Sanitation Network Inc. for
demolition.
The Duryea company was
hired in 2006 because it had
submitted the lowest bid, au-
thority officials said at that
time.
The payment covered re-
moval of an illuminated Ba-
nana Joes sign and pink Ca-
dillac that were perched on
the roof, railroad ties, an old
hotel lobby structure and the
previous nightclub entryway.
The authority received
about $38,000 for administra-
tive expenses and costs, and
$17,800 was paid to Philadel-
phia-based Mullin, Lonergan
Associates for technical ad-
vice and assistance with fed-
eral paperwork and regula-
tions.
Pittston-based Joyce Insur-
ance Group was paid $17,000
for property and liability in-
surance on the property.
Another Pittston company,
JPW Construction Manage-
ment Inc., was paid close to
$5,000 for debris removal in
the station, on rail cars and
the grounds. Its unclear how
the company was selected.
JPW is owned by Barton
Weidlich of Pittston, who was
sentenced in April to two
years probation for threaten-
ing a witness in the public
corruption probe. Weidlich
had received several no-bid
contracts to perform work in
county government.
The $6.1 million in county
funding was provided to the
authority as invoices were
submitted.
County officials had initial-
ly hoped the authority would
sell ancillary land on the site
to repay at least some of the
money, but authority officials
expressed reservations about
selling land until the train
station was developed.
The money doesnt have to
be repaid to the county unless
the authority sells the proper-
ty.
The money was spent be-
tween July 2005 and July
2008. Since then, the author-
ity has relied on rental in-
come from parking spaces
and the strip mall to pay for
insurance and other upkeep,
officials say.
$6.1 million already spent on historic train station site
Most of the money went to
Thom Greco companies to buy
Market Street Square site.
By JENNIFER LEARN-ANDES
jandes@timesleader.com
The county Redevelopment Authority, which became the owner of
the roughly 6-acre property at the corner of Market Street and
Wilkes-Barre Boulevard, performed two appraisals establishing
the property was worth $5.74 million. The parcel includes the
historic train station, a former passenger train car and a strip
mall containing four units.
I dont make any decisions now
without asking Rosalynn first, and
generally I just do what she
suggests.
Jimmy Carter
The former president commented on the full and equal partnership he
enjoys with his wife. The couple will mark its 65th wedding anniversary
on Thursday.
Attend upcoming meetings
of transition committee
I
n November Luzerne County voters will
elect a new, 11-person county council.
Ive attended meetings of the Home
Rule Transition Committee and its various
sub-committees. Many of the members of
those committees have been working hard
to help the new county council transition
to the new form of government that will
begin Jan. 2, 2012.
Citizen comments are sought at the
meetings. The committee members listen
to those thoughts and respond responsibly.
I encourage others to attend.
The Home Rule Transition Committee
will meet at 6:30 p.m. on the second and
fourth Wednesdays of July and August in
the Commissioners Meeting Room of the
courthouse. I urge citizens and candidates
for the new council to attend those meet-
ings, listen to the issues and express their
thoughts.
Good government happens when good
people participate.
Rick Williams
Kingston
Tewksbury great friend
to dairy farming industry
F
armers, do you realize you have one of
the very best people representing you,
and you dont pay a dime to him.
Day after day, this man runs fundraising
events and talks to consumers on your
behalf to tell them what challenges you, as
dairy farmers, are facing. This man goes to
Washington faithfully on your behalf, try-
ing to get you a fair price for your milk,
and he didnt even ask you for gas money.
He doesnt milk cows anymore, so why
should he care if you and I are getting a
fair price for our milk? Yet he continues to
fight the fight. He has written more letters
to the editor than we can count, made
more phone calls than we could ever
guess. He has more knowledge about the
milk industry than most of us will ever
have.
If you have not figured out, the man I am
speaking about is Mr. Arden Tewksbury.
I ask you to call Arden and ask him
questions about the dairy industry; get to
know the man who is working for you.
Talk to him about the new Milk Marketing
Improvement Act of 2011 and find out how
and why this will not only make you as a
farmer profitable, but also why it will not
cost our government one dime to put into
effect.
Find out about the Progressive Agricul-
ture Organization and how to become a
member. I am very proud to be a member
of Pro Ag and to be working side by side
with Mr. Tewksbury.
You can call Arden at (570) 833-5776 or
email him at progressiveagriculture-
org@gmail.com.
We deserve profitability; we are feeding
our nation a great product of which we can
be proud, so lets get a fair price before it is
too late for us all. Make the call and find
out more information.
Robin Fitch
West Winfield, N.Y.
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K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 PAGE 9A
WITH THE decline of com-
pany pension plans, the need
is for savvy individual in-
vestors.
For a half century, most
Americans in the middle
class had the benefit, in-
directly, of expert financial advice in preparing
for the retirement years. It came, mostly, in
the form of professional fund management
provided to company or union-supervised
pension funds. And this came on top of con-
tractual guarantees in most defined benefit
retirement plans that would offer a certain
percentage of salary for each year worked.
Retire after 30 years on the job with a 1 per-
cent multiplier for years served, and you were
guaranteed a pension of 30 percent of final
salary for life.
Today, although there are a wide range of
government-sanctioned retirement savings
options such as Individual Retirement Ac-
counts, Roth IRAs, Keogh Plans and 401(k)
plans offered through employers, the worker
has the freedom to manage his or her assets
wisely but also the freedom to fail miserably.
Thats not to say there is no advice available.
Managers of every 401(k) plan offer some level
of guidance. More help is available from for
fee financial advisers and retirement planners.
But the basic fact for every American family is
that the freedom to manage their own money
brings great responsibilities with it.
The wise family learns the basics of finance
and the rudiments of investing to guard
against the potential for unscrupulous and
self-declared retirement specialists who are
more interested in commissions and fees than
they are in helping people plan for retirement.
On the plus side, agencies such as the Penn-
sylvania Securities Commission, where I am
one of three commissioners appointed by the
governor, are committed to root out fraud and
abuse in the investment marketplace. But we
cannot and do not help people make invest-
ment choices.
We do, however, advocate that every in-
vestor take the time to shop for and work with
an investment professional even if the indi-
vidual has, for now, a small nest egg or is only
just starting out on a program to save for a
home purchase, a college education for a child
or retirement.
We also have an active program of investor
education and work closely with other Penn-
sylvania state agencies and nonprofit entities
through the JumpStart Coalition (www.jump-
start.org).
The reality is that its not likely well ever go
back to a time when corporations took on the
long-term responsibility for retirement plan-
ning for their employees. This is due in large
part to the fact that the time is past when an
individual would walk in the door of a factory
after high school and continue to work there
for the next 40 years. Today, people expect to
change jobs four or five times or more in a
lifetime. The federal government has created a
framework of tax incentives to encourage
individual retirement planning and other
long-term investment commitments, but this
well-intended policy runs smack dab into the
reality that many people dont begin to plan
for retirement until its too late.
While that sounds like a harsh judgment, it
isnt when you consider that most effective
retirement planning should begin when you
first enter the workplace. This is especially
true today when you consider that todays
home budget musts often include in addi-
tion to housing, food, utilities and health care
one or two college loan payments and one
or two car payments.
Even though these financial pressures make
long-term investment much more difficult,
they dont make it less necessary. Its never too
late for a household to take stock of its in-
vestment strategy or to start one if none
exists.
As a member of the Pennsylvania Securities
Commission, Id like to suggest the Securities
Commission as a tool in carrying out any plan
for investing. Call us at 1-800-600-0007 or visit
www.psc.state.pa.us.
TomMichlovic is a former member of the states
General Assembly and serves as a commissioner
on the Pennsylvania Securities Commission. Visit
www.psc.state.pa.us.
Commission offers guidance for retirement planning
COMMENTARY
T O M M I C H L O V I C
The federal government has created a
framework of tax incentives to encourage
individual retirement planning and other
long-term investment commitments, but
this well-intended policy runs smack dab
into the reality that many people dont
begin to plan for retirement until its
too late.
N
OBODY CAN SAY
that the juvenile jus-
tice scandal in Lu-
zerne County did not
send a shock wave through the
Pennsylvania judicial system.
Inreactiontothe luridfacts of
two judges running a kickback
scheme that exploited juvenile
offenders who were sent to pri-
vate detention facilities, a round
of thoughtful introspection be-
gan about what went wrong and
how it might be avoided in the
future. A process of reform be-
gan.
Astate-appointedInterbranch
Commission on Juvenile Justice
heard evidence and last year
made recommendations. With
the discussion broadened to in-
cludethequestionof judicial dis-
cipline in general, not just in the
juvenile courts, Pennsylvanians
for Modern Courts, a nonparti-
san organization, recently is-
sued its own recommendations
to improve the system.
The American Bar Associ-
ation has nowcome out with its
report, whichwas earlier sought
by the states Judicial Conduct
Board. Although the ABA docu-
ment has more detail and its
own areas of emphasis, its rec-
ommendations mirror many of
the points in the PMC report.
For example, both cite the
needtoexpandpubliceducation
and outreach about the judicial
discipline system and both rec-
ommend revising a confidential-
ity rule that limits the Judicial
Conduct Board.
Pennsylvania has been an ele-
phants graveyard for many re-
ports. But with the continuing
leadership of Chief Justice Ro-
nald D. Castille on judicial disci-
plinary reform, we hope these
different examinations can be a
catalyst for meaningful change.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
OTHER OPINION: KIDS FOR CASH
ABA echoes calls
for judicial reform
D
UMPING THE areas
homeless men and
women onto Wilkes-
Barres streets during
the daytime wont help the
downtowns image, which, of
course, should be a secondary
concern to the more obvious is-
sue.
Namely, that it wont help the
homeless.
Last weeks closingof thenon-
profit drop-in center known as
Reach Inc. tore another hole in
the areas fraying social safety
net for people whoare without a
safe place to stay a category
that includes people newly sep-
arated from their spouses, peo-
ple recently released from pris-
on, former foster children who
haveagedout of thefoster care
system, returning veterans, the
unemployed, the addicted, the
disillusioned, the delusional, the
desperate.
Reach a shoestring oper-
ation that for more than a dec-
ade supplied relief, support and
dignity to the homeless locked
its door Friday at St. Stephens
Episcopal Church basement on
South Franklin Street due to a
lack of funds. This summer it
lost $18,500 in state grant mon-
ey due to budget cutbacks in
Harrisburg, the proverbial final
nail in a succession of financial
blows.
Plenty of people in Greater
Wilkes-Barre will be happy to
see it go. Critics contended that
the weekday program often
drewanunsavory cast of charac-
ters intothe citys hub, causinga
spike innuisance crimes andpo-
tentially scaring off merchants
customers.
You would have to be ex-
tremely nave, however, to be-
lieve that Reachs closure will
clean up the city. People with-
out homes or apartments will
still cluster in Wilkes-Barres
heart; its wheretheymust gofor
court appointments and to con-
nect withneededsocial services,
including free meals, and most
public transportation.
Only now, many of them will
seek refuge from the elements
(includingthisweeksforecasted
90-degree temperatures) in pub-
lic spaces such as libraries, lob-
bies and shops. Plus, they wont
have access to Reachs homeless
services: guidanceonhowtoim-
prove their situations, telephone
access, mail pickup and show-
ers.
As many as 50 people per day
had relied on the now-defunct
program.
For them, as every compas-
sionate resident of this commu-
nity realizes, a new solution
needs to be found and soon.
Otherwise, it will seem as if
basic humanity has slipped be-
yond our reach.
OUR OPINION: THE HOMELESS
Word on street:
Life now tougher
For information on social ser-
vices and nightly homeless
shelters in Luzerne and Wyom-
ing counties, call Help Line at
1-888-829-1341.
S H E LT E R , S E R V I C E S
QUOTE OF THE DAY
RICHARD L. CONNOR
Editor and Publisher
JOSEPH BUTKIEWICZ
Vice President/Executive Editor
MARK E. JONES
Editorial Page Editor
PRASHANT SHITUT
President/Impressions Media
EDITORIAL BOARD
MALLARD FILLMORE DOONESBURY
S E RV I NG T HE P UB L I C T RUS T S I NC E 1 8 81
Editorial
C M Y K
PAGE 10A WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
N E W S
Many residents dont know what will
happen to their properties after
flooding on Coal Street in Plymouth.
See the video of the what residents
had to say and the damage done.
Flood aftermath
Fireworks light
up NEPAfor
July 4th
PHOTOS:
Def Leppard
live and in
concert
PHOTOS:
If we didnt have that, she said with
her voice trailing off, as if picturing in
her mind what could have happened.
She said the $1.3 million project was
well worth it.
Oh, definitely, Saunders said. Every
little bit of it.
Along Coal Street Creek, residents
werent so lucky.
But one borough resident says things
could have been much, much worse.
In the 1990s, three stone dams were
removed from Coal Street Creek start-
ing on Plymouth Mountain. One dam
the smallest one of the four was left in
place just beyond the last home on the
north end of Coal Street.
Dating to the 1870s, the rock dams
were installed by the Spring Brook
Water Co. to create reservoirs to sup-
plement drinking water in the area.
They were spaced out, more than 50
yards apart and about one mile from
the first one to the fourth one, and
became attractive swimming and fish-
ing holes.
Steve Kondrad, a borough resident
and board member of the Plymouth
Historical Society, said that had those
dams remained, Sundays torrential
rainfall estimates are that about 4
inches of rain dumped on the borough
in less than 45 minutes could have
been catastrophic.
He said pooled water would have
been swelled by the rainfall coming
down the mountain and could have
taken out the dams like dominos, add-
ing the standing water to the rainfall.
The dams likely wouldnt have held and
a wall of water could have hit the town.
Those dams would have made
things worse, Kondrad said. Its a
good thing they did that, he added,
referring to their removal.
Clif Madrack, a former borough
administrator who was in that post
when the Wadham Creek project was
approved, said had the concrete not
been poured, its likely the same thing
would have happened to that section of
Plymouth as occurred along Coal
Street.
Absolutely. No doubt, Madrack
said.
He said damage could have been
averted for those living near Coal
Street Creek if similar actions were
taken as at Wadham a decade ago.
For many years that was talked
about, but it was never done. That was
being discussed when I was a kid, said
the 66-year-old. We tried to get some
action on that in the 90s. I dont think
it ever made it to the drawing board.
DAMS
Continued from Page 1A
tocut throughthat redtape.
Yudichaksaidthe$1millionesti-
mate of damage so far seems to
fall short of what will be needed to
make repairs.
Just fromone bridge toanother
onCoal Street wouldcost amillion
dollars to fix, Yudichak said. I
have to believe that the number is
goingtobe higher.
Yudichak said he has spoken to
Sen. Lisa Baker, R-Lehman Town-
ship, and Harry Forbes, Gov. Tom
Corbetts regional director, to in-
form them of Tuesdays assess-
ment.
We have extensive public dam-
age and damage to private proper-
ties, Yudichak said. I understand
peoplearefrustrated, buttheyhave
to have patience. This is not going
tobeaquickfix. Weareworkingto
find ways to offer assistance to the
municipalities and to the individu-
al property owners as well.
Yudichak said there are varying
levels of funding sources and part
of thetaskaheadwill beidentifying
whichstateagenciestoapplytofor
help. He saidhe was pleasedtosee
PEMAandthestateDepartmentof
Environmental Protection and the
Pennsylvania Department of
Transportationat the site.
We might have to look at pur-
chasing some of those homes and
relocating some families, Yudi-
chaksaid. Alot of thecosts associ-
ated with the cleanup of the mud
anddebris arenot coveredbyflood
insurance.
Yudichak and state Rep. Gerald
Mullery, D-Newport Township,
urged residents affected by the
floodingtocontact their electedof-
ficials toinformthemof the extent
of the damage they have incurred.
It seems nobody is getting any
good news about help, Mullery
said. This is myfirst natural disas-
ter as a state representative and I
want to be sure that everyone af-
fectedgets the helpthey deserve.
LucyMorgan, deputydirector at
the Luzerne County Emergency
ManagementAgency, saiditwillbe
daysbeforeanaccurateassessment
of damages will be completed. She
said the county EMA office will
crunch the numbers and begin the
searchfor funding.
Morgan said the American Red
Cross has set up at the Goodwill
HoseCo. No. 2onWestMainStreet
and property owners should stop
there and fill out damage assess-
ment forms.
Until we complete our surveys
and all properties are accounted
for, wewontbeabletogiveanaccu-
rate estimate of damage, Morgan
said.
Brian Wrightson, director of
emergency service for the Red
Crossinthisregion, saidmorethan
100 cleanup kits have been distrib-
uted to Plymouth residents. Joe
Mazur, borough manager, said
more than 200 residents have re-
porteddamage totheir properties.
TheRedCrosscanprovidefood
and shelter for people in need,
Wrightson said. So far, we have
shelteredtwofamilies.
U.S. Rep. LouBarlettasaidthe$1
million estimate of damage cant
be right. He said he intends to
check with appropriate federal
agencies to see what funding is
available.
Whether or not the estimated
damagereachesthe$16millionlev-
el toearnapresidential declaration
ofdisasterremainsuncertain,Bar-
letta said. Nevertheless, the situa-
tionwe have here is a disaster. He
saidhedoesnot knowhowmunici-
palities and private property own-
ers will be able to pay for the dam-
age.
Its a real mess. Again, I dont
carewhatnumbertheyputonit, its
a disaster.
Meanwhile in Jackson Town-
ship, Supervisors John Wilkes Jr.
saidat ameetingonTuesdaynight
thatnearly5inchesofrainfellinthe
townshipinjusttwohours. Numer-
ous yards were damaged and base-
ments flooded. Several roads were
alsorippedup, he said.
The boarddeclaredanemergen-
cyforJuly3andsaidresidentswith
damage shouldsubmit photos and
estimatestothemunicipal officeas
soonas possible.
Times Leader correspondent
Camille Fioti contributed to this
story.
CLARK VAN ORDEN/THE TIMES LEADER
Michael A. Stalnecker of PEMA, along with Luzerne County EMA and Plymouth Township and Plymouth Borough officials, assess damage to Coal Street on Tuesday
morning that was caused by Sundays severe weather.
ASSESS
Continued from Page 1A
peal to the Supreme Court.
Assistant District Attorney
James McMonagle, who prose-
cuted Lanier and Cruttenden,
said the Supreme Courts deci-
sion to hear the appeal is impor-
tant because the original ruling,
if left to stand, couldsignificantly
hamper the ability of police to in-
vestigate certain types of crimes,
particularly drug deals and sex
offenses, in which text messag-
ing is often utilized.
McMonagle said texting has
become a common method for
drug dealers to communicate
with one another. To require an
officer workingundercover toob-
tain approval each time he or she
seeks to text a suspect would
make it virtually impossible for
the officer to do their job, he said.
If they are working undercov-
er, how do they exchange a text
with their target? They would
have to leave cover ... to enable
them to intercept a text mess-
age, he said.
McMonagle said the decision
could also impact sexual assault
investigations involving an adult
defendant who utilizes text
messages to communicate with a
minor.
TheSupremeCourt has agreed
to address the issue of whether
an officer pretending to be an ac-
complice violates the wiretaplaw
whenhe or she communicates di-
rectly with a suspect via text
messaging.
Cruttenden, of Breesport, N.Y.,
andLanier, of Tucson, Ariz., were
charged on March 27, 2007 with
attemptingtopossess withintent
to deliver a controlled substance
and conspiracy.
The men were arrested in the
parking lot of a hotel on state
Route 309 in Butler Township.
Police allege the men were in the
lot, awaiting the delivery of mari-
juana from Amodeo, when they
were taken into custody.
McMonagle said Cruttenden
and Lanier have been free on bail
pending resolution of the court
challenges.
The court has directed the
prosecutors to file a legal brief in
support of its position by July 27.
TEXTING
Continued from Page 3A
PLYMOUTH Local govern-
ment officials in the two commu-
nities most affected by weekend
flashfloodingare workingtohelp
residents recover from the dam-
age.
The Plymouth Township
Board of Supervisors will meet at
7 tonight at the municipal build-
ing and it wants residents affect-
ed by the flooding to attend and
ask questions.
We hope to be able to answer
their questions, said Gale Con-
rad, chairwoman of the board of
supervisors. We advise home-
owners who are landlocked to in-
formtheir insurance company so
they can qualify for some help to
get temporary housing.
Residents of Plymouth with
flood damage can visit the Ply-
mouth Borough Building, 162 W.
Shawnee Ave. or call 779-1011.
Residents of Plymouth Township
should call 779-5388 for assist-
ance, or stop by the township
building at 925 W. Main St.
Tom Serbin, one of several
landlocked homeowners, said he
and his wife and two children in-
tend to stay in their home be-
cause they have elderly neigh-
bors with health problems who
may need their help.
Were not leaving, Serbin
said. We have no place to go any-
way.
Serbin lives on Coal Street in
Plymouth Township. He was re-
turning home Tuesday with a
backpack filled with food for his
family when he happened upon a
group of federal, state and local
elected officials touring the area.
Most of Coal Street is in Ply-
mouth Borough, but the section
that was washed out lies mostly
in the township. Conrad said the
Tkaczyk family is the other land-
locked home on the street.
Conrad and fellow township
Supervisor Joe Yudichak were at
the scene most of Tuesday talk-
ing to residents and trying to get
answers from state agencies.
This wont be a simple pro-
ject, Yudichak said. Id like to
start tomorrow, but we need
funding to get it done.
Barney Dobinick, of the Lu-
zerne County Emergency Man-
agement Agency, told Yudichak,
Theres a lot of damage, but we
cant make any promises right
now.
Tom Stanitis, who lives at 151
Coal St., said concrete creek
walls appear tobe weakeningand
if they go, his house could incur
major damage.
I want somebody to tell me
what they are going to do about
these retaining walls, he said.
This creek was clear, and now
look at all of the debris in there.
They are going to have to dredge
it to prevent future flooding.
Eric Makos, who lives across
the street from Stanitis, was up-
set and let officials know it.
We want the creek fixed, Ma-
kos said. Those walls have been
deteriorating for years.
Margaret Allabaugh has lived
at 180 Coal St. for 60 years. The
rear foundation of her house was
damaged and her basement is fil-
led with mud and debris.
But I think I can get it fixed
and move back in, she said.
Along West Main Street in Ply-
mouth on Tuesday, piles of mud
and discarded items lined the
street. Abackhoe was loading ev-
erything into a truck.
Damage even extended to
school district property.
Charles Suppon, superintend-
ent at Wyoming Valley West
School District, said the high
schools gymnasiumfloor was ru-
ined by flooding. He said the wa-
ter laid in the gymfor a couple of
days over the holiday weekend,
causing the floor to buckle.
We never expected anything
like this, Suppon said.
People were cleaning out base-
ments on Poplar Street, Ransom
Street, West Main Street, Flat
Road and Kuschke Street in Ply-
mouth.
Michael Stalnecker, PEMA
emergency management special-
ist, was trying to calculate the es-
timated damage on Coal Street.
This is a very local disaster,
he said. But it is a disaster.
Conrad said she has advised
the people living in homes that
are landlocked to get out.
Ive told them to be sensible,
she said.
Plymouth, Plymouth Twp. leaders look to aid affected residents
Plymouth Twp. supervisors to
meet tonight. Landlocked
homeowners urged to get out.
By BILL OBOYLE
boboyle@timesleader.com
C M Y K
SPORTS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011
timesleader.com
Somebody
needs to find the
punk who
threatened Lizzy
Seeberg with a
text message
two days after
she accused a
Notre Dame football player of
sexual battery to tell himhe was
wrong.
Turns out you really can mess
with Notre Dame football.
The U.S. government just did.
Auniversity that brags about its
integrity shouldnt need federal
intervention to find its way. But in
a potentially significant defeat of
the status quo, the Department of
Education has required Notre
Dame to make comprehensive
reforms to improve its response to
sexual attack reports such as the
one involving Seeberg.
Last weeks agreement between
the DOEand Notre Dame com-
pleted a seven-month investiga-
tion that began
after the Chica-
go Tribune
detailed the
final days of
Seeberg, a
Northbrook, Ill.,
teen who killed
herself in her
Saint Marys
College dorm
nine days after
the incident.
It represents
a good start and
a reminder that
clarity often
comes fromthe
perspective
outside Notre
Dames campus,
where the Gold-
en Dome can be
less blinding.
No, the word
football appears nowhere in the
nine-page document. Though to
try to separate football fromthese
findings is like trying to envision
the Notre Dame campus without
a stadium. The football culture
served as the backdrop for the
tragic Seeberg saga fromthe
beginning and was a primary
reason the way it was handled
received unwanted national atten-
tion.
You can see nowwhy the uni-
versity preferred to keep this
quiet in an effort to protect its
reputation.
Notre Dames president, Rev.
John I. Jenkins, praised campus
police last December for conduct-
ing a thorough and judicious
investigation. Coach Brian Kelly,
whose player was never charged,
crowed about howproud he was
about the university process.
Sorry, but the DOEfindings
confirmthe process Notre Dame
blindly defended was a sham.
If it was thorough and judi-
cious, why did the DOEurge
putting a preponderance of the
evidence standard in writing to
steer administrators toward con-
sidering whether an alleged at-
tack more likely occurred than
not?
If the process was so effective,
why did the DOErecommend a
60-day deadline on internal re-
views of incidents or change an
archaic rule so the alleged victim
no longer needs to be in the same
roomas the accused during cam-
pus hearings?
Why should the government
have to tell the nations pre-emi-
nent Catholic university howto
treat women, anyway?
Lizzy Seeberg and every wom-
an on the Notre Dame campus
ignored or intimidated after mak-
ing similar accusations deserved
better.
Maybe nowat Notre Dame and
everywhere, more victims will
begin to get the respect they
deserve no matter whomthey
accuse.
Maybe the positive impact of
OPINION
D A V I D H A U G H
Calling out
a tarnished
golden dome
See HAUGH, Page 7B
Maybe now
at Notre
Dame and
every-
where,
more vic-
tims will
begin to
get the
respect
they de-
serve no
matter
whom they
accuse.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
Those minor injuries to his left
leg now have kept Tiger Woods
from playing in two majors.
In an announcement on his
website Tuesday that came as no
surprise, Woods said he would
skip the British Open next week
because his injuries have not ful-
ly healed.
Unfortunately, Ive been ad-
visedthat I shouldnot play inthe
British Open, Woods said. As I
stated at the AT&T National, I
am only going to come back
when Im100 percent ready. I do
not want to risk further injury.
Thats different for me, but Im
being smarter this time.
Im very disappointed and
want toexpress my regrets tothe
British Open fans.
It will be the second time in
the last four years that Woods
has missed two majors in one
season. He did not play the Brit-
ish Open and PGA Champion-
ship in 2008 while recovering
from reconstructive surgery on
his left knee. These injuries are
not as easy to describe.
Woods said in May that he suf-
feredminor injuries tokneelig-
aments and his Achilles while
hitting from an awkward stance
inthe pine strawonthe17thhole
inthe thirdroundat the Masters.
P R O G O L F
Injuries mean Woods wont be part of British invasion
AP PHOTO
Tiger Woods announced Tuesday on his website that he has been
advised not to play next week at Royal St. Georges.
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
... I am only going to
come back when Im 100
percent ready. I do not
want to risk further in-
jury. Thats different for
me, but Im being
smarter this time.
Tiger Woods
See WOODS, Page 7B
WOLFSBURG, Germany
Pia Sundhage came into the first
meeting with her new team,
pulled out her guitar and began
playing the Bob Dylan classic,
The Times They Are A-Chan-
gin.
Admit
that the wa-
ters around
you have
grown, and
accept it that
soonyoull be
drenched to
the bone, she sang. If your time
to you is worth savin then you
better start swimmin or youll
sink like a stone. For the times
they are a-changin.
With that, Sundhage let the
Americans knowshed be a coach
unlike any other theyd had.
Thats definitely been true
and it goes beyond Sundhages
performing skills and foreign
passport. She has built players up
with constructive criticism rath-
er than breaking them down by
yelling and screaming. She has
modified the style of play that
had brought the U.S. success for
so many years so the Americans
can stay at the top of the game as
the rest of the world improves.
Most importantly, she found a
way to heal the bitterness and
hard feelings that threatened to
destroy the Americans following
their ugly exit from the 2007
World Cup just a few months be-
fore she took over.
She was everything we need-
ed, said goalkeeper Hope Solo,
whose criticism of then-coach
Greg Ryan was the flashpoint for
the World Cup turmoil. At that
point in time, it almost didnt
matter who came in because we
needed somebody to lead us and
we needed somebody to believe
in. Our teamwas broken, wewere
down and out, there were a lot of
W O M E N S W O R L D C U P
AP PHOTO
United States head coach Pia
Sundhage answers questions
during a training session in
Wolfsburg, Germany, Monday.
Players
tuned in
to coach
Pia Sundhage has brought a
different style in leading U.S.
womens soccer team.
By NANCY ARMOUR
AP National Writer
See SOCCER, Page 6B
UP NEXT
U.S. vs.
Sweden
2:45 p.m. today
TV: ESPN
WASHINGTONThe judge
in the Roger Clemens perjury
trial, which begins today, is con-
sideringjust howmuchof a sala-
cious allegation against the star
pitchers chief accuser is fair
game, and hes probably not go-
ing to let a parade of Clemens
former New York Yankee team-
mates testify about their drug
use.
U.S. District Judge Reggie
Walton held a pretrial hearing
Tuesday to consider what jurors
will learn about trainer Brian
McNamee, who has said he in-
jected Clemens with steroids
and human growth hormone
several times during the decade
they workedout together. Clem-
ens defense is focused on con-
vincing jurors that McNamee is
a liar, and his attorneys also
want to introduce allegations
that McNamee drugged and
raped a woman in a Florida ho-
tel pool while on a trip with the
Yankees in 2001.
McNamee was questioned by
local police and admits mislead-
ing them, but he has never been
charged and has said he was try-
ing to rescue the woman from
R O G E R C L E M E N S P E R J U R Y T R I A L
Accusers history questioned
AP PHOTO
This artist rendering shows Roger Clemens, left, and his at-
torney Rusty Hardin in federal court in Washington on Tuesday
during his perjury trial.
By NEDRA PICKLER
and MARK SHERMAN
Associated Press
See TRIAL, Page 5B
MOOSIC Brian Gordon is
no stranger to the Lehigh Valley
IronPigs.
The right-hander pitched for
the Phillies Triple-A franchise
in 2010 and began the 2011 sea-
son with the squad.
On Tuesday, he faced his for-
mer teammates as a member of
the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Yan-
kees after opting out of his con-
tract to get a shot to pitch in the
big leagues.
After two starts with New
York and going 0-1, he was one
of the oddmenout ina suddenly
crowded rotation in the Bronx.
Gordon, though, showed on
Tuesday at PNC Field why he
was considered by the Yankees
organization. In his first appear-
ance for his new team, the 32-
year-old pitched five scoreless
innings, struck out seven, al-
lowed only four hits and left
with a lead. But he took a no-de-
cision as the SWB bullpen
couldnt hold the lead and the
IronPigs came frombehind for a
5-2 victory.
Lehigh Valley extended its
lead to 4
1
2 games over the Yan-
kees inthe International League
North with the win and has now
won four of five games at PNC
Field this year.
It was weird (facing Lehigh
I L BASEBAL L
FAMILIAR FOES
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Lehigh Valley baserunner Rich Thompson gets back to the bag as Yankees first baseman Jorge Vazquez waits for the ball during a
game Tuesday.
Gordon quiets ex-teammates, but SWB falls
5
IRONPIGS
2
YANKEES
Looking Ahead
Next Game: 7:05 p.m. today
vs. Buffalo at PNC Field
Probable Pitchers: Bisons
RHP Chris Schwinden (5-3,
2.87) vs. Yankees RHP Adam
Warren (6-3, 3.09)
On Deck: The series with the
Bisons ends Friday and the
homestand ends on Sunday,
the final day before the
all-star break.
Radio: All games can be heard
on THE GAME (1340-AM) with
Mike Vander Woude.
See YANKEES, Page 5B
By DAVE ROSENGRANT
drosengrant@timesleader.com
K
PAGE 2B WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
CAMPS/CLINICS
Wilkes University will hold a youth
field hockeyclinic for girlsentering
grades 1 through 8 from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m. on Aug. 27 .at the University
Center on Main. The focus of the
clinic will be instruction and game
tactics and will include skill drills
and small game play. Cost is
$30.00 per participant and in-
cludes instruction and a Wilkes
field hockey t-shirt. Participants
should bringa stick, mouth guard,
shin guards, filled water bottle and
sneakers UCOM is located in
Wilkes-Barre at the corner of
South Main Street and East South
Street and is an indoor facility, so
participants should be prepared
accordingly. Registration runs now
throughAug.15and is limited to 40
players. The registration form and
waiver of liability can be found at
Wilkes athletic site, www.GoWilke-
sU.com underneath the Athletics
tab on the left column. For any
questions or concerns regarding
the field hockey clinic, please
contact head field hockey coach
Mollie Reichard via phone, (570)
408-4018 or email, mollie.rei-
chard@wilkes.edu.
MEETINGS
West Side United Soccer Club will
hold its monthly Parents and
Coaches Committee Meeting at
6:30 p.m. Thursday atthe Ply-
mouth Borough Building.For more
information, call Matthew at 574-
7699.
REGISTRATIONS/TRYOUTS
Moutain Top Little League Baseball
will hold signups for fall ball from 6
p.m. to 8 p.m. on July 7, July 21
and July 16 and from noon to 2
p.m. on July 30. All signups are at
the Alberdeen Complex. The
league is for girls and boys ages 8
through 11. Ages based on 2011
regular season. The season runs
from late August through the
middle of October. For more in-
formation, call 823-7949 or visit
www.mountaintoparealittleleague-
.com.
NEPA Hurricanes fastpitch softball
team will host a College Showcase
on July 15 through 17 at the Jessup
Youth Sports Association complex
in Jessup. There are sixteen teams
from New York, New Jersey, Mid-
dle/Eastern Pennsylvania and
Long Island playing in the show-
case. Any college coaches wishing
to attend should contact Joe
Miraglia at 570-575-1945 or mi-
raglia2@hotmail.com. Profiles are
available of each player.Games will
begin from 3 p.m. until 7:30 p.m.
on July 15 and continue from 8
a.m. until4 p.m. on July 16 and July
17.
Bulletin Board items will not be
accepted over the telephone. Items
may be faxed to 831-7319, emailed to
tlsports@timesleader.com or dropped
off at the Times Leader or mailed to
Times Leader, c/o Sports, 15 N, Main
St., Wilkes-Barre, PA18711-0250.
BUL L E T I N BOARD
BASEBALL
Favorite Odds Underdog
American League
TWINS -$122 Rays
WHITE SOX -$138 Royals
ANGELS -$120 Tigers
AS -$120 Mariners
INDIANS -$107 Yankees
RED SOX -$125 Blue Jays
RANGERS -$200 Orioles
National League
BREWERS -$145 Dbacks
NATIONALS -$150 Cubs
PIRATES -$118 Astros
MARLINS -$117 Phillies
BRAVES -$200 Rockies
CARDS -$122 Reds
DODGERS -$125 Mets
GIANTS -$152 Padres
CFL
Favorite Points Underdog
Friday
WINNIPEG 1.5 Toronto
BR COLUMBIA 1.5 Calgary
Saturday
Montreal 2 SASKATCHEWAN
EDMONTON 1.5 Hamilton
AME RI C A S
L I NE
By Roxy Roxborough
BOXING REPORT: In the WBA/IBF
junior welterweight title fight on July 23
in Las Vegas, Nevada, Amir Khan is
-$480 vs. Zab Judah at +$380.
The W.N. Reynolds Memorial rolls on tonight with eight divisions
of the 2-year-old trotting fillies topping a 14-race program at the Mo-
heganSunat PoconoDowns. Theres plentyof talentedyoungsters on
the card, but the one that catches my eye is the daughter of Donato
Hanover, Bluff, in the fifth race. The Trond Smedshammer-trained
and -driven filly qualified super for her career debut, winning in
1:59.4, witha back half of :57 andchange. Shes bredwell onall angles
and looks to be the real deal with a lethal brush.
BEST BET: ON THE GLASS (10TH)
VALUE PLAY: SPRINGBOARD (7TH)
POST TIME 6:30 p.m.
All Races One Mile
First-$20,019 Reynolds Memorial
4 End Of Innocence D.Miller 2-3-2 Time to get guilty 3-1
7 Sculpted Vanity T.Tetrick 1-6-2 Won her debut 5-2
6 Miss Chip K C.Norris 3-2-8 Norris has a lot of youngsters 7-2
5 Winning Wind T.Smedshammer 3-5-x So-so in preps 9-2
2 Cantab Cabela To.Schadel 4-6-3 Doesnt have that spunk 6-1
3 Art Song Hanover M.Wilder 7-6-1 Play me another song 8-1
1 Dellies Jewel B.Miller 5-5-6 Crushed 12-1
Second-$20,019 Reynolds Memorial
1 Win Missy B C.Norris 1-x-x Super in qualifier 9-2
4 Blue Yonder Y.Gingras 1-2-4 Deserving chalk 5-2
6 Valentine Queen T.Tetrick 3-1-2 Note the driver change 3-1
5 Order By Wish J.Takter 3-1-x First timer 7-2
2 Sand Violent Blu B.Miller 3-1-1 Tom Ridge filly 6-1
3 Devilicious D.Palone 4-7-3 Scaring no one 8-1
7 Marion Mon Ami M.Kakaley 5-8-4 Fills out the field 12-1
Third-$18,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $13,000 last 5
5 Santana Bluestone D.Palone 8-7-1 Been tackling better 5-2
2 A Gentleman T.Tetrick 4-7-5 Keeps Timmy and moves in 3-1
4 Trotslikethwind A.McCarthy 7-5-8 Picks up the show dough 8-1
7 Commander Richards Tn.Schadel 6-7-4 Always draws outside post 12-1
6 Muscles To Spare B.Simpson 4-3-7 Winless in 17 prior 7-2
3 Too Salty D.Ingraham 6-4-4 Done little of late 6-1
1 Celebrity Playboy T.Buter 8-4-6 Lots to do 9-2
Fourth-$20,419 Reynolds Memorial
7 Swinging Nadine Y.Gingras 2-3-2 Wins a weaker division 3-1
2 Missy Goldfire D.Palone 4-2-3 Main contender 7-2
1 Amitys Lalabye C.Norris 6-1-x Broke in debut 8-1
5 Barmaid M.Wilder 2-2-1 All the Meadows boys are here 9-2
6 Cupcake Hanover D.Miller 5-2-x Stopped badly in div of PASS 4-1
8 Meadowbranch Jill To.Schadel 5-2-2 Rides the pylons 12-1
3 Broadway Beauty K.Rickert 5-4-5 Ugly 5-1
4 Rusty Mae B.Hanners 5-2-x Hanners with rare appearance 10-1
Fifth-$20,019 Reynolds Memorial
4 Bluff T.Smedshammer 1-3-x Blows by them all 3-1
7 For A Dancer D.Miller 1-13 Certain favorite 5-2
1 Sari Maki Hanover C.Ryder 8-2-1 Ryder trains and steers 7-2
2 Backflip T.Tetrick 1-7-3 Won a Stallion Series race 6-1
3 By A Nose Hanover To.Schadel 2-1-2 Hit board in both starts 9-2
6 Charmer Hall T.Buter 3-2-7 Just looking for flat mile 8-1
5 Desired Outcome R.Hammer 4-2-1 Not to be 12-1
Sixth-$18,000 Clm.Hndcp Pace;clm.price $15-20,000
2 Natural Woman N S.Allard 2-1-1 New barn, keeps truckin 3-1
6 A Golden Rose M.Kakaley 1-7-4 Never better 6-1
8 Cmybest J.Bartlett 2-1-1 Another in solid form 7-2
9 Sixteen Candles L.Stalbaum 1-2-1 Deadly consistent 4-1
7 Picked By An Angel J.Pavia 1-2-9 Comes off career mile 9-2
4 R Es Mary T.Tetrick 8-2-3 Very competitive group 8-1
3 Heres Matty M.Simons 2-4-3 Notch below these 10-1
5 Nite Games B.Simpson 3-3-6 Simpson in a funk 20-1
1 My Fanny J.Taggart 5-3-6 Beat up 15-1
Seventh-$18,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $13,000 last 5
6 Springboard J.Taggart 1-5-2 Loves this track 8-1
4 Sevruga D.Palone 10-1-1 The one to beat 5-2
2 Senator Hall J.Pavia 8-1-5 Should be close to action 3-1
5 And Away We Go A.Miller 6-2-3 From the barn of Julie Miller 7-2
1 Grey Ice F.Paquet 6-4-1 Leveled off a bit 6-1
3 My Leap Of Faith A.McCarthy 5-7-2 Drops, but dull 9-2
7 Jon Win M.Simons 5-2-1 Loses 12-1
Eighth-$20,419 Reynolds Memorial
5 Spicy Mombo D.Palone 1-1-1 Ready to dance 5-2
7 Check Me Out T.Tetrick 1-1-3 Looking to go 3-for-3 3-1
3 American Saint C.Norris 1-1-x Won both preps 6-1
6 Uncommon Night D.Minor 3-2-x Best of the rest 9-2
4 Princess Royalty D.Miller 1-6-5 No answers yet 4-1
8 Champagne Magic A.Miller 1-x-x Save your coin 15-1
1 Taylor Jean M.Wilder 2-5-3 Look elsewhere 10-1
2 Knockout Doll G.Wright 4-4-x KOd 12-1
Ninth-$14,000 Cond.Trot;n/w $9,000 last 5
6 Soapy Sap Y.Gingras 2-1-6 In good hands 3-1
4 Yankee Manny D.Irvine 3-5-8 Irvines lone drive 6-1
8 Dennis J.Bartlett 3-6-5 Trying to regain his edge 7-2
5 South Jersey Flash Tn.Schadel 2-4-5 Just missed in solid effort 4-1
3 Blazing Winner J.Pantaleano 6-3-9 Empty off the claim 9-2
1 Be Famous H.Parker 1-6-2 Moves up, just beat lesser 8-1
2 Rompaway Alvin A.McCarthy 7-8-8 Kleinhans barn is cold 10-1
7 Folk Tail M.Kakaley 7-2-8 Weak Burke trainee 15-1
9 No Money Fun A.Miller 3-8-7 No fun is right 20-1
Tenth-$29,000 F&M Open Pace
4 On The Glass M.Kakaley 2-7-2 Jogger 3-1
2 All Spirit J.Marohn Jr 1-1-1 Been on a tear 6-1
3 Bilmar Scooter T.Buter 6-3-2 Closing in on $100k for yr 9-2
6 Giveittomestraight Y.Gingras 1-2-5 Just won at Chester in 1:51 5-2
1 Up Front Kellie Jo T.Tetrick 5-1-1 Had her win streak snapped 7-2
5 LR Dancing Dream J.Pantaleano 4-1-2 Looking for cover 8-1
7 Quicksilvercandy A L.Stalbaum 4-6-3 Just raced on Saturday 12-1
Eleventh-$20,019 Reynolds Memorial
5 Sandra Volo J.Johnson 2-2-x Jan has soft hands 3-1
6 Access To Success J.Takter 1-4-2 Glidemaster filly 7-2
4 Love Walked In A.Miller 2-4-1 No slouch 5-2
1 Arabella Hall T.Tetrick 6-1-1 Very good division 9-2
2 Fancy Y.Gingras 1-5-x Czernyson good with trotters 6-1
3 Just Cause T.Buter 2-2-5 From the Gurfein stable 8-1
7 Keystone Tempo Tn.Schadel 1-x-x Fills out stout group 12-1
Twelfth-$18,000 Cond.Pace;n/w $12,500 last 5
4 Mr Right Now M.Simons 4-3-5 Gets well deserved win 5-2
3 Cheyenne Knight L.Stalbaum 2-4-7 Asher training at .335 7-2
6 Lislea Moran J.Pavia 4-8-2 Down a peg in company 9-2
2 Brokaw A.McCarthy 3-2-2 Not worthy of the 2-1 ml 2-1
5 Polaris N T.Tetrick 8-10-2 Sits in the whole mile 10-1
1 Rusty Tank A.Santeramo 6-6-6 Andy still winless 6-1
Thirteenth-$20,019 Reynolds Memorial
6 Maven Y.Gingras 1-2-4 Exploded in her win 5-2
7 Cant Be Seduced T.Smedshammer 3-1-x Trond driving an unreal .502 7-2
5 Riverfest D.Miller 3-1-x Windsongs Legacy lady 9-2
2 Angel Eyes Hanover B.Miller 2-4-4 Rounds out the superfecta 3-1
4 Transgressive M.Simons 1-3-4 Simons gets stakes drive 6-1
3 Havemycakeneatitto J.Pavia 7-4-5 Breaker 8-1
1 Barefoot Brook R.Hammer 2-5-5 One more race to go 12-1
Fourteenth-$20,019 Reynolds Memorial
1 Damsel in The Sand T.Smedshammer 5-x-x Takes home the finale 7-2
4 Funny Fashion D.Miller 4-3-x Bred by Broadway Hall 5-2
6 Cannot Tell A Lie R.Hammer 2-1-2 Won a fair race two back 6-1
2 Pink Cloud D.Snyder Jr 4-3-3 Snyder Jrs PD debut 8-1
5 Dream On Hanover B.Miller 5-3-2 Risky proposition 3-1
3 Quadrille S Y.Gingras 3-5-x next 9-2
7 Gemini Hall T.Buter 4-3-x See you on Fri. 12-1
On The Mark
By Mark Dudek
For The Times Leader
L O C A L
C A L E N D A R
Today's Events
SENIOR LEGION BASEBALL
(5:45 p.m. unless noted)
Plains at Wilkes-Barre
Mountain Top at Hazleton
Greater Pittston at Northwest
Tunkhannock at Swoyersville
Nanticoke at Back Mountain
LITTLE LEAGUE
(6 p.m. unless noted)
District 16 Senior Baseball
(5:45 p.m.)
North Wilkes-Barre at Pittston
Nanticoke at Duryea/Pittston Twp.
Avoca/Jenkins at Hanover/Ashley
Newport at Plains
District 31 Senior Baseball
Greater Wyoming Area at West Side, 5:45 p.m.
District 16 Major Baseball
Jenkins Twp. at South Wilkes-Barre
Pittston Twp. at Nanticoke (Newport field)
District 31 Major Baseball
Back Mtn. American at West Side
Back Mtn. National at Exeter
District 16 Minor Baseball
Hanover at Mountain Top
District 31 Minor Baseball
Northwest at West Pittston
District 16 Junior Softball
Mountain Top at Nanticoke
Thursday, July 7
SENIOR LEGION BASEBALL
(5:45 p.m. unless noted)
Old Forge at Wilkes-Barre
LITTLE LEAGUE
(6 p.m.)
District 31 Junior Softball
Greater Wyoming Area at Northwest
N A S C A R
Sprint Cup
Points Leader
Through July 2
1. Kevin Harvick, 586.
2. Carl Edwards, 581.
3. Kyle Busch, 576.
4. Kurt Busch, 570.
5. Matt Kenseth, 564.
6. Jimmie Johnson, 564.
7. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 534.
8. Jeff Gordon, 519.
9. Clint Bowyer, 505.
10. Ryan Newman, 498.
11. Denny Hamlin, 495.
12. Tony Stewart, 494.
13. Greg Biffle, 473.
14. Juan Pablo Montoya, 468.
15. A J Allmendinger, 467.
16. Paul Menard, 466.
17. David Ragan, 457.
18. Mark Martin, 455.
19. Kasey Kahne, 452.
20. Joey Logano, 439.
21. Marcos Ambrose, 435.
22. Brad Keselowski, 428.
23. Martin Truex Jr., 422.
24. Jeff Burton, 392.
25. Brian Vickers, 388.
26. David Reutimann, 380.
27. Jamie McMurray, 378.
28. Regan Smith, 372.
29. Bobby Labonte, 345.
30. David Gilliland, 315.
W H A T S O N T V
CYCLING
7:30 a.m.
VERSUS Tour de France, stage 5, Carhaix to
Cap Frehel, France
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
2 p.m.
WGN Kansas City at Chicago White Sox
7 p.m.
ESPN N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland
ROOT Houston at Pittsburgh
CSN Philadelphia at Florida
10 p.m.
SNY N.Y. Mets at L.A. Dodgers
SOCCER
11:45 a.m.
ESPN FIFA, Womens World Cup, Group D,
Equatorial Guinea vs. Brazil, at Frankfurt, Germany
ESPN2 FIFA, Womens World Cup, Group D,
Australia vs. Norway, at Leverkusen, Germany
2:30 p.m.
ESPN FIFA, Womens World Cup, Group C,
Sweden vs. U.S., at Wolfsburg, Germany
ESPN2 FIFA, Womens World Cup, Group C,
North Korea vs. Colombia, at Bochum, Germany
T R A N S A C T I O N S
BASEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLERSCalled up RHP Mitch
Atkins from Norfolk (IL). Placed OF Luke Scott on
the 15-day DL.
BOSTON RED SOXTraded OF Mike Cameron
and cash to Florida Marlins for a player to be named
or cash considerations.
NEWYORK YANKEESOptioned OF Chris Dick-
erson to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).
National League
CHICAGO CUBSPlaced RHP Marcos Mateo on
the 15-day DL. Purchased the contract of RHP Ra-
mon Ortiz from Iowa (PCL).
COLORADO ROCKIESRecalled 3B Ian Stewart
from Colorado Springs (PCL). Optioned OF Cole
Carner to Colorado Springs.
HOUSTON ASTROSRecalled RHP Fernando
Rodriguez fromOklahoma City (PCL). Placed LHP
Fernando Abad on the 15-day DL.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIESRecalled OF John
Mayberry Jr. from Lehigh Valley (IL).
ST. LOUIS CARDINALSActivated 1B Albert Pu-
jols fromthe15-day DL. Placed LHP Brian Tallet on
the 15-day DL.
WASHINGTON NATIONALSRecalled LHP
Ross Detwiler fromSyracuse (IL). Designated RHP
Collin Balester for assignment.
American Association
FARGO-MOORHEADREDHAWKSSignedRHP
Donnie R. Smith.
ST. PAUL SAINTSReleased INF Justin Snyder.
WICHITA WINGNUTSTraded RHP Mike Cotter
to the Washington (Frontier) for future considera-
tions.
Can-Am League
BROCKTON ROXAcquired RHP Francisco Cru-
ceta from San Angelo (NAL) for future considera-
tions.
NEWARK BEARSReleased RHP Mike Pontius.
QUEBECCAPITALESReleased INFDan Barbe-
ro.
ROCKLAND BOULDERSSigned C Chase
Weems, RHPKent Worthington and RHPJon She-
pard. Released INFJermel Lomack, OFEric Flynn,
INF Deybis Benitez, CChad Duesler and CJonath-
an Candelier.
Frontier League
GATEWAY GRIZZLIESSigned OF Kent Gerst.
Released OF David Phillips.
NORMAL CORNBELTERSSigned OF Tyler
McNeely. Released RHP Jon Berger.
ROCKFORD RIVERHAWKS Released RHP
Brandon Garner.
TRAVERSECITYBEACHBUMSSigned CChris
Key. Placed C Nate Peterson on the retired list.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
MONTREALCANADIENSSignedGNathanLaw-
son to a one-year contract.
Canadian Football League
WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERSSigned WR Alex
Watson.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BOSTON BRUINSAcquired D Joe Corvo from
Carolina for a 2012 fourth-round draft pick.
CAROLINA HURRICANESSigned D Tomas Ka-
berle to a three-year contract.
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETSAgreed to terms
with DMarc Methot on a four-year contract. Signed
D Aaron Johnson to a one-year contract.
MINNESOTA WILDSigned F Darroll Powe to a
three-year contract and C Jeff Taffe to a one-year
contract. Named John Torchetti coach of Houston
(AHL).
MONTREAL CANADIENSSigned G Peter Del-
mas to a three-year contract.
NASHVILLEPREDATORSSignedFKyleWilson
to a two-year contract and Zack Stortini to a one-
year contract.
NEWYORKISLANDERSAgreed to terms with C
Trevor Frischmon on a one-year contract.
OTTAWA SENATORSSigned F Zenon Konopka
to a one-year contract.
PHOENIXCOYOTESSigned DKeith Yandle to a
five-year contract extension.
ST. LOUIS BLUESSigned G Ben Bishop and F
Scott Nichol to one-year contracts.
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNINGSigned CTrevor Smith
to a one-year contract.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFSRe-signed LW Clar-
ke MacArthur to a two-year contract extension.
VANCOUVER CANUCKSSigned C Andrew Eb-
bett.
WINNIPEG JETSAgreed to terms with LW An-
drew Ladd.
American Hockey League
NORFOLK ADMIRALSRe-signed F Matt Forna-
taro, F Eric Neilson and F Cory Conacher to one-
year contracts.
ECHL
ELMIRA JACKALSExtended qualifying offers to
F Michael Dubuc, F Dale Mahovsky, F Andrew
Sweetland, D R.J. Anderson, D Patrick Coulombe,
D Chris Frank, D Tristin Llewellyn and D David
Sloane.
LAS VEGAS WRANGLERSExtended qualifying
offers to D Eddie DelGrosso, F Greg Collins, F Ja-
mie Bates, F Blake Gallagher, D Barry Goers, C
Chris Higgins, GMichael Ouzas andDSeanMcMo-
nagle.
SOCCER
Major League Soccer
SPORTINGKANSASCITYAcquired the rights to
F Soony Saad.
COLLEGE
COLLEGE SPORTS INFORMATION DIREC-
TORSOF AMERICA(CoSIDA)Named Will Role-
son the director of internal affairs/treasurer.
ARIZONA STATENamed Steve Patterson ma-
naging director of Sun Devil Sports Group and chief
operating officer of Sun Devil Athletics.
BUFFALOAnnounced senior QB Chazz Ander-
son is transferring from Cincinnati.
GEORGE WASHINGTONNamed Matt Lisiewski
director of mens basketball operations and Maurice
Joseph assistant director of mens basketball oper-
ations.
NYUNamed Sarah Kirkwood womens assistant
volleyball coach and Michele Canning womens
soccer coach.
SMUAnnounced junior mens basketball G Nick
Russell is transferring from Kansas State.
TEXAS-SAN ANTONIOPromoted assistant
cross country coach Scott Slade to associate head
coach.
H O R S E R A C I N G
Pocono Downs Results
Tuesday Jul 05, 2011
First - $19,891 Trot 1:57.2
1-Astarsborn Hanover (Ra Schnittker) 3.80 2.40
2.40
7-Nothing But Class (Ji Takter) 2.60 2.20
2-Frost Bites K (Ch Norris) 4.20
EXACTA (1-7) $8.00
TRIFECTA (1-7-2) $46.00
SUPERFECTA (1-7-2-5) $161.40
Scratched: Pekoe Fashion
Second - $9,700 Pace 1:51.3
9-Royal Cam-Hall (Ge Napolitano Jr) 3.40 2.60
3.00
6-Clear Character (Mi Simons) 2.60 3.20
5-Powered By Zeus (Ma Romano) 3.60
EXACTA (9-6) $16.60
TRIFECTA (9-6-5) $95.20
SUPERFECTA (9-6-5-2) $195.00
DAILY DOUBLE (1-9) $11.20
Scratched: Rader Detector, Artist Point
Third - $19,891 Trot 1:57.2
4-Lad Pine (Da Miller) 7.80 2.40 2.20
2-Stormin Normand (Ti Tetrick) 2.10 2.10
6-Keystone Silencer (To Schadel) 3.00
EXACTA (4-2) $14.00
TRIFECTA (4-2-6) $48.00
SUPERFECTA (4-2-6-1) $96.60
Fourth - $20,291 Trot 1:57.3
4-Possess The Will (Ti Tetrick) 6.20 3.00 2.60
1-Lightning Storm (Ya Gingras) 2.20 2.40
3-Super Macdeen (Ch Norris) 7.00
EXACTA (4-1) $10.20
TRIFECTA (4-1-3) $105.20
SUPERFECTA (4-1-3-2) $995.40
Fifth - $21,967 Pace 1:51.3
2-Mikayla Rose (Ti Tetrick) 16.40 7.00 2.60
1-Foxy Lady (Ma Kakaley) 4.60 2.40
6-Fresh Idea (Da Palone) 2.10
EXACTA (2-1) $34.80
TRIFECTA (2-1-6) $69.00
SUPERFECTA (2-1-6-5) $100.00
PICK 3 (4-4-2) $85.80
Sixth - $9,800 Pace 1:52.4
1-Five Star Gazer (Ma Kakaley) 9.00 8.40 2.80
6-Star Of India (An Napolitano) 13.60 5.80
7-Grngrasanhitimes (An McCarthy) 4.00
EXACTA (1-6) $144.40
TRIFECTA (1-6-7) $6,053.80
SUPERFECTA (1-6-ALL-ALL) $609.60
Seventh - $15,000 Trot 1:55.1
2-Apeachtoremember (Si Allard) 5.20 2.80 2.20
4-Round About (La Stalbaum) 6.60 2.80
5-Tilly Bomb (Ge Napolitano Jr) 3.20
EXACTA (2-4) $48.60
TRIFECTA (2-4-5) $79.00
SUPERFECTA (2-4-5-1) $430.00
Scratched: Chiselled
Eighth - $24,000 Pace 1:50.3
6-Three New Dawns (Ge Napolitano Jr) 3.80 2.80
2.20
5-Success Rocks (Da Miller) 6.40 4.00
2-Four Starz Elder (Ma Romano) 3.00
EXACTA (6-5) $37.20
TRIFECTA (6-5-2) $95.20
SUPERFECTA (6-5-2-9) $812.00
Scratched: Lap Hanover
Ninth - $9,700 Pace 1:52.4
6-Four Starz Sue (Ge Napolitano Jr) 4.60 3.60 2.60
7-R C Cruiser (Wi Mann) 4.80 2.80
5-Thee Town Hero (La Stalbaum) 6.40
EXACTA (6-7) $22.80
TRIFECTA (6-7-5) $152.20
SUPERFECTA (6-7-5-1) $375.00
PICK 4 (1-(2,8)-(3,6)-6 (4 Out of 4)) $253.80
Tenth - $21,967 Pace 1:52.0
3-In Deep Thought (Da Palone) 6.60 2.60 2.40
5-Cold Mist (Ge Napolitano Jr) 2.10 2.10
1-Musette Mindale (Pa Berry) 4.40
EXACTA (3-5) $12.80
TRIFECTA (3-5-1) $62.80
SUPERFECTA (3-5-1-2) $163.60
Eleventh - $20,291 Trot 1:56.4
6-Weingartner (Ji Takter) 4.40 3.60 2.80
7-Beer Summit (An McCarthy) 7.60 5.20
2-Can Do (Ra Paver) 5.20
EXACTA (6-7) $29.60
TRIFECTA (6-7-2) $253.80
SUPERFECTA (6-7-2-4) $2,709.40
Twelfth - $21,967 Pace 1:51.0
5-Myluvmylife (Ti Tetrick) 7.40 4.20 3.00
6-Caviart Sarah (An McCarthy) 20.20 5.20
2-Hasty Pulse (Ma Kakaley) 2.80
EXACTA (5-6) $109.40
TRIFECTA (5-6-2) $324.00
SUPERFECTA (5-6-2-4) $6,095.40
PICK 3 (3-6-5) $126.80
Thirteenth - $20,291 Trot 1:55.1
4-Uncle Peter (Ji Takter) 3.20 2.60 2.40
7-Map Of Hawaii (Da Palone) 6.20 3.40
5-Melt In Your Mouth (Ti Tetrick) 2.80
EXACTA (4-7) $18.40
TRIFECTA (4-7-5) $74.00
SUPERFECTA (4-7-5-2) $373.40
Scratched: Solvato
Fourteenth - $4,800 Pace 1:55.1
4-Hand Me No Lines (Ma Romano) 6.80 4.20 2.80
8-Heavenly Helen (Da Palone) 8.00 3.60
2-Sammy Savannah (An McCarthy) 3.60
EXACTA (4-8) $92.80
TRIFECTA (4-8-2) $164.60
SUPERFECTA (4-8-2-7) $379.40
LATE DOUBLE (4-4) $17.20
Scratched: Real Houdini, Listen To Your Art
Total Handle-$342,895
S O C C E R
Major League Soccer
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Philadelphia ................. 7 4 6 27 21 16
New York...................... 5 3 10 25 29 23
Columbus..................... 6 5 6 24 20 19
Sporting Kansas City.. 5 6 5 20 21 22
Houston........................ 4 6 8 20 21 22
D.C. ............................... 4 5 7 19 23 29
Chicago ........................ 2 4 12 18 19 22
Toronto FC................... 3 7 9 18 17 29
New England................ 3 8 7 16 16 24
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Los Angeles .................. 9 2 9 36 25 15
FC Dallas....................... 10 4 4 34 26 17
Seattle ............................ 8 4 8 32 25 18
Real Salt Lake............... 7 3 6 27 21 12
Colorado........................ 5 5 8 23 19 21
San Jose........................ 5 5 6 21 22 19
Chivas USA................... 4 7 6 18 21 22
Portland.......................... 5 8 3 18 19 28
Vancouver ..................... 2 8 8 14 18 25
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Saturday's Games
D.C. United 2, Philadelphia 2, tie
FC Dallas 2, Columbus 0
Chivas USA1, Chicago 1, tie
San Jose 2, New York 2, tie
Sporting Kansas City 2, Portland 1
Sunday's Games
Colorado 0, Houston 0, tie
Monday's Games
Real Salt Lake 3, New England 3, tie
Los Angeles 0, Seattle FC 0, tie
Today's Games
Toronto FC at New York, 8 p.m.
Colorado at Sporting Kansas City, 8:30 p.m.
Columbus at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
San Jose at Chivas USA, 10:30 p.m.
B A S E B A L L
International League
North Division
W L Pct. GB
Lehigh Valley (Phillies).......... 50 35 .588
Yankees.................................. 45 39 .536 4
1
2
Pawtucket (Red Sox) ............. 46 40 .535 4
1
2
Syracuse (Nationals) ............. 37 46 .446 12
Buffalo (Mets) ......................... 37 50 .425 14
Rochester (Twins).................. 32 52 .381 17
1
2
South Division
W L Pct. GB
Durham (Rays) ....................... 46 39 .541
Gwinnett (Braves) .................. 46 39 .541
Charlotte (White Sox)............ 43 43 .500 3
1
2
Norfolk (Orioles)..................... 34 52 .395 12
1
2
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Columbus (Indians)................ 57 29 .663
Louisville (Reds) .................... 47 40 .540 10
1
2
Indianapolis (Pirates) ............. 44 43 .506 13
1
2
Toledo (Tigers)....................... 35 52 .402 22
1
2
Tuesday's Games
Rochester 13, Pawtucket 3, 1st game
Buffalo 11, Syracuse 6
Indianapolis 10, Toledo 4
Durham 3, Gwinnett 1, 6 innings
Lehigh Valley 5, Yankees 2
Louisville 4, Columbus 2
Charlotte 5, Norfolk 2
Pawtucket 4, Rochester 2, 2nd game
Today's Games
Pawtucket at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Buffalo at Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Rochester, 7:05 p.m.
Toledo at Indianapolis, 7:05 p.m.
Columbus at Louisville, 7:05 p.m.
Norfolk at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Pawtucket at Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Indianapolis at Louisville, 7:05 p.m.
Buffalo at Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Lehigh Valley at Rochester, 7:05 p.m.
Norfolk at Durham, 7:05 p.m.
Toledo at Columbus, 7:05 p.m.
Gwinnett at Charlotte, 7:15 p.m.
Eastern League
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
New Hampshire (Blue Jays) . 49 33 .598
Trenton (Yankees) ................. 48 36 .571 2
New Britain (Twins) ............... 43 39 .524 6
Reading (Phillies)................... 43 41 .512 7
Portland (Red Sox) ................ 31 51 .378 18
Binghamton (Mets) ................ 30 53 .361 19
1
2
Western Division
W L Pct. GB
Harrisburg (Nationals)............. 49 34 .590
Richmond (Giants) .................. 43 39 .524 5
1
2
Akron (Indians)......................... 43 42 .506 7
Erie (Tigers) ............................. 42 42 .500 7
1
2
Bowie (Orioles) ........................ 41 41 .500 7
1
2
Altoona (Pirates) ...................... 36 47 .434 13
Tuesday's Games
Portland 6, Binghamton 3, 1st game
Richmond 5, Trenton 1
Akron 4, Altoona 2
Harrisburg 7, Erie 3
Reading 6, Bowie 2
New Hampshire 7, New Britain 2
Richmond 9, Trenton 6
Portland at Binghamton, 8:05 p.m., 2nd game
Today's Games
Portland at Binghamton, 6:35 p.m.
Erie at Harrisburg, 7 p.m.
Akron at Altoona, 7 p.m.
Reading at Bowie, 7:05 p.m.
New Britain at New Hampshire, 7:05 p.m.
Trenton at Richmond, 7:05 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Portland at Binghamton, 6:35 p.m.
Akron at Altoona, 7 p.m.
Erie at Harrisburg, 7 p.m.
New Britain at New Hampshire, 7:05 p.m.
Reading at Bowie, 7:05 p.m.
Trenton at Richmond, 7:05 p.m.
New York - Penn League
McNamara Division
W L Pct. GB
Staten Island (Yankees) ........ 15 3 .833
Brooklyn (Mets) ...................... 11 8 .579 4
1
2
Hudson Valley (Rays)............ 9 9 .500 6
Aberdeen (Orioles) ................ 2 17 .105 13
1
2
Pinckney Division
W L Pct. GB
Jamestown (Marlins)............... 12 7 .632
Auburn (Nationals)................... 11 8 .579 1
Mahoning Valley (Indians)...... 11 8 .579 1
Batavia (Cardinals) .................. 9 10 .474 3
Williamsport (Phillies) ............. 9 10 .474 3
State College (Pirates) ............ 5 14 .263 7
Stedler Division
W L Pct. GB
Vermont (Athletics) ................. 11 6 .647
Lowell (Red Sox) ..................... 9 9 .500 2
1
2
Connecticut (Tigers) ............... 8 9 .471 3
Tri-City (Astros) ....................... 7 11 .389 4
1
2
Tuesday's Games
Lowell 11, Connecticut 7, 1st game
Staten Island 6, Brooklyn 5, 11 innings
Vermont 12, Tri-City 8
Hudson Valley 8, Aberdeen 5
Auburn 4, State College 2
Batavia 2, Mahoning Valley 1
Jamestown 5, Williamsport 0
Connecticut 2, Lowell 0, 2nd game
Today's Games
Vermont at Brooklyn, 7 p.m.
Connecticut at Staten Island, 7 p.m.
State College at Batavia, 7:05 p.m.
Williamsport at Mahoning Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Auburn at Jamestown, 7:05 p.m.
Lowell at Aberdeen, 7:05 p.m.
Tri-City at Hudson Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Vermont at Brooklyn, 7 p.m.
Connecticut at Staten Island, 7 p.m.
Auburn at Jamestown, 7:05 p.m.
Tri-City at Hudson Valley, 7:05 p.m.
State College at Batavia, 7:05 p.m.
Williamsport at Mahoning Valley, 7:05 p.m.
Lowell at Aberdeen, 7:05 p.m.
Pacific Coast League
American North Division
W L Pct. GB
Omaha (Royals) ...................... 46 39 .541
Memphis (Cardinals)............... 45 39 .536
1
2
Iowa (Cubs) .............................. 41 44 .482 5
Nashville (Brewers)................. 38 46 .452 7
1
2
American South Division
W L Pct. GB
Round Rock (Rangers) ......... 50 34 .595
Albuquerque (Dodgers) ........ 43 41 .512 7
New Orleans (Marlins)........... 40 45 .471 10
1
2
Oklahoma City (Astros)......... 35 50 .412 15
1
2
Pacific North Division
W L Pct. GB
Reno (Diamondbacks)........... 50 34 .595
Tacoma (Mariners) ................ 41 44 .482 9
1
2
Salt Lake (Angels) ................. 38 47 .447 12
1
2
Colorado Springs (Rockies) . 37 47 .440 13
Pacific South Division
W L Pct. GB
Sacramento (Athletics).......... 50 34 .595
Las Vegas (Blue Jays) .......... 45 39 .536 5
Tucson (Padres) .................... 42 43 .494 8
1
2
Fresno (Giants) ...................... 35 50 .412 15
1
2
Wednesday's Games
Omaha at New Orleans, 12:30 p.m.
Iowa at Oklahoma City, 8:05 p.m.
Memphis at Nashville, 8:05 p.m.
Round Rock at Albuquerque, 9:05 p.m.
Las Vegas at Salt Lake, 9:05 p.m.
Tacoma at Colorado Springs, 9:05 p.m.
Reno at Tucson, 10 p.m.
Sacramento at Fresno, 10:05 p.m.
B O X I N G
Fight Schedule
July 8
At the Celebrity Theater, Phoenix (ESPN2), Jesus
Gonzales vs. Henry Buchanan, 12, for the vacant
NABF super middleweight title.
July 9
At Bucharest, Romania, Lucian Bute, vs. Jean-Paul
Mendy, 12, for Butes IBF super middleweight title-
;Jun Talape vs. Viorel Simion, 12, for Tapales WBC
International featherweight title.
At Boardwalk Hall, Atlantic City, N.J. (HBO), Paul
Williams vs. Erislandy Lara, 12, junior middle-
weights;Akifumi Shimoda vs. Rico Ramos, 12, for
Shimodas WBA World super bantamweight title;J-
honny Gonzalez Vs. Tomas Villa, 12, for Gonza-
lezs WBC World featherweight title;Cristobal Arre-
ola vs. Friday Ahunyana, 10, heavyweights.
At Mazatlan, Mexico, Hugo Cazares vs. Arturo Ba-
dillo, 12, for Cazares WBA junior bantamweight ti-
tle.
At TBA, Mexico, Jhonny Gonzalez vs. Roinet Ca-
ballero, 12, for Gonzalezs WBC featherweight title.
At the Home Depot Center, Carson, Calif. (SHO),
Brandon Rios vs. Urbano Antillon, 12, for Rios WBA
World lightweight title;Kermit Cintron vs. Carlos
Molina, 10, junior middleweights.
July 15
At Roseland Ballroom, New York (ESPN2), Pawel
Wolak vs. Delvin Rodriguez, 10, junior middle-
weights.
At Las Vegas (SHO), Diego Magdaleno vs. Alejan-
dro Perez, 10, for Magdalenos NABF junior light-
weight title.
W O R L D C U P
2011 Women's World Cup
FIRST ROUND
(Top two nations in each group advance)
GROUP A
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-Germany............ 3 3 0 0 7 3 9
x-France................ 3 2 0 1 7 4 6
Nigeria................... 3 1 0 2 1 2 3
Canada.................. 3 0 0 3 1 7 0
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Sunday, June 26
At Sinsheim, Germany
France 1, Nigeria 0
At Berlin
Germany 2, Canada 1
Thursday, June 30
At Bochum, Germany
France 4, Canada 0
At Frankfurt
Germany 1, Nigeria 0
Tuesday, July 5
At Moenchengladbach, Germany
Germany 4, France 2
At Dresden, Germany
Nigeria 1, Canada 0
GROUP B
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-England.............. 3 2 1 0 5 2 7
x-Japan ................. 3 2 0 1 6 3 6
Mexico................... 3 0 2 1 3 7 2
New Zealand ........ 3 0 1 2 4 6 1
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Monday, June 27
At Bochum, Germany
Japan 2, New Zealand 1
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Mexico 1, England 1
Friday, July 1
At Leverkusen, Germany
Japan 4, Mexico 0
At Dresden, Germany
England 2, New Zealand 1
Tuesday, July 5
At Augsburg, Germany
England 2, Japan 0
At Sinsheim, Germany
New Zealand 2, Mexico 2
GROUP C
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-United States..... 2 2 0 0 5 0 6
x-Sweden.............. 2 2 0 0 2 0 6
Colombia............... 1 0 0 2 0 4 0
North Korea.......... 2 0 0 2 0 3 0
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Tuesday, June 28
At Leverkusen, Germany
Sweden 1, Colombia 0
At Dresden, Germany
United States 2, North Korea 0
Saturday, July 2
At Augsburg, Germany
Sweden 1, North Korea 0
At Sinsheim, Germany
United States 3, Colombia 0
Wednesday, July 6
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Sweden vs. United States, 2:45 p.m.
At Bochum, Germany
North Korea vs. Colombia, 2:45 p.m.
GROUP D
GP W D L GF GA Pts
x-Brazil .................. 2 2 0 0 4 0 6
Australia................ 2 1 0 1 3 3 3
Norway.................. 2 1 0 1 1 3 3
Eq. Guinea............ 2 0 0 2 2 4 0
x-advanced to quarterfinals
Wednesday, June 29
At Augsburg, Germany
Norway 1, Equatorial Guinea 0
At Moenchengladbach, Germany
Brazil 1, Australia 0
Sunday, July 3
At Bochum, Germany
Australia 3, Equatorial Guinea 2
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Brazil 3, Norway 0
Wednesday, July 6
At Frankfurt
Equatorial Guinea vs. Brazil, Noon
At Leverkusen, Germany
Australia vs. Norway, Noon
QUARTERFINALS
Saturday, July 9
At Leverkusen, Germany
England vs. France, Noon
At Wolfsburg, Germany
Germany vs. Japan, 2:45 p.m.
Sunday, July 10
At Augsburg, Germany
Group C winner vs. Group D second place, 7 a.m.
At Dresden, Germany
Group D winner vs. Group C second place, 11:30
a.m.
SEMIFINALS
Wednesday, July 13
At Moenchengladbach, Germany
England-France winner vs. Dresden quarterfinal
winner, Noon
At Frankfurt
Germany-Japan winner vs. Augsburg quarterfinal
winner, 2:45 p.m.
THIRD PLACE
Saturday, July 16
At Sinsheim, Germany
Semifinal losers, 11:30 a.m.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Sunday, July 17
At Frankfurt
Semifinal winners, 2:45 p.m.
T E N N I S
ATP World Tour
Campbell's Hall of Fame Championships
At The International Tennis Hall of Fame
Newport, R.I.
Singles
First Round
Edouard Roger-Vasselin, France, def. Richard
Bloomfield, Britain, 6-4, 6-0.
Denis Kudla, United States, def. Ivo Karlovic, Croa-
tia, 7-6 (4), 4-6, 6-4.
Jimmy Wang, Taiwan, def. Igor Kunitsyn (3), Rus-
sia, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2.
Tobias Kamke (8), Germany, def. Alex Bogdanovic,
Britain, 7-6 (3), 6-3.
John Isner (1), United States, def. Karol Beck, Slo-
vakia, 6-3, 6-2.
Nicolas Mahut, France, def. Sebastian Decoud, Ar-
gentina, 6-1, 6-0.
Arnaud Clement, France, def. Ryan Harrison, Unit-
ed States, 6-4, 6-1.
Matthew Ebden, Australia, def. Ryan Sweeting (4),
United States, 6-4, 6-2.
Tommy Haas, Germany, def. Michael Berrer (7),
Germany, 7-6 (9), 6-4.
Michael Yani, United States, def. Dudi Sela, Israel,
7-6 (5), 6-3.
M A J O R
L E A G U E
B A S E B A L L
2011 All-Star Game
Final Vote Standings
Through Sunday; voting ends Thursday, 4
p.m. EDT
American League
1. Paul Konerko, Chicago White Sox
2. Victor Martinez, Detroit
3. Alex Gordon, Kansas City
4. Adam Jones, Baltimore
5. Ben Zobrist, Tampa Bay
National League
1. Shane Victorino, Philadelphia
2. Andre Ethier, L.A. Dodgers
3. Todd Helton, Colorado
4. Mike Morse, Washington
5. Ian Kennedy, Arizona
All-Star Game Rosters
At Chase Field, Phoenix
(s-starter, elected by fans; m-managers pick;
p-players' selection)
American League
PITCHERS p-Josh Beckett, Boston; m-Aaron
Crow, Kansas City; m-Gio Gonzalez, Oakland; p-
Felix Hernandez, Seattle; p-Brandon League, Seat-
tle; p-Chris Perez, Cleveland; m-David Price, Tam-
pa Bay; p-Mariano Rivera, N.Y. Yankees; p-James
Shields, Tampa Bay; m-Jose Valverde, Detroit; p-
Justin Verlander, Detroit; p-Jered Weaver, L.A. An-
gels; m-C.J. Wilson, Texas.
CATCHERS s-Alex Avila, Detroit; p-Russell
Martin, N.Y. Yankees; m-Matt Wieters, Baltimore.
INFIELDERS p-Adrian Beltre, Texas; p-Asdru-
bal Cabrera, Cleveland; p-Miguel Cabrera, Detroit;
s-Robinson Cano, N.Y. Yankees; s-Adrian Gonza-
lez, Boston; s-Derek Jeter, N.Y. Yankees; p-Howie
Kendrick, L.A. Angels; s-Alex Rodriguez, N.Y. Yan-
kees.
OUTFIELDERS s-Jose Bautista, Toronto; m-Mi-
chael Cuddyer, Minnesota; p-Jacoby Ellsbury,
Boston; s-Curtis Granderson, N.Y. Yankees; s-
Josh Hamilton, Texas; p-Matt Joyce, Tampa Bay; p-
Carlos Quentin, Chicago White Sox.
DESIGNATEDHITTERS s-David Ortiz, Boston;
p-Michael Young, Texas.
FINAL VOTE (One player to be selected) Alex
Gordon, OF, Kansas City; Adam Jones, OF, Balti-
more; Paul Konerko, 1B, Chicago White Sox; Victor
Martinez, DH, Detroit; Ben Zobrist, 2B, Tampa Bay.
National League
PITCHERSm-Heath Bell, San Diego Padres; m-
Matt Cain, San Francisco; m-Tyler Clippard, Wash-
ington; p-Roy Halladay, Philadelphia; p-Cole Ha-
mels, Philadelphia; p-Joel Hanrahan, Pittsburgh; p-
Jair Jurrjens, Atlanta; p-Clayton Kershaw, L.A.
Dodgers; p-Cliff Lee, Philadelphia; m-Tim Lince-
cum, San Francisco; p-Jonny Venters, Atlanta; m-
Ryan Vogelsong, San Francisco; p-Brian Wilson,
San Francisco.
CATCHERS s-Brian McCann, Atlanta; p-Yadier
Molina, St. Louis.
INFIELDERS m-Starlin Castro, Chicago; s-
Prince Fielder, Milwaukee; p-Chipper Jones, Atlan-
ta; p-Brandon Phillips, Cincinnati; s-Placido Polan-
co, Philadelphia; s-JoseReyes, N.Y. Mets; m-Gaby
Sanchez, Florida; p-Troy Tulowitzki, Colorado; p-
Joey Votto, Cincinnati; s-Rickie Weeks, Milwaukee.
OUTFIELDERS m-Carlos Beltran, N.Y. Mets; s-
Lance Berkman, St. Louis; s-Ryan Braun, Milwau-
kee; p-Jay Bruce, Cincinnati; p-Matt Holliday, St.
Louis; s-Matt Kemp, L.A. Dodgers; p-Hunter Pence,
Houston; m-Justin Upton, Arizona.
FINAL VOTE (One player to be selected) Andre
Ethier, OF, L.A. Dodgers; Todd Helton, 1B, Colora-
do; Ian Kennedy, RHP, Arizona; Mike Morse, OF,
Washington; Shane Victorino, OF, Philadelphia.
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 PAGE 3B
M A J O R L E A G U E B A S E B A L L
MIAMI An intentional
walk to Ryan Howard with a
runner at first backfired when
the next four hitters singled,
and the Philadelphia Phillies
went on to drub the Florida
Marlins 14-2 on Tuesday night.
After Marlins manager Jack
McKeon opted to walk Howard
with the game scoreless in the
third, the Phillies scored five
times in the inning. When the
Marlins pitched to Howard an
inning later, he hit his 18th
home run, and he finished with
four hits and four RBIs.
Raul Ibanez hit his 10th
homer and drove in four runs
for the Phillies, who achieved
season highs in runs and hits
(18).
Cole Hamels (10-4) allowed
two runs in eight innings to join
teammate Roy Halladay as a
10-game winner.
Pirates 5, Astros1
PITTSBURGHJeff Kar-
stens allowed one run in seven-
plus innings, Brandon Wood
homered and the Pittsburgh
Pirates won their third consec-
utive game, 5-1over the Hous-
ton Astros on Tuesday night.
Pittsburgh (45-41) improved
to four games over .500 this late
in a season for the first time
since 1992, the teams most
recent winning season before a
major North American profes-
sional sports record18 straight
losing seasons.
Cardinals 8, Reds1
ST. LOUIS Matt Holliday
homered twice hours after
being picked to represent the
National League in the Home
Run Derby and Jaime Garcia
had another stingy home out-
ing in the St. Louis Cardinals
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
Holliday is not a prototypical
home run hitter, totaling 77 the
last three seasons and entering
the game with just 10 in 62
games. He powered up against
Edinson Volquez (5-4) with a
solo shot in the first and three-
run homer in the fifth for his
16th career multi-homer game
and first since July 7, 2010, at
Colorado.
Braves 5, Rockies 3
ATLANTAFreddie Free-
mans third homer in two
games gave Atlanta the early
lead, Derek Lowe hit a three-
run double and the Braves beat
the short-handed Colorado
Rockies.
Freeman, who had two home-
rs in Atlantas 4-1win in Mon-
days series opener, hit his 12th
homer to center field off Jhou-
lys Chacin in the second inning.
Nationals 3, Cubs 2
WASHINGTONSecond
baseman Jeff Bakers incredibly
wayward throwgave the Wash-
ington Nationals a pair of runs
in the first inning, and Ross
Detwiler won his season debut
in a win over the Chicago Cubs.
Baker was only 30 feet or so
fromsecond when he fielded a
routine grounder with the
bases loaded and none out, but
his throwsailed more than10
feet wide of the bag and into
left field. Instead of allowing
one run on a double play, the
Cubs were in a 2-0 hole that
became 3-0 on Wilson Ramos
infield single.
Diamondbacks 7, Brewers 3
MILWAUKEE Justin
Upton homered after learning
hed been snubbed for the
Home Run Derby and the Ari-
zona Diamondbacks roughed
up the slumping Milwaukee
Brewers.
Gerardo Parra also homered
for the Diamondbacks, who
built a six-run lead early and
improved to 3-2 on this 10-game
road trip before hosting the
All-Star game Tuesday.
N AT I O N A L L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Phils flex muscle
in rout of Marlins
The Associated Press
CLEVELANDCCSa-
bathia took out any anger for
being snubbedas anAll-Star by
striking out 11insevenshutout
innings, Curtis Granderson
homeredtwice andDerek Jeter
movedcloser to 3,000 career
hits as the NewYork Yankees
roughedup the ClevelandIndi-
ans 9-2 onTuesday night.
Jeter went 2 for 6 andnow
has 2,996 hits, leaving himfour
shy of becoming the 28thmajor
leaguer andfirst Yankee
to reach3,000.
Sabathia (12-4) allowedfive
hits, walkedtwo andoverpow-
eredthe teamthat draftedhim
in1998 andtradedhim10 years
later. Despite leading the league
inwins andgoing 9-1inhis last
10 starts, Sabathia was left off
the ALroster for the July12
All-Star game inPhoenix.
RedSox3, Blue Jays 2
BOSTONDarnell McDo-
naldthrewout EdwinEncarna-
cionat the plate ona single to
short left fieldfor the final out,
andthe BostonRedSox heldon
for a winover the Toronto Blue
Jays.
Jose Bautista hit a two-run
homer inthe ninthoff Jonathan
Papelbon. Thena single by
Encarnacionanda walk to J.P.
Arencibia put runners at first
andsecondwithtwo outs. John
McDonaldloopeda single that
Darnell McDonaldchargedand,
onthe run, firedthe ball onthe
fly to JasonVaritek.
Twins 3, Rays 2
MINNEAPOLISScott
Baker hadanother impressive
start cut short by injury before
GlenPerkins bailedout strug-
gling closer Matt Capps inthe
ninthagainto help the Minne-
sota Twins hang onfor a victory
over the Tampa Bay Rays.
Baker (7-5) gave up one un-
earnedrunonthree hits with
three strikeouts before leaving
after five innings witha mild
right elbowstrain.
Rangers 4, Orioles 2
ARLINGTON, Texas Elvis
Andrus hustledhome withthe
go-aheadruninthe seventh, the
same inning that he made two
spectacular defensive plays, and
the Texas Rangers went onto a
victory over the Baltimore
Orioles.
WhenJoshHamiltonsingled
to score Yorvit Torrealba inthe
seventh, Andrus ranfromfirst
onthe play andwent headfirst
into thirdaheadof left fielder
NolanReimolds throwthat
ricochetedoff the runner to-
wardthe Baltimore dugout.
Andrus scrambledto his feet
andranhome to put Texas up
3-2.
Royals 5, White Sox3
CHICAGOFelipe Paulino
struck out nine insix innings for
his first victory inmore thana
year andthe Kansas City Royals
beat the Chicago White Sox.
Alcides Escobar hit a two-run
triple andMatt Treanor hada
go-ahead, two-runsingle for the
Royals, who wonfor the fifth
time in19 games.
A M E R I C A N L E A G U E R O U N D U P
Sabathia leads Yanks
to win over Indians
The Associated Press
Daily look at Derek
Jeters pursuit of
3,000 hits
The latest update on Derek
Jeters pursuit of 3,000 hits:
Against Cleveland on Tuesday
night: 2 for 6 with two RBIs
and a run scored.
Career hits total: 2,996.
STANDINGS/STATS
AP PHOTO
The Philadelphia Phillies Carlos Ruiz runs past Florida Marlins
catcher John Buck as Buck waits for the throw during the third
inning Tuesday in Miami. Ruiz scored on a Wilson Valdez single.
S T A N D I N G S
All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
New York...................................... 51 33 .607 8-2 W-1 28-18 23-15
Boston .......................................... 50 35 .588 1
1
2 6-4 W-1 23-17 27-18
Tampa Bay ................................... 47 39 .547 5 3
1
2 5-5 L-2 21-21 26-18
Toronto......................................... 42 45 .483 10
1
2 9 4-6 L-1 19-22 23-23
Baltimore ...................................... 36 47 .434 14
1
2 13 2-8 L-2 22-22 14-25
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Cleveland....................................... 45 39 .536 5-5 L-1 25-15 20-24
Detroit............................................. 45 41 .523 1 5
1
2 5-5 L-1 27-19 18-22
Chicago.......................................... 43 44 .494 3
1
2 8 6-4 L-1 20-21 23-23
Minnesota...................................... 38 46 .452 7 11
1
2 6-4 W-3 20-18 18-28
Kansas City ................................... 35 51 .407 11 15
1
2 4-6 W-1 23-24 12-27
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Texas ............................................. 46 41 .529 5-5 W-2 26-18 20-23
Los Angeles .................................. 45 41 .523
1
2 5
1
2 8-2 W-3 21-21 24-20
Seattle ............................................ 42 43 .494 3 8 5-5 W-2 23-22 19-21
Oakland.......................................... 38 48 .442 7
1
2 12
1
2 4-6 L-1 22-20 16-28
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
Philadelphia................................. 55 32 .632 7-3 W-2 32-14 23-18
Atlanta........................................... 51 36 .586 4 8-2 W-2 26-18 25-18
New York...................................... 43 42 .506 11 7 6-4 W-2 19-22 24-20
Washington.................................. 44 43 .506 11 7 5-5 W-2 26-15 18-28
Florida........................................... 38 48 .442 16
1
2 12
1
2 5-5 L-2 17-28 21-20
Central Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
St. Louis......................................... 47 40 .540 6-4 W-2 23-18 24-22
Pittsburgh ...................................... 45 41 .523 1
1
2 5
1
2 6-4 W-3 21-20 24-21
Milwaukee...................................... 45 42 .517 2 6 3-7 L-3 29-13 16-29
Cincinnati ....................................... 43 44 .494 4 8 4-6 L-2 23-21 20-23
Chicago.......................................... 35 52 .402 12 16 4-6 L-2 20-26 15-26
Houston ......................................... 29 58 .333 18 22 1-9 L-5 14-33 15-25
West Division
W L Pct GB WCGB L10 Str Home Away
San Francisco ............................... 48 38 .558 6-4 L-2 24-14 24-24
Arizona........................................... 47 40 .540 1
1
2 4 4-6 W-2 23-19 24-21
Colorado........................................ 41 45 .477 7 9
1
2 3-7 L-3 22-22 19-23
San Diego...................................... 39 47 .453 9 11
1
2 7-3 W-1 19-27 20-20
Los Angeles .................................. 37 49 .430 11 13
1
2 3-7 L-3 19-25 18-24
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Monday's Games
Toronto 9, Boston 7
Minnesota 7, Tampa Bay 0
Seattle 2, Oakland 1
Cleveland 6, N.Y. Yankees 3
Chicago White Sox 5, Kansas City 4
Texas 13, Baltimore 4
L.A. Angels 5, Detroit 1
Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Yankees 9, Cleveland 2
Boston 3, Toronto 2
Texas 4, Baltimore 2
Kansas City 5, Chicago White Sox 3
Minnesota 3, Tampa Bay 2
Detroit at L.A. Angels, (n)
Seattle at Oakland, (n)
Wednesday's Games
Tampa Bay (W.Davis 7-6) at Minnesota (Liriano
5-7), 1:10 p.m.
Kansas City (Chen 4-2) at Chicago White Sox
(E.Jackson 5-6), 2:10 p.m.
Detroit (Penny 5-6) at L.A. Angels (Chatwood 5-5),
3:35 p.m.
Seattle (Vargas 6-5) at Oakland (Moscoso 2-4),
3:35 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 0-1) at Cleveland(Master-
son 6-6), 7:05 p.m.
Toronto (R.Romero 7-7) at Boston (Wakefield 4-3),
7:10 p.m.
Baltimore (Guthrie 3-10) at Texas (Ogando 8-3),
8:05 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Detroit at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.
Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Seattle at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Monday's Games
Washington 5, Chicago Cubs 4, 10 innings
Pittsburgh 5, Houston 3
Arizona 8, Milwaukee 6
San Diego 5, San Francisco 3
Philadelphia 1, Florida 0
St. Louis 1, Cincinnati 0
Atlanta 4, Colorado 1
N.Y. Mets 5, L.A. Dodgers 2
Tuesday's Games
Washington 3, Chicago Cubs 2
Pittsburgh 5, Houston 1
St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 1
Atlanta 5, Colorado 3
Philadelphia 14, Florida 2
Arizona 7, Milwaukee 3
N.Y. Mets at L.A. Dodgers, (n)
San Diego at San Francisco, (n)
Wednesday's Games
Arizona (Collmenter 4-5) at Milwaukee (Gallardo
9-5), 2:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (R.Wells1-3) at Washington (Gorze-
lanny 2-6), 7:05 p.m.
Houston (Norris 4-6) at Pittsburgh (Morton 7-4),
7:05 p.m.
Colorado (Cook 0-3) at Atlanta (Jurrjens 11-3), 7:10
p.m.
Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 4-4) at Florida (Ani.San-
chez 6-2), 7:10 p.m.
Cincinnati (Arroyo7-7) at St. Louis (Westbrook 7-4),
8:15 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Niese 7-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Kuroda 6-9),
10:10 p.m.
San Diego (Moseley 2-8) at San Francisco (Bum-
garner 4-9), 10:15 p.m.
Thursday's Games
Colorado at Atlanta, 1:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Houston at Florida, 7:10 p.m.
Cincinnati at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.
Arizona at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.
N.Y. Mets at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.
San Diego at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
N L B O X E S
Phillies 14,
Marlins 2
Philadelphia Florida
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Rollins ss 5 3 4 0 Bonifac 3b 5 0 1 0
Mrtnz cf-2b 6 2 1 3 Infante 2b 4 0 1 0
Utley 2b 4 1 1 0 GSnchz 1b 5 0 1 0
Mayrry cf 1 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 3 0 1 0
Howard 1b 5 3 4 4 Morrsn lf 4 0 0 0
Ibanez lf 5 2 3 4 Stanton rf 4 1 2 0
Ruiz c 5 1 1 0 J.Buck c 3 1 1 2
DBrwn rf 4 1 2 1 Sanchs p 0 0 0 0
WValdz 3b 5 0 1 2 Dobbs ph 1 0 1 0
Hamels p 3 0 0 0 Petersn cf 4 0 2 0
BFrncs ph 1 1 1 0 Volstad p 1 0 0 0
Mathsn p 0 0 0 0 Wise ph 1 0 0 0
Ceda p 0 0 0 0
Hayes c 2 0 0 0
Totals 44141814 Totals 37 210 2
Philadelphia .................... 005 201 006 14
Florida.............................. 000 200 000 2
EW.Valdez (6). DPFlorida 1. LOBPhiladel-
phia 10, Florida 10. 2BRollins (15), Howard (18),
B.Francisco (8), G.Sanchez (20), H.Ramirez (10),
Petersen (2). 3BM.Martinez (2), Stanton (4).
HRHoward (18), Ibanez (10), J.Buck (9).
IP H R ER BB SO
Philadelphia
Hamels W,10-4 ....... 8 8 2 2 1 5
Mathieson................. 1 2 0 0 0 2
Florida
Volstad L,4-8........... 4 9 7 7 1 4
Ceda......................... 2 2 1 1 2 4
Sanches ................... 3 7 6 6 3 1
HBPby Mathieson (Infante), by Volstad (Ruiz).
WPSanches.
UmpiresHome, Vic Carapazza;First, Doug Ed-
dings;Second, DanaDeMuth;Third, KerwinDanley.
T3:05. A17,333 (38,560).
Braves 5,
Rockies 3
Colorado Atlanta
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Blckmn cf 5 0 1 1 Schafer cf 4 0 1 0
JHerrr ss 4 0 2 0 AlGnzlz ss 3 0 0 0
Helton 1b 4 0 1 0 McCnn c 4 0 0 0
Wggntn lf 5 0 0 0 C.Jones 3b 4 1 1 0
S.Smith rf 3 1 1 0 Fremn 1b 3 1 1 1
M.Ellis 2b 4 1 3 0 Heywrd rf 3 0 0 0
IStewrt 3b 3 1 0 0 Uggla 2b 2 2 2 1
Iannett c 4 0 1 1 McLoth lf 3 1 0 0
Chacin p 2 0 0 1 D.Lowe p 2 0 1 3
Splrghs ph 1 0 0 0 Sherrill p 0 0 0 0
Stults p 0 0 0 0 Gearrin p 0 0 0 0
Giambi ph 1 0 0 0 WRmrz ph 1 0 1 0
Lndstr p 0 0 0 0 OFlhrt p 0 0 0 0
Venters p 0 0 0 0
Conrad ph 1 0 0 0
Kimrel p 0 0 0 0
Totals 36 3 9 3 Totals 30 5 7 5
Colorado ............................ 000 021 000 3
Atlanta ................................ 010 301 00x 5
DPColorado 1. LOBColorado 10, Atlanta 7.
2BC.Jones (22), Uggla (12), D.Lowe (3). HR
Freeman (12), Uggla (13).
IP H R ER BB SO
Colorado
Chacin L,8-6............ 5 4 4 4 6 5
Stults......................... 2 2 1 1 0 1
Lindstrom................. 1 1 0 0 0 1
Atlanta
D.Lowe W,5-6 ......... 5
1
3 5 3 3 3 4
Sherrill H,5...............
1
3 0 0 0 0 1
Gearrin H,3..............
1
3 1 0 0 0 1
OFlaherty H,17....... 1 1 0 0 0 1
Venters H,18 ........... 1 1 0 0 1 2
Kimbrel S,26-31...... 1 1 0 0 0 2
WPChacin.
UmpiresHome, Laz Diaz;First, Cory Blaser;Se-
cond, Scott Barry;Third, Wally Bell.
T2:50. A17,718 (49,586).
Cardinals 8,
Reds 1
Cincinnati St. Louis
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Stubbs cf 4 0 0 0 Theriot ss 4 1 1 2
BPhllps 2b 3 1 1 0 Jay rf-cf 4 1 1 0
Renteri ph-2b 1 0 0 0 Hollidy lf 4 2 2 4
Votto 1b 3 0 0 0 Brkmn 1b 4 1 1 1
Cairo ph-1b 1 0 0 0 MBggs p 0 0 0 0
Rolen 3b 4 0 0 1
Freese
3b-1b 3 0 1 0
Bruce rf 4 0 0 0 Rasms cf 3 0 0 0
JGoms lf 3 0 0 0 Punto ph-2b 1 0 0 0
Hanign c 2 0 1 0 YMolin c 2 1 0 0
Janish ss 2 0 1 0 T.Cruz ph-c 1 0 0 0
Volquez p 1 0 1 0
Schmkr
2b-rf 4 1 1 0
LeCure p 0 0 0 0 JGarci p 2 0 1 0
Heisey ph 1 0 0 0 MHmlt ph 1 1 1 1
Chpmn p 0 0 0 0 Lynn p 0 0 0 0
Arrdnd p 0 0 0 0
Descals
ph-3b 1 0 0 0
FLewis ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 30 1 4 1 Totals 34 8 9 8
Cincinnati ........................... 000 100 000 1
St. Louis............................. 200 033 00x 8
EJanish (9). LOBCincinnati 9, St. Louis 4.
2BB.Phillips (20), Janish (8), Theriot (15), Schu-
maker (9). HRHolliday 2 (12), Berkman (23). S
Volquez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Cincinnati
Volquez L,5-4.......... 5
1
3 7 7 6 2 3
LeCure .....................
2
3 2 1 1 0 1
Chapman ................. 1 0 0 0 0 2
Arredondo................ 1 0 0 0 0 1
St. Louis
J.Garcia W,8-3........ 6 2 1 1 3 4
Lynn.......................... 2 2 0 0 0 4
M.Boggs................... 1 0 0 0 3 2
UmpiresHome, DaleScott;First, CBBucknor;Se-
cond, Dan Iassogna;Third, Jerry Meals.
T2:52. A36,090 (43,975).
Nationals 3,
Cubs 2
Chicago Washington
ab r h bi ab r h bi
RJhnsn rf 4 1 1 0 Berndn lf 4 1 1 0
JeBakr 2b 2 0 1 0 Espinos 2b 3 1 2 0
DeWitt 2b 2 0 0 0 Zmrmn 3b 4 1 2 0
ArRmr 3b 4 1 1 2 L.Nix 1b 4 0 1 1
Soto c 4 0 2 0 Cora 1b 0 0 0 0
ASorin lf 4 0 0 0 Werth rf 4 0 0 0
Byrd cf 4 0 1 0 Ankiel cf 3 0 2 0
C.Pena 1b 4 0 0 0 WRams c 3 0 2 1
Barney ss 3 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 3 0 0 0
R.Ortiz p 1 0 0 0 Detwilr p 2 0 0 0
Campn ph 1 0 1 0 Coffey p 0 0 0 0
Grabow p 0 0 0 0 Morse ph 1 0 0 0
Smrdzj p 0 0 0 0 SBurntt p 0 0 0 0
JRussll p 0 0 0 0 Clipprd p 0 0 0 0
Stairs ph 1 0 0 0
Storen p 0 0 0 0
Totals 33 2 7 2 Totals 32 310 2
Chicago.............................. 000 002 000 2
Washington ....................... 300 000 00x 3
EJe.Baker (1), Cora (3), Detwiler (1). DPChica-
go 2, Washington1. LOBChicago 6, Washington
10. 2BRe.Johnson(13), Soto(15). HRAr.Rami-
rez (13). SBCampana (9). SR.Ortiz, Desmond.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
R.Ortiz L,0-1............ 6 7 3 2 3 7
Grabow.....................
1
3 0 0 0 1 0
Samardzija............... 1 3 0 0 0 0
J.Russell ..................
2
3 0 0 0 0 1
Washington
Detwiler W,1-0 ........ 5
1
3 4 2 2 0 1
Coffey H,5................
2
3 1 0 0 0 1
S.Burnett H,10 ........
2
3 1 0 0 0 0
Clippard H,22 .......... 1
1
3 0 0 0 0 2
Storen S,21-24........ 1 1 0 0 0 0
HBPby Detwiler (Barney).
UmpiresHome, Mike Everitt;First, Chris Guccio-
ne;Second, Mike Muchlinski;Third, Mike Winters.
T2:46. A19,181 (41,506).
Pirates 5,
Astros 1
Houston Pittsburgh
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Bourn cf 4 0 2 0 Presley lf 4 0 0 0
Kppngr 2b 4 0 0 0 dArnad ss 4 0 0 0
Pence rf 4 0 2 0 Diaz rf 4 0 3 0
Ca.Lee lf 4 0 1 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0
Wallac 1b 4 0 0 0 Veras p 0 0 0 0
CJhnsn 3b 4 0 0 0 Resop p 0 0 0 0
Barmes ss 4 1 2 1 AMcCt cf 3 0 0 0
Towles c 3 0 0 0 Walker 2b 4 2 2 0
WRdrg p 2 0 0 0 Overay 1b 4 2 2 0
FRdrgz p 0 0 0 0 BrWod 3b 3 1 2 3
AngSnc ph 1 0 1 0 McKnr c 3 0 0 1
AnRdrg p 0 0 0 0 Karstns p 1 0 0 1
Paul rf 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 1 8 1 Totals 30 5 9 5
Houston.............................. 000 010 000 1
Pittsburgh .......................... 020 102 00x 5
DPPittsburgh 1. LOBHouston 6, Pittsburgh 6.
2BCa.Lee (22), Diaz (8), Walker (14). HR
Barmes (4), Br.Wood (4). CSDiaz (1). SKar-
stens. SFMcKenry.
IP H R ER BB SO
Houston
W.Rodriguez L,6-5 . 6 8 5 5 2 6
Fe.Rodriguez........... 1 1 0 0 1 0
An.Rodriguez .......... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Pittsburgh
Karstens W,7-4....... 7 7 1 1 0 3
Watson ..................... 0 1 0 0 0 0
Veras H,18............... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Resop....................... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Karstens pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
Watson pitched to 1 batter in the 8th.
UmpiresHome, John Tumpane;First, Ron Kulpa-
;Second, Derryl Cousins;Third, Jim Wolf.
T2:34. A18,151 (38,362).
Diamondbacks 7,
Brewers 3
Arizona Milwaukee
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Blmqst ss 4 0 1 0 RWeks 2b 3 1 0 0
KJhnsn 2b 4 1 1 0 CGomz cf 2 0 0 0
J.Upton rf 4 2 2 1
Morgan
ph-cf 2 0 1 0
CYoung cf 4 1 0 0 C.Hart rf 4 1 1 1
Monter c 4 1 1 2 Fielder 1b 4 1 2 2
Nady 1b 4 1 1 1 YBtncr ss 3 0 0 0
GParra lf 4 1 2 3 Estrad p 0 0 0 0
RRorts 3b 4 0 1 0 Kotsay ph 1 0 1 0
Duke p 3 0 1 0 Brddck p 0 0 0 0
W.Pena ph 1 0 0 0 McGeh 3b 3 0 0 0
Heilmn p 0 0 0 0
JoWilsn
lf-ss 3 0 1 0
ACastll p 0 0 0 0
Counsll
ph-ss 1 0 0 0
DHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Kottars c 3 0 1 0
Lucroy ph 1 0 0 0
Wolf p 2 0 1 0
Gamel lf 2 0 0 0
Totals 36 710 7 Totals 34 3 8 3
Arizona............................... 403 000 000 7
Milwaukee.......................... 100 001 010 3
LOBArizona 6, Milwaukee 9. 2BR.Roberts
(14). HRJ.Upton (14), G.Parra (5), C.Hart (10),
Fielder (22). SBBloomquist (9), R.Roberts (13).
SC.Gomez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Arizona
Duke W,2-3.............. 7 5 2 2 2 1
Heilman.................... 1 2 1 1 1 2
A.Castillo..................
2
3 1 0 0 1 1
Da.Hernandez
S,5-7.........................
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Milwaukee
Wolf L,6-6 ................ 6 10 7 7 4 4
Estrada..................... 2 0 0 0 0 3
Braddock.................. 1 0 0 0 0 0
UmpiresHome, Tony Randazzo;First, Larry Va-
nover;Second, Manny Gonzalez;Third, Brian Gor-
man.
T2:40. A34,014 (41,900).
M O N D A Y S
L A T E B O X E S
Mets 5, Dodgers 2
New York Los Angeles
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Pagan cf 5 2 2 1 GwynJ lf 4 0 1 0
Turner 2b 3 0 0 0 Furcal ss 4 0 0 0
Beltran rf 3 2 1 1 Ethier rf 4 0 0 0
DnMrp 3b 4 0 1 1 Kemp cf 2 2 1 0
Bay lf 4 0 1 1 Uribe 3b 4 0 1 0
Duda 1b 4 0 1 1 Miles 2b 4 0 1 0
RPauln c 4 0 0 0 Loney 1b 4 0 2 2
RTejad ss 4 1 2 0 A.Ellis c 3 0 1 0
Capuan p 1 0 0 0 Oeltjen ph 1 0 0 0
Harris ph 1 0 0 0 RDLRs p 2 0 0 0
Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Carroll ph 1 0 0 0
Pridie ph 1 0 0 0 Elbert p 0 0 0 0
FrRdrg p 0 0 0 0 Guerrir p 0 0 0 0
Velez ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 34 5 8 5 Totals 34 2 7 2
New York ........................... 000 003 020 5
Los Angeles....................... 010 100 000 2
LOBNew York 5, Los Angeles 7. 2BPagan 2
(10), Beltran (24), Dan.Murphy (16), Gwynn Jr. (8),
Kemp (18), Miles (8). SBUribe (2), Loney (3). S
Capuano.
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Capuano W,8-7....... 6 6 2 2 2 5
Parnell H,3............... 2 0 0 0 0 2
Fr.Rodriguez
S,21-24..................... 1 1 0 0 0 2
Los Angeles
R.De La Rosa L,3-4 7 5 3 3 1 5
Elbert ........................
2
3 1 2 2 0 0
Guerrier .................... 1
1
3 2 0 0 0 0
HBPby Elbert (Turner).
UmpiresHome, SamHolbrook;First, Todd Tiche-
nor;Second, Gerry Davis;Third, Greg Gibson.
T2:35. A56,000 (56,000).
Rangers 13, Orioles 4
Baltimore Texas
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Hardy ss 4 1 1 1 Kinsler 2b 4 1 2 0
Pie rf 0 0 0 0
ABlanc
pr-2b 0 0 0 0
Markks rf 4 0 0 0 Andrus ss 5 0 0 0
Andino ss 0 0 0 0 JHmltn dh 4 1 1 1
AdJons cf 4 0 1 0 ABeltre 3b 5 2 2 2
Guerrr dh 1 1 0 0 MiYong 1b 4 2 3 1
MrRynl 3b 4 2 2 3
Napoli
ph-1b 1 1 1 0
Wieters c 4 0 1 0 N.Cruz rf 5 1 2 1
Tatum c 0 0 0 0 DvMrp lf 5 3 3 2
D.Lee 1b 4 0 0 0 Torreal c 4 1 2 1
Reimld lf 4 0 0 0 EnChvz cf 3 1 2 4
BDavis 2b 3 0 1 0
Gentry
ph-cf 0 0 0 1
Totals 32 4 6 4 Totals 40131813
Baltimore.......................... 020 000 110 4
Texas ............................... 044 101 21x 13
EMar.Reynolds (20), Wieters (2). DPBaltimore
1, Texas 1. LOBBaltimore 5, Texas 6.
2BKinsler (18), Mi.Young (24), Napoli (8), N.Cruz
(15), Dav.Murphy (6), Torrealba (14), En.Chavez
(7). 3BMi.Young (4). HRHardy (12), Mar.Rey-
nolds 2 (20), A.Beltre (16), En.Chavez (3). SB
Kinsler (19). SFJ.Hamilton, Gentry.
IP H R ER BB SO
Baltimore
Jakubauskas L,2-2.. 2 7 6 6 0 2
Simon ....................... 4
1
3 9 6 5 0 0
Viola.......................... 1
2
3 2 1 1 1 2
Texas
C.Lewis W,8-7......... 7 5 3 3 3 4
ODay........................ 1 1 1 1 0 0
Rhodes..................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Jakubauskas pitched to 2 batters in the 3rd.
HBPby C.Lewis (Guerrero).
UmpiresHome, Chris Conroy;First, TomHallion-
;Second, Phil Cuzzi;Third, Bill Miller.
T2:48. A42,885 (49,170).
Angels 5, Tigers 1
Detroit Los Angeles
ab r h bi ab r h bi
AJcksn cf 3 0 0 0 Aybar ss 4 0 1 1
Boesch lf 4 0 1 0 TrHntr rf 3 1 1 1
Ordonz rf 2 1 0 0 Abreu dh 4 0 0 0
MiCarr 1b 3 0 0 0 V.Wells lf 4 2 2 1
VMrtnz dh 4 0 0 0 HKndrc 2b 4 0 1 0
JhPerlt ss 4 0 2 1 Trumo 1b 4 0 2 1
Avila c 4 0 1 0 Callasp 3b 3 1 1 0
Raburn 2b 3 0 1 0 Bourjos cf 3 1 1 0
Inge 3b 3 0 0 0 Mathis c 2 0 0 0
Totals 30 1 5 1 Totals 31 5 9 4
Detroit................................. 000 100 000 1
Los Angeles....................... 101 011 01x 5
DPLos Angeles 2. LOBDetroit 6, Los Angeles
5. 2BJh.Peralta (15), Avila (17), V.Wells (5),
H.Kendrick (19). HRTor.Hunter (9), V.Wells (12).
SBTrumbo (8), Bourjos 2 (11). CSTor.Hunter
(4). SMathis.
IP H R ER BB SO
Detroit
Furbush L,1-2.......... 4
2
3 5 3 3 1 5
Oliveros.................... 1
1
3 2 1 1 1 0
Perry......................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Coke ......................... 1 2 1 1 0 3
Los Angeles
Pineiro W,4-3 .......... 7 5 1 1 3 1
S.Downs H,14......... 1 0 0 0 0 2
Kohn ......................... 1 0 0 0 1 1
WPOliveros, Pineiro. BalkFurbush.
UmpiresHome, Angel Hernandez;First, Angel
Campos;Second, Joe West;Third, Chad Fairchild.
T2:41. A43,012 (45,389).
A L B O X E S
Yankees 9, Indians 2
New York Cleveland
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Jeter ss 6 1 2 2 Brantly lf 4 0 0 1
Grndrs cf 6 3 3 3 ACarer ss 1 0 0 0
Teixeir dh 5 0 2 0
Chsnhll
ph-3b 4 0 1 0
AlRdrg 3b 5 1 2 0 Hafner dh 4 0 0 0
R.Pena 3b 0 0 0 0 CSantn 1b 4 0 1 0
Cano 2b 5 1 2 1
OCarer
3b-ss 4 0 1 0
Swisher rf 4 1 2 1 GSizmr cf 4 1 2 0
Posada 1b 3 1 2 1 Kearns rf 3 1 1 0
Gardnr lf 4 0 2 0 Phelps 2b 1 0 0 0
Cervelli c 5 1 0 1 Marson c 3 0 1 1
Totals 43 917 9 Totals 32 2 7 2
New York ........................... 050 100 030 9
Cleveland........................... 000 000 002 2
LOBNew York 11, Cleveland 9. 2BJeter (10),
Cano 2 (21), Posada (11), Chisenhall (3), G.Size-
more(19). HRGranderson2(25). SBGardner 2
(22). SFPosada, Brantley, Marson.
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Sabathia W,12-4...... 7 5 0 0 2 11
Pendleton................. 2 2 2 2 2 1
Cleveland
C.Carrasco L,8-5 .... 4 10 6 6 3 3
Herrmann................. 2 2 0 0 0 0
Judy .......................... 1 1 0 0 0 1
Durbin....................... 1 4 3 3 0 2
J.Smith ..................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
UmpiresHome, Jeff Nelson;First, Marty Foster-
;Second, Bill Welke;Third, Mike Estabrook.
T3:18. A30,100 (43,441).
Rangers 4, Orioles 2
Baltimore Texas
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Hardy ss 5 1 1 1 Kinsler 2b 4 0 1 0
Markks rf 5 0 2 0 Andrus ss 3 1 0 0
AdJons cf 4 0 2 0 JHmltn lf 4 2 2 1
Guerrr dh 4 0 2 0 ABeltre dh 4 0 1 1
MrRynl 3b 4 0 0 0 MiYong 3b 4 0 3 0
Wieters c 4 1 3 1 N.Cruz rf 4 0 2 1
D.Lee 1b 4 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 4 0 0 0
Reimld lf 4 0 2 0 Torreal c 3 1 0 0
Andino 2b 3 0 0 0 EnChvz cf 2 0 1 0
BDavis ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 38 212 2 Totals 32 410 3
Baltimore............................ 100 100 000 2
Texas.................................. 000 001 30x 4
EReimold (1). DPBaltimore 1, Texas 1. LOB
Baltimore 9, Texas 7. 2BA.Beltre (22). HRHar-
dy (13), Wieters (8). SEn.Chavez.
IP H R ER BB SO
Baltimore
Atkins........................ 6 8 1 1 0 4
Ji.Johnson L,5-2
BS,4-4 ...................... 1 2 3 2 2 0
Berken...................... 1 0 0 0 0 0
Texas
M.Harrison............... 6 11 2 2 0 5
Tom.Hunter W,1-0.. 1 0 0 0 0 0
M.Lowe H,7 ............. 1 1 0 0 0 0
Feliz S,17-21........... 1 0 0 0 0 0
M.Harrison pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
UmpiresHome, TomHallion;First, Phil Cuzzi;Se-
cond, Bill Miller;Third, James Hoye.
T2:40. A25,945 (49,170).
Red Sox 3, Blue Jays 2
Toronto Boston
ab r h bi ab r h bi
RDavis cf 3 0 0 0 Ellsury cf 4 0 0 0
EThms ph-rf 1 0 0 0 Scutaro ss 4 0 1 0
CPttrsn lf 3 1 1 0 AdGnzl 1b 3 0 1 0
Bautist 3b 4 1 2 2 Pedroia 2b 4 1 1 1
Lind 1b 4 0 0 0 D.Ortiz dh 3 1 1 0
Encrnc dh 4 0 1 0 DMcDn lf 4 0 1 0
Snider rf-cf 4 0 0 0 Varitek c 4 1 1 1
Arencii c 1 0 0 0 J.Drew rf 2 0 1 1
JMcDnl ss 4 0 2 0 YNavrr 3b 3 0 0 0
McCoy 2b 2 0 0 0
A.Hill ph-2b 1 0 0 0
Totals 31 2 6 2 Totals 31 3 7 3
Toronto............................... 000 000 002 2
Boston................................ 021 000 00x 3
LOBToronto 6, Boston 7. 2BD.Ortiz (22), Vari-
tek (7). HRBautista (28), Pedroia (8). CSC.Pat-
terson (7).
IP H R ER BB SO
Toronto
Cecil L,1-4................ 8 7 3 3 2 6
Boston
Lester ....................... 4 0 0 0 1 5
Albers W,3-3 ........... 2 1 0 0 2 2
F.Morales H,2.......... 1 0 0 0 0 0
D.Bard H,18............. 1 1 0 0 0 1
Papelbon S,18-19... 1 4 2 2 1 1
HBPby Cecil (Ad.Gonzalez).
UmpiresHome, Brian Knight;First, Tim McClel-
land;Second, Bob Davidson;Third, Jerry Layne.
T2:38. A37,745 (37,493).
Royals 5, White Sox 3
Kansas City Chicago
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Getz 2b 5 0 1 0 Pierre lf 4 1 2 0
MeCarr cf 5 0 2 0 Morel 3b 4 1 1 0
AGordn lf 5 0 0 0
Teahen
ph-3b 1 0 0 0
Butler dh 2 2 1 0 A.Dunn dh 5 0 0 0
Hosmer 1b 4 0 0 0 Konerk 1b 5 1 3 2
Francr rf 4 2 2 0 Quentin rf 4 0 2 1
Mostks 3b 3 0 0 1 Przyns c 4 0 3 0
Treanr c 3 1 1 2 Lillirdg cf 4 0 0 0
AEscor ss 4 0 2 2 AlRmrz ph 1 0 0 0
Vizquel ss 4 0 2 0
Bckhm 2b 4 0 0 0
Totals 35 5 9 5 Totals 40 313 3
Kansas City ....................... 030 002 000 5
Chicago.............................. 012 000 000 3
ETreanor (4). LOBKansas City 9, Chicago 13.
2BMe.Cabrera (22), Quentin (24).
3BA.Escobar (3). HRKonerko (22). SB
Me.Cabrera (11), Francoeur (14), Pierre (12). SF
Moustakas.
IP H R ER BB SO
Kansas City
F.Paulino W,1-2 ...... 6 9 3 3 2 9
L.Coleman H,4 ........ 2 2 0 0 0 2
Soria S,14-19 .......... 1 2 0 0 0 0
Chicago
Peavy L,4-2 ............. 6 6 5 5 2 4
Ohman...................... 1 1 0 0 1 2
Bruney...................... 1 1 0 0 0 1
Sale........................... 1 1 0 0 1 2
Bruney pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.
HBPby F.Paulino (Quentin), by Peavy (Treanor).
WPPeavy.
Twins 3, Rays 2
Tampa Bay Minnesota
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Damon dh 5 0 0 0 Revere cf 4 2 2 0
Zobrist 2b 4 1 3 0 ACasill 2b 3 1 1 0
Longori 3b 4 0 0 0 Mauer c 4 0 0 0
Joyce rf 4 0 0 0 Cuddyr 1b 2 0 1 2
BUpton cf 4 1 2 1 Thome dh 2 0 0 0
Ktchm 1b 4 0 1 0 Valenci 3b 3 0 1 0
Brignc pr 0 0 0 0 Tosoni lf 3 0 1 0
Jaso c 2 0 0 0 Repko rf 3 0 0 0
SRdrgz ph-ss 2 0 0 0 Nishiok ss 3 0 0 0
Fuld lf 3 0 1 0
EJhnsn ss 3 0 0 0
Shppch c 0 0 0 0
Totals 35 2 7 1 Totals 27 3 6 2
Tampa Bay......................... 000 100 001 2
Minnesota.......................... 102 000 00x 3
EJoyce (1), Al.Burnett (1), Valencia (10). DP
Tampa Bay 1. LOBTampa Bay 8, Minnesota 3.
2BZobrist (28), A.Casilla(13). HRB.Upton(13).
SBZobrist (8).
IP H R ER BB SO
Tampa Bay
Shields L,8-6 ........... 6 6 3 2 3 5
Jo.Peralta................. 1 0 0 0 0 0
Howell....................... 1 0 0 0 0 1
Minnesota
S.Baker W,7-5......... 5 3 1 0 1 3
Dumatrait H,2 .......... 1
2
3 1 0 0 0 1
Al.Burnett H,5..........
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
Nathan H,6............... 1 1 0 0 0 1
Capps H,4................
2
3 2 1 1 1 0
Perkins S,2-3...........
1
3 0 0 0 0 0
WPS.Baker.
T H I S D A T E I N
B A S E B A L L
1929 The St. Louis Cardinals scored 10 runs in
the first and fifth innings in beating the Philadelphia
Phillies, 28-6, in the second game of a doublehead-
er. The Cardinals had 28 hits and set an NL record
for runs.
1933 The first major league All-Star game was
played at Comiskey Park in Chicago. The AL, man-
aged by Connie Mack, defeated the NL, managed
by John McGraw, 4-2 on Babe Ruths two-run
homer.
1938 Johnny Vander Meer, Bill Lee and Mace
Brown combined to limit the AL to one run and sev-
en hits as the NL won the All-Star game 4-1 at Cin-
cinnatis Crosley Field. Lefty Gomez of the New
York Yankees suffered his first defeat in four All-
Star starts.
1942 The AL beat the NL 3-1in the All-Star game
at the Polo Grounds on first-inning home runs by
Lou Boudreau of the Cleveland Indians and Rudy
York of the Detroit Tigers. Yorks shot came with a
man on base.
1949 Walker Cooper of Cincinnati went 6 for 7,
including three home runs and drove in 10 runs,
against Chicago at Crosley Field. Cooper also had
three singles and scored five times to lead the Reds
to a 23-4 rout of the Cubs.
1966 Boog Powell of the Baltimore Orioles
knocked in 11 runs in a doubleheader against the
Kansas City As totieanALrecord. Inthefirst game,
Powell hit two home runs, including a grand slam,
two doubles and a sacrifice fly to drive in seven runs
as the Orioles won11-0. Powell had four RBIs in the
nightcap.
1983 On the 50th anniversary of the All-Star
game, Fred Lynns grand slamoff Atlee Hammaker,
the first in All-Star competition, capped a record
seven-run third inning. The AL also set a one-game
recordfor runs scoredina13-3victory that endedan
11-game NL winning streak. Chicagos Comiskey
Park was thesite, as it was for thefirst All-Star game
in 1933.
2000 Keith McDonald of the St. Louis Cardinals
became the second player in major league history
to homer in his first two at-bats, connecting in the
second inning of a 12-6 loss to Cincinnati.
2005 Florida pitchers retired 28 consecutive bat-
ters from the third inning on and set a team record
with 22 strikeouts in a 12-inning, 5-4 victory over
Milwaukee. A.J. Burnett matched his career high
and the individual club record with 14 strikeouts in
six innings.
2007 Justin Morneau homered three times in the
second game of a doubleheader to help Minnesota
sweep Chicago 20-14 and12-0. The Twins won the
opener behind Jason Kubels seven RBIs.
2009 Chase Utley hit a three-run homer and
Shane Victorino and Greg Dobbs each had two-run
shots during a 10-run first inning, helping the Phila-
delphia Phillies rout the Cincinnati Reds 22-1.
WILKES-BARRE Joe DeLuc-
ca pitched a complete-game
shutout, giving up one hit as
Pittston Township defeated
North Wilkes-Barre 2-0 Tuesday
in a District 16 Little League
major baseball elimination game.
DeLucca also scored the game-
winning run on an inside-the-
park home run. He struck out 14
and gave up an infield single to
Steve Dressler in the third inning.
Jo Jo Carchilla had a hit and
scored the other run for Town-
ship.
Rob McClay, Eric Christian
and Chase Nowak pitched strong-
ly for North Wilkes-Barre.
Jenkins Township14,
Avoca/Dupont13
Steve Shamnoski hit a game-
winning home run in the bottom
of the seventh inning to propel
Jenkins Township to a win over
Avoca/Dupont.
Nick Allardyce added a three
hits and a two-run home run for
the victors, while Ryan Zelonis
added three hits and winning
pitcher Zach Mlodzienski
chipped in with two hits.
Aidan Jopling, Anthony Zim-
merman and Chris Merithewall
went deep for Avoca/Dupont.
DISTRICT31
MAJORBASEBALL
Kingston/FortyFort10, Exeter 2
Sean Judge went 3-for-3 with a
solo home run and David McCue
went 3-for-3 with a double and
only gave up one run in four
innings of pitching. Matt Evans
also went 3-for-3, including a
triple, for Kingston/Forty Fort.
Steve Homza had a single and
scored and starting pitcher Matt
Wright had two hits, including a
double, and also scored for Exe-
ter.
Wyoming/West Wyoming18,
West Side15
Matt Slinskie doubled twice
and homered for Wyoming/West
Wyoming. Cole Keating, Aaron
Lee and Blaise Erzar each sup-
plied a single.
Brandon Charney was the
winning pitcher and also dou-
bled.
DISTRICT16
MINORBASEBALL
Hanover13, Jenkins Twp. 3
Collin Cook was 3-for-3 and
scored three runs to pace Hanov-
er in a four-inning win. Brett
Stevens was 2-for-2 with three
runs scored, Jeremy Callahan had
two hits and scored three runs,
and Aaron Hummer had two hits.
TomMercadante was the win-
ning pitcher, striking out four.
Joe Stella paced Jenkins Town-
ship with two hits, while Santo
Insalaco had a single.
DISTRICT16
JUNIORBASEBALL
Plains 5,
Duryea/Pittston Township 2
R.J. Kenzakoski and Mike
Wozniak combined on a three-
hitter for Plains. Josh Gartley
produced a double and a triple.
Plains David Staskiel recorded
an outfield assist with the bases
loaded.
For Duryea/Pittston Town-
ship, Peter Kulick had two hits.
Kulick and Justin Renfer each
doubled.
SWB/Mayflower10,
Avoca/Pittston-1 4
Keith Ostrowski pitched the
complete game for South Wilkes-
Barre/Mayflower and went 3-
for-4 at the plate.
Jason Hoggarth went 3-for-4 at
the plate with two triples and a
single, driving in three runs. Ryan
Wasley, Paul Sromovski and
AdamCasey also drove in runs
for the winning team.
Bernie Kurtinitis led the of-
fense for Avoca/Pittston-1, going
3-for-3 with two doubles and a
single. Bobby Joyce also doubled
and singled, driving in two runs.
Nick Solfanelli added two singles.
DISTRICT31
JUNIORBASEBALL
West Side 9, Back Mountain 3
Brady Davidson struck out five
in five innings of work and Jamie
Lapivus drove in four runs for
West Side in a win over Back
Mountain. Larry Anderscavage
threwout two runners fromhis
catcher position for the winners.
Back Mountains Jonathan
Wilson went 2-for-4 and scored a
run.
Greater Wyoming Area 8,
Swoyersville1
Jeremy Zezza notched a win
for Greater Wyoming Area. Zez-
za, Zach Lopatka, Cory Lescav-
age and Tyler Mitchell each
contributed two hits. Mitchell
also launched a three-run home
run.
Swoyersvilles Scott Worlinski
had two hits.
Northwest 8,
Kingston/FortyFort 7
Tyler Long and Eric Gurzynski
combined on the mound for 11
strikeouts for Northwest.
Zach Bucher led the Northwest
at the plate with three hits. Tyler
Kolb, Gray Godfrey and Tyler
Harry had two hits each.
Scott Roper had three hits and
three RBI for KFF.
Mitch Pisarz added a double
and two RBI.
DISTRICT16
10-11 BASEBALL
Duryea 7, S. Wilkes-Barre 6
Hunter Ralston struck out
seven for Duryea in a win over
South Wilkes-Barre. Nick Maglio
picked up two hits and two RBI
for the winners.
Willie Wallace struck out three
for South Wilkes-Barre, while
Jesse Tomolonis added a double.
DISTRICT31
10-11 BASEBALL
Back Mountain American13,
West Side 0
Josh Holdredge went 3-for-3
with a home run and four RBI for
Back Mountain American in a
four-inning win.
J.D. Barrett struck out nine and
drove in two runs, AndrewKoval-
ick doubled and Chris Hardsall
went 4-for-4.
NORMANABRECHT
MEMORIAL
8-9BASEBALL
Mountain Top Red11,
Hanover 8
StewCaladie and Michael
McDonald produced three hits
for Mountain Top Red. Wyatt
Malia tallied a single.
Justin Stefanowicz and Tony
Metric supplied a hit for Hanover.
Plains10,
Mountain Top Gold 9
Plains scored seven runs in the
top of the sixth inning to defeat
Mountain Top Gold. John Bush,
Ryan Gardjulis, Ethan Cegalka,
Jaeden Davis and Ian Gartley all
drove in runs in the sixth inning
for the winners.
Josh Van Gordon had three hits
for Mountain Top Gold.
L I TTL E L EAGUE BASEBAL L
Pittston Township posts victory
BILL TARUTIS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
S.JOHN WILKIN/THE TIMES LEADER
Exeters Steve
Homza waits for
the throw to sec-
ond as Kingston/
Forty Forts Julien
Simons takes the
base in Exeter on
Tuesday evening in
District 31 Little
League action.
The Times Leader staff
North Wilkes-Barre third baseman Chase Nowak, left, looks to throw to shortstop Eric Christian as
Pittston Townships Joe Carchilla arrives at second base in District 16 Little League action in
Wilkes-Barre on Tuesday evening.
C M Y K
PAGE 4B WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
Click: North Wilkes-Barre vs. Pittston Township Little League
BILL TARUTIS PHOTOS/FOR THE TIMES LEADER
Greg Hunter, left, Bryan Giambra, Emma Hunter, and Maureen
Hunter, all of Pittston Township.
Conrad Hochreiter, 3, left, and his momHolly, both of Pittston
Township.
Yvonne Corcoran, left, Lisa Martin, and Missy Steligo, all of
Wilkes-Barre.
NANTICOKE Cody Tsev-
dos two-run double with the
bases loaded in the bottom of
the seventh gave Nanticoke an
8-7 victory over Old Forge.
Joey Yudichak added two hits
for the winners while Dominick
Policare drove in two runs.
Old Forge Nanticoke
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Preston, rf 4 1 0 0 Tsevdos, rf 3 1 3 2
Loftus, c 3 0 0 0 Yudichak, c 4 1 3 1
Fultz, ss 4 1 2 1 Ioanna, ss/p 3 1 1 1
Avisato, 1b 3 1 1 0 Hauer, cf 4 1 0 1
Drasba, lf/p 4 0 0 0 Polcr, 3b/2b 2 1 1 2
Fletcher, p/rf 0 0 0 0 Lukszwsk, lf 4 1 2 0
Pernot, dh 2 2 0 1 Ivan, 1b 3 1 0 0
Parcinski, 2b 3 1 1 2 Decker, p 2 0 0 0
Nemetz, lf/cf 4 1 1 2 Pasetti, 3b 2 0 0 0
Swantek, 3b 3 0 2 1 Zwibl, 2b/ss 3 1 1 1
Totals 30 7 7 7 Totals 30 811 8
Old Forge................................. 002 100 4 7
Nanticoke................................. 202 001 3 8
2B Tsevdos 2
IP H R ER BB SO
Old Forge
Fletcher ..................... 6.1 12 7 7 2 8
Drasba....................... .2 1 1 1 1 1
Nanticoke
Decker ....................... 3 5 4 3 4 1
Ioanna........................ 4 2 3 3 2 2
Greater Pitt. 8, Mtn. Post 2
Anthony Bellino knocked in
three runs with a double and
struck out four while pitching
three scoreless innings to lead
Greater Pittston past Mountain
Post.
Sam Eramo and Chris Mur-
phy both picked up three hits
for the winners.
Greater Pittston Mountain Post
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Carey, 3b 4 0 0 1 Lamore, ss 4 0 1 1
Ryan, cf 3 2 2 0 Quintiln, 2b 3 0 1 0
Murphy, ss 4 2 3 0 Sweeney, p 2 0 0 0
Nowicki, 1b 3 0 0 1 Chupka, ph 2 0 0 0
Grevis, c 4 0 0 0 Brynok, 1b 3 0 0 0
Eramo, dh 3 2 3 1 Ritz, cf 2 1 1 1
Bellino, p 1 0 1 3 Humnck, lf 2 0 0 0
Bone, lf 3 0 0 1 Miale, p 1 0 0 0
DeBona, rf 3 1 0 0 Berg, c 1 0 1 0
McDermtt, 2b 3 1 0 1 Rinehmr, ph 0 1 0 0
Petrchk, 3b 3 0 0 0
Piavis, rf 1 0 0 0
Williams, ph 0 0 0 0
Totals 31 8 9 8 Totals 24 2 4 2
Greater Pittston....................... 121 010 3 8
Mountain Post ......................... 000 000 2 2
2B GP: Bellino
IP H R ER BB SO
Greater Pittston
Harris......................... 3 2 0 0 0 3
Bellino........................ 3 0 0 0 1 4
Nowicki ...................... 1 2 2 2 3 2
Mountain Post
Sweeney................... 3 5 4 4 2 0
Miale .......................... 4 6 4 4 1 5
Hazleton 8,
Tunkhannock 5
Luke Stawick and Kyle Klein
supplied three hits each for
Hazleton in a victory over Tunk-
hannock. Stawick scored three
times, and Klein had two RBI.
Tunkhannocks Stephen Ash
produced two hits, and Austin
Cline manufactured two RBI.
Tunkhannock Hazleton
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Zaner ss 4 1 0 0 Stawick 3b 4 3 3 0
Sherry lf 3 1 0 0 Klein 2b 4 1 3 2
TWeiss p 4 0 1 0 Barletta cf 4 0 1 1
Cline rf 4 0 1 2 Benyo ss 2 1 0 0
Ash c 4 1 2 0 Bayzick p 4 1 2 1
Bernoski 2b 2 0 0 0 Gimbi rf 3 0 0 0
Bednard 3b 3 0 0 1 Chirico 1b 2 0 0 1
Spencer 1b 2 1 1 0 Sullivan 1b 2 1 2 0
Holton 1b 1 0 0 0 Seach lf 1 0 0 0
Rweiss cf 1 1 0 0 Seigendall lf 1 0 0 0
Gawel c 4 1 1 0
Totals 28 5 5 3 Totals 32 812 5
Tunkhannock .......................... 011 021 0 5
Hazleton................................... 202 130 X 8
IP H R ER BB SO
Tunkhannock
TWeiss (L) ................ 4 7 5 2 2 3
Cline........................... 2 0 3 2 0 1
Hazleton
Baszick (W)............... 6 6 5 3 3 4
Barletta (S)................ 1 0 0 0 0 0
Back Mountain 7,
Wilkes-Barre 6
Stephen Ruch hit a sacrifice
fly that scored the winning run
in the top of the sixth inning to
lead Back Mountain to a victory
over Wilkes-Barre in a game
held at Roosevelt Field in
Swoyersville.
Robert Saba doubled and
scored the go-ahead run. Paul
Narcum and Joel Peterlin had
2-for-3 performances at the
plate.
Back Mountain Wilkes-Barre
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Malloy cf 3 0 0 0 DiMagg 2b 4 0 1 0
Everett 3b 3 1 0 0 ODonnell cf 3 2 0 1
Saba 3b 1 0 0 0 Mathers ss 4 2 2 4
Ruch p 2 1 0 1 DiMarco 3b 3 0 0 0
Noryalis 1b 4 2 1 1 Reilly lf 3 1 0 0
Narcum c 3 1 2 1 Gushns 1b 3 0 1 0
Ritsick lf 2 1 1 2 DiMarco c 3 1 0 0
Wasylk lf 2 0 0 0 Kendra rf 2 1 0 0
Peterok 2b 3 1 0 0 Dubil p 3 1 1 0
Condo ss 3 0 0 0
Peterlin rf 3 0 2 1
Totals 29 7 8 6 Totals 28 6 6 5
Back Mountain......................... 204 000 1 7
Wilkes-Barre............................ 002 040 0 6
2B Saba, Noryalis, Mathers; 3B Narcum; HR
Mathers
IP H R ER BB SO
Back Mountain
Ruch (W)................... 6 6 6 5 1 2
Condo (S) ................. 1 0 0 0 0 2
Wilkes-Barre
Dubil (L)..................... 7 8 7 5 3 3
A M E R I C A N L E G I O N
Nanticoke rallies
past Old Forge
The Times Leader staff
Lauren Cawley struck out 15
in six innings and also picked
up two hits as Duryea/Pittston
Township defeated Mountain
Top 8-4 Tuesday to win the
District 16 Little League minor
softball tournament.
Jenna Smith had three hits,
Jeli Singer had two hits and
scored twice and Julia Pliska
added and RBI double for DPT,
which will host the Section 5
tournament starting July 12.
DPT will play District 32 cham-
pion Wallenpaupack in its open-
er at 7:30 p.m.
Mountain Tops Hanna Kehl
had two hits while Sara Sobo-
lewski scored twice.
SECTION 5
MAJOR SOFTBALL
North Pocono 7,
Kingston/Forty Fort 6
North Pocono scored the
winning run in the bottom of
the sixth inning to take down
Kingston/Forty Fort in the first
round of the Section 5 tourna-
ment.
KFF was led by Gia Dutter,
who went 3-for-3 with a double.
Brittany Hebda tripled.
Chloe Ruckle and Melinda
Holena pitched for KFF, which
will play an elimination game at
7:30 p.m. today at the Nanti-
coke Little League field.
Mariah Casey had three hits
and a double for North Pocono.
Chloe Pehanick recorded two
hits and a double.
DISTRICT 16
SENIOR SOFTBALL
Plains 15, Nanticoke 0
Abby Staskeil threw a two-
hitter, striking out four in
Plains shutout win.
Staskeil led the way at the
plate, going 3-for-4 with a dou-
ble. Serra Degnan (2-for-3,
double), Marissa Ross (2-for-4,
double) and Katie Colleran
(2-for-2) also came through for
Plains.
Jess Sedorchick and Jackie
Potoski had the hits for Nanti-
coke.
DISTRICT 31
MINOR SOFTBALL
Bob Horlacher 7,
Harveys Lake 5
Hope Jones, Mia Dixon and
Sarah Kuderka led Bob Horlach-
er at the plate, while Delaney
Romanchick and Jones handled
the pitching duties.
Corinna Scoblick, Abbie
Hogan and Jade Fry led Har-
veys Lake.
Duryea/Pittston Township captures D16 minor softball title
The Times Leader staff
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 PAGE 5B
S P O R T S
100
ANNOUNCEMENTS
110 Lost
LOST/STOLEN: 87
Comanche Jeep,
White. Last seen
State St & Nesbitt,
Larksville. Saturday,
7/2, early morning
hours. If seen call
(570) 779-2049
Line up a place to live
in classified!
340 Health Care
Services
Elderly Home Health Care
In Wilkes-Barre/
Kingston. Flexible
Hours. Alzheimer
patient specialty.
Cooking, cleaning &
companionship.
570-606-6551
Leave a message
412 Autos for Sale
BMW `99 M3
Convertible with
Hard Top. AM/FM. 6
disc CD. 117 K miles.
Stage 2 Dinan sus-
pension. Cross
drilled rotors. Cold
air intake. All main-
tenance records
available. $16,695
570-466-2630
MAZDA 2 `11
Low mileage, 197
miles. Selling due to
death in family. Lime
green. Loaded.
$15,500. Call
570-788-4354
412 Autos for Sale
CHEVROLET `00
CORVETTE
V-8. 5.7 liter.
345 Horse Power.
Automatic.
56,000 miles.
Pewter metallic.
Hatch Back.
Glass top.
Air conditioning.
Leather interior.
Power seat,
locks & windows.
Bose AM/FM
stereo.
Cassette/CD Player.
Very good to excel-
lent condition.
$19,700
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY
(570) 696-0424
506 Administrative/
Clerical
CLERICAL
Part time. Weekends
a must. Back-
ground check
required.
Call 570-822-8870.
LINEUP
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527 Food Services/
Hospitality
SERVERS
AM-PM Shifts
Full/Part Time
Red Rooster
Restaurant
Rte. 118 & 29
Sweet Valley
542 Logistics/
Transportation
DRIVERS
Class A CDL drivers
needed. Two posi-
tions available. Must
have clean MVR;
doubles endorse-
ment. Home every
day, off weekends.
Full time local work.
Call Todd
570-991-0316
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in classified
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548 Medical/Health
RESIDENTIAL
Full Time/Part Time
shift positions
available for serving
female youth in
24 hour/7 day a
week residential
treatment facility.
Experience with
youth MH/MR popu-
lation is a plus.
BS in social work or
related field is
preferred. Excellent
compensation,
benefits, salary.
Fax resume to:
570-825-4746 or
e-mail: mbyrne@
voapa.org or
soconnor@
voapa.org
EOE
566 Sales/Retail/
Business
Development
ASSISTANT MANAGER
Full time for beer
distributor. Respon-
sible, self-motivat-
ed, at least 21 with
valid drivers
license. Lift 1/2 keg,
and alternate Satur-
days & Sundays.
$10/hour.
Call 779-2870
700
MERCHANDISE
744 Furniture &
Accessories
FURNITURE FOR SALE
1 sofa, 1 love seat,
1 matching chair,
2 bedroom suites,
1 old cedar chest,
1 cedar closet, 2
rocking chairs, end
tables, lamps & mis-
cellaneous items.
Call for details.
570-829-0196
FORTY FORT
1056 Murray Street
Saturday July 9
8am-3pm
DVD, electronics,
household items,
tools, much more.
LINE UP
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94 Butler St.
Saturday July 9
8am to 3 pm
Christmas light,
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800
PETS & ANIMALS
815 Dogs
PITT BULL PUPPIES
Born May 10, 2011
6 males, 3 females.
Brown & white;
gray & white; tan &
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900
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
906 Homes for Sale
PLAINS
Rear 1194 N. Main St
1/2 double, 6 rooms
(3 bedrooms), gas
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Clean, good condi-
tion, move right in.
MLS 11-2289
Asking $29,900
JANE KOPP
REAL ESTATE
570-288-7481
906 Homes for Sale
WILKES-BARRE
PARSONS
262 Stucker Ave
7 room, 3 bedroom,
1 1/2 bath with office.
Lower Level family
room and attached 1
car garage. Also
includes separate
60x80 ft. lot known
as 10 Virginia Dr.
Office could be 3rd
bedroom. 10-2472
JANE KOPP
REAL ESTATE
570-288-7481
To place your
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941 Apartments/
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HARVEYS LAKE
2nd floor, 1 bed-
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PITTSTON
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West River Street
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941 Apartments/
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WYOMING
1st floor, 2 bedroom.
Large living room.
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drowning. Walton said hes
concerned that the rape alle-
gation would be extremely
prejudicial, but Clemens at-
torneys say it shows why
McNamee would have a mo-
tive to fabricate evidence
that he injected their client
with illegal drugs.
The investigation oc-
curredin2001, thesameyear
that Clemens helped lead
the Yankees to a World Se-
ries championship and that
McNameesays hedecidedto
save needles and gauze that
he used to inject the star
pitcher.
McNamees Yankee con-
tract was not renewed after
the Florida investigation.
Clemens attorney Rusty
Hardin said those events in
2001prompted McNamee to
begin fabricating evidence
against Clemens to protect
himself financially. Clemens,
however, hired McNamee as
a personal trainer for several
years, but Hardinhas saidhis
client didnt then know the
full extent of what happened
in Florida. Hardin also re-
ferred Tuesday to another
daterapeincident inSeattle
involving McNamee but
didnt fullyexplainwhat hap-
pened.
Walton said he would re-
serve a final decision on
whether to allowthe rape al-
legations to be mentioned
until the trial is under way.
Clemens listened closely
but didnt speak at the hear-
ing. He appeared toned-
down in a dark suit and pale
blue shirt with matching tie
gone were the blondhigh-
lights and flashy pinstripe
suit with silver tie from his
last appearance. He walked
so quickly out of the cour-
thouse, surrounded by news
media, that Hardin called
out from several yards be-
hind, Rog, wait up!
Walton also is waiting to
decide whether former Yan-
kees Andy Pettitte, Chuck
Knoblauch and Mike Stan-
ton can testify that they got
performance-enhancing
drugs from McNamee. Wal-
ton said his tentative ruling
is not to allow it because it
will lead jurors to infer im-
properly that Clemens must
have been getting illegal
drugs if his teammates were,
but he said hell see if some-
thing changes his mind dur-
ing the trial.
Walton said it would be
extraordinary to allow
such testimony and men-
tioned that he got cortisone
shots from a trainer as a col-
lege football player. I would
not want to be held respon-
sible for doing something in-
appropriate based on what
that trainer was giving to
other people, Walton said.
Assistant U.S. Attorney
Steven Durham argued that
the other players testimony
will corroborate McNamees
credibility, whichis under at-
tack by the defense, because
it will prove the trainer had
knowledge and ability to
give drugs to Clemens. He
said he expects the defense
will argue that Clemens
thought McNamee was get-
ting vitamin shots from his
trainer, but the teammates
will testify there was no
misadvertising.
The hearing also raised an
issue that Walton worried
could postpone the trial. At-
torneys revealed that the
U.S. House has refused to
turnover audiotapeof Clem-
ens depositionby the House
Government Reform Com-
mittee staff Feb. 5, 2008.
Clemens is accused of ly-
ing while under oath during
that deposition and during
testimonyat apublichearing
eight days later when he de-
nied ever using steroids or
human growth hormone.
Bothprosecutors andthe de-
fenseexpressedconcernthat
jurors will not be able to
judge fully from a transcript
whether Clemens was inten-
tionally lying.
Walton complained that
the issue wasnt raised earli-
er.
TRIAL
Continued from Page 1B
Valley), Gordon said. I tried
treatingthemlike any other team
I face this year. It was just pretty
ironic the way the matchup end-
ed up.
Gordon, who was pitching for
the first time in12days, was lifted
after throwing 72 pitches 50 for
strikes with a 2-0 lead.
But Brandon Moss tied the
game 2-2 in the top of the sixth
with his14th long ball of the year,
a two-run shot off the batters eye
in center field against Yankee re-
liever Josh Schmidt.
The biggest blow came off the
bat of Delwyn Young in the
eighth. With the score still even,
Young belted a three-run homer
to left that cleared the billboards
for his eighth shot of the year as
Lehigh Valley went up 5-2.
Theyre a great hitting team,
Gordon said about the IronPigs.
I just tried to keep it simple out
there.
SWB took a 1-0 advantage in
thebottomof thesecondonBran-
don Lairds ninth home run of the
year, a shot in between the PNC
Bankscoreboardandthe left field
wall.
Greg Golson, who had a three-
hit game, contributed with a RBI
triple in the gap in right-center to
score Doug Bernier in the fifth to
put the Yankees up 2-0.
The Yankees didnt have many
other scoring opportunities in
the game, only stranding eight
runners on base and only getting
three chances with runners in
scoring position before the ninth.
But they missed a chance in the
fifth when Golson was caught
stealingonanattemptedsqueeze
play after Austin Krum missed
the pitch.
The only other true opportuni-
ty SWB had arose in the bottom
of the ninth when it had runners
on first and third with one out,
but Doug Bernier struck out and
Golson grounded out to end the
game.
We were just trying to get the
third run across and we just
couldnt execute, Yankees man-
ager Dave Miley said about the
attempted squeeze play.
Notes: Gordon was 5-0 with a
1.14 ERAin12 appearances (nine
starts) with Lehigh Valley earlier
this season before signing with
the Yankees. Gordon is the
third former Phillies farmhand to
play for SWB this season. Golson
and Terry Tiffee were also in the
Philadelphia organization at one
time. Yankees all-star closer
Kevin Whelan, who is currently
on the disabled list, was replaced
onthe International Leagues ros-
ter for next weeks game in Salt
Lake City. The time of Tues-
days game was 2 hours, 51 min-
utes with a paid attendance of
3,842.
HOW THEY SCORED
YANKEES SECOND: Jorge Vazquez grounded
out. Brandon Laird homered. Gustavo Molina
grounded out. Luis Nunez doubled. Doug Bernier
flied out. YANKEES 1-0
YANKEES FIFTH: Luis Nunez grounded out.
Doug Bernier singled. Greg Golson tripled to score
Bernier. Golson caught stealing. Austin Krumstruck
out. YANKEES 2-0
IRONPIGS SIXTH: Rich Thompson grounded
out. Pete Orr reached safely on an error. Brandon
Moss hit a two-run home run. Jeff Larish struck out.
Delwyn Young fouled out. TIED 2-2
IRONPIGS EIGHTH: Pete Orr singled. Brandon
Moss walked. Jeff Larishpoppedout. DelwynYoung
hit a three-run home run. Josh Barfield struck out.
Cody Overbeck grounded out. IRONPIGS 5-2
DON CAREY/THE TIMES LEADER
Yankees third baseman Brandon Laird gets a low five from on deck batter Gustavo Molina, No. 48, after he hit a home run in the bot-
tom of the second inning of a game with Lehigh Valley Tuesday.
YANKEES
Continued from Page 1B
MILWAUKEE Milwaukee
Brewers slugger Prince Fielder
selected teammate Rickie
Weeks, Los Angeles Matt Kemp
and St. Louis Matt Holliday to
represent the National League
in Monday nights Home Run
Derby.
It was very tough, I wanted
everybody to be init. I definitely
wanted someone from the Dia-
mondbacks to be in it, but these
guys, I know these guys really
well, and these are my picks, no
hard feelings, Fielder said
Tuesday.
Arizona hosts the All-Star
game onTuesday andDiamond-
backs right fielder Justin Upton
had said he was interested in
representing the NL.
I wishI couldinviteeveryone
I knew. That was the only part
that was a little tough, trying to
narrow it down, Fielder said.
Kempcame intoplay onTues-
day with an NL-best 22 home
runs. Fielder has 21, Weeks has
15 and Holliday has the fewest
with 10, but has hit in the con-
test two previous times. Weeks
said hes not concerned about
messing up his swing by trying
to hit home runs because they
try to outhit each other in bat-
ting practice.
We mess around with it all
the time in BP, Weeks said. Its
one of those things where if
youre confident in yourself and
your swing; some people have
different swings, of course, and
they might have to create more
lift or something like that. May-
be that might mess them up,
possibly. Some people have long
homers and some people have
hard homers you just want to
stay with what got you here and
go hard and have fun, really.
Brewers manager Ron Roen-
icke said hes already talked to
Weeks about not altering his
swing and said hes comfortable
withtwoof his best hitters being
part of the festivities.
Rickie said hes going to be
fine, Roenicke said. I think he
can turn it on and off when he
wants to.
Fielder says hell use Triple-A
hitting coachSandy Guerrero as
his pitcher in the derby, the
same person who threw to him
when he won the contest in
2009. Weeks said he wasnt sure
who hed pick, either Guerrero
or Brewers hitting coach Dale
Sveum. Fielder did have a little
advice for his teammate on pre-
paring for the contest.
The new format this year pits
the NL against the AL for char-
ity, and the American League
hitters include 2010 derby
champ David Ortiz of the Red
Sox along with his teammate
Adrian Gonzalez, Robinson Ca-
no of NewYork and Jose Bautis-
ta of Toronto. Bautista leads the
majors with 27 homers.
M A J O R L E A G U E B A S E B A L L
Fielder makes picks
for Home Run Derby
By COLIN FLY
AP Sports Writer
Alexis Lewis scored 19 points
to lead the Rock Solid girls bas-
ketball team to a 54-44 victory
over the Tennessee Lady Vipers
in the AAU Eighth Grade Na-
tional Championships at the
ESPN Wide World of Sports
Complex in Orlando, Fla., on
Tuesday.
Allie Barber and Alana Wat-
son each chipped in with nine
points for the Trucksville-based,
which is currently in the Classic
bracket of the 48-team tourna-
ment.
YO U T H B A S K E T B A L L
Lewis leads Rock Solid girls to victory
The Times Leader staff
Lehigh Valley 5, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 2
Lehigh Valley Scranton/WB
ab r h bi ab r h bi
Thompson, cf 5 0 1 0 Golsom, cf 5 0 3 1
Orr, 3b 5 2 2 0 Krum, lf 4 0 0 0
Moss, lf 4 2 2 2 Parraz, rf 4 0 1 0
Larish, dh 4 0 0 0 Tiffee, dh 4 0 0 0
Young, rf 4 1 2 3 Vazquz, 1b 4 0 0 0
Barfield, 2b 4 0 0 0 Laird, 3b 4 1 1 1
Overbeck, 1b 3 0 0 0 Molina, c 4 0 1 0
Kratz, c 4 0 2 0 Nunez, 2b 4 0 3 0
Bocock, ss 4 0 2 0 Bernier, ss 4 1 1 0
Totals 37 511 5 Totals 37 210 2
Lehigh Valley..................... 000 002 030 5
Scranton/WB..................... 010 010 000 2
2B SWB: Nunez (5), Molina (3); 3B SWB: GOl-
son (5) HR LV: Moss (14), Young (8); SWB: Laird
(9).
IP H R ER BB SO
Lehigh Valley
Brummett ................. 5.2 7 2 2 0 5
De Fratus (W, 2-0) .. 2.1 1 0 0 0 5
Schwimer (S, 6) ...... 1 2 0 0 0 2
Scranton/WB
Gordon ..................... 5 4 0 0 0 7
Schmidt (BS, 1)....... 2 3 2 1 1 1
Flores (L, 0-1).......... 2 4 3 3 1 1
I tried treating them
like any other team I
face this year.
Yankees pitcher Brian Gordon
On facing his old team
C M Y K
PAGE 6B WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
S P O R T S
NEW YORK Roger Goodell
and DeMaurice Smith have tak-
en a back seat to lawyers and pa-
perwork for two days.
Attorneys for the NFL and the
players association are sorting
out contract language and details
that could speed the process in
reaching a new labor deal.
The owners will not open the
doors without a signed docu-
ment in place, a person with
knowledge of the talks told The
Associated Press on Tuesday.
So this paperwork is important
to get done on Tuesday and to-
day.
The person spoke on condition
of anonymity because a judge
has directed that details of the
court-ordered mediated negotia-
tions not be disclosed.
The 1993 collective bargaining
agreement was slowed by the
volume of paperwork.
Commissioner Goodell and
NFLPA chief Smith were not at
Tuesdays meeting at a Manhat-
tan law firms headquarters. On
Thursday, Goodell and Smith
will resume their discussion,
with owners and players present.
Those talks could last into the
weekend if a new CBA appears
imminent, the person with
knowledge of the talks said. The
sides did not get together on
weekends during negotiations
over the last month.
Time is gradually becoming a
factor in the discussions. Train-
ing camps for the Rams and
Bears are scheduled to open in
less than three weeks, and those
teams are scheduled to play in
the Hall of Fame game on Aug. 7.
The rest of the training camps
would open about a week later,
with a full slate of preseason
games set for the second week-
end in August.
Talks hit a snag last week until
U.S. Magistrate Judge Arthur
Boylan, the court-appointed
mediator, stepped in and got
both sides back on track, the
person said. After some prob-
lems last Thursday in Minneapo-
lis, a two-hour session on Friday
was productive.
A group of retired players filed
a class-action complaint against
the owners and current players
in federal court Monday, saying
they have been excluded from
the mediation sessions taking
place in an attempt to end the
lockout. A federal court hearing
on the retired players case has
been set for Aug. 8 in Minnesota.
Altogether 38 people, includ-
ing 24 former players, were listed
on the complaint, including Hall
of Famers Franco Harris, Marcus
Allen, Carl Eller, Mike Haynes,
Ron Mix, Paul Krause, Lem Bar-
ney, Elvin Bethea and Joe DeLa-
mielleure.
The retired players were not
originally part of the litigation
that began after labor talks broke
down on March 11, when the
players decertified their union
and brought an antitrust lawsuit
against the league. Hours later,
on March 12, the NFL locked out
the players.
DeLamielleure said his group
should be part of the process, not
excluded from it.
The union is saying, DeMaur-
ice Smith is saying, We are one
team. Well, they gave us a seat
but no chair, DeLamielleure
said. We really have no say-so.
Guess what: Those two guys
are negotiating, the league and
the union, without us again.
Jeff Nixon, another of the
plaintiffs, said the retired players
are asking both sides to set aside
for them an additional 1.5 per-
cent of league revenues $9.3
billion last year. The NFLand the
players had no comment Tues-
day on the retirees complaint.
N F L
The ball is now in the hands of the attorneys
Lawyers sifting through
contract language in hopes of
expediting a settlement.
By BARRY WILNER
AP Pro Football Writer
MUR-DE-BRETAGNE,
France Make no mistake, Al-
berto Contador is back on the
prowl.
After a dismal start to the
Tour de France, the three-time
champion showed some of his
old dominance Tuesday at cy-
clings premier event. He
gained seconds on his likely ri-
vals by placing second to Stage
4 winner Cadel Evans in a two-
man photo finish.
Norways Thor Hushovd, a
sprint specialist, barely kept the
yellowjersey in the107-mile leg
from Lorient to Mur-de-Bre-
tagne. He even surprised him-
self by keeping up with Evans
and Contador on a steep, if
short, climb to the finish.
The stage in mostly flat Brit-
tany underscored two aspects
of the three-week race so far:
Evans has been nearly flawless;
Contador can never be ruled
out.
The finish was so close that
Contador raised a fist to cele-
brate what he believed was his
victory. Then a black-and-white
photo showed the Spaniards
tire was a fraction of an inch be-
hind.
Contador again proving
himself. He was up there and
riding well, Evans said. Hes
never a guy you can underesti-
mate.
I still cant quite believe it. ...
It was a very close final. I didnt
even know if I had it on the line
myself, Evans added. To win
in front of Alberto Contador is
really a nice present.
Contador showed that even
on a short climb long before
the punishing Alps and Pyre-
nees ascents arrive he can
gain on key riders: Bradley Wig-
gins of Britain was six seconds
back; Andy Schleck of Luxem-
bourg, runner-up in 2009 and
2010, was eight seconds behind.
I never thought that he was
out of the race, Andy Schleck.
He just had bad luck the first
day and his team wasnt suited
for the time trial.
Hushovd, who is ahead of
Evans by a second, isnt expect-
ed to fare well in the mountain
stages that could determine the
winner.
My only goal today was to
keep the yellow jersey, said
Hushovd, of Garmin-Cervelo. I
had a great day. ... I will do all I
can to defend this jersey as long
as possible.
Wiggins is sixth overall, 10
seconds back, while Schleck is
ninth, 12 seconds back. Ameri-
cans Chris Horner and Levi Lei-
pheimer are 18 seconds behind
14th and 15th.
Contador remains 1:42 be-
hindHushovdin41st placeafter
two difficult opening days
stalledbya crashSaturday, then
losing time with his Saxo Bank
squad in the team time trial
Sunday.
By contrast, this has been a
nearly impeccable Tour for
Evans. He was runner-up to
stage winner Philippe Gilbert
on opening day, and his BMC
team was second in the team
time trial a day later. Unlike
Contador and Schleck, Evans
also has avoided crashes.
T O U R D E F R A N C E
AP PHOTOS
Stage winner Cadel Evans of Australia celebrates on the podium after the fourth stage of the
Tour de France, starting in Lorient and finishing in Mur de Bretagne, Brittany, western France,
on Tuesday.
Contador gains ground
Evans wins Stage 4
by nipping ex-champ
By JAMEY KEATEN
Associated Press
Stage winner Cadel Evans of
Australia, right, and three-
time Tour de France winner
Alberto Contador of Spain,
second right, and Philippe
Gilbert of Belgium, wearing
R E S U L T S
Tuesday
At Mur-de-Bretagne, France
Fourth Stage
A107.2-mile, mostly flat stage from
Lorient to Mur-de-Bretagne with a
1.2-mile finishing ascent
1. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC, 4 hours, 11
minutes, 39 seconds.
2. Alberto Contador, Spain, Saxo Bank Sun-
gard, same time.
3. Alexandre Vinokourov, Kazakhstan, Asta-
na, same time.
4. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Sky Procycling,
same time.
5. Philippe Gilbert, Belgium, Omega Pharma-
Lotto, same time.
6. Thor Hushovd, Norway, Garmin-Cervelo,
same time.
7. Frank Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-
Trek, same time.
8. Samuel Sanchez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euska-
di, same time.
9. Jurgen Van Den Broeck, Belgium, Omega
Pharma-Lotto, same time.
10. Andreas Kloeden, Germany, RadioSh-
ack, same time.
11. Bradley Wiggins, Britain, Sky Procycling,
6 seconds behind.
12. Jose Joaquin Rojas, Spain, Movistar,
same time.
13. Ivan Basso, Italy, Liquigas-Cannondale,
same time.
14. Damiano Cunego, Italy, Italy, Lampre-
ISD, :08.
15. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Asta-
na, same time.
16. Christopher Horner, United States, Ra-
dioShack, same time.
17. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Rabobank,
same time.
18. Dries Devenyns, Belgium, Quick Step,
same time.
19. Ryder Hesjedal, Canada, Garmin-Cerve-
lo, same time.
20. Levi Leipheimer, United States, RadioSh-
ack, same time.
Also
26. Tom Danielson, United States, Garmin-
Cervelo, same time.
31. Christian Vande Velde, United States,
Garmin-Cervelo, same time.
33. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, HTC-
Highroad, same time.
101. George Hincapie, United States, BMC,
2:06.
139. Danny Pate, United States, HTC-High-
road, 4:17.
158. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Cer-
velo, same time.
162. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC,
same time.
191. David Zabriskie, United States, Garmin-
Cervelo, 8:13.
Overall Standings
(After four stages)
1. Thor Hushovd, Norway, Garmin-Cervelo,
13 hours, 58 minutes, 25 seconds.
2. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC, 1second be-
hind.
3. Frank Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-
Trek, :04.
4. David Millar, Britain, Garmin-Cervelo, :08.
5. Andreas Kloeden, Germany, RadioShack,
:10.
6. Bradley Wiggins, Britain, Sky Procycling,
same time.
7. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky Procycling,
:12.
8. Edvald Boasson Hagen, Norway, Sky Pro-
cycling, same time.
9. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-
Trek, same time.
10. JakobFuglsang, Denmark, Leopard-Trek,
same time.
11. Tony Martin, Germany, HTC-Highroad,
:13.
12. Peter Velits, Slovakia, HTC-Highroad,
same time.
13. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, HTC-
Highroad, same time.
14. Christopher Horner, United States, Ra-
dioShack, :18.
15. Levi Leipheimer, United States, RadioSh-
ack, same time.
16. Janez Brajkovic, Slovenia, RadioShack,
same time.
17. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Rabobank,
:20.
18. Alexandre Vinokourov, Kazakhstan, Asta-
na, :32.
19. Philippe Gilbert, Belgium, Omega Phar-
ma-Lotto, :33.
20. JurgenVanDenBroeck, Belgium, Omega
Pharma-Lotto, :39.
Also
41. Alberto Contador, Spain, Saxo Bank Sun-
gard, 1:42.
45. Tom Danielson, United States, Garmin-
Cervelo, 1:57.
46. Christian Vande Velde, United States,
Garmin-Cervelo, same time.
50. George Hincapie, United States, BMC,
2:10.
120. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC,
6:48.
126. Danny Pate, United States, HTC-High-
road, 7:11.
167. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Cer-
velo, 10:43.
188. David Zabriskie, United States, Garmin-
Cervelo, 14:35.
fires to be put out, and she hap-
pened to be perfect person be-
cause she could lead us.
With a spot in the quarterfinals
already secured, the U.S. women
wrap up group play today against
Sundhages native Sweden at the
Womens World Cup.
Though Sundhage is non-
plussed at the prospect of facing
her home country (For me, its
not Sweden. Its just a team.) the
game will put the spotlight
squarely on the woman whose in-
telligence, confidence and un-
flinching optimism has trans-
formed a fractured team into
Olympic gold medalists and, just
maybe, WorldCupchampions for
a third time.
Everything that we hadhoped
for in making the decision to hire
her, shes livedupto, U.S. Soccer
president Sunil Gulati said.
Sundhage is considered one of
the greatest players the womens
game has ever had, scoring 71
goals in a 22-year international
career. She, not Mia Hamm or
Birgit Prinz or Marta, is still the
face of womens soccer in Swe-
den, which she led to the title at
the first European Womens
Championship in 1984 and the
bronze medal at the inaugural
Womens World Cup in 1991. She
remains so celebrated in Sweden
that her name was floated as a
possible coach of the mens team
after it failed to qualify for the
2010 World Cup.
She was consideredfor the U.S.
job when Ryan was hired in 2005,
but didnt have enough head
coaching experience. Though
Sundhage coached the Boston
Breakers in 2003 before the WU-
SA folded, most of her experi-
ence was with Swedens youth
teams.
When the Americans were in
the market for a coach again two
years later, Sundhages name
topped the list.
She still didnt have a lot of ex-
perience as a head coach at the
top level. But she obviously had a
great understanding of the
game, Gulati said. We asked
her if she couldnt be the head
coach of the womens national
teamif shedbe willingtotake an-
other role. She was quite firm in
her answer, which was no. That
both surprised and impressed
me, frankly. Because she hadnt
been a head coach at that level,
but was veryconfident inher abil-
ity and thought the time was
right for her.
Though Sundhage had told
Gulati she wanted to retool the
U.S. style, that would have to
wait. The Beijing Olympics were
just eight months away when she
was hiredinNovember 2007, and
the tournament is second only to
the World Cup in importance in
the womens game.
SOCCER
Continued from Page 1B
AUGSBURG, GermanyGer-
many and England proved that
timing is key at the womens
World Cup, winning matches
when it counts to top their re-
spective groups.
With its greatest player
benched because of poor form,
Germany didnt miss Birgit Prinz
a bit. Two first-half headers com-
pensated for some poor second-
half defending to give the hosts a
4-2 win over France to win Group
A. CeliaOkoyinodaMbabi sealed
the match with a fine volley late
in the game.
We showed class, Germany
coach Silvia Neid said. Now we
are really into this tournament.
The players showed what they
are made of.
So did the Englishwomen.
The team staved off the threat
of early elimination with a confi-
dence-boosting 2-0 win over Ja-
pan. The victory gave it the top
spot in Group B and produced a
stunning goal for the World Cup
highlights reel, a precise 21-yard
lob from Ellen White.
The results set up Germany
against Japan in Wolfsburg and
England against France in Lever-
kusen on Saturday. Groups Cand
D will be decided Wednesday,
withBrazil, Swedenandthe Unit-
ed States already through. The
Americans face the Swedes for
first place in Group C.
Also Tuesday, New Zealand
tied Mexico 2-2, and Nigeria beat
Canada 1-0.
The day had the first red card,
the first penalty kick, even the
first blackout. But more impor-
tantly, the biggest benching of
the tournament so far.
Prinz is the competitions all-
time leading scorer with14 goals
and was expected to score in her
fifth straight World Cup. After
Germanys best performance so
far, it was unclear whether
Prinzs sullen demeanor would
light up again for the next two
weeks.
After two one-goal wins, Ger-
many was second behind France
and badly needed a win, not only
to take the group, but also to give
the teamand a nation of fans con-
fidence again.
Four goals did so, even though
a weakness on corner kicks hurt
Germany.
Instead of Prinz, it was Inka
Grings who inspired the team
with two goals.
One came on a penalty kick af-
ter France goalkeeper Berangere
Sapowicz was sent off for swiping
Fatmire Bajramaj off her feet, the
first red card in10 days of compe-
tition.
The score of 3-1 and 11 against
10 should have had Germany
coasting. But France came back
on Laura Georges header and
even came close to equalizing be-
fore da Mbabi sent the 45,867
fans at the sold-out Borussia Park
celebrating into the night.
Now we want to build on
this, said da Mbabi.
England understands the surg-
ing feeling.
After a lackluster first two
games, England was spectacular
in its decisive match. After 15
minutes, Sophie Bradley sent a
deepball fromher half of the field
toward Ellen White, who spotted
goalkeeper Ayumi Kaihori off her
line. She let the ball bounce once
and lobbed it over Kaihori with
exquisite precisionfrom21yards.
W O M E N S W O R L D C U P
Key timing pays off
for Germany, England
By RAF CASERT
AP Sports Writer
NEWPORT, R.I. Top-seed-
ed John Isner and Nicolas Ma-
hut are forever linked with the
longest match in tennis history.
On Tuesday, they both wast-
ed little time in winning open-
ing-round matches at the Hall
of Fame Tennis Champion-
ships.
Isner, who entered the tour-
nament on a wild-card entry af-
ter No. 1 seed and defending
champion Mardy Fish with-
drew when he was selected for
the United States Davis Cup
team, needed just 63 minutes
to beat Karol Beck, 6-3, 6-2, in a
first-round match on center
court.
Mahut was even faster, beat-
ing Sebastian Decoud, 6-1, 6-0,
in just 51 minutes. Mahut
played his match on a side
court while Isner was also in ac-
tion.
Its something were not
used to, Isner said, breaking
into a smile. The points ac-
tually arent grinding like hard
court or clay. Its good to go out
there and get a real good sweat.
Any match thats this quick is
good, especially the first round.
Im just glad when I picked
my opponent at the draw party,
I didnt pick him, Isner said. I
would love to play him again
not in a first round.
Isner outlasted Mahut in 11
hours, 5 minutes last year at
Wimbledon.
Last month, the pair met
again, with Isner winning in
three sets in a match that lasted
about two hours.
If we play each (here) its in
the final, then wed both be hap-
py, Mahut said.
When asked if hes glad the
questions about their lengthy
meeting have started to fade,
he smiled and said, Yes. I
think John and I are both hap-
py.
After Fish withdrew, Isner
took over the tournaments No.
1 seed by virtue of his No. 46
overall ranking in the world,
which is the highest of any
competitor in Newport this
week.
A No. 1 has never won the ti-
tle in the 35 years of the tourna-
ment.
In other first-round play, wild
card Denis Kudla survived 24
aces against him to beat hard-
serving Ivo Karlovic, 7-6 (4),
4-6, 6-4; qualifier Jimmy Wang
upset third-seeded Igor Kunit-
syn, 4-6, 7-5, 6-2; No. 8 seed To-
bias Kamke beat Alex Bogda-
novic, 7-6 (3), 6-3; Edouard
Roger-Vasselin beat qualifier
Richard Bloomfield, 6-4, 6-0.
Matthew Ebden upset No. 4
seed Ryan Sweeting 6-4, 6-2;
Tommy Haas got past Michael
Berrer, 7-6 (9), 6-4; Amaud
Clement beat Ryan Harrison,
6-4, 6-1; and Michael Yani
downed Dudi Sela, 7-6 (5), 6-3.
T E N N I S
Linked duo
advance at
Newport
Isner, Mahut best known for
their marathon Wimbledon
match that lasted 11 hours.
The Associated Press
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 PAGE 7B
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Now Accepting
the DOEs investigation will be
felt at campuses such as Mar-
quette, whose athletic director
resigned last week after the Tri-
bunes report of a scandal related
to two sexual-assault allegations
against athletes.
Or maybe its still too idealistic
to think the accuser in a sexual
attack ever will receive her due
respect if the accused is an ath-
lete on a campus fueled by
sports.
If Notre Dames press release is
any indication, it could require
sweeping change at the top in
South Bend before anything truly
changes. According to Saturdays
story on the university website,
the DOErecognizes Notre
Dames wide array of effective
policies and procedures related
to sexual misconduct and calls
upon the university to make
several minor modifications to
those existing practices.
Effective policies? Minor mod-
ifications?
Among others, the spin annoy-
ed TomSeeberg, Lizzys father.
Their assault on the truth is
indefensible," said Seeberg, who
has yet to hear fromJenkins
since his daughters death.
Notre Dames lawyers have cut a
deal, signing the resolution with-
out an admission of failure in
policy and procedures. However,
implicit in the agreement with
the DOEis just such an admis-
sion. Lizzys case speaks with
quiet persistence fromevery cold
and lawyerly sentence of the
resolution. Notre Dame is now
legally obligated to clean up its
house.
It has become cluttered by
lapses in judgment.
Notre Dames clumsy handling
of the accident that killed student
videographer Declan Sullivan has
been well-documented. The
university paid a reduced $42,000
penalty Friday to the Indiana
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration and agreed to
launch educational initiatives on
the safe use of scissor lifts. But
IOSHAs investigation into that
tragedy revealed more questions
than answers about the discre-
tion of Kelly and athletic director
Jack Swarbrick.
More doubts arose last month
after Kelly cleared Michael Floyd
to resume voluntary teamwork-
outs, effectively ending the wide
receivers suspension. Floyd was
arrested in March after his third
alcohol-related issue in three
years. Yet Kelly has taken an odd
all-in or all-out approach with
Floyds eligibility based on him
meeting certain unspecified
conditions.
In opening the door, Kelly
basically is saying to Floyd:
Which starting quarterback do
you want throwing you the ball
Sept. 3?
It doesnt take a federal in-
vestigation to see whats going on
at Notre Dame, only a clear view
froma different zip code.
HAUGH
Continued from Page 1B
David Haugh is a columnist for the
Chicago Tribune.
Afterward, he skipped the Wells
Fargo Championship and with-
drew after nine holes from The
Players Championship a week
later.
Woods said last week it was a
mistake to go to The Players, and
that had he waited, he would be
playing golf right now.
In hindsight, I probably
shouldnt have competed at The
Players, but its a big event, and I
wanted to be there to support the
tour, he said. Ive got to learn
from what I did there and do it
right this time andnot come back
until Im ready.
Woods didnt say whether he
expected to play in the final ma-
jor, the PGA Championship,
which starts Aug. 11 at the Atlan-
ta Athletic Club. As he men-
tionedlast weekat Aronimink, he
doesnt have any idea when he
will compete next. He saidhe has
not hit golf balls since May 12 at
the TPC Sawgrass.
Woods also indicated at Aroni-
mink that his chances of playing
the British Open were remote
taking some of the surprise out of
Tuesdays announcement.
I wouldnt goover therejust to
show up, he said. Id go over
there to win the golf tournament,
so I need to obviously get my
body ready so I can practice and
eventually play. Woods was re-
placedat Royal St. Georges byJa-
son Dufner, who said on Twitter,
Looks like I am getting in the
open championship, I am excit-
ed!
Brendan Jones was the next al-
ternate, but the Australian told
theRoyal &Ancient hewouldnot
be able to play because his wife is
expecting their first child.
Its unfortunate for the game
of golf and its more unfortunate
for him, three-time major cham-
pion Padraig Harrington said.
He still is the name we would
look out for the most. Its not that
we want him to turn up and win,
but it would be nice to have him
there and bring the buzz he does.
Lets just hope its not that bad
its a long time for that injury
and that he fully recovers.
Woods called R&A chief exec-
utive Peter Dawson to personally
tell him he would not be playing.
I know how disappointed Ti-
ger is not to be able to play in the
Open this year, Dawson said.
Naturally, we are sorry that a
player of his caliber isnt able to
join us at Royal St. Georges, but
we wish him well in his recovery
and hope to see him back soon,
competing in front of the fans
that love to see him play the
game.
Woods tied for fourth in the
2003 British Open at Royal St.
Georges, where he started with a
two-shot penalty when he
couldnt find his opening tee shot
in the rough. He wound up two
shots behind Ben Curtis.
WOODS
Continued from Page 1B
C M Y K
T
o
d
a
y
Visa update
Visa investors cheered last week when the Federal Reserve
unveiled new rules on fees for debit cards. They pushed Visas
stock up 15 percent in one day. This afternoon, an updated
profit forecast for 2011 from Visa executives will show whether
the enthusiasm was warranted. The Federal Reserve said last
week that banks can charge retailers up to 21 cents for each
debit card transaction. Investors liked it, because the cap was
higher than the 12 cents that the Fed had earlier proposed.
Walgreen sales
The largest U.S. drugstore chain
gives an update on its sales for
June. In May, the company said it
benefited not only from more cus-
tomers coming into the store but
also from them buying more per
shopping trip. Despite better-than-
expected revenue growth last quar-
ter, Walgreen stock has struggled
in the last month. It fell 8.4 percent
the week of June 20, after the com-
pany said it may walk away from a
$5 billion deal to fill prescriptions
for Express Scripts customers.
Services still slipping
Economists expect todays report
from the Institute for Supply Man-
agement to show growth in the ser-
vice industry slowed for the third
time in four months. This bears
watching as the industry employs 90
percent of the countrys work force,
and has been growing nonstop since
December 2009. Growth reached a
six-year high in February, but tailed
off as higher gasoline prices and the
weak job market hurt the economy.
A reading above 50 indicates the
industry is still expanding.
Visa operating EPS
3Q 10 4Q 10 1Q 11 2Q 11 3Q 11 4Q 11
est. est.
$.97
1.22 1.23 1.23
.95
Price-to-earnings ratio: 17
based on past 12 months results
Dividend: $0.70 Div. Yield: 1.6%
25
35
$45
WAG $42.73
$26.56
10
Source: FactSet
ISM service industry index
52
54
56
58
60
Source: FactSet Source: FactSet
J F M A M J
est.
54
1.22
Debt warning slows prices
Stocks closed mixed after a warning
about Portugals debt revived worries
about Europes financial crisis.
Major indexes were mixed for much
of the day but dipped in afternoon
trading after Moodys downgraded
Portugals debt. The credit ratings
agency cited concerns that Portugal
will not be able to meet targets to re-
duce its deficit due to the formidable
challenges the country is facing in
cutting spending.
The number of stocks that rose was
about the same as those that fell on the
New York Stock Exchange.
Sheetz plans expansion
Sheetz Inc. is looking to the South as
the gasoline and convenience store
chain plans further expansion from its
central Pennsylvania hub.
The Altoona-based company has 394
stores, with more than half in Penn-
sylvania. Six stores will be added by
August to get to 400, executive vice
president Joe Sheetz said.
The chain has plans to hit the 500
mark in three years, with North Car-
olina and West Virginia the prime tar-
gets for expansion. In North Carolina
alone, Sheetz hopes to build about 10
new stores a year.
Sick time mandate in Conn.
Connecticut has become the first
state to require businesses to offer
employees paid sick time.
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy announced
Tuesday that he signed the law requir-
ing businesses in the service industry
with 50 or more employees to allow
workers to accrue one hour of sick time
for every 40 hours worked. The law
takes effect Jan. 1.
Backers estimate that 200,000 to
300,000 workers will benefit.
Businesses say the legislation will
make Connecticut less competitive
with other states.
Netflix adds Latin America
Netflix is expanding its movie and
TV show streaming service into 43
countries throughout Latin America in
the online movie rental companys
largest international expansion yet.
Analysts said the expansion was
larger than expected. The companys
stock closed at an all-time high of
$289.63 in trading Tuesday.
Netflix Inc. subscribers in Mexico,
South and Central America and the
Caribbean will be able to watch TV
shows and movies streamed on a wide
range of gadgets starting this year.
WTO cites China
The World Trade Organization ruled
that China was unfairly protecting its
domestic manufacturers by limiting the
export of nine raw materials that are
used widely in the steel, aluminum and
chemical industries.
A WTO panel sided with the United
States, European Union and Mexico,
which had each filed complaints saying
China was driving up the prices they
pay for raw materials such as coke,
bauxite and zinc by setting export
duties and quotas on them.
I N B R I E F
$3.45 $2.68 $3.69
$4.06
07/17/08
BUSINESS S E C T I O N B
THE TIMES LEADER WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011
timesleader.com
DOW
12,569.87
- 12.90
S&P
1,337.88
- 1.79
NASDAQ
2,825.77
+9.74
WALL STREET
Mohegan Sun at Pocono
Downs saw slot machine gross
revenue jump nearly $3 million
from the fiscal year that ended
June 30, 2010 to the one that
ended June 30, 2011.
The Plains Township casino
reported slots revenue of
$225.5 million in the past year.
Statewide revenues rose by
$182 million, to $2.3 billion in
the same time period.
In a tough economic envi-
ronment whenmany properties
are down year over year, we feel
pretty good about growing,
said Bobby Soper, president
and chief executive officer of
Mohegan Sun at Pocono
Downs.
Among the casinos that saw
declining year-over-year reve-
nues from slots was Mohegan
Suns closest competitor,
Mount Airy Casino Resort near
Mount Pocono in Monroe
County. That casino reported
$555,000 less in gross slots rev-
enue in the latest fiscal year
than the one before.
Efforts to get a comment
from Mount Airy officials were
unsuccessful Tuesday.
Three other casinos also re-
ported lower gross revenue
from slot machines: Parx Casi-
no in Bensalem, Harrahs Ches-
ter Casino and Racetrack in
Chester and The Meadows
Racetrack and Casino in Wash-
ington.
Mohegan Sun had some
months when its slots revenue
dipped compared to the previ-
ous year, but Soper saidthat the
casino doesnt view things
month-to-month. He said the
revenues were upfor the year as
a whole and that was on top of
what he called a very good
2009-10.
The increased revenue
means more money for proper-
ty tax relief and more funding
for projects in communities
statewide.
Pennsylvania casinos are
continuingtosee significant pa-
tronage which, in turn, means
our citizens have benefited by
continuing to receive property
tax reduction, living-wage jobs,
and funds that are supporting a
myriad of projects in many
communities, said Gaming
Control Board Chairman Greg
Fajt.
The gaming control board re-
leased data Tuesday showing
tax revenue produced from the
playof slot machines duringthe
12-month period ending June
30 totaled $1.28 billion, an in-
crease of 7.8 percent from the
prior fiscal year. To date, since
the opening of the first slot ma-
chine casino at Mohegan Sun at
Pocono Downs in November
2006, taxes from slot machine
play have totaled nearly $4.5
billion.
Mohegan Sun slots revenue up $3M
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
W
ASHINGTON Businesses requested more airplanes, au-
tos, and oil drilling equipment in May. The jump in factory
orders after a sluggish spring suggests supply disruptions
stemming from the Japan crisis are fading. Factory orders rose 0.8
percent in May, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. That fol-
lowedadownwardlyreviseddropof 0.9percent inApril. Theincrease
pushedfactoryorders to$445.3billion. Thats almost 32percent higher
than the low point during the recession, reached in March 2009.
Muchof the increase was drivenby a 36.5percent increase inorders for
aircraft, avolatilecategory. But therewerealsosignsof strengthinareas
that had slowed sharply in the previous month.
Auto and auto parts orders rose 2 per-
cent. And a measure of business invest-
ment rose1.6 percent, after falling0.4 per-
cent the previous month. Companies in-
vestedmoreincomputersandequipment.
Orders for so-called nondurable goods,
suchas food, clothing, oil, andplastics, fell
0.2 percent inMay. But that was partly be-
cause oil prices dropped.
Until this spring, manufacturing had
been one of the strongest sectors of the
economy since the recession ended two
years ago.
Economists largely blamed the weak
period on high gas prices and the impact
of the March 11 earthquake in Japan,
which led to a parts shortage that has
hampered U.S. manufacturers.
Those factors appear to be easing. Gas
prices have come down since peaking in
early May. And the manufacturing sector
expanded at a faster pace in June after
slowing sharply in May, according to the
Institute of Supply Management.
There are encouraging signs that the
second half will likely get better, particu-
larly for manufacturers, saidRyanSweet,
an economist at Moodys Analytics.
Arecovery in the auto sector is one rea-
sonproductionis pickingup. Japaneseau-
tomakers withplants inthe UnitedStates,
such as Toyota Motor Corp., Honda Mo-
tor Co. and Nissan Motor Co., sharply cut
production in the spring. But they are res-
toring output. Toyota executives say their
North American factories will be back to
100 percent by September.
AP PHOTO
Line worker Diane Counts moves transmissions fromthe assembly line to a pallet at the Ford Van Dyke Transmission
Plant in Sterling Heights, Mich. Orders to U.S. factories rose in May, recovering after supply disruptions stemming from
the Japan earthquake and the effect of high gas prices on consumer demand.
Orders for factory goods up in May
By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER
AP Economics Writer
Some area Verizon Wireless cus-
tomers might have noticed a new
symbol on their smartphone
screens Tuesday as the 3G icon has
now become 4G.
The company announced last
month that it would upgrade its lo-
cal network by July 21. The first cus-
tomers in Luzerne and Lackawanna
counties were upgraded Tuesday.
Our network teamis currently in
its final stages of preparing for the
official 4G LTE launch on July 21.
We are performing tests on the 4G
LTE network to ensure network op-
timization, which is why many Veri-
zon Wireless customers may be see-
ing the 4G icon on their 4G capable
devices and are enjoying the bene-
fits of 4GLTEat this time, saidTim
Donaldson, system performance
manager for VerizonWireless Phila-
delphia Tri-State region.
People with 4G LTE smart-
phones, laptop modems and hot-
spots will be able to take advantage
of speeds up to 10 times faster than
the companys 3G network. Wilkes-
Barre/Scranton International Air-
port also will be covered by the 4G
Long Term Evolution or LTE ser-
vice.
According to the company, in re-
al-world, fully loaded network envi-
ronments, 4G LTE users should ex-
perience average data rates of 5to12
megabits per second on the down-
link and 2 to 5 Mbps on the uplink.
It goes without saying that busi-
nesses thrive onconnectivity, soany
investment which enhances the
speed and efficiency of that connec-
tivity is a positive, said Larry New-
man, a Wilkes-Barre Chamber vice
president. Today, when businesses
ask about infrastructure, they are
talkingnot just about roads andsew-
ers but about wireless and broad-
band as well. Consequently, Veri-
zons investment in 4G service in
Wilkes-Barre is absolutely good for
our communitys competitiveness.
Verizon
upgrades
to 4G
By ANDREWM. SEDER
aseder@timesleader.com
HARRISBURG While a
consultant wraps up a study in-
to the pros and cons of privatiz-
ing Pennsylvanias state-con-
trolled liquor and wine busi-
ness, the current proprietor
said Tuesday that its financial
condition has never looked bet-
ter.
The Pennsylvania Liquor
Control Board said sales at
state stores for the year that
ended Thursday set a record at
nearly $2 billion a 4 percent
increase from last year and
generated a record $496 mil-
lion in profit and tax revenue
for the state treasury to help fi-
nance other state services.
Never in the history of this
agency has the PLCB delivered
such strong returns, said
board chairman P.J. Stapleton,
who attributed the growth to
efforts in recent years to run
the PLCB more like a busi-
ness.
The boards statement drew
flak from a Harrisburg-based
conservative group that advo-
cates for the privatization of li-
quor and wine sales.
The Commonwealth Foun-
dation called the notion of gov-
ernment running a business for
profit un-American.
Its time government stop-
ped acting like privatization
and just started acting to priv-
atize, foundation spokesman
Jay Ostrich said.
One of the boards strongest
allies in the fight for its survival
is the largest state-store em-
ployee union. Leaders of Local
1776 of the United Food and
Commercial Workers argue
that private owners could not
match the performance of the
more than 600 state stores in
collecting state taxes, enforc-
ing the drinking age or offering
a broad selection of products at
competitive prices.
Advocates of privatization,
who include Republican Gov.
Tom Corbett, say the state
stands to receive a sizable fi-
nancial windfall from the sale
of liquor licenses and that the
government should not be in
the liquor and wine business in
the first place.
Estimates of howmuchmon-
ey is at stake have ranged as
high as $2 billion, but no up-to-
date, independent analysis is
available.
State stores had record $2 billion in sales, $496 million in profits
By PETER JACKSON
Associated Press
C M Y K
THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 PAGE 9B
T H E M A R K E T I N R E V I E W
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Talbots 3.12 -.11 -63.4
TalismE g 21.01 +.27 -5.3
Target 47.55 -.38 -20.9
TataMotors 23.25 +.37 -20.8
TeckRes g 52.78 +.53 -14.6
Teleflex 62.31 -.12 +15.8
TelefEsp s 24.09 -.70 +5.6
TelMexL 16.26 -.22 +.7
Tellabs 4.53 -.10 -33.2
TempleInld 30.88 +.63 +45.4
TmpDrgn 30.60 -.10 -.4
TenetHlth 6.48 -.03 -3.1
Tenneco 45.31 -.13 +10.1
Teradyn 15.05 -.13 +7.2
Terex 29.44 -.29 -5.2
Tesoro 23.15 +.09 +24.9
TevaPhrm 48.92 -.08 -6.2
TexInst 32.92 -.60 +1.3
Textron 22.73 -1.21 -3.8
ThermoFis 64.98 -.03 +17.4
ThomCrk g 10.10 -.03 -31.4
3M Co 96.14 -.53 +11.4
TibcoSft 30.47 +1.05 +54.6
THorton g 49.33 -.29 +19.6
TW Cable 79.97 +.47 +21.1
TimeWarn 36.88 -.04 +14.6
TiVo Inc 10.63 -.20 +23.2
TorDBk g 84.24 -1.20 +14.9
Total SA 57.21 -.97 +7.0
Toyota 83.60 +.15 +6.3
TrCda g 43.65 -.33 +14.7
Transocn 64.27 -.21 -7.5
Travelers 58.53 -.58 +5.1
TrimbleN 40.95 +.09 +2.6
TrinaSolar 21.09 -.24 -9.9
TriQuint 10.19 +.06 -12.8
TwoHrbInv 10.98 +.11 +12.2
TycoIntl 49.69 +.11 +19.9
Tyson 19.24 -.29 +11.7
UBS AG 18.31 -.29 +11.2
UDR 25.40 +.30 +8.0
US Airwy 8.45 -.49 -15.6
US Gold 5.97 +.19 -26.0
USEC 3.17 -.23 -47.3
UniSrcEn 38.03 -.07 +6.1
UnilevNV 33.18 +.04 +5.7
Unisys 26.17 -.05 +1.1
UtdContl 22.64 -.39 -5.0
UtdMicro 2.50 -.06 -20.9
UPS B 73.78 -.18 +1.7
US Bancrp 25.59 -.47 -5.1
US NGs rs 10.96 +.10 -8.5
US OilFd 37.96 +.81 -2.7
USSteel 46.85 -.06 -19.8
UtdTech 89.51 -.62 +13.7
UtdhlthGp 52.85 -.28 +46.4
UnumGrp 25.80 -.14 +6.5
UrbanOut 29.11 +.19 -18.7
Vale SA 33.14 -.29 -4.1
Vale SA pf 30.00 -.27 -.7
ValenceT h 1.25 +.03 -25.6
ValeroE 25.49 -.30 +10.3
ValpeyFsh 2.67 -.06 -21.2
ValVis A 7.83 -.41 +28.2
VangTSM 69.37 -.01 +6.8
VangEmg 49.05 -.13 +1.9
Ventas 53.83 +.09 +2.6
VertxPh 52.19 +.49 +49.0
VestinRMII 1.38 ... -4.8
ViacomA 58.67 -.04 +27.9
ViacomB 51.95 +.06 +31.2
VimpelCm 12.77 -.01 -15.1
VirgnMda h 30.57 +.33 +12.2
Visa 88.32 +.35 +25.5
VishayInt 15.81 +.11 +7.7
Vivus 8.43 +.35 -10.0
Vodafone 26.84 -.06 +1.5
Vornado 95.42 +.56 +14.5
WalMart 53.39 -.12 -1.0
Walgrn 42.73 -.10 +9.7
WsteMInc 37.62 +.08 +2.0
WeathfIntl 18.91 +.10 -17.1
WellsFargo 28.42 -.25 -8.3
WendyArby 5.16 -.03 +11.7
WernerEnt 25.39 -.12 +12.3
WestellT 3.59 -.01 +9.8
WDigital 36.78 +.14 +8.5
WstnRefin 18.57 -.12 +75.5
WstnUnion 19.34 -.90 +4.1
Weyerh 22.15 -.14 +17.0
WhitingPt s 57.94 +.40 -1.1
WmsCos 30.68 -.07 +24.1
Windstrm 13.21 +.09 -5.2
WiscEn s 31.62 -.21 +7.4
WT India 23.86 -.14 -9.6
Worthgtn 23.41 +.04 +27.2
XcelEngy 24.52 -.14 +4.1
Xerox 10.57 -.14 -8.2
Xilinx 36.63 -.43 +26.4
YRC Ww rs 1.26 +.03 -66.1
Yahoo 15.49 +.04 -6.9
Yamana g 12.17 +.75 -4.9
Youku n 37.79 +1.32 +7.9
YumBrnds 56.60 -.15 +15.4
Zagg 13.73 +.88 +80.2
Zalicus 2.63 +.30 +66.5
Zimmer 64.42 -.67 +20.0
ZollMed 58.00 +.53 +55.8
Zweig 3.50 ... +4.5
ZweigTl 3.41 ... -4.2
DOW
12,569.87
-12.90
NASDAQ
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S&P 500
1,337.88
-1.79
6-MO T-BILLS
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-.01
10-YR T-NOTE
3.13%
-.06
CRUDE OIL
$96.89
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GOLD
$1,512.30
+30.00
q q q q p p q q p p q q q q p p
EURO
$1.4410
-.0134
1,230
1,260
1,290
1,320
1,350
1,380
J F M A M J
1,240
1,300
1,360
S&P 500
Close: 1,337.88
Change: -1.79 (-0.1%)
10 DAYS
2,560
2,640
2,720
2,800
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J F M A M J
2,600
2,720
2,840
Nasdaq composite
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10 DAYS
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD
StocksRecap
Peter Svensson, Elizabeth Gramling AP SOURCES: FactSet; the companies
A tale of two Motorolas
The breakup of Motorola into
two companies achieved one of its
main goals. Shareholders have
seen the combined market
capitalization of Motorola Mobility
and Motorola Solutions rise $1.3
billion since the Jan. 4 split.
But the two companies have
had very different fortunes. If you
held on to both stocks, now may
be the time to decide whether you
want to keep holding them.
Motorola Mobility, the cellphone
business, pulled out of a multi-year
slump last year when it started
selling new smartphones like the
Droid. But its future is starting to
look shaky. When Verizon began
selling Apples iPhone in February,
it was a severe blow to sales of
the Droid line. BMO Capital
Markets analyst Tim Long said last
week that the company lost half its
smartphone market share over the
past 12 months. And analysts say
Motorola Mobility is too small to
compete effectively against Apple
and big Asian manufacturers like
Samsung and HTC. The company
lost $81 million during the first
quarter. Its stock is down 27
percent since the breakup.
Motorola Solutions sells
gadgets like police radios and bar
code scanners to governments
and corporations. Its not a sexy
business, but its dependable. And
it doesnt have much competition
Motorola Solutions dominates
the U.S. market for police radios. It
earned $497 million in the first
quarter. The stock is up 22 percent
since the breakup. Analysts
speculate that the company might
start paying a dividend before the
end of the year. That would make
it even more appealing than its
struggling sibling.
How the stocks of Motorola Mobility and Motorola
Solutions have done since Motorola split up on Jan. 4.
Revenue and earnings for Motorola
Mobility and Motorola Solutions calculated
as if they were publicly traded during 2009
and 2010.
MOTOROLA MOTOROLA
2010 SOLUTIONS MOBILITY
PROJECTION (MSI) (MMI)
Revenue $7.87 billion $11.5 billion
Net income (loss) $207 million -$86 million
EPS $1.52 16 cents 20
30
40
$50
Motorola Solutions (MSI)
Jan. 4 open $37.30
Motorola Mobility
(MMI) $31.17
MMI $22.79
-27%
MSI $45.64
+22%
J F M A M J J
Mutual Funds
Alliance Bernstein
BalShrB m 14.88 -.01 +7.7
CoreOppA m 12.83 +.02 +11.5
American Beacon
LgCpVlInv 19.47 -.08 +5.1
LgCpVlIs 20.52 -.09 +5.2
American Cent
EqIncInv 7.51 -.02 +5.3
GrowthInv 27.70 +.04 +7.2
IncGroA m 25.85 -.02 +8.3
UltraInv 24.81 +.12 +9.5
American Funds
AMCAPA m 20.18 -.02 +7.6
BalA m 18.83 +.01 +6.2
BondA m 12.34 +.03 +2.9
CapIncBuA m51.94 -.12 +6.0
CapWldBdA m20.99 -.01 +4.6
CpWldGrIA m37.30 -.12 +6.0
EurPacGrA m43.63 -.04 +5.5
FnInvA m 39.18 ... +7.4
GrthAmA m 32.28 +.03 +6.0
HiIncA m 11.43 +.01 +5.0
IncAmerA m 17.34 -.02 +6.8
IntBdAmA m 13.53 +.02 +1.9
IntlGrInA m 32.66 -.10 +6.7
InvCoAmA m 29.26 -.07 +4.9
MutualA m 26.92 -.06 +7.6
NewEconA m 27.34 -.01 +7.9
NewPerspA m30.17 +.01 +5.4
NwWrldA m 56.24 +.05 +3.0
SmCpWldA m40.39 +.12 +3.9
TaxEBdAmA m12.06 ... +4.1
USGovSecA m14.06 +.03 +2.1
WAMutInvA m29.40 -.05 +9.3
Artio Global
IntlEqI 31.08 +.12 +3.1
IntlEqIII 12.89 +.05 +3.5
Artisan
Intl d 23.37 +.07 +7.7
IntlVal d 28.80 -.04 +6.2
MdCpVal 22.26 -.16 +10.9
MidCap 37.84 +.27 +12.5
SmCapVal 18.29 ... +8.5
Baron
Asset b 60.67 +.09 +9.8
Growth b 57.34 +.19 +11.9
SmCap b 27.06 +.07 +13.8
Bernstein
DiversMui 14.46 ... +3.0
IntDur 13.91 +.04 +3.3
TxMIntl 15.99 -.06 +1.7
BlackRock
EqDivA m 18.87 -.05 +8.1
EqDivI 18.92 -.04 +8.3
GlobAlcA m 20.24 +.01 +4.2
GlobAlcC m 18.84 +.01 +3.9
GlobAlcI d 20.36 +.02 +4.4
CGM
Focus 32.64 +.25 -6.2
Mutual 28.12 +.21 -4.5
Realty 29.96 +.24 +12.1
Calamos
GrowA m 57.44 +.46 +7.6
Cohen & Steers
Realty 65.97 +.46 +13.7
Columbia
AcornA m 31.55 +.06 +9.1
AcornIntZ 41.44 -.10 +3.8
AcornZ 32.56 +.06 +9.2
DivBondA m 5.06 +.01 +2.7
DivrEqInA m 10.60 -.03 +5.7
StLgCpGrZ 14.27 +.14 +14.9
TaxEA m 13.12 ... +5.3
ValRestrZ 52.10 -.15 +3.7
DFA
1YrFixInI 10.36 +.01 +0.6
2YrGlbFII 10.21 ... +0.6
5YrGlbFII 11.20 +.03 +2.9
EmMkCrEqI 22.42 +.05 +1.7
EmMktValI 35.77 +.02 -0.6
IntSmCapI 17.90 +.04 +5.3
USCorEq1I 11.83 -.01 +8.1
USCorEq2I 11.77 -.02 +7.8
USLgCo 10.55 -.02 +7.4
USLgValI 21.98 -.06 +9.9
USMicroI 14.77 +.05 +7.5
USSmValI 27.19 -.04 +6.4
USSmallI 23.28 +.04 +9.2
DWS-Scudder
EnhEMFIS d 10.77 +.01 +1.4
HlthCareS d 28.05 -.09 +15.2
LAEqS d 50.57 -.35 -4.8
Davis
NYVentA m 35.55 +.05 +3.5
NYVentC m 34.25 +.05 +3.1
NYVentY 35.97 +.06 +3.7
Dimensional Investme
IntCorEqI 11.66 -.03 +5.2
IntlSCoI 17.83 +.03 +5.0
IntlValuI 18.99 -.11 +5.4
Dodge & Cox
Bal 74.00 -.12 +6.5
Income 13.40 +.03 +3.4
IntlStk 37.03 -.12 +3.7
Stock 114.85 -.33 +7.4
Dreyfus
Apprecia 41.50 +.03 +8.7
EmgLead ... ... +3.7
TechGrA f 34.69 +.20 +6.8
Driehaus
ActiveInc 11.12 ... +2.1
Eaton Vance
HiIncOppA m 4.45 +.01 +5.5
HiIncOppB m 4.46 +.01 +5.1
LrgCpValA m 18.82 -.04 +3.8
NatlMuniA m 9.09 -.01 +5.1
NatlMuniB m 9.09 -.01 +4.7
PAMuniA m 8.82 ... +5.7
FMI
LgCap 16.82 -.01 +7.8
FPA
Cres d 27.99 -.01 +5.4
NewInc m 10.80 +.01 +1.7
Fairholme Funds
Fairhome d 32.39 -.33 -9.0
Federated
KaufmanR m 5.71 -.03 +3.8
ToRetIs 11.23 +.03 +3.0
Fidelity
AstMgr20 13.10 +.02 +3.1
AstMgr50 16.08 +.02 +4.6
Bal 19.19 +.03 +5.6
BlChGrow 49.22 +.28 +8.5
Canada d 60.60 +.36 +4.2
CapApr 27.12 +.07 +7.0
CapInc d 9.67 +.01 +5.6
Contra 72.06 +.37 +6.5
DiscEq 24.26 +.02 +7.7
DivGrow 30.02 -.02 +5.6
DivrIntl d 31.48 +.04 +4.4
EmgMkt d 26.83 +.11 +1.8
EqInc 46.70 -.21 +5.8
EqInc II 19.28 -.08 +5.9
ExpMulNat d 23.00 +.02 +5.5
FF2015 11.84 +.03 +4.8
FF2035 12.07 +.03 +5.6
FF2040 8.43 +.02 +5.6
Fidelity 34.91 +.09 +8.6
FltRtHiIn d 9.82 ... +1.7
Free2010 14.17 +.03 +4.7
Free2020 14.44 +.04 +5.1
Free2025 12.09 +.03 +5.3
Free2030 14.46 +.04 +5.4
GNMA 11.70 +.02 +3.8
GovtInc 10.57 +.03 +2.5
GrowCo 93.51 +.47 +12.5
GrowInc 19.29 -.04 +5.7
HiInc d 9.08 +.01 +4.7
Indepndnc 26.24 +.17 +7.8
IntBond 10.72 +.04 +3.2
IntMuniInc d 10.16 ... +3.3
IntlDisc d 34.18 -.03 +3.5
InvGrdBd 7.54 +.02 +3.7
LatinAm d 59.48 -.18 +0.8
LevCoSt d 30.59 +.01 +7.6
LowPriStk d 42.10 -.09 +9.7
Magellan 73.98 +.07 +3.4
MidCap d 29.79 +.09 +8.6
MuniInc d 12.53 ... +4.3
NewMktIn d 15.94 -.01 +4.7
OTC 61.18 +.57 +11.4
Overseas d 34.39 +.05 +5.9
Puritan 18.93 +.04 +6.1
RealInv d 28.99 +.21 +12.8
Series100Index 9.28 ... +6.2
ShTmBond 8.52 +.01 +1.5
SmCapStk d 20.64 -.11 +5.3
StratInc 11.30 +.01 +4.6
StratRRet d 9.90 +.06 +3.8
TotalBd 10.91 +.03 +3.6
USBdIdxInv 11.48 +.03 +2.9
Value 72.88 -.35 +6.1
Fidelity Advisor
NewInsA m 21.16 +.11 +6.2
NewInsI 21.38 +.11 +6.3
StratIncA m 12.62 +.01 +4.5
ValStratT m 27.87 -.05 +7.6
Fidelity Select
Gold d 47.37+1.03 -7.3
Pharm d 14.02 +.02 +15.9
Fidelity Spartan
500IdxAdvtg 47.58 -.07 +7.4
500IdxInv 47.58 -.06 +7.4
ExtMktIdI d 41.08 +.07 +9.0
IntlIdxIn d 37.18 -.13 +6.1
TotMktIdAg d 39.16 -.02 +7.8
TotMktIdI d 39.16 -.02 +7.8
First Eagle
GlbA m 49.11 -.08 +5.9
OverseasA m 23.73 -.01 +4.7
FrankTemp-Franklin
CA TF A m 6.84 +.01 +4.5
Fed TF A m 11.64 +.01 +5.1
GrowB m 45.79 -.04 +7.0
Growth A m 47.93 -.03 +7.4
HY TF A m 9.91 ... +5.6
Income A m 2.24 ... +6.5
Income C m 2.26 ... +6.1
IncomeAdv 2.22 ... +6.2
NY TF A m 11.40 +.01 +4.1
RisDv A m 35.64 -.10 +8.5
US Gov A m 6.81 +.01 +3.1
FrankTemp-Mutual
Beacon Z 13.14 -.02 +6.7
Discov A m 30.84 -.09 +5.7
Discov Z 31.25 -.09 +5.8
QuestZ 18.67 -.05 +5.5
Shares A m 21.96 -.05 +6.4
Shares Z 22.16 -.05 +6.6
FrankTemp-Templeton
Fgn A m 7.56 ... +8.3
GlBond A m 13.98 ... +5.1
GlBond C m 14.01 +.01 +4.9
GlBondAdv 13.94 ... +5.2
Growth A m 19.49 -.01 +9.6
World A m 15.94 -.01 +7.4
Franklin Templeton
FndAllA m 11.06 -.01 +7.3
GE
S&SProg 42.52 -.11 +5.7
GMO
EmgMktsVI 14.23 +.04 +5.1
IntItVlIV 23.54 -.14 +7.8
QuIII 21.63 +.01 +8.1
QuVI 21.64 +.01 +8.2
Goldman Sachs
HiYieldIs d 7.34 +.01 +4.6
MidCapVaA m38.51 -.15 +7.3
MidCpVaIs 38.86 -.15 +7.5
Harbor
Bond 12.34 +.01 +3.3
CapApInst 40.67 +.25 +10.8
IntlInstl d 65.41 -.25 +8.0
IntlInv m 64.69 -.25 +7.8
Hartford
CapAprA m 34.68 -.08 +0.1
CapAprI 34.73 -.08 +0.3
CpApHLSIA 43.79 -.12 +3.4
DvGrHLSIA 20.79 -.07 +6.6
TRBdHLSIA 11.23 +.04 +3.1
Hussman
StratGrth d 12.26 -.01 -0.2
INVESCO
CharterA m 17.41 -.06 +7.7
ComstockA m16.69 -.07 +6.8
ConstellB m 22.25 +.11 +6.3
EqIncomeA m 8.94 -.02 +5.0
GlobEqA m 11.77 -.02 +9.6
GrowIncA m 20.18 -.07 +5.6
PacGrowB m 22.37 -.09 +0.2
Ivy
AssetStrA m 26.70 +.28 +9.4
AssetStrC m 25.85 +.27 +8.9
JPMorgan
CoreBondA m11.58 +.03 +2.8
CoreBondSelect11.57+.03 +2.9
HighYldSel d 8.23 +.02 +4.7
IntmdTFSl 10.96 ... +3.4
ShDurBndSel 11.01 +.01 +1.2
USLCpCrPS 21.70 -.03 +5.0
Janus
BalJ 26.44 +.03 +6.5
OverseasJ d 47.69 +.07 -5.8
PerkinsMCVJ 23.94 -.03 +6.1
TwentyJ 67.51 +.02 +2.7
John Hancock
LifAg1 b 13.04 ... +6.2
LifBa1 b 13.49 ... +5.5
LifGr1 b 13.58 ... +5.8
RegBankA m 14.33 -.13 -2.1
SovInvA m 16.68 -.02 +6.7
TaxFBdA m 9.73 ... +4.3
Lazard
EmgMkEqtI d 22.01 ... +1.1
EmgMktEqO m22.38 ... +0.9
Legg Mason/Western
CrPlBdIns 10.96 +.01 +3.6
MgdMuniA m 15.48 ... +5.1
Longleaf Partners
LongPart 31.47 -.13 +11.4
Loomis Sayles
BondI 14.87 +.03 +7.0
BondR b 14.81 +.02 +6.8
Lord Abbett
AffiliatA m 12.00 -.02 +4.1
BondDebA m 8.00 +.01 +5.6
ShDurIncA m 4.60 ... +2.2
ShDurIncC m 4.63 ... +1.9
MFS
IsIntlEq 19.37 -.07 +8.0
MAInvA m 20.44 -.01 +6.8
MAInvC m 19.76 ... +6.5
TotRetA m 14.64 -.01 +4.9
ValueA m 24.13 -.08 +6.5
ValueI 24.23 -.09 +6.6
Manning & Napier
WrldOppA 9.23 -.02 +7.2
Merger
Merger m 16.26 -.03 +3.0
Metropolitan West
TotRetBdI 10.45 +.02 +3.1
TotRtBd b 10.45 +.02 +2.9
Morgan Stanley Instl
IntlEqI d 14.56 -.03 +7.0
MdCpGrI 42.37 +.18 +13.4
Natixis
InvBndY 12.44 +.03 +5.2
StratIncA m 15.45 +.03 +7.3
StratIncC m 15.53 +.02 +6.8
Neuberger Berman
GenesisIs 51.26 +.30 +11.5
GenesisTr 53.06 +.31 +11.4
SmCpGrInv 20.44 +.22 +14.3
Oakmark
EqIncI 29.64 -.02 +6.8
Intl I d 20.47 +.02 +5.5
Oakmark I d 44.63 -.09 +8.1
Old Westbury
GlbSmMdCp 16.39 +.02 +8.0
Oppenheimer
CapApA m 46.67 +.14 +7.1
CapApB m 41.05 +.13 +6.6
DevMktA m 36.37 -.05 -0.3
DevMktY 36.03 -.05 -0.1
GlobA m 65.45 -.20 +8.4
IntlBondA m 6.73 -.03 +4.6
IntlBondY 6.73 -.03 +4.7
MainStrA m 33.72 +.01 +4.1
RocMuniA m 15.39 ... +4.3
RochNtlMu m 6.82 ... +6.9
StrIncA m 4.37 ... +5.1
PIMCO
AllAssetI 12.48 ... +5.2
AllAuthIn 10.88 +.01 +4.7
ComRlRStI 8.86 +.16 +3.2
DevLocMktI 11.09 -.04 +5.6
DivIncInst 11.62 +.01 +4.5
HiYldIs 9.40 +.02 +4.8
InvGrdIns 10.68 +.03 +4.7
LowDrA m 10.50 ... +2.0
LowDrIs 10.50 ... +2.2
RealRet 11.69 +.02 +5.5
RealRtnA m 11.69 +.02 +5.3
ShtTermIs 9.90 ... +1.0
TotRetA m 11.01 +.01 +3.0
TotRetAdm b 11.01 +.01 +3.1
TotRetC m 11.01 +.01 +2.6
TotRetIs 11.01 +.01 +3.2
TotRetrnD b 11.01 +.01 +3.1
TotlRetnP 11.01 +.01 +3.2
Parnassus
EqIncInv 27.73 -.04 +6.0
Permanent
Portfolio 48.55 +.34 +6.0
Pioneer
PioneerA m 43.08 -.18 +5.6
Principal
L/T2020I 12.42 +.02 +6.5
SAMConGrB m13.90 ... +5.9
Prudential Investmen
2020FocA m 17.24 +.12 +8.5
BlendA m 18.78 +.05 +9.1
EqOppA m 15.01 -.05 +8.1
HiYieldA m 5.57 +.01 +4.9
IntlEqtyA m 6.66 -.01 +7.6
IntlValA m 21.96 -.05 +6.6
JenMidCapGrA m30.43+.03+11.1
JennGrA m 19.96 +.12 +10.6
NaturResA m 57.41 +.49 +0.6
SmallCoA m 22.43 +.04 +10.5
UtilityA m 11.14 -.05 +10.0
ValueA m 15.81 -.03 +7.3
Putnam
GrowIncA m 14.17 -.06 +5.1
GrowIncB m 13.92 -.06 +4.7
VoyagerA m 23.93 -.03 +0.9
Royce
LowStkSer m 19.13 +.12 +4.8
OpportInv d 12.52 -.06 +3.6
PAMutInv d 12.69 +.03 +8.9
PremierInv d 22.47 +.05 +10.4
TotRetInv d 14.01 +.01 +6.9
ValPlSvc m 14.21 +.06 +5.9
Schwab
1000Inv d 39.99 -.04 +7.6
S&P500Sel d 21.01 -.03 +7.4
Scout
Interntl d 33.91 -.14 +5.3
Selected
American D 42.97 +.07 +3.8
Sequoia
Sequoia 146.37 +.43 +13.2
T Rowe Price
BlChpGr 41.53 +.15 +8.9
CapApprec 21.67 -.03 +6.7
DivGrow 24.55 -.07 +8.0
DivrSmCap d 18.05 +.09 +14.1
EmMktStk d 36.01 +.19 +2.1
EqIndex d 36.04 -.05 +7.3
EqtyInc 24.80 -.10 +5.5
FinSer 14.02 -.12 -1.1
GrowStk 34.59 +.12 +7.6
HealthSci 36.50 +.11 +20.5
HiYield d 6.86 +.01 +4.9
IntlBnd d 10.34 -.05 +5.3
IntlDisc d 46.48 +.06 +5.9
IntlGrInc d 14.35 -.09 +7.8
IntlStk d 15.01 -.01 +5.5
IntlStkAd m 14.95 -.01 +5.4
LatinAm d 54.39 -.33 -4.1
MediaTele 57.46 +.37 +11.1
MidCapVa 25.32 -.13 +6.8
MidCpGr 63.68 -.03 +8.8
NewAmGro 35.48 +.09 +7.5
NewAsia d 20.06 +.08 +4.6
NewEra 53.98 +.20 +3.5
NewHoriz 38.31 +.26 +14.4
NewIncome 9.57 +.03 +2.6
R2015 12.58 ... +5.8
R2025 12.81 ... +6.4
R2035 13.06 -.01 +6.8
Rtmt2010 16.18 +.01 +5.5
Rtmt2020 17.45 ... +6.1
Rtmt2030 18.42 -.01 +6.6
Rtmt2040 18.60 -.01 +6.8
ShTmBond 4.86 ... +1.4
SmCpStk 38.11 +.14 +10.7
SmCpVal d 38.68 +.08 +7.1
SpecGrow 18.97 -.01 +7.2
SpecInc 12.60 ... +4.1
TaxFHiYld 10.57 ... +4.4
Value 24.88 -.13 +6.6
ValueAd b 24.61 -.13 +6.5
Templeton
InFEqSeS 21.42 ... +6.8
Third Avenue
Value d 52.34 ... +1.1
Thornburg
IntlValA m 29.78 +.19 +6.9
IntlValI d 30.44 +.19 +7.2
Tweedy Browne
GlobVal d 24.93 +.13 +4.7
VALIC Co I
StockIdx 26.61 -.03 +7.3
Vanguard
500Adml 123.25 -.16 +7.4
500Inv 123.25 -.16 +7.3
AssetA 25.99 -.02 +6.9
BalIdxAdm 22.40 +.02 +5.9
BalIdxIns 22.40 +.02 +5.9
CAITAdml 10.97 ... +4.5
CapOp d 34.81 -.14 +4.7
CapOpAdml d80.43 -.33 +4.8
CapVal 11.43 -.11 +3.7
Convrt d 13.77 +.02 +4.2
DevMktIdx d 10.64 -.05 +5.8
DivGr 15.52 -.07 +9.0
EmMktIAdm d40.81 +.05 +2.4
EnergyAdm d134.60 +.43 +11.3
EnergyInv d 71.67 +.23 +11.2
ExplAdml 75.87 +.17 +11.8
Explr 81.47 +.18 +11.7
ExtdIdAdm 45.14 +.08 +9.4
ExtdIdIst 45.14 +.08 +9.4
ExtndIdx 45.09 +.08 +9.3
FAWeUSIns d98.48 -.31 +5.0
GNMA 10.93 +.01 +3.4
GNMAAdml 10.93 +.01 +3.5
GlbEq 19.19 -.03 +7.4
GrowthEq 11.79 +.04 +9.3
GrowthIdx 33.86 +.07 +7.7
GrthIdAdm 33.86 +.08 +7.8
GrthIstId 33.86 +.08 +7.8
HYCor d 5.79 +.01 +5.3
HYCorAdml d 5.79 +.01 +5.4
HltCrAdml d 59.58 -.12 +16.2
HlthCare d 141.16 -.30 +16.2
ITBondAdm 11.39 +.06 +4.0
ITGradeAd 9.97 +.04 +3.8
ITIGrade 9.97 +.04 +3.8
ITrsyAdml 11.56 +.05 +3.3
InfPrtAdm 26.41 +.07 +5.5
InfPrtI 10.76 +.03 +5.6
InflaPro 13.45 +.04 +5.5
InstIdxI 122.42 -.16 +7.4
InstPlus 122.43 -.16 +7.4
InstTStPl 30.54 -.02 +7.9
IntlExpIn d 17.08 -.07 +2.5
IntlGr d 20.52 ... +6.1
IntlGrAdm d 65.31 -.02 +6.2
IntlStkIdxAdm d27.57 -.06 +4.6
IntlStkIdxI d 110.31 -.24 +4.6
IntlVal d 33.36 -.06 +3.7
LTGradeAd 9.41 +.03 +3.7
LTInvGr 9.41 +.03 +3.7
LifeCon 16.93 +.01 +4.5
LifeGro 23.30 -.01 +6.3
LifeMod 20.48 ... +5.5
MidCapGr 21.42 +.07 +12.7
MidCp 22.28 -.01 +9.7
MidCpAdml 101.21 -.02 +9.8
MidCpIst 22.36 ... +9.8
MidCpSgl 31.94 -.01 +9.8
Morg 19.55 +.04 +8.4
MuHYAdml 10.31 ... +4.6
MuInt 13.55 ... +4.1
MuIntAdml 13.55 ... +4.1
MuLTAdml 10.90 ... +4.4
MuLtdAdml 11.08 ... +2.0
MuShtAdml 15.91 ... +1.0
PrecMtls d 25.68 +.20 -3.8
Prmcp d 70.03 -.09 +6.4
PrmcpAdml d 72.69 -.09 +6.5
PrmcpCorI d 14.77 -.02 +7.3
REITIdx d 20.48 +.15 +13.1
REITIdxAd d 87.40 +.66 +13.2
STBond 10.63 +.03 +1.8
STBondAdm 10.63 +.03 +1.9
STBondSgl 10.63 +.03 +1.9
STCor 10.76 +.01 +1.7
STFedAdml 10.86 +.02 +1.6
STGradeAd 10.76 +.01 +1.8
STsryAdml 10.77 +.02 +1.3
SelValu d 20.29 -.07 +8.2
SmCapIdx 38.03 +.05 +9.4
SmCpIdAdm 38.09 +.06 +9.5
SmCpIdIst 38.09 +.06 +9.6
SmGthIdx 24.63 +.11 +12.4
SmGthIst 24.69 +.10 +12.4
SmValIdx 17.05 -.02 +6.5
Star 19.97 ... +5.6
StratgcEq 20.88 +.03 +14.0
TgtRe2010 23.45 +.02 +5.1
TgtRe2015 13.08 ... +5.3
TgtRe2020 23.34 +.01 +5.6
TgtRe2030 23.02 -.01 +6.2
TgtRe2035 13.94 -.01 +6.5
TgtRe2040 22.90 -.01 +6.5
TgtRe2045 14.38 -.01 +6.5
TgtRetInc 11.64 +.02 +4.4
Tgtet2025 13.36 ... +5.9
TotBdAdml 10.71 +.03 +2.8
TotBdInst 10.71 +.03 +2.8
TotBdMkInv 10.71 +.03 +2.7
TotBdMkSig 10.71 +.03 +2.8
TotIntl d 16.48 -.04 +4.6
TotStIAdm 33.77 -.02 +7.9
TotStIIns 33.77 -.02 +7.9
TotStISig 32.59 -.02 +7.9
TotStIdx 33.76 -.02 +7.8
TxMCapAdm 67.52 -.08 +7.9
TxMIntlAdm d12.25 -.05 +5.8
TxMSCAdm 29.83 +.11 +9.8
USValue 11.10 -.03 +9.9
ValIdxIns 22.10 -.09 +7.5
WellsI 22.53 +.04 +5.7
WellsIAdm 54.59 +.10 +5.8
Welltn 32.47 -.03 +5.9
WelltnAdm 56.08 -.06 +5.9
WndsIIAdm 48.76 -.13 +8.2
Wndsr 14.11 -.05 +5.1
WndsrAdml 47.60 -.17 +5.2
WndsrII 27.48 -.07 +8.2
Yacktman
Yacktman d 18.12 -.03 +9.6
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
YTD
Name NAV Chg %Rtn
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
52-WEEK YTD
HIGH LOW NAME TKR DIV LAST CHG %CHG
Combined Stocks
ABB Ltd 26.25 +.17 +16.9
AEP Ind 29.05 -.23 +11.9
AES Corp 12.84 -.14 +5.4
AFLAC 46.45 -.98 -17.7
AGL Res 41.75 +.25 +16.5
AK Steel 16.37 +.39 0.0
AMC Net n 38.53 -1.32 +8.6
AMR 5.34 -.18 -31.5
ASM Intl 40.14 -.73 +14.7
AT&T Inc 31.63 -.05 +7.7
AU Optron 6.45 -.46 -38.1
AbtLab 53.16 +.06 +11.0
AberFitc 71.41 +2.69 +23.9
Abraxas 4.15 +.38 -9.2
AcadiaRlt 20.87 +.22 +14.4
Accenture 61.75 +.88 +27.3
ActionSemi 2.12 +.03 -1.4
ActivsBliz 11.80 -.04 -5.1
AdamsEx 11.28 -.01 +5.0
AdobeSy 31.52 -.01 +2.4
AdvBattery 1.12 +.05 -70.9
AdvEnId 13.27 -1.75 -2.7
AMD 7.14 +.03 -12.7
Aetna 44.69 -.54 +46.5
Agilent 51.66 -.34 +24.7
Agnico g 63.09 +1.52 -17.7
AkamaiT 31.18 -.31 -33.7
AlcatelLuc 5.92 +.04+100.0
Alcoa 16.39 +.08 +6.5
AlignTech 23.00 -.01 +17.7
AllegTch 62.72 -.21 +13.7
Allergan 84.51 -.06 +23.1
AlliBInco 7.90 +.01 -.4
AlliantEgy 41.29 -.13 +12.3
Allstate 30.78 -.12 -3.5
AlphaNRs 46.08 -.67 -23.2
AlteraCp lf 47.12 -.41 +32.4
Altria 26.60 +.07 +8.0
AmBev s 34.49 +.19 +11.2
Amazon 213.19 +3.70 +18.4
Ameren 29.04 -.17 +3.0
AMovilL s 26.98 -.06 -5.9
AMovilA s 26.82 -.18 -6.2
ACapAgy 29.96 +.36 +4.2
AmCapLtd 9.98 -.01 +32.0
AEagleOut 12.91 -.08 -11.8
AEP 38.51 +.33 +7.0
AmExp 52.33 -.01 +21.9
AmIntlGrp 29.68 -.30 -38.5
AmSupr 8.93 +.05 -68.8
AmTower 53.59 -.69 +3.8
AmWtrWks 29.91 -.19 +18.3
Ameriprise 57.47 -.92 -.1
Ametek s 45.61 -.02 +16.2
Amgen 57.92 -.36 +5.5
Anadarko 79.31 +1.40 +4.1
Annaly 18.26 +.06 +1.9
Anworth 7.68 +.06 +9.7
ApolloGrp 47.03 +.57 +19.1
Apple Inc 349.43 +6.17 +8.3
ApldMatl 13.09 -.20 -6.8
Arbitron 41.30 +.04 -.5
ArcelorMit 34.72 -.51 -8.9
ArchCoal 26.55 -.44 -24.3
AriadP 11.90 +.36+133.3
ArmHld 29.22 +.62 +40.8
ArmourRsd 7.50 +.09 -4.0
ArubaNet 30.49 +.69 +46.0
AstraZen 51.08 +.63 +10.6
Atmel 14.48 +.17 +17.5
ATMOS 33.65 -.20 +7.9
Autodesk 38.87 +.17 +1.8
AutoData 53.67 -.22 +16.0
AveryD 38.57 -.45 -8.9
Avon 27.72 -.26 -4.6
BB&T Cp 27.13 -.21 +3.2
BHP BillLt 94.79 -.66 +2.0
BJs Whls 50.34 -.02 +5.1
BP PLC 44.21 -.41 +.1
BP Pru 113.44 +.95 -10.4
BPZ Res 3.84 +.16 -19.3
BRFBrasil 17.40 -.19 +3.1
BabckW n 26.81 -.93 +4.8
Baidu 145.87 +2.52 +51.1
BakrHu 73.89 +.96 +29.2
BallardPw 1.59 -.01 +6.0
BallyTech 41.12 -.03 -2.5
BcBilVArg 11.63 -.35 +14.4
BcoBrades 20.71 -.01 +2.1
BcoSantSA 11.53 -.34 +8.3
BcoSBrasil 11.58 -.12 -14.9
BkHawaii 46.51 -.46 -1.5
BkIrelnd 1.08 -.03 -59.2
BkMont g 63.15 -1.19 +9.7
BkAtl A h .92 -.01 -20.0
BarcGSOil 25.07 +.67 -2.1
Barclay 16.74 -.35 +1.3
Bar iPVix rs 20.36 +.07 -45.9
BarnesNob 17.08 -.40 +20.7
BarrickG 45.98 +1.20 -13.5
Baxter 60.17 -.06 +18.9
BedBath 59.30 -.09 +20.7
BerkHa A 115860 -1190 -3.8
BerkH B 77.31 -.78 -3.5
BestBuy 32.24 +.24 -6.0
BigLots 33.38 -.58 +9.6
BioRadA 121.44 -.10 +16.9
Blkboard 44.15 -.03 +6.9
Blackstone 16.93 -.44 +19.6
BlockHR 16.07 -.24 +34.9
Boeing 74.15 -.12 +13.6
BostonSci 7.14 -.09 -5.7
BrigExp 31.01 +.38 +13.8
BrMySq 29.16 +.01 +10.1
Broadcom 34.27 -.14 -21.3
BrcdeCm 6.59 +.04 +24.6
BrkfldOfPr 19.61 +.02 +11.9
Buckeye 64.64 -.02 -3.3
CA Inc 22.89 -.28 -6.3
CBS B 28.57 +.02 +50.0
CF Inds 143.13 +3.61 +5.9
CH Engy 54.04 +.03 +10.5
CMS Eng 19.93 -.18 +7.2
CNO Fincl 7.93 -.11 +17.0
CSS Inds 20.60 -.35 0.0
CSX s 26.50 -.31 +23.0
CblvsNY s 26.37 +.41 +11.4
CalaStrTR 9.69 -.01 +4.6
Cameco g 26.41 -.10 -34.6
Cameron 50.21 -.22 -1.0
CampSp 34.45 -.20 -.9
CdnNRs gs 43.03 +.70 -3.1
CapOne 53.06 +.41 +24.7
CapsteadM 13.46 +.03 +6.9
CardnlHlth 46.38 +.06 +21.1
CareFusion 27.76 +.09 +8.0
Carnival 38.33 -.46 -16.9
Caterpillar 108.43 -.19 +15.8
CedarF 20.65 -.01 +36.2
CelSci .50 ... -39.1
Celgene 60.31 -.57 +2.0
Cemex 8.41 -.25 -18.3
CenterPnt 19.75 -.04 +25.6
CVtPS 36.03 +.03 +64.8
CntryLink 41.00 -.03 -11.2
ChkPoint 57.65 +.90 +24.6
Checkpnt 17.93 -.22 -12.7
Cheesecake33.34 +.51 +8.7
ChesEng 30.29 +.19 +16.9
Chevron 105.12 +1.03 +15.2
Chimera 3.47 -.07 -15.6
Chubb 62.20 -.83 +4.3
ChurchD s 40.89 -.32 +18.5
CIBER 5.63 +.03 +20.3
CienaCorp 17.95 -.70 -14.7
Cirrus 16.55 -.35 +3.6
Cisco 15.67 -.13 -22.5
Citigrp rs 42.57 -.31 -10.0
Clearwire 3.91 +.09 -24.1
CliffsNRs 94.84 +1.14 +21.6
Clorox 67.97 -.30 +7.4
Coach 66.76 +.77 +20.7
CocaCE 29.76 -.05 +18.9
Coeur 24.83 +.91 -9.1
CoffeeH 18.63 +1.13+400.8
ColgPal 87.98 -.49 +9.5
Comc spcl 24.87 +.27 +20.1
Comerica 34.32 -1.07 -18.8
CmtyHlt 25.73 -.47 -31.1
Compuwre 9.60 -.24 -17.7
ConAgra 25.74 -.16 +14.0
ConnWtrSv 25.36 -.15 -9.0
ConocPhil 75.85 -.03 +11.4
ConsolEngy48.37 +.03 -.8
ConEd 53.69 -.37 +8.3
ConsolWtr 9.55 +.05 +4.1
ConvOrg h .05 -.01 -86.8
CooperTire 19.72 -.11 -16.4
CornPdts 57.14 +.90 +24.2
Corning 18.31 -.23 -5.2
Covidien 53.78 -.44 +17.8
Cree Inc 32.81 -1.05 -50.2
CrownHold 39.19 -.04 +17.4
Ctrip.com 44.17 +.12 +9.2
CybrOpt 10.03 +.09 +17.4
DCT Indl 5.34 +.06 +.6
DNP Selct 9.97 +.01 +9.1
DR Horton 11.63 -.05 -2.5
DTE 50.61 -.19 +11.7
Danaher 54.38 -.14 +15.3
Darden 53.48 +.69 +15.2
DeanFds 12.38 +.01 +40.0
Deere 84.84 +.30 +2.2
Dell Inc 16.98 ... +25.3
DeltaAir 9.12 -.17 -27.6
DeltaPtr h .45 -.01 -40.8
DenburyR 20.23 +.18 +6.0
Dentsply 38.56 +.04 +12.8
DeutschBk 59.42 -1.64 +14.2
DevelDiv 14.52 +.10 +3.1
DevonE 79.80 +1.04 +1.6
Diageo 83.66 +1.24 +12.6
Diebold 31.67 +.06 -1.2
DirecTV A 52.01 +.25 +30.3
DrSCBr rs 32.80 -.31 -30.0
DirFnBr rs 43.17 +.86 -8.6
DrxEMBull 39.29 -.05 -4.9
DrxEBear rs13.90 -.23 -38.4
DrxFnBull 26.45 -.54 -5.0
DirxSCBull 86.12 +.69 +18.9
DirxEnBull 76.87 +1.12 +31.5
Discover 26.81 +.32 +44.7
Disney 39.97 +.25 +6.6
DomRescs 48.61 -.38 +13.8
Dover 68.98 -.11 +18.0
DowChm 36.30 -.02 +6.3
DrPepSnap 42.74 +.59 +21.6
DryShips 4.11 -.20 -25.1
DuPont 54.45 -.02 +9.2
DukeEngy 19.07 ... +7.1
Dycom 16.64 +.16 +12.8
ECDang n 12.23 +.43 -54.8
E-Trade 14.25 -.20 -10.9
eBay 32.64 -.10 +17.3
EMC Cp 27.88 +.05 +21.7
ENI 47.30 -.82 +8.1
Eastgrp 44.30 +.75 +4.7
EKodak 2.93 -.14 -45.3
Eaton s 52.32 -.33 +3.1
ElPasoCp 20.48 +.05 +48.8
Elan 11.60 -.26+102.4
EldorGld g 15.44 +1.02 -16.9
ElectArts 24.32 +.13 +48.5
Emcore lf 2.97 +.12+173.7
EmersonEl 57.16 +.07 0.0
EnbrEPt s 30.11 -.03 -3.5
EnCana g 31.02 +.19 +6.5
EndvSilv g 9.17 +.97 +24.9
Ener1 1.00 -.07 -73.6
Energen 57.99 +.59 +20.2
Energizer 74.74 +.42 +2.5
EngyConv 1.16 -.01 -74.8
EngyTsfr 48.75 -.19 -5.9
ENSCO 52.85 -.04 -1.0
Entergy 67.33 -1.05 -4.9
EntPrPt 43.14 -.19 +3.7
EntropCom 9.15 -.10 -24.3
EnzoBio 4.41 +.03 -16.5
EqtyRsd 61.62 +.27 +18.6
EricsnTel 14.42 +.04 +25.0
Exelon 42.96 -.39 +3.2
Expedia 29.93 +.39 +19.3
ExpScripts 53.66 -.30 -.7
ExxonMbl 81.60 -.41 +11.6
Fastenal s 36.59 -.06 +22.1
FibriaCelu 13.19 -.01 -17.6
FifthThird 12.91 -.06 -12.1
Finisar 18.55 -.28 -37.5
FstHorizon 9.43 -.27 -19.9
FstNiagara 13.15 -.20 -5.9
FT ConStap25.35 +.03 +20.1
FirstEngy 44.09 -.54 +19.1
FlagstBcp 1.20 -.02 -26.4
Flextrn 6.55 -.05 -16.6
Fluor 64.65 +.56 -2.4
FocusMda 32.28 +.48 +47.2
Fonar 2.01 +.01 +54.6
FootLockr 23.81 -.29 +21.4
FordM 14.10 +.08 -16.0
ForestLab 39.61 -.56 +23.9
ForestOil 28.15 +.97 -25.9
FortuneBr 64.75 -.01 +7.5
FosterWhl 29.66 -.85 -14.1
FMCG s 53.62 +.12 -10.7
FDelMnt 26.50 -.49 +6.2
FrontierCm 8.11 -.09 -16.6
FuelCell 1.40 +.06 -39.4
FultonFncl 11.00 -.03 +6.4
GT Solar 17.11 +.93 +87.6
GabDvInc 16.94 +.05 +10.3
GabelliET 6.20 +.01 +9.3
Gafisa SA 9.31 -.13 -35.9
GameStop 27.40 +.47 +19.8
Gannett 14.51 -.03 -3.8
Gap 18.17 -.11 -17.6
GenElec 19.04 -.16 +4.1
GenGrPr n 16.95 +.23 +9.5
GenMills 37.16 -.19 +4.4
GenMot n 30.86 +.28 -16.3
GenOn En 3.79 -.10 -.5
Gentex 30.84 +.06 +4.3
Genworth 10.28 -.28 -21.8
Gerdau 10.80 -.05 -22.8
GileadSci 41.57 -.38 +14.7
GlaxoSKln 43.26 +.26 +10.3
GlimchRt 9.69 -.01 +15.4
GluMobile 5.35 -.02+158.5
GolLinhas 13.18 +.57 -14.3
GoldFLtd 14.49 +.24 -20.1
GoldResrc 22.63 -1.47 -23.0
Goldcrp g 49.31 +1.88 +7.2
GoldStr g 2.29 +.11 -50.1
GoldmanS134.50 -2.15 -20.0
Goodyear 17.35 +.06 +46.4
Google 532.44+11.41 -10.4
Gramrcy lf 3.04 -.02 +31.6
GrtBasG g 2.01 ... -32.1
Greif A 66.22 +.46 +7.0
GpoTMM 1.83 -.03 -26.8
GpTelevisa 24.29 -.40 -6.3
HCP Inc 37.50 +.27 +1.9
HSBC 50.29 -.22 -1.5
Hallibrtn 52.15 +.86 +27.7
HanJS 15.29 -.13 +1.3
HanmiFncl 1.25 +.07 +8.7
HarbinElec 17.10 +.79 -1.4
HarleyD 42.85 +.76 +23.6
HarrisCorp 44.84 -.71 -1.0
Harsco 33.31 -.04 +17.6
HartfdFn 26.51 -.54 +.1
HawaiiEl 24.40 -.12 +7.1
HeclaM 7.84 +.15 -30.4
Hess 75.78 +.36 -1.0
HewlettP 36.47 -.58 -13.4
HomeDp 36.59 -.14 +4.4
HonwllIntl 59.46 -.73 +11.9
Hospira 54.13 -1.54 -2.8
HostHotls 17.45 -.18 -2.4
HudsCity 8.20 -.05 -35.6
HuntBnk 6.58 -.06 -4.3
Huntsmn 19.61 +.33 +25.6
Hydrognc 6.89 +.01 +83.2
Hyperdyn 4.37 +.06 -11.9
IAMGld g 19.21 +.77 +7.9
INGPrRTr 6.12 -.10 +7.6
iShGold 14.80 +.28 +6.5
iSAstla 25.81 -.43 +1.5
iShBraz 73.89 -.27 -4.5
iSCan 31.99 +.09 +3.2
iShGer 26.95 -.19 +12.6
iSh HK 18.68 -.00 -1.3
iShJapn 10.54 +.02 -3.4
iSh Kor 66.53 +.46 +8.7
iSMalas 15.39 -.06 +7.0
iShMex 62.90 -.36 +1.6
iSTaiwn 15.26 -.13 -2.3
iSh UK 17.99 ... +3.6
iShSilver 34.63 +1.63 +14.7
iShChina25 42.97 -.33 -.3
iSSP500 134.30 -.05 +6.4
iShEMkts 48.14 -.02 +1.0
iShB20 T 93.84 +.21 -.3
iShB7-10T 95.99 +.60 +2.3
iS Eafe 60.44 -.36 +3.8
iSR2KV 74.08 -.03 +4.2
iShR2K 84.04 +.21 +7.4
iShREst 61.76 +.38 +10.4
iShSPSm 74.75 +.26 +9.2
ITT Corp 59.07 -.78 +13.4
ITW 57.65 +.04 +8.0
Illumina 77.83 +1.82 +22.9
Imax Corp 29.99 -2.61 +6.8
Immucor 26.99 +6.26 +36.1
Informat 60.86 +1.46 +38.2
IngerRd 45.84 -1.22 -2.7
InglesMkts 16.79 -.01 -12.6
IngrmM 17.97 -.32 -5.9
InovioPhm .66 +.05 -42.6
Intel 22.44 -.09 +6.7
IBM 175.43 +.89 +19.5
IntlGame 17.66 -.33 -.2
IntPap 29.87 -.74 +9.7
Interpublic 12.75 +.04 +20.1
Intersil 12.84 -.11 -15.9
Invesco 23.40 -.16 -2.7
ItauUnibH 23.67 -.03 -1.0
JAlexandr 6.51 -.08 +24.0
J&J Snack 50.83 +.06 +5.4
JA Solar 5.70 +.16 -17.6
JDS Uniph 16.64 -.37 +14.9
JPMorgCh 41.03 -.55 -3.3
Jabil 20.44 -.33 +1.7
JanusCap 9.51 -.09 -26.7
JpnSmCap 8.45 +.13 -5.8
JetBlue 5.96 -.29 -9.8
JohnJn 67.62 +.32 +9.3
JohnsnCtl 42.25 -.15 +10.6
JnprNtwk 31.79 -.18 -13.9
KB Home 9.94 -.23 -26.3
KLA Tnc 40.61 -.84 +5.1
Kaydon 37.91 -.05 -6.9
Kellogg 55.14 -.26 +7.9
KeyEngy 18.02 -.11 +38.8
Keycorp 8.30 -.14 -6.2
KimbClk 66.52 -.38 +5.5
Kimco 18.97 +.24 +5.2
KindME 73.09 +.19 +4.0
Kinross g 16.54 +.75 -12.8
KodiakO g 6.39 +.48 -3.2
Kohls 51.52 -.27 -5.2
KrispKrm 9.84 +.18 +41.0
Kroger 25.04 -.04 +12.0
Kulicke 11.38 -.03 +58.1
LDK Solar 7.25 -.11 -28.4
LSI Corp 7.20 -.05 +20.2
LancastrC 61.65 +.07 +7.8
LVSands 44.10 +.21 -4.0
LennarA 18.58 -.14 -.9
LeucNatl 34.72 -.23 +19.0
Level3 2.48 -.04+153.1
LibtyMIntA 17.28 +.09 +9.6
LillyEli 37.28 -.39 +6.4
Limited 39.28 +.37 +27.8
LincNat 28.65 -.50 +3.0
LinearTch 32.87 -.56 -5.0
LizClaib 5.30 -.06 -26.0
LloydBkg 3.07 -.18 -25.3
LockhdM 80.97 -1.00 +15.8
LaPac 8.36 -.02 -11.6
Lowes 23.48 -.34 -6.4
lululemn g 118.75 +3.13 +73.6
LyonBas A 39.89 +.97 +16.0
MBIA 8.67 -.40 -27.7
MEMC 8.38 -.20 -25.6
MFA Fncl 8.21 +.03 +.6
MMT 6.93 +.01 +.4
MGIC 6.05 -.05 -40.6
MGM Rsts 13.70 +.01 -7.7
Macys 29.60 -.28 +17.0
MagHRes 6.96 +.20 -3.3
Manitowoc 17.79 +.27 +35.7
Manulife g 17.69 -.09 +3.0
MarathnO s 34.07 +1.12 +51.6
MarathP n 42.21 +.01 +8.2
MarinaB rs .17 -.02 -89.2
MktVGold 55.42 +1.68 -9.8
MktVRus 39.17 +.08 +3.3
MktVJrGld 35.25 +1.34 -11.6
Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD Name Last Chg %YTD
Mongolia chose the coal miner as
part of a group that will jointly devel-
op a sought-after coking coal de-
posit in the Gobi Desert.
In a bid to expand its overseas pay-
ments business, the money-transfer
company will buy a Travelex unit for
$973.8 million.
Energy Transfer Equity agreed to
pay $5.1 billion for the pipeline com-
pany, trumping a bid by rival Wil-
liams Cos.
The major stock indexes were mixed Tuesday as
investors took a breather following the S&P 500
indexs best week since 2009. The S&P 500 fell
1.79 points, or 0.1 percent, to 1,337.88. It was the
indexs first drop in six trading days. The Dow
Jones industrial average fell 12.90, or 0.1 percent,
to 12,569.87. The Nasdaq composite index rose
9.74, or 0.3 percent, to 2,825.77. A downgrade by
Moodys of Portugals debt rating weighed on
stocks.
20
30
40
$50
A M J
Southern Union SUG
Close: $42.07 1.70 or 4.2%
$21.23 $42.12
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
9.9m (3.7x avg.)
$5.25 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
22.0
1.4%
19
20
21
$22
A M J
Western Union WU
Close: $19.34 -0.90 or -4.4%
$14.93 $22.03
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
11.0m (2.4x avg.)
$12.23 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
14.0
1.7%
50
60
$70
A M J
Peabody Energy BTU
Close: $60.69 1.30 or 2.2%
$39.75 $73.95
Vol.:
Mkt. Cap:
5.6m (1.0x avg.)
$16.43 b
52-week range
PE:
Yield:
20.2
0.6%
Story Stocks
Stocks of Local Interest
96.73 65.09 AirProd APD 2.32 96.29 -.16 +5.9
30.70 20.04 AmWtrWks AWK .92 29.91 -.19 +18.3
51.50 41.02 Amerigas APU 2.96 45.72 -.01 -6.3
23.79 17.63 AquaAm WTR .62 22.31 -.06 -.8
38.02 25.58 ArchDan ADM .64 31.01 +.18 +3.1
299.60 192.65 AutoZone AZO ... 297.14 -.48 +9.0
15.72 10.40 BkofAm BAC .04 11.00 -.09 -17.5
32.50 23.78 BkNYMel BK .52 25.70 -.36 -14.9
17.49 6.08 BonTon BONT .20 9.60 -.21 -24.2
52.21 29.83 CIGNA CI .04 52.09 -.11 +42.1
39.50 26.84 CVS Care CVS .50 37.69 -.28 +8.4
68.77 50.02 CocaCola KO 1.88 68.30 +.21 +3.8
27.16 16.76 Comcast CMCSA .45 25.97 +.24 +18.7
28.95 21.76 CmtyBkSy CBU .96 25.15 +.01 -9.4
42.50 22.33 CmtyHlt CYH ... 25.73 -.47 -31.1
37.19 25.61 CoreMark CORE ... 36.78 +.08 +3.3
13.63 4.97 Entercom ETM ... 8.75 -.47 -24.4
21.02 7.71 FairchldS FCS ... 17.32 -.06 +11.0
9.84 6.99 FrontierCm FTR .75 8.11 -.09 -16.6
18.71 13.09 Genpact G .18 17.55 +.16 +15.5
13.74 7.59 HarteHnk HHS .32 8.30 -.14 -35.0
55.00 43.16 Heinz HNZ 1.92 53.42 -.20 +8.0
58.20 45.31 Hershey HSY 1.38 57.42 +.01 +21.8
35.50 27.85 Kraft KFT 1.16 35.62 +.15 +13.0
27.45 19.35 Lowes LOW .56 23.48 -.34 -6.4
95.00 72.03 M&T Bk MTB 2.80 88.00 -1.03 +1.1
85.80 65.63 McDnlds MCD 2.44 85.64 -.01 +11.6
24.98 19.27 NBT Bcp NBTB .80 22.43 -.06 -7.1
9.26 3.64 NexstarB NXST ... 8.36 -.07 +39.6
65.19 49.43 PNC PNC 1.40 60.27 -.62 -.7
28.38 24.10 PPL Corp PPL 1.40 27.88 -.14 +5.9
17.72 11.98 PennMill PMIC ... 16.67 +.06 +26.0
17.34 10.03 PenRE PEI .60 15.88 +.09 +9.3
71.89 60.95 PepsiCo PEP 2.06 69.77 -.42 +6.8
71.75 46.34 PhilipMor PM 2.56 67.19 +.44 +14.8
67.72 58.92 ProctGam PG 2.10 64.26 -.01 -.1
67.52 48.56 Prudentl PRU 1.15 64.17 -.60 +9.3
17.11 10.23 SLM Cp SLM .40 17.00 +.02 +35.0
60.00 32.41 SLM pfB SLMpB 4.63 56.13 -.97 +28.1
41.68 21.23 SoUnCo SUG .60 42.07 +1.70 +74.8
12.45 7.06 Supvalu SVU .35 9.40 -.17 -2.4
54.94 39.56 TJX TJX .76 53.73 +.56 +21.0
33.53 25.30 UGI Corp UGI 1.04 32.28 -.19 +2.2
38.95 25.99 VerizonCm VZ 1.95 37.82 +.02 +5.7
57.90 48.16 WalMart WMT 1.46 53.39 -.12 -1.0
41.82 32.74 WeisMk WMK 1.16 41.08 +.02 +1.9
34.25 23.02 WellsFargo WFC .48 28.42 -.25 -8.3
USD per British Pound 1.6047 -.0049 -.31% 1.5494 1.5138
Canadian Dollar .9629 +.0020 +.21% .9963 1.0651
USD per Euro 1.4410 -.0134 -.93% 1.3151 1.2538
Japanese Yen 81.04 +.26 +.32% 83.31 87.74
Mexican Peso 11.6391 +.0512 +.44% 12.2075 13.1400
CURRENCY CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Copper 4.34 4.29 +1.10 -1.42 +46.59
Gold 1512.30 1482.30 +2.02 +10.11 +26.57
Platinum 1742.60 1716.80 +1.50 +0.71 +15.11
Silver 35.40 33.69 +5.07 +21.35 +98.52
Palladium 774.65 756.45 +2.41 -0.08 +75.90
METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. 6MO. 1YR.
Foreign Exchange & Metals
C M Y K
PAGE 10B WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
W E A T H E R
ALMANAC
REGIONAL FORECAST
NATIONAL FORECAST
For more weather
information go to:
www.timesleader.com
National Weather Service
607-729-1597
Forecasts, graphs
and data 2011
Weather Central, LP
Yesterday 84/55
Average 82/61
Record High 98 in 1919
Record Low 45 in 1979
Yesterday 5
Month to date 26
Year to date 234
Last year to date 299
Normal year to date 186
*Index of fuel consumption, how far the days
mean temperature was above 65 degrees.
Precipitation
Yesterday 0.00
Month to date 1.57
Normal month to date 0.65
Year to date 28.18
Normal year to date 18.82
Susquehanna Stage Chg. Fld. Stg
Wilkes-Barre 2.81 -0.70 22.0
Towanda 1.96 0.29 21.0
Lehigh
Bethlehem 2.86 0.54 16.0
Delaware
Port Jervis 5.96 -1.57 18.0
Todays high/
Tonights low
TODAYS SUMMARY
Highs: 83-90. Lows: 61-65. Sunny to partly
cloudy skies today. Partly cloudy skies
tonight.
The Poconos
Highs: 80-90. Lows: 70-73. Sunny to part-
ly cloudy skies today. Partly cloudy skies
tonight.
The Jersey Shore
Highs: 80-88. Lows: 58-65. Partly cloudy
with a chance of thunderstorms today.
Partly cloudy tonight.
The Finger Lakes
Highs: 90-90. Lows: 72-73. Sunny to partly
cloudy skies today. Partly cloudy skies
tonight.
Brandywine Valley
Highs: 82-89. Lows: 70-75. Partly cloudy
with a chance of thunderstorms today.
Partly cloudy tonight.
Delmarva/Ocean City
Anchorage 62/47/.00 61/51/pc 63/50/pc
Atlanta 90/69/.00 92/73/t 91/74/t
Baltimore 92/69/.00 92/75/t 92/73/t
Boston 88/68/.00 89/71/pc 82/64/pc
Buffalo 79/58/.00 80/64/t 74/60/s
Charlotte 88/68/.00 91/70/t 90/71/t
Chicago 91/68/.00 82/66/t 78/64/pc
Cleveland 85/58/.00 83/68/t 79/63/pc
Dallas 100/79/.00 102/77/pc 100/76/pc
Denver 89/63/.00 81/60/t 85/61/t
Detroit 89/66/.00 88/65/t 82/62/s
Honolulu 85/75/.00 89/75/s 88/76/pc
Houston 97/75/.00 96/77/pc 96/77/pc
Indianapolis 88/63/.00 88/69/pc 84/65/pc
Las Vegas 96/81/.00 102/84/pc 103/86/pc
Los Angeles 76/66/.00 72/66/pc 72/66/pc
Miami 91/82/.00 89/77/t 90/78/t
Milwaukee 90/69/.00 75/61/pc 73/61/pc
Minneapolis 87/70/.01 82/63/s 82/65/pc
Myrtle Beach 88/75/.00 87/75/t 86/75/t
Nashville 90/71/.00 90/70/t 90/71/t
New Orleans 93/77/.02 92/78/t 92/79/t
Norfolk 86/73/.00 87/72/t 88/73/t
Oklahoma City 103/71/.00 99/75/pc 95/76/pc
Omaha 83/71/.63 84/67/pc 86/68/t
Orlando 93/76/.00 93/74/t 92/75/t
Phoenix 103/86/.00 108/87/pc 110/87/pc
Pittsburgh 86/62/.00 86/63/pc 83/61/pc
Portland, Ore. 83/56/.00 84/59/s 77/55/pc
St. Louis 88/71/.00 88/70/s 86/70/pc
Salt Lake City 85/72/.00 89/68/pc 89/68/t
San Antonio 96/75/.00 98/75/pc 99/75/pc
San Diego 79/69/.00 73/65/pc 72/64/pc
San Francisco 75/52/.00 76/55/pc 71/54/s
Seattle 79/51/.00 82/56/s 70/53/c
Tampa 88/77/.24 93/77/t 91/77/t
Tucson 99/74/.00 101/78/pc 103/78/pc
Washington, DC 90/74/.00 91/73/t 89/72/t
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
Amsterdam 75/52/.00 72/53/sh 68/54/sh
Baghdad 108/84/.00 110/85/s 112/85/s
Beijing 84/75/.00 96/71/pc 91/69/pc
Berlin 75/61/.00 79/59/pc 79/61/pc
Buenos Aires 54/34/.00 55/36/s 59/39/s
Dublin 68/55/.00 61/53/sh 59/51/sh
Frankfurt 84/57/.00 80/59/sh 78/60/pc
Hong Kong 93/82/.00 90/81/pc 90/79/pc
Jerusalem 85/63/.00 90/64/s 92/65/s
London 77/55/.00 64/55/sh 64/54/sh
Mexico City 77/57/.00 73/55/t 74/55/t
Montreal 86/66/.00 80/63/sh 76/56/s
Moscow 73/66/.00 75/60/t 77/61/t
Paris 88/55/.00 73/54/sh 72/55/sh
Rio de Janeiro 66/61/.00 70/62/c 68/59/pc
Riyadh 106/81/.00 110/81/s 110/80/s
Rome 81/66/.00 86/68/pc 87/68/pc
San Juan 89/79/.00 88/77/t 89/79/t
Tokyo 88/75/.00 86/75/sh 85/74/t
Warsaw 72/55/.00 70/57/t 77/60/t
City Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Yesterday Today Tomorrow
WORLD CITIES
River Levels, from 12 p.m. yesterday.
Key: s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sn-snow, sf-snowurries, i-ice.
Philadelphia
91/74
Reading
91/68
Scranton
Wilkes-Barre
89/63
88/64
Harrisburg
89/68
Atlantic City
84/71
New York City
93/72
Syracuse
84/64
Pottsville
88/63
Albany
88/65
Binghamton
Towanda
88/62
88/60
State College
87/62
Poughkeepsie
91/65
102/77
82/66
81/60
98/74
82/63
72/66
71/54
86/68
89/60 82/56
93/72
88/65
92/73
89/77
96/77
89/75
61/47
61/51
91/73
Sun and Moon
Sunrise Sunset
Today 5:37a 8:39p
Tomorrow 5:38a 8:39p
Moonrise Moonset
Today 11:39a 11:38p
Tomorrow 12:51p none
First Full Last New
July 8 July 15 July 23 July 30
It is going to be
a hot one
today! The
temperture will
climb into the
upper 80s and
lower 90s.
Showers and
thunderstorms
are possible this
afternoon, as a
cold front
approaches from
the northwest.
This cold front
will likely pro-
duce some
showers and
thunderstorms
this evening.
The front may
stall over south-
ern PAand help
produce more
showers and
thunderstorms
on Thursday
and Friday as
well . . .
Stay cool!
- Kurt Aaron
NATIONAL FORECAST: Showers and thunderstorms will follow a cold front, extending from northern
New England to the southern Great Lakes. Thunderstorms will be scattered across the Southeast as
well. A pair of storm systems, along with a moist flow of air from the south will lead to scattered
showers and thunderstorms from the Southwest into the central Rockies and east into the Plains.
Recorded at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Intl Airport
Temperatures
Cooling Degree Days*
Precipitation
TODAY
Sun, a T-storm
THURSDAY
Sun, a
T-storm
87
65
SATURDAY
Sun, a T-
storm
85
60
SUNDAY
Sunny
88
62
MONDAY
Sunny
90
65
TUESDAY
Sun, a
T-storm
90
65
FRIDAY
Sun, a T-
storm
85
60
90
60
C M Y K
TASTE S E C T I O N C
THE TIMES LEADER WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011
timesleader.com
WHEN THE weather is warm, people
seem to enjoy salads for a lighter meal.
With the variety of produce, both local
and imported, salads are
a great way to experi-
ence new flavors and
textures. Just take a
stroll through a super-
markets produce area
this time of year, and you
can get lots of ideas for the perfect dish.
On a recent visit, my wife decided she
wanted a BIG salad for dinner, so this is
what we created.
You can always call Vanderlyns at
283-6260 to see when this will be a fea-
tured item, or try preparing it yourself.
SURF AND TURF SALAD
Ingredients for 2 salads:
4 cups spring mix, cleaned
1 plum tomato, quartered
6 cucumber slices,
1
4-inch thick
4 strawberries, sliced
1
4 cup blueberries, washed
1
4 cup pineapple, diced
1
4 cup raspberries, washed
2 tablespoons candied walnuts
2 ounces Maytag Bleu Cheese Crumbles
4 shrimp, cleaned
2 filets mignon, 4 ounces each
salt and pepper
Method of preparation:
Season shrimp with salt and pepper and
grill for about 4 minutes on each side. Sea-
son filets with salt and pepper and grill to
desired doneness.
Combine greens and fruits in bowl with
vinaigrette.
On a cold plate place tomatoes and cu-
cumbers, add greens and fruit.
Sprinkle walnuts and bleu cheese on salad
and top with shrimp and filet.
Serve with your favorite dressing and
enjoy!
CHEFS CORNER
R O B E R T M A N F R E
VANDERLYN S RESTAURANT
Surf and turf
summer salad
a sizable entree
AIMEE DILGER/THE TIMES LEADER
Surf and Turf Salad at Vanderlyns.
What makes a recipe for delicious food
even better is when that delicious food is
actually good for you.
This occasional series, Healthy Help-
ings, will offer a health-conscious dish,
compliments of some of the areas profes-
sional nutritionists and dietitians.
This weeks diabetic-friendly recipe
comes from the Diabetes Management &
Nutrition Center of the Wyoming Valley
Health Care system. Its cool, tasty and
refreshingly light on a warm summer
night, and you wont have to sacrifice
great taste or good nutrition.
BLUEBERRIES CHANTILLY
Total Servings: 6
Serving size: 1/2 cup fruit with 1/4 cup top-
ping
2 cups fresh blueberries
1 cup fresh raspberries
1 cup fat-free sour cream
1/2 cup fat-free cream cheese
1 tbsp orange juice
1 tbsp honey
1 tsp cinnamon
2 tsp orange peel
Place the blueberries and raspberries in a
large bowl. With electric beaters, whip to-
gether the sour cream, cream cheese, orange
juice, honey and cinnamon until light and
fluffy. Spread over the top of the berries.
Garnish with orange peel and serve.
Nutrition information per serving:
Calories: 105
Total fat: 0 grams
Saturated fat: 0 grams
Sodium: 171 milligrams
Total carbohydrate: 21 grams
Dietary fiber: 3 grams
Protein: 5 grams
Original source: Diabetic Meals in 30 Min-
utes Or Less! 2nd Edition, American Dia-
betes Association
Blueberries Chantilly
refreshingly light
HEALTHY HELPINGS
T
he season for campfires and toasty marshmallows is very much here. But man cannot live by smores alone.
So its hardly surprising that camp food has inspired its very own publishing niche, complete with practical, macho
and whimsical approaches to the fine art of the weenie roast. The newest batch of camp cookbooks includes a British
charmer, a macho Tim Allen-esque tome and what can only be described as camping with Jeeves.
The Camping Cookbook
The best of the bunch is Annie Bells new
Camping Cookbook: 95 Inspirational Recipes,
From Hearty Brunches to Campfire Suppers
(Kyle Books, 176 pp., $16.95) and not just be-
cause its encased in a plastic sleeve that evokes
old Brownie Scout handbooks.
Bell is the British food writer behind two par-
ticularly tasty volumes Gorgeous Vegeta-
bles and Gorgeous Christmas. This camping
foray was inspired by Bells husbands wish to
spend his birthday on a sailboat-camping vaca-
tion. So when Bell says these recipes are tried
and true, she means they were tested under con-
es will be alternately charmed (Enid Blyton ref-
erences!) and put off (egad, kippers?). But
theres plenty of humor and practical wisdom.
Some recipes are intended to be made ahead.
Others are designed for campfire cooking, with
measurements given in casual handfuls and
mugs. And like any good camping book,
theres a heavy emphasis on bacon and coffee.
Ultimate Camp Cooking
Stand-up comics Mike Faverman and Pat Mac
ditions that will make your Mt. Diablo or New
Brighton setup look like something out of Top
Chef. Your work surface may be a picnic table,
but at least it doesnt bob up and down.
Bells preptips alone are worththe price of the
book. And the paramount consideration for ev-
erything fromher basic camping marinade to
the Cucumber Feta Couscous, Grilled Pork
Chops with Aioli and Cowboy Coffee Beef is
to minimize the water required, both in prepara-
tion and cleanup. The book is obviously written
by someone withample experience inscrubbing
camp pots. With cold water. In the dark.
Its a very British book, so American audienc-
By JACKIE BURRELL Contra Costa Times
Campfire
Cookery: Ad-
venturesome
Recipes and
Other Curi-
osities for the
Great Out-
doors (Stew-
art, Tabori &
Chang, 304
pp., $29.95) is
a curiosity in
itself.
MCT PHOTOS
Annie Bells
new Camp-
ing Cook-
book: 95
Inspirational
Recipes,
From Hearty
Brunches to
Campfire
Suppers
(Kyle Books,
176 pp.,
$16.95).
(Camping Cookbook: 95 Inspirational Recipes, From Hearty Brunches
to Campfire Suppers, was) obviously written by someone
with ample experience in scrubbing camp pots.
With cold water. In the dark.
See CAMPFIRE, Page 2C
C M Y K
PAGE 2C WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 THE TIMES LEADER www.timesleader.com
C O M M U N I T Y N E W S
Advertisement Advertisement
THIS WEEK: July 6-12
Homemade Chicken and Biscuits
Dinner and Bake Sale 4:30-
6:30 p.m. Saturday, Loyalville
United Methodist Church, Loyal-
ville Road, a half mile off Route
29 South. Adults pay $8; $3.50
for children younger than 12
years old. Takeouts available.
Place orders in advance by
calling 477-3521.
Two-Day Barbecue Dinner Fun-
draiser, sponsored by the Tyre
Square Club Inc., noon-6 p.m.,
Saturday and Sunday, Wilkes-
Barre Boulevard and Hill Street,
Wilkes-Barre. Dinners cost $10,
sandwiches $8, racks of ribs
$25, and sides are $3 each. For
more information, call 793-7627.
Chicken Barbecue Dinner orders
are due by Monday for the sale
planned noon-3 p.m. July 16, St.
Michaels Orthodox Church Hall,
Church and Winter streets, Old
Forge. Dinners are $9 each. Call
Al at 562-3965.
Community Lunch Programfor
White Haven Residents 1 1:30
a.m.-noon every Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, St.
Pauls Lutheran Church, 418
Berwick St., White Haven. This
ministry is supported through
volunteers and donations.
Doors open at 10 a.m. for coffee
and close at 1:30 p.m. Contact
the Rev. Dawn Richie of St.
Pauls Lutheran Church at
443-9424 for more informa-
tion.
FUTURE
Takeouts-Only Chicken Barbe-
cue, hosted by the Trustees of
Trucksville United Methodist
Church, 4:30-7 p.m. July 15,
Dickson Educational Facility on
Church Road, Trucksville. Adults
pay $8; $4 for children. Call the
church office at 696-3897
Monday through Friday from 9
a.m.-1 p.m. to reserve tickets.
Chicken Barbecue, sponsored by
the Trucksville Volunteer EMS
Fire & Rescue Association 10
a.m.-5 p.m. July 16, Thomas
Family Market, Shavertown.
Half a chicken, choice of vege-
table, salad and beverage costs
$6.99.
All-You-Can-Eat Breakfast Buf-
fet 8 a.m.-noon, July 17, Pond
Hill-Lily Lake Fire Company.
Takeouts available.
Family-Style HamDinner 4:30-
6:30 p.m. July 23, Sweet Valley
Volunteer Fire Company, 5383
Main Road, Sweet Valley. All you
can eat except dessert. Take-
outs start at 4 p.m. Adults pay
$8; $4 for children ages 6 to 1 1
years old; free for children 6
years of age and younger.
Proceeds benefit the fire com-
pany.
Chicken Barbecue, 5 p.m. July 23,
Mount Zion United Methodist
Church, Mount Zion Road,
Harding. Takeouts served 4-5
p.m. Adults pay $8.50; $5 for
children 12 years old and young-
er. For tickets, call Bob, 823-
2484, or Carole, 388-6565.
Two-Day Barbecue Dinner Fun-
draiser, sponsored by the Tyre
Square Club Inc., noon-6 p.m.,
July 30-31, Wilkes-Barre Boule-
vard and Hill Street, Wilkes-
Barre. Dinners cost $10, sand-
wiches $8, racks of ribs $25,
and sides are $3 each. For more
information, call 793-7627.
GOOD EATS!
Editors note: Please send news
for this space by noon Friday to
people@timesleader.com or by mail
to Good Eats, The Times Leader, 15
N. Main St., Wilkes-Barre, PA1871 1.
To ensure accuracy, information
must be typed or computer gener-
ated. For more information, con-
tact Michele Harris at 829-7245.
sprinkle plenty of humor into
their Ultimate Camp Cooking
(Andrews McMeel, 216 pp.,
$14.99) book, which riffs on the
DVD cooking series of the same
name.
Its a book for guys who like
to camp, carouse and cook
hearty food thats rich enough to
horrify cardiologists and aro-
matic enough to make the entire
campground jealous. (Camp-
ground jealousy is a theme of
the book. Also, bears and off-
color stories. Tim Allens charac-
ter on the old Home Improve-
ment sitcom would have loved
this book.)
Unfortunately, all that flavor-
ful aroma relies heavily on
canned and processed ingre-
dients. A recipe for Mexican
Lasagna, for example, calls for
cans of condensed cream of
mushroom soup, enchilada
sauce, nacho cheese sauce and
refried beans, layered between
ready-made, corn tortilla shells.
Its not an entirely can opener-
centric volume, of course. The
book also includes recipes for
Asian-inspired, grilled aspara-
gus, salmon with fresh herbs
and a Dutch oven blueberry
cobbler.
Campfire Cookery:
Adventuresome Recipes and
Other Curiosities for the
Great Outdoors
(Stewart, Tabori & Chang,
304 pp., $29.95)
By contrast, this is a curiosity
in itself.
Co-authors Sarah Huck and
Jaimee Young, recipe developers
and testers for New York Times
food columnist Melissa Clark,
have lavished considerable at-
tention on their prose. Some
might call the results char-
mingly whimsical. Others will
respond with well, heres a
look at the introduction to a
recipe for Charred Fennel and
Finocchiona Tartine:
After a long day amongst the
Boticellis at the Uffizi, nothing
pleases like a stroll to the near-
est piazza for a goblet of Chianti
and a platter of this revelatory
sausage laced with wild fennel
seed harvested from the wooded
hills and uninhabited fields of
Tuscany.
In her foreword, Clark con-
fesses shes not entirely sure
when her assistants are joking,
but she knows a good recipe
when she sees one. We do too,
and there are many here. But we
dont nibble tea sandwiches or
lemon curd when we camp. And
unless Jeeves is into backpack-
ing, its highly unlikely that well
be dining on this duos squab,
stuffed with pate, and served on
china.
That said, a campfire break-
fast that includes a Flying
Dutchmans Asparagus and
Aged Gouda Omelette sounds
pretty darn fabulous. As long as
theres coffee. And bacon.
CAMPING MARINADE
Note: This recipe makes
enough to marinate a couple of
meals worth of meat or fish for
3-4 people. You also can use it as
a salad dressing.
1/3 cup lemon juice
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
3 garlic cloves, peeled and
crushed into a paste
1 teaspoon sea salt
Combine all the ingredients in
an airtight container. Shake
before use. Store in a cool place.
Annie Bell, The Camping Cook-
book (Kyle Books, 176 pp.,
$16.95)
CUCUMBER AND
FETA COUSCOUS
Serves 4
Note: This is perfect campfire
fare, because it requires no real
cooking and only the most casual
of measurements.
1 mug couscous
1 and 1/2 mugs boiling water
Extra virgin olive oil
Sea salt
1/2 of a cucumber, quartered and
thinly sliced
A few small fresh mint leaves,
torn
6 tablespoons Camping Marinade
(see recipe)
A couple of handfuls of green,
pitted olives 7-ounce block feta
cheese, coarsely crumbled.
Combine the couscous, a tables-
poon or two of olive oil and a pinch
of salt in a large bowl. Pour in the
boiling water and set aside. It will
be ready in 10 minutes, but for the
purposes of this salad, leave it to
cool, then fluff it up with a fork.
Toss in all remaining ingredients,
adding the feta last. Drizzle with a
little more oil before serving.
Annie Bell, The Camping Cook-
book (Kyle Books, 176 pp.,
$16.95)
DUTCH OVEN
BLUEBERRY COBBLER
Serves 4-6
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 tablespoon baking powder
1 cup heavy whipping cream
3 tablespoons unsalted butter,
roomtemperature
1 cup fresh blueberries
Powdered sugar, garnish
1. In a large bowl, combine the
flour, granulated sugar, baking
powder, cream and butter, and mix
until it makes a sticky dough.
2. Grease 6 individual ramekins.
Drop about 1/4 cup dough into each
ramekin and use your fingers to
spread it evenly across the bot-
toms and up the sides to form a
cup for the filling. Put a few spoon-
fuls of blueberries in each cup.
3. Put the ramekins in your
Dutch oven and pour a little hot
water in the bottom, so ramekins
are half-submerged. Cover the
Dutch oven and put 8 hot coals on
top and 4 around the outside of
the bottom, but not underneath.
Cook for 35-40 minutes, or until
the dough has cooked through.
Sprinkle with powdered sugar
before serving.
Mike Faverman and Pat Mac,
Ultimate Camp Cooking
(Andrews McMeel, 208 pp.,
$14.99)
2
9
8
7
6
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