VOICE
Monday, December 26, 2016
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COVERING THE GREATER WYOMING VALLEY
THE CITIZENS’ WHAM! SINGER DEAD
PLAYOFFS FOR THE STEELERS
George Michael dies at age 53
Pittsburgh clinches AFC North title
NO DETAILS: PAGE 27
NFL: PAGE 28
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The Christmas Together Dinner was held at First Presbyterian Church of Wilkes-Barre on Sunday.
TOGETHER FOR
CHRISTMAS
Volunteers organize annual holiday dinner event, deliver meals to hundreds in Luzerne County. Page 4 BREAKING NEWS, BLOGS, VIDEOS & MORE AT CITIZENSVOICE.COM LIKE THE CITIZENS’ VOICE ON FACEBOOK AND FOLLOW @CITIZENSVOICE ON TWITTER
Misericordia grad overcomes speech disorder to conquer public speaking
TODAY’S FORECAST
A bit of drizzle, can freeze on surfaces early today; cloudy. Winds south-southeast 6-12 mph.
41 39 WILKES-BARRE EXTENDED FORECAST
average normal highs/lows for the week: 34/20: A shower tomorrow morning; otherwise, some sun, then clouds and mild. Winds west 8-16 mph. Colder Wednesday. Winds north 6-12 mph.
TUESDAY
49
WEDNESDAY
39
30
28
A shower
Colder
Last year: 53/37
38/30
THURSDAY
42
28
A bit of snow 42/31
FRIDAY
36
By Annemarie Butkiewicz Staff Writer
SATURDAY
23
A snow shower 48/37
30
36
Variable clouds 45/36
Forecasts and graphics provided by accuWeather, inc. ©2016
COMPLETE WEATHER DATA ON PAGE 39
INSIDE TODAY’S VOICE Tourney set for tipoff The 51st McGrane Basketball Tournament opens tonight at the CYC. Page 29
INDEX Almanac Advice Birthdays Search for answers Business Russia is examining all possible Classifieds reasons for the Black Sea jet Comics crash that killed 92 Sunday. Page 26 Editorial Horoscope National Request denied Police Blotter The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals dePublic Notices nied former Lackawanna County comPuzzles missioner Robert Cordaro’s request for permission to file a new appeal of Sports Television his corruption conviction. Page 6
39 24 18 A2 A3-16 20-23 14 23 A1 3 A3 21-23 28-40 24
LOTTERY NUMBERS
2 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
Pick 2
Day
Night
36
71
Pick 4
Day
Night
4424
1211
Pick 3 660 754 Pick 5 62124 09009 Wild ball Day: 6; Night: 0 (applies to Pick 2, 3, 4, 5) Cash 5 3, 19, 20, 32, 34 treasure hunt 4, 8, 18, 20, 24
Cash 5: No players matched all five numbers, so today’s jackpot rolls to $225,000. Powerball: There were no winners, so Wednesday’s jackpot rolls to $60 million.
OBITUARIES CAFFREY, Thomas FREDERICK, Deborah HERRON, Mark HUMMEL, Harvey KRUM, Mildred MURPHY, Dorothy STANTON, George Obituaries, pages 25-26
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DALLAS — Public speaking is no easy task, and dealing with a speech disorder doesn’t make it easier. But public speaking is something that Misericordia University graduate Terrence Murgallis overcame during his four years at college. As the valedictorian for his class in August, Murgallis, who received a bachelor’s degree in speech-language pathology, gave the graduation speech on Dec. 18. In his speech, Murgallis recalls an instance of stuttering while speaking publicly and feeling frustrated, embarrassed and emotionally drained. Confronting, accepting and acknowledging his stutter enabled him and his audience to feel more comfortable, he said. There was a standing ovation and Murgallis received many words of support afterwards. “I definitely impressed myself, that’s for sure,” Murgallis said. “Spoken expression wasn’t always my strong suit, so being able to move people was pretty cool.” Murgallis’s childhood friend, TJ Zelinka, was there to see his sister graduate. The speech brought his mother to tears. “He made my mother cry like a baby,” Zelinka, who has seen Murgallis gain confidence in public speaking, said. “It was very touching, very inspiring as well.” He credits his success since his senior year of high school, when he gave his first graduating speech for Elmer L. Meyers Junior/ Senior High School, to working with the Misericordia University Speech-Language and Hearing Center and Dr. Glen Tellis. “It helped me immensely with confidence and having the skills to stand up there with the spotlight on me,” Murgallis said. Working with the center inspired Murgallis to pursue a degree in speech-language pathology instead of
COURTESY OF MISERICORDIA UNIVERSITY
Terrence Murgallis, right, credits Dr. Glen Tellis, professor of speech-language pathology at Misericordia University, with helping him overcome fears with public speaking.
‘The misconception is that you cannot communicate because you stutter. When you acknowledge that you stutter — you put your audience more at ease right away.’ DR. GLEN TELLIS Misericordia University Speech-Language and Hearing Center nuclear engineering. Initially, Murgallis was concerned stuttering would hinder him from helping others, but Tellis dispelled these doubts — he knows many specialists who stutter. “The misconception is that you cannot communi-
U.S. and at Oxford University in England. He reached out to the community and started a local chapter of the National Stuttering Association. Now Murgallis lives in Maryland where he works as a speech-language pathologist. He said he enjoys interacting with kids and being a positive roll model for them. “I love my job,” Murgallis said. “It’s such a rewarding thing to be able to give back to those kids what I learned in my speech therapy.”
cate because you stutter,” Tellis said. “When you acknowledge that you stutter — you put your audience more at ease right away.” While at Misericordia University, Murgallis dove into researching stuttering with Tellis’ help, presenting abutkiewicz@citizensvoice.com 570-821-2072, @anniebutkiewicz research papers around the
NEWS IN BRIEF Police: Man shot in W-B on Christmas Eve WILKES-BARRE — Officers responded to an area hospital where a reported shooting victim had been dropped off on Christmas Eve, according to Wilkes-Barre police. Officers spoke with the shooting victim, a 28-year-old Dalton man, at about 7:25 p.m. at the medical facility where he had been taken, police said in a news release. The man said he went to an unknown address on North Main Street, where several people confronted him and demanded that he empty his pockets, the news release states. The man was then shot, he told police. The shooting victim had non-life-threatening wounds to his abdomen and leg, police said. Anyone with information is asked to contact city police at 570-208-4200, or dial 911. — Eric Mark
Police: Man upset about chicken bones hit window WILKES-BARRE — A man unhappy about finding chicken bones outside a fried-chicken restaurant punched a window of the restaurant, according to city police. The incident happened shortly after 1 a.m. Saturday at Crown Fried Chicken on South Main Street, police said in a news release. The man entered the restaurant upset that there were chicken bones outside, then punched a window with brass knuckles, police said. The suspect is described as a black male with a beard, wearing a black jacket, accompanied by a large brown dog. — Staff report
Woman shot to death in south Philadelphia store MARK MORAN / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
Magisterial District Judge Paul Roberts of Kingston will retire Jan. 1. Roberts initially ran for the seat 29 years ago after 10 years as a police officer.
STEPPING OFF THE BENCH Kingston magisterial district judge set to retire after 29 years By Sarah Scinto Staff Writer
the possibilities of retirement. “I’ll keep myself occupied,” he said. “I’d like to go to a lot of concerts. I’m looking for, possibly, land to farm. I wish I could have five or six acres — I’d have about a dozen dogs.” Still, he said he will miss aspects of his time as a district judge. “The meeting of the people ... that’s what I’m going to miss most,” he said. “You meet all walks of life that come through here.” He offered some advice for his eventual successor. “Be fair, be stern, but always rule with a level mind and a fair hand,” he said. “Get the respect of the people. Whether they lose or win, as long as you have their respect, there’ll be no problems.” sscinto@citizensvoice.com 570-821-2048, @sscintoCV
POLICE BLOTTER Wilkes-Barre police activity Wilkes-Barre police report the following incidents: n Officers responded to a report of shots fired at the parking lot of Ali Baba Lounge on South Main Street at about 2:55 a.m. Sunday. Officers found spent shell casings and vehicles damaged. One suspect is described as a black male wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt, who fled on foot toward Academy Street. n A woman told police that when she returned home to her North Empire Court residence early Sunday morning she found two men inside. One man restrained her while the other damaged property within the residence, she said. Nothing was reported stolen. n Shakuille Russell, 21, of Wilkes-Barre, was charged with possession of controlled substances, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct after officers responded to a complaint of a male attempting to force entry to a Scott Street residence at about 4:10 a.m. Sunday. n Joshua Wink, 31, and Samantha Hawkins, 28, both of Wilkes-Barre, were cited for possession of drug paraphernalia on Saturday after officers allegedly observed Wink try to conceal a hypodermic needle. — Compiled from staff reports
CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS It is our policy to correct errors promptly. To report an error, please call the city desk at 570-821-2056.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 3
confirmed one of his life mottos. “I tell people, do what’s in your heart,” he said. “You don’t want to ... say I should have done that.” At the start of his district court tenure, Roberts said some in the community worried he would be more likely to take the side of law enforcement when ruling on cases because of his experiences as a cop. He said he tried to check his own potential biases and learn from them early on. “I caught myself once,” he said. “From that one time you learn your lesson ... never rule with your heart, you have to rule with what’s in front of you.” Roberts hoped he has established a reputation as a fair, “down the middle” judge over his decades of service. “I rule on whatever is presented to me,” he said. Roberts looks forward to
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KINGSTON — About 29 years ago, Paul Roberts was a former cop running for magisterial district judge. Now, after decades of unopposed reelection and community support, Roberts will retire Jan. 1. “When you reach that point where you know in your heart it’s time to go, it’s time to go,” he said. “It’s that time.” Roberts has served as the judge for Magisterial District Court 11-1-05, which covers Kingston and Edwardsville. In his time presiding over the court, he said he has seen the number of major criminal cases that pass through his courtroom dramatically increase. Right now, he estimates his court has about 720 criminal cases on its plate. “When I first started, if I’d
get 100 that’s a lot,” he said. “What causes most of your major crimes is the drugs ... it’s a catalyst.” After his retirement, Roberts said a senior district judge will keep the courtroom running until a successor is elected. One candidate for Roberts’s seat has already come forward: Luzerne County prosecutor Mamie Phillips has created a Facebook page for her campaign for district judge and plans to make an official campaign announcement next month. Looking back at the start of his career, Roberts said he initially ran for the judge seat after 10 years as a police officer. “I always wanted be an attorney but never went to school for it,” he said. “This opportunity came along, I ran and was successful.” He said that experience
PHILADELPHIA — Authorities have identified an elderly woman who was shot and killed in her south Philadelphia store on the morning of Christmas Eve. Police said 81-year-old Marie Buck, the owner of Marie’s Grocery store, was gunned down shortly before 9 a.m. Saturday inside the store. Police said a man dressed all in black and wearing a hood shot her multiple times. No arrests have been reported. Family members said Marie Buck ran the market for 43 years. Relatives and officials said she seemed to take a personal interest in her customers, including helping those in need. — Associated Press
Christmas Together Dinner a holiday tradition for volunteers By Eric Mark Staff Writer
el, showing the inter-faith nature of the holiday event, Frey said. Frey, a former Commission on Economic Opportunity employee and a member of First Presbyterian Church, has worked on the Christmas Together Dinner since her late husband, David Frey, helped found the event in the late 1970s. Frey’s adult sons also help out with the dinner. By about 2 p.m. Sunday the dinner was winding down and volunteers got a chance to rest, relax and enjoy the Christmas meal they had just provided for others. Vo l u n t e e r s D a r i a Kochanievich and Sally McGinley sat together. Both said they have helped with the Christmas Together Dinner for about 10 years. Many of their fellow volunteers have made the dinner an annual holiday tradition, they said. Sometimes, students from Wilkes University and King’s College who are in DAVE SCHERBENCO / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE Wilkes-Barre and unable to Brian Grilli, left, works with his mom Judy to fill an order at the Christmas Together Dinner at First get home for Christmas help Presbyterian Church of Wilkes-Barre on Sunday. out, McGinley said. The volunteers, of all ages, show up year after year for pretty much the same reason, according to Kochanievich. “I like making people happy,” she said.
4 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
WILKES-BARRE — Volunteers provided Christmas meals and holiday cheer for hundreds at the 39th Christmas Together Dinner on Sunday. The Commission on Economic Opportunity and the First Presbyterian Church of Wi l ke s - B a r r e COVER joined forces to rganize the STORY oeve n t , wh i c h started at noon at the church on South Franklin Street. At least 150 attended the dinner — which was free and open to the public — at the church, while volunteer drivers delivered hot meals to about 500 homes throughout Luzerne County, according to Nancy Frey, one of the organizers of the event. Donors paid for the food used to prepare the meals, while about 100 volunteers helped to decorate the church meeting hall, cook the turkey and trimmings, serve the meal at the church and deliver meals via vehicle, Frey said. “It’s a joint effort,” she said. Volunteer musicians also provided entertainment and holiday-themed music to accompany dinner at the church. One of the musical groups came from Temple Isra- emark@citizensvoice.com, 570-821-2117
DAVE SCHERBENCO / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
The Commission on Economic Opportunity and the First Presbyterian Church of Wilkes-Barre worked together to organize the event.
DAVE SCHERBENCO / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
Volunteer Rich Piccolotti dishes out DAVE SCHERBENCO / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE turkey to a server at the Christmas Rabbi Larry Kaplan from Temple Israel plays piano during the Together Dinner on Sunday. event.
Lighting the way for a Hanukkah celebration Executive Director Stewart Forman and Sydney Chapin sing after lighting the first candle on the menorah at the Jewish Community Center in Wilkes-Barre on Saturday. The eight-day celebration of Hanukkah kicked off Saturday at sundown.
DAVE SCHERBENCO / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
Making a joyful noise in Pittston Members of the children’s choir sing before Christmas Eve Mass on Saturday at Our Lady of the Eucharist Parish in Pittston.
DAVE SCHERBENCO / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
Striking up some holiday bowling fun in Wilkes-Barre Chacko’s Family Bowling Center in Wilkes-Barre was open Christmas Eve for some pre-holiday fun. Clockwise from right: Ella Demellier tosses her ball down the lane as she bowls with her family Saturday. Areianna, Tameka, Daveion and Kayson Brooks take a break from bowling for some pizza. Riyen Shatt tries to decide which ball would be best. PHOTOS BY DAVE SCHERBENCO / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
THE CITIZENS' VOICE MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 5
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Court denies Cordaro request for new appeal By Terrie Morgan-Besecker Staff Writer
amounted to a new rule of law relating to bribery cases, which would mean it could be applied retroactively to other cases, including Cordaro’s. In a one-page order, the 3rd Circuit court said the Supreme Court’s ruling related to the interpretaBUTCH COMEGYS / TIMES-SHAMROCK FILE tion of a criminal statute Former Lackawanna County Commissioner Robert C. Cordaro was conand does not constitute a victed in 2011 of accepting bribes from companies that did business with new rule of law, therefore the county. Cordaro is not entitled to any relief.
The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals denied for mer Lackawanna County commissioner Robert Cordaro’s request for permission to file a new appeal of his corruption conviction. The court on Thursday rejected Cordaro’s argument that he should be permitted to file a new appeal based on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that altered We Do Not Check Credit the standard of proof for tbesecker@timessharmock.com APR Amount Term Payment Rate @tmbeseckerTT “pay to play” schemes. $10,000.00 120 $133 8.39 10.21 Cordaro and former commissioner A.J. Munchak $20,000.00 180 $211 8.87 9.71 $$$ CASH $$$ were convicted in 2011 of $30,000.00 240 $284 9.01 9.71 FOR YOUR AUTOMOBILE accepting bribes from comANY MAKE or MODEL $50,000.00 240 $473 9.01 9.71 panies that did business FOREIGN or DOMESTIC CARS and TRUCKS with Lackawanna County. Fairway Finance • 1-800-722-8840 JO-DAN MOTORS www.fairwayloans.com 1339 N. RIVER ST. Cordaro was sentenced to Family Owned Direct Lender Located in Luzerne, PA for Over 50 Years 829-2043 PLAINS Payment does not include escrow for taxes and insurance, if applicable. Final payment obligation may be greater. 11 years in prison and Munchak to seven years. Cordaro filed numerous appeals of his conviction, all of which were denied. In November he sought permission to file a new appeal based on the U.S. Supreme Court’s June ruling in the case of former Virginia governor Robert McDonNORTHEASTERN LARGEST NEWS TEAMVaLLEy COVERiNgPENNSYLVANIA’S thE gREatER WyOMiNg nell, who was convicted of Flat Roofs • Shingles • Siding honest services fraud for Free Estimates • Insured For Home Delivery / 570-821-2010 / citizensvoice.com giving special treatment to Also Available At Your Local Newsstand HIC# PA-005521 political donors, including providing them access to state officials who could THERE IS STILL PLENTY OF TIME TO LOSE UP TO 30 LBS BY CHRISTMAS! benefit the donor’s business. The high cour t overhow great Imagine ho re it would feel to attend those holiday parties feeling light and healthy! turned McDonnell’s convicesca Franc top tion, finding that elected S Can’t g! officials must take some Smilin official action, not something like setting up a meeting, to be found guilty of honest services fraud. Cordaro’s attorney, Brian Kelly of Boston, argued the Supreme Court decision
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The wonder of Christmas morning Brian Vinsko Jr., 2, of Wilkes-Barre tears into one of his Christmas gifts Sunday morning.
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O’ come all ye faithful to Mass in Wilkes-Barre The Rev. Joseph D. Verespy, center, prepares to celebrate Mass at St. Nicholas Church in Wilkes-Barre on Christmas Day.
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AROUND THE STATE Police probe whether gunfire led to traffic death
ALVERTON — Authorities say a man has been arrested in the hit-and-run death of a man who was HOMESTEAD — Authori- struck as he was running ties in western Pennsylvania with his dog along a western
Woman arrested in Christmas stabbing
UPMC Presbyterian, where he died. The dog wasn’t hurt. Police on Sunday announced the arrest of 29-year-old Matthew Ramsay of New Stanton, who was charged with vehicular homicide, driving under the influence and other counts. — Compiled from wire reports
PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMNT FOR JENKINS TOWNSHIP The 2017 Jenkins Township Refuse Stickers are available for purchase at the Municipal Building located at 46 ½ Main Street, Inkerman, PA 18640. The Township will provide one garbage and one recycling bin for each sticker sold. The bins will be delivered to homeowners once the sticker is purchased and displayed. The refuse collection schedule will remain the same as pick-ups will continue on Mondays & Tuesdays. The Township will no longer be selling refuse bags. The bulk item pick-up program will continue as usual and bulk stickers are available for purchase.
Please contact the Jenkins Township Municipal Building at 570-654-3315 for any questions.
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Man arrested in death of man running with dog
Pennsylvania road on the afternoon of Christmas Eve. State police in Westmoreland County said 49-year-old Joseph Cummins of Mount Pleasant was struck before 2:30 p.m. Saturday in East Huntingdon Township. Police said he was taken to Frick Hospital and then flown to
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HARRISBURG — Authorities in central Pennsylvania are investigating whether gunfire led to a Christmas Eve traffic death in Harrisburg. PennLive.com reports that the victim was struck and killed by a vehicle at about 8 p.m. Saturday. But police chief Thomas Carter said early Sunday that investigatorsaretryingtodetermine whether the victim ran intothepathof thevehicleashe was fleeing gunshots in the area, either as a potential target orjusttoavoidthecrossfire. Carter said no arrests have been made and no other injuries were reported. The name of the victim hasn’t been released.
say a woman has been arrested in a stabbing that critically injured a man on Christmas morning. Allegheny County public safety officials said police and emergency medical responders were called to a Homestead residence just before 10 a.m. Sunday. They found a 55-year-old man with a stab wound to the chest. He was taken to a local hospital in critical condition. A 56-year-old woman accused of having stabbed the victim during an argument was arrested. Authorities said she will face charges of aggravated assault and evidence-tampering.
‘Don’t give up:’ An officer’s path to recovery Traffic stop becomes a life-changing event By Kaitlin Greenockle The (Hanover) Evening Sun GETTYSBURG (AP) — It was March 11, 2010. A typical day where April Phillips worked from her home in Gettysburg as a transcriptionist for Hanover Hospital. Her husband, Rick Phillips, a police officer for Eastern Adams Regional Police Department, kissed his wife and two stepdaughters goodbye, like he always did, and headed out to work his 5 p.m. to 3 a.m. shift. During his dinner break, Rick called April to let her know he would be working his normal traffic enforcement for the rest of the night. April told him to be careful and that she loved him, just like any other day. “You just don’t know about the future,” April said. Later that night, a knock on the door woke April up at 12:45 a.m. Two police officers told her Rick had been in a serious accident. Rick, who had been a police officer for about 15 years, had been involved in a high-speed pursuit. The chase ended when he crashed into a tractortrailer. Rick broke facial bones and his leg and sustained a traumatic brain injury. After the crash, he wouldn’t live full-
8 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
EARLY
time in his home again for five years, and his career as a police officer — one that he loved — would be over. “I miss my job there a lot,” he said. “I loved that job.” “Since he left, I don’t think we ever really recovered,” Eastern Adams Regional Police officer Shawn Cuffley said. n That night on March 11, 2010, Rick attempted to make a traffic stop but was soon in pursuit of the car he tried to pull over. While traveling on Route 30, the car ran a red light at the Route 94 intersection in Cross Keys. Rick continued through the red light, and his police cruiser crashed into a tractor-trailer. The car he was pursuing kept going. April was in shock when she heard the news and immediately went to York Hospital with her twin 11-year-old daughters. “Just imagine being woken up from a sleep at that time of night home alone,” April said. When April arrived at the hospital, Rick was getting a CAT scan. She was sent to the trauma waiting room. Doctors told her what they knew about his brain injury and said Rick would soon go to the operating room to have a pressure monitor placed in his head. When she finally saw him, he was on a stretcher being
earlypsychiatricandcounseling.com Dr. S. Rahman, M.D. (Psychiatrist)
wheeled to the operating room. April stood at the doorway, and she remembers the doors flying open and seeing blood everywhere. She yelled out that she loved him even though she wasn’t sure if he could hear her. After that, all she could do was cry and pray, she said. “I still think it’s a sheer miracle he woke up and can function the way he can,” April said. It took about a month for Rick to fully wake up. There were moments where he was semi-conscious and sometimes he would remember who April was, but other times he would call her Cindy, who is his sister, April said. “Awaking from a coma is strange, not like you see in the movies,” she said. “It’s a gradual process.” When Rick began talking again, doctors called it “word salad,” because nothing he said made sense. It took about six months for him to be able to remember what he had just done an hour before, April said. Even now, Rick says April knows his memory better than he does.
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Even now that Rick is home, he is still recovering. A therapist comes to his home during the week to take him to volunteer for a few hours. He has become involved with his community again — after they rallied around the family in their time of need — just in a different way. He volunteers at Shining Stars and at the Brethren Home and April and Rick are looking for more ways to give back, April said. SEE RECOVERY, PAGE 10
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She has to remind him to take his medication or take a shower. If something happened to her, Rick would have to go back and live in a rehab facility since he will never be independent. She worries about the future. “But it’s all part of my wedding vows to Rick,” April said.
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and Brianna Milliken, flew to North Carolina to spend the holiday with Rick. “I missed my family and friends, but we are all here now though, thank goodness,” Rick said. The crash dramatically altered April’s life, too. Her husband was no longer home, she had two pre-teens to raise and the dynamic of the home had changed. “It’s been a complete role reversal in the household,” April said. One of the rehab facilities suggested April seek legal guardianship so she could force Rick to stay at the facility. Otherwise, he could have left on his own, which was not safe at that point. “It was hard, but I had to think with my mind and not my heart,” April said. Rick is still her full-time responsibility, she said. He requires 24/7 supervision. He can’t drive, and probably will never drive, April said.
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After York Hospital, he went to rehabilitation facilities in North Carolina and Philadelphia. Rehab mainly worked on his memory issues, but he also had speech, physical and occupational therapy. Rick was also working with specialists when he was at ReMed in Paoli to help him come to terms with the changes in his life, April said. During those five years, he missed out on a lot of holidays and family events, April said. Whenever Rick was in the Paoli area for treatment or therapy she would go see him every day, and when he wasn’t in the area she would call every day. April made a total of 20 trips to see Rick in North Carolina and drove a total of 28,782 miles when he was in Pennsylvania facilities. “She was a very busy person,” Rick said. One Christmas, April and her twin daughters, Amber
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Making spirits bright Geisinger Health plan presented more than 200 filled holiday stockings to adult and pediatric patients at Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center on Thursday. Stockings were also given to hospital patients by the staff over the holiday. Employees stuffed 1,121 stockings with surprises, hoping the donations bring holiday cheer to those who may need it the most. Stockings were also distributed to patients at Geisinger hospitals throughout the state.
WARREN RUDA / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
Above: From left, Laura Ryan, Emily Parker, Rosemary Wyatt, Beverly Free and Kristine Brunn prepare to distribute stockings. Right: Brian and Stacey Roth of Mountain Top welcomed twins on Dec. 16. At left, Brian is holding Brandon while Stacey, right, is holding Nathan.
WARREN RUDA / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE WARREN RUDA / THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
Jennifer Kobesky of Pittston holds Luna.
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Eileen by Dennis Neuberger, Garrick and Charlene David and Joyce Connell, $25. Barge, $25. $25. In memory of our grandPaul and Annette SmerIn honor of Pesky and Yaz, son, Kaiden Alril-Ela who kanich, $50. $25. died at age of 2 of brain canDennis Rooney, $25. In honor of 2016 AL East cer by grandparents RoseAnonymous, $1,000. Division Champs Boston Red mary and Ray Calabrese, $50. Anonymous, $50. Sox, $25. Jennifer Libus, $50. James and Gail Devers, $50. Donna and Donald Graham, $50. In memory of George H. We Give You More. Stritzinger and Thomas A. Thorne by Janet Stritzinger, $25. Anonymous, $25. d Exam Wil Glasses an te Pair of Knights of Columbus Wil- 5702 Comple kes-Barre Council No. 302, $100. $ 57 Patricia Matus, $20. M Charles Coslett, $50. 57 Donna Weber, $50. Stephen Stetz, $50. 5 In memory of my niece Angela Wallace, $25. crystalvisioncenter.com
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Many people donated to Valley Santa to purchase Christmas gifts for children in need throughout Luzerne County. Donors included: Thomas and Lori Kucewicz, $50. In memory of Bernadine Archacovage, $15. Walter and Patricia Malyndziak, $50. Theresa and John Columbus, $20. Daniel Chmiola, $200. Marcella E. Marlin, $20. In memory of Rickey Wanat by Darlene and Tom Richards, $25. In memory of Joann Kocher, Mary Jean Lavelle, Elsie Bokar, Betty Jean James and Dorcas Kretchmer given by a friend, $95.50 In memory of my wife
Recovery: Officer’s Sisters find harmony in singing at churches, online long-term prognosis remains an uncertainty
10 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
By Joshua Bridges Emeigh The (Altoona) Mirror
FROM PAGE 8 Shining Stars in Gettysburg provides therapy through horsemanship. Rick and April volunteer together Thursday nights as side-walkers, walking alongside the horse as someone rides, and Rick volunteers during the week to help care for the horses. “I feed them, water them, brush them, clean their buckets and their stalls,” Rick said. Rick enjoys the side-walking because he said it’s fun to be around all the kids. “It’s a great program to be a part of,” April said. Before Rick was an officer in the Easter n Adams Regional Police department, he was an officer in Bendersville. That community decided to name a street after him to show their appreciation for his years of service. Bendersville Borough Police Chief David Ogel knew Rick for years, even as far back as when Rick was a constable. Rick knew how to have fun, Ogel said. They would play pranks on each other often. “Rick was very thorough as a police officer, but he knew how to have fun,” Ogel said. Rick has made strides in his recovery — he still enjoys fishing like he did before — but there is no guarantee of what to expect. Doctors are able to give the family an idea of the severity and can make predictions, but no two brain injuries are the same, April said. The experience has brought April closer to God and she became stronger in her spirituality. “God can get you through anything,” April said, “because I don’t know how else you could go through something like this without having faith.” Amber learned to rely on friends and family through the hard times. Brianna said she learned to not take anything for granted. As for Rick’s future, he
‘God can get you through anything, because I don’t know how else you could go through something like this without having faith.’ APRIL PHILLIPS Rick Phillips’ wife constantly talks about wanting to drive again, April said. He has driving tests done every six months by the rehab facility, but he hasn’t passed yet. He processes information slowly and has a slow reaction time, which he realizes, but he keeps trying. Being able to drive is Rick’s biggest goal for his future. “Don’t give up, and don’t take anything for granted,” Rick said. n Six years after the crash, Lance Lester Hawkes was found guilty of aggravated assault, and his sentencing will take place Jan. 9. “Justice pays, but it just takes a long time to happen,” said Rick Phillips, who was an acquaintance of Hawkes before joining the police academy. In 2013, Hawkes’ brother told police that Hawkes told him that he was the one driving the car being pursued by Rick. After he made it through the intersection he looked in his rearview mirror and saw Rick’s car blow up, according to an affidavit filed with District Judge Little. In 2015, Hawkes’ brotherin-law told police Hawkes admitted to him, just days after the crash, that he was the one driving the car, the affidavit states. Now that they know who caused the accident, the family is able to move forward with their lives, April Phillips said
CLAYSBURG (AP) — They share a love of music and their faith and occasionally even the same piano keyboard at the same time. Priscilla Kuhn, 25, and Drusilla Kuhn Rosentrator, 28, are sisters from Claysburg who enjoy playing the piano and singing in local and surrounding churches. They now are finding a wider audience through Facebook. The sisters have been singing together in church since they were very young, Drusilla said. “I remember our mother, Gail Kuhn, teaching us the basics,” Priscilla said. The rest they picked up on their own. Drusilla and Priscilla sing at Faith Baptist Church in Osterburg, where they are members. But they often visit surrounding churches to provide special music for them, Priscilla said.
One of their frequent requests is to play together on the same piano. They often play piano duets — four hands, one piano, one song. The duets seem to be the most requested music, they said. Now they are sharing their talents online. Priscilla laughed when she recalled how it all began. “One day, we decided to record our special music on my phone, and then we uploaded the video to Facebook. We received an overwhelming response and came up with the idea to create a fan page, specifically designed for people just to see and hear our music,” she said. “Then it hit us, ‘Kuhn Tunes’ was a no-brainer and catchy” name for their group, Priscilla said. “We are always happy and excited to visit and sing at new churches,” she said, adding people interested in having them perform can contact them on their Facebook page. The sisters were introduced
to southern gospel music at an early age. “We grew up listening to the Gaither Vocal band, The Cathedrals and The Hoppers,” Priscilla said. When they attend some concerts, the sisters even have the privilege of singing with them, one time was when The Hoppers performed at the Everett Area High School. “Still to this day, southern gospel music holds a special place in our hearts,” Priscilla said. Priscilla strictly plays and sings by ear and memory, while Drusilla prefers to play by reading music. Neither sister has ever taken music or singing lessons, Priscilla said. Angelica Friend acts as the Kuhn Tunes’ booking agent/ product manager. “She does a tremendous job of finding us new churches to sing at,” Priscilla said. Drusilla’s husband, Clint Rosentrator, is in charge of making sure they arrive, safely and on time at their venues.
Kuhn Tunes has often thought about recording an album. Many people have asked them about that, so they will be working to release one in the near future. Outside of singing, Drusilla enjoys spending time with her two pit bulls, Buddy and Zoey. Buddy is often featured “singing along to our piano duets in our videos,” Priscilla said, laughing. Drusilla also enjoys giving piano lessons to the elementary-age children at the Kuhn Tunes Studio and driving her restored 1999, 35thanniversary Ford Mustang GT, which she shows in multiple car shows every year. “We strongly believe that children are our future, and we are honored to play a part in their early education,” the sisters said. For their future, they plan to sing at more venues and churches, produce albums and hopefully add more musical members to the Kuhn Tunes family, while spreading their shared faith.
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DEALS TO RING IN THE NEW YEAR! Nolan Battige rides the flying bobsled attraction at Santa’s Workshop, one of the last theme parks in the Adirondack regions, in North Pole, N.Y.
Struggling theme park asks: Do you still believe in Santa? By Annie Stoltie New York Times News Service
CARRIE MCDONALD Harveys Lake resident
SEE PARK, PAGE 12
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recovering in a nearby pasture.) While it appeared to be a snowglobe-perfect scene, Doug Waterbury, the owner of Santa’s Workshop, said, “It’s a challenge to keep the door open, frankly.” “We lose money or break even every year,” Waterbury added. “Attendance is down. It’s hard to get up in the morning to push snow, feed reindeer and then look at all that red ink at the end of the year — and it’s not red because of Christmas.’’ Santa’s Workshop in North Pole, in Wilmington, New York, is among the last of the theme parks in the region, outlasting the Land of Makebelieve, Frontier Town, Time Town, Gaslight Village and other Adiron-
dack roadside attractions. Since 1949, Santa’s Workshop, an alpine village scaled for children, has welcomed families along the Whiteface Mountain Veterans Memorial Highway, a scenic road that meanders toward the peak’s 4,865-foot summit. Today, the park’s Technicolor slope-roofed buildings and non-thrill rides are a kitschy throwback that draws dedicated fans fueled by nostalgia, who return with their children or grandchildren to share their childhood experience of seeing Santa and his reindeer. Near the Candy Cane Express train, Car rie McDonald, 41, who lives in Harveys Lake, and her sister, Erin Richburg, 37, who l ive s i n P h i l a d e l p h i a , watched their children flap arms and legs into snow angels. “We came up in 1984 with our grandparents and have really vivid memor i e s, ” M c D o n a l d s a i d . “We’ve made it a tradition to come back. Right now we’re choosing this over Disney.” Richburg added, “It’s oldfashioned and simple. It’s all about Santa.”
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On a snowy shoulder of Whiteface Mountain in the Adirondacks, beyond handpainted signs advertising “North Pole, N.Y.” and “Rides, Shops, Shows,” several parking attendants pushed a sedan, its tires spinning, into a packed lot. The car’s occupants spilled out, joining other families who high-stepped through snowdrifts — just about everyone smiling, some tossing snowballs — toward the entrance to Santa’s Workshop, a theme park from another era. Inside, a line to Santa’s house snaked toward a frost-covered North Pole, where families posed for selfies and a boy in a puffy s n ow s u i t t o u c h e d h i s tongue. Some f amilies roasted marshmallows around a fire pit or wandered into the reindeer stable, where the animals were bedded down and out of reach of little hands. A boy raced from stall to stall, stopping in front of an empty one and shouting, “Where’s Donder? Where’s Donder?” (Donder and Dasher, an attendant elf later explained, had been feeling ill so they were
‘We came up in 1984 with our grandparents and have really vivid memories. We’ve made it a tradition to come back. Right now we’re choosing this over Disney.’
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12 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
Park: Attraction’s remote location presents challenge in luring patrons FROM PAGE 11 Standing by the park’s outdoor amphitheater, where Mary and Joseph trudge to the manger, Corinne Curtis, her husband, Dave, and their children, Jack, Deacon, Kainen and Londyn, who range in age from 8 years old to 16 months, were back for a second year, visiting from their home in Binghamton, New York. “The old-school feeling is what appeals to us,” Corinne Curtis said. And Santa, of course. “He’s a sweet Santa,’’ she said. “He takes the time with them. It’s not like other commercial places.” But in the 21st century, a nice St. Nick might not be enough to sustain a theme park in a remote part of the state. Santa’s Workshop’s inaccessibility — far from metropolitan areas, including five hours from New York City along twisty mountain roads — is “part of the mystique of the place,” Waterbury said. But it has also contributed to its decline. In 1967, the final stretch of Interstate 87 — through the easter n Adirondacks — was completed, punching a direct route from New York City to Montreal. It bypassed communities with mom-and-pop motels and cabin colonies as well as diners and attractions that had flourished in the years after World War II. In the 1940s, when three businessmen, Julian Reiss, Harold Fortune and Arto Monaco, came up with idea of a destination where it was always Christmas, they hadn’t anticipated 90 mph roller coasters or parks built around Walt Disney’s characters. (In fact, before Disneyland opened in Anaheim, California, in 1955, Walt Disney visited Santa’s Workshop for inspiration and to consult with Monaco, according to Waterbury.) The recession of 2008 pummeled the Adirondack travel industry. The unpredictability of the weather has also presented challenges, including Tropical Storm Irene in 2011, which damaged the p a rk . A t t e n d a n c e h a s dropped steadily since the 1970s, and now the park attracts no more than about 1,000 people on most days — a far cry from the more than 14,000 customers who would
‘The old-school feeling is what appeals to us. He’s a sweet Santa. He takes the time with them. It’s not like other commercial places.’ CORRINNE CURTIS On why she and her family returned to Santa’s Workshop for a second year
NANCIE BATTAGLIA / THE NEW YORK TIMES
The Jaquemin family, from Cincinnati, gathers around Santa at Santa’s Workshop in the Adirondack region, in North Pole, N.Y. show up in the 1950s. But the biggest hurdle for the theme park, Waterbury said, is the weakening hold that the story of Santa has on children today. In the 1950s “a 13-year-old might still believe in Santa Claus,” Waterbury said. “It’s unusual today that a kid over 7 or 8 still believes. There’s an urgency to get families to bring their kids here before they grow away.” In the lobby of the Jack Jingle puppet theater, where juice glasses, coasters and other memorabilia are displayed, Danielle and Paul Raimondi, from Center
Moriches, New York, showed their daughters, Isabel, 13, and Sophia, 10, sacks spilling over with 60 years’ worth of letters addressed to Santa Claus. After the girls wandered away, Danielle Raimondi whispered, “A lot of people in our 10-year-old’s school were talking about not believing, and we wanted to show her that he still does exist.” Waterbury, whose company, Empire Attractions, buys troubled assets, joined Bob Reiss, a son of Julian Reiss, as a co-owner in 2004. A decade later he bought out Reiss after earning his trust
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that he was committed to keeping the park’s spirit alive. Waterbury said he felt an obligation to loyal Santa fans, the community and the park’s history. Waterbury recently hired a new general manager, John Collins, who has many years of experience in the theme
park industry. They’re trying to figure out ways to bolster summertime attendance, the workshop’s most dismal season. “I’m not going to let it go,” Waterbury said. “There are enough bad things. This place is about what’s good in life.”
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The first sign you might have that the enamel on your teeth is beginning to erode is the pain felt after drinking or eating a hot or cold liquid or food. This pain is due to exposure of the sensitive “dentin” layer that makes up the majority of the tooth beneath the outer layer of enamel. According to a recent study of 3,773 people, evidence of dental erosion was found in 79 percent of the study’s participants. Further analysis of the participants’ dietary habits showed that those with moderate and severe dental erosion also consumed more fruit juices and soft drinks than the others. The chief culprit is the high acid content of these drinks, which etches tooth enamel. P.S. If high-acid drinks are consumed in large amounts, they override saliva’s ability to neutralize them. You may not even be aware that you have gum disease because often there is no pain. If you have any concerns or questions about any subject relating to the well-being of your teeth and gums, call CARPENTER DENTAL at 570.331.0909. We’re located at 1086 Wyoming Ave., Forty Fort, where we utilize laser assisted periodontal therapy. Dr. Charles M. & Dr. Chas M. Carpenter
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Coming out of depression to rediscover the joy of life By Marion Callahan Bucks County Courier Times
anymore,” he said. “I used to think if I was going to die by suicide, it would end my life and not impact anyone around me. But that day, I saw how many people my depression was affecting.” And that, he said, is when his recovery began. Bergman spent two weeks in an inpatient facility in Pennsylvania, where he was
protected from harming himself. He then went into intensive outpatient therapy four days a week for several months in Philadelphia and slowly began putting his life back together. St. Joe’s Prep allowed him to put his health before academics, he said, increasing his workload at home in small increments and easing him
back into the school day slowly. “I had to start with achievable steps, doing 15 minutes of work at home at night — not the hour that I would talk myself out of,” Bergman recalled. “Getting sleep, eating a good diet and taking care of my mental health was first.” When the 10th-grader returned to school a few
months later, his guidance counselor, who also worked as a therapist, asked him: “What can we do to keep you alive?” That help included seeing a therapist at least four times a week after school and taking summer classes to catch up on the coursework he missed.
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PHILADELPHIA — Drew Bergman recalled the Catholic school uniform he wore as he walked down the halls of St. Joseph’s Preparatory School in Philadelphia. The long sleeves and long pants of his St. Joe’s uniform hid the self-inflicted cuts on the ninth-graders’ arms and legs, signs of a disease he battled during adolescence. He struggled to mask the limp that was caused by other self-inflicted injuries. No one who brushed shoulders with Bergman in the halls knew that he had tried to end his life once and would do so again. He kept that dark side of his life silent, where he thought it belonged. Today, Drew is 23 — and silent no more. For the last five years, the Mount Holly, Burlington County, man has been shining a light on depression by traveling around the country speaking on behalf of the mental health advocacy group Minding Your Mind, which trained him as a speaker. He beams with excitement as he talks about connecting with people and making a difference in their lives. He also takes pride in discussing common misconceptions about mental illnesses so people feel less alone. The Temple University student’s message is clear: “No matter how hard things seem in that (suicidal) moment, remember to take a step back and look at the bigger picture. Things can and will always get better; as hard as it is, there are people and resources out there to get them the help they need.” He didn’t always think this way. “For so long, I thought I chose to be depressed and it was my fault,” said Bergman. “I realized later that it chose me; it ran through my genes and picked me. ... We celebrate other physical illnesses in our society and raise money ... like my grandmother died of breast cancer, but whoever talks about depression running in their family? There is this big fear that if you talk about
it, a child will show symptoms.” Bergman said depression hit him hard in seventh grade, when he was 12. The star soccer goalie stopped playing with his travel team. Soon after, he began missing school. Then, he stopped even trying to go. “He stopped doing anything that was of interest to him,” said his mother, Jennifer Uhl-Bergman. “I couldn’t get him up out of bed.” Afraid her son would harm himself, she made an appointment with the family pediatrician. “He shuffled us out the door and told us to see a psychiatrist, but offered no suggestions other than ‘Check with your insurance.’ If my son had a tumor, he would have suggested other doctors. I was scared and didn’t know what to do, and there was no one to help,” UhlBergman recalled, adding that finding a psychiatrist who will see an adolescent is difficult and many don’t accept health insurance. When Bergman wasn’t in school, his mom stopped by the house from work to check on him. “I always feared that I would find him hanging in the closet,” she said. One day when he was 12, he slashed his wrists and ended up in the emergency room. In the years following that first attempt to end his life, he continued to struggle — especially as he made the transition to high school and faced increasing academic pressure. “I was living, but I wasn’t getting better,” he said. Bergman said when he was 16 and in the 10th grade he felt so depressed he tried to commit suicide again. “All I was able to feel was the pain and sadness of that moment,” he recalled. “I wasn’t seeing the bigger picture to realize things might change. I didn’t think things would ever get better. I had really felt like that was it.” The day after that second suicide attempt, Bergman said he awoke to find his family circled around his hospital bed. “That moment, I could see how much pain I put them through, and I couldn’t do that
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14 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
Pension reform at state level would help schools Long before legislators return to the Capitol for the new legislative session in January, they will be reminded of major problems regarding public schools that they have failed to resolve for decades. Teachers in the Dallas School District broke off their strike just before Christmas but, absent a settlement, might resume the walkout in February. Scranton’s school board, meanwhile, appears to have no idea how it will close a $17 million budget hole by the end of the year, much less cover any even larger long-term deficit. Strikes and funding shortfalls are not exclusive to those districts. Rather, the problems are matters of degree for individual districts statewide. And much of that flows back to the state legislature’s refusal to bring school governance, including pension reform, into the 21st century. Regarding labor relations with teachers, the objective is not only to outlaw strikes but to replace the current system that encourages them with a method to achieve fair settlements. Because the law requires 180 days of instruction, politicians on school boards risk nothing through political posturing and teachers risk nothing by short-term strikes. School strikes are terribly inconvenient for students and parents but in terms of actually accomplishing anything they are a charade, mere theater. The legislature could change that in many ways. It could mandate a statewide teachers’ contract or, at the least, a statewide health insurance package for school personnel to remove one of the most volatile issues from negotiations. Best of all, it could mandate last-best-offer arbitration, which creates major risks for both sides and forces the parties to compromise. Lawmakers also must finally enact meaningful pension reform relative to current costs, rather than limiting benefits only for new employees and deferring any potential savings far into the future. The same legislators who created the crisis through unsustainable benefit increases coupled with unrealistic contribution requirements, refuse to resolve it for the worst possible reason — doing so would adversely affect their own Rolls Royce-level benefits. Ongoing problems in local school districts partially reflect poor governance at the state level. Legislators should tackle serious reforms early in the new session.
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George V. Lynett Jr., Robert J. Lynett, Matthew E. Haggerty 570-821-2045, publisher@citizensvoice.com Donald Farley — COO, print and digital Times-Shamrock Communications 570-207-3449 dfarley@citizensvoice.com Larry Holeva — Executive Editor 570-821-2064 lholeva@citizensvoice.com Dave Janoski — Managing Editor 570-301-2178 djanoski@citizensvoice.com Kevin Amerman — City Editor 570-821-2023 kamerman@citizensvoice.com Mark A. Altavilla — Advertising Director 570-821-2037 maltavilla@citizensvoice.com Joe Nealon — Circulation Director 570-821-2078 jnealon@citizensvoice.com
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Get ready for a two-president nation By Jay Ambrose Tribune News Service TNS Barack Obama first came to national attention as a conciliator. It was 2004 at the Democratic National Convention and the Illinois state senator made a resounding, eloquent speech calling for national unity. Five years later, at his inauguration as president of the United States, he made another resounding, eloquent speech, this time calling for national division. Or at least provoking it. Dr. Jekyll was gone, Mr. Hyde was on hand and the healing physician has since been hard to spot as Obama has broken records in polarizing the country. He has stirred up class antagonisms, heightened racial tensions and helped instigate political stalemate. His negotiation style with Republicans has been a modern-age version of a king telling uppity peasants what they had darned well do. And, on top of that and much more, he now appears ready to harass Donald Trump from a prominent D.C. perch for the next four years, more or less serving as an unofficial leader of disruptive antagonism. But let’s start with that 2009 inauguration speech that told us so much about the real Obama as he tried to tell us so much about President George W. Bush. As a report in The Guardian newspaper observed, Obama spoke of Bush’s eight years of running things as a time of “greed and irresponsibility,” of “a sapping of confidence” and of “a nagging fear that America’s decline is inevitable.” He announced an end to “the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas, that far too long have strangled our politics.” With Bush sitting close by, the new president said the government must quit “protecting narrow interests and putting off unpleasant decisions.” He said we must now “pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off and begin the work of remaking America,” then failing to go over to Bush, pick him up, dust him off and apologize.
This smooth, charming, brilliant but arrogant man continued to pick on Bush for the next four years as Bush himself said nary a word. And yes, I’ve heard the stuff about Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell saying he wanted to make Obama a one-term president. That happened in a 2010 interview in which he also said he would love it if Obama would try to meet the Republicans at least halfway. So far, he had not, and, in McConnell’s view, his uncompromising agenda was a thing to fear. Misleading critics love to kick McConnell without mentioning how Obama started his tenure by telling some Republicans he was president and they weren’t, implying they should shut up. The adorers do not delve into the ways in which subservient Harry Reid, easily among the worst Senate majority leaders in U.S. history, did far more than House Republicans to block conciliation on issues of moment. They also excuse Obama’s vow to act unilaterally if necessary after the GOP took over both houses of Congress in 2014. We’ve got a new issue now, namely that Obama, thoroughly practiced in keeping unity at bay, is not about to let his skills go to waste. He has said he will stay in Washington, D.C., to train Democrats on how to assume power again and has explicitly said he will speak out if he sees Trump going astray. Hardly any president has ever booed successors much — Jimmy Carter is a disgraceful exception — but it’s easy to imagine Obama growling through a media microphone on a daily basis. Gallup did various polls during this administration showing more political division in the country than ever before. Imagine what could happen with all the anti-Trump virulence, the mass protest rallies already planned and those now refusing to go to Canada despite pleas they get their passports as promised. We seem to be in for something like a two-president country, and the national hurt could be enormous.
RUBES
BY LEIGH RUBEN
EDITOR’S NOTE:
COMMENTARY
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Shoppers must guard against theft of packages Pittsburgh Post-Gazette TNS
ANDREW HARNIK / ASSOCIATED PRESS
President-elect Donald Trump waves to members of the media after a meeting with admirals and generals from the Pentagon at Mar-a-Lago, in Palm Beach, Fla., last week.
Trump and the hacking probe Los Angeles Times TNS
that the president-elect has adopted a position of willful ignorance about the possibility that Russia meddled in the election, speculating that the hacking could just as easily have been the work of China or “somebody sitting in a bed someplace.” Trump’s chief of staff, Reince Priebus, told Fox News on Sunday that the president-elect may come around if “intelligence professionals” publicly air unified findings. But both he and Trump have s u g g e s t e d t h a t t h o s e wh o express alarm about Russian interference are just trying to undermine the legitimacy of Trump’s election. Now that the electoral college has spoken, it’s time for Trump to drop the defensiveness, stop assailing the integrity of the intelligence community and support a thorough and bipartisan congressional investigation. If Russia eng aged in cyber espiona g e to influence the outcome of an American election, that should be alarming even to the candidate who won it.
Email: yourvoice@ citizensvoice .com Fax: 570-821-2247 Every letter must include your name, address and telephone number for verification. Only the name and town will be printed in the newspaper. Viewpoints are published free of charge. In an effort to express multiple views we request letter writers submit just one letter every two weeks.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 15
To their credit, prominent Republicans in Cong ress — led by Sen. John McCain of Arizona — are refusing to join President-elect Donald Trump in dismissing concerns about Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign. As a result, it seems increasingly likely that there will be an aggressive congressional investigation into what the intelligence community says was an effort by Russia to use information thefts and disclosures to meddle in America’s d e m o c r a t i c p r o c e s s. M o r e recently, the CIA and the FBI now reportedly agree that the object of the interference was to aid Trump and harm Hillary Clinton. One sticking point is a split among lawmakers over which committee or committees should be involved: a “Select C o m m i t t e e o n C y b e r, ” a s McCain and some allies prefer, or the Senate Intellig ence Committee and other existing panels, as Senate Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has insisted. We’re not sure it matters that much how the investigation is configured so long as it is aggressive, bipartisan and not conducted completely in secret. A select committee would have the advantage of preventing duplicative inquiries by different committees, but it also could take time to organize. Rep. Adam Schiff, of California, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, has of fered an attractive alternative: a joint inquiry by the House and Senat e i n t e l l i g e n c e p a n e l s i n wh i ch ch a i r s a n d r a n k i n g members of other interested committees could also participate. That approach would minimize duplication but not require creating an entirely new structure. Whatever form the investigation takes, it will be able to complete its work more expeditiously if it receives the cooperation of the incoming Trump administration. The problem, of course, is
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In Dr. Seuss’ “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” the Grinch is said to be a monster who has a heart that’s nothing more than an empty hole. As festive as Christmas can be, there are plenty of Grinches looking to steal your cheer — and your presents. There are stories every year about burglars stealing gifts, but the most egregious case this season has to be from Phoenix, Ariz., where burglars broke into a home, stole packages from under the Christmas tree — and took the family’s new puppy, an 11-weekold Cavapoo named Rosa. Her water bowl and food were swiped for added insult. While there is no foolproof way to prevent a breakin, police encourage shoppers to be alert, to hide packages or valuables that need to be left in the car and not to leave cardboard boxes that held expensive items at the curb after Christmas. The explosion of online sales in recent years has created an easier target for thieves during the holiday season — gifts left on the front porch. However, there are safeguards that can help prevent a person from being victimized. n Get a tracking number so someone can be home at the time of delivery. If possible, ask the delivery service to request a signature. n Have the gift dropped off at a side door or a back door where it will not be left in plain sight. n If no one will be home, ask a neighbor to accept the package. n If the gift is not too large, have it dropped off at a workplace. n Ask the shipper if the package can be picked up at a distribution center. Christmas gifts aren’t the only items thieves want. As difficult as it would be to have someone take that watch or doll purchased for a special someone, it would be worse if thieves stole guns or teenagers stole alcohol from an unlocked vehicle. As the saying goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. In Dr. Seuss’ tale, the Grinch’s heart triples in size, he returns all the gifts, and he joins the Whos for dinner. Such a story of Christmas repentance is unlikely in real life, so be alert and take precautions.
The forum page of The Citizens’ Voice welcomes viewpoints from readers. Letters of 150 words or less are of the best length. Long letters may be edited for space.
COMMUNITY
16 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
Wright Township police officer completes prestigious FBI training Police de partments a c r o s s M o u n t a i n To p always have emphasized the importance of training for their officers. Earlier this month, a member of the Wright Township Police Department completed the world’s most prestigious law enforcement training – the FBI National Academy. Sgt. Scott Rozitski, a 19-year veteran of the Wright Township Police Department, g raduated from the 266th session of the FBI National Academy Program at Quantico, Virginia, on Dec. 16. He was one of 222 law enforcement officers from 48 states, 20 inter national countries, five military organizations and eight federal civilian organizations. Internationally known for its academic excellence, the National Academy Program offers 11 weeks of advanced communication, leadership, and fitness training for selected offic e r s wh o h ave p rove n records as professionals within their agencies. On average, these officers have 21 years of law enforcement experience. Rozitski joins a short, but impressive list of local police who have completed the rigorous training. Wright Township Police Chief Royce Engler is a graduate of the academy as was former Chief Joseph Jacob. Fairview Township Police Sgt. Phil Holbrook graduated from the academy in 2006. FBI Director James Comey was principal speaker at the ceremony. A total of 49,686 men and women have graduated from the FBI National Academy since it began in 1935. Compost facility accepts trees on Jan. 14 Mountain Top Council of Governments met last week and voted to open the compost facility in the Crestwood Industrial Park from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, for disposal of live Christmas
tants, was hired to perform Fairview Township’s 2016 audit at a cost of $4,790.
Dorrance budget holds line on taxes Dorrance Township supervisors approved the townPAT ship’s 2017 budget at their RUSHTON meeting on Dec. 12. The fiscal plan sets anticipated expenMOUNTAIN TOP PEEKS ditures at $733,583, a decrease of more than $82,000 from the pat4psu@msn.com current fiscal plan. The propt r e e s . T r e e s m u s t b e erty tax rate will remain at unadorned. Lights, tinsel, .75 mills. ornaments and all other decorations must be removed. PennDOT centers closed for holiday Signal timing scrutinized PennDOT driver license If you are one of the and photo centers, including motorists who has waited its full-service center in Harseveral cycles at the traffic risburg, will be closed today signal at Route 309 and Kirby for the Christmas holiday. avenue to make a left turn onto the highway, take heart. Hike to start the New Year Fairview Township superviIf one of your New Year’s sors have asked State Rep. resolutions is to get outdoors Eddie Day Pashinski to con- and exercise more in 2017, tact the state Department of you might want to join the Transportation to see if any- folks at Nescopeck State Park thing can be done about the for a First Day Hike on Jan. timing of the signal. 1. According to superstition, Supervisor Russell Mar- what you do on the first day hold reported at this month’s of the year, you will do for supervisors meeting that the rest of the year. supervisors have received Join park staff and consercomplaints about the timing vation volunteer John Jakoof the light, prompting him by for this easy 2.5-mile hike to contact Pashinski. Mar- that cruises through various hold said he is awaiting a habitats within the park and response from the represen- passes by the scenic Nescotative and PennDOT. A short peck Creek. The hike starts green signal for motorists on at 1 p.m. Hiking boots, water, Kirby Avenue and the Tur- and a snack are recommendkey Hill exit, particularly in ed. Nescopeck Trail is not late afternoon and evening, suitable for strollers and pets often causes backups on both are not permitted on this roads. hike. The hike may be cancelled due to inclement Fairview Township weather. Registration is zoning appointments required. Fairview supervisors reThe park’s Hide-n’-Seekers appointed three members program for preschoolers to the township zoning will be held Jan. 5 at 10 a.m. hearing board for staggered Children ages 3-5 will have a terms of one, two and three chance to learn about the years beginning Jan. 1. natural world through stoA p r i l J a c o b s o n w a s ries, activities, and crafts. appointed to a one-year Weather permitting, particiterm ending Dec. 31, 2017; pants will go outside for part Shirley Garren to a two- of the program, so children year term ending Dec. 31, should be dressed according2018, and William Ermish ly. Registration is required. to a three-year term ending You can register through Dec. 31, 2019. Marhold said the park’s online calendar of that at the end of their events found at http://events. terms if the members want dcnr.pa.gov/ or by calling the to continue serving, their park at 570-403-2006. terms can be extended for a five-year period. PAT RUSHTON writes about Kovalchik, Kollar & Co., Mountain Top. Contact him at Certified Public Accoun- pat4psu@msn.com.
The Twin Boro Lions Club of Sugar Notch and Warrior Run and I.O.O.F. Askam Lodge 899 held a children’s Christmas party on Dec. 19. The children enjoyed refreshments, received a gift from Santa and took home a goodie bag. Four children won bicycles at the event. From left, are bike winners Gabrielle Mill, Breanna Balbach, Santa, Jayden Avery and Adam Heller.
HANOVER AREA
COMMUNITY DIGEST
Back Mountain DALLAS BOROUGH LISTS SCHEDULE FOR CURBSIDE PICKUP AND RECYCLING OF CHRISTMAS TREES: Dallas Borough announced the schedule for curbside pickup and recycling of Christmas trees. The Dallas Borough Road Department will commence curbside collection of Christmas trees on Jan. 3 and continue through Jan. 20. Christmas trees must have all decorations removed prior to being placed curbside. Do not place trees on the roadway or in swales/ditches. Residents are to refrain from placing their trees curbside prior to weather predictions for snow and/or freezing rain events. For information, contact the administrative office at 570-675-1389.
WYOMING/WEST WYOMING SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB: The Wyoming, West Wyoming Senior Citizens met Dec. 6 to celebrate Christmas. The 50-50 winners were Frank Perfinski, Joe Kosloski (2), Carol DeSalvo (2), Dona Pocceschi, Theresa Alexander, George Mchin and George Yurek. Door prizes were won
How to submit community news The Citizens’ Voice welcomes community news and photographs from community groups, service organizations, senior citizens groups, churches and non-profit organizations. Send community news to community@citizensvoice. com. Fax to 570-821-2247. Mail to The Citizens’ Voice, 75 N. Washington St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701, Attn. community news. Call 570-821-2069 for information. Dated announcements should be submitted at least one week prior to desired publication date. Images submitted electronically should be attached as high resolution jpg files. Other formats cannot be reproduced in print and will be rejected. All photographs must contain complete identifications for everyone in the photo. Please identify those in the photograph by first and last names, from left, by rows. Photographs without identifications or with incomplete identifications cannot be considered for publication. Content submitted by email should be typed in the text of the email or attached as a Word document. Please do not attach PDFs or other format files of publicity fliers or related materials. Such content cannot be readily extracted from these files for publication. Visit citizensvoice.com for community news. Select the ‘sections’ tab in the upper right-hand corner of the home page, and ‘community’ section under ‘arts and living.’ by Donna Pocceschi, Carol DeSalvo, George Mochin, Ann Kosloski and George Yurek. Bingo jackpot was won by Mary Matani. Next meeting is Feb. 7. Birthday
honorees are: December — Kathy Kostick, Marg Malarkey, MaryAnn Paluck and George Mochin. January — Theresa Alesxander, Ann Kosloski and Marion Pocceschi.
MILITARY BRIEFS Pvt. Andrew Ryman completes basic training
St. Nicholas visited the children, teens and parishioners of St. Mary’s Antiochian Orthodox Church on Sunday, Dec. 4, in honor of the Feast of St. Nicholas on Dec. 6. First row, from left, are Brody Moses, Christina Solomon with her daughter, Izabella; Sofia Moses, Isaac Solomon, Josie Solomon, Anthony Attar, Nadalie Solomon
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and her daughter, CiCi; George Attar and Eliana Marques. Second row: Jennifer Moses, Issa Dahdal, Steven Qarmout, Chloe Mazzatosta, Mary Dahdal, Alia Mazzatosta, St. Nicholas, the Rev. David Hester, Mario Landino, Deacon John Karam, Laila Qarmout and Sam Qarmout. Third row: Seminarians Joseph Clark and Yazen Fakhouri.
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Private Andrew Ryman, son of Martin and Kristy Ryman, Wapwallopen; grandson of Martin and Brenda Ryman, Wapwallopen, Darla Flick, Mountain Top, and the late Chet Flick, Ryman Berwick, recently completed boot camp at Marine Corps Depot, Parris Island, South Carolina. Andrew joined his older brother, Corporal Martin Lee Ryman II, in the U.S. Marine Corps. Ryman completed 12 weeks of training and received a perfect score on Table 2 earning him an expert rating in marksmanship. After graduation on Parris Island, he attended Marine Combat Training at Camp Geiger in North Carolina for a month of combat training. Upon his graduation of Marine Combat Training on Oct. 25, Ryman started his training in his Military Occupational Specialty in Logistics.
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help.thesubservice.com/wbasd
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
BACK MOUNTAIN Small Wonders Day Care School in Shavertown recently collected nonperishable food items to help restock the shelves of the Back Mountain Food Pantry. The pantry is located in the lower level of the Trucksville United Methodist Church administration building. Students in the pre-kindergarten class, first row, from left, are Levi Harris, Norah Banks, Grayson Greig, Miles Wilson and Afina Jenkins. Second row: Jack Willis, Brian Bolesta, Courtney Brittain, Addyson Coulter, Sara Naperkowski, Emily Chrobak and Brendan Lee.
Brian Thomas, son of Tara Parry and Kenny Thomas of Plymouth, is celebrating his fifth birthday today, Dec. 26. Brian is the grandson of Monica and Ken Thomas, and Adelaila and Dana Parry. Brian has two sisters, Ava-Lyn, 10, and Xylia, 3.
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YOUR BIRTHDAY The Citizens’ Voice is pleased to run, free of charge, birthday photos of children ages 1 through 16. Readers should send an individual photo of the child to: Birthdays, The Citizens’ Voice, 75 N. Washington St., Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701. Email to birthdays@ citizensvoice.com. Please include child’s last name and birth date in the e-mail’s subject line. Articles should be typewritten. Please include a daytime telephone number to allow us to verify the information. Photos should be received one week prior to the birthday. Photos received late will be published the next available day. We cannot accept color enlargements or computer printouts. Photos may be picked up at our Customer Service Desk off our first-floor lobby. Or, you can include a stamped, self-addressed envelope and we will return the photo. Please call 570-821-2067.
Students in the pastry arts management program at Luzerne County Community College recently made gingerbread houses as part of a class project. The gingerbread houses were on display at the Joseph A. Paglianite Culinary Institute and those who viewed the display were able to vote for their favorite house. The Pastry Arts Club also held a winter open house in conjunction with this year’s display. With the winning gingerbread houses, from left, are Nikki Campbell, Millville, second place; Shelly Reese, WilkesBarre, first place, and Ron Vomero, West Wyoming, third place.
NANTICOKE
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K.M. Smith School in Nanticoke announced its Students of the Month for December. These students have excelled in acting safely, being responsible and caring about others. One student from each class was selected for the honor. Layla Aleski was chosen as the School Wide Student of the Month winner. Her teacher is Ellie Anthony. First row, from left, are Kaden Shovlin, Mason Maga, Madison Falkowski and Ella Raczowski. Second row: Justin Kopa, Jalil Spears, Ryan Turner, Zackary Pliska, Jacob Bartuski, Layla Aleski and Ellie Anthony. Also participating were Gage Confletti, Cheyenne Durhunt, Tyler Klem and Nathan Vnuk.
NANTICOKE AREA
West Side SWOYERSVILLE HOLIDAY GARBAGE/RECYCLING SCHEDULE: Swoyersville Borough lists its Christmas week garbage and recycling collection schedule. Due to
the Christmas holiday, the garbage and recycling collection for this week, the week of Dec. 26, will be delayed one day. Today’s collections will be on Tuesday; Tuesday’s collections will be on Wednesday and Wednes-
day’s collections will be on Thursday.
SEND COMMUNITY NEWS to community@citizensvoice. com. Fax to 570-821-2257. Call 570-821-2069 for information.
Merry Money Winners! They WON 20 Merry Money PA Lottery Tickets!
Winners: Monday, December 26 Nicole Prezkop, Plains, PA John Blannard, Swoyersville, PA Robert Bozek, Forty Fort, PA
Winners can pick up their PA Lottery tickets at: The Citizens’ Voice Office 75 N. Washington Street, Wilkes-Barre until Friday, January 6, 2017 / T-F 9AM-5PM / Please have identification.
Members of the Disabled American Veterans (DAV) Chapter 102, Kingston, attended the 10th annual veterans appreciation event and expo held in conjunction with Misericordia University recently. The event was sponsored by state Rep. Karen Boback and the 117th Legislative District. From left, are William Jones, sergeant at arms, DAV; Williard Rollins, past commander, DAV; state Rep. Karen Boback; Raymond Smith, senior vice commander, DAV, and Dorothy Smith, past commander, Disabled American Veterans Auxiliary (DAVA).
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New Winners Announced Daily Until December 31 T HE C IT IZE NS' V O IC E
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THE CITIZENS’
Knights of Columbus Assembly 1928, Luzerne, recently donated to the Toys for Tots campaign at the Marine Corps Training Center, MWSS 472, Detachment A, Wyoming. At the presentation, from left, are Staff Sgt. Hunter, USMC; Raymond Smith, 4th degree Knights of Columbus; 1st Sgt. Shawn C. Kelly, USMC; Bill Jones, former master, Knights of Columbus; Sgt. Vandusen, USMC, and Sgt. Schell, USMC.
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Winners will be determined by a random drawing daily from from all entries received. Employees of this newspaper, and its subsidiary companies and their immediate families are not eligible to win prizes in this contest. Newspaper carriers are not employees and are eligible for this contest. No purchase necessary. The PA Lottery benefits older Pennsylvanians. Must be 18 years or older to play. Please play responsibly. For official rules go to www.citizensvoice.com/palottery.
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Pictured are winners of “Merry Money” at The Citizens’ Voice office.
THE LOCKHORNS
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BELIEVE IT OR NOT
MARVIN
THE PHANTOM
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NON SEQUITUR CRANKSHAFT
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“I wish they always ate breakfast as fast as they do the day after Christmas.”
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PEARLS BEFORE SWINE
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PAJAMA DIARIES
Please find answers to the previous Scramlets and Sudoku puzzles on the next page
SUDOKU PUZZLE The objective of the game is to fill each row, column and 3x3 box with the numbers from 1 to 9 inclusive. There is no mathematics involved. In a typical grid, approximately 30 of the numbers are given to you. From thereon, you can deduce all the other digits using logic alone.
ZITS
WORD WARP
YESTERDAY’S SOLUTION
CRYPTOQUIP The Cryptoquip is a substitution cipher in which one letter stands for another. Solution is by trial and error. Saturday’s Cryptoquip: That perjurer placed one spot higher than me in the tournament. I came in just under the liar.
Today’s Cryptoquip Clue: D equals O
DAILY BRIDGE Hans Rosling is a Swedish medical doctor who rose to prominence when he produced a Ted Talk in which he promoted the use of data to explore development issues. He said, “My best friend in medical school was a magician. We were shown an X-ray of a sword swallower, and I tried it and failed. Then I got a sword swallower as a patient, and he taught me.” If you know how to do something, it seems easy. But until you do, it can appear very difficult. At the bridge table, we would all play better if we had X-ray vision. In this deal, for example, what happens in three no-trump after West leads the diamond three? South starts with six top tricks: one spade, two hearts, two diamonds and one club. He should hope that East has the
HOROSCOPE By Eugenia Last Celebrities born on this day Chris Daughtry, 37; Jared Leto, 45; Ozzie Smith, 62; John Walsh, 71.
Birthday baby You are outgoing, adaptable and astute. You are worldly and candid. CONTACT EUGENIA’S websites, eugenialast.com for yearly transits, daily timing and compatibility services, and join Eugenia on twitter/facebook/ linkedin.
EMAIL YOUR OWN HOT SHOT PHOTOS to hotshot@citizensvoice.com. Submitted photos should be at least 200 dpi and 4-by-6 inches. Please give a description or story behind each submitted photo and include your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be submitted by email. No hard copies will be accepted. See more photos at citizensvoice.com/hotshot.
TODAY’S HOT SHOT Bernie Czeck, Mo-
canaqua, submitted this photo taken at the Princeton University Chapel. He wrote, “My wife and I enjoyed attending our granddaughter’s Westminster Choir College’s, “An Evening of Readings and Carols,” in the Princeton University Chapel on Dec. 10. When completed in 1928 at a cost of more than $2 million, this imposing college chapel, capable of seating 2,000, was second in size only to the chapel at King’s College, Cambridge University. The soaring arches of the Princeton University Chapel have summoned countless people to come inside to find faith, peace, inspiration, challenge, and courage.”
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ARIES (March 21-April 19): Think before you say something you might regret. A situation will get blown out of proportion, making it necessary for you to remain silent while you consider all angles. Offer affection to your loved ones. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): A last-minute invite will be met with mixed emotions. Consider the impact your
with friends or family. Choose your words wisely and avoid indulgence. Offer insight, suggestions and positive encouragement. Someone from your past will cause confusion, conflict and the need to reconsider your options. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Rely on what you have done in the past and put together a plan geared to using your skills to promote something you enjoy doing. Start your own business or look for a job where you can call your own shots. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Trust in yourself and your abilities. Emotional outbursts will not help you solve problems. Look for answers that are based on truth and facts. Avoid arguing or getting into a no-win situation with a friend or relative.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Happy birthday Use your imagination. Look at every angle of each situation you encounter. The trick will be to avoid overspending, overdoing and overindulging. If you are bored and want to make a change, consider altering your appearance, meeting new friends or taking on a creative project. Don’t feel pressured or guilty. Choose what makes you happy and eases your stress. Your numbers are 5, 16, 20, 23, 32, 37, 45.
decision will have on others. Don’t try to fit too much into your schedule. Take care of your own responsibilities first. Personal improvements are encouraged. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Look for greater opportunities and ways you can have an impact on the way you look and what you have to offer. A serious discussion within a partnership will lead to a positive change in the upcoming year. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Listen carefully to what’s being said. Emotional matters could give you the impression one thing is going to happen when something else winds up taking place instead. Don’t overreact, just accept the inevitable and do what’s best for you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Plan to have some fun, but don’t allow emotional spending to get you into financial trouble. If you want to change things up a bit, start with the relationships that you want to move forward with. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): If you feel confused, ask questions. Don’t let an emotional situation drag you
down. An older relative or youngster will test your patience. Communication is favored over taking sudden action. Get the facts before you react. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Plan to make change happen. Procrastination won’t solve your problems. Rely on your intuition to bring about changes at home or at work. Feeling good about what you do will set the stage for future accomplishments. Get together with friends or relatives. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Think matters through and you will come up with a solution that will improve your surroundings or your relationships. Don’t let an emotional incident lead to anger when laughter is the better choice. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You’ll have difficulty ignoring your feelings. Getting together with friends or family will be tiresome and leave you questioning some of the information that has been shared. You’ll have to decide what’s fact and what’s fiction. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’ll have to walk a fine line when dealing
club king and that he can get four heart tricks. What is the best play in the heart suit? Ideally, you run the nine. Then, assuming it loses to the jack or queen, you cash the ace and king. Your chances are just under 50 percent. Here, though, declarer’s communications are imperfect. The simplest-looking line is to win the first trick with dummy’s diamond king and to lead a club toward the queen. Suppose East takes that trick and returns a diamond. South should win that, cash the club queen, then lead a low heart from his hand. Yes, the defenders take that trick and two diamond winners, but when hearts prove to be 3-3, declarer is home. Note, though, that if East had shifted to the spade four at trick three, it would have defeated the contract — not easy.
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E < +++ Forrest Gump (‘94) Tom Hanks. æ 'TV14' ; < +++ Forrest Gump (‘94) Tom Hanks. æ 'TV14' ; ESPN Monday Countdown (L) æ 'TVG' ; Football NFL Detroit Lions at Dallas Cowboys (L) 'TVG' ; SportC æ 'TVG' ; ESPN2 Football NCAA Independence Bowl (L) SportsCenter (N) SC Top Plays E:60 OLines ESPNCL Basket. Cl. NCAA UpClose UpClose UpClose UpClose F. Night 'TVPG' ; F. Night 'TVPG' ; F. Night 'TVPG' ; FNC S.Report 'TVG' ; On Record 'TVG' O'Reilly 'TVG' ; K. 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It’s time to talk turkey to freeloading relatives DEAR ABBY: It has happened again, another stressful, unpleasant Thanksgiving for me. My husband has out-of-town relatives who fly in using frequent flier miles. They get picked up from the airp o r t o n a r r iva l a n d returned to the airport for departure. They spend a week here eating, drinking and being entertained. NEVER ONCE have they offered to buy any food, help with meals or take us out for dinner. If we go out for a meal, it is always our treat. They brag nonstop about how much money they are saving, and they could well afford to be gracious. This has been happening for 15 years. They invite themselves. I do NOT enjoy their company. My husband is aware of how I feel, but has asked me to tolerate them because they are the only blood relatives he’s in contact with outside of our family. I am left to do the laundry and cleaning after they leave. They have a nice vacation, and I feel used and abused. How can I get rid of them and still keep peace in the family? — FED UP WITH FREELOADERS DEAR FED UP: If your husband insists on entertaining these users because of his blood relationship, you should allow him to do it. If you’re feeling magnanimous, welcome them warmly and tell them you’re sorry you can’t spend more time with them, but you are leaving to
DEAR ABBY ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DearAbby.com
visit: your grown children, your parents, your dear old school chum(s). Perhaps when your husband has to shoulder all of the responsibility for those awful people, he will realize the extent to which he is being used and find the courage to tell them what he expects of them the next time they visit. You have suffered enough.
DEAR UNREASONABLE: Every bride — or almost every bride — fantasizes that her wedding day will be the most beautiful day of her life. Whether or not your fiance’s sister has her wedding around that time will not detract from yours in the slightest — and it shouldn’t be a contest anyway. Frankly, the idea of sparing the relatives the expense of traveling to a second wedding makes sense. However, if you cannot accept this, then perhaps you should consider postponing your wedding for another year. Look at the bright side: If you do, you will have 12 months of extra income, and your wedding can be even more elaborate.
Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear DEAR ABBY: My fiance Abby at www.DearAbby.com and I have been planning our or P.O. Box 69440, Los Anwedding for two years. Both geles, CA 90069. of us are working our butts Good advice for everyone off at two jobs to pay for all the elaborate details. It will, — teens to seniors — is in after all, be the most beauti- “The Anger in All of Us and How to Deal With It.” To ful day of my life. My fiance’s sister just got order, send your name and engaged and I’m happy for mailing address, plus check her. But now she’s talking or money order for $7 (U.S. about having her wedding funds) to: Dear Abby, Anger “around the same time as Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount ours” to make it convenient Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipfor our distant relatives. My ping and handling are concern is that they’re going included in the price.) to “steal our moment.” Abby shares more than I feel very hurt, but I’m not 100 of her favorite recipes in sure how to approach her two booklets: “Abby’s Favorbecause I don’t want to cause ite Recipes” and “More conflict. It would make so Favorite Recipes by Dear much more sense for them to Abby.” Send your name and be married the following mailing address, plus check year. On the other hand, it’s or money order for $14 (U.S. their prerogative to do it funds) to: Dear Abby, Cookwhenever they want. Am I booklet Set, P.O. Box 447, being unreasonable? — Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. U N R E A S O NA B L E I N (Shipping and handling are NEW HAMPSHIRE included in the price.)
FUNERAL NOTICES BERTI, Irene K. — West Pittston. Mass, Wednesday, 11 a.m., Immaculate Conception Church, West Pittston. BRYK, Vincent — Dupont. Tuesday, 9:30 a.m., Kiesinger Funeral Services Inc., 255 McAlpine St., Duryea. Mass of Christian Burial, 10 a.m., Sacred Heart of Jesus Church, Lackawanna Avenue, Dupont. Sacred Heart of Jesus Cemetery. Friends, Monday, 4 to 8 p.m. DENTE, Biagio A. — Pittston. Mass, Wednesday, 11:30 a.m., Our Lady of the Eucharist Parish, 535 N. Main St., Pittston. Mount Olivet Cemetery, Carverton. Friends, Wednesday, 9 to 11:30 a.m. IORIO, Eleanor — Jenkins Township. Tuesday, 9 a.m., Peter J. Adonizio Funeral Home, 251 William St., Pittston. Mass, 9:30 a.m., St. John the Evangelist Church, 35 William St., Pittston. St. Mary’s Cemetery, Hanover Township. Friends, Monday, 5 to 7 p.m. McCOMIC, John — Moscow. Service, Wednesday, 10:30 a.m., Gubbiotti Funeral Home, 1030 Wyoming Ave., Exeter. Friends, 9 a.m. to service time. MELISKY, Thomas J., Sr. — Tuesday, 9 a.m., Kearney Funeral Home Inc., Scranton. Mass, 10 a.m., St. Paul of the Cross Parish, Scranton.
Friends, Monday, 4 to 7 p.m. SANTUK, Josephine — Mountain Top. Tuesday, noon, Davis-Dinelli Funeral Home, 170 E. Broad St., Nanticoke. St. Mary’s Cemetery, Hanover Township. Friends, Tuesday, 10 a.m. to service time. SCARANO, Domenico — Mountain Top. Mass, Wednesday, 11 a.m., Ss. Peter and Paul Church, Hudson Road, Plains Township. SERAFIN, Lottie Ann — Plains Township. Tuesday, 9 a.m., Corcoran Funeral Home Inc., 20 S. Main St., Plains Township. Mass, 9:30 a.m., Ss. Peter and Paul Church, 13 Hudson Road, Plains Township. Parish cemetery, Plains Township. Friends, Tuesday, 8 to 9 a.m. TORRES, Eliezer — Mountain Top. Monday, noon, McCune Funeral Home, 80 S. Mountain Blvd. Mountain Top. Albert Cemetery. Friends, Monday, 9 a.m. to service time. WERTS, Brayden — Service, Tuesday, 8 p.m., George A. Strish Inc. Funeral Home, 211 W. Main St., Glen Lyon. Friends, Tuesday, 6 to 8 p.m. VALENTI, Kerri Ann — Marlton, N.J. Mass, Tuesday, noon, St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church, 100 Willowbend Road, Marlton, N.J. Friends, Tuesday, 10 to 11:45 a.m., at the church.
OBITUARY POLICY
The funeral will be held at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday from Curtis L. Swanson Funeral Home Inc., state Routes 29 and 118, Pikes Creek, with the Rev. L.D. Reed, pastor of the Emmanuel Assembly of God Church, officiating. Friends may call Wednesday from noon to service time. Interment will be in the Chapel Lawn Memorial Park, Dallas. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, memorial contributions be sent to the Emmanuel Assembly of God Church, 239 Church Road, Harveys Lake, PA 18618. Please visit clswansonfuneralhome.com to leave condolences.
Mark E. Herron December 23, 2016 Mark E. Herron, 34, of Exeter, passed away Friday, Dec. 23, 2016, at his home. Bor n in Kingston, he was the son of James and Joanne Richardson Herron, Dallas. He was educated in the Wyo m i n g A r e a S c h o o l District. He enjoyed fishing, boating and all the outdoor activities with his family. P re c e d i n g M a rk i n death were his pater nal g r a n d p a re n t s, E dw a rd and Elizabeth Her ron; and mater nal grandparents, Joseph and Dorothy Richardson. Surviving, in addition to his parents, are sisters, Sandra Shulskie and her husband, John, Noxen; S h e r i H e r ro n , E xe t e r ; brothers, James Herron Jr. and his wife, Sherry, Wilkes-Bar re; Timothy
Dorothy C. Murphy, 95, formerly of Port Blanchard, passed away Thursday, Dec. 22, 2016, at River Run Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, Kingston. Born in Forest City, she was the daughter of the late Guy and Emma Brain Carpenter. She was a graduate of West Pittston High School. After high school, she served in the Signal Corps during World War II. She was a member of the Wyoming United Methodist Church, was involved with cooking at many of the church fundraisers and was also a volunteer for the local food pantry. She was a member of the Ladies Card Club that met regularly at Marianacci’s Restaurant. Also preceding her in
George A. Stanton December 25, 2016
COLOR OPTION
For information on includGeorge A. Stanton, 66, of ing color photos, contact Tunkhannock, passed away your funeral director. Sunday, Dec. 25, 2016, in Scranton Regional Hospital. Merry Christmas in Heaven Funeral arrangements are pending from Gubbiotti Funeral Home, 1030 Wyoming Ave., Exeter.
Judy Maher
Mildred A. Krum December 24, 2016 Mildred A. Krum, 92, of Harding, passed away Saturday, Dec. 24, 2016, at The Meadows Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Dallas. Arrangements are pending from Metcalfe-ShaverKopcza Funeral Home Inc., 504 Wyoming Ave. Wyoming.
Happy Birthday In Heaven
KEITH K LUCAS Herron and his wife, Brianne, Dallas; numerous aunts and uncles and nieces and nephews. The funeral will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday from Metcalfe-Shaver-Kopcza Funeral Home Inc., 504 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, with the Rev. Laura Lewis officiating. Friends may call 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday.
death was her son, Allan R. Murphy, in 2012. Surviving are her daughter, Carole Bracken and her husband, Hugh, Annapolis; son, William G. Murphy, Kingston; three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday from Metcalfe-Shaver-Kopcza Funeral Home Inc., 504 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, with the Rev. Harriet Santos of the Wyoming United Methodist Church officiating. Interment will follow in Memorial Shrine Park, Carverton. Friends may call Wednesday from 10 a.m. to service time. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Wyoming United Methodist Church, 376 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming, PA 18644.
Til we meet again. Forever Loved and Missed MOM & FAMILY
2/13/1947 - 4/14/2012
We miss you more and more every day. We miss your smile. We are all aware you enjoyed Christmas time very, very much. Although life was short & your passing unexpected, you will always be in the deepest of our hearts; you will never be forgotten and you will always be in our prayers.
Love, Husband Paul, Sister, Sister-in-Law, Children, Grandchildren, Relatives, Many Friends & Dog Kelly
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 25
unless a large photo is specified when the obituary is submitted. All photos will be cropped unless otherwise specified when the obituary is submitted. Photos brought into the newspaper on weekends will only be scanned in after 6 p.m. All obituaries should be in paragraph form with a d o u b l e s p a c e b e t we e n paragraphs. Obituaries should be submitted by a funeral home. Private individuals who wish to submit an obituary must provide the name, phone number and address of the funeral home or crematory handling arrangements. The Citizens’ Voice will not accept obituaries without funeral home or crematory contact information for verification purposes.
Harvey L. Hummel, 79, of Harveys Lake, went home to be with his Lord on Friday, Dec. 23, 2016, in Celtic Hospice Inpatient Unit, South Wilkes-Barre. Mr. Hummel was born in Lake Township on Nov. 29, 1937, and was the son of the late Hughie and Elizabeth Grey Hummel. He served in the U.S. Army as a medic. Harvey was a caregiver for people who were confined to their homes. He was a faithful, 40-year member of the Emmanuel Assembly of G o d C h u r c h , H a r ve y s Lake. Harvey was a loving husband, father and grandfather who enjoyed sports and cherished time with his family and sharing the love of Christ with others. Beside his parents, he was predeceased by brothers, Leland and Tom. He is survived by his wife of 52 years, the former Ruth Gliddon; son, Jody and his wife, Maria, Sweet Valley; daughters, Tamara Madonna and her husband, James, Sweet Valley; Tracey Capinas and her husband, Tom, Lake Township; niece, Terri Gliddon, New Jersey; 13 grandchildren.
Dorothy C. Murphy December 22, 2016
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
The email address for The Citizens’ Voice obituaries and photos is obits@ citizensvoice.com. Please include the word “obituary” in the subject line of emails when submitting obituaries. The deadline to submit obituaries is 7:30 p.m. H o l i d ay h o u r s m ay change. Funeral directors should call the obituary desk at 570-821-2100 to confirm receipt of emails. Calls after 9 p.m. should be directed to the city desk at 570-821-2056. Scanned photos must have a resolution of at least 500 dpi. The person’s head must be at least 2 inches wide and have at least a halfinch of space on each side in the photo. The photos should be sent as jpegs or tiffs. All photos will be published as thumbnails
Harvey L. Hummel December 23, 2016
Thomas J. Caffrey Jr. December 17, 2016 Thomas J. Caffrey Jr., 56, of Plains Township, passed away Saturday evening, Dec. 17, 2016, at his home a f t e r a 1 2 - ye a r b a t t l e against brain cancer. Born in Wilkes-Barre, he was the son of Thomas J. Caffrey Sr. and his wife Carol Linker Caffrey, Plains Township, and the late Barbara Barber Kotlarchick. Tom was a graduate of James M. Coughlin High School, Wilkes-Barre, and was employed by Action Lift/Medico Industries as a fork lift manager. Tom was an avid dirt track race car driver and a collector of model trains. He was also a lover of heavy metal music from bands from the early 1980’s to present day. In addition to his mother, Barbara, he was preceded
in death by his grandparents, Bernie and Catherine Caffrey; and his stepbrother, Joseph Linker. Surviving are his wife Sandra Glahn Caf frey, Plains Township; daughter, Dianne Sayre and her husband, Justin, Mountain To p ; g r a n d s o n , G av i n Sayre; father and his stepmother, Thomas and Carol
Deborah Ann Frederick December 23, 2016 Caffrey, Plains Township; s i s t e r s, G i n a C a f f r e y, Hanover Township; Lisa Caffrey, Wilkes-Barre; stepbrother, Donald Linker and his wife Cory, Nanticoke, several nieces and nephews. Funeral services for Tom will be held at 6 p.m. Thursday from Corcoran Funeral Home Inc., 20 S. Main St., Plains Township. Family and friends may call Thursday from 5 p.m. to service time. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to St. Jude Childrens’ Research Hospital, 332 North Lauderdale St., Memphis, TN 38105. For infor mation or to leave Tom’s family a message of condolence, please visit www.corcoranfuneralhome.com.
Deborah Ann (Debby) Frederick, 69, of Courtdale, passed into eternal life early Friday morning, Dec. 23, 2016, in Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center, Plains Township, following a lingering illness. Born in Ashley, she was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Frank Orloski Sr. Educated in Ashley schools, she was a graduate of the former St. Leo’s High School. Until her retirement, Debby was employed most recently by Genpact, formerly Credit Tech. Previously, she was employed for many years as an analyst for Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Northeastern Pennsylvania, Wilkes-Barre. In her spare time, Debbie enjoyed playing Bunco with her friends and
online shopping. Left to mourn her passing are her sons, Edward A. Frederick Jr. and his wife Nikki, Dallas; Brian H. Frederick and his spouse, Gary LaTorre Jr., San Diego, Calif.; granddaughters, Blanca, Kirsten and Paige Frederick; great-grandchildren, Matti
and Norrin Frederick; several cousins and dear friends. Funeral services for Debby will be private and at the convenience of her family. John V. Morris Family Funeral Homes Inc. of Wilkes-Barre are honored to care for Ms. Frederick and her family at this time. Debby’s family would be honored if those wishing to send a contribution in her memory kindly consider the Blue Chip Farm Animal Refuge, 974 Lockville Road, Dallas, PA 18612. As per her request, there will be no public visitation, however those wishing to send her sons and family words of comfort, support or to light a virtual candle in her memory, please visit our family’s website at www. johnvmorrisfuneralhome. com.
Russia examines all possible reasons for Black Sea jet crash
26 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
By Vladimir Isachenkov and Veronika Silchenko Associated Press SOCHI, Russia — Backed by ships, helicopters and drones, Russian rescue teams searched Sunday for victims after a Russian plane carrying 92 people to Syria crashed into the Black Sea shortly after takeoff. Investigators said they were looking into every possible cause for the crash, including a terror attack. All 84 passengers and eight crew members on the Russian military’s Tu-154 plane are believed to have died when it crashed two minutes after taking off at 5:25 a.m. in good weather from the southern Russian city of Sochi. The passengers included dozens of singers in Russia’s world-famous military choir. More than 3,000 rescue workers on 32 ships — including over 100 divers flown in from across Russia — were searching the crash site at sea and along the shore, the Defense Ministry said. Helicopters, drones and submersibles were being used to help spot bodies and debris. Powerful spotlights were brought in so the operation could continue all night. Emergency crews found fragments of the plane about
VIKTOR KLYUSHIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Russian rescue workers on Sunday carry a body from the wreckage of the crashed plane at a pier just outside Sochi, Russia. a mile from shore. By Sunday evening, rescue teams had recovered 11 bodies and Transport Minister Maxim Sokolov said fragments of other bodies were also found. Asked if a terror attack was a possibility, Sokolov said investigators were looking into every possible reason for the crash. Several experts noted factors that suggested a terror attack, such as the crew’s failure to report any malfunction and the fact that plane debris was scattered over a wide area. The plane was taking the
Defense Ministry’s choir, the Alexandrov Ensemble, to perform at a New Year’s concert at Hemeimeem air base in Syria’s coastal province of Latakia. Those on board also included nine Russian journalists and a Russian doctor famous for her work in war zones. Russian President Vladimir Putin went on television to declare Monday a nationwide day of mourning. “We will conduct a thorough investigation into the reasons and will do everything to support the victims’
families,” Putin said. The Black Sea search area — which covered about 4 square miles — was made more difficult by underwater currents that carried debris and body fragments into the open sea. Sokolov said the plane’s flight recorders did not have radio beacons, so locating them on the seabed was going to be challenging. The Tu-154 is a Soviet-built three-engine airliner designed in the late 1960s. More than 1,000 have been built, and they have been used extensively in Russia and worldwide. The
plane that crashed Sunday was built in 1983, and underwent factory check-ups and maintenance in 2014 and this year, according to the Defense Ministry. Magomed Tolboyev, a decorated Russian test pilot, said it was clear that all on board had died in the crash. “There is no chance to survive in such situation,” he said, according to the Interfax news agency. Before Sokolov spoke to reporters in Sochi, senior Russian lawmakers had ruled out a terror attack, arguing that the military plane was under reliable protection. Security is particularly tight in Sochi, the Black Sea city that hosted the 2014 Winter Games and is regularly visited by Putin, who often receives foreign leaders at his residence there. But some experts said the crew’s failure to report a malfunction pointed at a possible terror attack. “Possible malfunctions ... certainly wouldn’t have prevented the crew from reporting them,” Vitaly Andreyev, a former senior Russian air traffic controller, told RIA Novosti. Vadim Lukashevich, an independent aviation expert, told Dozhd TV that the crew’s failure to communicate an
equipment failure and the large area over which the plane’s fragments were scattered raises the possibility of an attack. Alexander Gusak, a former chief of a SWAT team at the main domestic security agency, the FSB, told Dozhd that Russian airports are still vulnerable to terror threats despite security cordons. “It’s possible to penetrate them. It’s a matter of skills,” he said. Russian planes have been brought down previously by terror attacks. In October 2015, a Russian plane carrying mostly Russian tourists back from vacation in Egypt was brought down by a bomb over the Sinai Peninsula, killing all 224 people aboard. Officials said the explosive device was planted in the plane’s luggage compartment. The local affiliate of the Islamic State group claimed responsibility. In August 2004, two Russian planes were blown up in the skies over Russia on the same day by suicide bombers, killing 89 people. A Chechen warlord claimed responsibility. In the last year, the Russian military has repeatedly flown Russian singers and artists to perform at Hemeimeem, the main hub for the Russian air campaign in Syria.
Speech Publicist: British singer George Michael dead at age 53 Life: resonated with By Nekesa Mumbi Moody and Gregory Katz Associated Press
FRANCOIS MORI / ASSOCIATED PRESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
success was based on his sex appeal to young women. His look was raw and provocative, with tight jeans, tight T-shirts, black leather jackets and designer stubble, and his videos pushed the accepted limits with many lingerieclad models vying for Michael’s attentions on screen. But Michael’s situation changed abruptly in 1998 when he was arrested for lewd conduct in a public toilet in Los Angeles after being spotted by a male undercover police officer. The arrest received international media attention, and seemed for a brief time to jeopardize Michael’s stature as a top recording artist. But instead of making excuses for his behavior, he went on to release a single and video, “Outside,” that made light of the charges
against him and mocked the Los Angeles police who had arrested him. Like all of his efforts at the time, it sold in prodigious numbers, helping him put the incident behind him. The arrest also prompted him to speak openly about his sexual orientation. These years represented the height of Michael’s commercial success, which at times was marred by a protracted legal dispute with his record company Sony. He remained a strong musical force throughout his career, releasing dozens of records and touring to adoring crowds despite a growing number of run-ins with police, many of them stemming from a series of driving-under-the-influence-ofdrugs incidents, including several crashes. Michael was an admitted
FROM PAGE 13 Bergman also began attending social events and talking with his classmates, though he never told them about the depression he battled. He called it the “other side” of his personality. In 11th grade — one year and one month following his second suicide attempt — he broke the silence by speaking to his entire school. “I couldn’t just tell a few people; the story would get misconstrued,” Bergman said. “And I knew that suicide was the second leading cause of death for students in school. I knew kids in my own school who cut themselves. If I continued to lie, it would not help them get through their suffering. And when I heard the numbers about suicide deaths in our country, I had to give a speech about it.” Today, several years after he broke his silence, former classmates still approach him about that 17-minute speech. It earned him a five-minute standing ovation and pats on the back from fellow students. The day after the speech, he awoke to 75 texts and 200 emailed responses to his story. Years later, one student who was in the auditorium told Bergman the speech had saved his life. Positive feedback fuels Bergman’s purpose and brings him joy. “On average, four to six people will (still) reach out to me through Facebook in a week, telling me that speech impacted them one way or another,” he said. So, he keeps speaking, spreading the word about mental illness one heartfelt speech at a time. He took his story to Congress last year, asking lawmakers to make funding for teens with depression a priority. “If I help one (person); it’s enough for me,” Bergman said. “At the end of the day, it’s one less life lost to this preventable death. What keeps me going is reading about tragedy after tragedy and nothing being done about it. I can’t stop until I begin to see change and our society makes this a national priority.”
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 27
catchy but disposable pop and gave his solo efforts far higher marks. His first solo album, 1987’s “Faith,” sold more 20 million copies, and he enjoyed several hit singles including the raunchy “I Want Your Sex,” which was helped immeasurably by a provocative video that received wide air play on MTV. The song was controversial not only because of its explicit nature, but also because it was seen as encouraging casual sex and promiscuity at a time when the AIDS epidemic was deepening. Michael and his management tried to tamp down this point of view by having the singer write “Explore Monogamy” on the leg and back of a model in the video. At the time, Michael had not disclosed his homosexuality, and much of his chart
Above, British singer George Michael performs in 2012 at a concert to raise money for the AIDS charity Sidaction in Paris, France; at left, George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley of the British group WHAM! perform in 1985 during a concert in Peking, China.
classmates
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
LONDON — George Michael, who rocketed to stardom with WHAM! and went on to enjoy a long and celebrated solo career lined with controversies, has died, his publicist said Sunday. He was 53. Michael died at his home in Goring, England. His publicist, Cindi Berger, said he had not been ill. No other details were released. He enjoyed immense popularity early in his career as a teenybopper idol, delivering a series of hits such as “Wake Me Up Before You GoGo,” ‘’Young Guns (Go For It)” and “Freedom.” As a solo artist, he developed into a more serious singer and songwriter, lauded by critics for his tremendous vocal range. He sold well over 100 million albums globally, earned numerous Grammy and American Music Awards, and recorded duets with legends like Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Luciano Pavarotti and Elton John. Throughout his career, his drug use and taste for risky sex brought him into frequent brushes with the law, most famously in 1998 when he was arrested for public lewdness in Los Angeles. Yet, he managed to turn the incident into fodder for a popular song that poked fun at his behavior, and his acknowledgment of his homosexuality at that time made him even more popular with his fans. Michael, with startling good looks and an easy stage manner, formed the boy band WHAM! with his school friend Andrew Ridgeley in the early 1980s. Helped by MTV, which was an emerging music industry force at the time, the cheerful duo easily crossed the Atlantic to become popular in the United States with Michael, as lead singer, usually the focal point. He started his solo career shortly before WHAM! split, with the release of the megahit single “Careless Whisper,” making a seamless transition. Critics generally viewed his WHAM! songs as
user of marijuana and prescription sedatives and several times was found slumped over his car’s steering wheel after using both at the same time. His driver’s license was finally revoked for five years in 2010 after Michael drove his Land Rover into the side of a Snappy Snap photo shop with so much force that his vehicle dented the wall. A passer-by remembering Michael’s early career wrote the word WHAM on the spot his SUV had hit. He was also arrested a second time in public toilets — this time in North London in 2008 for drug use, an incident that prompted him to apologize to his fans and promise to get his life in order. He also offered an apology to “everybody else, just for boring them.” A year earlier, he had told a television interviewer that his problems stemmed from a self-destructive streak and his attention-seeking nature. He said at a press conference in 2011 that he felt he had let young people down with his misbehavior and had made it easier for others to denigrate homosexuals. Despite these personal setbacks, Michael’s musical performances remained strong even as his material moved farther from the teen tunes that first brought him to stardom. The Telegraph newspaper in 2011 described a London concert appearance as an impressive event, calling his voice, “A rich, soulful instrument, it’s capable of serious emotional heft, expertly matching the confessional tone of his own material.” Michael, with strong Greek-Cypriot roots, was born Georgios Panayiotou in England. He and schoolmate Ridgeley formed a ska band called the Executive when they were just 16 before moving on to form WHAM! Michael was active in a number of charities and helped raise money to combat AIDS, help needy children, and support gay rights. He had a long-term relationship with Kenny Goss, but announced onsta g e in August 2011 that the two had broken up.
SPORTS
CHAMPIONS IN THE NORTH Late surge helps Steelers clinch second AFC North title in three years
28 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
By Will Graves Associated Press PITTSBURGH — The clock ticking and a season filled with promise evaporating, Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger took the snap, turned to his left and put the AFC North title in the hands of Antonio Brown. The star wide receiver caught the ball at the Baltimore 1 and waited for the hit he knew was coming. When it arrived from Ravens safety Eric Weddle and linebacker C.J. Mosley, Brown d u c ke d h i s h e a d a n d stretched the ball across the goal line for a playoff-clinching touchdown that symbolized his team’s considerable resilience. Reeling in November — heck, reeling early in the fourth quarter at home on Christmas against an archrival that’s more than had their number in recent years — the Steelers are heading to the playoffs anyway. Brown’s lunging 4-yard score with 9 seconds left lifted Pittsburgh to a gripping 31-27 victory and a second division title in three years, delivering just as Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell predicted Brown would. “Over there by the heaters before the final drive, he said ‘AB, you got to go down there and get the game winner,’” Brown said. It was a play Brown’s teammates have seen many times, just never with so much on the line. “That’s AB,” wide receiver Damarcus Ayers said. “He does it so much in practice, it doesn’t ‘wow’ you in a game. In this particular moment, it’s like, ‘he’s done it again.’” Baltimore (8-7) was eliminated from contention. Brown finished with 10 receptions for 96 yards to join Hall of Famer Marvin Harrison as the only players with four straight 100-catch sea-
DON WRIGHT / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Steelers running back Le’Veon Bell (26) leaps into the end zone ahead of Ravens strong safety Eric Weddle (32) for a touchdown.
NFL Raiders will turn to McGloin after Carr’s injury. Page 34 Division standings and box scores from Saturday’s and Sunday’s games. Page 35 sons. Roethlisberger shook off a pair of third-quarter interceptions to finish with 279 yards passing and three touchdowns. Bell ran for 122 yards and a score and hauled in another on an ad-libbed play by Roethlisberger as Pittsburgh rallied from a 10-point deficit to win its sixth straight. The Steelers (10-5) host during wild-card weekend on
either Jan. 7 or 8, heady territory considering they were 4-5 after falling to Dallas on Nov. 13. As New Year’s nears, they haven’t lost again. “I think today showed some resolve,” Roethlisberger said. “I think we showed some fight, no quit.” The Ravens took the lead on Kyle Juszczyk’s 10-yard burst up the middle with 1:18 remaining. But Roethlisberger calmly led the Steelers 75 yards in 10 plays to eliminate Baltimore, the last 4 yards on a play that could live on in team history — depending on how far Pittsburgh’s momentum can carry it. Joe Flacco passed for 262 yards, including a pretty
18-yard dart to Steve Smith that put Baltimore up 14-10 early in the third quarter. Smith ended up with seven receptions for 79 yards, but the Ravens crumbled late. Their defense put up little resistance as Roethlisberger clinically got his team in position to get back to the playoffs. “We didn’t want (Roethlisberger) to have a good game,” Ravens linebacker Terrell Suggs said. “We didn’t want (Brown) and (Bell) to kind of put their imprint on the game, or their stamp on the game, and they did that. They’re a good team. They’re well deserving. They won the division, we’ll applaud them, but we’ll be back.”
It’s a destination that seemed to be disappearing right in front of Pittsburgh’s eyes in the third quarter. Roethlisberger threw a pair of interceptions deep in Pittsburgh territory — both poorly thrown balls to heavily covered targets — that helped the Ravens take control. “It’s pretty special the way we won it,” Roethlisberger said. “Especially after feeling the way I felt at a certain point in that game and feeling like you let guys down and you blew it.” Instead, it’s the Ravens who will spend a long offseason wondering how their mastery over the Steelers — and a potential postseason
berth — dissolved in the final 12 minutes. Baltimore will miss the playoffs for the third time in four seasons. “It’s everything you work for and you don’t reach your goal, so it’s just somber,” Weddle said. “It’s down. Give them credit. Ben got it rolling.” Obscure rookie wide receiver Demarcus Ayers drew a pass interference play that set up Bell’s score after finally making the active roster. Ayers also caught a 9-yard pass on Pittsburgh’s winning drive. “Ben told me last night he we going to come to me at some point,” Ayers said. “I couldn’t sleep. I just tried to stay ready.”
McGrane celebrating 51st year By Matt Bufano Staff Writer
MCGRANE SCHEDULE Tonight Crestwood vs. Holy Redeemer, 6 Pittston Area vs. Hanover Area, 7:15 Wednesday Consolation game, 6 Championship game, 7:15
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE FILE
Pittston Area’s Mason Gross, Michael Schwab and James Emmett receive the trophy after winning the 2013 McGrane Tournament at the Wyoming Valley CYC. play for and coach Bishop O’Reilly teams that played in holiday tournaments — but never in the McGrane. “That was the big, hot thing during the Christmas tournaments,” Guido said. Having built connections across the East Coast, Guido said his program has been approached with offers to appear in holiday tournaments throughout Pennsylvania, as well as Maryland and Washington, D.C. When Lake-Lehman dropped out of the McGrane prior to this season, Guido never even entertained the possibility of going elsewhere in case the McGrane couldn’t field a fourth team. “Those guys pretty much told me, flat-out, don’t worry about it,” Guido said. “They said, ‘That’s not happening. The McGrane tournament isn’t going away.’”
The tournament’s athletic council inserted Crestwood, a team whose 2015-16 winning percentage was .435 percentage points better than Lake-Lehman. Crestwood is one of many programs that once hosted a holiday tournament — the Munley — but no longer does so. Te a m s h ave o c c a s i o n a l ly dropped out of the McGrane, but its hard-working athletic council members — about 15 of them, according to DeMichele — have been instrumental in keeping the McGrane alive for 51 years. “We always had a backup plan,” DeMichele said. “I think we stayed on top of it year-round.” Guido said his players understand the significance of the McGrane, which begins sinking in with the program’s listing of past tournament MVPs like Bob Sura and Greg Skrepenak.
and a heightened basketball fandom. The GAR Grenadiers were also a big draw when led by Sura, who had a celebrated career at Florida State and in the NBA. GAR went to back-to-back state finals with Sura in 1990 and 1991. “He was a tremendous draw,” DeMichele said. “In other words, everyone wanted to come see him play. Even if you didn’t have a connection to the teams in the tournament, you came to see Bob Sura play. At that time it was standingroom-only.” Also unique to the McGrane is that it’s not only a varsity tournament, but also includes junior varsity and freshman teams. The McGrane tips off 6 p.m. tonight with Crestwood vs. Holy Redeemer, followed by reigning champion Pittston Area vs. Hanover Area. The championship will be played Wednesday and, keeping in line with tradition, the Rev. John S. Terry is anticipated to announce it. From the 1960s through 2010s and beyond, thousands of fans have attended the McGrane to watch some of the area’s greatest high school basketball talent on the court and sidelines. From CYC executive director Mark Soprano on down, DeMichele stressed that it’s the people involved with the McGrane who have helped it become a local sports institution. “It’s just a great, great group of guys,” he said, “that have been around a long time that wanted to raise money for the kids at the CYC.”
“It’s like, ‘Holy cow. He went to GAR, which is only right up there and (they) played in the tournament,’” Guido said. Many also have emotional ties to the CYC, as well as its philanthropic efforts. “It’s kind of cool, especially for us. A lot of the kids grew up playing ball there — bitty ball, third grade, fourth grade, fifth grade, sixth grade,” Guido said. “‘Now I’m here as a sophomore, junior, senior, playing in a Christmas tournament in the varsity games.’ ... We’re obviously thrilled to be involved. Being the only catholic high school in the county, it’s a big thing for us every year and I know our guys really look forward to it.” Money raised goes toward the CYC’s athletic department. T h e M c G r a n e ’ s h e y d a y, according to DeMichele, was the mbufano@citizensvoice.com early-to-mid 1980s, due to parity 570-821-2060, @CVBufano
Year 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004
Champion Pittston Area Holy Redeemer Pittston Area Hanover Area Pittston Area Holy Redeemer Holy Redeemer GAR Holy Redeemer Bishop Hoban Bishop Hoban Bishop Hoban
MVP, School Alex McAndrew, Pittston Area Darius Washington, Redeemer Mason Gross, Pittston Area Jorge Colon, Hanover Area Steve Stravinski, Pittston Area Stephen Ruch, Holy Redeemer Austin Carr, Holy Redeemer A.J. Magda, GAR Greg Sam, Holy Redeemer Owen Wignot, Bishop Hoban Kyle Flemings, Bishop Hoban Joe Harenza, Bishop Hoban
2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991
Hanover Area Pittston Area GAR Bishop Hoban GAR Meyers Meyers Hanover Area GAR Bishop Hoban Bishop Hoban Bishop Hoban Bishop Hoban
Eric Plisko, Hanover Area Sean Tigue, Pittston Area Kevin Brown, GAR John Mooney, Bishop Hoban Anthony Harris, GAR Sylvester Gibson, Meyers Greg Barrouk, Meyers Shawn Slusser Hanover Area Jamie Price, GAR Brian Gryboski, Bishop Hoban Mike Barrouk, Bishop Hoban Mike Barrouk, Bishop Hoban Tony Modrovsky, Bishop Hoban
1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978
GAR GAR Coughlin Hanover Area GAR GAR Bishop Hoban GAR GAR Hanover Area Bishop Hoban GAR Bishop Hoban
Bob Sura, GAR Bob Sura, GAR Jim Mikolaichik, Coughlin Jeff Thomas Hanover Area Greg Skrepenak, GAR Greg Skrepenak, GAR Bob Dombroski, Bishop Hoban Carl Rollins, GAR Bob Collins, GAR Steve Harnischfeger, Hanover Area Dan Polachek, Bishop Hoban Howie Walker, GAR Mickey Banas, Bishop Hoban
1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966
Bishop Hoban Bishop Hoban Hanover Area Bishop Hafey Coughlin Bishop Hoban Bishop Hoban St. Mary’s Coughlin St. Mary’s Meyers St. Mary’s
Bill Thornton, Bishop Hoban Jim Shea, Bishop Hoban Joe Rasavage, Hanover Area Larry Krizansky, Bishop Hafey Joe Kosloski, Coughlin John Leighton, Bishop Hoban Gene Marinelli, Bishop Hoban Steve Ferrance, St. Mary’s Rich Firda, Coughlin John Walters, St. Mary’s Bob Yuhas, Meyers Ray Majikes, St. Mary’s
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 29
MCGRANE CHAMPIONS / MVPS
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Predating even the 3-point shot, basketball in 1966 looked a lot different compared with today. The NCAA’s March Madness tournament involved only 22 schools; not 68. The NBA’s 10 teams drafted firstround players at an average height of about 6-foot-5; five 7-footers were selected in this year’s 30-pick first round. Locally, Plymouth and Swoyersville High Schools won PIAA District 2 championships in what were called Classes A and B. What has stood the test of time, however, is the Wyoming Valley Catholic Youth Center’s Robert McGrane Basketball Tournament. It is named after a former King’s captain and coach who died in the beginning stages of the tournament. “Over the years a lot of tournaments have come and gone,” said Ryan Smith, program executive at the CYC. “To be able to have a tournament that lasted so long — to be in its 51st year — I think it’s really special to have that.” While many holiday tournaments have gone by the wayside, the CYC-hosted McGrane has lasted long enough for Ed DeMichele to participate in it as a player, referee and administrator. A member of the tournament’s athletic council for 25 years, he said, DeMichele is currently the tournament president. “It was always special,” DeMichele said. “I played for GAR and always thought it was special because it was a hometown rivalry. We had, at the time, Meyers and Hanover and GAR and Bishop Hoban. It was always great because we were friends with the guys that we played against. “It was always a really great tournament.” Holy Redeemer head coach Paul Guido treasured opportunities to
OF ATHLETE THE WEEK
Sem’s Davis bounces back at Xcalibur By Eric Shultz Staff Writer
MAYA KORNFELD Holy Redeemer Senior, Basketball Hometown: Kingston Age: 18 Family: Mother, Dana; father, Ross; brothers: Seth, Sam, Zev, and Ash Accomplishment: Kornfeld scored her 1,000th career point and had eight total in a victory over GAR on Wednesday.
30 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
GETTING TO KNOW MAYA Favorite school subject: Math Favorite television show: “Gossip Girl” Favorite movie: “Like Mike” Favorite actor: Leonardo DiCaprio Favorite musician: ASAP Rocky Favorite sports teams: North Carolina men’s basketball and the Boston Celtics Favorite athlete: Celtics guard Isaiah Thomas Favorite food: Pizza from Angelo’s Favorite junk food: Doritos Favorite holiday: Christmas Maya’s favorite thing about basketball is ... being able to assist on her teammates’ baskets. For Maya, the most difficult part of playing basketball is ... staying focused for every game and not looking past an upcoming opponent. If Maya could meet anyone in history, it would be ... John F. Kennedy. If Maya could switch places with any athlete for a day, she would choose ... former Indiana Pacers star Reggie Miller. One thing Maya can’t live without is ... all of her brothers. Maya’s biggest role models have been ... her parents. In the future, Maya ... wants to play basketball in college and is strongly considering Ursinus College. She is unsure of what she wants to study.
Jack Davis is already a national prep champion wrestler. He’s also finished among the best in the world. But until Dec. 17, there was one title that eluded the Wyoming Seminary junior and Hanover Township native. It was rather close to home, too. Davis had never won a championship at Sem’s very own Xcalibur Invitational, hosted at Wilkes. That all changed at this year’s third installment of the tournament, where Davis won gold as he and his young Wyoming Seminary squad got back on track with a team championship. “It finally feels good winning it for once,” Davis said shortly after his medal ceremony. “I was placing at all these big tournaments, and I just wanted this one, finally.” Davis took second at the tournament in 2015 to West Morris Central’s Shane Metzler, losing by fall late in the 120-pound finals. They met again at 126 this year, and Davis got back with a 6-4 victory. Davis reached the finals with two tech falls, a pin and a decision, and got to get a small scouting report on Metzler when he faced Sem teammate Justin Hoyle in the semifinals. In the final, Davis escaped right away in the second
FRANK LAURI / FOR THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
Wyoming Seminary’s Jack Davis, right, won the Xcalibur Invitational on Dec. 17. period for a 1-0 lead. He took that lead into the third and then, after allowing an escape early on, took Metzler straight to his back for a takedown and a pair of nearfall points. Metzler narrowed the gap, but Davis held on for the win. “He definitely had a high energy level this year,” Sem coach Scott Green said. “He was pushing the pace the entire time. When Jack gets frustrated, sometimes he sits back and lets things happen. He really imposed his will a little bit here.” Davis’ win was a part of a rebound effort for Sem, which had taken 10th with just one champion at the Walsh Jesuit Ironman tournament the week before.
Davis was seeded sixth there but fell in the round of 16. A week later, Davis earned gold at Xcalibur. So did five other Blue Knights, while 19 total earned medals. That’s a step in the right direction for a Sem team that lost a lot of firepower from its national prep runner-up squad of 2015-16. The Knights had nine seniors compete at last year’s national prep championships. Of them, six advanced to a championship bout, and three took home gold. That’s a lot to move on from, and Sem has seen its team ranking dip down Intermat’s top 25 as a result. It’s No. 13 at the moment, and Davis is one of the team’s leaders after a prep
meetings between the Penguins (19-5-3-0) and Senators this season. The Penguins won the first meeting, 4-1. ... Rookie forward Jake Guentzel has 13 points (6G-7A) in his past seven AHL games dating back to Nov. 18, and has only been held off the scoresheet once in that time frame. … Defenseman David Warsofsky has 11 points
(3G-8A) in his past eight games. ... Over the course of the Penguins’ current season-best fivegame winning streak, they have outscored their opponents 24-8. … Wilkes-Barre/Scranton has successfully killed off 20-straight opponent power plays. About the Senators: Binghamton (10-16-2-1) has gone 5-4-1-0 over its last 10 games
more information, call coach Ashley Stevens at 570-2085900 ext. 5443 or email ashleystevens@kings.edu.
a skills clinic is set for 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Cost is $45 for each clinic or $80 for both. Team discouts available. For more information call the King’s Softball Office at 570-208-5900, ext. 5397 or email softball@ kings.edu or go to the softball team page at www.kingscollegeathletics.com.
title and a fifth place showing at the Cadet World Championships this summer. Davis acknowledged competitors will be gunning for him, but he said he just has to keep wrestling his match and not let that bother him. He and the rest of the Knights can continue their roll Thursday at the Powerade Tournament, where they took first a year ago. “We’re a young team. This is what we needed after a mediocre Ironman performance,” Green said. “To get a couple guys back in the lineup and have guys perform well was a nice end to the December season.” eshultz@citizensvoice.com 570-821-2054, @CVEricShultz
PENGUINS SCOUTING REPORT Penguins at Binghamton When: 7:05, tonight Where: Floyd L. Maines Arena, Binghamton, New York On the air: Nick Hart and Mike O’Brien will have the broadcast on 103.1 FM and 910, 930, 980 AM and on AHL Live at www.theAHL.com About the Penguins: This is the second of six scheduled
and currently sits in last place in the Eastern Conference. … The Senators’ 66 goals this season rank last in the conference, while their power play (11.0 percent) ranks dead last in the AHL. … Centers Phil Varone (6G-9A) and Kyle Flanagan (4G-11A) lead the Senators with 15 points each. — Seth Lakso / Staff Writer
CAMPS WOMEN’S LACROSSE: King’s will hold an informational lacrosse clinic 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Feb. 11 at the Betzler Athletic Complex. Open to students in grades 9 through 12. Cost is $75. Clinic is designed for high school student-athletes interested in King’s women’s lacrosse. For
SOFTBALL: King’s Champion Skills Softball Clinic Feb. 19 at Scandlon Gymnasium. Open to girls 9 to 18. A pitching clinic is set for 9:30 to 11:30 and
SOFTBALL: Wilkes Winter Camp Jan. 22 at the University Center on Main. Defense session is 9 to noon with hitting camp 1 to 3. Cost for defense camp is $50, cost for hitting camp is $40 and cost for both is $85. For more information contact coach Maulorico at 570-408-4031.
PLAYBOOK Little League
Feb. 7 and Feb. 9 at the Valley West middle school.
KINGSTON/FORTY FORT:
Spring registration is open at Run kffll.org until Feb. 6. A verifica- PITTSTON AREA: Wrestling booster club is hosting the tion meeting is set for 6 to 8
3-mile Run for the Wrestlers 9 a.m. Friday at Pittston Area. Cost is $25. For more information, call Kerra at 570-8810932 or coach Jarryd Lokuta at 570-479-0361.
Once again, the employees of
WVAA
The Wyoming Valley Athletic Association recently made a donation to Brian Miller of Wilkes-Barre, whosw wife, Kelly, is battling ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease). The donation is made possible from program and gate receipts from the annual Dr. George P. Moses Senior Basketball All-Star Classic. The games are co-sponsored by the WVAA and The Citizens’ Voice. From left, Matt Himlin, WVAA; Walt Allabaugh, WVAA treasurer; Dr. George P. Moses, WVAA president; Brian Miller; Dan Frascella and Neil Corbett, WVAA.
WVAA
The Wyoming Valley Athletic Association recently made a donation to cancer survivor Bill Price of Wyoming to help defray his medical expenses. The donation was made possible from program and gate receipts generated by the Dr. George P. Moses Senior Basketball All-Star Classic. The Classic is cosponsored by the WVAA and The Citizens’ Voice and is set for March 31, 2017 at Holy Redeemer. From left, Walt Allabaugh, WVAA treasurer; Matt Kultys, friend; Bill Price; Dr. George P. Moses, WVAA president; John Gosciewski, Matt Himlin, Neil Corbett, WVAA; and Jim Reeser, sports editor, The Citizens’ Voice.
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The Wyoming Valley Athletic Association recently made a donation to Joe Kordek of Newtown section of Hanover Topwnship to help defray his medical expenses from open heart surgery. The donation was made possible from program and gate receipts generated by the Dr. George P. Moses Senior Basketball All-Star Classic. The Classic is co-sponsored by the WVAA and The Citizens’ Voice and is set for March 31, 2017 at Holy Redeemer High School. From left, Walt Allabaugh, WVAA treasurer; Barbara Kordek, wife; Joe Kordek, Dr. George P. Moses, WVAA president; John Gosciewski, Matt Himlin, Neil Corbett, WVAA; and Jim Reeser, sports editor, The Citizens’ Voice.
united to generously donate to the United Way of Wyoming Valley
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Cavs rally past Warriors in Finals rematch COLLEGE BASKETBALL Associated Press
Associated Press CLEVELAND — Kyrie Irving dropped a fadeaway jumper over Klay Thompson with 3.4 seconds left and the Cleveland Cavaliers came back on Golden State just like they did last June in the NBA Finals, beating the Warriors 109-108 on Sunday. The Cavs trailed 94-80 early in the fourth quarter before rallying in front of a rowdy Christmas crowd. And as was the case in the Finals, it was Irving, who made a 3-pointer in the final minute of Game 7, who made the biggest basket. Golden State had one last chance, but Kevin Durant lost his balance while coming off a screen and couldn’t get off a shot as time expired. LeBron James had 31 points, and Irving scored 25 for the Cavs, who were down 3-1 in last season’s Finals before winning three straight and the championship — the first for a Cleveland team since 1964. Durant, making his first appearance in the league’s hottest rivalry, scored 36 and Thompson had 24.
Celtics 119 Knicks 114 NEW YORK — Isaiah Thomas scored 27 points, Marcus Smart made a tiebreaking 3-pointer with 47 seconds left after Boston blew a late lead, and the Celtics beat the New York Knicks. The Knicks wiped out a late nine-point deficit with an out-of-nowhere 11-2 run in a little more than a minute, but Smart answered with his shot and Avery Bradley and Al Horford made big defensive plays afterward. Jae Crowder and Kelly Olynyk each had 16 points for the Celtics, who won for the fifth time in six games. Thunder 112 Timberwolves 100 OKLAHOMA CITY — Russell Westbrook had 31 points and 15 assists to help the Oklahoma City Thunder beat the Minnesota Timberwolves. Westbrook had 10 assists in the second half to help Oklahoma City take control, although he fell short of becoming the first Thunder
San Diego State 62 San Francisco 48 HONOLULU — Zylan Cheatham had 16 points and 11 rebounds to help San Diego State beat San Francisco for the Diamond Head Classic championship. Illinois State 68 56 Tulsa HONOLULU — Paris Lee scored 18 points, Deontae Hawkins added 16 and Illinois State cruised past Tulsa for third place in the Diamond Head Classic.
TONY DEJAK / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cavaliers’ LeBron James (23) drives past Warriors’ Kevin Durant (35) in the first half of Sunday’s game in Cleveland. The Cavs won, 109-108. player to score at least 40 points in four straight games. Steven Adams scored 22 points and Enes Kanter added 20 points for the Thunder, who shot 51.2 percent while winning their third straight.
Spurs 119 100 Bulls SAN ANTONIO — LaMarcus Aldridge had a seasonhigh 33 points and the San Antonio Spurs held on to beat the Chicago Bulls after nearly blowing a hot start.
Kawhi Leonard added 25 points, 10 rebounds and four assists. Tony Parker had 13 points and eight assists. Chicago rallied from a 20-point deficit to lead by three points midway through the third quarter.
Chiefs advance to playoffs, get by Broncos
32 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
By Dave Skretta Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — With their postseason spot secured, the Kansas City Chiefs turned to Travis Kelce and Tyreek Hill to roll past the Denver Broncos 33-10 on Sunday night and keep their AFC West title hopes alive. Kelce had 11 catches for 160 yards and a touchdown, and Hill took a handoff 70 yards for another score, as the Chiefs (11-4) beat the Broncos (8-7) for the third straight time and eliminated the Super Bowl champions from postseason contention. Kansas City punctuated the win in style when 346-pound defensive tackle Dontari Poe, lined up at quarterback, threw a jump pass to Demetrius Harris with just under 2 minutes left.
The Chiefs were already assured of a wild card when Pittsburgh beat Baltimore earlier in the day. But a win next weekend in San Diego coupled with an Oakland loss in Denver would give the Chiefs their first division title since 2010, not to mention a first-round bye and home playoff game. Meanwhile, the Broncos trudged through another inept offensive performance. Trevor Siemian was 17 of 43 for 183 yards and a gameending interception, and the only TD drive he led came after a pick gave him the ball at the Kansas City 6. Justin Forsett scored two plays later. The lackluster performance came one week after a dismal showing in a 16-3 loss to New England led to a lockCHARLIE RIEDEL / ASSOCIATED PRESS er room shouting match between the Denver offense Chiefs wide receiver Tyreek Hill (10) runs past Broncos safety Justin Simmons (31) for a 70-yard touchdown during Sunday night’s game. and defense.
Utah 74 Stephen F. Austin 66 HONOLULU — David Collette scored 17 points on 8-of-8 shooting as Utah defeated Stephen F. Austin to claim fifth in the Diamond Head Classic. Hawaii 60 Southern Mississippi 46 HONOLULU — Jack Purchase made five 3-pointers and scored 17 points, and Hawaii snapped a four-game losing streak with a victory over Southern Mississippi in the seventh-place game of the Diamond Head Classic.
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Raiders turning to McGloin after Carr breaks fibula By Jimmy Durkin East Bay Times OA K L A N D, C a l i f. — S c r a n t o n n a t ive M a t t McGloin hasn’t started a game since 2013, but the reigns of the Raiders offense will be turned over to him after MVP candidate Derek Carr suffered a broken fibula in Saturday’s 33-25 win over the Indianapolis Colts. Carr spent Christmas Day having surgery and his season, in all likelihood, is done. That leaves the Raiders’ hopes in the hands of McGloin, the fourth-year pro who was a former undrafted free agent out of Penn State. McGloin’s last significant action came in the 2015 season-opener when Carr left the game in the second quarter with a hand injury, and his last start came Dec. 22, 2013. “I’m ready to go,” said McGloin, a graduate of West Scranton High School. “It has been great working with Derek Carr the past few years and working together and seeing what he has done on the field, trying to learn from that. I’m ready to go. I know this team, these guys around me, this staff, the organization will do a great
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Raiders quarterback Matt McGloin (14) passes against the Colts during Saturday’s game. job of helping me out and embracing me.” That’s clearly the only option for the Raiders as they recover from the devastation of Carr’s injury. Like most backups, McGloin’s snaps in practice are fairly minimal, so this next week of practice will be huge to get him up to speed. Rookie Connor Cook also now becomes the backup. He’s been inactive for every game this season. “We’re going to be fine,” left tackle Donald Penn said. “I believe in Matt. That’s why he’s our backup quarterback.” McGloin completed 2 of
his 3 passes Saturday for 29 yards, including a huge 19-yard pass to Amari Cooper that allowed the Raiders to run out the clock and secure the win over the Colts. “He’s a great quarterback,” Cooper said of McGloin. “I really like him. I’m excited to see what he’s going to do. I’m excited to see how he prepares and I’m just excited to just go out there and work with him.” McGloin said he tried to stay as calm as possible when he entered the game. “It is a difficult situation,” McGloin said. “First and foremost, (Carr) is a very good
friend of mine and it is tough to see him go down and get hurt. He has been having such an incredible season and to see him go down like that was tough. At the same time, I’ve got to try my best to stay calm, stay poised, stay focused and do my job.” For McGloin’s career, he’s completed 58.3 percent of his passes for 1,847 yards, 11 touchdowns and 11 interceptions in 12 games of action. Saturday’s two completions were his first of the year, but his teammates didn’t waste any time rallying behind him. “Matt’s definitely capable of leading us all the way to accomplish our goals,” said running back DeAndre Washington, who rushed for a career-high 99 yards and his first two NFL touchdowns. “He’s one of the hardest workers. He’s a perfectionist. He hates making mistakes. Just his preparation week in and week out, you would never tell he’s not the starter the way he prepares each and every week.” “He’s a competitor,” Cooper added. “He wants to win. He prepares as if he wants to win.” That’s what the Raiders will now be banking on.
Houston’s Savage looks to improve before postseason
34 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
By Kristie Rieken Associated Press HOUSTON — Houston’s Tom Savage wasn’t great in his first career start in place of Brock Osweiler. But he didn’t make any major mistakes, and the Texans got a 12-10 win over Cincinnati on Saturday night thanks to a missed field goal as time expired. Houston clinched a second straight AFC South title. Savage and the Texans know he’ll need to improve if they hope to make a run this postseason. “I think we can build, and obviously I think it’s a good thing that we protected the ball — not put the defense in a tough situation,” Savage said. “I think just going out there and ... keep executing what we need to do, and it’s good to go out there and
get some experience for sure.” Savage threw for 260 yards last week to help Houston rally for a 21-20 win over Jacksonville in his first regular-season action since 2014. Osweiler was benched that game after throwing interceptions on consecutive possessions in the second quarter. Coach Bill O’Brien decided to leave Osweiler on the bench and stick with Savage this week, and early on against the Bengals, it looked like a mistake. Savage completed two passes for 13 yards in the first half, and the Texans trailed 3-0 at halftime. The thirdyear player was much better in the second half, and he finished with 176 yards passing to help Houston win. He completed 18 of 29 passes and has not turned over the ball after Osweiler threw more inter-
ceptions (16) than touchdown passes (14) in his 14 starts. “We went to no-huddle and he was able to get rid of the ball a little bit quicker,” O’Brien said. “The no-huddle helped our pace, our rhythm, and it was just a good job by the offensive staff of getting him into a rhythm.” Though the Texans (9-6) moved the ball better after halftime, they still struggled in the red zone. Houston had first downs inside the 10-yard line twice in the second half and settled for field goals on both of those trips. “We still are not very good in the red area; that’s going to come back and bite us here if we don’t improve that,” O’Brien said. “We’re going to keep trying to improve it.” Though the Texans have already secured the division title, next week at Tennessee will be important for Savage
to get more experience before the playoffs begin. They’re looking for more this year after an embarrassing 30-0 home loss to the Kansas City Chiefs in the first round last January. “We got a resilient group and it’s exciting,” Savage said. “Going forward, offensively, we’ve got to just be a little bit better — make some plays, obviously work on the red area.” After losing star defensive end J.J. Watt to a season-ending back injury after three games, Houston certainly took time to celebrate overcoming adversity to reach the playoffs. But the Texans have bigger goals, especially with the Super Bowl taking place in their stadium in February. “The goal is to win it all, but this is the first step,” owner Bob McNair said.
MATT ROURKE / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Giants’ Eli Manning passes during the first half of Thursday night’s game against the Eagles.
Tampa Bay loss clinches playoff spot for Giants Associated Press EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — At least now the Giants don’t have to root for the Cowboys. After Tampa Bay lost to New Orleans on Saturday, New York advanced to the playoffs. Had the Bucs won, the Giants would have needed their archrival from Dallas to beat Detroit tonight to secure a postseason berth. Instead, the Giants (10-5) are in the playoffs for the first time since 2011, when they won the Super Bowl. They must wait until after the season finales to find out where they will head on Jan. 7 or 8 for a wild-card game. “There is a process in progressing to your ultimate objective,” said coach Ben McAdoo, who replaced Tom Coughlin this year. “This is the next step in the process. But each step requires focus on the task at hand, and our focus right now is on learning from Thursday night’s (loss at Philadelphia) and moving on and getting better. “It’s all in front of us, and we are still working toward playing our best, most complete game.” With Tampa Bay’s loss and Atlanta’s 33-16 victory over Carolina, the Falcons also clinched the NFC South title. This will be the Giants’ 32nd postseason appearance, tying them with Dallas for the most in NFL history. The Packers will also participate in their 32nd postseason should they qualify. New York could face Green Bay, which it lost to on
Oct. 9, or Detroit, which it beat on Dec. 18. It could also be at Atlanta or Seattle, neither of which it played this season. The Giants need their offense to come alive. Eli Manning has been inconsistent, often rescued by the super pass-catching and tackle-avoiding skills of Odell Beckham Jr. The running attack has improved recently, but it was so weak for much of the schedule that it had nowhere else to go but up. Offensive line is the weakest spot on the roster, forcing Manning to throw too many times before he has wanted. But as in their 2007 and 2011 championship seasons, the Giants have developed a dynamic pass rush, even without star DE Jason Pierre-Paul. Their secondary, a question mark when the season began, has become a strength as safety Landon Collins blossomed into a Pro Bowler, and cornerbacks Janoris Jenkins and Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie have performed well. The Giants certainly won’t fear the Cowboys, whose only two losses this season were against New York. But they haven’t been much of a road team, going 3-4, with one victory a “home game” for the Rams in London. And barring a bevy of upsets, they won’t be playing any postseason games at MetLife Stadium as the No. 5 seed in the NFC. In wild-card matches, the Giants are 6-4. Two of those wins came in their most recent Super Bowl years.
NFL STANDINGS AMERICAN East W L T y-New England 13 2 0 Miami 10 5 0 Buffalo 7 8 0 N.Y. Jets 4 11 0 South W L T y-Houston 9 6 0 Tennessee 8 7 0 Indianapolis 7 8 0 Jacksonville 3 12 0 North W L T y-Pittsburgh 10 5 0 Baltimore 8 7 0 Cincinnati 5 9 1 Cleveland 1 14 0 West W L T x-Oakland 12 3 0 x-Kansas City 11 4 0 Denver 8 7 0 San Diego 5 10 0 NATIONAL East W L T y-Dallas 12 2 0 x-N.Y. Giants 10 5 0 Washington 8 6 1 Philadelphia 6 9 0 South W L T y-Atlanta 10 5 0 Tampa Bay 8 7 0 New Orleans 7 8 0 Carolina 6 9 0 North W L T Detroit 9 5 0 Green Bay 9 6 0 Minnesota 7 8 0 Chicago 3 12 0 West W L T y-Seattle 9 5 1 Arizona 6 8 1 Los Angeles 4 11 0 San Francisco 2 13 0 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division
Redskins 41, Bears 21
Pct. .867 .667 .467 .267
PF 406 349 389 245
PA 236 345 348 399
Pct. .600 .533 .467 .200
PF 262 357 387 298
PA 304 361 372 376
Pct. .667 .533 .367 .067
PF 372 333 298 240
PA 303 294 305 425
Pct. .800 .733 .533 .333
PF 410 352 309 383
PA 361 284 291 386
Pct. .857 .667 .567 .400
PF 366 291 386 340
PA 258 274 364 318
Pct. .667 .533 .467 .400
PF 502 337 437 353
PA 374 353 416 385
Pct. .643 .600 .467 .200
PF 301 401 289 269
PA 285 364 297 361
Pct. .633 .433 .267 .133
PF 329 374 218 286
PA 269 356 350 455
Thursday Philadelphia 24, N.Y. Giants 19 Saturday New England 41, N.Y. Jets 3 Jacksonville 38, Tennessee 17 Washington 41, Chicago 21 Green Bay 38, Minnesota 25 Cleveland 20, San Diego 17 Atlanta 33, Carolina 16 Miami 34, Buffalo 31, OT Oakland 33, Indianapolis 25 New Orleans 31, Tampa Bay 24 San Francisco 22, Los Angeles 21 Arizona 34, Seattle 31 Houston 12, Cincinnati 10 Sunday Pittsburgh 31, Baltimore 27 Kansas City 33, Denver 10 Today Detroit at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Browns 20, Chargers 17 San Diego Cleveland
14 10 7 10 — 41 0 14 0 7 — 21 First Quarter Was — C.Thompson 7 run (Hopkins kick), 7:43. Was — C.Thompson 17 pass from Cousins (Hopkins kick), :57. Second Quarter Was — FG Hopkins 29, 10:07. Chi — Langford 1 run (Barth kick), 6:20. Was — Cousins 9 run (Hopkins kick), 1:41. Chi — Meredith 21 pass from Barkley (Barth kick), :34. Third Quarter Was — Cousins 1 run (Hopkins kick), 3:05. Fourth Quarter Was — FG Hopkins 20, 12:53. Chi — D.Thompson 3 pass from Barkley (Barth kick), 1:21. Was — M.Brown 61 run (Hopkins kick), :57. A — 57,953. Was Chi First downs 21 31 Total Net Yards 478 458 Rushes-yards 35-208 26-140 Passing 270 318 Punt Returns 0-0 1-3 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 1-5 Penalties-Yards 7-73 4-52 Time of Possession 32:35 27:25 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Washington, M.Brown 8-82, Kelley 19-76, Cousins 5-30, C.Thompson 3-20. Chicago, Howard 18-119, Langford 7-19, Prosinski 1-2. PASSING — Washington, Cousins 18-29-0-270. Chicago, Barkley 24-40-5-323. RECEIVING — Washington, Jackson 5-114, Garcon 4-94, Grant 3-25, Kelley 2-6, C.Thompson 1-17, Davis 1-13, Crowder 1-3, M.Brown 1-(minus 2). Chicago, Meredith 9-135, Jeffery 5-92, D.Thompson 3-34, Braunecker 2-19, D.Brown 2-19, Bellamy 1-11, Howard 1-9, Langford 1-4.
Falcons 33, Panthers 16 Atlanta Carolina
13 7 3 10 — 33 0 3 10 3 — 16 First Quarter Atl — Perkins 26 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 10:57. Atl — FG Bryant 51, 6:09. Atl — FG Bryant 48, :35. Second Quarter Car — FG Gano 31, 10:17. Atl — Tialavea 1 pass from Ryan (Bryant kick), 5:34. Third Quarter Car — FG Gano 40, 9:23. Atl — FG Bryant 29, 3:34. Car — Benjamin 26 pass from Newton (Gano kick), :00. Fourth Quarter Atl — T.Coleman 55 run (Bryant kick), 13:19. Car — FG Gano 31, 9:43. Atl — FG Bryant 50, 1:55. A — 73,549. Atl Car First downs 21 17 Total Net Yards 408 302 Rushes-yards 24-152 23-119 Passing 256 183 Comp-Att-Int 27-33-0 18-43-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-21 2-15 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 6-45 4-24 Time of Possession 32:45 27:15 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Atlanta, T.Coleman 9-90, Freeman 1353, Ryan 2-9. Carolina, Stewart 11-50, Newton 8-36, Whittaker 3-30, Tolbert 1-3. PASSING — Atlanta, Ryan 27-33-0-277. Carolina, Newton 18-43-2-198. RECEIVING — Atlanta, Freeman 8-35, J.Jones 4-60, Sanu 3-56, T.Coleman 3-45, Gabriel 3-15, Perkins 2-34, Robinson 1-15, Toilolo 1-10, DiMarco 1-6, Tialavea 1-1. Carolina, Olsen 6-59, Benjamin 4-63, Ginn 3-29, Whittaker 1-14, Brown 1-12, Manhertz 1-10, Funchess 1-9, Stewart 1-2.
Texans 12, Bengals 10 Cincinnati Houston
0 7 14 3 — 24 7 6 15 3 — 31 First Quarter NO — Ingram 6 run (Lutz kick), :57. Second Quarter TB — Brate 12 pass from Winston (Aguayo kick), 10:50. NO — FG Lutz 42, 6:45. NO — FG Lutz 34, :00. Third Quarter NO — Ingram 14 run (Lutz kick), 14:01. TB — Rodgers 3 run (Aguayo kick), 8:38. NO — Cadet 11 pass from Brees (Ingram run), 6:20. TB — M.Evans 34 pass from Winston (Aguayo kick), 1:52. Fourth Quarter NO — FG Lutz 21, 11:55. TB — FG Aguayo 35, 2:00. A — 73,177. TB NO First downs 23 25 Total Net Yards 349 417 Rushes-yards 21-89 31-123 Passing 260 294 Comp-Att-Int 23-35-2 23-34-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-17 2-5 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 7-63 7-59 Time of Possession 28:24 31:36 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Tampa Bay, Rodgers 15-63, Winston 3-14, Sims 3-12. New Orleans, Ingram 18-90, Hightower 8-29, Kuhn 1-3, Brees 4-1. PASSING — Tampa Bay, Winston 23-35-2-277. New Orleans, Brees 23-34-0-299. RECEIVING — Tampa Bay, M.Evans 7-97, Sims 4-30, Shepard 3-61, Huff 2-24, Myers 2-21, Rodgers 2-15, Humphries 1-12, Brate 1-12, Cross 1-5. New Orleans, Thomas 6-98, Cooks 5-98, Fleener 2-30, Snead 2-21, Cadet 2-16, Phillips 2-15, Ingram 2-3, Hightower 1-11, Kuhn 1-7.
Patriots 41, Jets 3 N.Y. Jets New England
0 0 0 3— 3 10 17 7 7 — 41 First Quarter NE — FG Gostkowski 29, 8:16. NE — Bennett 5 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 3:02. Second Quarter NE — FG Gostkowski 22, 11:13. NE — Lengel 18 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), 2:40. NE — White 25 pass from Brady (Gostkowski kick), :25. Third Quarter NE — Blount 1 run (Gostkowski kick), 3:22. Fourth Quarter NE — Blount 1 run (Gostkowski kick), 12:24. NYJ — FG Folk 29, 6:16. A — 66,829. NYJ NE First downs 14 21 Total Net Yards 239 325 Rushes-yards 29-111 40-114 Passing 128 211 Punt Returns 2-7 3-16 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-8 1-9 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-0 Penalties-Yards 6-77 3-20 Time of Possession 25:17 34:43 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — New York, Powell 15-60, Robinson 8-22, Wilds 4-14, Enunwa 1-12, Fitzpatrick 1-3. New England, Lewis 1652, Blount 20-50, White 1-14, Garoppolo 3-(minus 2). PASSING — New York, Petty 0-3-1-0, Fitzpatrick 8-21-2136. New England, Brady 17-27-0-214, Garoppolo 1-2-0-6. RECEIVING — New York, B.Marshall 2-28, Powell 2-14, Enunwa 1-30, Peake 1-27, Smith 1-20, Seferian-Jenkins 1-17. New England, Edelman 5-89, White 3-32, Mitchell 3-29, Bennett 2-19, Hogan 1-22, Lengel 1-18, Floyd 1-6, Lewis 1-5, Develin 1-0. MISSED FIELD GOALS — New York, Folk 34.
49ers 22, Rams 21 San Francisco Los Angeles
7 0 0 15 — 22 14 0 0 7 — 21 First Quarter SF — Hyde 19 pass from Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 9:01. LA — Gurley 1 run (Zuerlein kick), 4:07. LA — Austin 30 run (Zuerlein kick), 2:33. Fourth Quarter LA — Higbee 2 pass from Goff (Zuerlein kick), 10:32. SF — Kaepernick 13 run (Dawson kick), 5:06. SF — Streater 10 pass from Kaepernick (Knick run), :31. A — 83,656. SF LA First downs 21 13 Total Net Yards 323 177 Rushes-yards 29-70 29-99 Passing 253 78 Comp-Att-Int 28-38-1 11-24-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-13 4-12 Fumbles-Lost 2-1 2-0 Penalties-Yards 11-100 5-45 Time of Possession 31:03 28:57 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — San Francisco, Hyde 13-38, Draughn 10-17, Kaepernick 6-15. Los Angeles, Gurley 23-67, Austin 3-26, Goff 2-4, M.Brown 1-2. PASSING — San Francisco, Kaepernick 28-38-1266. Los Angeles, Goff 11-24-2-90. RECEIVING — San Francisco, Streater 6-63, Draughn 6-48, Kerley 5-62, Celek 4-39, Hyde 3-24, Burbridge 2-15, Harris 1-14, Harper 1-1. Los Angeles, Kendricks 3-36, Gurley 3-20, Austin 2-14, Higbee 2-5, Britt 1-15.
MORRY GASH / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Packers’ Jordy Nelson gets past Vikings’ Eric Kendricks on Saturday. Dolphins 34, Bills 31, OT Miami Buffalo
7 7 14 3 3 — 34 0 7 14 10 0 — 31 First Quarter Mia — Ajayi 2 run (Franks kick), 6:24. Second Quarter Mia — Drake 45 run (Franks kick), 13:34. Buf — Watkins 38 pass from Taylor (Carpenter kick), 5:06. Third Quarter Mia — Parker 56 pass from Moore (Franks kick), 12:05. Buf — McCoy 19 run (Carpenter kick), 6:46. Mia — Stills 6 pass from Moore (Franks kick), 3:14. Buf — Clay 18 pass from Taylor (Carpenter kick), 1:12. Fourth Quarter Buf — FG Carpenter 28, 5:51. Buf — Clay 7 pass from Taylor (Carpenter kick), 1:20. Mia — FG Franks 55, :06. Overtime Mia — FG Franks 27, :47. A — 64,690. Mia Buf First downs 22 30 Total Net Yards 494 589 Rushes-yards 38-261 49-272 Passing 233 317 Comp-Att-Int 16-30-1 26-39-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 2-12 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 2-15 5-35 Time of Possession 33:40 40:33 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Miami, Ajayi 32-206, Drake 4-56, Landry 1-0, Moore 1-(minus 1). Buffalo, McCoy 24-128, Gillislee 11-91, Taylor 12-60, Felton 1-1, Bush 1-(minus 8). PASSING — Miami, Moore 16-30-1-233. Buffalo, Taylor 26-39-0-329. RECEIVING — Miami, Parker 4-85, Stills 3-35, Landry 3-29, D.Williams 2-51, Sims 2-10, Gray 1-20, Ajayi 1-3. Buffalo, Clay 8-85, Watkins 7-154, McCoy 5-17, Woods 3-43, Felton 2-14, Goodwin 1-16. MISSED FIELD GOALS — Miami, Franks 46.
Jaguars 38, Titans 17 Tennessee Jacksonville
0 7 3 7 — 17 10 9 6 13 — 38 First Quarter Jac — Lee 21 pass from Bortles (Myers kick), 11:03. Jac — FG Myers 29, 4:03. Second Quarter Ten — Matthews 3 pass from Mariota (Succop kick), 8:59. Jac — Ivory 1 run (kick failed), 1:57. Jac — FG Myers 48, :11. Third Quarter Ten — FG Succop 42, 12:24. Jac — FG Myers 56, 8:13. Jac — FG Myers 50, 2:59. Fourth Quarter Ten — Walker 14 pass from Cassel (Succop kick), 8:42. Jac — Bortles 20 pass from Lee (kick failed), 5:25. Jac — Ramsey 30 interception return (Myers kick), 5:17. A — 59,621. Ten Jac First downs 19 25 Total Net Yards 263 415 Rushes-yards 20-58 28-84 Passing 205 331 Comp-Att-Int 21-44-1 27-39-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-18 2-14 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 2-1 Penalties-Yards 6-49 4-45 Time of Possession 27:29 32:31 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Tennessee, Murray 14-42, Henry 4-13, Mariota 2-3. Jacksonville, Ivory 14-45, Grant 9-27, Bortles 3-7, Yeldon 2-5. PASSING — Tennessee, Mariota 8-20-0-99, Cassel 1324-1-124. Jacksonville, Bortles 26-38-0-325, Lee 1-1-0-20. RECEIVING — Tennessee, Douglas 5-48, Sharpe 3-48, Matthews 3-31, Walker 3-23, Henry 2-22, Wright 2-21, Murray 2-18, Fasano 1-12. Jacksonville, A.Robinson 9-147, Walters 5-45, Ivory 4-69, Lee 3-37, Koyack 2-12, Ellis 2-10, Bortles 1-20, Grant 1-5.
Steelers 31, Ravens 27 Baltimore Pittsburgh
3 3 11 10 — 27 7 0 3 21 — 31 First Quarter Pit — Grimble 20 pass from Roethlisberger (Boswell kick), 7:12. Bal — FG Tucker 41, 5:50. Second Quarter Bal — FG Tucker 38, :18. Third Quarter Bal — S.Smith 18 pass from Flacco (S.Smith pass from Flacco), 13:26. Pit — FG Boswell 36, 9:35. Bal — FG Tucker 46, 1:28. Fourth Quarter Bal — FG Tucker 23, 14:18. Pit — Bell 7 run (Boswell kick), 11:41. Pit — Bell 7 pass from Roethlisberger (Boswell kick), 7:16. Bal — Juszczyk 10 run (Tucker kick), 1:18. Pit — Brown 4 pass from Roethlisberger (Boswell kick), :09. A — 66,276. Bal Pit First downs 22 23 Total Net Yards 368 406 Rushes-yards 26-122 22-127 Passing 246 279 Comp-Att-Int 30-44-1 24-33-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-16 0-0 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 7-95 4-45 Time of Possession 34:37 25:23 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Baltimore, Dixon 12-57, West 10-27, Campanaro 1-23, Juszczyk 2-15, Koch 1-0. Pittsburgh, Bell 20-122, Rogers 1-6, Roethlisberger 1-(minus 1). PASSING — Baltimore, Flacco 30-44-1-262. Pittsburgh, Roethlisberger 24-33-2-279. RECEIVING — Baltimore, Pitta 8-75, S.Smith 7-79, Wallace 4-21, Perriman 3-32, West 3-28, Juszczyk 2-10, Waller 1-11, Boyle 1-5, Dixon 1-1. Pittsburgh, Brown 10-96, Rogers 4-84, James 4-49, Bell 3-15, Grimble 1-20, Ayers 1-9, Hamilton 1-6.
Cardinals 34, Seahawks 31 Arizona Seattle
7 7 0 20 — 34 0 3 7 21 — 31 First Quarter Ari — D.Johnson 2 run (Catanzaro kick), 7:52. Second Quarter Ari — Nelson 80 pass from Palmer (Catanzaro kick), 3:53. Sea — FG Hauschka 27, :15. Third Quarter Sea — Kearse 2 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 8:20. Fourth Quarter Ari — D.Johnson 1 run (Catanzaro kick), 13:32. Sea — Baldwin 42 pass from Wilson (Reece pass from Wilson), 8:49. Ari — D.Johnson 1 run (Catanzaro kick), 6:47. Ari — FG Catanzaro 42, 4:10. Sea — Graham 37 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 2:48. Sea — Richardson 5 pass from Wilson (kick failed), 1:00. Ari — FG Catanzaro 43, :00. A — 69,050. Ari Sea First downs 21 24 Total Net Yards 370 391 Rushes-yards 29-94 27-78 Passing 276 313 Comp-Att-Int 16-27-0 29-45-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 1-8 6-37 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 1-1 Penalties-Yards 7-85 5-40 Time of Possession 26:18 33:42 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Arizona, D.Johnson 28-95, Palmer 1-(minus 1). Seattle, Wilson 10-36, Collins 7-28, Rawls 8-8, Baldwin 2-6. PASSING — Arizona, Palmer 16-26-0-284, Fitzgerald 0-1-0-0. Seattle, Wilson 29-45-0-350. RECEIVING — Arizona, D.Johnson 4-41, Fitzgerald 4-31, Nelson 3-132, Gresham 2-40, B.Golden 1-22, Brown 1-12, K.Williams 1-6. Seattle, Baldwin 13-171, Richardson 4-42, Kearse 4-37, Collins 4-19, Graham 2-43, Lockett 2-38. MISSED FIELD GOALS — Arizona, Catanzaro 53.
Raiders 33, Colts 25 Indianapolis Oakland
0 7 7 11 — 25 0 19 14 0 — 33 Second Quarter Oak — Holmes 1 pass from Carr (Janikowski kick), 14:57. Ind — Moncrief 24 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 9:49. Oak — Walford 5 pass from Carr (kick failed), 5:50. Oak — Richard 4 pass from Carr (kick blocked), :18. Third Quarter Oak — Washington 22 run (Janikowski kick), 10:48. Oak — Washington 22 run (Janikowski kick), 8:40. Ind — Turbin 3 pass from Luck (Vinatieri kick), 5:18. Fourth Quarter Ind — Luck 11 run (Hilton pass from Luck), 7:40. Ind — FG Vinatieri 42, 2:33. A — 54,896. Ind Oak First downs 20 27 Total Net Yards 391 459 Rushes-yards 24-103 37-210 Passing 288 249 Comp-Att-Int 19-29-2 22-33-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 1-8 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 4-22 10-93 Time of Possession 23:55 36:05 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Indianapolis, Gore 13-73, Turbin 6-18, Luck 4-12, McAfee 1-0. Oakland, Washington 1299, Richard 6-66, Murray 15-40, Carr 1-8, McGloin 3-(minus 3). PASSING — Indianapolis, Luck 19-29-2-288. Oakland, Carr 20-30-0-228, McGloin 2-3-0-29. RECEIVING — Indianapolis, Doyle 5-46, Hilton 4-105, D.Allen 3-31, Moncrief 2-30, Turbin 2-11, Swoope 1-45, Gore 1-12, Dorsett 1-8. Oakland, Crabtree 7-90, Cooper 4-72, Holmes 3-33, Richard 3-13, Walford 2-20, Murray 2-11, Washington 1-18.
Packers 38, Vikings 25 Minnesota Green Bay
3 10 0 12 — 25 14 14 0 10 — 38 First Quarter GB — Nelson 21 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 7:13. Min — FG Forbath 22, 3:37. GB — Adams 20 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 1:49. Second Quarter Min — FG Forbath 26, 12:30. GB — Nelson 2 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 8:11. Min — Thielen 71 pass from Bradford (Forbath kick), 7:24. GB — A.Rodgers 6 run (Crosby kick), :24. Fourth Quarter GB — FG Crosby 48, 14:55. GB — R.Rodgers 13 pass from A.Rodgers (Crosby kick), 9:02. Min — Diggs 3 pass from Bradford (kick failed), 4:20. Min — Thielen 8 pass from Bradford (run failed), :32. A — 77,856. Min GB First downs 22 19 Total Net Yards 446 348 Rushes-yards 20-93 15-40 Passing 353 308 Comp-Att-Int 34-50-0 28-39-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-29 4-39 Fumbles-Lost 2-2 1-0 Penalties-Yards 8-70 3-21 Time of Possession 31:01 28:59 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Minnesota, McKinnon 11-50, Asiata 6-34, Bradford 2-5, Thielen 1-4. Green Bay, Montgomery 9-23, A.Rodgers 2-13, Michael 4-4. PASSING — Minnesota, Bradford 34-50-0-382. Green Bay, A.Rodgers 28-38-0-347, Hundley 0-1-0-0. RECEIVING — Minnesota, Thielen 12-202, Rudolph 6-53, McKinnon 5-35, Diggs 4-29, Asiata 3-30, Patterson 2-13, C.Johnson 1-16, Morgan 1-4. Green Bay, Nelson 9-154, Allison 4-66, Adams 4-44, Montgomery 4-17, Cook 3-37, R.Rodgers 2-20, Janis 1-8, Michael 1-1.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 35
0 3 0 7 — 10 0 0 3 9 — 12 Second Quarter Cin — FG Bullock 43, :00. Third Quarter Hou — FG Novak 25, 9:05. Fourth Quarter Hou — FG Novak 22, 13:31. Cin — LaFell 86 pass from Dalton (Bullock kick), 10:45. Hou — Blue 24 run (kick blocked), 8:41. A — 71,836. Cin Hou First downs 15 17 Total Net Yards 294 250 Rushes-yards 19-50 24-95 Passing 244 155 Sacked-Yards Lost 3-24 4-21 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Penalties-Yards 6-60 3-25 Time of Possession 28:54 31:06 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — Cincinnati, Burkhead 12-42, Hill 7-8. Houston, Blue 21-73, Savage 1-11, A.Hunt 1-6, Prosch 1-5. PASSING — Cincinnati, Dalton 28-41-1-268. Houston, Savage 18-29-0-176. RECEIVING — Cincinnati, Core 8-39, LaFell 6-130, Uzomah 5-28, Burkhead 4-25, Boyd 2-25, Hewitt 1-8, Wright 1-8, Erickson 1-5. Houston, Fiedorowicz 4-42, Blue 4-17, Hopkins 3-43, Fuller 3-39, A.Hunt 2-28, Mumphery 2-7. MISSED FIELD GOALS — Cincinnati, Bullock 43.
Saints 31, Bucs 24 Tampa Bay New Orleans
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
10 0 7 0 — 17 7 10 3 0 — 20 First Quarter SD — Gates 1 pass from Rivers (Lambo kick), 10:49. Cle — Crowell 8 run (Parkey kick), 5:12. SD — FG Lambo 43, 1:49. Second Quarter Cle — Crowell 4 run (Parkey kick), 12:39. Cle — FG Parkey 49, 4:46. Third Quarter Cle — FG Parkey 27, 10:58. SD — Ty.Williams 1 pass from Rivers (Lambo kick), 6:04. A — 57,272. SD Cle First downs 19 23 Total Net Yards 356 251 Rushes-yards 19-34 29-124 Passing 322 127 Comp-Att-Int 23-46-1 19-28-0 Sacked-Yards Lost 0-0 9-48 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 9-92 4-44 Time of Possession 27:31 32:29 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING — San Diego, Farrow 9-28, Hillman 9-6, Rivers 1-0. Cleveland, Crowell 16-54, Griffin 6-42, D.Johnson 7-28. PASSING — San Diego, Rivers 23-46-1-322. Cleveland, Griffin 17-25-0-164, Kessler 2-3-0-11. RECEIVING — San Diego, Gates 8-94, Ty.Williams 4-64, Farrow 4-29, Benjamin 3-75, Inman 3-44, Watt 1-16. Cleveland, Barnidge 5-42, Crowell 4-4, Pryor 3-36, D.Johnson 2-21, C.Coleman 2-15, Hawkins 1-21, DeValve 1-21, Vitale 1-15. MISSED FIELD GOALS — San Diego, Lambo 45.
Washington Chicago
36 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
THE LINE NFL Favorite Points (O/U) Underdog COWBOYS 6.5 (45.0) Lions College Football Favorite Points (O/U) Underdog Saturday College Football Playoffs Peach Bowl Atlanta, GA Alabama 15 (54.5) Washington Saturday College Football Playoffs Fiesta Bowl Glendale, AZ Ohio St 3 (59.5) Clemson Quick Lane Bowl Detroit, MI Maryland 1.5 (43.5) Boston Coll Independence Bowl Shreveport, LA NC State 5.5 (45.5) Vanderbilt Tuesday Heart of Dallas Bowl Dallas, TX Army 11 (48.5) N Texas Tuesday Military Bowl Annapolis, MD Temple 12 (41.0) Wake Forest Tuesday Holiday Bowl San Diego, CA Wash St 10.5 (61.5) Minnesota Wednesday Pinstripe Bowl Bronx, NY Pittsburgh 5.5 (65.5) Northwestern Wednesday Russell Athletic Bowl Orlando, FL Miami-Fla 3 (56.5) W Virginia Wednesday Foster Farms Bowl Santa Clara, CA Utah 7 (54.5) Indiana Wednesday Texas Bowl Houston, TX Texas A&M 2.5 (56.5) Kansas St Thursday Birmingham Bowl Birmingham, AL S Florida 10.5 (62.5) S Carolina Thursday Belk Bowl Charlotte, NC Va Tech 7 (61.5) Arkansas Thursday Alamo Bowl San Antonio, TX Colorado 3 (62.5) Oklahoma St Friday Liberty Bowl Memphis, TN Georgia PK (48.5) Tcu Friday Sun Bowl El Paso, TX Stanford 2.5 (54.5) N Carolina Friday Arizona Bowl Tucson, AZ Air Force 13.5 (57.5) S Alabama Friday Music City Bowl Nashville, TN Tennessee 5.5 (59.5) Nebraska Friday Orange Bowl Miami Gardens, FL Michigan 6.5 (52.5) Florida St Saturday Citrus Bowl Orlando, FL Lsu 3.5 (59.5) Louisville Saturday Taxslayer Bowl Jacksonville, FL Ga Tech 3.5 (60.5) Kentucky January 2 Outback Bowl Tampa, FL Florida 3 (40.5) Iowa January 2 Cotton Bowl Arlington, TX Wisconsin 8 (53.5) W Michigan January 2 Rose Bowl Pasadena, CA Usc 7 6.5 (60.5) Penn St January 2 Sugar Bowl New Orleans, LA Oklahoma 3 (63.5) Auburn NBA Favorite Points Underdog Grizzlies 1.5 ( NL ) MAGIC WIZARDS 5 (212.5) Bucks Cavaliers 4.5 ( NL ) PISTONS Hornets 6.5 (215.5) NETS PELICANS 4 (198.5) Mavericks ROCKETS 13 (229.5) Suns T’WOLVES 3 ( NL ) Hawks BULLS 3.5 ( NL ) Pacers Raptors 4 ( NL ) BLAZERS KINGS 8.5 ( NL ) 76ers CLIPPERS 9 ( NL ) Nuggets HOME TEAM IN CAPS
NBA EASTERN Atlantic Division W L Pct GB Toronto 21 8 .724 — Boston 18 13 .581 4.0 New York 16 14 .533 5.5 Philadelphia 7 22 .241 14 Brooklyn 7 22 .241 14 Southeast Division W L Pct GB Charlotte 17 13 .567 — Atlanta 15 15 .500 2.0 Washington 13 16 .448 3.5 Orlando 14 18 .438 4.0 Miami 10 21 .323 7.5 Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 23 6 .793 — Milwaukee 14 14 .500 8.5 Indiana 15 16 .484 9.0 Chicago 14 16 .467 9.5 Detroit 14 18 .43810.5 WESTERN Southwest Division W L Pct GB San Antonio 25 6 .806 — Houston 22 9 .710 3.0 Memphis 20 12 .625 5.5 New Orleans 11 21 .34414.5 Dallas 9 21 .30015.5 Northwest Division W L Pct GB Oklahoma City 19 12 .613 — Utah 18 13 .581 1.0 Portland 13 19 .406 6.5 Denver 12 18 .400 6.5 Minnesota 9 21 .300 9.5 Pacific Division W L Pct GB Golden State 27 5 .844 — L.A. Clippers 22 9 .710 4.5 Sacramento 13 17 .433 13 L.A. Lakers 11 22 .33316.5 Phoenix 9 21 .300 17 Friday Charlotte 103, Chicago 91 Orlando 109, L.A. Lakers 90 Cleveland 119, Brooklyn 99 Golden State 119, Detroit 113 Oklahoma City 117, Boston 112 Memphis 115, Houston 109 Milwaukee 123, Washington 96 New Orleans 91, Miami 87 Sacramento 109, Minnesota 105 Atlanta 109, Denver 108 Phoenix 123, Philadelphia 116 Toronto 104, Utah 98 San Antonio 110, Portland 90 Dallas 90, L.A. Clippers 88 Sunday Boston 119, New York 114 Cleveland 109, Golden State 108 San Antonio 119, Chicago 100 Oklahoma City 112, Minnesota 100 L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Today Memphis at Orlando, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Washington, 7 p.m. Charlotte at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Atlanta at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Dallas at New Orleans, 8 p.m. Indiana at Chicago, 8 p.m. Phoenix at Houston, 8 p.m. Toronto at Portland, 10 p.m. Denver at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL SCORES Illinois St. 68, Tulsa 56 Hawaii 60, Southern Miss. 46 Utah 74, Stephen F. Austin 66 San Diego State 62, San Francisco 48
BOXING SCHEDULE Friday At Tokyo, Naoya Inoue vs. Kohei Kono, 12, for Inoue’s WBO junior bantamweight title; Akira Yaegashi vs. Wittawas Basapean, 12, for Yaegashi’s IBF junior flyweight title; Ryota Murata vs. Bruno Sandoval, 10, middleweights. Saturday At Kyoto, Japan, Jonathan Guzman vs. Yukinori Oguni, 12, for Guzman’s IBF super bantamweight title; Kazuto Ioka vs. Yutthana Kaensa, 12, for Ioka’s WBA World flyweight title. At Tokyo, Jezreel Corrales vs. Takashi Uchiyama, 12, for Corrales’ WBA Super World super featherweight title; Ryoichi Taguchi vs. Carlos Canizales, 12, for Taguchi’s WBA World light flyweight title.
IN THE BLEACHERS
WVC GIRLS BASKETBALL DIVISION 1 Pittston Area Valley West Hazleton Area Crestwood Dallas Coughlin DIVISION 2 Nanticoke Area Berwick Holy Redeemer Lake-Lehman Tunkhannock Wyoming Area DIVISION 3 Northwest Meyers Wyoming Seminary Hanover Area GAR
WVC 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 WVC 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-1 WVC 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1
NHL ALL 5-1 3-1 4-1 3-1 2-2 0-6 ALL 4-0 3-1 2-3 1-4 1-3 3-1 ALL 4-1 3-2 3-3 2-5 1-5
WVC BOYS BASKETBALL
RADIO / TV TODAY’S RADIO SCHEDULE AHL 7 p.m. Penguins at Binghamton, 980 AM, 103.1 FM TODAY’S TV SCHEDULE College Football 11 a.m. St. Petersburg Bowl, Miami (Ohio) vs. Miss. St., ESPN 2:30 p.m. Quick Lane Bowl, Maryland vs. Boston College, ESPN 5 p.m. Independence Bowl, NC State vs. Vanderbilt, ESPN2 NBA 8 p.m. Indiana at Chicago, NBA 10:30 p.m. Denver at LA Clippers, NBA NFL 8:15 p.m. Detroit at Dallas, ESPN Soccer 7:30 a.m. Crystal Palace at Watford, NBCSN 10 a.m. Bournemouth at Chelsea, CNBC 10 a.m. Sunderland at Manchester United, NBCSN 12:10 p.m. Manchester City at Hull City, NBCSN
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL The 107 remaining free agents (q-did not accept $17.2 million qualfiying offer): AMERICAN LEAGUE BALTIMORE (7) — Pedro Alvarez, dh; Michael Bourn, of; Tommy Hunter, rhp; Nolan Reimold, of; Drew Stubbs, of; q-Mark Trumbo, of; Matt Wieters, c. BOSTON (2) — Ryan Hanigan, c; Aaron Hill, 3b. CHICAGO (3) — Matt Albers, rhp; Austin Jackson, of; Justin Morneau, dh. CLEVELAND (4) — Marlon Byrd, of; Coco Crisp, of; Rajai Davis, of; Mike Napoli, 1b. DETROIT (2) — Erick Aybar, ss; Jarrod Saltalamacchia, c. HOUSTON (3) — Doug Fister, rhp; Colby Rasmus, of; Luis Valbuena, 3b. KANSAS CITY (3) — Luke Hochevar, rhp; Kris Medlen, rhp; Peter Moylan, rhp. LOS ANGELES (4) — Tim Lincecum, rhp; Geovany Soto, c; Jered Weaver, rhp; Chris Wilson, lhp. MINNESOTA (1) — Kurt Suzuki, c. NEW YORK (2) — Billy Butler, of; Mark Teixeira, 1b. OAKLAND (2) — Ross Detwiler, lhp; Sam Fuld, of. SEATTLE (5) — Franklin Gutierrez, of; Chris Iannetta, c; Dae-ho Lee, 1b; Adam Lind, 1b; Drew Storen, rhp. TAMPA BAY (3) — Kevin Jepsen, rhp; Logan Morrison, 1b; Alexei Ramirez, ss. TEXAS (1) — Colby Lewis, rhp. TORONTO (6) — q-Jose Bautista, of; q-Edwin Encarnacion, dh; Scott Feldman, rhp; Gavin Floyd, rhp; Dioner Navarro, c; Michael Saunders, of. NATIONAL LEAGUE ARIZONA (1) — Rickie Weeks, of.
ATLANTA (3) — Emilio Bonifacio, of; Eric O’Flaherty, lhp; A.J. Pierzynski, c. CHICAGO (7) — Trevor Cahill, rhp; Chris Coghlan, of; Jason Hammel, rhp; Munenori Kawasaki, 2b-3b; David Ross, c; Joe Smith, rhp; Travis Wood, lhp. CINCINNATI (2) — Ross Ohlendorf, rhp; Alfredo Simon, rhp. COLORADO (6) — Jorge De La Rosa, lhp; Daniel Descalso, inf; Nick Hundley, c; Boone Logan, lhp; Ryan Raburn, of; Mark Reynolds, 1b. LOS ANGELES (5) — Brett Anderson, lhp; Joe Blanton, rhp; J.P. Howell, lhp; q-Kenley Jansen, rhp; Chase Utley, 2b. MIAMI (2) — Jeff Francoeur, of; Chris Johnson, 1b-3b. MILWAUKEE (2) — Blaine Boyer, rhp; Chris Capuano, lhp. NEW YORK (6) — Jerry Blevins, lhp; Alejandro De Aza, of; Kelly Johnson, 2b-3b; James Loney, 1b; Jon Niese, lhp; Fernando Salas, rhp. PHILADELPHIA (3) — Peter Bourjos, of; David Hernandez, rhp; Ryan Howard, 1b. PITTSBURGH (3) — Neftali Feliz, rhp; Ivan Nova, rhp; Ryan Vogelsong, rhp. ST. LOUIS (3) — Brandon Moss, 1b-of; Jordan Walden, rhp; Jerome Williams, rhp. SAN DIEGO (4) — Edwin Jackson, rhp; Brandon Morrow, rhp; Adam Rosales, 3b; Carlos Villanueva, rhp. SAN FRANCISCO (8) — Gordon Beckham, 2b; Gregor Blanco, of; Santiago Casilla, rhp; Javier Lopez, lhp; Joe Nathan, rhp; Angel Pagan, of; Jake Peavy, rhp; Sergio Romo, rhp. WASHINGTON (4) — Matt Belisle, rhp; Stephen Drew, 2b; Mat Latos, rhp; Yusmeiro Petit, rhp.
DIVISION 1 Dallas Crestwood Hazleton Area Pittston Area Valley West Coughlin DIVISION 2 Berwick Wyoming Area Nanticoke Area Tunkhannock GAR Meyers DIVISION 3 Wyoming Seminary Northwest Holy Redeemer MMI Prep Hanover Area Lake-Lehman
WVC 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 WVC 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 WVC 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1
ALL 4-0 2-2 2-2 2-3 1-4 1-5 ALL 6-0 4-0 5-1 4-1 3-1 3-1 ALL 4-3 2-2 2-2 1-2 1-4 0-5
WVC SWIMMING GIRLS Hazleton Area Dallas Tunkhannock Valley West Wyoming Seminary Holy Redeemer Pittston Area Berwick Coughlin Lake-Lehman Wyoming Area Meyers Nanticoke Area BOYS Tunkhannock Hazleton Area Dallas Wyoming Seminary Berwick Holy Redeemer Valley West Wyoming Area Nanticoke Area Lake-Lehman
WVC 2-0-0 2-0-0 2-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 1-1-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 WVC 2-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 1-0-0 1-1-0 0-0-0 0-0-0 0-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0
WVC WRESTLING DIVISION 1 Hazleton Area Dallas Tunkhannock Coughlin Pittston Area Crestwod Valley West DIVISION 2 Lake-Lehman Meyers Hanover Area Wyoming Area Nanticoke Area Berwick
WVC 2-0 2-0 1-0 1-0 0-2 0-2 0-2 WVC 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1
FREEDOM BASKETBALL MEN Misericordia DeSales Eastern Wilkes Delaware Valley FDU-Florham King’s Manhattanville WOMEN DeSales Eastern FDU-Florham Misericordia Manhattanville Wilkes Delaware Valley King’s
CONF 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 CONF 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0
ALL 8-1 5-3 5-4 5-4 4-5 3-4 4-6 3-4 ALL 7-1 8-2 7-2 5-3 4-3 4-6 3-6 1-8
EASTERN Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts. PF PA Montreal 34 21 9 4 46 104 76 Ottawa 34 20 11 3 43 88 89 Boston 36 18 14 4 40 85 87 Tampa Bay 35 17 15 3 37 100 98 Florida 35 15 14 6 36 85 97 Detroit 34 15 15 4 34 83 96 Toronto 32 13 12 7 33 93 94 Buffalo 33 12 13 8 32 71 91 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts. PF PA Columbus 32 23 5 4 50 110 65 Pittsburgh 35 22 8 5 49 121 100 N.Y. Rangers 36 23 12 1 47 119 89 Washington 32 20 8 4 44 87 69 Philadelphia 36 20 12 4 44 110 108 Carolina 33 15 11 7 37 88 90 New Jersey 34 13 14 7 33 80 102 N.Y. Islanders 33 13 14 6 32 90 102 WESTERN Central Division GP W L OT Pts. PF PA Chicago 35 22 9 4 48 101 84 Minnesota 33 21 8 4 46 102 66 St. Louis 35 18 12 5 41 98 103 Nashville 33 15 13 5 35 94 94 Winnipeg 36 16 17 3 35 95 105 Dallas 34 13 14 7 33 86 104 Colorado 32 11 20 1 23 65 105 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts. PF PA San Jose 33 20 12 1 41 84 73 Edmonton 35 18 12 5 41 103 94 Anaheim 35 17 12 6 40 96 99 Los Angeles 33 17 13 3 37 85 81 Calgary 35 17 16 2 36 90 102 Vancouver 34 14 17 3 31 85 105 Arizona 33 11 17 5 27 74 104 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Saturday No games scheduled Sunday No games scheduled Today No games scheduled
AHL Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OTLSOL GF GA Pts Penguins 27 19 5 3 0 90 55 41 Lehigh Valley 28 20 7 1 0 106 73 41 Hershey 28 16 6 4 2 99 74 38 Providence 29 15 7 4 3 86 82 37 Bridgeport 27 16 11 0 0 85 79 32 Springfield 27 11 11 3 2 67 77 27 Hartford 28 10 14 3 1 77 109 24 North Division GP W L OTLSOL GF GA Pts Syracuse 27 16 8 0 3 88 75 35 Albany 29 16 12 0 1 81 78 33 St. John’s 29 14 12 3 0 86 89 31 Toronto 27 13 12 1 1 79 75 28 Utica 28 10 14 3 1 67 87 24 Rochester 29 11 17 0 1 78 101 23 Binghamton 29 10 16 2 1 66 95 23 Western Conference Central Division GP W L OTLSOL GF GA Pts Grand Rapids 28 18 7 1 2 96 68 39 Milwaukee 27 17 7 2 1 82 74 37 Cleveland 29 15 11 1 2 79 84 33 Chicago 30 14 11 3 2 95 87 33 Manitoba 28 12 12 2 2 73 90 28 Iowa 30 13 14 2 1 75 87 29 Rockford 28 10 13 2 3 70 89 25 Charlotte 30 11 17 2 0 71 89 24 Pacific Division GP W L OTLSOL GF GA Pts Stockton 25 16 7 1 1 88 64 34 Tucson 22 13 6 3 0 70 73 29 Ontario 24 13 6 5 0 79 74 31 San Jose 22 12 6 1 3 76 56 28 Texas 27 15 10 1 1 101 99 32 San Diego 23 11 11 1 0 66 76 23 Bakersfield 24 10 10 3 1 64 66 24 San Antonio 29 12 15 2 0 69 84 26 Two points for a team winning in overtime or shootout the team losing in overtime or shootout receives one which is registered in the OTL or SOL columns.
Friday No games scheduled
Saturday No games scheduled
Sunday No games scheduled
Today St. John’s at Toronto, 3 p.m. Hartford at Bridgeport, 7 p.m. Providence at Albany, 7 p.m. Penguins at Binghamton, 7:05 p.m. Hershey at Lehigh Valley, 7:05 p.m. Syracuse at Rochester, 7:05 p.m. Rockford at Iowa, 8 p.m. Chicago at Milwaukee, 8 p.m. Stockton at San Jose, 8 p.m. Bakersfield at Ontario, 10 p.m. Tucson at San Diego, 10 p.m.
BC preps for strong Maryland ground game By Rich Thompson Boston Herald DETROIT — Boston College middle linebacker Connor Strachan is embracing the challenge of Maryland’s in-your-facemask ground game. The Terrapins have a stout front five and three gifted ball carriers that will attack BC’s front seven when the Eagles take on Maryland in the Quick Lane Bowl today at Ford Field. “They are a grind-it-out team and their running backs are fast, talented guys so I think like with any team we’ve played this year they have unique challenges that we as a defense have to take care of,” said Strachan. “But, yes from what I’ve seen we expect them to try and run the football on us. But that is exciting for us. We love that kind of game when people try to run on us and I hope they do.”
FLAHERTY’S BAR & KITCHEN OPEN @ 3PM
The Terps are ranked 94th nationally in total offense (379.5), 92nd in scoring offense (25.4), 110th in passing offense (174.0) and 40th in rushing offense (205.5). Maryland head coach D.J. Durkin was hired as Florida’s offensive coordinator just as BC coach Steve Addazio was leaving to take the head job at Temple. While the two didn’t work on game plans together in Gainesville, Fla., they both were heavily influenced by Urban Meyer’s running schemes. What Addazio left behind at Florida he expects to see again in the Motor City. “Their offense and series of plays is something I’m very familiar with and those were a lot of the plays we ran at Florida,” said Addazio. “Gap schemes, zone schemes and they go with tempo and
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be flanked by senior pass rusher Matt Milano and classmate Ty Schwab. Strachan leads the team with 70 tackles despite missing a game with a shoulder injury. He has a team-high 10 tackles for loss (minus-47 yards), 3½ sacks and four fumble recoveries. Schwab is third with 57 tackles, including five tackles for a loss, one sack and an interception. Milano is fourth with 55 tackles with 9.5 tackles for a loss and five sacks. BC junior defensive end Harold Landry, a secondteam AP All-American, finished the regular season tied for first in the nation with a school record 15 sacks. He also led the country with seven forced fumbles and was fourth with 20½ tackles for a loss.
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INDEPENDENCE BOWL NC State (6-6) vs. Vanderbilt (6-6) When: 5 p.m. TV: ESPN2 It seems like we have one team annually that carries a bowl win into a breakout season. Vandy could be that team. So could NC State. The Commodores beat rival Tennessee and almost topped Florida and Auburn. The Wolfpack beat North Carolina and nearly upset FSU and Clemson.
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ST. PETERSBURG BOWL Miami, Ohio (6-6) vs. Mississippi State (5-7) When: 11 a.m. TV: ESPN Ah, the SEC versus the MAC. The RedHawks, once 0-6, rattled off sixstraight wins to end the year. They’re coached by Chuck Martin, who went 74-7 with two NCAA D-II titles in six seasons at Grand Valley State. The Bulldogs made a bowl despite a 5-7 record, and they’ll still win this game.
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they have a good offensive line that is well coached; they have some good players running the football.” Strachan is not your usual Power Five middle linebacker. The junior from Wellesley is just 6-foot, 237 pounds, but he makes up for his lack of heft with a relentless motor and the foot speed of a defensive back. “Everywhere the coaches have put me this year has been fun so it’s not that I have a preference in a 4-3 or a 3-4,” said Strachan. “I’m happy to play whatever. You have to find your own niche and play to your strengths and I’ve been able to run fast.” The Eagles have one of the top collections of linebackers in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Strachan feels fortunate to
TODAY’S BOWL GAMES
SPORTS ON TAP TODAY’S LOCAL SCHEDULE High School Boys Basketball McGrane Tournament at CYC Crestwood vs. Holy Redeemer, 6 Pittston Area vs. Hanover Area, 7:15 Girls Basketball Nanticoke Area vs. Nazareth at Riverside, 6 Ice Hockey Casey Classic at Toyota SportsPlex Valley West vs. Crestwood, 1:45 Pittston Area vs. Back Mountain, 3:15 Hazleton vs. Wyoming Area, 4:45 Crestwood vs. Wyoming Seminary, 6:15 AHL Penguins at Binghamton, 7:05
ONLINE DIRECTORY Blogs at citizensvoice.com Penguins Insider: Seth Lakso provides breaking news, off-the-beaten-path nuggets and insightful analysis. Varsity Voice Blog: One-stop source for scores, schedule changes, analysis and more. Blog, Sweat & Tears: Donnie Collins keeps you up to date on Penn State. Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders Blog: Stay in the know with insight, breaking news and other RailRiders nuggets. WildLife Blog: Exploring the wilds of Northeast Pennsylvania and beyond. College Corner: News and analysis focusing on the college sports teams in Luzerne County. Twitter @cvgameface: High school football scores and updates @SportsCV: Scores, updates and links for all sports @CVSteveBennett: High school sports and more from staff writer Steve Bennett
38 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
@CVJimReeser: Sports and random thoughts from sports editor Jim Reeser
2016’s most inspiring sports moments unseeded Monica Puig beat Germany’s Angelique Kerber — who would win two Grand Slam titles in 2016 and take over the No. 1 ranking — to become her island’s first gold medalist in any Olympic sport. As the Puerto Rican anthem echoed around an Olympic arena and spectators belted out the lyrics, Puig was unable to join in for one simple reason: too many tears. “If I would’ve stopped crying,” Puig said, “I probably would have started singing.”
By Howard Fendrich Associated Press We watch sports to see who wins and loses, but also to be inspired — and 2016 offered plenty of examples of the latter, from a touching moment between two strangers on the Olympic track, to a little boy from a war-torn land who met his favorite soccer player. There were athletes and coaches whose stories touched us, as well as folks connected to the sports world who contributed their own uplifting vignettes. One example: When sideline reporter Craig Sager died from leukemia this month, there were heartfelt tributes tinged with sadness, of course, but also remembrances that spread the positive message he offered as he continued to cover the NBA and college basketball despite his illness. “Man, life is too beautiful, too wonderful. There’s just too many things,” Sager said in August. “Fight until the end. Fight as hard as you can.” Some inspiring sports moments during the past year: Lending a hand During a qualifying heat for the 5,000 meters at the Rio Games, Abbey D’Agostino of the U.S. and Nikki Hamblin of New Zealand got their feet tangled, s e n d i n g b o t h s p r aw l i n g . D’Agostino got up and, instead of trying to get herself back into the race, crouched down, helped Hamblin rise and whispered: “Get up. We have to finish this.”
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE
New Zealand’s Nikki Hamblin, left, and United States’ Abbey D’Agostino embrace after competing in a 5,000-meter heat during the 2016 Summer Olympics. They both were injured — D’Agostino could barely move by race’s end and needed a wheelchair — but they crossed the line. Then they hugged. “That girl is the Olympic spirit, right there,” Hamblin said. “I’ve never met her before. ... And isn’t that just so amazing? Such an amazing woman.” Meeting Messi Murtaza Ahmadi, a 5-year-old from Afghanistan, was photographed wearing a plastic bag fashioned into a makeshift Lionel Messi uniform — blue and white stripes, Messi’s name and number written in black marker. The image became an Internet sensation. Murtaza got to
walk with Messi onto the field before an exhibition game. Saluting an opponent Takes something special for supporters of one team to salute a player for an opponent that won a game, and that’s what happened early in the NHL season in Edmonton. The Oilers’ fans gave Senators goalie Craig Anderson a standing ovation after he made 37 saves for a shutout in Ottawa’s 2-0 victory over Edmonton — his first start since learning his wife had been diagnosed with cancer.
Go, Cubs, Go The Chicago Cubs’ first World Series championship in more than a century was a big deal to many long-suffering fans — and provided a way for some to reconnect spiritually with lost loved ones who never got to see Wrigleyville turn into Titletown. Wayne Williams kept a pledge he and his father made to each other and shared a moment they’d both been waiting for all their lives. Williams drove from North Carolina to his father’s gravesite in Indiana to listen on the radio “together” as the Cubs beat the Cleveland Indians in Game 7.
Coming back from cancer University of Pittsburgh running back James Conner was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma in 2015, went through more than five months of draining treatment, then returned to college football this year and wound Si se peude up breaking Atlantic Coast ConVibrant chants of “Si se ference records for career touchpuede!” resonated around Rio’s downs and running TDs. Now tennis stadium as Puerto Rico’s he’s headed to the NFL.
@CVSethLakso: WBS Penguins news and analysis from staff writer Seth Lakso
Bowl win perfect conclusion to Hawaii’s season
@CVBufano: High school sports and more from staff writer Matt Bufano
By Ferd Lewis The Honolulu Star-Advertiser
CONTACT US
For the benefit of a national television audience, the University of Hawaii boiled its entire 14-game football season of 2016 down to one all-encompassing game. Over a revealing 3 hours and 46 minutes in the Hawaii Bowl, the Rainbow Warriors served up a microcosm of head coach Nick Rolovich’s inaugural campaign. From the beginning struggles to the satisfying, trophy-hoisting conclusion built on resilience, it was all there on display in a 52-35 victory over Middle Tennessee State. “That was our season right there,” acknowledged defensive coordinator Kevin Lempa, flick-
Jim Reeser, Sports editor 570-821-2065 jreeser@citizensvoice.com Steve Bennett, Sports writer 570-821-2062 sbennett@citizensvoice.com Matt Bufano, Sports writer 570-821-2060 mbufano@citizensvoice.com Steve Connors, Sports copy editor 570-821-2063 sconnors@citizensvoice.com Seth Lakso, Sports writer 570-821-2083 slakso@citizensvoice.com Tyler Piccotti, Sports copy editor 570-821-2089 tpiccotti@citizensvoice.com Eric Shultz, Sports writer 570-821-2054 eshultz@citizensvoice.com Sports email: sports@citizensvoice.com Fax number : 570-821-2247
ing away the remnants of an ice chest that had been emptied on him in celebration. Indeed, a team that had begun unsteadily losing three of its first four games closed the season with three consecutive victories to finish an improbable 7-7, marking the first non-losing edition in six years. “It was a great way to end this year; you really couldn’t ask for anything else,” offensive tackle RJ Hollis said of the Rainbow Warriors’ first postseason Christmas present to their fans in a decade. And what an end it was, with the Rainbow Warriors scoring a season-high 52 points and stopping the Blue Raiders on fourth-
and-goal at the UH 3-yard line with 34 seconds remaining. It was a symbolic statement by a team that found its greatest strength in the end of the season, something largely unimagined after it had absorbed blowout losses in three of its first four games and suffered confounding defeats in the middle. Similarly, UH wobbled into this one, falling behind 14-0 less than six minutes into the first quarter. The ’Bows went three-and-out on their first two possessions, while MTSU required just six offensive plays to impressively roll up 14 points before much of the Aloha Stadium turnout of 20,327 had found its seats. At that point, whatever ESPN
audience there was probably began reaching for the TV remote. For sure there was an uneasy deja vu feeling. “This whole year it was like that — we wanted to spot somebody 14 points before we start playing,” Lempa said. “There must have been six games like that.” But they found their equilibrium and grit soon thereafter. “The main thing was we didn’t panic,” said offensive coordinator Brian Smith. “We started slow, but we knew it was a long game and we were gonna get our points if we held it together.” Hollis said, “It was like what Coach Rolo told us early on: If we worked hard and kept at it we could be successful. And we did.”
HEADING TO THE ER? SAVE YOUR SPOT IN LINE. ONLINE. The next time you experience an illness or injury, visit our website, answer a few questions and we'll save your spot in the ER. It's that easy. You can even choose a time that is convenient for you. To check in now, visit commonwealthhealth.net.
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SUNRISE/SUNSET
MOON STAGES
Sunrise today ...................... 7:28 a.m. Sunset today ...................... 4:40 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow .............. 7:28 a.m. Sunset tomorrow .............. 4:41 p.m.
1
10 a.m.
Noon
0 2 p.m.
0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme.
Full Jan 12
Last Jan 19
TM
The higher the number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
REAL FEEL TEMPERATURE Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice
First Jan 5
COMFORT INDEX
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
0
New Dec 29
Rainy day Monday
®
Today
0
Rating on scale of 0-10, where 10 is most comfortable and 0 is least comfortable for this time of year.
The exclusive AccuWeather.com composite index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors. Shown are the highest and lowest values of the day.
National Weather Service
Fronts Cold Warm Stationary
There will be areas of freezing drizzle today before 1 p.m., then areas of drizzle between 1 and 4 p.m., then a slight chance of rain after 4 p.m. It will be mostly cloudy, with a high near 41. The chance of precipitation is 40-percent. There will be rain mainly after 7 p.m. tonight, with a low around 41. The chance of precipitation is 80-percent. On Tuesday, there will be achance of rain before 10 a.m. It will be partly sunny, with a high near 45. The chance of precipitation is 30-percent. Tuesday night will be cloudy, with a low around 28.
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities.
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Dec. 26
OUTLOOK
Wilkes-Barre through 4 p.m. yesterday
Precipitation 24-hour total ending 4 p.m. ...... 0.00” Total month-to-date .................... 1.90” Normal month-to-date ................. 2.24” Total year-to-date ...................... 31.14” Normal year-to-date ................... 37.89” Last year-to-date ....................... 30.93” Record for Dec ........... 6.58” in 1983 Wind speed and direction High ....................................... N 17 mph Low .......................................... N 8 mph
River/Flood stage Sun.
Wilkes-Barre Towanda Lehigh at Bethlehem Delaware at Port Jervis
22’ 16’ 16’ 18’
5.27’ 3.16’ 1.61’ 3.28’
Mon.
5.40’ 3.70’ 1.70’ 3.40’
River stages from 7 a.m. yesterday.
JERSEY SHORE Cloudy and mild today. High 50 to 54. Water temperature: 44.
SKI FORECAST Poor skiing conditions today with a bit of rain and drizzle, some of which will freeze early in the day. It will then turn milder as high temperatures rise into the middle 40s. Remaining mild on Tuesday with poor skiing conditions as temperatures approach 50 degrees.
Albany Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Boston Buffalo Cape May Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus, OH Dallas Denver Harrisburg Hartford Honolulu Houston Las Vegas Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Myrtle Beach New Orleans New York Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Raleigh Rochester St. Louis San Francisco Seattle Shreveport State College Syracuse Topeka Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Wilmington, DE
Today Tuesday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
39/35/i 28/23/sn 63/57/r 52/49/c 49/45/sh 38/37/pc 51/35/r 50/48/c 55/51/c 53/27/pc 64/36/sh 59/36/r 61/36/r 68/47/c 39/21/s 45/43/sh 37/37/i 80/72/c 79/67/c 48/36/s 62/44/pc 69/38/sh 72/49/t 83/73/pc 61/57/sh 76/62/pc 46/45/sh 83/63/pc 49/46/sh 61/43/s 60/46/r 32/31/sn 56/51/c 47/38/r 63/32/pc 53/39/s 42/39/r 76/59/t 41/37/i 43/40/i 46/25/s 61/30/s 52/48/c 50/24/s 49/47/sh
46/28/pc 27/17/c 72/52/c 57/36/sh 61/32/sh 53/32/sh 36/27/sf 56/36/sh 68/48/c 35/25/pc 42/27/s 39/29/c 39/27/pc 65/53/c 52/28/s 56/32/pc 51/28/pc 80/69/s 76/65/pc 51/37/s 69/48/s 47/29/s 56/40/c 83/71/pc 71/55/sh 73/61/pc 56/35/sh 83/62/pc 59/35/sh 68/46/s 47/28/pc 47/25/pc 70/46/c 39/28/sf 46/32/s 55/42/s 45/38/r 65/59/sh 47/28/pc 41/27/sf 50/33/s 54/41/pc 63/37/sh 51/30/s 59/33/sh
Dec. 30
Dec. 31
Jan. 1
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WORLD CITIES Wednesday Hi/Lo/W
36/25/c 22/7/pc 67/59/r 44/34/s 43/32/pc 41/28/s 33/30/pc 43/32/s 61/47/pc 41/30/c 45/34/pc 39/34/c 40/34/pc 76/47/pc 47/19/pc 40/31/pc 37/23/pc 80/68/sh 78/65/c 55/41/s 73/49/s 51/37/pc 61/43/r 83/70/pc 64/53/c 73/62/c 42/33/s 82/62/c 42/32/pc 67/50/pc 38/33/pc 34/21/pc 60/43/pc 34/28/c 51/35/pc 59/43/s 45/35/c 75/58/c 35/29/pc 33/24/sf 53/31/s 61/37/pc 47/37/pc 56/29/s 42/31/pc
City
Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Barbados Beijing Berlin Bermuda Cairo Calgary Cancun Cape Town Caracas Dublin Edmonton Frankfurt Geneva Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Lisbon London Madrid Manila Melbourne Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nassau New Delhi Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome St. Thomas San Juan Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tehran Tokyo Toronto Vancouver
Today Tuesday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
87/73/pc 48/41/pc 57/44/s 72/58/c 61/43/pc 85/79/pc 34/16/c 51/39/sn 67/63/pc 65/52/s 24/16/pc 83/74/pc 83/65/s 84/75/pc 44/34/pc 13/12/pc 52/36/sh 44/37/sh 77/61/s 51/41/pc 64/57/c 59/41/pc 48/31/s 58/34/pc 85/77/r 81/65/pc 73/47/pc 32/30/sn 32/29/sn 83/72/pc 74/48/pc 36/33/sn 53/30/c 90/79/s 60/42/s 85/75/s 83/76/s 41/22/r 88/76/t 42/31/pc 85/68/s 52/39/pc 57/54/pc 49/32/r 38/37/sn
87/75/pc 49/36/pc 59/45/s 71/59/c 59/42/pc 85/79/pc 34/12/s 46/38/sh 69/67/pc 62/49/pc 31/24/pc 83/72/sh 80/64/pc 85/75/pc 46/38/s 30/20/pc 46/36/pc 42/30/s 68/55/pc 45/40/sh 73/60/c 58/42/pc 45/32/s 59/34/pc 89/77/pc 87/75/c 72/50/pc 37/19/sf 35/27/sn 83/71/pc 73/48/pc 33/17/sf 45/30/s 94/80/s 61/37/pc 84/74/s 83/75/s 33/17/pc 84/75/t 38/26/pc 82/71/s 52/41/sh 65/39/r 33/25/sf 43/33/c
Wednesday Hi/Lo/W
88/75/pc 44/30/c 51/36/s 71/58/c 60/40/s 86/79/pc 36/9/s 44/35/c 72/65/sh 63/53/pc 32/20/pc 84/70/pc 80/62/s 85/75/s 48/39/s 29/18/pc 43/31/c 41/30/s 65/58/pc 50/41/pc 72/59/t 59/44/s 46/35/c 56/37/s 88/77/t 85/73/s 72/47/pc 21/16/pc 30/23/sn 82/69/pc 74/49/pc 18/13/s 45/30/s 95/79/s 58/37/s 84/74/s 85/74/s 34/23/pc 86/75/c 34/29/s 85/72/pc 51/35/r 48/38/s 32/27/pc 41/35/sh
W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
TODAY IN HISTORY Today is Monday, Dec. 26, the 361st day of 2016. There are five days left in the year. The sevenday African-American holiday Kwanzaa begins today. This is Boxing Day. Today’s highlight On Dec. 26, 1941, during World War II, Winston Churchill became the first British prime minister to address a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress. Churchill grimly warned that “many disappointments and unpleasant surprises await us,” but also expressed faith that “the British and American peoples will, for their own safety and for the good of all, walk together in majesty, in justice and in peace.” On this date In 1908, Jack Johnson became the first African-American boxer to win the world heavyweight championship as he defeated Canadian Tommy Burns in Sydney, Australia. In 1966, Kwanzaa was first celebrated. Today’s birthdays Actor Donald Moffat is 86. Actor Caroll Spinney (Big Bird on TV’s “Sesame Street”) is 83. Rhythm-and-blues singer Abdul “Duke” Fakir (The Four Tops) is 81. “America’s Most Wanted” host John Walsh is 71. Baseball Hall of Fame catcher Carlton Fisk is 69. Baseball Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith is 62. Humorist David Sedaris is 60. Rock musician Lars Ulrich (Metallica) is 53. Actress Nadia Dajani is 51. Actorsinger Jared Leto is 45. Actress Kendra C. Johnson is 40. Rock singer Chris Daughtry is 37. Actor Kit Harington is 30.
— ASSOCIATED PRESS
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 39
Temperatures Yesterday’s high ................................ 45 Yesterday’s low ................................. 37 Normal high ........................................ 35 Normal low ......................................... 21 High last year ..................................... 59 Low last year ...................................... 42 Record high ....................... 62 in 1964 Record low .......................... -7 in 1980
RIVER STAGES
Dec. 29
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
TODAY’S ALMANAC
Dec. 28
NATIONAL CITIES City
REGIONAL
Dec. 27
VOICE
SPORTS
MCGRANE SET TO TIP OFF FOR 51ST SEASON. PAGE 29
PLAYOFFS CLINCHED Steelers rally to beat Ravens, claim AFC North title. Page 28
FRED VUICH / ASSOCIATED PRESS
40 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
Steelers wide receiver Antonio Brown (84) is tackled by Ravens cornerback Kyle Arrington (24) after making a catch during the second half on Sunday.
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE! TREAT YOURSELF TO JEWELRY WITH YOUR CHRISTMAS CASH!
STEVE HYDOCK JEWELERS
VE STE IS G! IRIN RET
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Monday, December 26, 2016
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Netanyahu lashes out over U.N. vote ASSOCIATED PRESS
NETANYAHU U.S. allowed U.N. Security Council to condemn Israeli settlements in West Bank and east Jerusalem.
JERUSALEM — Israel’s prime minister lashed out at President Barack Obama on Saturday, accusing him of a “shameful ambush” at the United Nations over West Bank settlements and saying he is looking forward to working with his“friend”President-electDonald Trump. Benjamin Netanyahu’s comments came a day after the United Statesbroke withpastpracticeand allowed the U.N. Security Council to condemn Israeli settlements in
the West Bank and east Jerusalem as a “flagrant violation” of international law. Although the U.S. opposes the settlements, it has traditionally useditsvetopowerasapermanent member of the Security Council to block resolutions condemning Israel, saying that disputes between Israel and the Palestinians must be resolved through negotiations. Welcomed by the Palestinians, the resolution, while mostly symbolic, could hinder Israel’s negoti-
atingpositioninfuturepeacetalks. Mr. Trump also condemned the U.N. vote Saturday, taking to Twitter to say it “will make it much harder to negotiate peace.” But, he added, “we will get it done anyway.” A year ago, Mr. Trump told The Associated Press that he wanted to be “very neutral” on Israel-Palestinian issues, but his comments became much more pro-Israel as the race progressed and he took a sharp tone against the Palestinians.
Mr. Netanyahu said the U.S abstention was “in complete contrast” to U.S. commitments — including one that he said Mr. Obama made in 2011 — not to imposeconditionsforafinalagreement on Israel at the Security Council. “The Obama administration conducted a shameful antiIsrael ambush at the U.N.,” Mr. Netanyahu said. The White House declined to commentonMr.Netanyahu’scriticism. The U.S. and much of the inter-
national community considerIsrael’s settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem as an obstacle to peace. Mr. Netanyahu rejects such claims, blaming the failure of peace efforts on the Palestinian refusal to recognize Israel’s Jewish identity. Thedecisiontoabstainfrom the vote was one of the biggest American rebukes of its long-standing ally in recent memory and marked a final chapter in the icy relations between Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Obama over the last eight years.
Turkey eyes action with Trump vs. IS Country is concerned the Kurds’ territorial gains in Syria could lead to a new state there BY SELCAN HACAOGLU BLOOMBERG NEWS
TOBIAS HASE / DPA VIA AP
Police blocked a road in Augsburg, Germany, on Sunday as authorities disarmed a World War II bomb. The bomb was uncovered last week during construction work.
WWII bomb defused in German town Thousands of people in the town of Augsburg left Christmas behind while authorities disarmed the massive bomb BY DAVID MCHUGH ASSOCIATED PRESS
FRANKFURT, Germany — Explosives experts on Sunday defused a large World War II aerial bomb in the southern German city of Augsburg — clearing the way for thousands of evacuated residents to return to their Christmas celebrations at home. City police tweeted that they had “good news at Christmas” just before 7 p.m. local time Sunday. They had earlier been unable to say how long residents would have to stay away. Some 32,000 households with 54,000 residents in the city’s historic central district were forced to leave by 10 a.m. Christmas morning so experts could handle the bomb. They had to clean seven decades of muck off the bomb so they
could find and disable its three detonators. The munition’s large size — 1.8 tons — suggested it was a so-called blockbuster of the type dropped by British forces, with the aim of blowing surrounding buildings apart so that accompanying incendiary bombs could start fires more easily. The bomb was uncovered last week during construction work in the city’s historic central district.
STEFAN PUCHNER / DPA VIA AP
Rescuers help a woman into a car of the fire brigade after she was evacuated from her home in Augsburg, Germany, following the discovery of a massive World War II bomb in the city. Police said Christmas Day was the best time to defuse it because there was less traffic and it was more likely that people could stay with relatives. Police rang doorbells and used
vans with loudspeakers to urge procrastinators to leave ahead of a 10 a.m. deadline. Schools and sports facilities were opened as shelters but most people appeared to have left on Christmas Eve.
BRIEFS JERUSALEM
and messy — Christmas for the northern Plains and Fake news story some Western states. sets off Twitter feud Most of the Dakotas and MANILA, Philippines A fake news story has southwest Minnesota was touched off a tense Twitter turning into an “icy, slipPowerful typhoon confrontation between nuclear pery mess” due to freezing darkens holiday power Pakistan and Israel, rain Sunday morning that A powerful typhoon widely believed to have a nuclewas expected to change into ar arsenal of its own, in an epi- slammed into the eastern snow later in the day when sode that underlines the poten- Philippines on Christmas temperatures fell, accordDay, spoiling the biggest holi- ing to National Weather tially harmful impact of such day in Asia’s largest Catholic Service meteorologist Greg stories in sensitive global nation, where a governor affairs Gust in Grand Forks, North In an apparent response to a offered roast pig to entice vil- Dakota. fake story claiming Israel’s for- lagers to abandon family celeHis advice to holiday brations for emergency shel- travelers: “Stay put.” mer defense minister threatters. ened a nuclear attack against “Between the ice and snow, Typhoon Nock-Ten was Pakistan if it sends troops to and winds howling like crazy, Syria, Pakistan’s Defense Min- packing maximum sustained there will be nothing moving” winds of 114 miles per hour ister Khawaja Mohammad until late afternoon today, he and gusts of up to 158 mph Asif reminded Israel that said. “Then it’s dig-out time.” when it made landfall Sunday “Pakistan is a nuclear state A blizzard warning was in night in Catanduanes provtoo.” effect for most of North Dakoince, where fierce winds and ta, western South Dakota and Israel’s Defense Ministry tweeted back Saturday, saying rain knocked down the a small section of eastern island’s power and communi- Montana through today, with the original story on the site cations, officials said. AWD News was “totally fictiexpected snow totals of 8 to 15 There were no immediate tious.” inches and winds up to 55 AWD has been identified by reports of injuries. mph. fact-checking organizations as CHICAGO SANTIAGO, Chile a fake news site. Israel maintains a policy of Blizzard targets Powerful quake nuclear ambiguity, neither conDakotas, Montana shakes Chile firming nor denying the exisIt was a white — but slick A powerful earthquake tence of an arsenal. Pakistan became a nuclear power in 1998. The countries have no diplomatic ties.
shook southern Chile on Sunday, but there were no immediate reports of deaths and only minor known damage. The U.S. Geological Survey said the magnitude 7.6 quake struck at 11:22 a.m. local time near the southern tip of Chiloe Island, about 25 miles south-southwest of Puerto Quello and at a depth of 22 miles. The area, some 800 miles south of the capital of Santiago, is relatively sparsely populated. National emergency director Ricardo Toro told a news conference that some 4,000 people were evacuated for fear of a possible tsunami following the quake, but the alert was eased about 90 minutes after the temblor. “There is no information of loss of life,” Mr. Toro said, though he said some highways were damaged. The local electric company reported that power was cut to about 22,000 customers. — ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANKARA, Turkey –– Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan plans to seek joint action with the Trump administration against Islamic State in its de facto capital in Syria, Raqqa. Turkish troops are close to capturing the Islamic State-stronghold of al-Bab in northwest Syria and could move via the town of Manbij toward Raqqa, Mr. Erdo- ERDOGAN gan said in a televised speech in Istanbul. Mr. Erdogan reiterated his country’s readiness to extend its Islamic State fight if U.S. Presidentelect Donald Trump agrees to prevent Kurdish TRUMP forces from participating in such an operation. Turkey is concerned the Kurds’ territorial gains in Syria could lead to a new state there, in turn emboldening separatist Kurdish aspirations at home. Kurds have established control over much of Syria’s north during five years of violence, and in doing so, emerged as a favored U.S. fighting force in the ground war against Islamic State. “We will not allow the formation of a new state in northern Syria,” Mr. Erdogan said as he vowed to retake Manbij, which was seized by Kurdish forces from Islamic State. “After Manbij, Raqqa is next if we can join hands with the U.S.” Turkey entered Syria in August to fight Islamic State and the Kurdish forces. Turkey regards the Kurds as terrorists because of their links to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, whose fight for autonomy in Turkey’s southeast has, by the government’s account, killed nearly 40,000 people, cost hundreds of billions of dollars, and undermined Turkish aspirations to join the European Union.
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BUSINESS
THE CITIZENS’ VOICE
A2
DECEMBER 26, 2016
Economic Snapshot TREASURY YIELD CURVE 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5
2.86
3.0
2.55
2.5
2.04
2.0 1.5
1.22
1.0 0.5 .00
Fu n 30 ds d 90 ay 18 day 0d ay Ye ar 2y r 3y r 5y r 7y 10 r yr 20 y 30 r yr
0.0
DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS
20000
Weekly Close
19500
Take stock of your finances at year-end
19000 18500 18000
Up 90.40 to 19,933.81
17500
BY CAMERON HUDDLESTON GOBANKINGRATES.COM
Start paying yourself first
wo-thirds of middle-income Americans don’t have comprehensive financial plans, according to a new study by investment adviser Financial Engines. Without a plan, it can be difficult to achieve financial success. It’s like trying to get to a destination without a map. Now is a great time to review your finances and make a plan to get on track for 2017. Here are a few key things you can do before the end of 2016 to improve your money situation in the new year, and beyond.
Americans’ top financial resolution for the past several years has been to save more, according to Fidelity Investments’ seventh annual New Year Financial Resolutions Study. Such a resolution isn’t surprising, considering that GOBankingRates found that one-third of Americans have nothing saved for retirement. A separate survey found that 34 percent have nothing in savings accounts either. Certified financial planner Dominique Henderson, owner of financial planning firm DJH Capital Management in Cedar Hill, Texas, said people need to save more. “You should be paying yourself at least what your tax rate is,” he said. For many people, that means saving 15 percent of their income. Save most of that 15 percent in a 401k or workplace retirement account through automatic deductions from your paycheck. Or, save through an automatic transfer from your checking account to an individual retirement account, such as a traditional IRA or Roth IRA. For the remaining percentage, set up an automatic transfer from checking to savings each month to build an emergency fund to cover at least six months’ worth of expenses.
17000
Oct
2300
S&P 500
Dec
Nov
T
Weekly Close
2250 2200 2150 2100 2050 2000 1950 1900
Down 5.72 to 2,263.79 Dec
Nov
Oct
GOLD London Fix Price 1500
Create a budget you can follow
1400 1300 1200 1100
Down 60 cents to $1,131.00
1000
Oct
Dec
Nov
GAS PRICES Scranton/Wilkes-Barre 2.7 SOURCE: AAA Fuel Gauge Report 2.6 2.5 2.4 2.3 2.2 2.1
Up 3 cents to $2.48/gal.
2.0 1.9 1.8
Dec
Nov
Oct
OIL NYMEX light sweet crude 60 55 50 45
Budgeting is a perennial challenge for many of us. GOBankingRates’ 2015 Life + Money survey found that sticking to a budget is the biggest money challenge for Americans. However, the right system can ensure that your money goes where it should. To get your budget under control, review your bank and credit card statements to see how you’re spending money, said Scott Bishop, director of financial planning at Houstonbased STA Wealth Management. Determine whether your money is going toward goals, such as savings or debt repayment, or toward unnecessary expenses that prevent you from reaching those goals. Use software such as Quicken or an app such as Mint to track expenses, Mr. Bishop said. And to avoid overspending, “start giving yourself a weekly cash budget,” he said.
40 35
Up 15 cents to $53.25
30 25 20
Oct
Dec
Nov
NATURAL GAS 5.0 4.5
Near-month futures contracts
Adjust your tax withholding If you got a tax refund of $1,000 or more this past spring, you are letting the IRS keep too much of your money during the year, said Ms. Henderson. “That money could be going toward something else to reach your goals,” he said. “Adjust your W-4, and get more in your paycheck every month instead of giving the government an interest-free loan.” You can file a new W-4 form with your employer and claim more allowances so you will have less tax withheld. The IRS website has a withholding calculator you can use to figure out how many allowances to claim. Use that extra money in your pay-
check to pay down debt or increase savings, Ms. Henderson said. If your company doesn’t offer matching 401k contributions, put the extra money into an IRA. Contributions to a traditional IRA are tax-deductible. Or, you can open a Roth IRA and benefit in retirement when you make tax-free withdrawals. Traditional IRA and 401k withdrawals are taxed at your regular income-tax rate.
Check your credit report and score Reviewing your credit report and checking your credit score annually helps you save money in the new year, Mr. Bishop said. The higher your credit score, the less it will cost you to borrow money. The most commonly used credit score, the FICO score, ranges from 300 to 850. “If you get well above 700, the cost of credit on a car or house or other things can be much cheaper,” said Mr. Bishop. Some employers also check job candidates’ credit reports, he said. If your credit is bad, it might hinder a job search in the new year. Your credit report, which you can get for free from AnnualCreditReport.com, shows all of the loans and lines of credit you have, the amount owed and your payment history. It might also include a list of businesses that have checked your report, and any bankruptcies or public records related to you. By reviewing your credit report, you can figure out why you have a low, or high, score. Checking your report will also help you identify any errors dragging down the score. For example, Mr. Bishop said he paid off a car loan early, but the bank incorrectly used the wrong code that indicated it had repossessed the car. Also, look for any lines of credit you didn’t open, which is a sign of identity theft, he said. Immediately alert the credit reporting agencies, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, of any errors or signs of fraud to protect your finances and identity in the new year.
4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5
Up 30 cents to $3.68 per million BTUs
JESSE MUSTO / STAFF ARTIST
1.0
Dec
Nov
Oct
HOME MORTGAGE RATES 4.50
Freddie Mac 4.25 U.S. average
30-year
4.00
Don’t enter into a lease planning to get out of it
3.75
BY BRUCE WILLIAMS 3.50
Up .14 to 4.30%
3.25 3.00
Oct
Dec
Nov
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX 6 5
U.S. city average not seasonally adjusted 12-month percent change
4
Up 1.7% since Nov. 2015
3 2 1 0 -1 -2
N D J F M A M J J A S O
UNEMPLOYMENT 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5
Seasonally adjusted
S/W-B 6.5-6.6%
6.0 5.5 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0
U.S. 4.9% N D J FM AM J J A SON
DEAR BRUCE: I am looking at entering into a lease. My question is, what if I wanted to “exit” the lease early? Can I transfer the payments or “loan” it to somebody else?
Smart Money
During a period of 10 years, he saved all the money he possibly could while I paid all of the bills. He built up a very large savings account. — READER I recently received a DEAR READER: If $50,000 settlement from an you’re remotely consideraccident. We decided to add ing getting out of a lease it to a joint account. About early, don’t go into a lease! two months ago, he transYou might be able to transferred all but $25 into his fer the payments to someaccount. I wasn’t too worone else, if they are credit- ried about it because I was worthy and the lender has a joint signer on that no reason not to do this, but account. there is no guarantee. Then he took it all, over Either way, since you’re $110,000, and moved it to an looking for a way out before account with his name you even sign anything, I only. Now he won’t give me wouldn’t get in. the account number. I am DEAR BRUCE: I’ve been mad! Doesn’t the bank have married 24 years. My husany responsibility to notify band has always kept a sep- the joint account holder? I arate account from mine, feel like my husband stole and so therefore, I keep my from me. money in a separate — C.S. DEAR C.S.: Unhappily, account as well. However, we have recently come into you’ve been paying all the some money due to the sale bills for 10 years and he has been putting everything of two homes.
into his savings account. Seems a little one-sided. That having been said, putting your money into a joint account means either of the joint members (you and your husband) may take out as much as you want. You can take out everything, if needed. I understand that you’re angry with the bank, but that was the type of account you both opened, and there is no responsibility on the bank. What your husband did is another story. You should sit down and try talking it out. If you can’t come to a conclusion, you may go to some kind of mediation. I suspect that your marriage is going to be put through a very solid test, and I wouldn’t move hastily, but I would move quickly. SEND QUESTIONS to bruce@ brucewilliams.com. Questions of general interest will be answered in future columns. Owing to the volume of mail, personal replies cannot be provided.
Holiday shopping season is losing some of its power BY ANNE D’INNOCENZIO AP RETAIL WRITER
NEW YORK — The holiday shoppingseasonislosingsome of itspowerintheyear’ssales. November and December now account for less than 21 percentof annualretailsalesat physical stores, down from a peak of over 25 percent, and experts believe it’ll keep dropping. Those extra percentage points would have translated into an extra $70 billion more in buying for last year, says Michael Niemira, principal at TheRetailEconomist. The season had steadily gained in importance and peaked in the early ‘80s, before thedominanceof bigdiscounters like Wal-Mart stalled its growth as shoppers began moving away from department stores. Still, the twomonth period held its own through the mid-’90s, when online shopping for deals took hold. “There was a mindset even before online shopping,” said Niemira,whosedatagoesback to 1967. “But this just acceleratedit.” In general, many people are
shopping for the holidays all year long now, mirroring the trend for back-to-school items. Heavy discounting has diluted sales, and with big promotions throughout the year, shoppers no longer hold off making their biggest purchases until theholidays. This year, the contentious presidential election delayed some shoppers, and with Christmas falling on a Sunday, stores are expecting a bigger number of last-minute buyers. AtabusyTargetstoreinBrick, NewJerseyonSaturdaymorning, many shoppers seemed to be picking up small items to useasstockingstuffers.Others were hoping to find a last-minutedeal. “I’m pretty much set for Christmas,soIthoughtIwould come down and see what I could find on sale, like maybe a TV,”TerryKreft,38,saidasshe strolled through the store. She has spent about $600 on gifts this year, taking advantage of discounts during the traditional holiday-season shopping days right after Thanksgiving, called “Black Friday” and “CyberMonday.”
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WORK SESSIONS January 30 July 31 February 27 August 28 March 27 September 25 April 24 October 30 May 30 (Tues) November 27 June 26 Dec. 26 (Tues)
The Auditors of Exeter Twp., Wyoming Cty., will hold their reorganization meeting on Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2017 at 7:00PM at the Township Building. Their regular meeting for the month of January will follow. Nancie Hopkins, Secretary/Treasurer
PLANNING COMMISSION January 18 July 19 February 15 August 16 March 15 September 20 April 19 October 18 May 17 November 15 June 21 December 20
NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Jeanette Cheshelski, daughter of Edward Cheshelski and grand-daughter of Angeline Cheshelski, whose last known address was Nanticoke, PA, is hereby notified of a hearing to he held to determine who shall best administer the Estate of Angeline Cheshelski on January 17th, 2017 at 10:00 o 'clock a.m. in the Office of the Register of Wills located in the Luzerne County Courthouse Annex, 200 N, River Street, WilkesBarre, PA 18711. Michael J. Hudacek, Jr., Esquire Hudacek & Hudacek 33 E. Main Street, Plymouth, PA 18651 NOTICE Notice is hereby given, that as per the Chairman, the Hanover Township Planning Commission Meeting scheduled for January 3, 2017 at 6:30 PM at the Municipal Building is hereby canceled. George Pajor, Secretary Hanover Township Planning Commission NOTICE Fairview Twp. Board of Supervisors will hold their regular monthly meetings on the first Tuesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at the municipal building, 65 Shady Tree Drive, Mountaintop, PA, and their work sessions on the last Monday of the month at 6:00 p.m. If the date of the meeting falls on a Legal Holiday, the meeting will be held the following day, same time, same place. The planning commission meets on the third Wednesday of the month at 7:30 p.m. The dates of meetings for 2017 SUPERVISORS MEETINGS January 3 July 5 (Wed) February 7 August 1 March 7 September 5 April 4 October 3 May 2 November 7 June 6 December 5
Sunday & Monday...Friday 5 p.m. Tuesday....................Monday 5 p.m. Wednesday............Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday.........Wednesday 5 p.m. Friday.....................Thursday 5 p.m. Saturday.......................Friday 2 p.m.
Thursday by 4PM Tuesday Friday by 4 PM - Wednesday Lengthier notices may require additional notification. Email your public notice to cthompson@citizensvoice.com. CLEARLY typed notices may be mailed to 75 N. Washington St., W-B, PA 18711 or faxed to (570) 301-2189. For additional information regarding scheduling of public notices, contact Chantel at (570) 821-2046.
Barbara Wasiakowski Secretary/Treasurer LEGAL NOTICE The Supervisors of Exeter Twp. Wyoming County will hold their reorganization meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2017 at 7:00PM at the Township Building. Their regular meeting for the month of January will follow. Nancie Hopkins, Secretary/Treasurer NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the Jackson Township Board of Supervisors Reorganization Meeting will be held on Tuesday, January 3 at 5:30 PM at the Jackson Township Municipal Building which is located at 1275 Huntsville Road, Shavertown, Luzerne County, PA On Behalf of the Jackson Township Board of Supervisors John J. Wilkes, Jr. - Chairman LEGAL NOTICE The Supervisors of Exeter Twp. Wyoming County will hold a Special Meeting on Thursday, Dec. 29, 2016 at 7:00PM at the Township Building. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss a residents request for support to apply for a license to grow Medical Cannabas. Nancie Hopkins, Secretary/Treasurer PUBLIC NOTICE YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW and be informed of the functions of your government are embodied in public notices. In that self-government charges all citizens to be informed, this newspaper urges every citizen to read and study these notices. We strongly advise citizens seeking further information to exercise their right of access to public records and public meetings. PUBLIC NOTICE DEADLINES Saturday by 4 PM Thursday Sunday by 12 Noon Friday Monday by 12 Noon Friday Tuesday by 4 PM Friday Wednesday by 4 PM Monday
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NOVENA TO ST. JUDE O Holy St. Jude, Apostle and Martyr, great in virtue and rich in Miracles, near kins-man of Jesus Christ, faithful intercessor of all who invoke your special patronage in time of need, to you I have recourse from the depth of my heart and humbly beg to whom God has given such great power to come to my assistance. Help me in my present and urgent petition. In return, I promise to make your name known and cause you to be invoked St. Jude pray for us and all who invoke your aid. Amen. Say three Our Fathers, Hail Marys and Gloria's. Publication must be prompt. The Novena has never been known to fail. I have had my request granted. C.O.
2 BURIAL LOTS
with outer burial containers available at Chapel lawn Memorial Park in Dallas. Make an Offer! Call 570-829-1941.
2 BURIAL PLOTS FOR SALE
Memorial Shrine. $750 for both. Call 610-779-8438. BURIAL LOT, transfer fees paid by owner. Chapel Lawn Memorial Park, Dallas, PA. $500 OR BEST OFFER. Call for more information and details. MUST SELL!!! 570-417-6056
ELMHURST, PA Garden of Prayer Section 1 lot, 1 burial vault, 1 bronze marker on a granite foundation with vase. $2,500 includes $95 transfer fee. Call: 570-878-2115
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HANOVER TOWNSHIP Maple Hill Cemetery 2 plots for sale. $450 each. Phone 570-736-6118
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Please refer to our web page www.johnson.edu for further details. Johnson College 3427 North Main Ave. Scranton, PA 18508 humanresources@johnson.edu
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MAUSOLEUM CRYPT 1 FOR SALEMother of Sorrows Cemetary, Finch Hill. Top row of 6, Walk of The Immaculate Conception. Valued at $3,600, will sell for $3,200.Call 570-357-5587
Moscow. Prime roadside burial lots with monument privilege's. Lots 1, 2, 3 & 4. Section 6W, lot 9, block A. Discounted price $3,000. 772-219-2266
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Needed for local private apartment community. Own Vehicle a must, rotating on call, small hand tools required, electric and plumbing knowledge a plus Fax resume to 570-822-3446
Audition to be our famous LADY LIBERTY. Male or Female. Energy and enthusiasm a must! Earn income being a Liberty Tax Marketer! GET PAID TO WAVE! Pittston & Plains: 570-883-7829 Edwardsville & Wyoming 570-288-4007 Wilkes Barre, Hanover Twp, & Tunkhannock 570-208-1096
General Local trailer manufacturer looking for:
General
• Welders & Workers With Carpentry Experience • Assemblers Please apply in person at: Look Trailers 1355 Oak Hill Road Mountain Top, PA 18707 Being a VIP Subscriber has its privileges When you start 'flashing' your
Outage 2017
Power Plant Laborers General Clean Up & Labor Work $$$ Earn Great Pay $$$ 500 Openings FBI Background/ Drug Testing Apply @ Workforce 125 North Warren Street West Hazleton, PA 570 235-6728 or 570-454-8810
you'll start saving money immediately!
Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today! General
LUZERNE COUNTY
General
Position: Information Technology Technician (Service Desk) Department: Information Technology Employment Status: Non-Union, Regular Full Time, Non-Exempt Salary:$29,000 to $32,000 annually plus benefits Reporting Authority:Director of Information Technology Summary: This is a technical position that will provide a variety of IT support functions. The above is a summary only of the position. Please refer to Career Opportunities on the Luzerne County website www.luzernecounty.org for a detailed official job description which includes Essential Duties & Responsibilities, Knowledge, Skills & Abilities (KSAs). First Review of applicants is January 3, 2017 Please apply through www.governmentjobs.com/careers/luzernecounty The County of Luzerne is an EEO/ADA Employer General
REWARDING CAREER Weekly Pay Medical Benefits You choose your work schedule! Training Available Call today 888-450-0890 ext 1108 Walk-in/Same Day Interview 224 Wilkes-Barre Blvd Twp Wilkes-Barre, PA 18702
General
TAX PREPARER
No experience necessary Enroll in a FREE 1-week Tax Class Focus on providing quality service to Liberty Tax customers. Day and evening classes available. Seasonal job opportunities. Pittston & Plains 570-883-7829 Edwardsville & Wyoming 570-288-4007 Wilkes Barre, Hanover Twp, & Tunkhannock 570-208-1096 Call Classifieds 570-821-2020
LUZERNE COUNTY
Position: Human Resources Analyst 2 Division/Department: Human Services Employment Status:Full Time, Non Union, Exempt Starting Salary: $40,284 Reporting Authority: Executive Director of Office of Human Services Summary: The individual in this position is responsible for providing personnel services for both Civil Service Agencies, (Aging, Mental Health/Developmental Services, Drug & Alcohol, Children & Youth); and non-Civil Service Agencies (Human Services); Unionized Departments (Aging, Children & Youth, Mental Health/Developmental Services), and Joinder agencies with Wyoming County (Aging, Drug & Alcohol, MH/Developmental Services) covering approximately 400 county employees. This position also performs other duties as required and/or needed. The above is a summary only of the position. Please refer to Career Opportunities on the Luzerne County website www.luzernecounty.org for a detailed official job description which includes Essential Duties & Responsibilities, Knowledge, Skills & Abilities (KSAs) First review of applicants will be Wednesday, January 5, 2017 Please apply through www.governmentjobs.com/ careers/luzernecounty The County of Luzerne is an EEO/ADA Employer
Buying A New Car? Call Us Today To Sell Your Old One! The Citizens' Voice Classified Ad Department 570-821-2020 Healthcare
RCA's
Resident Care Aides Part Time 1st & 2nd Shifts (may lead to Full Time) Looking for caring, compassionate people for our Alzheimer's Personal Care home. High School diploma/GED, or current nurses license required. Apply in Person Keystone Garden Estates 100 Narrows Rd Rt 11 Larksville PA NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. General
...
COOKS
Earn Extra Cash The Citizens' Voice has delivery routes open in the following areas:
DALLAS
...
Apply in Person Austie's Restaurants 2333 San Souci Parkway Hanover Twp., PA 18706
This is What You Deserve; This is Exactly What You Get When You Call Us!
General
E Center, N Lehigh, Lower Demunds, Shaver, Terrace $850/month potential profit Early Morning Hours. 7 Days per Week Must have reliable vehicle & current auto insurance If interested contact Marie @ 570-266-9025 or email at: mbidwell@citizensvoice.com
Earn Extra Cash
Broker, GRI, SRES
annmarie@custom-computers.com
DIVERSIFIED...
ALL OF YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS
Potential monthly profit $570 Approximately 145 papers
North End
This position concentrates efforts in helping the District Manager with the daily operation, leading to the successful distribution of newspapers to our customers in accordance with company policy and standard operating procedures, ensuring customer service goals and objectives are met. All interested parties apply to: The Citizens' Voice 75 N Washington St Wilkes-Barre PA 18701 Attn: Marie Bidwell @ 570-266-9025 Fax: 570-821-1651 Email: mbidwell@citizensvoice.com
Summary: The Field Investigator will serve as immediate back up to Chief Deputy when required. The above is a summary only of the position. Please refer to Career Opportunities on the Luzerne County website www.luzernecounty.org for a detailed official job description which includes Essential Duties & Responsibilities, Knowledge, Skills & Abilities (KSAs). First Review of applicants is January 2, 2017 Please apply through: www.governmentjobs.com/careers/luzernecounty
CITIZENS' VOICE CLASSIFIEDS WORK!
Center City of Wilkes-Barre Potential monthly profit $675 approximately 175 papers
Call Today To Place Your Ad! 570-821-2020
Miners Mills
Potential monthly profit $745 approximately 190 papers If interested contact Shannon@ 570-760-4753 slipinski@citizensvoice.com
ASHLEY NEW PRICE
Trades/Construction
Providing prompt, professional service with attention to detail
ELECTRICIAN
For more than 25 years Judy Rice, Associate Broker GRI, ABR, CRS
Must have own tools. Valid drivers license and transportation. Salary based on experience. Call 570-735-0462 leave name and phone number.
REAL ESTATE APRAISALS
Luzerne County Position: Field Investigator/Lab Assistant Department: Coroner Employment Status: Non-Union, Regular Full Time, Non-Exempt Salary:$28,956 annually plus benefits Reporting Authority: Coroner
Residential, Commercial, Leasing and Land
section of Wilkes-Barre Potential monthly profit $600 approximately 150 papers
Professional
OFFERED FOR:
• Estate Settlement • Divorce Settlement • Bankruptcy • Tax Appeals • PMI • Buying or Selling a Home
Gorgeous ½ Double, brand new modern eat-kit; & modern bath, good size LR & DR, wood flrs, 3 spacious BR' screened in porch, fenced in yard, full walk up attic, comfortable gas heat. Garage. Easy To Buy! Low down payment programs available MLS#16-1469 $49,900 Call Jerry Busch (570) 709-7798
Michael G. Vacendak, CRS, GRI Certified Residential Appraiser 570-262-1761 centralr@epix.net
(570) 288-2514
The Citizens' Voice has a delivery route open in
MOUNTAIN TOP
Potential Monthly Profit $2400 Early Morning Hours 7 days/week Reliable transportation & valid vehicle insurance required If interested contact John@ 570-760-4716 or email at: jschutz@citizensvoice.com
O: (570) 288-9371 D: (570) 714-9230 Email: Judyrice@epix.net
DURYEA REDUCED
7 Curry St $37,500 Affordable home w/2 BR, deck, driveway. Low taxes. MLS #16-495 Colleen 570-237-0415 cturant@atlasrealtyinc.com
BUYING-SELLING
HOME-LAND INVESTMENT-SELLING
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE 570-822-1133
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
The County of Luzerne is an EEO/ADA Employer
Get The Latest News Updates!
Make it a Successful Day!
Call:John Piszak, Realtor JOSEPH P. GILROY REAL ESTATE Office: (570) 288-1444 Direct: (570) 313-8586
www.thecitizensvoice.com Professional
To Place an Ad Please Call 570-821-2020
Luzerne County
HAVE YOU OUTGROWN YOUR HOME? The Citizens' Voice Classifieds Can Open A New Door For You!
EXETER DALLAS
Chief Deputy Coroner
Department: Coroner Employment Status: Non-Union, Regular Full Time, Exempt Salary:$48,000 annually plus benefits Reporting Authority: Coroner Summary: The Chief Deputy Coroner shall be capable of all duties of the County Coroner.
Earn Extra Cash
Charming colonial offering 4 BR's 2.5 baths, 1st flr laundry/PR, FR w/FP, eat in kit; leading to 3 season sunroom, Rear deck & 2 car garage. $199,900 MLS 16-6269 Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769
Charles Adonizio
The Citizens' Voice has delivery routes open in the following areas:
Parsons section of Wilkes-Barre
General
DALLAS
...
•A+ Service •A+ Advertising •A+ Commitment
Full or Part Time
JOIN A GREAT TEAM AT THE VOICE Assistant District Manager
You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot!!
AAA
Experienced
The above is a summary only of the position. Please refer to Career Opportunities on the Luzerne County website www.luzernecounty.org for a detailed official job description which includes Essential Duties & Responsibilities, Knowledge, Skills & Abilities (KSAs). First Review of applicants is January 3, 2017
Save 20%
at over 100 area locations every time you show your
PRESS PASS Call The Citizens' Voice for more information
950 Exeter Ave $120,000 STORY BOOK CAPE COD! Beautifully remodeled 3 BR w/ultra modern kit & bath. LR has authentic HDWD, tray ceilings & wood burning FP to cozy up to on chilly nights. Vintage French doors to a relaxing sun room. OSP, not in the flood zone & super low taxes. This is a MUST SEE! MLS#16-6427 Michele Hopkins 570-540-6046
570-821-2108
Please apply through: www.governmentjobs.com/careers/luzernecounty The County of Luzerne is an EEO/ADA Employer
330 Huntsville Rd $249,000 Farmhouse feel showcases 3 FR's 2 FP's & family size kit; Finished LL, attached 1 car garage, detached 2 car garage. All on 2.3 acres w/apple, pear & peach trees. Just minutes from downtown Dallas! MLS#16-3332 Call Judy Rice 570-714-9230
RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-100
WILKES BARRE
3 bedroom ranch. Finished basement. Off street parking. $92,500. 570-852-1193
570-288-9371
Your Special Occasion Here’s the help you need to plan your special event!
To Advertise call Susan at 570-821-2024 or Donna at 570-301-2184 Banquet Room
Jewelry
Catering
HOLY TRANSFIGURATION CHURCH HALL BOOKING NOW FOR: Graduations, Weddings, Sweet Sixteen and More! Catering available or bring your own food. Bride on a Budget give us a call. • Affordable Hall Rental • 570-256-7883 Banquet Room Smoking Permitted At:
“CLUB 79”
79 Blackman Street Wilkes-Barre, PA Small Parties/Baby Showers, $175
American French Italian Polish Ukranian Southern Russian Home-Made Gourmet Off-Premise Catering & Personal Chef Dinner Trays VIEW MENUS: KlsCatering.com 570-693-0396
570-793-9390 or 825-8381
Expert Watch & Jewelry Repairs Buying Gold – Silver – Silver Coins - Old Paper Money – Diamonds Silverware Sets & any Unwanted or Broken Jewelry 428 Hazle Avenue Wilkes-Barre, PA 570-822-5511
Custom Wedding Favors
Sweet 16 Parties
Choose from a variety of chocolates, boxes and ribbons. Make your wedding extra sweet by customizing your own unique favor for your special day!
GENETTI'S TRIBUTE TO THE 80's
$9.95 Per Person (Minimum of 100 Guests)
Tribute to Michael Jackson & Prince
Incudes: *Pizza & Soda *DJ, Sound & Lights *Setup/Cleanup
Ga Bree's Boutique
The Poets DJ Scott Stevens
Oyster Weddings
"Nothing But The Best" * New Outdoor Poolside Cabana * Ceremonies * Photo Opportunities with White Silver Cloud Rolls Royce * Customized Stations & Elegant 5 Course Meal Packages
Tuxedos Proudly providing premium transportation for over 3 Generations! Weddings – Proms – Airports New York Shows – Dinners Corporate Functions – Sporting Events Concerts – Casino Trips – Wine Tours Nights Out. PA PUC A22037/US DOT 425100 MC 168096
TUXEDO JUNCTION Genetti Weddings
* Affordability, * Elegance & * Customized Packages for every taste and budget
Pittston, PA 570-655-3737 or 570-654-3681 www.parrishlimos.com
Disc Jockey Music
Email: rockinrichdj@aol.com
Live Entertainment By:
570-825-0000 (Mark)
Parrish Limousines
Mon.- Fri., 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Sat., 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Closed Sun. 570-823-8272 www.MichaelMootzCandies.com To Place an Ad Please Call 570-821-2020
570-829-2744 Rich Nordheim Cell: 570-406-4100
105 North Main Street across from Kings College Call for info & Private Parties
FIRST HOLY COMMUNION DRESSES
1246 Sans Souci Parkway Hanover Township
Music For Any Occasion Karaoke Completely Digital Rockin' Since '76 Competitive Prices
Come Experience The Ultimate In Wedding Services
Graduation Parties Guys 16th Birthday Bash
Limousine Service
115 Gateway Shopping Center Edwardsville, PA 570-718-4040
HARPIST
Music for Banquets, Weddings, Christmas Parties & More! Sherri L. Trometter, 570-988-1972 Email: harpingalong@wildblue.net Website: harpingalong.homestead.com
570-820-8505
Being a VIP Subscriber has its privileges
Prom & Wedding Specials!
When you start 'flashing' your
Tuxedojunctiononline.com
you'll start saving money immediately!
56 West End Rd. Hanover Township 570-829-4999
You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot!! Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
Special Events
Wilkes-Barre, PA www.genetti.com 570-820-8505
Communion Dresses
MICHAEL MOOTZ CANDIES
Receptions
GENETTI'S
Gemstones Diamonds-Watches-European Beads Grandfather Clocks – Gifts For All Occasions
Bereavement 4 Hours $150 Candies/Favors
Private Party Rentals
DUNAY JEWELERS
Visit our Website!
Classifieds WORK!
Have a GOOD TIME!
Buying A New Car? Call Us Today To Sell Your Old One! The Citizens' Voice Classified Ad Department 570-821-2020
7:30pm - 2am
December 31, 2016 Cocktail Hour: 7:30 pm. - 8:30 pm. Featuring Hot & Cold Hors d'oeuvre s Elegant Dinner: 8:30 pm. - 10 pm. Entrees: * Chicken Sorrento - $84.95 * King Cut Prime Rib - $89.95 * Surf and Turf - $99.95 Tax & Service Charge Included Open Bar From 7:30pm. - 2am For Those Late Night Munchies Complimentary Hot Breakfast Buffet Served 1-2 am. Reservations: 570-823-6152 Call for Hotel Packages Best Western Plus Genetti's Hotel/Convention Center 77 East Market Street Wilkes-Barre, PA www.genetti.com A Rittenhouse Entertainment Event
In-Column Ad Placement Deadlines:
Sunday..........................Friday 5 p.m. Monday.........................Friday 5 p.m. Tuesday......................Monday 5 p.m. Wednesday................Tuesday 5 p.m. Thursday..............Wednesday 5 p.m. Friday........................Thursday 5 p.m. Saturday........................Friday 2 p.m.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 A5
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
EXETER
KINGSTON REDUCED
637 Schuyler Avenue
Looking To Buy or Sell a House and don't know where to Begin? GIVE ME A CALL
REDUCED TO SELL $239,000 316 Donna's Way Fox Meadows Beautiful 2 story 3 BR 1 full, 1 ¾ BA, finished LL w/bar, gas heat, split system AC, 2 car garage, lg level lot: S on Slocum St, L on Troback Dr, R on Donnas Way, property is on the left. Negotiable MLS#16-3312 Call LuAnn 570-430-4730
Great opportunity for an investment or an owner willing & able to add a little more TLC & make it their own! Owners misfortune is your gain. A broken pipe was repaired, along w/new kit. cabinets; new kit & DR flooring! A great single-family home w/LR, DR, kitchen & 3 BRs. Full bath on the 2nd level + toilet closet off the kitchen. MLS# 15-6180 $50,000 Call Mary Ellen at 570-690-0375 or Walter at 570-690-0464 to schedule a private showing.
SUE KOJADINOVICH 570-817-6909 (cell)
392 Wyoming Ave Kingston PA 18704 570-718-4959 (office)
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
FORTY FORT
MOUNTAIN TOP NEW LISTING
THESE DEALS RE FRO EN
SOLID!
570-283-9100
LAFLIN 29 Sullivan St $129,900 Attractive Colonial 3 BR w/newer kit & modern tile baths, new roof, vinyl siding, driveway, many replacement windows, wood burning stove, LR, FP. Detached garage fenced rear yard MLS#16-5524 Steve Shemo 570-793-9449
570-718-4959
“Full-Time Professional Associate Broker Wants to Help You”. GET YOUR HOME SOLD!
153 Maplewood Drive $239,900 Beautiful 4BR 2 Story w/spacious Eat/in Kit; w/New Cabinets ,Granite Counter Tops, SS Appliances,Tile flrs, Formal DR wide/open FR, FP. Master BR w/HDWD flrs, Vaulted Ceilings, Walk/In closet, Master Bath/Whirlpool Tub, Tile Walk in Shower. Multi Level Decks, Above Ground Pool, Tastefully Landscaped ,Fish Pond, over sized one car garage on large lot Dave Rubbico 570-881-7877
RUBBICO REAL ESTATE 570-826-1600
Call ME Today For Your FREE Market Analysis .
Carol A. Shedlock YOUR REALTOR FOR LIFE! Associate Broker Regional Sales Manager Office: 570-718-4959 Cell: 570-407-2314
List Your House With Jerry Busch Jr & See It Advertised & Sold Here! Call Jerry at 570-288-2514 to Sell Yours!
28 Park Lane N $237,900 Updated Kit; BA. SS appliances 2 level deck; new HVAC Sys w/gas heat, Central A/C; security system! Fantastic home in Fairview Hills, recent updates inside& out 1st fl laundry & 3/4 tiled bath. Multi level deck overlooking brand new stone patio & fire pit!! Fenced corner lot & yard; custom shed w/large driveway. This could be your FOREVER Home! MLS#16-6006 Call Barbara Beggs
STK#GN151201 Comfort Group, UConnect 8.4
MSRP $27,480
MSRP $31,935
$
HUNLOCK CREEK
MSRP $32,305
$
Save 20%
or
379
$
2017 New Jeep Patriot Latitude STK#HD152321 Remote Start, 4x4
4x4 MSRP $24,835
$
or
or
219
$
PRESS PASS 570-821-2108
JUNK CARS & TRUCKS Highest Prices Paid In Cash 570-288-8995
$
17,942
Call The Citizens' Voice for more information
STK#C614019
Now 28,999
STK#HT502289 All Wheel Drive, Leather,
Rear Seat Video
MSRP $36,484
Now
31,011
$
2017 New Chrysler Pacifica STK#HR571583 New Design
$
or
239
2017 New Dodge Journey GT
2017 New Jeep Grand Cherokee MSRP $35,590
Now
19,999
$
Now
at over 100 area locations every time you show your
570-709-7798 JERRY BUSCH JR. REALTOR 25 YEARS WWW.GERALDL BUSCHREALESTATE.COM
Now
28,990
25,548
Sell Your Home Through Classified Advertising!
BUYING 1495 SR29 (Pikes Creek)$259,000 6.45 acre estate w/1000 ft of stream Beautiful 3BR 2 BA home completely Renovated w/deck overlooking creek. Hunt out your back door MLS#16-2863 Chariie Gordon 570-690-2168
2017 New Jeep Latitude
STK #HW555733 Cold Weather Group, 75th Edition, 4x4
2017 New Jeep Sport Compass
The Citizens' Voice is on Facebook!
www.facebook.com/citizensvoice
21,348
MSRP $26,835
575 Pierce St Suite 101 Kingston PA
359
plus tax/39 months
Now
STK#HD101503
“Like” our page to be the first to find out about the latest breaking news and sports headlines, weather alerts and traffic updates.
$
Sale Price
$
Popular Equipment Group All Wheel Drive
Hemi Bedliner Popular Equipment Group
Anniversary Edition
2016 New Dodge Charger One Source Realty 12 N Mountain Blvd Mountaintop PA 18707 Mobile: 570-407-1236 Office: 570-403-3000 barbbeggs@verizon.net
2017 New Ram 1500 Quad Cab Express
2016 New Chrysler 200's Limited
MSRP $31,490
Now
25,999
$
359
$
*plus tax,title and license fees, includes all rebates. Not all will Qualify. Lease payments are with $0 down.10,000 miles per year. 39 months see Dealer for details
DODGE CHRYSLER JEEP Also Buying USED Cars & Trucks SCRANTON 1146 WYOMING AVE., SCRANTON SELLING USED TIRES & BATTERIES $20.00 & UP
570-344-1261
Who Does It?
A Directory of Services • Call 570.821.2024, 570.821.2020, or 570.301.2184 to Advertise
Citizens' Voice Advertisers Offer The Best Service!
JAMES TABIT & SONS The Road is Open
• Remodeling • Kitchens • Baths• Decks • Windows • Additions Restoration Work • Garages Driveways • Chimneys • Masonry Work • Concrete & Retaining Walls. Residential – Commercial 25 Years Experience Insured
Check Out Our Service Directory For All Your Home Improvement Needs! Merry Christmas! Closed Christmas Eve & Day Eco1Appliances.com Happy Holidays Your Business means the World To Us
ECO-FRIENDLY APPLIANCE TECH. 25 Years Experience repairing all major household appliances. Free in home estimate. All Work guaranteed. No service charge for visit. 570-706-6577
Quality Used Appliance's
30 Day Warranty Delivery Available Big Selection - Discount Priced Call Ken @ 570-287-9631 Mon. - Fri. ONLY 11am-5pm
EARN EXTRA CASH! Deliver The Citizens' Voice in your neighborhood. We have a route for YOU! CALL NOW! 570-821-2114 earnextracash@citizensvoice.com
VITOs & GINOs WANTED:
Junk Cars & Trucks
Highest Prices Paid in CA$H! Pickups Available 288-8995 (Used Tires $20 & Up)!
“When You Want The Job Done Right”
WANTED!!!
570-822-3299
FLOORING INSTALLATION PROFESSIONALS
16 years experience. Carpet, vinyl, tile, wood, laminate installation; repairs. If you walk on it, we know how to install it! All Work Guaranteed Fully Insured. 570-574-8953
GARAGE DOOR Sales, Service, Installation & Repair Fully Insured! PA065008. Call Joe: 570-735-8551 or 570-606-7489
Classifieds Work!
EYESORE?
CAVUTO CHIMNEY SERVICE & GUTTER CLEANING Free Estimates & Insured 570-709-2479
CHIMNEY CLEANING SPECIAL
Hair at Home Hair Services Shirley Berti Hair Designs If you are someone who cannot go to a salon, We come to you! Perms, cuts, and colors in your home. Call:570-655-8639
$39.95 Oil and Gas Flue
AFFORDABLE ELECTRIC Master electrician anything residential no job too small. Licensed and insured 570-881-1623
A&A HANDYMAN “No Job Too Small. We Do It All.” Flooring, Hauling, Painting, Baths, Plumbing, Electrical 570-574-2411
RNI ELECTRIC LLC
CHRIS MOLESKY Chimney Specialist - PA058322 New, Repair, Rebuild, Inspections, Caps, Liners installed. 570-328-6257
Residential/Commercial. Generators. Licensed & Insured. PA 029575 Retired Veteran 570-814-8979
ALL MAINTENANCE Plumbing • Electrical • Painting All Home Repairs • Insured 570-814-9365
Spring Hill Chimney 570-471-3742 1-800-943-1515 PA 022281
Make Life Easier, Sign Up Forward
SLEBODA ELECTRIC Master Electrician PAHIC 008719 Service Changes. Generator Installations Licensed & Insured. 570-868-4469
EZ PAY! The Easiest and Most Economical way to pay for your subscription. Call The Citizens' Voice to enroll 570-821-2108
FRANK HUNTZINGER No job too small. Free estimates. frankhuntzinger2@aol.com.Credit cards accepted.570-822-1182 PA106557
PA-1 Pest Control
Bedbugs, Termites, Mice, Bees and Much more. Licensed/Insured. Visa & MasterCard Accepted 570-500-2414
SEASONED FIREWOOD Hanover, PA. Pick up or delivery. Call or text: 570-991-1564
DO IT ALL HANDYMAN
Painting, plumbing, dry wall, Plus all types of home repairs. 570-829-5318
***AA AL'S HAULING
Yards, Basements, Garages. Same Day Service. Free Estimates. 570-947-9633 A-B HAULING YOU CALL – WE HAUL Residential/Commercial Cleanouts No job too large or small. Cheaper than a dumpster. Senior & Vet Discounts. Free Estimates. Insured. PA#112108. Climate Controlled Storage Available. 570-687-7687
Dog Grooming 719 West 8th St. 570-266-3525
RAY'S RECYCLING
General Hauling, Attics, Basements, Estate Clean-Outs, Business & Warehouse Clean-Outs 570-735-2399
FAIR HOUSING REGULATIONS
The Times-Tribune, Citizens' Voice, Electric City & Diamond City Classifieds reserves the right to edit any copy that does not conform to Fair Housing Regulations.
Absolutely Free Estimates E-STERN CO. 30 year architectural shingles. Do Rip off & over the top. Fully insured. PA014370 570-760-7725 or 570-341-7411
CORNERSTONE CONSTRUCTION
JUNK CARS& TRUCKS 570-779-5344 CUSTOM SLIP COVERS/DRAPERIES Your Fabric or Ours Residential or Commercial 40 Years Experience & Prompt Delivery Sunset117@aol.com*570-519-0214
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND
Rick Holzmann Professional
We'll Haul It Away! Same Day Service Best Rates – Free Estimates 570-266-8771
C. R. HOUSE CLEANING RESIDENTIAL OR COMMERCIAL Weekly, Bi-Weekly or Monthly Insured – 570-899-0061
Roofing, Siding and Carpentry 40 Years Experience Licensed & Insured. Reg. PA026102 Call Dan, 570-881-1131
HARDENS IMPROVEMENTS
A SUPERMARKET OF MOBILE HOME PARTS Full contracting services: 24 hr. plumbing, heating, central AC 1-800-264-7796
OLD TIME MASONRY Voted #1 Masonry Contractor Brick, Block, Concrete, Decorative Stamped Concrete, Stone, Chimneys, Foundation Repair, Stucco, Retaining Walls, Patios, Pavers. Fully Insured PA HIC122433 Certified Retaining Wall Installer Workmanship Guaranteed Roy, 570-466-0879 www.oldtimemasonry.com
DO IT ALL PAINT Spackle, Drywall, Stucco, Plaster, Wallpaper. Free Estimates. PA #108191 - 570-262-8387 M. PARALIS PAINTING Interior & exterior, powerwashing Professional work at affordable rates. Free estimates 570-288-0733
We Do It!
570-288-6709 NEW ROOFS & REPAIRS Shingles Rubber Slate, Gutters & Chimney Repairs. Credit Cards Accepted. EMERGENCY SERVICES AVAILABLE FREE Estimates! Licensed & Insured PA#025188
SNOW PLOWING Commercial Industrial Residential DRIVEWAYS SIDEWALKS SALTING
(570) 574-1275
APEX TREE AND EARTH Wyoming Valley, Back Mountain & Surrounding Areas SNOW PLOWING Tree Removal, Lot Clearing, Pruning. Stump Grinding. Insured. Now Accepting All Major Credit Cards. 570-550-4535
No job too Big! Get it Done! Ask about Color!
A6 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
NANTICOKE
1101 S Hanover St VERY AFFORDABLE Charming, Spacious Brick ½ dbl which shows more like a single family home! Taxes reduced for 2017. Sunroom (could be an office) LR w/Stained Glass Window, Glam Chandelier, French Doors, formal DR w/leaded glass windows, large Eat in kit; Pantry & 1st Flr Laundry, 2nd Flr features 3 Brs, bonus room (could be sitting room/library/walk in closet) modern bath; attic is semi-finished for additional living space or storage Priced below market to sell @ $39,990 MLS#15-4860 Don't delay, Call Pat TODAY! 570-287-1196
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
NANTICOKE
40 W Grand St. $145,000 This well cared for 2 story is in move in condition. Covered front porch, rear open deck over looking above ground pool, shed, fenced yard, OSP, Central entrance foyer leading to modern eat in kit w/corian tops, tile flr, 2 pantry cabinets, spacious LR, formal DR Rec room in basement, new gas furnace, hot water heater & roof. MLS#16-5513 Ann Marie Chopick 570-760-6769
NANTICOKE
Great income property or live on one side & let the other pay your mortgage. This double block has 3 BR's a full bath, & 1st flr laundry on each side. There is parking on the street as well as OSP in the rear for 3 to 4 cars. All utilities are separate. MLS#16-6521 $64,900 Call John Polifka 570-704-6846
PAT BUSCH, REALTOR 570-885-4165
I have BUYERS for 3 & 4 Bedroom homes in Luzerne Call Pat Busch to sell yours! 570-885-4165
SELLING YOUR HOME?
Place Your Home in our capable hands today and be assured of priority treatment by a competent, courteous professional GO TO THE TOP... CALL JANE KOPP
27 Glen St $125,000 Spacious Ranch w/finished FR w/FP in basement. 3 BR's, 3 Baths, large yard OSP for 3 cars. Handicap accessible. MLS#16-5518 Call Barbara Mark @ 570-696-5414
JANE KOPP REAL ESTATE 570-288-7481 SHICKSHINNY
570-675-5100
NANTICOKE
WILKES-BARRE
570-696-1195
WILKES-BARRE
(570) 288-2514
PITTSTON annmarie@custom-computers.com
Sell Your Home Through Classified Advertising!
111 Union St W $64,900 2 Unit; good condition, out of the flood zone w/2 story barn & 2 car carport. MLS#16-3978 Ken Williams 570-256-3309
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R 38 Prince St $109,900 3BR, 2 bath home w/in ground swimming pool, 2 car garage, 2 ductless a/c units, laundry on 1st flr, low low taxes. MLS #16-4292 Call Tom 570-262-7716
104 Church St. $114,900 Well kept, 4 square home, w/ beautiful woodwork, 4 BR, formal DR, gas heat, perfectly landscaped yard, paved sidewalks & drive, corner lot MLS#14-3616 Call Lu-Ann 570-430-4730 email: lu172@epix.net
SUGAR NOTCH REDUCED
684 Main St $88,900
709 N Washington $39,900 Nicely kept home w/OSP, & 2 carport, 3BR good room sizes, gas heat & hot water. Move right in. MLS #16-5819 Call or Email Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
www.atlasrealtyinc.com CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
www.atlasrealtyinc.com www.atlasrealtyinc.com
PITTSTON
Very nice ranch home with 3 BR's HDWD flrs, large yard, basement garage with nice size driveway. MLS #16-5022 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
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107 Pine St $79,900 4BR, 1 BA w/newer windows, electric, roof, chimney, gas furnace. HDWD flrs OSP can be made in rear alley. MLS #16-474 Call Tom 570-262-7716
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
PITTSTON
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
Classifieds WORK!
RENT YOUR HOUSE
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Check Out The Citizens' Voice Classifieds
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To Place Your Ad Call 570-821-2020 SWEET VALLEY Nice corner lot located near shopping & highway. Large kit; 1 ½ baths, nice size rooms; large fenced in yard. Much more than meets the eye! Easy show call to schedule an appointment. MLS#16-5519 $62,500 Karen Parcinski 570-589-9410
131 Center St $59,900 Nice 3 BR 2 Story, 1.5 BA, lg rooms, eat in kit; lg yard, room for OSP MLS#16-2624 LuAnn 570-430-4730
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
PITTSTON
2105 State Route 118 $265,000 2 story, country home on almost 8 acres; well designed & charming. Large eat in kit. w/center island & pantry. All season sun room features sauna & hot tub. Wood flrs throughout, oil heat; wrap around deck, in ground pool & separate workshop. MLS#16-6128 Jean Hummler 570-696-3599
570-288-1401
WILKES-BARRE REDUCED
JOSEPH P. GILROY REAL ESTATE 570-288-1444
16 Defoe St $166,900 Very nice two story home in established neighborhood, 3 BR, 1 1/2 baths, LR, DR, great room w/vaulted ceiling, 3 season room overlooking in ground pool; large rear yard, 2 ductless a/c units. MLS #16-5986 Call/Email Charlie 570-829-6200
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
CITIZENS' VOICE CLASSIFIEDS WORK!
SWEET VALLEY
3 BR Log Home w/over sized 28x40' detached, heated garage, wrap around deck, 2 sheds. Extra 3.3 acre lot. MLS#16-2098 $199,900 Call Ken Williams @570-256-3309
22 Amherst Ave A Really Good Choice! Move in Ready 3 BR, 1.5 bath w/large LR, formal DR, new FR eat in Kit; Screened Porch, Finishable Basement w/high ceilings, fenced yard; Garage. Walking distance to schools & sports fields! MLS# 16-4891 $94,000 Don't delay, Call Pat TODAY! 570-287-1196
WILKES-BARRE REDUCED
Call Today To Place Your Ad! 570-821-2020 PITTSTON
Thinking of Selling Your Home? LISTINGS NEEDED!!! Call Me, I CAN HELP!
56 ½ Butler $64,900 3 BR, 2 bath home w/gas/electric radiant heat. Interior freshly painted. Good solid home @ great price. MLS #16-5723 Call Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
• 25 Years of Experience • Commission Negotiable
Theresa Vacendak, CRS, GRI Associate Broker/ Appraiser 570-650-5872
centralr@epix.net
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
Move in Ready w/10 Rooms, Very large LR, DR, FR. New modern, granite Kit; 1st fl BR or office, 1st Flr Full Bath & Laundry; 2nd Flr new Full Bath & 4-5 BR's; Walk up Attic for storage, Yard & Driveway - Walking distance to Schools & Sports Fields! MLS#164500 $89,900 Don't delay, Call Pat TODAY! 570-287-1196
CENTRAL REAL ESTATE 570-822-1133
WILKES-BARRE TOWNSHIP
PITTSTON WILKES-BARRE
58 E. Columbus Ave. $114,900 Large 4 BR home, newly updated & move in ready. New roof & gas furnace, 1 1/2 baths w/ 1st flr laundry, FR in basement, walk up attic. Nice yard. MLS #16-5408 Call Colleen 570-237-0415
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
252 Plymouth Ave $148,500 Available immediately! 5 BR ranch w/great room, gas FP, hot tub, wet bar & finished LL w/2nd kit. OSP - Corner lot - Home Warranty Included! MLS#16-5890 Call Pat at 570-885-4748
(570) 696-3801
659 E Northampton St. $49,900 Georgetown section of WB Twp. Nicely kept 2 story w/ 3/4 BR, all appliances, 2 ductless A/C units, gas heat & hot water. Own your own house for less than renting! Mortgage, taxes & insurance ONLY $425/per month. Owner will pay your closing costs. Must have a minimum down payment of $2,000 plus good credit and qualify for loan with your lender MLS#16-1055. Call Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
JENKINS TOWNSHIP
LAFLIN
143 Haverford Drive $109,000 Excellent, move-in ready, 3BR townhouse w/pergo laminate flooring on 1st flr, new windows, new patio sliding doors & front door. 2 lg downstairs hallway closets & entry way closet. A Must see. MLS#16-3821 Melissa Hudzinski 570-237-6384
Heather Highlands A Quality Manufactured Housing Community Rent Promotion for limited time Rent a home before 1/31/2017, get 1 month free (credited to your account 60 days after move in date) New & Pre-Owned Homes for Sale! Rentals Available Financing Available to Qualified Buyers 109 Main Street, Inkerman Jenkins Twp., PA 18640 Rental Office: 570-655-9643 Sales Office: 570-655-2050 www.umh.com Licensed by the PA. Dept. of Banking NMLS 20033
UNFURNISHED
UNFURNISHED
UNFURNISHED
GLEN LYON
WILKES BARRE
MOUNTAIN TOP
Ken Pollock Apartments 41 Depot Street
Low and Moderate Income Elderly Rentals Include • Electric Range • Refrigerator • Off Street Parking • Community Room • Coin Operated Laundry • Elevator • Video Surveillance Applications accepted by appointment 570-736-6965 8 a.m. - 4 p.m. TDD only, 1-800-654-5984 Voice only, 1-800-654-5988 Handicap Accessible Equal Housing Opportunity
FURNISHED
HANOVER TOWNSHIP
WILKES BARRE
Efficiency in nice neighborhood, very clean with everything there, short or long term, $525 includes everything. No pets. Call 570-822-9697.
EXETER
2 bedroom mobile home. 89 Mountain Lookout. Immaculate. $10,000 Call 570-288-5679 from Noon-7pm
UNFURNISHED
Ashley
45 Cook St. 3BR
$1100
182 Grove St. 3 BR 531 Main St. 2 BR
$650 $525
Edwardsville
Jackson Twp
LEHMAN
1360 Huntsville Rd. 1BR $650 Heat&water included 1360 Huntsville Rd. 3BR $850 Heat&water included
Nanticoke
201 E. Ridge St. 2 BR $600 931 S. Market St. 2 BR $600 164 W. Green St. 4 BR 2 BA $800
Plains
10 Cottage Ave. 3BR $750 (No smoking, No pets) 10 Woodcrest St. Townhouse $1200
Plymouth
Great Location in Lehman Center. A true Landmark, Current owners successful since 1973. Country Store w/all equipment included. 2 apts on 2nd flr appliances included. Natural gas heat, bldg useful as professional offices MLS#16-727 $209,500 Call Richard 570-406-2438
235 Main St. 2BR w/heat&water $600 235 Main St. 1BR includes water $450
Wilkes-Barre
20 Alexander St. 5 BR, 2BA
$850
AVOCA
2 floor, 1 bedroom apartment. Freshly painted. Off street parking. Heat and water included. No pets. $550/month + utilities, security and references. 570-299-5964
SWEET VALLEY
BACK MOUNTAIN
1st floor, NON SMOKING, spacious 2 bedroom. Kitchen, living & dining rooms. Includes heat, hot water, cable & garage. $750/month. No pets. References. 1 months security. 570-7043056.
BEAR CREEK TOWNSHIP
3 rooms furnished, Oil heat, Internet access and utilities included except electric. $650 month. No pets, nonsmoking. Security and references. 570-954-1200
DALLAS MEADOWS APARTMENTS
SWOYERSVILLE
220 Lake St. Housing for the elderly & mobility impaired; all utilities included. Federally subsidized program. Extremely low income persons encouraged to apply. Income less than $12,700. Call: 570-675-6936 or TDD# 800-654-5984 9am-4pm., Mon.-Fri. Equal Housing Opportunity Handicap Accessible
DALLAS
1200 Main St $395,000 Step right into an operating business! Ideal location w/plenty of parking. Showroom, display & production area MLS#16-6407 Call Judy Rice 570-714-9230
570-542-2627
VERY, VERY large 2 bedroom. Living room, kitchen, bathroom. Off street parking. Available now! $850/month + security. Heat, sewer and garbage included. 570-760-7551
DALLAS, PA
2 buildings on same lot - 5 apartments, $75,000. Out of flood plain. Call 570-822-9697
WILKES BARRE
Rent Starting at $1200-2300 2 Bedroom 2 bath 1,200 sq. ft. 3 Bedroom 2.5 bath 2,300 sq. ft. Features include:Air Conditioning Dishwasher,Fireplace, Microwave Stainless Steel Appliances Washer & Dryer, Some Garages Community Features: Swimming Pool, Fitness Center, Playground, Club house for parties or business. Call Today 570-881-3946 or 570-690-6632 Rt 415 & Rt 118 Dallas, Pa 2nd floor apartment, 3 bedrooms. Water, sewer & heat included. Off street parking. No pets. $650/month + security. 570-704-8629. Call Classifieds 570-821-2020
EDWARDSVILLE
Beautiful newly remodeled studio apartments. All utilities included. On site laundry. Lounge room for special occasions. Spectacular view, beautiful gardens. Pets are welcome At reasonable rent prices. 570-846-7765
FORTY FORT
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
On the Avenue. 3 room apartment Like new! Range, refrigerator, heat, hot water, & garbage furnished. Parking. Non-smoking, no pets. References & security. $650/month. 570-574-1276 or 570-288-4860
Garden Village Apartments
EDWARDSVILLE
Private furnished rooms, with shared kitchen & baths. $120-$130/week Special! 2nd week Free with paid 1st week or 2 Free weeks with 1st paid month. Call Mike 570-852-9145 or Bob 570239-3633.
Special Discount if Qualified We Accept Section 8
WILKES-BARRE
KINGSTON
KINGSTON
Large two bedroom, second floor, sewer included, off street parking $600/month. Call 570-417-5350
KINGSTON
Includes Heat, Water, Sewer & Garbage Removal Make Your Life Effortless: Washer & Dryer in Each Apartment Modern Equipped Kitchen 24 Hour Maintenance Central Location to any Destination You Need: Colleges, Shopping, Hospitals, Bus & Highway Access Pet Friendly (up to 70 lbs.)* Short Term Leases Available
LUXURY LIVING @THE L BUILDING Six 1 Bedroom & Two 2 bedroom, Upscale Apartments. High End Kitchens. Off Street Designated Parking. Elevator & 2 Stair Wells. Secure Entry Sprinkler & Alarm Systems Cable, Phone & Internet Ready; Water & Trash Removal Included Rent Starting at $1,150 Retail Space Available Ground level 570-714-8020 CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
KINGSTON
Market Street Nice, 2nd floor, 1 bedroom in nice well maintained home. Hardwood floors and sun porch. Stove, refrigerator and sewage included. $475/month + utilities and security. No pets. Call 570-542-7740
KINGSTON Modern
Architectually Designed 1 bedroom apartment, 2nd floor. Kitchen and appliances. Central air. Off street parking. Quiet, residential neighborhood. Utilities and heat by tenant. No pets. Non smoking. 1 months security. 1 year lease.
221 Fremont St., West Pittston Housing for the elderly & mobility impaired. All utilities included. Federally subsidized program. Extremely low income persons encouraged to apply. Income less than $12,700. 570-655-6555 or TDD# 800-654-5984 8am to 4pm Monday – Friday
UNFURNISHED
LARKSVILLE
3 bedroom, ½ double. Trash & sewer included. Section 8 accepted. Tenant is responsible for utilities. $750/month Call 570-855-2554
PITTSTON
Half double for rent. Neat 2 bedroom with modern kitchen (all appliances), bath, basement storage. $650/month plus utilities. NO Pets, lease and security required. 570-829-1578
KINGSTON
KINGSTON
Two bedroom, second floor water and sewer included, off street parking washer/dryer hook up $550/month. Call 570-417-5350
1st floor, 1 bedroom. No steps. Air conditioning. All appliances, laundry, sewer and garbage included. Utilities by tenant. $475 month plus security. 570-735-6170
NANTICOKE
Hanover St. 2nd floor., 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Recently remodeled. All appliances, garbage & sewer included. On bus route. No pets. $575/month plus utilities. 1St, last & security required. MUST SEE! 570-592-2827.
NANTICOKE
Hanover Street 2nd floor apartment. 1 bedroom. Recently remodeled. All appliances included. Washer/dryer and sewer included. No pets. $500/month. 1St + last and security required. Call 570-592-2827
NANTICOKE
Second floor. 2 bedrooms with living room, kitchen, bathroom. Washer, and dryer, stove, refrigerator included. Off street parking, yard. Garbage and sewage fee included. No pets $495/month + security and references Call 570-814-3697
NANTICOKE WEST
2 story, 1.5 bedroom. New carpets. No pets. Security. $425/month + utilities. 570-477-3635
PITTSTON
1 bedroom apartment 1st floor for rent. Everything included $600/month Off street parking 570-417-5350
PITTSTON
1 bedroom unit, all utilities included, washer/dryer hook up; off street parking $750/month 570-417-5350
PLAINS
1 bedroom apartment. Good location with off street parking. $600/month + electric. 1 year lease required. No pets. 570-793-6143
PLYMOUTH nd
Attractive 1 bedroom, 2 floor apartment. Just renovated. Great neighborhood. Section 8 welcome. Heat/water included. $525/month. 570-606-9917
Classifieds Work!
$800/month plus utilities, nice 2BR, w/w carpet, eat in kit, OSP. Security & Lease, no pets. Call Tom 570-262-7716
KINGSTON
3 bedroom, 1.5 bath townhouse for rent. Finished basement. Central A/C. All appliances. Excellent location. $1,100/month + utilities. 570-328-5664
WILKES-BARRE
Near VA, 2 bedroom townhouse, end unit. 1.5 baths. All appliances, sewer, garbage & association fee included. $750 month + security. 570-817-4475
COMMERCIAL SPACE WYOMING AVE. W. PITTSTON FIRST MONTH FREE High Visibility / Reception area $500 plus utilities Rent w/option to buy building
Two bedrooms:2 full baths open floor plan newly remodeled. Master bedroom/(3)closets, small foyer Off street parking. $800/month Three bedrooms: 1 1/2 baths Newly remodeled; off street parking Fenced in back yard $900/month 1 yr lease. Both available Dec 1 2016 Call 570-762-1068
WYOMING
3 bedroom, ½ double, living room, dining room, kitchen, bath. Everything is electric. Nice yard, front & back porch. Washer/dryer hookup. $750/month. Landlord pays water & sewer. Lease, 1st month rent & security. Call 570-954-6347 Looking For A New Car? Check Out: The Citizens Voice Call 570-821-2020 to place a classified ad
570-299-9618
When you start “flashing” your you'll start saving money immediately! You'll receive 20% OFF your bill – on the spot! Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe
HUGHESTOWN
109 New St $350,000 “Owner financing available,contact agent for details” solid masonry bldg; good location. 8,464 sq. ft. Currently used as office & warehouse. Could be re purposed for almost any commercial use w/zoning approval. Add'l 3/4 acre lot can be purchased for $40,000. Property also available for lease. MLS#16-3609 Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
HUNLOCK CREEK
LAKE SILKWORTH 2 bedroom mobile home on 1 acre lot. Nice yard, storage shed and porch. $550/month with option to buy. 570-407-0910
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
KINGSTON
A Must See! Brand new apartment. Close to amenities. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. All new appliances. Extremely nice. Quiet, modern. Granite top & island. Beautiful hardwood floors – tiles. Lease and reference. 1 st and last month + security. No pets. Non smoking. Tenants pay all low utilities. $800/month 570-885-2766
The Good Life . . . Close at Hand • 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments
822-4444
www.eastmountainapt.com
• 1, 2, 3 BR Apts.
288-6300
KINGSTON – LAND
www.gatewaymanorapt.com
½ acre parcel of land. Great for parking vehicles, storage, or prep area. Heavy industrial zoning. $500 month. Call 570-947-3292
WASHINGTON SQUARE APARTMENTS
KINGSTON
Warehouse/Garage 16 commercial units. 1,250 sq. ft. 12' ceiling, 10' overhead door. Each with office area & bathroom. 1 unit available. $550 month + utilities. Call 570-947-3292
PLAINS TWP
Gas/service station, located just 1 1/2 miles North of Mohegan Sun Casino on busy Highway 315 (over 30,000 cars per day). Family owned for over 60 years, owners are retiring. Take over the business or reuse building site for new venture. Corner lot W/high visibility. Equipment list available, must be sold w/property. MLS#16-5490 $395,00 Charlie 570-829-6200 caatlas@aol.com
Senior Citizens Housing in Downtown W-B Renting 1BR Apartments. Features air conditioning, heat, wall to wall carpeting, security & laundry facilities. Active social organization. Rental assistance available. Call For Application
823-0127
Equal Housing Opportunity
SDK Green Acres Homes Peaceful, Park Like Garden Apartments & Spacious Townhouses
www.atlasrealtyinc.com
KINGSTON
527 Schuyler Ave. Single family home. Central air, 3 bedroom, one full bathroom small back porch, all new carpets, off street parking, washer, dryer, fridge, stove, $900 a Month Plus Utilities. Please Leave Voicemail or Text Message and I'll get Right Back to you. 570-881-1735.
EAST MOUNTAIN APARTMENTS
Apartments
Stonehurst Cottages
Rent To Own
6 burner stove with oven, $1,350; 4 ft. flat top griddle, $1,200; 3 ft Salamander, $1,500; 3 ft radiant char broiler, $1,350; 4 ft. Steam table, $600; All cooking equipment LP gas. 4 ft. Bain Marie S/C, $1,650; 20 qt. Mixer SS bowl, 3 attachments & safety guard, $1,750; 4 ft. SS Work Table $165.
Region’s Best Address
Short term lease or month-to-month rental. $700-$950 per month. Includes heat, electric, cable TV & Internet. Garrity Realty 570-639-1891
FORTY FORT
FOOD EQUIPMENT: Bakery/Deli Display Cases(FEDERAL) (1)50L Dry$1,900 (retail $4,900) ; (1)50L. Refrigerator - $3,600 (retail $9,000) ; (1)59L Refrigerator - $4,200 (retail $9,500) ; Measuring Scale up to 60 lb.(DETECTO) $375 (retail $900); 6 Shelf Wire Display Rack w/sign (1)-$80 (retail $200); 3 Bread Basket and Floor Stand Display (1)-$45 (retail $105) ;Ingredient Bins w/wheels 27 gallon (CAMBRO) (6)-$75 each (retail $195) ALL ABOVE ARE BRAND NEW CONDITION! While Supplies Last. Call or leave message 570877-5317 (Scranton Area)
SNOWBLOWER SIMPLICITY 32": Electric start. $250 or best offer. Call 570-817-2135.
FURNISHED
Want to purchase a beautiful, pristine, two bedroom home and new appliances? Yard, front porch/side porch, basement. Off street parking. Rent cost $995 monthly, with $300 going toward your equity! Call for details 570-881-0320
Excellent Condition! $3,000 570-676-9233
All Equipment NEW 570-620-2693 570-236-6298
HUGE PRICE REDUCTION
HARVEYS LAKE
UNFURNISHED
with hand and specialty tools
FOR SALE
WEST PITTSTON
WEST PITTSTON
SNAP ON ROLL TOP CAB
NEW RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT
PLAINS
ROSEWOOD REALTY Call: 570-287-6822
New bath, new kitchen, new paint. Hardwood floors & carpeting. 2 bedroom. Refrigerator, stove, washer/dryer. Dining room. Great room, storage room. Hutch, fireplace. Yard. Lease & security. $985/month. Heat & hot water included. Call 570-283-4370.
PIANOS Many to choose from, starting at $250. Bartolai Piano Store 570-654-3572
Newly renovated 2 bedroom half double. Loving room, dining room, , kitchen. 1 bath. Stove, refrigerator and oven included. Washer/dryer hookup. No pets. $725/month + security. 570-824-6982 or 814-1775 after 5. 3 bedroom half double. Eat in kitchen, large living room, wall/wall carpet. Fenced yard. Off street parking. Washer/dryer hook up. $650/month + utilities. No pets. Section 8 accepted. 570-862-6754
UNDER $2000 SNOW THROWER: Ariens model 724. 7hp. 24" path. Very good condition, ready to use. $325. 570-690-3714.
WEST PITTSTON FOR RENT
CALL TODAY FOR AVAILABILITY!!!!
570-822-3968
TONS OF FURNITURE - Sofas, fabric chairs, bedroom sets, 1 large king and 2 queen (BRAND NEW) suites, end tables, coffee tables, sports memorabilia, Kunstler Civil War pictures and MUCH MORE! MUST SEE! Call 570-406-0750.
PITTSTON
Townhouse for rent. Newly constructed 3 bedroom townhouse. Modern kitchen and 2.5 baths. Tile and hardwood floors. Off street parking. $1,200/month + utilities. References required. Available January 1st 570-237-6140 For Appointment
WILKES-BARRE
Large 2 – bedroom on quiet street near Wilkes. Hardwood floors. Includes laundry room. Dishwasher included. Security deposit, proof of income, and references required. $575/month. 570-822-7692
Elevate Your Lifestyle... Value Filled 1, 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms
400 North Gates Avenue Spacious 2nd floor, 2 bedroom apartment. Well maintained. Nice kitchen, living room, dining room. Off street parking. On site laundry. Heat, hot water, trash pick up included in rent. Security deposit required. 570-287-2825
Desirable Walden Park Terrific neighborhood. Crestwood school district. 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath. All appliances, gas, heat and air. 2 car garage. $1,400/month. 570-678-7089
Great neighborhood, heat & hot water included, laundry on premises; hardwood floors, all appliances. Off street parking. For appointments call 570-822-7944 or 973-417-4300
KINGSTON
3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and laundry room. Front/rear porches, gas heat; off street parking $725/month 570-822-4177
NANTICOKE
EDWARDSVILLE
694-696 N Main St $79,900 Move right in 2 family, 2 detached garages, 3 flrs; of living space, 9 rooms, 3Br, 1 1/2 baths, security system; other has 7 rooms, 2Br, 1 bath. MLS #16-3328 Call Tom 570-262-7716
113 Edison St Hablamos Español 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath 1 Bedroom, 1 Bath
MAYFLOWER CROSSING APARTMENTS
2nd floor, 2 bedroom apartment. All appliances, central air. Off street parking. Coin-op washer & dryer + extra storage in basement. $595/month + utilities. 570-760-7797 or 570-287-9631
Very nice 1st floor, 2 bedroom. Fresh paint all appliances including washer/ dryer. $650/month + deposit. All utilities by tenant. References & credit check. 570-762-1319.
570-288-9371
HANOVER TWP.
WILKES-BARRE
Lafayette Gardens
KINGSTON
KINGSTON
PRICE REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE
1 ½ bedroom, modern, all appliances, all gas. Off street parking. Near Cross Valley Expressway. $465 + utilities. Call 570-417-5441
Certain Restrictions apply*
570-270-4535
5298 Main Road In The “Y” Routes 118 & Main Rd Old (50+) established restaurant business $249,000 MLS#15-3794 Call Richard today 570-406-2438.
Korn Krest Section. 1 bedroom. Heat, hot water, sewer, garbage, stove & refrigerator included. Lease & security needed. $525/month. No pets please!
Country living in the city
mayflowercrossing.com
nd
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 A7
UNDER $2000 ELECTRIC GE WHITE STOVE and MayTag Fridge / Freezer. Selling a pair of super-reliable white appliances from my home. Delivery included to local area. $400. Text 570-510-2525.
Free Heat, Water & Gas Newly Renovated Swimming Pool & Fitness Center Community Room 1, 2, 3 Bedroom Apts Wall to Wall Carpet Fully Equipped Kitchens Maintenance FREE Patio/Balcony
570-288-9019 SOFA – Light tan, 84” sofa. In good condition. No rips, tears or stains. $100. WASHER – Maytag, good condition. $100. 570-763-5209
Best Location In Town Church St., Kingston www.sdkgreenacres.com
Opportunities!
BUY, SELL, RENT and HIRE!
Read The Citizens’ Voice CLASSIFIEDS.
CALL 821-2020
A8 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
NOW THROUGH JANUARY 3, 2017
0% 72 APR FOR
RED TAG SALES EVENT MONTHS
POSITIVELY ENDS 1/03/17!
FOR QUALIFIED BUYERS ON MOST REMAINING 2016 CHEVY MODELS IN LIEU OF CURRENT INCENTIVES**
NO ONE BEATS A FAIRWAY CHEVROLET DEAL...NO ONE! 2017 CHEVY SPARK HATCH LS
RECEIVE A 42” FLAT SCREEN T WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY Y NEW OR PRE-OWNED † VEHICLE IN STOCK
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MSRP .............$14,975
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FAIRWAY
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FAIRWAY
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FAIRWAY
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$4,500
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AUTO & A/C
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FAIRWAY
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PRICE $44,980*
FAIRWAY
*Tax & Tags Extra. Not Responsible For Typographical Errors. Offers End 1/03/17. **Monthly payment is $13.89 for every $1,000 you finance. Example down payment: 6.0%. Must finance through GM Financial. Some customers will not qualify. Not compatible with some other offers. Excludes L trims. Take delivery by 1/03/17. See dealer for details. ***Plus Tax & Tags. Subject To Vehicle Insurance & Availability With Approved Credit. 2017 CHEVY EQUINOX LS AWD 1 At This Price. † TV Included With Purchase Of Any New or Used Vehicles Currently Advertised Price Excludes Commercial Vehicles. Must Take Delivery By January 3, 2017.
www.fairwaymotors.com
FAIRWAY CHEVROLET 1101 N. Church St. (Rt. 309), Hazle Twp., PA 18202
570-455-7701 or 877-OK-FAIRWAY
Mon.-Thurs. 8:30am-8pm; Fri. 8:30am-6pm; Sat. 8:30am-3pm; Sun. Closed.
FAIRWAY WILL MAKE YOUR 1ST PAYMENT UP TO $300 WHEN PURCHASING OR LEASING A NEW IN STOCK SUBARU† 2017 SUBARU
OUTBACK • Symmetrical
All-Wheel Drive • 2016 IIHSTop Safety Pick • Option Package 01 • Standard Model • Rear Bumper Cover • All Weather Floor Mats • Tonneau Cover
2017 SUBARU
FORESTER
2.5i CVT
$0 DOWN PAYMENT $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT $249 1ST MONTH’S PAYMENT
$249TOTAL DUE AT LEASE SIGNING
NO MONEY DOWN MSRP $26,919 #H3275276
$249**
PER MONTH LEASE/10,000 MILES/YEAR. 36 MONTHS. PLUSTAX &TAGS.
HDB 01
OR
BUY FOR
$25,295*
2017 SUBARU
LEGACY
• Symmetrical All-Wheel Drive • 2016 IIHSTop Safety Pick • Option Package 02 • Alloy Wheel Package: 17”Alloy Wheels w/ Machine Finish, Roof Rails, Black Finish, Auto Up/Down Power Passenger Window. • Splash Guards • All Weather Floor Mats • CargoTray
2.5i CVT
$0 DOWN PAYMENT $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT $239 1ST MONTH’S PAYMENT
$239TOTAL DUE AT LEASE SIGNING
NO MONEY DOWN MSRP $25,399 #HH485056
$239**
PER MONTH LEASE/10,000 MILES/YEAR. 36 MONTHS PLUSTAX &TAGS.
HFB 02
OR
BUY FOR
$23,895*
2016 SUBARU 2.5i CVT
• Symmetrical $0 DOWN PAYMENT All-Wheel Drive $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT • 2016 IIHSTop Safety Pick $239 1ST MONTH’S PAYMENT HAB 02 • Option Package 02 AT LEASE SIGNING • Alloy Wheel Package: NO MONEY DOWN 17” Alloy Wheels, MSRP $23,503 Splash Guards, FOR 63 MOS. PER MONTH LEASE/10,000 #H3036645 MILES/YEAR. 36 MONTHS All Weather ON LEGACY MODELS*** PLUSTAX &TAGS Floor Mats, CargoTray. ***With Tier 1 Credit Approval Required Through
$239TOTAL DUE
AS LOW AS
0% AVAILABLE
$239**
OR BUY FOR $22,195*
Subaru Motors Finance Now Through 1/03/17.
CROSSTREK
2.0i Premium CVT
• Symmetrical All-Wheel Drive $0 DOWN PAYMENT • 2016 IIHSTop Safety Pick $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT • Option Package 12 $274 1ST MONTH'S PAYMENT • Standard Model • Popular Package #1 • Auto-Dimming Mirror Compass AT LEASE SIGNING • Rear Bumper Cover • Splash Guards • All Weather Floor Mats MSRP $25,177 PER MONTH LEASE/10,000 #G8338658 • Seat Back Protector MILES/YEAR. 36 MONTHS. • Cargo Net Rear PLUSTAX &TAGS. • Cross Bar Set
$274TOTAL DUE
#GRC 12
NO MONEY DOWN
OR
$274**
$23,585*
BUY FOR
*Plus Tax & Tags. **Plus Tax & Tags. Subject To Vehicle Insurance & Availability With Approved Credit. 2017 Subaru Outback 2.5i CVT 1 At This Price. 2017 Subaru Forester 2.5i CVT 1 At This Price. 2017 Subaru Legacy 2.5i CVT 1 At This Price. 2016 Subaru Crosstrek 2.0i CVT 1 At This Price. Subaru will donate $250 for every new Subaru vehicle sold or leased from November 17, 2016, through January 3, 2017, to four national charities designated by the purchaser or lessee. Pre-approved Hometown Charities may be selected for donation depending on retailer participation. Certain participating retailers will make an additional donation to the Hometown Charities selected. Purchasers/lessees must make their charity designations by January 31, 2017. The four national charities will receive a guaranteed minimum donation of $250,000 each. See your local Subaru retailer for details, or visit subaru.com/share. All donations made by Subaru of America, Inc. † Prior Sales Excluded. Must Take Delivery By 1/03/17. Not Responsible For Typographical Errors. Offer Ends 1/03/17.
1109 N. Church Street (Rt. 309) Hazle Twp., PA 18202
www.fairwaysubaru.com • 570-455-7733
Mon.-Thurs. 8:30am-8pm; Fri. 8:30am-6pm; Sat. 8:30am-3pm; Sun. Closed.
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 A9
A10 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
BUICK 2016 VERANO SPORT TOURING
ITEMS FOR SALE: Thompson Center Encor Inline 209 x 50. Camel, blue barrel with scope in box. Lots of extras. $650. Vintage Whyam-o crossbow. New in box with 6 hunting arrows. $275. 2 sets of 4 16” Subaru aluminum rims. 1 set has tires on it $250, Other set no tires $150. Craftsman radial arm saw $50.
Like new! All the latest equipment. 420 miles. On Star, heated seats, rear vision camera. 6 year warranty. Stabilatrac, Bluetooth. Remote starter.
Call 570-657-6597
CADILLAC '05 CTS
MATTRESS SALE
Locally Owned All New USA Made Mattress Guy – No Hassle Shopping Twin: $169; Full: $199; Queen: $249 Financing Available. 570-288-1898
Miscellaneous Items for Sale
Vinyl gate (3 feet Height) with Fencing 6 feet long, 32” Height white chain link fence, two wrought iron handrails for steps 5'7”, Two handrails 3' height, (wrought iron) 3x4 and 4x3, Two aluminum pillars, 8” diameter; 7' 10” height; Wood: 2x4 and 2x6 sizes, Sharpening business also selling sharpening tools. Call 570-823-4653 SNOWPLOW - Never used, BOSS 7'6" sport duty smart shield snowplow. Includes harness, all hydraulics and electronics. Garage kept. Reduced to $3,000.00. Call 570-510-4302
UNDER $2000 BOOKSHELVES: 2, very tall $150. Upright piano $50. Call 570-824-1783.
$20,100 570-371-8000
Tinted windows, sunroof. Very good condition, garage kept $6,000. Can be seen in West Pittston Call 570-762-1068
CADILLAC 2013 XTS
Platinum. AWD. Black. 40,000 miles. Original owner. Garage kept. Balance of factory warranty. All service records. Mint condition.
$27,900 570-814-3281
CHEVY 1993 CORVETTE Red on Red
Automatic. Totally Refurbished! A Must See! An Absolute Beauty! 82,500 miles. Asking $14,500 Call 570-575-1547
CHEVY 1995 CORVETTE PACE CAR
NISSAN 2009 ALTIMA 25 SL
Black with tan leather seats, 95,000 miles, sun roof, new tires, good-very good condition. Asking Blue book value $6,500. 570-941-5853
DODGE 1998 WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE VAN
SUBARU 2007 OUTBACK
Power steering, power brakes, automatic, 6 cylinder, wire wheels, power seats, leather interior, radio, tape deck, air conditioning. Good condition! 1 Owner! Automatic door and ramp with remote. Sliding driver transfer seat. Removable passenger seat. New inspection, tires, and battery. 85k on motor. $7,950 or best offer. 570-881-1400
PLYMOUTH 1997 GRAND VOYAGER (CARAVAN)
RALLYE EDITION 3.3 V6, 105k. Factory mags with Good Year tires, AM/FM/cassette, zoned heat & AC. Privacy glass, rack, Runs perfect, just serviced. ing $2,300. Call 570-239-9707.
new dual roof Ask-
ME RCU RY 20 04 MO NTERE Y
CALL 570-290-5656
SUBARU 2012 LEGACY
CHEVY 2006 COBALT LS
TOYOTA '99 FORERUNNER SR5
Rolling chassis assembly complete. Good motor and drive train. $1500 negotiable. Call 570-510-0113
Interior in very good condition! Automatic, power everything, new tires. Well maintained. Low miles.
NEEDS ENGINE (only running on
$$$ XMAS $ CA$H $$$
For college textbooks. New or Used. Prefer Newer Editions. Why store them? Convert to cash. 570-235-9280
BUYING ANTIQUES
Radios, Old Toys & Signs, Fishing, Instruments, Advertising, Sports, Trains, Jewelry, Rugs, Paintings, Military, Mining & Holiday Items. CLEAN OUTS AVAILABLE 570-266-3762
4 cylinder, 2.2 lier engine. 105K, AC, manual 5speed transmission. Cruise, tilt. PA-Title. Dealer. $2,999. Call Joe. Highway Auto. 570-876-1870 Mon. Fri. 8:30 – 5:00 or Sat. 8:30 – 1:00.
FORD 1992 F-150 XLT
Miss A Sunday,
DAEWOO SKIDSTER LOADER
Please contact Mike at 570-883-9815 leave message to set up an appointment
CAVALIER KING CHARLES SPANIEL Prices reduced. AKC. Health certified. $2,500 to $2,800
HAVANESE
All colors & both genders available. $1,000 to $1,500 (some for less) www.willowspringcavaliers.com 215-538-2179
Power steering, power brakes, power windows, A/C, rear wheel drive, 6 cylinders, automatic, 8 ft. bed with cap. Here is a well maintained 2 owner truck in very good condition. If you're looking for an inexpensive work or farm truck, this is it! Truck is located in Scranton.
CHEVROLET 2012 EQUINOX
The Sunday Citizens' Voice Call 570-821-2010 to subscribe today!
FORD 2004 F-350 LARIAT SUPER CAB
Asking $3,595 Call 610-346-8468
2005 DODGE MAGNUM SXT
FORD 2005 FOCUS SES
$11,200 570-287-1322
FORD 2009 EXPLORER LIMITED
$14,900 570-814-3281 FAIR HOUSING REGULATIONS
4WD
Automatic, New tires, new brakes, 47K Miles, Like New, Super Sharp Car, Silver with Black top $5,500. 570-970-0564
59k miles. 4 cylinder. 4 wheel drive. Heated leather seats. Tan in color.
V-8 engine. Black. 64,500 miles. Original owner. Garage kept. All service records. Includes extra set of Blizzak winter tires. Great for towing! Must see to appreciate!
FORD 2001 Mustang Convertible
New 2014 box. Rebuilt motor has less than 5000 miles on it. Reduced $14,995 or best offer. Truck and Cedar Creek Camper $29,995 or best offer. See ad for details on Cedar Creek RV. Call 570-465-3370
Model 1760-XL Perkins diesel, 4 cylinders. Less than 2,700 hours. Clam bucket, tooth bar and new quick spade.
DOOLITTLE LANDSCAPE TRAILER
Find all of this and so much more only in
Puppies
The Times-Tribune, Citizens' Voice, Electric City & Diamond City Classifieds reserves the right to edit any copy that does not conform to Fair Housing Regulations.
FORD 2011 ESCAPE LTD 4WD
Enclosed. Suitable for Daewoo Skidsteer.
REDUCED: $15,000 Both Items. 570-620-2693 570-236-6298
$18,500 570-857-7135
BMW 2011 328i X DRIVE SEDAN
Black interior, black exterior. Auto, 73,000 miles. Premium package, value package. Navigation. Excellent condition. REDUCED TO $15,000 or Best Offer! Call 570-351-6247
4 cylinder, automatic, AC, CD, power windows, power door locks, rear defroster, power mirrors, cruise, 62k, PATitle, aluminum wheels. Reduced $3,999. Dealer. Call Joe 570-8761870 Mon.-Fri. 8:30am.-5pm. Sat. 8:30am. 1pm.
FORD 2010 FUSION SE
27,500 miles. 6 cylinder. Moon roof, backup alarm, charcoal gray. Garage kept. Asking $10,500 Call 570-384-3708
CHEVY 1996 CORVETTE
FORD '86 MUSTANG HATCHBACK
Garage Man's Special! 5.0 strong engine. 5 speed. Rebuilt disk brakes. Rebuilt front suspension. Good running car. No rust. Needs body & interior work. $2,300 or best offer. 570-283-8235
MERCEDES '79 BENZ 450 SL
HONDA 1999 ACCORD EX
CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
BUICK 1998 LESABRE
HYUNDAI 2011 ACCENT HATCHBACK
$2,000 Or Best Offer 570-954-6793
BUICK 1999 LESABRE
V-6, 146k miles. A/C, power brakes, power steering, cruise control and new AM/FM/CD. Has some rust. Runs great.
Asking $1,200 Or Best Offer 570-815-4068
Save 20%
Cash Paid 570-574-1275
ASKING $12,200
PRESS PASS
HARRY'S U-PULL IT!
GMC 2001 JIMMY SLT 4 X 4
Call The Citizens' Voice for more information
1-888-514-9901
Call 570-436-4830
at over 100 area locations every time you show your
LISPI TOWING
$ Junk Cars $ $ Wanted $ 570-822-0995 570-824-8795 Leather, Undercoated. New Inspection Runs Great. Interior in perfect shape and NO BODY RUST! REDUCED TO $2,995!! Or best Offer. 570-489-6909
HYUNDAI 2005 SANTA-FE
White, 96,000 miles. All options, 5 speed, new tires. Very good condition. Scranton. R-Title. $4,200. 717-271-6560
MERCEDES 2006 BENZ E350 4Matic Wagon
Black exterior & tan interior. Moon roof. All the extras & Sirius radio. New tires. 128,000 miles. Very good condition. $9,599. 570-760-2334 & ask for Mark
All options, leather, sunroof, dual DVD players, brand new tires. 80,500 miles.
$10,900 570-499-5919
AWD, 2.7 V6, automatic 119,900 miles, with many options, sun/moon roof, A/C, CD & cassette tape player, tilt wheel, power windows, tow package, alloy wheels including spare. New parts, Cardone front axles, two catalytic converters, exhaust crank sensors, rear brakes, radiator new in 2014, new head lights & rear lift door struts. If you are looking for a good car this is it. Just retired and no longer need a second car. $5,295. Call Lee 570-351-2207
The car-buying information you need. The Local Dealers you Trust.
Search LOCAL Car Dealer Inventories in ONE Easy Click!
Bring Your Vehicle To Us! - Enter to Win $500 Gift Card every month www.wegotused.com
570-821-2108
BMW 1980 R100T MOTORCYCLE
Buying A New Car? Call Us Today To Sell Your Old One! The Citizens' Voice Classified Ad Department 570-821-2020
CHRYSLER 2011 TOWN & COUNTRY
CLASSIFIEDS 570-821-2020 MAZDA 2008 3
1988 BUICK REATTA (Red) Low milage. Asking $1500. Call 570-498-4656
JUNK CARS & TRUCKS...
Moon roof, 6 cylinder, 2 door Sport $2,495 Call 654-2081
49,000 miles, AC, satellite radio. Runs great. $4,000. 570-871-1139
Excellent interior. New tires. New brakes. Good body. 120,000 miles. Runs well. Well kept.
Power windows and locks, Tow package. Auto/manual shift, Chrome package and running boards, White color. New 5 year battery remote start. 6.2L gas engine, 13K miles. Asking $30,000 570-779-1751
Triple slide. Coleman Road trip grill. Asking $15,995 or best offer. Nadauide RV Prices. Low retail $24,310. Average retail $29,260. Reduced $15,995 or best offer. See ad for F350 V-10 Lariat Super-Cab 4WD to pull RV. $29,995 or best offer. Call 570-465-3370
Hard Top Convertible
124,000 miles. Gray with blue leather interior. Very good condition. Asking $5,000 or best offer. Call 570-489-1809
$8,000 570-550-4518
FORD 2011 F250 SD CREW CAB 4X4 LIKE NEW
YFZ 2012 450
Bought brand new. Only ridden a couple times. Like brand new. $5,300 or best offer. Call 570-288-4495
$$$ BUYING $$$ All options, 58,300 miles, V-6 3 liter Flex-fuel engine, ABS brakes, AM/FM stereo, single disc Sirus satellite radio & much more.
4.6 liter/V8 engine. 141K miles. Very clean. Runs perfect! All service records available. AM/FM/Multi CD player, power windows and locks, bed liner, Tauno cover, remote starter, new tires/rotors/brakes and MUCH MORE! I original owner.
$7,000 570-562-3539 or 570-430-6946
White with red leather interior, all power options, automatic, new brakes. Just Inspected. Runs great. 73,000 original miles. Asking $12,500. Serious inquiries only due to sickness. Call 570-824-5360. Leave message. Will call back.
Purchased new. V6, AWD, sunroof, under 49,000 miles. $7500 Call 570-824-4560
BMW 2007 335I CONVERTIBLE
7,800 miles, candy apple orange/beer bottle brown metallic. Crash bars, pipes, leather bags, bag rack, extra chrome, removable windshield. Garage kept. $13,500. 570-542-7564
CEDAR CREEK 2007 SILVERBACK 5TH WHEEL
FORD 2008 F-150 SUPER CREW XL 4X2
Hard top, New tires, Excellent condition! LIKE NEW! Black sapphire. Tan, leather interior. 68,000 miles. Automatic, Inspection.
HARLEY DAVIDSON 2013 HERITAGE SOFT TAIL
YAMAHA 2003 “1600 ROAD STAR”
Asking $1,500 00 OR BEST OFFER!
MISS A LOT Investigations State Politics Local News Opinion Savings Obituaries Entertainment Puzzles Comics Special Occasions
$15,500 570-573-6699
ASKING $19,995 570-352-2729
4 out of 6 cylinders) DAKOTA 2005 QUAD CAB 4 X 4 SLT 4.7L Magnum(R) V8 engine. 5-speed automatic transmission. Air, power windows and locks. 91,300 miles. $10,000. Call 570-288-9434
15,500 miles. Harley Davidson Custom Number Paint Set, Vance Hines pipes. Lots of chrome. Invested over $33,000. Showroom condition. Serious inquiries only. MUST SEE!
4 Motion, AWD w/panoramic sunroof and navigation. 2.0 TSI turbocharged engine. 6 speed automatic transmission. Candy white exterior. Black leather interior. Bluetooth mobile connectivity, heated seats, split folding/ sliding rear seat. Garage kept. 29K miles.
Pearl white, ONLY 15,000 miles. Many extras. Garage kept, very clean. $16,500 570-825-5962
4 door, 4 cylinder, Automatic, rebuilt engine, low mileage (24,000), $2,300 Negotiable. Call 570-817-5869
All wheel drive. Runs and drives great. 209K miles. 4 new tires. New brakes, rotors, etc. New radiator as well! $4,500 Or Best Offer 570-401-2462
VOLKSWAGON 2013 TIGUAN SE
VOLKSWAGEN 1997 JETTA Only 527 made! Very rare! Very low mileage. Garage kept, never out in bad weather. For details
HARLEY DAVIDSON 2007 SOFT TAIL CUSTOM
$7,495 570-829-1547
OLDSMOBILE 1987 TORONADO
$8,500 570-698-0520 or 516-384-2572
JEEP 2004 GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO
Z6, 87k miles. A-title. 1 owner. Garage kept. Never off road! Power everything! Excellent condition. You won't find one nicer then this! Light blue with black interior.
1,000cc, 36,000 miles, red, second owner. Two fairings-both painted to match bike color. Both with windshields and mirrors. 1) Hannigan Super Sport. Full uppers and lowers. 2) Smaller-Handle bar/frame mounted. BMW Krauser hard bags., Eclipse tank sack. Eclipse rear bag-both with rain covers. Two seats, one stock, one Corbin. BMW crash bars, Stock & Brown side stands, BMW tool kit, Metzler tires, New battery, New Dowco cover. You won't find a finer machine of this era in our locale. First $6,500 Takes It! 570-253-0831 after 7:00pm or leave a message.
Buying or Selling A Car?
Check Out The Citizens' Voice Classifieds To Place Your Ad Call 570-821-2020
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NEPAAutoSource.com
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Auto
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 A11
DEALERS PLACE YOUR CAR LOT AD BY CALLING
570-821-2022
FAX 570-821-1651 OR EMAIL: cnat@citizensvoice.com
Automobiles
Tom Driebe Auto Sales
# 1 All Around!
Best Selection! Best Quality! Best Values!
Celebrating Our 36th Year!
Over 75 Vehicles In Stock!
Freshly Serviced, State Inspected & Warrantied. MOST WITH LOW MILES! Join Our Family Of Thousands Of Satisfied Customers! ( FINANCING AVAILABLE ) Car Fax Available On ALL Vehicles! View Our Inventory @ www.wyomingvalleyautos.com 197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
#1 in Customer Satisfaction!
( Near Bolus Motor Lines )
BENNETT INFINITI OF WILKES-BARRE
Under $5,000!
1060 HIGHWAY 315 PLAINS, PA 570-822-9900
531 N. Keyser Ave., Scranton Call: 570-350-4541 Specializing In Vehicles '10 Toyota Corolla LE, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, 1 Owner, Local Trade WOW! $6975 '08 Chrysler Sebring, 4 Cyl., Gas Miser, Auto., Air, FWD, Low Miles, Absolutely Like New! $5975 '08 Ford Focus SE, FWD, Sunroof, Alloys, Keyless, Local Trade, Nicely Kept! $4975 '07 Chevy Cobalt, 2 Dr., 4 Cyl., Gas Miser, Auto., Air, Spoiler, Local Trade, Newest Inspection WOW! $3975 '05 Ford Taurus, 6 Cyl., Auto., Air, Scratch & Dent Special! $2295 '04 Ford Taurus SE, 6 Cyl., Auto., Air, 1 Owner, Local Trade, Only 66K! $4675 '03 VW Passat, V6, Auto., Air, Alloys, Moonroof, 1 Owner, Local Trade, 100K, Steal This One! $3995 '02 Mazda 626, 4 Cyl. Gas Miser, Auto., Air, Local Trade, Needs a little work $1475 '99 Pontiac Grand Am, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, Alloys, FWD, Fresh Inspection Great Work Car! $1695 '98 Olds Cutlass, V6, Auto., Air, 1 Owner, Local Trade,Only 69K!$2775 We CAN Get You Financed! www.tomdriebeonline.com Call: 570-344-8000
River St., Plains 570-823-4077
4 Dr., 6 Cyl., Auto, Excellent Condition! $6995 (With Warranty)!
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales
DODGE '07 RAM
444 Market St., Kingston, PA
All Prices Reduced!
CHEVY '08 MALIBU 4 CYL., AUTO., 1 OWNER EXTRA CLEAN! $4495 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Black w/ Black Leather, 113K, Stock# 10370A $13,500
Call For Hours
QUAD CAB 4WD, 85K Miles, Big Horn Edit., 20” Wheels, Clean CarFax Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! $17,995
jodanmotors.com
'13 FORD EDGE SEL
CHEVY '12 COLORADO LT
DODGE '08 GR. CARAVAN SXT, AUTO., V6, PWR. SLIDING DOORS, ULTRA SHARP! $5995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours 48K, Stock# 1338 $17,900
BUICK '06 LACROSSE
4x4, 4 Dr. Crew Cab, 3.7L I5, 56K Miles, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! ON SALE NOW!!
jodanmotors.com
DODGE '11 CALIBER
4 CYL., AUTO., 1 OWNER, SUNROOF, ULTRA SHARP! $5995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
CHEVY '12 MALIBU LS
4 Door Sedan, 77K
$8499
Gorgeous White! 6 Cyl., All Options, Must See & Drive! $4925 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
Black w/ Beige Leather, 57K, Stock# 10349B $18,900
KELLY
DODGE '11 DAKOTA
'15 ACURA RLX W/ TECH PKG.
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243 www.kellyautosales.net
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
Graphite w/ Ebony Leather, 30K, Stock# 10150A $30,900 '12 TOYOTA VENZA AWD LTD.
06 Chrysler Pt Cruiser Touring, 4 Dr., Super Sharp! Automatic, Very Impressive Options, Must See & Drive, Great On Gas! 99K ONLY $3695 05 Ford Escape XLT, 4 Dr., V6, Auto., Many Nice Options, Beautiful Red Exterior, Plush Interior, Smoke Free, Must See & Drive! Only $5295 05 Pontiac Sunfire, 2 Dr. Coupe, 4 Cyl., Auto., Nicely Equipped, Sunroof & More! Excellent Condition! Smoke Free, 23 MPG City...32 HW Only 70K! $3195 04 Lexus ES 300, 4 Dr., V6, Low Miles,Dark Blue Exterior, Leather, Many Nice Options, Garage Kept! $8995 04 Dodge Caravan SXT, 5 Dr., 7 Passenger, V6, Auto., Nicely Equipped, Plush Interior, 117K, 17 MPG City...24 Highway $3295 03 Chevy Silverado, 2 Dr., Reg. Cab, 2WD, 4.3 V6, Auto., Plush Interior, New Tires, Very Good Condition! 104K, Smoke Free, Runs Excellent! 15 PMG City...21 HW, 8' Box $4995 03 Chevy Cavalier, 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto., Great On Gas, Smoke-Free Vehicle, 22 MPG City...30 Highway Low Miles $2895 02 Chevy Cavalier, 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto., Nice Options, Excellent Condition! 22 MPG City...30 HW 95K $2695 01 Chevy Blazer LT, V6, Auto., Leather, Many Nice Options, Factory OnStar Communication System, Low Miles, 17 MPG City... 20 MPG Highway $4195 98 Dodge Dakota SLT, Club Cab V6, Auto., 4x4, Great Condition! 133K, As Traded!...No Hassle Price! $2895 ALL Vehicles Are Serviced & Inspected In Our Shop & MOST Are Sold w/ A Warranty VISIT US AT: www.feszauto.com www.facebook.com/ feszauto
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
BUICK '11 LACROSSE CXL
FINANCING AVAILABLE!!!
$500 DOWN ON APPROVED CREDIT!
570-288-6227
'09 HONDA PILOT EXL
'10 TOYOTA HIGHLANDER SE V6
Example:
PONTIAC '99 GRAND PRIX
1 Owner, 58K, Super Clean! $3995 Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
infinitiofwilkesbarre.com
FESZCHAK'S AUTO
CHEVY '08 IMPALA LT
CHEVY '13 SILVERADO 4x4
4x4, Big Horn Crew Cab, 73K Miles, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! ON SALE TODAY!... CALL NOW!!
jodanmotors.com FORD '00 F-150 PICKUP
V8, 8' Bed, 44K Miles
$19,999
KELLY DODGE '11 RAM 2500
Sunroof, Nav., Leather Heated Seats, Only 51K Miles! Clean CarFax! Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! ON SALE!...CALL TODAY!
4WD, V8, 5 Speed Manual, As Traded! $1750 (Call For Details)!
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
jodanmotors.com
www.kellyautosales.net
CADILLAC '08 DTS
Low Miles, Excellent Condition! $10,495 (With Warranty)!
Affordable Vehicles ONLINE www.
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales
V6, Black w/ Grey Leather, 33K, Nav., Pano Sunroof, Stock# 1390 $21,900
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
'15 CADILLAC ESCALADE PLATINUM
4x4, Big Horn Crew Cab, 67K Miles, 1 Owner, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! Christmas Sale!...CALL NOW!!
jodanmotors.com
444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
OUT OF THE 250,875 ADULTS IN LUZERNE COUNTY 43.6% own dogs 30.6% own cats
Source: Scarborough Research Study: Wilkes-Barre/ Scranton, PA 2010 Release 1 (Apr 2009 - Mar 2010)
ROCHESAUTOSALES .com
829-Cars (2277)
DODGE '12 RAM 1500 FORD '03 EXPLORER
AUTOMOBILES
DAVE'S
Silver w/ black Interior, 30K, Stock# 10189A $67,400
USED CAR SALES INC.
2008 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming
'14 NISSAN PATHFINDER
“The little Guy With The BIG Savings”!
(570)714-1980
All Vehicles Are Now
CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED!
15 KIA FORTE LX, Only 13K! Gas Saver! Sat. Radio, PW, PL, PM SALE $12,997 14 HYUNDAI ELANTRA COUPE New Tires, alloys, Heated Seats, Sat. Radio, Fog Lights SALE $13,995 14 CHEVY CRUZE LS, 4 Cyl., PW, PL, PM, Gas Saver SALE $11,995 13 DODGE DART SE, 4 Cyl., 6 Spd. Manual, PW, PL, PM, 30K Miles! CLEARANCE $8797 12 NISSAN ALTIMA 3.5 SR Only 15K! Powerful 6 Cyl., Auto., PW, PL, PM, PS WHOLESALE! $13,997 12 CHEVY MALIBU LTZ, 4 Cyl., Auto., Heated Leather, Sunroof, Vent Visors, Bose Audio REDUCED! $12,497 09 DODGE CHALLENGER R/T V8, Auto., PW, PL, PM, PS, Heated Leather,Push ButtonSALE $22,497 08 CHEVY IMPALA LT, Auto., 6 Cyl., Heated Leather Seats, PW, PL, PM, PS, Bluetooth SALE $6997 07 PONTIAC SOLSTICE ROADSTER, 5 Spd. Manual, Convertible, Aux Inputs, New Tires SALE $10,995 07 PONTIAC G6, Gas Saver! New Tires, PW, PL, PM,PS, AM/FM/CD SALE $7995 Visit Our Website @ www.
davesusedcarsales.com Find Us On Facebook @
daves used car sales
WE BUY CARS CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
BUICK '01 PARK AVE 6 Cyl., Auto, 53K, Showroom Condition! $5995 (With Warranty)!
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales 444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227
CHEVY '98 S-10 PICK UP
4 Cyl., 5 Spd., Great Gas Mileage, Good Looking Truck! $3195 Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
CHEVY '02 SUBURBAN
1 Owner, LT Pkg., 8 Passenger Seating, 4x4, 133K $5995 Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
jodanmotors.com
CHRYSLER '06 TOWN & COUNTRY 30K, Stock# 10340A $20,900
CHEVY '02 SUBURBAN 4X4
'13 TOYOTA RAV4 LIMITED
AUTO., V6, 1 OWNER, BARGAIN PRICE! $3995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
$9499
2 DOOR, 2WD, 6 CYL. AUTO., SHARP, CLEAN SUV! $2995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
26K, Stock# 10339A $19,900
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
4 Cylinder $4995
Silver w/ Graphite Interior Stock# 1388B $16,800 '11 CHEVY MALIBU LT
CHEVY '06 AVEO
AUTO., 4 CYL., SUNROOF, 1 OWNER, SHARP! $2495 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Looking For A New Car? Check Out: The Citizens Voice Call 570-821-2020 to place a classified ad
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
CHRYSLER '08 PT CRUISER
4 CYL., 5 SPEED, AIR, SUPER ECONOMY CAR! $2995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
Call For Hours
CHRYSLER '07 PT CRUISER
'13 GMC TERRAIN SLE-2
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243 www.kellyautosales.net
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
72K, Stock# 10239A $9800
Call For Hours To Place an Ad Please Call 570-821-2020
DODGE '03 RAM 1500 CREW CAB 4X4 MUST SEE! $6995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
CHEVY '07 AVEO
4 Door, 5 Speed Stick Shift, Gas Miser! $3495 Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Call For Hours
CHEVY '06 1500 4X4
KELLY
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours Extra Clean!... Affordably Priced!!
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
570-457-0034
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
X-CAB, 2WD, 4 CYL., AUTO., NICE CLEAN TRUCK! $3995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
816 Moosic Rd., Old Forge
3rd Row Seating, AWD, Beautiful Condition! $4975
FORD '03 EXPLORER SPORT
CHEVY '07 COLORADO
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
EASTERN AUTO
3RD ROW, HEATED LEATHER LIKE NEW! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
BUICK '03 CENTURY
Sharp Silver! Tilt, PW, Looks & Runs Like New $2950
4x4 Sport Quad Cab, Only 7,898 Miles! Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! Special Pricing...CALL TODAY!
EARN EXTRA CASH! Deliver The Citizens' Voice in your neighborhood. We have a route for YOU! CALL NOW! 570-821-2114 earnextracash@citizensvoice.com
DODGE '06 GR. CARAVAN CHEAP TRANSPORTATION! $1495 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
CHECK OUT SOME SWEET DEALS! '06 DODGE Dakota Crew Cab 4x4, 71K, V6, Air, New Rubber, Must See! $11,500 '09 FORD Focus, Leather, Sunroof 63K, Flawless! $8495 '07 FORD Escape, 4x4, Sunroof, 75K, Flawless! $8995 '08 NISSAN Sentra, Leather, Sunroof, 58K $7995 '05 FORD Escape, 4x4, Leather, Sunroof, 75K $7495 '06 CHEVY Uplander Van, 4x4, Leather, Rear Seating, 91K Has to Be Seen To Appreciate... GM's Finest Yet! $7495 '00 CHEVY S-10, Ext. Cab, 100K, Fiberglass Lid, Mint! $6995 '04 VW Jetta, New Car Trade! 48K $6495 '06 CHEVY Cobalt LT, Coupe, Mags, Spoiler, PW, 42K, PW, New Car Trade, Sharp!...2 To Choose From! Starting @ $5995 '04 CHEVY Malibu LS, 83K, Air, Local New Car Trade! $5495
ELI'S Sales & Service
1425 Main St. • Jenkins Twp.
570-602-5255
CARS 09 PONTIAC G5 2 Dr., Sunroof, 82K............$5895 09 CHEVY Cobalt 4 Dr., 112K.........................$4195 07 CHEVY Cobalt LS 70K.....................................$4995 06 DODGE Stratus SXT 4 Dr., V6, Automatic..........$4300 05 CHEVY Cobalt LS 54K.....................................$5195 05 FORD Taurus SE Sedan 83K, Super Clean!..............$4495 04 SATURN Ion 4 Door, 55K........................$4195 03 FORD Focus, 4 Dr., 64K..$3995 TRUCKS & VANS 02 DODGE Dakota 2WD, V6, Auto...................$3195 00 CHEVY 2500 Series Cargo Van, V8, Auto., Ladder Racks, Inside Tool Bins................$4995 All Vehicles Serviced & Come With Warranty
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
FORD '04 ESCAPE
Drives Great!...Super Clean! $4800 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
FORD '04 EXPLORER 4X4 LEATHER, SUNROOF, 3RD ROW SEATING, EXTRA CLEAN! $5995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
FORD '06 F-250 SUPER DUTY XLT
4 Dr. Crew Cab, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! 56K Miles, WON'T LAST LONG!... CALL TODAY!
jodanmotors.com
A12 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
Your Priority is Business... Fairway’s Priority is YOU! Loaner Truck Available!
FAIRWAY COMMERCIAL TRUCK HEADQUARTERS OUR COMMERCIAL D L O S$42,229* TRUCK LOT IS STOCKED AND READY FOR YOUR END OF YEAR PURCHASES!
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 9’ DUMP #28739, SNOW PLOW PREP, K GE, LOAD HANDLER CONV PACKA BODY
MSRP $48,000
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 9’ DUMP #28853, SNOW PLOW PREP, LOAD HANDLER BODY
MSRP $47,090
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$39,660*
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 9’ DUMP #28857, SNOW PLOW PREP, LOAD HANDLER BODY
OLD S$39,660* MSRP $47,090
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 9’ DUMP
JUST ANNOUNCED! $5,000 GM BONUS TAG
#28858, SNOW PLOW PREP, K GE, MYLINK, AIR FLOW CONV PACKA BODY
MSRP $50,425
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$44,728*
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 9’ DUMP #28868, SNOW PLOW PREP, LOAD HANDLER BODY
MSRP $46,655
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$41,185*
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 9’ DUMP
ON THE LAST TWO 2016 BOX TRUCKS IN STOCK!
2017 CHEVROLET EXPRESS 2500 CARGO WORK VAN #28891
MSRP $32,705
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$29,984*
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500 REG CAB 4X4 W/T #28455 SNOW PLOW PREP
MSRP $38,515
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$35,795*
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500 DOUBLE CAB 4X4 W/T #28846 CONV PACKA K GE, SNOW PLOW PREP
OLD S $37,495* MSRP $41,365
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500 DOUBLE CAB 4X4 W/T #28737, CONV PACKA K GE, SNOW PLOW PREP, BEDLINER
OLD $38,195* S MSRP $42,115
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 3500 REG CAB 4X4 W/8’ RENDING UTILITY #28900 SNOW PLOW PREP, MYLINK RADIO
MSRP $45,405
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$39,897*
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500 DOUBLE CAB 4X4 W/8’ RENDING UTILITY #GZ416406 SNOW PLOW PREP
#28885, SNOW PLOW PREP, LOAD HANDLER BODY
MSRP $46,785
MSRP $46,590
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$41,192*
$39,895*
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 3500 2WD W/12’6” ALUMINUM STAKE BODY
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 9’ DUMP
#28884 MAGNUM BODY
#28871, SNOW PLOW PREP, CONV PAKCAGE, LOAD HANDLER BODY
MSRP $42,145
MSRP $45,360
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$39,995*
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
2016 CHEVROLET EXPRESS 4500 W/16’ DRY FREIGHT
$37,103*
#28765 SUPREME SIGNATURE INER-CITY
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 BARE CHASSIS
2016 CHEVROLET EXPRESS 4500 W/16’ DRY FREIGHT
MSRP $44,423
#28866 SNOW PLOW PREP
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE $38,978
BONUS TAG -$5,000
MSRP $38,660
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$34,190*
2016 CHEVROLET 3500 4x4 BARE CHASSIS
NOW $33,978*
#28760 SUPREME SIGNATURE INER-CITY
OLD S$38,978* MSRP $44,423
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
2016 CHEVROLET EXPRESS 3500 W/12’ SPARTAN SERVICE BODY #28895 DRW 12,300 GVW
#28873
OLD S$42,915* MSRP $47,653
MSRP $38,660
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$34,190*
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500 W/T 4x4 CREW CAB
2016 CHEVROLET EXPRESS 3500 CARGO WORK VAN
#28780 8’ BOX, TRAILERING PACKA K GE
#28829
OLD S $33,175*
OLD S$38,128*
2016 CHEVROLET EXPRESS 3500 W/12’ SPARTAN BODY
MSRP $36,985
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
MSRP 41,990
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
#28890
2017 CHEVROLET EXPRESS 3500 CARGO WORK VAN #28864
MSRP $36,790
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
$33,776*
MSRP $39,953
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE $34,995
2016 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 2500 W/T 4x4 CREW CAB
NOW $29,995
FAIRWAY SALE PRICE
BONUS TAG -$5,000
#28764, DURAMAX DIESEL, MYLINK, CONV. PACKA K GE, SNOW PLOW PREP
*
MSRP $52,415
$48,565*
*Tax & Tags Extra. Select Photos May Be Used For Illustration Purposes Only. Not Responsible For Typographic Errors. Offers End 1/03/17
CHEVROLET 1101 N. Church St. (Rt. 039) Hazle Township, PA 18202 (570) 455-7701 • 877-OK Fairway OPEN: Mon.-Thurs. 8:30-8; Fri. 8:30-6; Sat. 8:30-3; Sun Closed.
Full-Service Auto Body Shop (570) 464-0963
Business Elite Manager Keith Laylo 570-956-7860
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 A13
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
US ARMY
Greg Martin General Manager 26 Yrs. at Coccia
Tom Washington Sales Manager 7 Yrs. at Coccia
John Kuna Salesperson 3 yrs. at Coccia
Jim Roccograndi Salesperson 3 yrs. at Coccia
0% 60 FOR
PLUS
Frank Vieira Sales Manager 6 Yrs. at Coccia
Abdul Alsaigh Sales Manager 9 Yrs. at Coccia
Ginny Kutzer Salesperson 25 Yrs. at Coccia
Steve Mizenko Service Manager 20 Yrs. at Coccia
Rudy Podest Parts & Service Director 32 Yrs. at Coccia
Jim Bufalino Salesperson 23 Yrs. at Coccia
Kevin Uren Salesperson 6 Yrs. at Coccia
Brian Kunda Salesperson Over 26 Yrs. Experience
NEW 2016 FORD FOCUS
M O S
SAVE $4,500
$2,750
Len Gierszal Finance Manager 3 Yrs. at Coccia
Barry Williams Finance Manager 29 Yrs. at Coccia
Pat McGinty Parts Manager 25 Yrs. at Coccia
Mike Hallock Salesperson 5 Yrs. at Coccia
Lori Thomas Salesperson
Patrick Yearing Salesperson 4 Yrs. at Coccia
0% 72 FOR
2.55L. Auto., CD, 16” Steel Wheels, Tilt, PW, PDL, Safety Pkg., Side Impact Air Bags, nd 2nd Air Curtains, Anti-Theft Sys., 1st an CD, SYNC, Message Center, Cruise Control, Keyless Entry, Auto. Headlamps
$1,000
Air, PL, PW, Tilt Wheel, Side Air Curttains, Airbags, CD, Remote Keyless Entrry, SYNC, Rear Camera Anti-Theft Sys., Rear Defroster
Lease For
$ 40
MPG
129
24 Mos.
14,695
$
WAS............................... $19,195 FORD REBATE.....................................-$3,750 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP ..........-$750
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied. ** Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
37
MPG
PLUS
$1,000
169
24 Mos.
19,699
$
NEW 2017 FORD FUSION AWD
ALL WHEEL DRIVE, 1.5L EcoBoost, SYNC, Siirius Satelite Radio, 17” Alloy Wheels, Advaance Trac w/Stability Control, PW/PL, ABS, Perimeter Alarm, Rear View Camera, Remote Keyless Entry System.
M O S
$
Lease For
WAS ...........................................................$23,485 FORD REBATE .............................................-$750 FORD CERTIFICATE ................................-$1,000 FORD OWNER LOYALTY REBATE.........-$1,000 FORD REGIONAL DISCOUNT OFF MSRP $490 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP ................$546
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied including Owner Loyalty Rebate. ** Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
NEW 2017 FORD ESCAPE SE AWD 0% 60 FOR
0 72 % FOR
PLUS
ALL WHEEL DRIVE, 2.0L EcoBoost, Leather Power Heated Seats, 18” Luxury Wheels,Keyless Entry System, Auto Head dlamps, SYNC, Safety Package with 1st and 2nd Air Curtains, Power Moon Roof, Navigation, Terracota Pkg., Tech Pkg., My Ford Touch
M O S
$1,000
33
MPG
SAVE $6,156
WAS....................................$27,745
WAS.................................. $35,155
FORD CERTIFICATE ............................... -$1,000 FORD REBATE............................................ -$750 FORD REGIONAL DISCOUNT OFF MSRP... -$2,535 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP ........... -$1,371 FORD OWNER LOYALTY REBATE....... -$1,000
FORD REBATE ...........................................-$1,500 FORD CERTIFICATES.................................-$1,000 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP ................-$746
Lease For
$
199
24 Mos.
$
37
24,499
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied. **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
Steve Hinkley Over 20 yrs. Experience
Tiffany Savoy Social Media Specialist
NEW 2017 FORD FUSION
M O S
PLUS
Brad Dwyer Salesperson 2 Yrs. at Coccia
Jason Kilduff Body Shop Manager 5 Yrs. at Coccia
MPG
$
Lease For
249
24 Mos.
$
28,499
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied including Owner Loyalty Rebate. **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
NEW 2017 FORD EXPLORER AWD NEW 2016 FORD F150 SUPERCAB 4X4 NEW 2016 FORD F150 SUPERCREW All W eel Drive, 3.5L V6, EcoBoost 3.55L V6, Power Equipment Group, XLT4X4 Engine, My Ford Display, PM, Auto. SYNC C, Cruise Control, Sport Climate, 17” Steel Wheels, CD, Keyless Entry, 3rd Row Seat, MyKey, Cruise Control, PW
23
Lease For
$9,000
FORD REBATE...................................... -$1,750 FORD CERTIFICATE........................... -$1,000 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP...................... -$701
359 $31,499
$
24 Mos.
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied including Conquest Rebate. **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
NEW 2016 FORD FIESTA 0% 72 FOR
PLUS
SAVE
WAS............................... $34,950
MPG
Automatic, A/C, SYNC, Power Mirrors, Tiltt Wheel, Advance Trac, Side Impact Air Bags, AM/FM/CD, Rear Spoiler
M O S
$2,740
2.77L EcoBoost, Auto, Remote Start, Rear View Camera, Reverse Sensing System, Power Sliding Rear Window, Chrome Appearance Pkg, 18” Chrome Wheels, Tow Pkg., Power Moon Roof WAS............................... $50,530
Appearance Pkg, 17” Alloy Wheels, Fog Lamps.
Lease For
WAS......................................... $38,490
229 $29,490
$
SAVE
FORD REBATE................................................... -$2,250 FORD CERTIFICATE......................................... -$1,000 FORD CREDIT REBATE: .................................... -$500 FORD BONUS REBATE: ................................... -$2,500 FORD REGIIONAL DISCOUNT OFF MSRP:. -$1,250 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP: ................... -$1,500
24 Mos.
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied including Off Lease Rebate. **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
$12,031 Lease For
FOR
PLUS
M O S
$1,000
249 $38,499 24 Mos.
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied including Off Lease Rebate. **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
NEW 2016 FORD EDGE
NEW 2017 FORD ESCAPE 0% 60
$
FORD REBATE.................................... -$2,250 FORD BONUS REBATE ......................-$2,800 FORD CERTIFICATE ...........................-$1,000 FORD CREDIT REBATE .............................. -$500 FORD REGIONAL DISCOUNT OFF MSRP .. -$2,500 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP .............. -$2,700
Auto, Air, AM/FM CD, SYNC, 17” Alloyy Wheels, Advance Trac w/Staability Control, PW/PL, ABS, Personal Safety Systme, Anti Theft System, Remote Keyless Entry System
0% 60 FOR
PLUS
M O S
$2,000
All Wheel Drive, 2.0L EcoBoost Engine, 18” Alloyy Wheels, AM/FM CD, SYNC, Crusie Control, Power Windows and Locks, Personal Safety System, Rear View Camera WAS............................... $31,785
MPG
$
14,499
*Taxes, Tags and Doc Fee Extra. Sale Ends 12/31/2016
Follow Us On FaceBook, Twitter and Instagram! CALL NOW 823-8888
SATURDAY SERVICE HOURS 7A.M. - 2P.M. Overlooking Mohegan Sun 577 East Main St., Plains Just Minutes from Scranton or W-B
Lease For
199 $21,499
$
24 Mos.
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied. **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. First months payment, $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
30
MPG Lease For
$
FORD REBATE.................................... -$2,750 FORD BONUS REBATE ..................... -$1,000 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP ...................$536 FORD CERTIFICATE ....................................$1,000 FORD BONUS REBATE ...............................$2,750 FORD REGIONAL DISCOUNT OFF MSRP ..................$500
279 $25,999 24 Mos.
*Taxes, Tags, And Doc Fee Extra. Security deposit waived. All factory rebates applied. **Lease payments based on 24 month lease 21,000 allowable miles. $645 Bank Fee, and $2,500 down payment (cash or trade) due at delivery. Sale ends 12/31/2016
2015 FOR FOR OUTSTANDING OUTSTANDING CUSTOMER CUSTOMER SATISFACTION SATISFACTION
Coccia Ford Now 11 Time Winner! 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2007, 2012, 2014, 2015
Route 315
37
WAS......................................... $17,780 FORD REBATE........................-$1.750 FORD CERTIFICATE .....................-$1,000 FORD REGIONAL DISCOUNT OFF MSRP..... -$490 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP......-$41
WAS............................................$24,495 FORD REBATE............................$1,500 COCCIA DISCOUNT OFF MSRP........$496 FORD CERTIFICATE .................................$1,000
•
East Main St. (Jumper Rd.) Mohegan Sun Casino
A14 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
Auto
DEALERS PLACE YOUR CAR LOT AD BY CALLING
570-821-2022
FAX 570-821-1651 OR EMAIL: cnat@citizensvoice.com
HONDA 2008 CRV LX GMC '04 ENVOY 4X4
FORD '07 FIVE HUNDRED
JEEP '07 GR. CHEROKEE
V6, AUTO., LEATHER SHOWROOM CONDITION! $5495 CALL FOR DETAILS!
4X4, SUNROOF, HEATED LEATHER, SHARP SUV! $6995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
Call For Hours AWD, Dark Blue Metallic w/ Grey Cloth, 101K, Freshly Serviced & Warrantied! $8990
LIMITED, Nicely Equipped $6495
GRONSKI'S
Leaves aren't the only thing that's FALLING!...
JEEP '99 WRANGLER
Sahara Edition, Straight 6, 5 Spd., 91K Original Miles, Hard Doors & Top, Interior Very Nice! $4250 351 Main St. Kingston 570-239-9232
'14 Ford Focus Hatchback, 9K...................................$12,765 '11 Ford Escape AWD.......$10,965 '14 Ford Escape AWD.......$15,465 '14 Chevy Malibu..............$13,965 '12 Chrysler 200 LX..............$8365 Labor Free Lifetime Warranty! Free Auto Health Plan with Every Auto Purchase!
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368 Reg. Cab SLE, 4x4, 120K Miles, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! $12,995
FORD '08 EDGE LTD.
HONDA 2013 ACCORD LX
KIA '04 OPTIMA
V6, AUTO., VERY, VERY NICE! $2995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
Visit: www.gronskis.com
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
jodanmotors.com
AWD, Heated Leather, Highway Miles $6995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
KIA '08 RIO
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
VEHICLES UNDER
$10,000!... BUY TODAY!!! '12 FIAT 500c Pop CONVERTIBLE
Call For Hours
FORD '08 F-150 4x4 SUPERCAB
GMC '07 SIERRA
Ready For Work!... Priced To Sell!!
Silver w/ Grey Cloth, 1 Owner, Only 42K! EXTRA CLEAN! $13,990!
$10,999
KELLY
Gas Saving 4 Cylinder, FWD, Auto., AM/FM/CD, Rear Defrost, Looks & Runs Like New! $4450 Regular Cab, 4x4, 8' Box, Only 67K Miles! Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! $14,995
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
jodanmotors.com
www.kellyautosales.net
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368 HONDA 2013 CR-V EX-L
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
2 Door, 6 Speed Automatic, 23K Miles, Black On Black $9995
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
'08 CHRYSLER SEBRING TOURING CONVERTIBLE
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
KT Auto A Division Of Kelleher Tire 430 W. Market Street Scranton, PA 570-346-1133 25 LOW MILE VEHICLES IN STOCK!!!! VISIT: WWW.KTAUTO.COM
FORD '11 FOCUS SEL
LEXUS '09 IS 250 AWD
Roche's Garage 570-829-2277
CarFax 1 Owner! Leather, Moonroof, All The Options, Looks & Runs Like New! $5850 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
FORD '11 FOCUS SEL
14 FORD ESCAPE SE, 78K, Power Gate, Backup Camera $12,900 09 PONTIAC G6 GT, 63K, 2 Owner, Fully Equipped $7995 09 FORD FOCUS SE, 78K, 5 Spd., Alloys, Extra Clean! $6995 08 DODGE RAM Reg. Cab 1500 4x4 Hemi, 20” Wheels, 156K, Extra Clean $10,900 08 PONTIAC G5 GT, Auto., 97K, Sunroof, Spoiler, Extra Clean! $5995 07 DODGE RAM Crew Cab SLT 4x4, 102K, Extra Clean! $12,900 07 HYUNDAI SONATA, 102K, V6, Fully Equipped, Alloys $5995 06 AUDI S4 CONVERTIBLE, V8, AWD, Extra Clean! $9900 05 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT, 4x4, 1 Owner, Fully Equipped, 105K $6995 03 VW BEETLE, 5 Spd., Fully Equipped, Extra Clean $4450 6 Month / 7,500 Mile Warranty With Purchase! Serviced
CarFax 1 Owner, Auto., Air, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, Leather, Sunroof, etc. Excellent Condition! $5450 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
Inspected Warrantied CarFax
AWD, Dark Chocolate Metallic w/ Black Leather, 65K EXCEPTIONAL! $16,990!
80 East North St.
4 Dr. Sedan, V6, Well Equipped Includes Heated /Cooled Leather Seats, 47K Miles! SOLD!
KELLY
Clean CarFax, 2 Door, A Heavily Optioned Convertible, Navigation Great Color Combo! $9995
'08 HYUNDAI SONATA
Wilkes-Barre
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
SE, 4 Door Sedan, Clean CarFax, A Great Car For The Money! $9995
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
'08 BUICK LACROSSE
www.kellyautosales.net
EXCELLENT CONDITION! $17,995 (With Warranty)!
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales 444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227
HYUNDAI '03 SANTA FE
AWD, Super Duper Clean! $3399 d Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
'11 Subaru Impreza WRX, 4 Dr. Turbo, 5 Speed, 73K............$17,500 '10 Chevy Malibu LT, White w/ Grey Cloth, 2.4:, 4 Cyl., Auto. 4 Dr., 85K Miles.................................$6450 '07 Audi A4 Quattro Avant Wagon, 3.2L V6, Auto., Silver w/ Grey Leather, Heated Seats Front & Rear..........................................$5999 '06 Audi A4 Quattro, 2.0 Turbo, 5 Spd., 88K, Black on Black./..$6250 '06 VW Jetta, 4 Dr., Auto, 101K, Grey w/ Grey Leather.............$3999 '04 Ford F-150 4 Dr., V8, Auto., 122K, Tonneau Cover $9950 '02 Audi A4 Quattro, 1.8 Turbo, 4 Cyl., Auto., Gold w/ Tan Leather, 140K.........................................$2295 '01 Honda Civic, 4 Cyl., 5 Spd., Silver, 4 Dr., High Miles But Runs Well!.........................................$1599 '99 Jeep Cherokee Sport, 4.0L Auto., 135K, 4 Door.................$3595 97 Ford Escort, 4 Cyl., Auto., 125K Red w/ Grey Cloth...................$1995
570-401-8885 Warranties Available!
NISSAN '07 VERSA 41K Miles $9995
'08 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER Gorgeous Black! 4 Dr., Auto, Air, Only 76K! Looks & Runs Like New! $4950
HYUNDAI '05 ELANTRA GT MAZDA '94 B4000 Pickup
4x4, 4.0 6 Cyl., Ready For Winter! Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
FORD '11 RANGER Absolutely Like New! Only 85K Miles! Auto., Air, PW, Moonroof $4450
To Place an Ad Please Call 570-821-2020
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
MAZDA 2014 2 SPORT
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
AWD, Fuel Efficient, Low Miles, Nicely Equipped $14,150
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
Clean CarFax, 4 New Tires, 4 Speed Automatic, Surf Blue Pearl w/ Grey Interior... Looks & Runs GREAT! $4995
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
'07 CHEVY HHR
570-821-2020
TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD Please Call
NISSAN '12 ROGUE AWD
Back Up Camera, Extra Clean Inside & Out, 46K Miles!
SOLD!
KELLY Only 45K Miles, 1 Owner, Sunroof, Leather, Heated Seats $8995
'06 CHEVY SILVERADO 875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
jodanmotors.com CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
www.kellyautosales.net
HYUNDAI '10 ELANTRA GLS
HONDA '12 CIVIC
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops! Graphite Metallic w/ Black Cloth, Only 37K! COOL CAR! $8990!
Low Miles, 4 Dr., 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, $13,900 (With Warranty)!
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales 444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227
HONDA '13 SILVERWING 600 CC SCOOTER
jodanmotors.com
N V AUTO SALES
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
HONDA '11 CR-V LX
Titanium Hatchback, 4 Dr., 4 New Tires, 1 Owner, 88K Miles, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! $11,995
AWD, New Tires, Absolutely Runs Like New! Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
LEXUS '11 ES350
www.rochesautosales.com
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
FORD '12 FOCUS
MITSUBISHI '08 ENDEAVOR
Route 309 South Dallas Memorial HWY Trucksville, PA 18708
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
4x4 XLT Super Cab, 48K Miles,Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! ON SALE!...CALL TODAY!!
(800)-344-8558
BARN FIND MOTORS
GMC '04 SIERRA 2500 HD
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
3905 BIRNEY AVE., MOOSIC
36K, Very Nice Condition! With ABS $4600
4 Dr. Sedan, Sunroof, 83K Miles, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! $7995
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
NISSAN 2012 JUKE SV
ALL Vehicles Come With A FREE Lifetime Inspection! FINANCING FOR EVERYONE!
(Credit Specialist Team Here To Help)!
CLEAN CAR FAX WITH EVERY VEHICLE
jodanmotors.com
BARN FIND MOTORS 351 Main St. Kingston 570-239-9232
1500 LT2 4 Door, Crew Cab, Clean CarFax, 1 PA Owner, 2WD, A Well Cared For Truck! $8995
MAZDA 3 2011
HONDA 2006 ELEMENT LX
ALL VEHICLES WITH 6 MONTH / 7500 MILE WARRANTY
All Wheel Drive, Nutmeg Metallic w/ Black Cloth, Moonroof, 82K, COOL CAR! $11,990!
Tax & Tags Additional Highest Quality Full Service Dept. A+BBB Rating FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED SINCE 1971
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK!
HYUNDAI '13 SONATA LTD
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
FORD '13 F-150
Low Miles, Super Clean, SHARP! $7850 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
CONTACT US Phone 570-821-2020 Fax 570-606-2404 To place your ad
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Great In Snow! 7 Month Warranty! $5690
Nicely Equipped w/ Most Options, 1 Owner, Low Miles, Well Kept! $16,250
4x4 STX Super Cab, 28K Miles, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! On Sale Today!... CALL NOW!
jodanmotors.com
FORD '13 FOCUS SE
Bright White Exterior, Auto., Air, PW, PL, Cruise, 42K, With Warranty, Beautiful Condition! $8700
BARN FIND MOTORS
MAZDA 3 I 2013 TOURING
22K Miles! SKYACTIV
$14,999
KELLY 80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
MERCURY '06 MILAN
4 CYL., AUTO, REAL NICE! $3495 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
AWD, Sky Blue w/ Black Cloth, Alloys, Back-Up Camera, 51K! $13,990!
JEEP '01 CHEROKEE HYUNDAI '07 ACCENT
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
MITSUBISHI '06 LANCER
www.kellyautosales.net
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
funrvcamping.com 78K, 1 Owner, Clean CarFax $4950
6 Cyl., Auto., Air, PW, 4 New Tires, EXCELLENT! $3450
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
“A CAMPER' S BEST FRIEND”
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
570-389-9900
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Route 11 Bloomsburg – Danville Highway
NISSAN 2013 ROGUE Special Edit.
Call For Hours
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
351 Main St. Kingston 570-239-9232
SUSQUEHANNA RV
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
MERCRUY '02 SABLE
STATION WAGON, AUTO., V6, EXTRA CLEAN! $2495 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
CarFax 1 Owner, Low Miles, Auto., PW, PL, Gas Saving 4 Cylinder, Absolutely Like New! $3975 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
PRIDE MOBILITY CELEBRITY X SCOOTER Includes Manuals & Power Cord, ALMOST BRAND NEW! $900
BARN FIND MOTORS 351 Main St. Kingston 570-239-9232
THE CITIZENS' VOICE
Auto NISSAN 2014 VERSA NOTE SL
DEALERS PLACE YOUR CAR LOT AD BY CALLING
RinaldiAutoSales.com
(across from Armory & Kirby Park)
Credit Restoration Program Available... Call For Details!
570-288-4501
15 LINCOLN MKC RESERVE AWD
Main St.,Taylor 570-562-2277
S.T. ENTERPRISE AUTO GROUP INC
SUZUKI '06 DR200 MOTORCYCLE
570-569-2746
$2799
1270 Wyoming Ave. Exeter
$ALE!
Fall Specials!
JEEP '14 PATRIOT LATITUDE
'08 CHEVY SILVERADO
lousgarage.com
FORD '13 ESCAPE SE
Black Crew Cab
$13,995
'05 CHEVY SILVERADO
V8, Auto., Air, PW, PL, Pwr. Seats, Leather, Chrome, 30K $29,495
351 Main St. Kingston 570-239-9232
Regular Cab 2500 HD Series, Black
$15,995
TOYOTA '12 RAV4 AWD
Silver w/ Black Cloth, 41K, EXTRA CLEAN! $10,500! V8, Heated & Cooled Leather, Nav., Moonroof, Alloys, 35K, 1 Owner $34,995 11 FORD RANGER XLT SUPER CAB 4 DR. 4x4
lousgarage.com
4 Cyl., 3rd Row, Only 37,000 Miles BUY FOR $16,495
570-825-3368
'11 TOYOTA COROLLA S 1 Owner, 69K $10,995 '10 FORD TRANSIT CONNECT Cargo Van, 69K $8995 '10 DODGE CALIBER SXT 85K $6995 '09 JEEP LIBERTY, 65K $9995 '08 HONDA CR-V, AWD 84K $10,995 '07 JEEP GR. CHEROKEE 65K $11,488 '07 SUBARU LEGACY AWD 80K $6995 '02 DODGE RAM CREW CAB 101K $9488 GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL
570-457-5441
'14 Chevy Cruz LT, 31K, 1 Owner, Backup Camera, Remainder of Factory Warranty! $10,995 '13 Chevy Camaro RS Package Convertible, Fire Red, Nav.,Backup Camera $16,495 '09 Ford F-150 Extended Cab 4x4 Black w/ Chrome Wheels & Trim A Real Looker! SALE $10,995 '05 Lexus GX470 SUV, The Big One! A Super Ride...Like New! SALE $9995
4.0 V6, Air, PW, PL, Alloys, 4 New Tires, 41K $20,995 13 FORD ESCAPE SEL
Special Edition, Alloys, XM, Backup Camera, Only 51K! BUY FOR $13,995
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
Specializing In 4 Wheel Drives
Feature Car! 2009 FORD FUSION
TOYOTA '12 VENZA AWD
2004 Ford 500 2002 Mitsubishi Eclipse 2001 Chrysler PT Cruiser 1996 Dodge Gr. Caravan 2002 Suzuki Aerio 1995 Chevy K1500 4x4 2004 Dodge Neon 31 Point Check Done On All Vehicles
2.0 Eco Boost, Leather, Panoramic Roof, Nav., Chrome, Alloys, Low Miles $16,500
V6, Sat., Bluetooth, Alloys, Backup Camera, Only 59K! BUY FOR $15,995
13 HYUNDAI ELANTRA COUPE
CHEVY '09 TRAVERSE LT AWD
Call To Make An Appointment! See Full Inventory @
PetilloMotors.com
FWD, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, PW, ,PL, Alloys, 27K, 1 Owner $11,800 12 FORD F-150 STX SUPER CAB 4x4
Leather, Sky Roof, Nav., Sat. Radio, DVD, Only 67K! NOW $15,995 TOYOTA '09 CAMRY LE
PONTIAC '08 G6
70K Miles! Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! $7995
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
Specializing In Vehicles Under $5000!
Old Forge
V8, Auto., Air, PW, PL, SRW, CD, Alloys, 32K $24,995 11 FORD F-150 STX REG. CAB RC SHORT BOX 4x4
4 Cyl., Moonroof, Sat. Radio, Super Clean! BUY FOR $8995
1 Owner, 6 Cyl., Auto., Sunroof, Black on Black ONLY $5995
Trucks, Vans & SUVs
Tom Driebe Auto Sales
531 N. Keyser Ave., Scranton ( Near Bolus Motor Lines )
Call: 570-350-4541
Specializing In Vehicles Under $5,000!
'07 Dodge Caliber SXT, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, Alloys, FWD, 80K, Local Trade SOLD! '07 Subaru Forester S, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, Alloys, AWD, Local Trade, Fresh Inspection SAVE! $4995 '06 Chevy Tahoe SE, V8, Auto., Air, Leather, Alloys, 3rd Row Seating, Rear Entertainment, Absolutely Like New! $13,700 '05 Cadillac Escalade, Low Miles, Fully Equipped, Newest Inspection WOW! $14,500 '04 Chevy Blazer, V6, Automatic, Air, Alloys, 4x4, Extra Nice!...Newest Inspection! $4975 '03 Chevy Suburban, V8, Auto., Air, Alloys, Newest Inspection, Runs Great! Steal This One! $4795 '02 Lexus RX300, V6, Auto., Air, Alloys, Moonroof, Newest Inspection $6475 '02 Mitsubishi Outlander, V6, Auto. Air, Alloys, Roof Rack, Extra Nice! $4175 '99 Subaru Outback Sport, 4WD, 4 Cyl. Gas Miser, Auto., Air, Newest Inspection, Looks & Runs Like New! $3975 '91 Honda SUV, 5 Spd., Newest Inspection...Steal this One! $475 We CAN Get You Financed! www.tomdriebeonline.com Call: 570-344-8000
view complete inventory @
Gorgeous White 4 Door Hatch, Auto., Air, PW, PL, Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM/CD, Only 82K! Absolutely Like New! $5950
570-675-4329 or 477-2833
PETILLO MOTORS
LUXURY CARS & SUVS... ALL BELOW NADA PRICES!
SUZUKI '11 SX4
Anniversary Edition
BetterUsedAutos.com
NISSAN '12 ROGUE AWD
20 TRUCKS IN STOCK STARTING @ $3995!
805CC Cruiser, Windshield, Saddle Bags, Blue & White, Whitewalls, 1,600 Original Miles, EXCELLENT CONDITION! $5000
FORD '13 FOCUS SE
Automatic, Leather, Moonroof, Sync., Sat. Radio, Only 22K! Factory Warranty BUY FOR $11,995
910 Moosic Rd.
SUZUKI '11 BLVD CT50 MOTORCYCLE
BARN FIND MOTORS 4x4, Sync, Sat., Touch Screen, Only 13,000 Miles BUY FOR $16,995
13 FORD F-150 FX4 SUPER CREW 4x4
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
4x4, Heated Seats, Factory Warranty BUY FOR $15,495
14 FORD F-150 XLT SUPER CAB 4x4
Looking For A New Car? Check Out: The Citizens Voice Call 570-821-2020 to place a classified ad
NISSAN 2015 VERSA NOTE
KELLY
www.kellyautosales.net
2.3 Eco Boost, Panoramic Roof, Nav., Tech Pkg, 20” Alloys, 17K $36,643
570-825-3368
Dual Sport, 3,504 Miles
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243
Red Pearl w/ Tan Cloth, Alloys, Back-Up Camera, 47K $10,400!
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
570-821-2022
FAX 570-821-1651 OR EMAIL: cnat@citizensvoice.com
Pat & Dan's Del Balso Ford
249 Market St., Kingston
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016 A15
Classifieds WORK!
www.cpizzanoauto.com 16 Dodge Ram 1500 Quad Cab Hemi 4x4, Big Horn Pkg., 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options, 20" Chrome Wheels, Like New! $28,995 16 Jeep Compass Sport, 4x4, 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options, Premium Sport Wheels, Like New 2 to Choose! $17,995 15 Dodge Ram 1500 Quad Cab Hemi 4x4, Big Horn Pkg., 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options, 20” Chrome Wheels, Like New! $27,995 15 Mitsubishi Outlander Sport 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options Premium Wheels, Like New! $16,995 15 Hyundai Veloster Reflex Edit., 1 Owner, Only 12K! Auto., Leather, All Power Options $15,995 15 Dodge Journey SE, 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options $15,995 14 Ford Escape SE, 4WD, 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options, Backup Camera, Microsoft Sync, Like New! $18,995 14 Jeep Patriot Latitude, 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options, Heated Seats, Premium Sound & Wheels LIKE NEW! $15,995 13 VW Beetle Turbo, 1 Owner, Only 29K! 6 Spd., All Power Options, Heated Seats, Premium Wheels, Like New! SPECIAL! $15,995 11 Chevy Equinox LS, AWD, 1 Owner, Low Miles, All Power Options, Premium Wheels $12,995 Low Interest Financing! WE BUY CARS!
VITO's & GINO's
949 Wyoming Ave. Forty-Fort 570-288-8995
'09 Chevy Silverado 4x4 Crew Cab LT Only $10,900 '07 Mini Cooper Convertible 4 Cyl., 5 Spd., Don't Miss This One! $5995 '07 Chrysler Pacifica, AWD, Nicely Equipped! $4995 '07 Pontiac G5, 2 Dr., 4 cyl., Auto., Very Sporty! $3995 '06 Volvo S60, 5 Cyl. Turbo, 1 Owner ONLY $5495 '05 Jeep Liberty Ltd., 6 Cyl., Auto Sunroof, Extra Clean! $5495 '05 Saab 9 3 Convertible, Black With Black Top,Think Spring!$4995 '04 Hyundai Elantra, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, Sharp Car! ONLY $2995 '00 Dodge Caravan, 6 Cyl., Auto., Runs Great! ONLY $1995
TOYOTA '08 SCION TC
Super Sharp 2 Dr. Hatchback! 1 Owner, Auto., PW, PL, Tilt, ABSOLUTELY LIKE NEW! $6450 State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
197 West End Road W-B 570-825-7577
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
'09 Mercedes GL450, 7 Passenger, Too Many Options To List!, 38K, Garage Kept Cream Puff! $29,500 '06 Chevy Corvette Convertible Auto., 27K $28,900 '04 Honda Civic SI $4995 '01 Mercury Gr. Marquis, 92K $2395 '00 Chevy 1500 Pickup Truck, 4WD, Automatic $6495 '96 Chevy Handicap Van, Excellent Condition! $5995 '94 GMC Rollback, Ready to Work! $12,500 '93 Toyota Camry $1995 '79 Chevy Rollback, Ready to Work! $6995
Junk Cars & Trucks Wanted! $$$ CASH PAID! $$$
WE BUY USED VEHICLES! (Used Tires $20 & Up)!
570-287-1493 or 814-9821
All Vehicles Are Serviced, Inspected & Come With A Warranty!
VW 2014 JETTA SE
SUBARU '09 FORESTER AWD
jodanmotors.com
SUBARU '14 OUTBACK
TOYOTA '13 RAV-4 XLE
Pristine Motor World
2122 Washburn St. Scranton
Sky Roof, Alloys, Sat. Radio, Bluetooth, Ready For Winter! BUY FOR $8995
570-961-0774
V8, Auto., Air, PW, PL, SRW, Alloys, Low Miles $15,995
AWD Limited, 1 Owner, 4 New Tires, 30K, Comes With FREE Lifetime Inspection! ON SALE!...CALL NOW!!
10 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT 2 DOOR HARD TOP 4x4
DODGE '05 RAM QUAD CAB 4x4
& Registration Fees Extra
PRICED TO SELL! $6500
'06 BMW 750li..................$7495 '06 FORD TAURUS...........$2495 '05 NISSAN ALTIMA........$3995 '05 VW NEW BEETLE........$2995 '04 JEEP LIBERTY............$3488 '03 CHEVY TRAILBLAZER LT 1 Owner.............................$3995 '98 VOLVO S-70...............$1995 All Vehicles Inspected & Ready To Go!
V6, Auto., AIR, PW, PL, CD, 4 New Tires, Good Miles $17,995 06 FORD FOCUS SE 4 DOOR SEDAN
S.T. ENTERPRISE AUTO GROUP INC
SUZUKI '00 DR200 MOTORCYCLE $2799
KELLY
570-569-2746
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243 www.kellyautosales.net
daves used car sales
SUZUKI '01 VITARA
4 Dr., 4 Cyl., 4x4 Gas Miser! ed Hope Everyone Has A Great Holiday & Happy New Year!
State Inspected & Warrantied Financing Available
197 West End Road W-B 825-7577
(Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
ONLY $79.95 (Regularly $115.95)
“Like” our page to be the first to find out about the latest breaking news and sports headlines, weather alerts and traffic updates.
AWD, Auto., Air, Low Miles $17,995
LOU MAFFEI Auto Sales 444 Market St., Kingston, PA
570-288-6227
EARN EXTRA CASH! Deliver The Citizens' Voice in your neighborhood. We have a route for YOU! CALL NOW! 570-821-2114 earnextracash@citizensvoice.com
SUZUKI '05 DR200 MOTORCYCLE
The Citizens' Voice is on Facebook!
SUBARU '12 FORESTER TOURING SATURN '06 ION
To Receive Your Special All For
www. wyomingvalleyautos.com
www.facebook.com/citizensvoice
4 CYL., 5 SPEED, SPORTY RED CAR! $2995 CALL FOR DETAILS!
BRING THIS AD
CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED!
KELLY
SUBARU '08 LEGACY
All Wheel Drive, Auto., PW, Leather, Must See & Drive $3950
(570)714-1980
All Vehicles Are Now
Dual Sport, 3,578 Miles
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
570-675-6029 or 570-574-6512
'11 Ford Focus, 42K! Charcoal, Heated Leather Seats, All Power, BEAUTIFUL! $6999 '11 Ford Focus, 4 Dr., Auto., Air, All Power, Excellent Condition, Very Clean, 72,150 Miles, With Warranty SOLD! '10 Ford Focus SE, 4 Dr., 4 New Tires, Excellent Condition, 42,900 Original Miles! $6999 '09 VW Beetle, Green, Automatic, Low Miles $5900 '08 Ford Focus SES, 4 Dr., All Power Options, Power Sunroof, 58,180 Miles SOLD! '08 Ford Focus SES, Black 2 Door Coupe, All Power Options SOLD! '07 Ford Focus, 4 Door, All Power Options, 72K Miles $3999
DAVE'S
14 DODGE RAM 1500 Quad Cab Express 4x4, Only 16K! 5.7L Hemi, Backup Camera, Touch Screen REDUCED $26,997 13 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500 Crew Cab LT, 49K, Level Kit, New Tires, Tonneau Cover SALE $27,997 13 JEEP WRANGLER SPORT 4x4 Soft Top, 6 Spd Manual, 33K, Fog Lights, New Tires SALE $23,995 13 HYUNDAI SANTA FE Sport, AWD, 2.0 Turbo, 4 Cyl., AT, PW, PL, PM, PS, Backup Camera, Heated Leather SALE $20,497 13 NISSAN ROGUE SL, AWD, 2.5L, 4 Cyl., Auto., Heated Leather, Navigation, Around View Monitor REDUCED $17,497 13 CHEVY EQUINOX LS AWD, Alloys, PW, PL, PM, PS, 4 Cyl. SALE $15,995 12 JEEP LIBERTY SPORT 4x4 6 Cyl., PW, PL, PM, SAT Radio, 1 Owner! SALE $15,995 11 FORD EXPLORER Limited 4x4 Heated & cooled Leather, Dual Sunroofs, Power Fold 3rd Row SALE $19,995 11 FORD F-150 Super Crew Lariat 4x4, V8, Auto. Heated & Cooled Seats, Leather REDUCED $23,497 06 DODGE RAM 1500 Quad Cab Sport, 4x4, Only 50K! Sunroof, PW, PL, PS, PM, 5.7 L Hemi SALE $17,995 Visit Our Website www.
RICK'S USED CARS
FULL NOTARY SERVICE PENNDOT APPROVED ON-LINE SERVICE
TRUCKS & SUVs
“The little Guy With The BIG Savings”!
SERVICE SPECIAL!
FWD, 4 Cyl., Auto., Air, PW, PL, CD, 1 Owner, 39K $7295 www.
CALL US TO SETUP A TEST DRIVE, YOU WON'T BE DISSAPOINTED!
2008 Wyoming Ave., Wyoming
.com
( Across from Jack Williams Tire )
lousgarage.com
570-825-3368
USED CAR SALES INC.
1270 Wyoming Ave. Exeter
Lube Oil Change Filter Change Tire Rotation & State Inspection
$2799
davesusedcarsales.com Find Us On Facebook @
WE BUY CARS
BetterUsedAutos.com
Follow The Citizens' Voice on Twitter@CitizensVoice to keep up-to-date on breaking local news
80 East North St. Wilkes-Barre
Dual Sport, 4,375 Miles
delbalsofordkingston
MEMORIAL HWY, DALLAS
AWD, Low Miles, 1 Owner, Sunroof, Nicely Equipped Call For Details!
jodanmotors.com
4x4, Auto., Alloys, PW, PL, Only 86K! BUY FOR $7995Tags
V8, Auto., Extra Nice! Fiberglass Leer Cap Included
Black w/ Tan Leather, Moonroof, 54K, SHARP CAR! $11,990!
JEEP '07 PATRIOT SPORT
875 W. MARKET ST. KINGSTON 570-287-2243 www.kellyautosales.net
SANTA'S SECRET: Shop Where Santa Shops!
VOLVO '05 V-50 T5
AWD, LOCAL NEW VOLVO TRADE! $4995 CALL FOR DETAILS! (Near Francis Slocum State Park)
Call For Hours
Save 20%
at over 100 area locations every time you show your
PRESS PASS Call The Citizens' Voice for more information
570-821-2108
Most Consumers Don't Just Read The Citizens' Voice
They Shop With It!
So If You Want Response To Your Advertising,
Place It Where It Will Be Seen. Where It Will Be Used. Where It Will Move Readers To Shop With What They Read.
The Citizens' Voice 570-821-2020
A16 THE CITIZENS' VOICE
MONDAY, DECEMBER 26, 2016
SHOP US 24/7 WWW.VALLEYCHEVROLET.COM
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22% OF MS
RP CA
#17310, 1.4L DOHC, Rear Spoiler, 4G LTE Wi-Fi, Outside Temperature Display, Stabiltrak, Chevrolet MyLink Audio System 7” Diagonal Color Touchscreen, Bluetooth, Air Conditioning, High Back Bucket Front Seats, Rear 60/40 Split Folding Bench, Splash Blue Color
$
2017 CHEVROLET CRUZE LS
#16826, ECOTEC 1.8L 6 Speed Automatic, Stabilitrak, PW, PDL, Remote Vehicle Start, Air, Chevrolet MyLink, OnStar Navigation, Power heated Mirrors, Rear Spoiler, Rear Wiper/Washer, Crystal Red Metallic Tintcoat,
MSRP $13,875
MSRP $19,415
- $3,053
- $4,416
Valley Holiday Priced at
10,822
$
*
#17332, Turbo 1.4L 6 Speed Automatic, Stabilitrak, OnStar w/Turn-by-Turn Navigation, RearVision Camera, Chevrolet MyLink Audio System w/7” Diagonal Color Touchscreen, Bluetooth, 4G LTE WiFi, PW, Cruise, Front Bucket Seats, PDL, Air, Red Hot
Valley Holiday Priced at
14,999
*
2017 CHEVROLET SILVERADO 1500 DOUBLE CAB 4X4
#17183, 5.3L V-8 6 Speed Automatic, Custom Trim Package, Trailering Equipment Package, Remote Keyless Entry, 20” Chrome Clad Aluminum Wheels, Auto Locking Rear Differential, Chevrolet MyLink Audio System w/7” Diagonal Color Touch, Cruise Control, Remote Locking Tailgate, PW, PDL, Rear Folding Seat, Cornerstep, Silver Ice Metallic $
“CUSTOM CONVENIENCE PACKAGE”
MSRP $20,400
- $2,602
MSRP 41,120
Valley Holiday Priced at
$ Up To
13%
OF MS
RP CA
17,798
2017 CHEVROLET TRAX LS FWD
- $7,121
*
or lease for only
SH
BON BACK —TAGUS —
$
179**
RP CA
SH BA
BON —TAGUS —
per mo.
CK
Up To
14% RP CA
Up To
RP CA
18,870
2017 CHEVROLET IMPALA LT
per mo.
20% RP CA
BON —TAGUS —
- 7,113
2017 CHEVROLET TRAVERSE LS FWD
Valley Holiday Priced at
$
27,952
16%
OF MS
RP CA
SH BA
BON —TAGUS —
CK
2017 CHEVROLET VOLT PREMIER
$
** per
259
mo.
#17016, 1.5L Engine, Range Extender, Electric Drive Unit, Rear Vision Camera, 4G LTE WiFi, Side Blind Zone Alert w/ Lane Change Alert, Front Heated Seats, Chevrolet MyLink Audio w/8 Diagonal Color Touchscreen, Wireless Device Charging, Heated Rear Seats, Silver Ice Metallic
MSRP $40,030
- $3,059
$
Valley Holiday Priced at
Up To
15%
OF MS
RP CA
SH BA
BON —TAGUS —
CK
$
Valley Holiday Priced at
27,995
*
2017 CHEVROLET CORVETTE STINGRAY 1LT COUPE #17303, 6.2L V8 7 Speed Manual w/Active Rev Matching, Heated Mirrors, Xenon LED Par & Turn Signals, 4G LTE Wi-Fi, Rear Vision Camera LED Removable Carbon Fiber Roof Panel, Chrome Badge Package, Chevrolet MyLink Premium Bose Audio System w/8” Color Touch Screen, Bluetooth, Jet Black
MSRP $56,445
36,971
** per
399
per mo.
- $5,235
- $7,446
*
or lease $ for only
179**
MSRP $33,230
*
or lease for only
$
#16965, 3.6L V6 Automatic, Dual Power Mirrors, Ultra Silver Metallic Cast Aluminum Wheels, Trailering Equipment Pkg., Chevrolet MyLink Audio, 4.2” Diagonal Color Display, OnStar w/ Navigation, 4G LTE WiFi, Remote Keyless Entry, Cruise, PW, PDL
Valley Holiday Priced at
26,995
*
2016 CHEVROLET COLORADO CREW CAB 4x4
- $5,200
Up To
21,999
or lease for only
MSRP $32,195
$
per mo.
- $4,406
*
#17069, 3.6L SIDI V6 Automatic, 8 PASSENGER SEATINGw3/2nd & 3rd Row Split Bench Seats, Front Bucket Seats, Extended Range Remote Keyless Entry, OnStar, Color Touch Sirius XM Radio, Bluetooth, USB Port, Rear Spoiler, Compass Display, Rear Vision Camera, 4G LTE Wi-Fi
199**
MSRP $26,405
SH
BON BACK —TAGUS —
$
$
#17160, 2.4L DOHC 6 Speed Automatic, Compass Display, Air, OnStar w/Turnby-Turn Navigation, Bluetooth, 4G LTE WiFi, Color Touch Radio w/7” Screen MP3 Player, Rear Vision Camera, Aluminum Wheels, XM Radio, Remote Keyless Entry, Dual Power Mirrors, Cruise Control, Nightfall Grey Metallic
Up To
Valley Holiday Priced at
$
*
17%
MSRP 35,065
CK
20,999
2017 CHEVROLET EQUINOX LS FWD
$
SH BA
Valley Holiday Priced at
or lease for only
RP CA
Up To
OF MS
$
OF MS
per mo.
- $3,101
179**
#17195, 3.6L SIDI V6 Automatic, Leather, power Seating Surfaces, Forward Collision Alert, Chevrolet MyLink Audio w/8 Diagonal Color Touch Screen, Rear Vision Camera, 4G LTE WiFi, OnStar, Remote Vehicle Start, 3 USB Ports, Rear Cross Traffic, Siren Red Tintcoat
*
MSRP $24,100
SH
*
$
299
BON BACK —TAGUS —
Valley Holiday Priced at
or lease for only
SH
BON BACK —TAGUS —
33$ ,999 **
#17218, Keyless Start, PW, PDL, Air Conditioning w/Humidity Sensor, Power Dual Mirrors, Front Bucket Seats, Chevrolet MyLink Audio w/7” Diagonal Color Touchscreen, Cruise, Aluminum Wheels, Rear Vision Camera, 4G LTE WiFi, Blue Velvet Metallic
13%
OF MS
- $3,025
Valley Holiday Priced at
or lease for only
2017 CHEVROLET MALIBU LS
MSRP 21,895
OF MS
$
Up To
17%
OF MS
#17214, ECOTEC Turbo 1.4L DOHC 6 Speed Automatic, Stabilitrak, Rearview Camera, Remote Keyless Entry, Air, OnStar w/ Turn-by-Turn Navigation, 4G LTE WiFi, USB Ports, Chevrolet MyLink Audio System w/7” Diagonal Color Touchscreen, PW, PDL, Cruise, Apple Carplay Capability, Silver Ice Metallic $
$
SH
BON BACK —TAGUS —
mo.
$
Valley Holiday Priced at
48,999
601 Kidder Street, Wilkes-Barre,PA
570-904-8478 • 877-544-6766
**
Scan with Mobile Device for More Specials
SHOWROOM HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 8:30-8pm; Fri 8:30-6pm; Sat. 8:30-5pm * Sale price includes all applicable GM Rebates ie: (% cash back of MSRP, bonus tag on select models, supplier pricing, Customer Cash, Bonus Cash, Valley Chevrolet Discount). Sale price plus tax & tags. ** Lease example CRUZE – must be a 2017 model ( MSRP $22,325) Lease $179 per month plus tax & tags, 39 month lease, 10K miles per year, $1849 (cash or trade) due at lease signing; Lease example -SILVERADO (MSRP $42,590) Lease $299 per month plus tax & tags, 39 month lease, 10K miles per year, $3639 (cash or trade) due at lease signing; Lease example -TRAX (MSRP $23,795) Lease $179 per month plus tax & tags, 39 month lease, 10K miles per year, $1229 (cash or trade) due at lease signing; Lease example – MALIBU (MSRP $26,000) Lease $199 per month plus tax & tags, 39 month lease, 10K miles per trade) due at lease signing; $2659 (cash or trade) due at lease signing; Lease example - EQUINOX (MSRP $26,405) Lease $179 per month plus tax & tags, 39 month lease, 10K miles per year, $1869 (cash or trade) due at lease signing; Lease example TRAVERSE (MSRP $34,995) Lease $259 per month plus tax & tags, 39 month lease, 10K miles per year, $2379 (cash or trade) due at lease signing; Lease example VOLT (MSRP $40,030) Lease $399 per month plus tax & tags 39 month lease, 10K miles per year, $1999 (cash or trade) due at lease signing; ** Corvette sale price includes $2,000 Corvette owner loyalty (must own or lease a Corvette). See dealer for details. Artwork for illustration only. Not responsible for typographical errors. Sale price & lease payments subject to change. Must take delivery by 12/30/2016. Prior Sales Excluded.
DIRECTIONS: Exit 170B off I-81 to Exit 1. Bear right on Business Route 309 to sixth light. Just below the Wyoming Valley Mall.