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A big sporting weekend, a traffic migraine Phillies, Eagles, Flyers, and charity events highlight busy weekend. By Frank Fitzpatrick

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Citizens Bank Park’s base paths might not be congested this weekend in what is expected to be a pitchingdominated start to the 2010 National League Championship Series, but that won’t be the case with the roads, bridges, and subways around the South Philadelphia sports complex. More than 200,000 spectators could converge on the area Satur-

Cheering a worker, a rig, and a rescue

day and Sunday for one of those joyfully packed sporting Oktoberfests that, with the Phils’ recent postseason success, have become fall traditions in Philadelphia. That ticketed throng will be enhanced by thousands of police; employees of the three sports facilities; and all those fans who just want to tailgate, wander the Phillies’ pregame parties on Citizens Bank Way, or soak in the colorful

and spirited atmosphere. Adding to the congestion, both in South Philly and for traffic trying to move through Center City, will be two charity events on Sunday. Between 1 p.m. Saturday and near See WEEKEND on A5

New pact for Phila. firefighters

Art work in progress

By Kathy Boccella

There were cheers, mock champagne, and “Chile dogs” outside a West Chester factory Friday to celebrate the most famous drilling rig in the world and the local man who traveled 5,000 miles to help operate it. At a jubicookout Cookout at lant at the headW. Chester quarters of Schramm firm that Inc., employdesigned ees welcomed home the Chile field technidrilling rig. cian Jeff Roten, who spent 36 days overseeing the company’s T-130 drilling rig that broke through 2,200 feet of rock to reach 33 trapped Chilean miners whose 69-day ordeal and rescue riveted the planet. In toasting Roten and Claudio Soto, a Schramm regional sales manager based in Chile, chief executive officer Ed Breiner See SCHRAMM on A6

Nutter vowed to appeal the four-year contract, saying it does little to offset costs. By Jeff Shields and Marcia Gelbart

INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS

Philadelphia firefighters will receive 3 percent annual raises for the next three years and be protected from furloughs under a long-awaited four-year contract awarded Friday by an independent arbitration panel. Despite changes to the firefighters’ pension plan that the city sought, the award drew swift and sharp criticism from Mayor Nutter, who vowed to appeal. Bill Gault, president of Local 22

It voted to give the governor more control and limit business ties. A painting of Albert C. Barnes, top, by Laresha

who operated the rig in Chile.

By Paul Nussbaum

Williams, a seventh grader at Henry School, is attached to the fence at the construction site of the new home of the Barnes Foundation in central Philadelphia. At right, a Mural Arts Program construction fence piece entitled “The Barnes” by artist Barbara Kaufman Smolen surrounds ongoing work. B1.

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

TOM GRALISH / Staff Photographer

INSIDE NATION

Probe of WikiLeaks Pentagon: U.S. intelligence not hurt, but concerns remain. A3.

WEATHER Windy and chilly Saturday. Air quality: Good. Exclusive NBC10 EarthWatch forecast, B5.

INDEX

Business …A9 Comics ……D6 Lotteries E12

Movies ……D2 Obituaries …B4 Stocks …A10 Television …D4

The Pennsylvania Senate has approved a bill to give the governor and the legislature more control over the Delaware River Port Authority and to limit the DRPA’s business ties to its board members. The proposed law, passed Thursday, was the first DRPA-related measure to win approval this year in either house in Pennsylvania or New Jersey, as the states

contemplate ways to rein in the troubled bistate agency. Other legislation is pending in Congress. The DRPA operates four toll bridges and the PATCO commuter rail line between Pennsylvania and South Jersey. In recent months, the authority has come under fire for its spending and hiring practices, conflicts of interest, and lack of accountability and transparency. Changing the charter that governs how the DRPA operates is not easy, requiring approval of the legislatures and governors of both states as See DRPA on A4

Bernanke hints strongly Fed will act By Sewell Chan

NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

High 64, Low 46

of the International Association of Fire Fighters, in contrast called it “a major victory.” “It’s a fair award that addresses the needs of firefighters and paramedics and the city,” Gault said in a news release, urging the city not to appeal. “There are pluses in it for both sides.” Nutter said similar wage increases awarded to police officers last year — which he did not appeal — were not offset in the fire contract by sufficient health-care savSee FIREFIGHTERS on A6

Pa. Senate OKs curbs on DRPA

¢ Trauma begins to surface as Chilean miners try to adjust. A6.

LAURENCE KESTERSON / Staff

A graphic dissects the two aces.

¢ How will the wind and cold affect play in Game 1? A5. ¢ Coming Sunday: Halladay poster. ¢ ALCS: Yankees 6, Rangers 5. E4.

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Jeff Roten, the Schramm worker

In Sports

BOSTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke appeared on Friday to remove any lingering doubt that the central bank would take new actions to fortify the torpid economic recovery and fight low inflation and high unemployment. The effect of the Fed’s most likely course — resuming vast purchases of government debt to lower long-term interest rates — would ripple far beyond American shores. The new ac-

But the impact of its most likely course also has risks. tions could contribute to the weakening of the dollar and complicate a festering currency dispute that threatens to disrupt global trade relations. For most Americans, additional Fed activity is likely to mean already low 30-year mortgage rates will fall further. The moves would not help savers, though, as yields on certificates of deposit and savings bonds probably

would also fall. But the Fed hopes that by making credit even cheaper, it will encourage businesses and consumers to borrow and spend — and that could eventually bring relief to jobless workers. “Given the committee’s objectives, there would appear — all else being equal — to be a case for further action,” Bernanke said in a detailed speech at a gathering of economists See FED on A4 ¢ Retail sales exceed forecasts. A9.

© 2010 Philadelphia Media Network Inc. Call 215-665-1234 or 1-800-222-2765 for home delivery.

STEVEN SENNE / Associated Press

Ben S. Bernanke at his Boston speech. The Fed’s likely course would be to resume buying government debt.


The Inquirer Want to know what’s on the minds of our metro columnists, or tell them what’s on yours? Join the mashup, at philly.com/blinq

Firefighter’s death is called a suicide. B2

Christie takes victory lap on national TV. B3 B

Monday, June 27, 2011 ★ Section B

Church’s challenge: Spend a year with a best seller By David O’Reilly

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

It may be the best-selling book of all time, but its battles, bloodletting, and “begats,” its many laws, rituals, and tribes, and those chewy names like Oholiab and Eliphelehu and “Joshbekashah son of Heman” don’t make for easy reading. Yet when the rector of St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Whitemarsh invited his congregants in January to join him in reading the Bible cover to cover in a year, the response surprised him.

Congregants and others heeded the call of St. Thomas Episcopal. The Bible held big surprises for some. “It’s taken on a life of its own,” the Rev. Marek Zabriskie said last week. More than 150 of his 1,300 congregants, and 85 others, have turned his “Bible Challenge” into a far-flung community of readers, Zabriskie said. The project has also taught him new ways to conceive of “church” in the electronic age.

Connected at first by e-mail, recently by Facebook, and soon by Twitter, folks as far away as Mali, some of whom “never darken the door of a church,” have joined in reading the Good Book and sharing their responses. “It’s something I always wanted to do,” said James Rowan, a semiretired commercial real estate executive. “But this has forced me

to do it in a way I wouldn’t have done on my own.” Raised Roman Catholic, Rowan said he had little encouragement in his youth to read the Bible, but as of last week was “almost through Maccabees and getting into the wisdom books.” “It’s not going to be easy,” Zabriskie, a self-described “theological centrist,” had cautioned prospective readers last winter. Like most mainline Protestants, few had ever sat down with the parts he calls “boring and See BIBLE on B8

PHA’s dream home is on hold Controversial plans for a $20 million headquarters on Chestnut have stalled amid the agency’s tumult. By Jennifer Lin

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

When the Philadelphia Housing Authority unveiled its plan for a glass-front, $20 million headquarters on Chestnut Street near 20th, historic preservationists cringed. They dismissed it as too modern, too sleek — as out of place in its brick-and-limestone surroundings as a woman in a power suit amid ladies in crinoline. This was, after all, a national historic district, one celebrating the commercial history of Philadelphia from the early 20th century. “Do you see anything with huge glass windows or very contemporary character around here?” asked John Gallery, executive director of the Preservation Alliance for Greater Philadelphia, as he stood across from the PHA site at 2012 Chestnut St. The stewards of Philadelphia’s historic buildings can breathe easier. Given all the tumult at PHA the last 10 months — from the firing of executive director Carl R. Greene amid sexual-harassment accusations to multiple federal investigations — the agency is putting the project on hold. Michael P. Kelly, PHA’s new top See PHA on B2

CLEM MURRAY / Staff Photographer

Charles E. Gallagher, a therapist visiting the Bristol Township School District, conducts a summer exercise with second, third, and fourth graders.

Meditation for children

It can help special-needs students cope with frustration. By Kristin E. Holmes INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Brandon Heinz, an eighth grader in the Bristol Township School District, told occupational therapist Charles E. Gallagher that he had been asked to sit still “millions of times.” The problem is that it’s not always easy. For Brandon, 14, and his classmates — students with autism, attention-deficit disorders, or other special needs — controlling signs of anxiety is often a struggle. So Gallagher made a suggestion: Breathe. “In through your nose, and out through your

mouth,” he instructed. Then, he said, let out a big sigh. Gallagher went on to teach the students meditation techniques to help them cope when frustration threatens to overwhelm. The session, at the Benjamin Franklin Freshman Academy in Levittown, was part of the district’s summer initiative to help 25 first through eighth graders gain the social skills they often lack because of their special needs. Students with conditions such as autism and attention- deficit disorders have difficulty reading the social cues of language, voice, and

Two seeking citizenship denied a day in court

Play’s the thing to make her point against rape essay By Miriam Hill

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

When Cara Blouin sat down to write her new play, she had revenge in mind. Like many, she had read the “What Should Women Do?” essay in which Philadelphia journalist Dan Rottenberg questions whether some women’s behavior makes them more vulnerable to rape. The article includes a photo of Lara Logan, the 60 Minutes correspondent who was sexually assaulted in Egypt, in an alluring evening gown at an awards dinner in the United States. The caption underneath asks, “What message was the TV journalist Lara Logan sending here?” Rottenberg’s opinion went viral, inviting, in his words, “vituperative” attacks on him. Online outlets such as Salon.com took him to task. Like many, Blouin, a local director and writer, was outraged when she saw Rottenberg’s essay. See PLAY on B8

behavior and consequently might react in ways that appear inappropriate. They also can experience high levels of anxiety. “They feel out of control,” said JoAnn Allison, the district’s supervisor of special education. “A lot of the strategies we have are to help them feel they have control of their environments and themselves.” Gallagher, who has studied a treatment approach known as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, fit in perfectly, Allison said. Mindfulness is a concept that means “paySee MEDITATION on B5

Playwright Cara Blouin

took on journalist Dan Rottenberg by staging a play lampooning his recent online column about the sexual abuse of women.

Nearly two weeks ago, a Brazilian couple walked into the offices of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at Second and Chestnut and asked a clerk whether he’d like to deport them. Livia Maria Borges, the wife, was so nervous she had to squeeze back tears. Her husband, Welismar De Jesus, was a little calmer. Their lawyer had assured them there was little risk of their having to say goodbye to the good, though illegal, life they had built in Northeast Philadelphia during the last decade. In fact, getting before an immigration judge was the goal of the June 15 visit, because in 18 years of practicing law, David Piver had not seen a stronger argument for making an exception to

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the rules that govern what happens when illegal immigrants turn themselves in. As Piver imagined it, an enforcement officer would issue a notice for the couple to appear before a judge. Then Piver could plead for something called a cancellation of removal, which the law allows in special cases. And this case was special. The couple had satisfied the basics — they had lived in the country for a decade and committed no crimes. They had even paid taxes on earnings made under the See IMMIGRATION on B4

Armed patron kills 1, injures 5 in Nicetown bar By Joseph Tanfani and Mark Fazlollah

INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS

A man who was booted from a Nicetown bar for smoking a cigarette returned with a gun Sunday shortly after midnight and killed one patron and wounded five others. The dead man was Carl Sharper, 43, of North Philadelphia, police said. Sharper, who apparently did not know the shooter, was planning to be married this summer. Two other victims were a woman, 44, shot multiple times in the abdomen and a man, 32, shot twice in See SLAYING on B10

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Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Police and friends say firefighter’s death was suicide

Scene Through the Lens

Photographer Tom Gralish’s visual exploration of our region.

John Slivinski Jr. was remembered as a gutsy member of the department’s elite rescue unit. By Joseph Tanfani

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

For Philadelphia firefighters, John “Jack” Slivinski Jr. was family; he followed his father into an elite rescue squad. When he got in hot water for posing shirtless for a charity calendar, his buddies rallied around him. On Sunday, those friends and colleagues were stunned and shaken when news spread of Slivinski’s death at 31. The former Marine had been found dead at his Lawndale home Saturday, reportedly by his father, known as Jack Sr. Police and his colleagues said the cause was suicide. “If you or your family members were in danger, this was the kid you’d want showing up at your house,” said Mike Kane, an executive board member at International Association of Fire Fighters Local 22. “He gave you 110 percent, whether he was washing dishes or going down a smoky hallway,” Kane said. “When I heard yesterday morning, I had to sit down. It took my legs out.” Slivinski posed shirtless in front of the fountain in Logan Circle for “Nation’s Bravest,” a charity calendar. He was suspended in April, but was allowed to return to Rescue 1 after a meeting with Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers. “All of that was over,” Ayers said Saturday. “As always, any loss like this is devastating, not only to his family but to his team members,” Ayers said. “We’re asking that the city say their prayers as well.” Kane, along with a firefighter at Rescue 1, also said the calendar controversy had blown over. Slivinski had been troubled for several weeks over personal problems, said one firefighter at Rescue 1, who asked not to be identified. Slivinski’s father is still an active firefighter. The father also had served in Rescue 1, and the son slept in his old bunk. “They were inseparable. They did everything together,” the firefighter said. In 2004, a friend of Slivinski’s, Lt. Derrick Harvey, died when he went into a burning house to help Slivinski and another firefighter. A friend said Slivinski kept a small me-

DAVID MAIALETTI / Staff Photographer

John Slivinski Jr. at Logan

Circle in April for a calendar. The fire commissioner said that dispute had blown over. morial to Harvey in his home, using Harvey’s helmet. He had a knack for making perfect pizza dough, a skill honed in his youth, and in his off hours he worked at the pizza oven at the King’s Oak at the Piazza at Schmidts. A manager at the restaurant declined to comment. Slivinski had been planning to donate his share of the calendar proceeds to a fund for firefighters’ widows. “He had the most contagious smile,” said Katherine Kostreva, the calendar’s publisher. She said she had talked to him the day before he died. “We were talking about a fund-raiser in September. He was looking forward to it.” The calendar is due out in August, Kostreva said. She said she would let the family decide whether Slivinski’s picture would appear. Besides his father, he is survived by his wife, Carla; his mother, Gerry; and a sister, Jennifer Wysocki. A viewing will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and 8 to 9:30 a.m. Wednesday at Burns Funeral Home, 9708 Frankford Ave. The funeral will begin at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at St. Timothy’s Church. Burial will be in Westminster Cemetery. Memorial donations may be made to the Local 22 Firefighters Widow Fund, 415 N. Fifth St., Philadelphia 19123. Contact staff writer Joseph Tanfani at 215-854-2684 or jtanfani@phillynews.com. Inquirer staff writer Joelle Farrell contributed to this article.

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Waiting for a bus outside the Sands Casino Resort in Bethlehem, Pa. Tom Gralish blogs weekly about his work at www.philly.com/philly/blogs/inq-on-the-road/

PHA has to put dream home on hold amid controversies PHA from B1 official, said the millions earmarked for headquarters would stay in the bank for the time being. PHA’s senior management works out of leased space at 12 S. 23d St., and “the impetus for getting out of here is a strong one,” Kelly said in an interview. “But frankly, the timing is such that I don’t see the idea of moving our administrative office while the agency is in recovery as a good one.” Overall, the pace of development will slow this year for PHA, Kelly said. Coming off a gangbuster year, fueled by an extra $127 million in federal stimulus funding, PHA plans to spend $62 million on capital projects and new development in the fiscal year that will start Friday, Kelly said. The biggest project on the books — at $31 million — is replacing the Queen Lane high-rise with 55 residential units. Kelly said PHA still planned to participate in a joint project to build a community center as part of the Lucien E. Blackwell development in West Philadelphia, but not in the year ahead, as previously thought. Other projects on indefinite hold include PHA’s involvement in building a charter school and dormitory in West Philadelphia. “That’s not on our radar screen right now,” Kelly said. He said he remained committed to building a headquarters in Center City. But if PHA resumes work on the project, he promised to work more closely with preservationists and neighborhood groups on the design. PHA, Kelly added, “will make sure their voices are heard in the process.” Gallery finds this new tone at PHA refreshing. He met Kelly and the PHA staff in January, along with representatives of the Center City Residents’ Association, Philadelphia Historical Commission,

JENNIFER LIN / Staff

John Gallery of the Preservation Alliance of Greater Philadelphia discusses the national historical district that includes the Philadelphia Housing Authority building behind him at 2012 Chestnut. and National Trust for Historic Preservation. Kelly, Gallery said, “conveyed a very different attitude and feeling about the situation than we got from PHA before that.” The pugnacious Greene had built a reputation in the city as a developer who fought to get what he wanted. The original plan, introduced in 2009, called for PHA to raze its vacant, four-

News in Brief Assailant shoots 2 inside car in Strawberry Mansion

A man was shot in the neck and his passenger was wounded as they sat in a car near Susquehanna Avenue and Natrona Street in the city’s Strawberry Mansion neighborhood about 7 a.m. Sunday, police said. The man, 28, drove from the scene to York Street and Ridge Avenue, where he and the woman were found, police said. He was taken to Temple University Hospital and the woman to St. Joseph’s Hospital. Both were in stable condition. Neither was immediately identified. No arrests had been made late Sunday, police said. — Mark Fazlollah

story brick office building, built in 1927. The agency wanted to build a five-story replacement structure, incorporating an adjacent vacant lot. The design featured long, black windows; private indoor parking for a dozen cars; a rooftop terrace; and a $372,000 green roof. Listed on the National Register, the Center City West Commercial Historic District stretches roughly from 15th to 21st Street and from Walnut to Chestnut. Many of the surrounding buildings are two- to four-story rowhouses with shop fronts. Gallery said the streetscape reflected the evolution of commerce in Philadelphia, with a mix of everything from Victo-

rian to art deco buildings. Since PHA receives federal funding, it cannot demolish a building in a historic district without including interested parties like the Preservation Alliance in the review process. When that process began last summer, Gallery was girding for a “difficult” tug-ofwar with Greene and PHA. He said he was “delighted” by Kelly’s approach. “When you’re in a historic district, you need to find a balance and respect the character of the district,” Gallery said. “That’s what we’re trying to get to.” Contact staff writer Jennifer Lin at 215-854-5659 or jlin@phillynews.com.

Man who fell off boat in Barnegat Bay still missing

BARNEGAT LIGHT, N.J. — Rescue crews on Sunday resumed the search for a man who fell off a speedboat in Barnegat Bay. The man, 25, was one of four people aboard the 23-foot boat when it hit a wake in the Tices Shoal section around 6 p.m. Saturday, authorities said. The man, who wasn’t wearing a life jacket, and another passenger with him in the back were tossed into the water. The boat’s driver soon pulled the other passenger from the water, but the missing man never resurfaced. Crews from the Coast Guard, state police, and other agencies suspended their search Saturday due to darkness. They resumed it shortly after dawn Sunday. — AP

This is an artist’s depiction of the new headquarters that had been planned for the Chestnut Street site.


Monday, June 27, 2011

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Christie says he’s leadership model

al TV interviewers ask the governor. He replied that although he has too strong of a personality to be vice presiBy Matt Katz INQUIRER TRENTON BUREAU dent — a Gov. Christie nationalized would-be presihis victory on pensions and dent would health benefits on NBC’s “have to be seMeet the Press on Sunday, saydated” to pick ing President Obama’s Washhim — he is ington should model itself on otherwise easyChristie’s New Jersey. going. Christie portrayed himself “I’m huggaas an active leader directly ble and lovinvolved in putting together able, David. the historic legislation, which I’m not abrathe New Jersey Assembly sive at all. You gave final approval last week. know what peoChristie said Obama needed ple are tired of to deal directly with congresin politics? WILLIAM B. PLOWMAN / NBC News sional leaders, just as Chris- Gov. Christie on “Meet the Press.” He said he They’re tired tie sat with Democratic legis- had to sell his legislative proposals himself. of blow-dried, lative leaders to hammer out tested answers an agreement that forces pubthat are given lic workers to pay more for riage. by political consultants to polpensions and health benefits. He did say, however, that iticians, and everybody The antiabortion, antigay- he would not sign a bill allow- sounds the same: Erh-erh-erh. marriage governor dodged a ing gay marriage. He said I don’t sound the same.” more specific question on New Jersey would “continue Christie said that despite whether he would sign a Re- to pursue civil unions.” his style, he and the New Jerpublican abortion pledge, and NBC’s David Gregory asked sey Democrats “didn’t demaanother question on whether whether Christie was “too gogue each other” on the benthe federal government abrasive,” perhaps the most efits bill, which allowed for should ban same-sex mar- common question that nation- compromise. Christie also

Votes set on N.J. transparency bill By Bruce Shipkowski ASSOCIATED PRESS

TRENTON — A measure that would require New Jersey’s government-related authorities, commissions, and other agencies to have an online presence will go before both houses of the Legislature this week. The bill would require the agencies to put certain information online — including financial data and meeting minutes — to provide more transparency about their mission, spending, and activities. It would implement changes recommended by the state comptroller, whose office issued a report that found more than one-third of New Jersey’s independent local authorities and commissions did not have websites. And only 3 percent of them post financial reports online. Of those that do offer information online, many omit basic details such as financial reports, schedules, agendas, and meeting minutes. The Senate will consider

the bill Monday, and the Assembly will likely vote Wednesday. “All too often it’s all but impossible to find out where and when [these authorities] meet, who serves on the boards, and even information as simple as phone numbers and basic budget information,” said Sen. Jennifer Beck (R., Monmouth), who is sponsoring the measure with Senate Majority Leader Barbara Buono (D., Middlesex). “It’s time that the local and regional authorities within New Jersey step into the 21st century and make this information publicly available and easily accessible.” The Comptroller’s Office analyzed the level of online transparency of the state’s 587 independent local authorities and commissions, which together spend more than $5 billion of public money annually and have more than $5 billion in public debt. They also account for about 10,000 employees in the state pension system.

Only seven agencies satisfied all the transparency measures the office used to test how well they keep the public informed. Some officials said the report did not take into account the costs of designing, staffing, and updating websites, noting that many volunteer agencies struggle to cover basic operational costs. But proponents say taxpayers deserve easy access to basic information about these entities. “Taxpayers deserve better. Open and transparent government is always the best approach, and that’s what this bill will accomplish,” said Assemblyman Dan Benson, who is sponsoring the measure in that chamber with Assemblyman Wayne DeAngelo, a fellow Mercer County Democrat.

said he had been able to muscle the bill through because he had sold the plan himself at dozens of town-hall meetings. Obama, he said, needs to do the same sort of thing. “If you’re the executive, you’ve got to be the guy who’s out there pushing and leading. You can’t lay back and wait for somebody else to do it. And I think if the president has made a mistake here, it’s this laidback kind of approach where he’s waiting for someone else to solve the problem. “Some people say it’s a political strategy. No matter what it is, it’s not effective in solving problems. What we did in New Jersey proves that’s the effective way to do it. The executive needs to lead and then bring people to the table to forge compromise.” Contact staff writer Matt Katz at 609-217-8355, mkatz@phillynews.com, or @mattkatz00 on Twitter. Read his blog, “Christie Chronicles,” at philly.com/christiechronicles

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Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Commentary By Daniel Rubin

Couple denied a chance to argue for citizenship IMMIGRATION from B1 table — you can do that with a taxpayer ID number. But one last element made their case most compelling: Their deportation would result in unusual hardship to their youngest daughter, who choked 18 months ago while eating, leaving her with permanent brain damage. The 3-year-old, Cindy Borges-De Jesus, no longer speaks or walks. She is totally dependent on those who care for her — her parents and the nurses who spend 16 hours a day with her. Because she was born here, Cindy is a U.S. citizen. And taxpayers are picking up the cost of her care. Her parents say they wanted to come clean so they could end a decade of limbo and be better able to support her. In the last three years, Piver had taken 10 clients to ICE for processing, and in half of those cases a judge granted permanent residency. Piver considered the Brazilians “the poster children for cancellation of removal cases.” But it’s hard to get a hit if

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you can’t get up to bat. After about 90 minutes of conferring, ICE officials turned the couple away. According to Piver, the enforcement officer and his supervisors said the office had a policy not to open cases against people who were looking for relief in court. Piver isn’t sure there is such a policy. Maybe, he said, it’s that the law is applied inconsistently. Harold Ort, an ICE spokesman, said his agency had discretion whether to place people in removal proceedings. Decisions are made, he said, “on a case-by-case basis, as appropriate.” Borges, 28, and De Jesus, 34, were looking for opportunity when they decided to move to the United States. She had just finished high school in 2000, and overstayed her tourist visa. He owned a small clothing factory, and walked across the border from Mexico, ultimately joining an uncle in Philadelphia. Within a week he was cleaning houses. Within a year he

was working construction. She studied English, then worked as a domestic until having the first of their children seven years ago. De Jesus said permanent residency would allow him to earn a Pennsylvania driver’s license and find a better-paying job. Borges wants to be able to go to college and study occupational therapy so she can help her daughter. She said she had nearly broken under the emotional weight of caring for a severely disabled child without the support of her parents, whom she hasn’t seen in a decade. “God help me,” she said. “I have to be strong to take care of my house, my husband, and my kids.” Seems to me ICE shouldn’t get to make this call. If the law allows for consideration in special cases, these people should have their day in court — at least for the sake of their daughter. Contact Daniel Rubin at 215-854-5917 or drubin@phillynews.com.

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Monday, June 27, 2011

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Children meditate to control anxieties

B

B5

. . . T E G O T W O H

MEDITATION from B1 ing attention on purpose in the present moment without judgment,” said Gallagher, who has trained at the Mindfulness Institute at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. Meditative exercises such as deep breathing help practitioners pay attention to the reactions of the body and mind in stressful moments, said Don McCown, a faculty member at the Mindfulness Institute. Once those reactions are recognized, the person can work toward controlling them. Meditation also can help youngsters control their anxiety enough to reduce any medications they are taking, said Christina DiNicola, a pediatrician with the Myrna Brind Center of Integrative Medicine at Jefferson. Early studies show promising results in youngsters with attention-deficit disorders who use yoga and biofeedback to relax, DiNicola said. Allison incorporated a few yoga practices last year in the summer program, which the

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to eighth graders at the Benjamin Franklin Freshman Academy. district operates with the Delaware Valley Children’s Center, an organization in Wrightstown that provides mental-health services. This year, Allison invited Gallagher, a therapist at the Delaware County Intermediate Unit, to lead a 30-minute session on meditation. At the school, Gallagher talked with students in three classes — first and second graders, third and fourth, and fifth to eighth. Students ran quickly throughout the room, and then in slow motion in exercises designed to get them to notice differences in their body when moving quickly and moving slowly. Gallagher clinked a meditation bell to signal when to stop and go. He taught them about breathing deeply while stand-

ing up and while sitting down with their hands on their belly. He taught them to focus on sounds in their surroundings. “How do you feel?” Gallagher asked the class of older students. “My body feels more calm,” said Zachary Ford, 10. “My face feels like it loosened up.” In the class of third and fourth graders, Christine Smeltzer, 8, said her body felt like she wanted to take a nap. Christine said she might use the techniques outside the classroom during times when she’s frustrated. That means when “kids are telling me what to do or bullying my friends,” she said. The breathing would help her feel “calm.” Contact staff writer Kristin E. Holmes at 610-313-8211 or kholmes@phillynews.com.

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www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Homes’ child injuries detailed

After Pennsylvania acted, incidents in residential care declined slightly — but so did head counts. the Department of Public Welfare began a program in 2006 to reduce the restraining of children by staff members. The newspaper said that injuries reported to the state had declined 7 percent from 2008 to 2010 — but that the number of juveniles in residential programs also had decreased during the same period. “Nobody goes out and wants to hurt kids. I believe that in my heart,” Angela Logan, the welfare department’s policy director, told the newspaper in an article published Sunday. She said the 2006 initiatives had marked “a perfect time for the providers and the state to get together — and the family members — to learn from one another.” Still, a review of the incident reports since 2005 showed that some children had been restrained for behavior such as “aggressive

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH — The number of children injured in Pennsylvania’s 767 licensed residential programs is decreasing, but hundreds of children were still hurt in such facilities in the last six years, a newspaper found. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reviewed 361 reports that detail 264 injuries to children from January 2005 through December 2010 at residential facilities that house abused or neglected children, as well as those placed by courts for delinquency or other issues. The injuries included 21 fractured or broken bones and 18 cuts that required stitches, and, according to the newspaper, most were caused by staff members who restrained the children for misbehavior or other reasons. To prevent such injuries,

posturing” even though state bulletins say such restraints are supposed to be used only as “an emergency measure of last resort.” The newspaper said its review and interviews with officials, parents, youths, and staff at some residential facilities showed that efforts to reduce restraint-related and other safety problems had been complicated by practical considerations, the entrenched habits of the staff at some facilities, and financial issues encountered by the publicly funded facilities. Cynthia Allen has pushed for changes since her son, Giovanni Aletriz, 16, died when staff put him in a hold that kept him facedown until he lost consciousness at Summit Quest Academy in Ephrata, Lancaster County, in February 2006. The 6-foot-1, 250-pound teen had enrolled in the residential facility after he was arrested and received a diagnosis of bipolar disorder while on juvenile probation.

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Join us at Thanks Giving In July! The event will feature celebrity chef cooking demos and help us celebrate the launch of Philadelphia’s new online food destination, philly.com/food. Come and get a taste of these great chefs: • Aaron McCargo, Jr., Food Network personality • Kevin Sbraga, Top Chef winner • Jack McDavid, owner, Down Home Diner • Jennifer Carroll, Top Chef contestant and Chef de Cuisine at 10 Arts Philabundance will be accepting food donations. Demonstrations are FREE; $5 charitable donation for each chef tasting.

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AGLOW

GLADYS ( nee Pressman) June 24, 2011. Wife of Jack. Mother of Mitchell Aglow (Marianne), Susan Cuttance (Christopher) and Lori Jacobson (Howard); also survived by 7 grandchildren and 2 great grandchildren. Relatives and friends are invited to Memorial Services Wednesday 1:00 P.M. GOLDSTEINS’ precisely ROSENBERG’S RAPHAEL SACKS, 6410 N. Broad St. Shiva will be observed at the Jacobson residence. Contributions in her memory may be made to your favorite charity. www.goldsteinsfuneral.com

ATTANASIO

MARY LOU (nee Mongelluzzo), on June 23, 2011, of Margate. Loving wife of Ed Attanasio. Devoted mother of Angel (Kevin) Packard and Luisa (Daniel) Robbins and daughter of the late Honorable Lewis and Rose Mongelluzzo. Relatives and friends are invited to her Viewing Wed., 10 to 10:45 A.M., at the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, Jerome and Ventnor Ave., Margate NJ. Funeral Mass, 11 A.M. Interment SS. Peter and Paul Cemetery at a later date. In lieu of flowers, contributions in Mary Lou’s name to Lupus Foundation of America Inc., 2000 ’L’ St. NW, Ste 710, Washington DC 20036. Condolences can be made at www.danjolell.com Arr. by D’ANJOLELL-STIGALE MEMORIAL HOME, Aston PA.

BEARDSLEY

RICHARD S. "RICK", age 52, passed away on June 24, 2011. An educator of Broadcast Journalism at Temple University for 26 years. Beloved son of the late Harold R. Beardsley, MD and the late Alma M. Beardsley. Loving brother of Harold R., III (Michelle), Donald J. (Becky), David J. (Sheila), Susan M. Seckinger, Jacqueline A. Peterson (Jim), the late Joanne E. "Jodi" Mallon (Michael), Patricia M. Beardsley (Brett Martin) and Cynthia E. Short (the late Michael). Also survived by his cherished nieces, nephews and many dear friends. Relatives and friends are invited to a Celebration of Rick’s life 1 P.M. Wednesday, June 29, 2011, Spring Mill Manor, 171 Jacksonville Road, Ivyland PA 18974. Interment will be private. Please omit flowers. Donations in his memory to standup2cancer.org would be appreciated. Campbell and Thomas Funeral Home To express condolences www.campbellfh.com

CASPER

FLORENCE B. (nee A b r a m c z y k ), of Washington Twp.; formerly of Philadelphia; peacefully passed away on June 25, 2011. Floss is the beloved wife of the late Walter P. Casper, Jr; loving mother of Walter P. (Christine) Casper, III, Raymond A. (Jane) Casper and Charlotte (the late John) Candelori; dear sister of Lillian Chociay, Dorothy (Bob) Gardner, Jessie Gabriel, Bernice Moshinski; loving grandmother of 9; great grandmother of 12; sister in law of Naomi Casper & Helen Abramczyk and sister of the late Edward, Josephine Pokropski Alfreda Monaghan, Theodore, Walter Jr, Raymond and Charles Abramczyk; Relatives and friends are invited to attend Floss’ Viewing Wednesday evening 6:30 to 9 P.M. and Thursday morning after 8:30 A.M. in the McGUINNESS FUNERAL HOME, 573 Egg Harbor Road, Washington Twp. Funeral Mass Thursday 10 A.M. in SS. Peter & Paul R. C. Church, Ganttown, Road, Washington Twp. Entombment New Saint Mary’s Cemetery, Bellmawr. Tributes and memories may be shared at www.mcgfuneral.com

CLAY

CHARLES T. on June 24, 2011, age 68, of Upper Darby, PA. Beloved husband of Andrea M. Clay; loving father of Karen (Greg Basile) and Bryan (Ayse) Clay; grandfather of Becca and Noah; brother of Sandy(Robert) Bauer. Friends may visit the family Wednesday 12 Noon-1:00 P.M. at THE DONOHUE FUNERAL HOME, 8401 WEST CHESTER PIKE (cor. LYNN BLVD.), UPPER DARBY PA, 610-4490300. followed by his memorial service 1:00 P.M. at the funeral home. Interment private. In lieu of other expressions of sympathy, memorials in Mr. Clay’s name may be made to Penn Wissahickon Hospice, 150 Monument Rd., Suite 300, Bala Cynwyd, PA. 19004. Online condolences at: www.donohuefuneralhome.com

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COOPER

PATRICIA J. (nee Scully), on Thursday June 23, 2011, age 61, of Plymouth Meeting, PA. Beloved wife of the late John F. Cooper, III. Mother of Melissa (Todd) Yates. Sister of David M. Scully, Rosemary Mascaro, and Kathleen (Richard) Folino. Grandmother of Bailey Yates. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the Memorial Mass on Thursday, June 30, 2011 at 10:30 A.M. at Epiphany of Our Lord RC Church, 3050 Walton and Townshipline Road, Plymouth Meeting. Friends may call on Wednesday Evening from 7 to 9 P.M. at the MOORE & SNEAR FUNERAL HOME, 19 E. Germantown Pike, E. Norriton PA and Thursday Morning from 10 to 10:30 A.M. at the Church. Interment Valley Forge Gardens, King of Prusssia, PA. Memorial contributions may be made in her memory to the American Lung Association, 527 Plymouth Road, Suite 403, Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462.

HAUGHEY

THERESE M., 82, of Holy Family Home, on June 24, 2011. Daughter of the late Patrick and Eleanor (nee Boyle) Haughey; sister of James, John, S.J., Kathleen, SND, Isabel, OSF, Eileen Harrington (John) and Daniel Houghey; she is also survived by many nieces, nephews and cousins. Memorial Mass will be 11 A.M. Wed from Holy Family Home, 5300 Chester Ave., Philadelphia 19143 where friends may call after 10 A.M. Contributions in her memory to Holy Family Home would be preferred. (TOPPITZER FUNERAL HOME )

HOWELL

WALTER L. June 21, 2011 after a lengthy illness. Survived by 3 children Cynthia, Gaynita and Derrick; one sister Muriel; one brother-in-law Sam Ancrum; 2 grandchildren; 2 great grandchildren; other relatives and friends. Service Wednesday June 29th, Our Lady of Hope Catholic Church, 5200 Broad St., 10:30 A.M. Mass. Viewing 9:30 PAULINE D. (nee Doto), June A.M. Interment Holy Sepulchre 25, 2011 of Ft. Washington. Cem., Glenside, PA. Arr. by FOUNTAIN F.H. Beloved wife of Edward T. Devoted mother of Myles and Elizabeth Diamond (Patrick Grady). Loving sister of Dr. Joseph Doto (Paula) and Diane Bieri (Robert). Aunt of Jeffrey, MARC A., 56, of Lansdale, Jessica, Kaite, Laura and John. formerly of Orlando, FL, died Relatives and friends are June 25, 2011. He is survived invited to the Viewing on by his wife, Karen E. (O’Neill) He was a kind, Wednesday 9 to 10:15 A.M. at Hudgeons. Queen of Peace Church, 820 unselfish, and loving husband Marc was a North Hills Ave., Ardsley, and father. followed by Funeral Mass at successful businessman and a 10:30 A.M. Interment Private. true entrepreneur. Most of all, In lieu of flowers, he loved life and making people remembrances may be made to laugh. In addition to his wife, the Abramson Cancer Center Marc is survived by three Development Office, 3535 children, Hillary R., Hayley B., Market St., Ste. 750, Phila., PA and Jake A. Hudgeons; and a Tom Hudgeons 19104. (Checks made to brother, "Trustees of University of PA"). (Denise). The Funeral Service is 5 P.M. Wednesday, June 29th JOS. J. McGOLDRICK F.H. at the BranchCreek Community Church, 100 S. Main St., Harleysville, PA 19438; friends may call at the Church at 3 P.M. MARGARET M. (nee Donovan) until the time of the Service. In on June 25, 2011. Beloved wife lieu of flowers, donations may of the late Joseph W. P.F.D. be made in Marc’s memory to Loving mother of Joseph W., Jr. the Jake Hudgeons Education (Eileen) of IL, Daniel J. (Linda) Fund, TD Bank, 290 Forty Foot of NJ, Michael T. of Phila. Also Rd., Lansdale, PA 19446, survived by 11 grandchildren Account # 4763486391. and 11 great grandchildren. HUFF & LAKJER FUNERAL Dear sister of Sara Mueller. HOME, 701 Derstine Ave., Lansdale Relatives and friends are invited to attend her Viewing and Funeral on Wednesday 8:30 A.M. from THE EDWARD J. PETNER FUNERAL HOME ROSLYN (nee Wiesen), June 26, (Family Owned and Operated), 2011. Wife of the late Stanley, 6421 Frankford Ave. at Levick mother of Carole (Philip) Scher St. followed by her Mass of and Alan (Rosalind) Kaufman, Christian Burial 10 A.M. St. sister of Lila Katz; also Leo’s Church. Int. Our Lady of survived by 4 grandchildren Grace Cemetery. In lieu of and 9 great grandchildren. flowers, donations made in her Relatives and friends are memory to Shriner’s Hospital, invited to Graveside Services 3551 N. Broad St., Phila., PA Wednesday 10 A.M. precisely at 19140 would be preferred by the Shalom Memorial Park her family. (Sec. Gabriel), Pine and Byberry Roads. Family will return Wed. only to the residence of Carole and Philip Scher. Contributions in her memory may be made to a charity of the donor’s choice. www.goldsteinsfuneral.com

DIAMOND

HUDGEONS

EDWARDS

KAUFMAN

FISH

KELLER MARIE A. (nee Trifiro) age 74 passed away Saturday June 25, 2011 at Treasure Coast Hospice, Ft. Pierce, FL. Born in Philadelphia, PA. Daughter of the late Sebastian and Josephine Trifiro. She was a resident of Richboro, PA prior to moving to Ft. Pierce, FL., 20 years ago. She was a very caring, and loving wife, mother, and grandmother who will be sadly missed by all whose lives she touched. Beloved wife of the late Russell E. Fish. She is survived by her 2 sons, Michael A. Fish and his wife Lorna of Richboro, and John R. Fish and his wife Patricia of Ft. Lauderdale, FL. Her sisters Cecilia Donahue and companion Harry A. Quinn of Philadelphia, Joanna Bockman of Southampton, her brother Sebastian of Philadelphia. Her 2 grandchildren Danielle and Jared of Richboro, and many nieces and nephews. Also survived by her companion, Joseph Nunnez of Ft. Pierce, FL. Funeral services will be held Wednesday June 29, 2011 from 11:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. at the HAISLEY FUNERAL & CREMATION HOME. Mass at 1 P.M. Wednesday June 29, 2011 at St. Marks Catholic Church. Int. at Riverview Memorial Park, Ft. Pierce FL. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Treasure Coast Hospice, 1201 SE Indian St. Stuart, FL. 34997.

GEHAN

THOMAS P., June 23, 2011, beloved husband of the late Dorothy, devoted father of Thomas, Dennis and his wife Pam, also survived by 5 grandchildren and one great granddaughter. Relatives and friends are invited to his Viewing Wednesday 9AM BURNS FUNERAL HOME, 1428 E. Columbia Ave. (at Fkd. Ave.) followed by his service of Christian Burial 10AM. Interment Hillside Cemetery.

JOSEPH J. of Philadelphia on June 24th, 2011. Age 80. Relatives and friends are invited to his Graveside Service Friday, July 1st at 10:00 A.M. in George Washington Memorial Park, 80 Stenton Ave. Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462. www.kirkandniceinc.com

O’NEIL

EDWARD “JON” on June 24, 2011, age 78, of Haddonfield, NJ, beloved husband of the late Dolores (nee Balara). Loving father of Marti Gustafson (Chris) of Haddonfield and Lindsay Hamilton (Brian) of Oreland, PA. Also survived by 5 grandchildren, Ellen, Jack and Owen Gustafson and Lucas and Gavin Hamilton and his brother, Frank O’Neil (Barbara). Mr. O’Neil was a US Marine Corp Veteran who served in the Korean War. His family will receive friends on Wednesday, June 29, 2011 from 10-10:45 AM at Christ the King R.C. Church, 200 Windsor Ave., Haddonfield, NJ, Funeral Mass will follow at 11AM.Interment New St. Mary’s Cem., Bellmawr, NJ. Arr. By: KAIN-MURPHY FUNERAL SERVICES, Haddonfield N.J.

PAUPST

WILLIAM JOHN, SR. "MOUNTAIN BILL" of Phila. PA, on June 25, 2011, suddenly after a motorcycle accident. Husband of Rowena (nee Wolfe) (he has been my sunshine for 26 years). Father of William J., Jr. (Rachel). Brother of Joe (Debbie), Jeff (Nancy), Wendy (Jim) and the late Wayne (Carol). Grandfather (Pappy) of Liam, Owen, Cassie and Abby. Uncle of Tammi, Kyle, Kevin, Johanna, David and Joey. Also survived by his dogs, Sofie, Lily, Widget and Sadie, cats Woody, Cubby and Lucy and many extended family members. Family will receive friends Wed. 6 to 8 P.M. at THE JAMES J. McGHEE FUNERAL HOME, 2nd St. Pike and Belmont Ave., Southampton, PA. Int. private. Donations may be made to SPCA, 350 East Erie Avenue, Philadelphia PA 19134. Further information is available at www.mcgheefuneralhome.com

NEIMAN

DOROTHY E. (nee Toogood) suddenly on June 25, 2011 of Holland, PA. Beloved wife of the late Robert F. Neiman who passed away in 2006 from complications of Alzheimer’s Disease and loving mother of the late Robert W. Neiman. She is survived by her loving children Dorothy Neiman, Richard Neiman, and Eileen Cain. She is also survived by 3 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren. Dorothy’s family will receive condolences on Wednesday from 10 A.M. until her Funeral Service at 11A.M. from the JOSEPH A. FLUEHR III FUNERAL HOME 800 Newtown-Richboro Rd. (at Holland Rd.) Richboro, PA 18954. Int. will follow at Union Cemetery, Richboro. In lieu of flowers contributions in her memory that will honor her late Husband may be made to Alzheimer’s Disease & Related Disorders, 100 N. 17th St., 2nd Floor, Phila., PA 19103. www.fluehr.com

REISBORD

ANNE (nee Lowenthal), died peacefully at home on June 17, 2011, at 102 years. Predeceased by her beloved husband of 72 years, Alex Reisbord. Survived by her daughters, Susan Reisbord and Joan Green and son-in-law Robert Brown; 4 grandchildren; 7 step grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren, as well as many devoted nephews, nieces and their offspring. A Memorial Service for family and friends is planned for July. Anne was a sculptor and a poet and was one of five centenarians profiled in a short film commissioned by the Mayor’s Office, which can be seen at: http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=DI a9x66DlAs. Memorial donations may be made to the Library for the Blind, 919 Walnut St., Phila. PA 19107-5289.

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OBITUARY

SHINDER

NAOMI (nee Snyder) June 26, 2011. Wife of the late Paul. Beloved mother of Joyce (David) Rosner and the late Elliott Shinder. Loving grandmother of Perri and Drew Rosner. Relatives and friends are invited to Graveside Services Tuesday 11 A.M. precisely at Shalom Memorial Park (Section Macabees) Shiva will be observed at the residence of Joyce and David Rosner Tuesday and Wednesday. Contributions in her memory may be made to Abramson Center Hospice, 1425 Horsham Rd, North Wales, PA 19454 or the Oral Cancer Foundation, 3419 Via Lide 205, Newport Beach, CA 92663. www.goldsteinsfuneral.com

PALMER

JOHN CLETUS "UNCLE JOHN" age 75, on June 22, 2011. Beloved husband of 55 years to Elizabeth (Aunt Betty) Nagle Palmer, son of Eleanor Dwyer Palmer, devoted father to Mary (Ken) Rhoades, Cathy McDevitt, Adele Palmer Rivera (deceased), loving grandfather of Michael (Lisa), Angela (Dan), Mary (Jim), Adele, Tammy (Derik), Kenny (Jean), Karen and Arthur, preceded in death by his granddaughters Adriana and Pamela, devoted greatgrandfather to Jacob, Adelle, Lela, Danny, Adrianna, Ryann, Jack, Ellie, James, Matthew, Shane, Cole and predeceased by great grandson Chase. Survived by siblings Betty (Jim) Roberts, predeceased by his sister Patricia and brother Cletus; also survived by Caroline (Andy) McGraw, John Nagle, Fred (Stephanie) Nagle, Fred (Stephanie) Nagle, Doris (Andy) Gonzaga, Arlene Nagle, Robert (Judith) Nagle and George Nagle (deceased). John loved being with his family, reading, sports, crossword puzzles and spending time with friends at the Lutheran Settlement House Senior Citizen Center. Funeral Mass will be held at 10 A.M. in St. Michael RC Church, 1445 N. 2nd St. on Wednesday June 29, 2011, where visitation will begin 8:30 A.M. Interment at the New Cathedral Cemetery. In lieu of flowers donations can be sent in his memory to Lutheran Settlement House Senior Citizen Center, 1340 Frankford Ave., Phila. PA 19125. ( McELVARR)

C

SLIVINSKI JOHN

A. JR., "JACKIE". Suddenly June 25, 2011, beloved husband of Carla (nee Kim), loving son of Jack Sr. and Gerry (nee C r o m l e y ) , dear brother of Jennifer Wysocki and her husband Mike, brother-in-law of Robert Kim and his wife Lara, godfather of Nina and Charlie; also survived by his aunts and uncles: Annie and Felix, Sean and Cathy, Harriet, Raymond, Margie and Mike and m a n y cousins. Relatives, friends and members of the Philadelphia Fire Dept. are invited to his Viewing Tuesday Evening 6 to 9 P.M. and also Wednesday 8 A.M. to 9:30 A.M. B U R N S FUNERAL HOME, 9708 Frankford Ave. (So. of Grant Ave.) followed by his Funeral Mass 10:30 A.M. St. Timothy Church. Interment Westminster Cemetery. In lieu of flowers contributions to Local 22 Firefighters Widow Fund, 415 N. 5th St., Phila, PA 19123 in his memory would be appreciated. www.burnsfuneralhome.com

THOMPSON

KATHRYN ’’ANN’’ on June 23, 2011 of Broomall, PA. Loving wife of James K. Thompson; beloved mother of James K. Jr. (Toni) and Bruce A. Thompson; grandmother of Beckey J., James K. III, Bruce A. Jr. and Carly E. Thompson; sister of Evelyn Smith. Services and Interment private. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the charity of choice. Arrs. FRANK C. VIDEON , Broomall

THORSTENSEN

MAFALDA ROSE, age 83 of Cherry Hill on June 24, 2011. Beloved wife of the late Roy F. Devoted mother of Shelley Marie Thorstensen (Dale Baggerley) of Oxford, PA., Roy Martin (Mary) Thorstensen of Vineland and Brad Peter (Sylvie) Thorstensen of Haddon Twp. Loving grandmother of Graham, James, Eric, Martin, Gracellen Rose, Emilie and Roy Bernard. Mafalda was an assistant to the president of Pennsylvannia College of Podiatric Medicine. Relatives and friends are invited to attend her Memorial Mass Wednesday 10:30 A.M. at Christ Our Light RC Church, 401 N. Kings Hwy. Cherry Hill where the family will receive friends 9:30-10:30 A.M. Interment Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington VA at a date to be determined. Arrangements by MURRAY-PARADEE FUNERAL HOME of Cherry Hill.

WEBER

ELMER W., of Springhouse Estates and formerly of West Oak Lane, June 24, 2010. He was the son of the late Elmer W. Weber, Sr. and Elizabeth C. (nee Shee). Relatives, friends and employees of Philco-Ford are invited to Graveside Services, Wed. 9:30 A.M. at West Laurel Hill Cemetery, Bala Cynwyd, PA BISHOP F. H.

Express Condolences. See the Death Notices at Philly.com

Gertrude Fuchs, 99, activist and nurse By Sally A. Downey

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Gertrude Fuchs, 99, a Quaker activist and nurse, died Sunday, May 29, at Stapeley, a retirement residence in Germantown. Born in Hagen, Germany, Ms. Fuchs witnessed the devastation of World War I and the bombing of her family’s home. After the war, she had her first encounter with Quakers, who came from England and the United States to distribute food. As a teenager, she was an au pair to a family in France. She then attended Gertrude a commercial Fuchs college in Germany for two years. In 1931, she took a position as a nanny in England and studied nursing in Birmingham, becoming a nurse midwife. She told friends that she had intended to spend the rest of her life in England. In 1939, Ms. Fuchs returned to Germany to visit her parents and to deliver, as promised, the baby of a friend. Germany invaded Poland later that year, sealing the borders, and she was unable to leave. During World War II, she was head nurse at a women’s hospital in Cologne, Germany. Allied bombing reduced the city to rubble, and she told the Mount Airy Times-Express in 1997 that after one raid, “in my garden I found an arm with a wristwatch still on it. You dealt with this kind of stuff every day.” The Nazis questioned Ms. Fuchs, then a Congregationalist with strong pacifist beliefs, about how she would defend the hospital if the Allies came. She told them, “ ‘I would defend it with a pitchfork,’ and somehow they accepted that.” After the war, Ms. Fuchs was a translator for the Allies. In 1947, she joined a Quaker relief group and became a Quaker. Fifty years later, she was featured in a film, Love Amid the Ruins, about the Quakers’ work in postwar Germany; those efforts were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. In 1954, Ms. Fuchs emigrated to the United States. She was briefly a private-duty nurse in Delaware, riding her bike to see patients. After earning a bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of Pennsylvania, she worked for the Visiting Nurse Association in Philadelphia. She retired in 1976. Ms. Fuchs was a volunteer docent for more than 20 years at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, visiting schools with kits of artifacts from the museum’s collection. For many years, she lived in apartments in homes on the grounds of Awbury Arboretum in Germantown, where she gardened and kept bees, giving jars of honey to her many friends. She enjoyed hiking and traveled widely in the United States and Europe. She returned often to Germany and on several trips bought a car, usually a Volkswagen, that she shipped to the United States. She continued to drive well into her 90s. Weeks before she died, she spoke to a friend, Hollister Knowlton, about what had influenced her life. Religion “helps us find purpose in life,” she said. “Reading good books to find out what to do; being among good people, too; and music is another thing that helps us find our way.” Ms. Fuchs is survived by a nephew, Hans MartinSchaefer. A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 1, at Chestnut Hill Friends Meeting, 100 E. Mermaid Lane. Ms. Fuchs was a longtime member of the meeting and took leadership roles in the stewardship of the physical plant and on the committee that oversaw pastoral care. Contact staff writer Sally A. Downey at 215-854-2913 or sdowney@phillynews.com.


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Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

OBITUARIES

The former advertising artist for The Inquirer painted this mural in the newspaper’s headquarters on North Broad Street.

James Heugh, 97, artist and illustrator By Sally A. Downey

cation Scholarship. After graduating in 1936, he studJames Heugh, 97, an artist ied in Europe on a Cresson and illustrator formerly of fellowship. Downingtown, died Sunday, In 1940, he married artist May 29, at Shawnee Gardens Frances Cowan, whom he had Healthcare & Rehabilitation met at a PAFA summer sesCenter in Shawnee, Kan. sion in Chester Springs. “He For most of his career, Mr. threw her into the pool,” said Heugh was a freetheir daughter, Nancy lance graphic artist Edmondson. and illustrator and During World War painted watercolors II, Mr. Heugh served for pleasure. in the Army in RichIn 1958, he won a mond, Va., designing gold medal at the Philgraphics and camouadelphia Art Directors flage. Club Show for an illusAfter retiring in tration of a speeding 1979 to Pinehurst, locomotive. His depic- James N.C., Mr. Heugh won tions of outer-space Heugh several prizes in reexploration were ingional exhibitions for cluded in a children’s his paintings and wildbook, What’s Going On in life sculptures. He was a dedicated gardener and enjoyed Space? In the 1960s and 1970s, Mr. golf and tennis. Mr. Heugh’s wife died in Heugh was an advertising artist for The Inquirer. He paint- 1999. He moved to the Mided a mural, depicting newspa- west in 2009 to be near his per production, in the com- daughter. posing room of the company’s In addition to her, he is surbuilding on North Broad vived by a son, J. Alan Heugh, and nieces and nephews. Street. A service will be scheduled. Mr. Heugh graduated from Frankford High School and attended the Pennsylvania Contact staff writer Sally A. Academy of the Fine Arts on Downey at 215-854-2913 or a Philadelphia Board of Edu- sdowney@phillynews.com. INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

IN THE NATION AND THE WORLD Christiane Noblecourt four years. Egyptologist, 97 Fred Steiner

Christiane Desroches Noblecourt, 97, a pioneering French Egyptologist who prodded Gen. Gamal Abdel Nasser to help salvage Nubia’s vaunted antiquities, died Thursday at a hospital in Epernay, east of Paris, where she had been taken after a recent stroke, said Anne Françoise, treasurer of a retirement home in the nearby town of Sezanne where Ms. Desroches Noblecourt lived the last few years. Born Nov. 17, 1913, in Paris, she developed a passion for Egypt after reading about the discovery of King Tut’s tomb in the early 1920s. She later studied at the Louvre and the Sorbonne. After an initial trip to Egypt in the late 1930s, she became the first woman to be put on a stipend with the Cairo-based French Institute of Oriental Archaeology — cracking a male-dominated world of Egyptology. After Egyptian officials began planning the Aswan High Dam on the Nile in 1954, Ms. Desroches Noblecourt met Nasser to air concerns that 32 ancient temples and chapels in southern Nubia were facing submersion. In an interview with Le Monde newspaper in 2007, she recalled how she told him to “let me handle it, I’ll go talk to UNESCO on your behalf,” and he “trusted me and let me do it.” Paris-based UNESCO — the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization — then helped mobilize nearly 50 countries for a vast project in the 1960s to dismantle, move, and reconstruct the antiquities — including massive statues of Pharaoh Ramses II at Abu Simbel, which were broken down into 1,000 pieces and rebuilt over

— AP

Music composer, 88

Television and film music composer Fred Steiner, 88, creator of the bold and gritty theme for the Perry Mason TV series and one of the composers of the Oscar-nominated score for The Color Purple, died of natural causes Thursday at his home in the town of Ajijic in the Mexican state of Jalisco, according to his daughter Wendy Waldman, a singer-songwriter. One of the busiest composers working in Hollywood in the 1950s and ’60s, Mr. Steiner also crafted music for Gunsmoke; The Twilight Zone; Star Trek; Have Gun, Will Travel; Rawhide; Hogan’s Heroes; and other TV series. He said he wanted to create music for Mason, writer Erle Stanley Gardner’s legal-eagle lawyer, that projected two key facets of his personality: suave sophistication and the underlying toughness that allowed him to go head-to-head with the criminals with whom he often came into contact. The piece he came up with, titled “Park Avenue Beat,” pulsed with the power of the big city and the swagger of a beefy hero played to perfection by actor Raymond Burr. Frederick Steiner was born Feb. 24, 1923, in New York City, the son of violinist, composer, and arranger George Steiner. He began playing the piano at 6 and took up the cello at 13. He received a scholarship to the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Ohio, where he studied with composer Normand Lockwood. His early jobs included composing, arranging, and conducting music for New York City-based radio shows in the 1940s. — Los Angeles Times

To Submit Obituaries The Inquirer welcomes obituary information from funeral directors, relatives and friends. Please submit information promptly. We want our obituaries to be timely. Recent photographs of publishable quality are desired.

To contact obituary writers ¢ For all obituaries: 215-854-2717 ¢ Fax: 215-854-2988

Photos with obituaries ¢ Delivery: 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. weekdays at the front desk, 400 N. Broad St., Philadelphia. ¢ E-mail: Contact the obituary writers at the above number.

Funeral announcements To submit a Paid Funeral Announcement, call 215-854-5800 or email Deathnotices@phillynews.com

JASON DeCESARE

Bible scholar Peter Enns gestures as he talks about notions of wisdom to a men’s group at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in

Whitemarsh. At the other end of the table is the Rev. Marek Zabriskie, who got the ball rolling on the yearlong Bible reading.

Surprises and conversation follow church’s Bible Challenge BIBLE from B1 gruesome and strange” that almost never make it into liturgies or homilies. Even so, many said they had been unprepared for what they had found. “By the time I got to Leviticus, I was as depressed as could be,” Neal Pratt, 72, recalled last week. Widowed in January, Pratt had supposed that reading the Bible would prove a comfort, “but there just seemed to be no kindness” as the Israelites hacked their way into the Promised Land. Even God was a shock. “I had the notion he was a kind person,” said Pratt, who was dismayed to find Yahweh repeatedly commanding the Israelites to exterminate whole tribes of enemies. “I never had a good idea of the contrast between the God of the Old and New Testament. They’re not the same person.” The group’s recommended version is the Oxford Annotated Bible: the New Revised Standard Version, found in most Episcopal churches. Some are curling up with their family Bibles, while oth-

ers are reading via apps loaded onto their iPads or Droids or Kindles or iPhones. One-year Bible readings are not unusual in evangelical churches, said Marshall Shelley, general editor of the Quest Study Bible and a vice president of Christianity Today magazine, but rarer in what he called “liberal” Protestant denominations such as the Episcopal Church. Shelley said he was not surprised to hear that members of St. Thomas’ Bible Challenge were quick to distance themselves from the violent figure of Yahweh. While most evangelicals are disturbed by the Bible’s violence and drunkenness and sex, he said, they typically read the Bible at a younger age than do Catholics and mainline Protestants. By adulthood, he said, evangelicals are typically less jarred by the disturbing passages and view the two testaments as a continuum that culminates in Jesus, whose message is that “violence and domination are not the ultimate solution.” Only two original members of the project have dropped

out, according to Zabriskie, who engages regularly with participants by e-mail at mzabriskie@stthomaswhitemarsh.org. The church has also created a Facebook site for the Bible Challenge at www.facebook.com/pages/St-ThomasWhitemarsh-Bible-Challenge/228202230533157 Much conversation has also taken place, as it did last week, on the grounds of the parish. Joining Zabriskie in leading those conversations has been Bible scholar Peter Enns, who was on hand Wednesday at a gathering of the church’s regular “Burgers, Beer, and Bible” men’s group, about a third of whose regulars are part of the Bible Challenge. Among them was Tim Russell, 69, who said he shared Pratt’s dismay at the “blood and gore” of the Old Testament, but also the worship of false gods by such heroes as Solomon and Aaron, brother of Moses. Russell said he took breaks from some of the Old Testament’s more difficult passages by turning to the Psalms and the New Testament, with

their “more relaxed view of the world.” Although a year’s completion time is the nominal goal, the pace and sequence of the readings is up to each person, said Zabriskie, rector at St. Thomas for 16 years. He encourages readers to “skip over the boring parts if it helps them stick with the goal,” and to mix Old and New Testaments, Psalms, and Proverbs with each reading. The project is so popular that the church will renew it next year. So many participants have voiced concern over the violence, Zabriskie said, that Enns will devote some of next year’s teaching to the God figures of the Old and New Testaments. “Rape, sexual abuse, genocide in Rwanda, ethnic cleansing in the Balkans — these are things we read about in the newspapers,” he said. “We shouldn’t be surprised to discover them in texts that are 3,000 years old.” Contact staff writer David O’Reilly at 215-854-5723 or doreilly@phillynews.com.

Play makes a point about rape essay PLAY from B1 But instead of writing a screed, she went for laughs. Within three days of seeing the essay, which Rottenberg wrote for his online arts publication, the Broad Street Review, Blouin had whipped up her retort, a 30-minute play titled Dan Rottenberg Is Thinking About Raping You. “I wanted to get everyone in a room where we all affirm for each other that what he said was silly,” she said of her play, which was performed for the first and probably only time Saturday night at Plays and Players Theatre on Delancey Street. The real Rottenberg is on vacation in France. He said in an interview Sunday that he regretted his comments about Logan. “I think it was insensitive of me to refer to that picture,” he said. “She went through a horrific ordeal, and she deserves tremendous sympathy.” But his main point remains relevant, he said. “I think it’s naive for people to place their entire faith in the law or moral codes,” he said, “and they should learn to take some precautions.” In an e-mail, Rottenberg

also said he hoped his essay would generate “dialogue about male sex abuse and women’s responses to it.” Rottenberg has been a figure in the Philadelphia cultural scene for decades. From 1978 to 1997, he wrote an oped column for The Inquirer. In the early 1970s, he said, he helped pressure Chicago’s four daily newspapers into “reforming their male chauvinist attitudes toward women,” including forcing them to stop segregating employment ads by gender. Rottenberg, 69, promises he will post a “full reply to all the critics on the Broad Street Review site by Tuesday evening.” Coincidentally, his daughter Julie Rottenberg wrote for Sex and the City, a TV show whose female characters were so sexually liberated that some viewers found them unsympathetic. In Broad Street Review, Rottenberg was responding to an article by SaraKay Smullens, a Philadelphia therapist, about the prevalence of sexual abuse. Smullens praised Logan for speaking up about the problem. Smullens has known Rottenberg for years, admiring his

Man killed, 3 girls hurt in shooting at park party A man was killed and three girls were wounded in a shooting about 10 p.m. Sunday at a party in Fairmount Park near 33d and Diamond Streets, police said. They said the man, in his 20s, was hit six times, including once in the forehead. He was taken to Temple University Hospital, where he was pronounced

dead. The girls, ages 6, 10 and 15, were in stable condition. Police said the 15-yearold was taken to St. Christopher Hospital for Children with a bullet wound to the leg. The younger two, both with facial injuries, were taken to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. — Mark Fazlollah

advocacy on some issues, but his recent stance stunned her, she said. “Dan has been a very fair editor when I have submitted work to him,” she said. “My primary concern about what he wrote is that it could promote the shame and blame of women, something I’ve spoken out against all my professional life.” She and about 80 others went to Plays and Players to see Blouin’s work, which benefited SlutWalk, a group that organizes marches to challenge the idea that it’s OK to blame victims of crimes. Blouin, 32, said fury had propelled her writing. “It was easy,” she said, because she lifted many ideas from his writing. “He wrote most of [the lines] himself.” The play had the character she called Rottenberg present his “Five-Point Plan for the Prevention of Sexual Assault” as if lecturing to a college class or an infomercial audience. The audience got the joke, laughing loudly and often. Actor Brendan Norton played the Rottenberg character as a scold and a creep who was also strangely endearing.

“My name is Dan Rottenberg,” the actor said. “I’m here to talk to you about an issue that can be really scary to talk about. That issue is female naivete.” The character then presented a series of educational scenes, including an explanation from a scientist (played by Lucas Nguyen) who used a drawing of a well-endowed man to explain that for men, the penis is the dominant organ. “Wow,” the Rottenberg character said. “Looking at this, it’s easy to understand why we have no choice but to put it in things and people.” Jennifer MacMillan played an audience member who popped up with questions like this: “You’re saying that a man needs to conquer an unwilling sex partner. But I thought my revealing attire meant that I want to be assaulted. How can I truly satisfy men if I’m not truly unwilling? I’m so confused!” “Don’t worry,” the Rottenberg character told her. “At the end of the day, it doesn't really matter what you want. It matters what men need.” Contact staff writer Miriam Hill at 215-854-5520 or hillmb@phillynews.com.


Monday, June 27, 2011

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Weather Report

Monday’s Forecast

After a comfortable weekend the heat and humidity return starting Monday. Temperatures will climb a bit in the afternoon but get even warmer Tuesday with higher humidity. There will be showers and thunderstorms moving through the area late Tuesday before temperatures drop slightly.

Monday

Tuesday

HIGH

HIGH

LOW

87 70

Scranton

LOW

HIGH

LOW

85 62

Showers and thunderstorms late

Sun/Moon

New York

Wednesday

88 69

Getting warmer

83/64

Sunny and nice

Sun rises 5:34 a.m., sets 8:34 p.m. Moon rises 2:24 a.m., sets 5:20 p.m.

Thursday

HIGH

85 67

86/66

85/66

Lancaster 87/68

Asbury Park 80/67

Philadelphia

Wilmington

New

Trenton

87/70

85/69

Vineland 87/65

Baltimore

Atlantic City 84/68

89/74

Water Temp

Dover

84/69

73

Cape May

Washington

81/69

89/72

Regional Forecast

Poconos Partly cloudy. High 81. Increasing

Marine Forecast

July 1

First

July 8

Full

July 15

Last

July 23

Air Quality

Bristol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Burlington . . . . . . . . . . . . Camden. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chester . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Norristown. . . . . . . . . . . . Philadelphia. . . . . . . . . . . Trenton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wilmington . . . . . . . . . . .

G46 G44 G45 G48 G41 G45 G40 G35

High Pollutant Sunday

PA PA PA PA OZ PA PA PA

Pollution Forecast Monday

M M M M M M M M

Manasquan to Cape Henlopen Partly cloudy. Wind northwest at around 5 knots. Visibility mainly unrestricted. Waves 2-3 feet.

Ozone forecast available daily at 1-800-872-7261 and at www.dvrpc.org.

Jersey Shore Partly cloudy. High 84. Increasing clouds Monday night. Low 68. Chance of scattered showers Tuesday. High 84.

Delaware Bay Partly cloudy. Wind northwest

Friday’s pollen, count and discomfort levels:

Delaware Partly cloudy. High 84. Becoming

Cape Henlopen to Virginia Beach Partly cloudy, chance of scattered storms. Wind north at 5 knots. Visibility reduced in occasional storms. Waves 2-3 feet.

clouds Monday night. Low 60. Chance of scattered showers Tuesday. High 80.

mostly cloudy Monday night. Low 69. Chance of scattered showers Tuesday. High 88.

at around 5 knots. Visibility mainly unrestricted. Waves 1 foot or less.

Tides Monday

In the Region

Grasses, 4.3, very low; weeds, 19.4, moderate; trees, 4.3, very low; mold spores, 10625.8, very high SOURCE: www.asthmacenter.com

Philadelphia Almanac

Readings taken through 4 p.m.

Temperatures

Philadelphia (Chestnut St.) High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:31 a.m., 11:53 p.m. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:53 a.m., 5:54 p.m. Weather indications s = sunny; pc = partly cloudy; c = cloudy; sh = showers; t = thunderstorms; r = Delaware Breakwater High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:09 a.m., 6:39 p.m. rain; sf = snow flurries; sn = snow; i = ice. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12:17 a.m., 11:59 a.m. City Sunday Monday Tuesday Cape May Allentown 77/57/pc 85/64/pc 85/68/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:36 a.m., 6:04 p.m. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:13 a.m. Atlantic City 86/64/pc 84/68/pc 84/72/sh Atlantic City (Steel Pier) Baltimore 82/60/pc 89/74/c 90/73/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:02 a.m., 5:30 p.m. Harrisburg 78/60/pc 87/68/c 84/68/t Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:52 a.m. New York 79/66/pc 83/66/pc 84/71/sh Beach Haven (Little Egg Harbor) Pittsburgh 74/58/pc 85/68/c 82/62/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:35 a.m., 7:56 p.m. Salisbury, Md. 85/66/pc 86/69/pc 90/70/t Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2:36 a.m., 2:24 p.m. Scranton 73/57/pc 83/64/pc 80/63/t Barnegat Inlet Washington 83/67/pc 89/72/pc 91/72/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:10 a.m., 5:31 p.m. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:27 a.m. Wilmington 82/62/pc 85/69/pc 87/71/t

HIGH

Sunday

LOW

HIGH

90 73

Warmer

LOW

92 74

Hot and humid

Hot and humid

National Forecast Seattle 75/55 Portland 81/57

Weather at noon Monday and forecast high/low temperatures

Montreal 81/66 Toronto Minneapolis Boston 79/59 75/64 79/65 Detroit 81/70 Pittsburgh New York 85/68 83/66 Chicago Philadelphia 84/66 Washington 89/72 St. Louis 93/72 CANADA

Billings 76/55

San Francisco 66/54

The worst pollutant in the region Sunday was particulates, produced mainly by motor vehicles and power plants. Good (G) . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-50 Carbon monoxide . . . .CO Moderate (M) . . . . . . . 51-100 Nitrogen dioxide . . . . .NO Unhealthful (U). . . . . 101-200 Particulates . . . . . . . . . PA Very Unhealthful (V) . 201-300 Sulfur dioxide . . . . . . .SO Hazardous (H) . . . . . 301-400 Ozone . . . . . . . . . . . . . OZ At a Pollution Standard Index rating of 100, the general population begins to experience irritation and other unhealthful effects.

Sunday’s Pollution Standard Index

LOW

88 70

Sunny and nice

Vancouver 68/57

85/64

87/68

HIGH

Saturday

s = sunny; pc = partly cloudy; c = cloudy; sh = showers; t = t-storms; r = rain; rs = rain/snow; sf = flurries; sn = snow; i = ice

83/66

Reading

Friday

LOW

Allentown Harrisburg

High Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 (1:49 p.m.) Record high for Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .100 (1952) 3 p.m. humidity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44% Low Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 (5:53 a.m.) Record low for Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 (1960) Normal high/low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83/67 High/low same date last year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91/72 Season cooling degree days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448 Last season cooling degree days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 517 Normal season cooling degree days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 274

Sunday’s barometer

6 a.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.92 rising Noon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29.96 falling 6 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.94 steady

Daylight sky conditions Sunday 60% clouds with 40% sunshine

Precipitation

Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.00 in. Month through Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.48 in. Year through Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.01 in. Normal through Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.26 in. Deficit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.25 in.

Denver 78/57

Los Angeles 72/63

Low High

Phoenix 115/86

Dallas 101/76

Thunderstorms

City Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Boston Buffalo Charleston, S.C. Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville

Ice

Sunday 75/60/c 98/65/pc 64/53/c 92/72/pc 76/61/pc 72/61/sh 96/74/pc 88/63/pc 80/57/pc 74/63/t 77/57/pc 97/77/pc 91/61/pc 80/62/pc 81/61/pc 81/75/s 95/79/pc 74/64/t 94/70/pc

Tuesday 84/65/sh 99/67/pc 61/51/sh 93/72/t 80/68/pc 72/63/t 91/76/t 94/73/t 75/62/pc 83/66/pc 77/65/t 99/77/pc 92/60/pc 80/64/pc 82/62/pc 88/73/s 95/77/pc 82/64/s 93/74/t

Cities Abroad

City Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Barbados Beijing Berlin Bermuda Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Copenhagen Dublin Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul

Sunday 88/79/pc 75/61/pc 75/66/s 55/46/pc 111/84/s 91/81/pc 86/77/t 90/66/pc 72/55/pc 84/75/pc 75/59/s 50/32/s 95/na/s 64/48/pc 73/59/pc 91/73/pc 86/82/pc 86/63/s 57/34/s 95/70/s

New Orleans 94/76

MEXICO

Monday 83/61/pc 99/67/pc 61/51/sh 93/73/t 79/65/pc 75/68/c 92/75/t 95/71/c 84/66/t 87/71/t 82/70/pc 101/76/s 78/57/pc 83/62/t 81/70/t 88/74/s 96/78/pc 89/69/t 91/75/t

Monday 90/77/t 83/65/s 80/66/s 59/50/sh 113/85/s 88/77/t 87/81/t 89/69/s 80/60/pc 81/77/t 86/65/s 56/39/s 87/67/s 75/59/pc 62/50/sh 90/75/t 87/79/t 85/63/s 63/40/s 93/65/s

Tuesday 86/77/t 82/66/t 82/70/s 59/46/t 113/82/s 95/79/t 87/81/t 90/72/s 90/68/s 81/77/t 88/55/t 54/41/pc 90/70/s 75/66/s 63/45/pc 90/75/t 86/81/t 79/63/s 61/39/s 90/66/s

Fronts:

Atlanta 93/73

Stationary

Houston 96/78

Rain Snow

Memphis 97/78

Warm Miami 89/78

Cold

City Sunday Kansas City, Mo. 89/69/pc Las Vegas 101/79/s Los Angeles 70/61/pc Memphis 93/78/pc Miami 91/78/pc Minneapolis 78/61/pc New Orleans 93/78/pc Orlando 90/73/t Phoenix 110/86/s Portland, Maine 71/57/pc Portland, Ore. 73/51/s Richmond 88/67/pc St. Louis 85/66/r Salt Lake City 80/59/s San Diego 71/61/pc San Francisco 68/53/pc San Juan 89/79/pc Seattle 71/48/pc Tampa 86/72/t

Monday 88/63/pc 105/82/s 72/63/s 97/78/pc 89/78/t 79/59/t 94/76/pc 90/73/t 115/86/s 77/59/s 81/57/c 93/72/t 93/72/t 87/65/s 74/62/s 67/53/s 87/76/t 75/55/c 93/75/t

Tuesday 82/68/pc 106/83/s 70/60/s 93/79/t 88/79/t 78/60/pc 93/77/pc 91/77/t 116/86/s 74/59/pc 77/57/sh 94/72/t 84/69/s 94/66/s 71/62/s 66/53/r 88/76/t 74/57/sh 91/76/t

City London Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Milan Montreal Moscow Nassau New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver

Monday 83/64/t 100/70/pc 60/46/pc 68/55/t 85/66/t 81/66/s 78/61/t 91/81/t 96/84/t 91/66/s 80/61/pc 75/65/sh 88/66/s 76/66/sh 89/77/t 74/55/s 64/45/s 83/71/sh 75/64/s 68/57/r

Tuesday 68/55/sh 95/63/pc 61/41/s 68/55/t 82/68/s 82/57/c 84/68/t 90/81/t 93/81/t 86/55/t 82/54/s 70/54/sh 91/72/s 81/70/s 88/81/t 82/59/pc 63/55/sh 84/70/pc 75/55/sh 63/54/sh

Sunday 79/59/pc 100/70/s 57/46/pc 77/57/pc 88/64/s 75/64/pc 79/64/pc 91/82/pc 86/79/pc 86/57/s 70/52/pc 88/68/pc 82/66/s 72/64/c 90/81/pc 70/54/pc 68/46/s 72/68/pc 72/63/pc 64/52/pc

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Contact staff writer Joseph Tanfani at 215-8542684 or jtanfani@phillynews.com.

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The Inquirer Want to know what’s on the minds of our metro columnists, or tell them what’s on yours? Join the mashup, at philly.com/blinq

Firefighter’s death is called a suicide. B2

PHA puts its dream home on hold. B2 B South Jersey

Monday, June 27, 2011 ★ Section B

Christie says he’s a leadership model Washington could learn from New Jersey, he said, adding President Obama needed to deal directly with lawmakers, just as he had. By Matt Katz

INQUIRER TRENTON BUREAU

Gov. Christie nationalized his victory on pensions and health benefits on NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday, saying President Obama’s Washington should model itself on Christie’s New Jersey. Christie portrayed himself as an active leader directly involved in putting together the historic legislation, which the New Jersey Assembly gave final approval last week. Christie said Obama needed to deal directly with congressional leaders, just as Christie

Transparency bill on week’s agenda By Bruce Shipkowski ASSOCIATED PRESS

sat with Democratic legislative leaders to hammer out an agreement that forces public workers to pay more for pensions and health benefits. The antiabortion, antigay-marriage governor dodged a more specific question on whether he would sign a Republican abortion pledge, and another question on whether the federal government should ban same-sex marriage. He did say, however, that he would not sign a bill allowing gay marriage. He said New Jersey would “continue to pursue civil unions.” NBC’s David Gregory asked whether Christie was “too abrasive,” perhaps the most common question that national TV interviewers ask the governor. He replied that although he has too strong of a personality to be vice See CHRISTIE on B3

WILLIAM B. PLOWMAN / NBC News

Gov. Christie on “Meet the Press.” He said he had to sell his legislative proposals himself: “If you’re the executive, you’ve got to be the guy who’s out there pushing and leading.”

TRENTON — A measure that would require New Jersey’s government-related authorities, commissions, and other agencies to have an online presence will go before both houses of the Legislature this week. The bill would require the agencies to put certain information online — including financial data and meeting minutes — to provide more transparency about their mission, spending, and activities. It would implement changes recommended by the state comptroller, whose office issued a report that found more than one-third of New Jersey’s independent local authorities and commissions did not have websites. And only 3 percent of them post financial reports online. Of those that do offer information onSee BILLS on B3

Some surprised at what’s in there.

Spending a year reading the Bible By David O’Reilly

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

It may be the best-selling book of all time, but its battles, bloodletting, and “begats,” its many laws, rituals, and tribes, and those chewy names like Oholiab and Eliphelehu and “Joshbekashah son of Heman” don’t make for easy reading. Yet when the rector of St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Whitemarsh invited his congregants in January to join him in reading the Bible cover to cover in a year, the response surprised him. “It’s taken on a life of its own,” the Rev. Marek Zabriskie said last week. More than 150 of his 1,300 congregants, and 85 others, have turned his “Bible Challenge” into a far-flung community of readers, Zabriskie said. The project has also taught him new ways to conceive of “church” in the electronic age. Connected at first by e-mail, recently by Facebook, and soon by Twitter, folks as far away as Mali, some of whom “never darken the door of a church,” have joined in reading the Good Book and sharing their responses. “It’s something I always wanted to do,” said James Rowan, a semiretired commercial real estate executive. “But this has forced me to do it in a way I wouldn’t have done on my own.” Raised Roman Catholic, Rowan said he had little encouragement in his youth to read the Bible, but as of last week was “almost through Maccabees and getting into the wisdom books.” “It’s not going to be easy,” Zabriskie, a self-described “theological centrist,” had cautioned prospective readers last winter. Like most mainline Protestants, few had ever sat down with the parts he calls “boring and gruesome and strange” that almost never make it into liturgies or homilies. Even so, many said they had been unprepared for what they had found. “By the time I got to Leviticus, I was as depressed as could be,” Neal Pratt, 72, recalled last week. Widowed in January, Pratt had supposed that reading the Bible would prove a comfort, “but there just seemed to be no kindness” as the Israelites hacked their way into the Promised Land. Even God was a shock. “I had the notion he was a kind person,” said Pratt, who was dismayed to find Yahweh repeatedly commanding the Israelites to exterminate whole tribes of enemies. “I never had a good idea of the contrast between the God of the Old and New Testament. They’re See BIBLE on B6

CLEM MURRAY / Staff Photographer

Charles E. Gallagher, a therapist visiting the Bristol Township School District, conducts a summer exercise with second, third, and fourth graders.

Meditation for children

It can help special-needs students cope with frustration. By Kristin E. Holmes INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Brandon Heinz, an eighth grader in the Bristol Township School District, told occupational therapist Charles E. Gallagher that he had been asked to sit still “millions of times.” The problem is that it’s not always easy. For Brandon, 14, and his classmates — students with autism, attention-deficit disorders, or other special needs — controlling signs of anxiety is often a struggle. So Gallagher made a suggestion: Breathe. “In through your nose, and out through your mouth,” he instructed. Then, he said, let out a big sigh. Gallagher went on to teach the students meditation techniques to help them cope

when frustration threatens to overwhelm. The session, at the Benjamin Franklin Freshman Academy in Levittown, was part of the district’s summer initiative to help 25 first through eighth graders gain the social skills they often lack because of their special needs. Students with conditions such as autism and attention- deficit disorders have difficulty reading the social cues of language, voice, and behavior and consequently might react in ways that appear inappropriate. They also can experience high levels of anxiety. “They feel out of control,” said JoAnn Allison, the district’s supervisor of special education. “A lot of the strategies we have are to help them feel they have control of their environments and themselves.”

Two seeking citizenship denied a day in court

Play’s the thing to make her point against rape essay By Miriam Hill

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

When Cara Blouin sat down to write her new play, she had revenge in mind. Like many, she had read the “What Should Women Do?” essay in which Philadelphia journalist Dan Rottenberg questions whether some women’s behavior makes them more vulnerable to rape. The article includes a photo of Lara Logan, the 60 Minutes correspondent who was sexually assaulted in Egypt, in an alluring evening gown at an awards dinner in the United States. The caption underneath asks, “What message was the TV journalist Lara Logan sending here?” Rottenberg’s opinion went viral, inviting, in his words, “vituperative” attacks on him. Online outlets such as Salon.com took him to task. Like many, Blouin, a local director and writer, was outraged when she saw Rottenberg’s essay. See PLAY on B6

Gallagher, who has studied a treatment approach known as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction, fit in perfectly, Allison said. Mindfulness is a concept that means “paying attention on purpose in the present moment without judgment,” said Gallagher, who has trained at the Mindfulness Institute at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. Meditative exercises such as deep breathing help practitioners pay attention to the reactions of the body and mind in stressful moments, said Don McCown, a faculty member at the Mindfulness Institute. Once those reactions are recognized, the person can work toward controlling them. Meditation also can help youngsters control See MEDITATION on B7

Playwright Cara Blouin

took on journalist Dan Rottenberg by staging a play lampooning his recent online column about the sexual abuse of women.

Nearly two weeks ago, a Brazilian couple walked into the offices of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement at Second and Chestnut and asked a clerk whether he’d like to deport them. Livia Maria Borges, the wife, was so nervous she had to squeeze back tears. Her husband, Welismar De Jesus, was a little calmer. Their lawyer had assured them there was little risk of their having to say goodbye to the good, though illegal, life they had built in Northeast Philadelphia during the last decade. In fact, getting before an immigration judge was the goal of the June 15 visit, because in 18 years of practicing law, David Piver had not seen a stronger argument for making an exception to

the rules that govern what happens when illegal immigrants turn themselves in. As Piver imagined it, an enforcement officer would issue a notice for the couple to appear before a judge. Then Piver could plead for something called a cancellation of removal, which the law allows in special cases. And this case was special. The couple had satisfied the basics — they had lived in the country for a decade and committed no crimes. They had even paid taxes on earnings made under the See IMMIGRATION on B4


Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

www.philly.com

South Jersey B

B3

Armed patron kills 1, injures 5 in Phila. bar By Joseph Tanfani and Mark Fazlollah

36-year-old man once in his right calf and grazed two INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS women, ages 20 and 27, police A man who was booted said. Those three were in stafrom a Nicetown bar for ble condition. Before the shooting, a smoking a cigarette returned with a gun Sunday shortly af- bouncer had kicked the man ter midnight and killed one out of the Genesis Bar, 4421 patron and wounded five oth- Wayne Ave., police said. He returned shortly before 12:45 ers. The dead man was Carl a.m. and began shooting. The front door of the bar Sharper, 43, of North Philadelphia, police said. Sharper, was sprayed with bullet who apparently did not know holes. Witnesses described the the shooter, was planning to shooter as a bald, bearded be married this summer. black man in his 30s, 6 feet Two other victims were a tall, wearing a white shirt and woman, 44, shot multiple khaki pants. times in the abdomen and a No arrests had been made, man, 32, shot twice in the police said late Sunday. back, police said. Both were in critical condition at Temple Contact staff writer Joseph University Hospital. Tanfani at 215-8542684 or The gunman also shot a jtanfani@phillynews.com. WILLIAM B. PLOWMAN / NBC News

Gov. Christie, answering a question on “Meet the Press,” said: “I’m not abrasive at all. You know what people are tired of in politics?

They’re tired of blow-dried, tested answers that are given by political consultants to politicians, and everybody sounds the same.”

Christie touts his leadership

CHRISTIE from B1 president — a would-be president would “have to be sedated” to pick him — he is otherwise easygoing. “I’m huggable and lovable, David. I’m not abrasive at all. You know what people are tired of in politics? They’re tired of blow-dried, tested answers that are given by political consultants to politicians, and everybody sounds the same: Erh-erh-erh. I don’t

D I A M O N D S

S I L V E R

sound the same.” Christie said that despite his style, he and the New Jersey Democrats “didn’t demagogue each other” on the benefits bill, which allowed for compromise. Christie also said he had been able to muscle the bill through because he had sold the plan himself at dozens of townhall meetings. Obama, he said, needs to do the same sort of thing.

“If you’re the executive, you’ve got to be the guy who’s out there pushing and leading. You can’t lay back and wait for somebody else to do it. And I think if the president has made a mistake here, it’s this laid-back kind of approach where he’s waiting for someone else to solve the problem. “Some people say it’s a political strategy. No matter what it is, it’s not effective in solv-

ing problems. What we did in New Jersey proves that’s the effective way to do it. The executive needs to lead and then bring people to the table to forge compromise.”

Mon-Sat 10a.m. - 9p.m. Sunday 11a.m.-6p.m.

NOW OPEN

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Mon-Sat 10a.m. - 9:30p.m. Sunday 11a.m.-6p.m.

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Mon-Sat 10a.m. - 9p.m. Sunday 11a.m.-6p.m.

ADOPTION ♥ ♥ Domestic Adoption

the costs of designing, staffing, and updating websites, noting that many volunteer agencies struggle to cover basic operational costs. But proponents say taxpayers deserve easy access to basic information about these entities. “Taxpayers deserve better. Open and transparent government is always the best approach, and that’s what this bill will accomplish,” said Assemblyman Dan Benson, who is sponsoring the measure in that chamber with Assemblyman Wayne DeAngelo, a fellow Mercer County Democrat. The agencies subject to the comptroller’s review were local authorities and commissions, fire districts, housing authorities, joint insurance funds, workforce investment boards, soil conservation districts, Urban Enterprise Zone development corporations, regional health commissions, and county parks commissions. The measure would mandate that all the entities have websites that include basic contact information for the person or member who oversees its operations; its mission statements, rules, resolutions, and policy statements; its budgets and audits for the last three years; annual comprehensive financial statement; and agenda meeting schedules and meeting minutes.

♥ Home Study Services ♥ Surrogacy In India ♥ Embryo Ed Series ♥Free Services to Pregnant Women

Join us for a free information meeting:

Learn About Domestic Adoption July 19, 6:30pm in Cherry Hill

Discover Domestic Adoption July 12, 7:00pm Free Online Webinar

Heartbeats: Surrogacy in India July 19, 7:00pm Free Online Webinar

856-665-5655 ♥ www.afth.org

first day classifieds Entertainment Center:Large, Mahogany. Piano: Lester Spinet. Bikes (3) Chopper style. Best offer for each. 267-467-9174 Washer, Whirlpool & Dryer, GE, gas; $500. Sofa, leather; $600. 215-878-6773

Boxer Pups, 2 Fem., reg, nice markings, shots/vet, born 3/30, $550, 717.278.6480 Cane Corso pups, reg, shots, all colors, born 4/29/11, $900/bo. (215)360-4727 PIT BULL PUPPIES, 8 wks, 2 males, $500. ADBA/UKC reg., S/W. (267)636-3573 Yorkshire Terrier - ACA, Female, 8 mo. old, all shots, $1000 obo, 267-506-8089

Housekeeper,etc, PT-FT, min. 5 yrs exp, refs,car,bkgd chk,Overbrook 215.290.2100

Stuttering Didn’t Silence His Story.

20/20’s John Stossel knows news. He also knows what it’s like to deal with a stuttering problem. John still struggles with stuttering yet has become one of the most successful reporters in broadcast journalism today. For more information on what you can do about stuttering, write or call toll-free: THE

STUTTERING FOUNDATION

®

A Nonprofit Organization Since 1947—Helping Those Who Stutter

www.stutteringhelp.org 1-800-992-9392

The Plaza, King of Prussia Mall 610-337-0137

Contact staff writer Matt Katz at 609-217-8355, mkatz@phillynews.com, or @mattkatz00 on Twitter. Read his blog, “Christie Chronicles,” at philly.com/christiechronicles

Transparency bill on week’s agenda BILLS from B1 line, many omit basic details such as financial reports, schedules, agendas, and meeting minutes. The Senate will consider the bill Monday, and the Assembly will likely vote Wednesday. “All too often it’s all but impossible to find out where and when [these authorities] meet, who serves on the boards, and even information as simple as phone numbers and basic budget information,” said Sen. Jennifer Beck (R., Monmouth), who is sponsoring the measure with Senate Majority Leader Barbara Buono (D., Middlesex). “It’s time that the local and regional authorities within New Jersey step into the 21st century and make this information publicly available and easily accessible.” The Comptroller’s Office analyzed the level of online transparency of the state’s 587 independent local authorities and commissions, which together spend more than $5 billion of public money annually and have more than $5 billion in public debt. They also account for about 10,000 employees in the state pension system. Only seven agencies satisfied all the transparency measures the office used to test how well they keep the public informed. Some officials said the report did not take into account

GET THE MOST CASH FOR YOUR GOLD, SILVER & DIAMOND JEWELRY.

3100 Walnut Grove Road, Suite 603 P.O. Box 11749 • Memphis, TN 38111-0749

12xx E. Chelten Ave 4 BR Sec. 8 ok Newly renovated. 215-424-2785 14xx S. Etting (Grays Ferry) 3BR $675+ $2025 move in required (215)365-4567 25xx W. Oakdale 3BR $700+utils newly remod., front porch. 609-332-2062

53xx Yocum St. 3Br/1Ba $750 hardwd flrs, new carpet. (267)565-8021 5615 Angora 3Br $785 lovely row, hw flrs, Sec 8 ok267.975.6489 56xx Litchfield St 3 br/1 ba $700+utils 14xx S 52nd St 3 br/1.5 ba $700+utils renovated, near transport., 267-574-6591 5957 Malta St. 3br $850 renovated, drive by & call 267-991-2825 NE Houses 3 BR $895+utils available immediately, move-in specials. Call 267-357-7892 or 215-783-0175 Norristown 1br+small office $900+utils Riverfront House, Port Indian Community, small yard, bsmnt, gar (267)377-0087 Rising Sun 3 BR/1.5 BA $700+ utils Seniors welcome, call 215-626-2594

"Close to the Fun!" Shawnee: 2 BR TH w/ hot tub, sleeps 6-8, week of 7/8, 7/15, or 9/2, $500. 856-461-1510

31xx Stirling St. 3br Section 8 ok, Call (215)669-1304 50th & Catharine 3BR $1,200+utils hrdwd flrs, W/D, side entr. 215-747-3157 50th & Osage Ave 1BR $700+utils privt entrance & hrdwd flrs, 215-747-3157 5915 Old York Rd. 1br $550+utils cred chk, 15 min to dwntwn 267.574.3658 61xx Wheeler St. 1 BR $525+ utils bkyd, storage, bsmnt, 215.290.1710 lv msg 6xx N. 57th St. 2BR $650 +utils info and appointment. 215-806-9584

73xx Ruskin Rd. 2br $790+utils 2nd flr, renov, w/d, garage (215)888-7491 9xx E. Tioga 1 BR $475+ utils 2nd floor, renovated, 215-424-2785

29xx OXFORD St. - Large Rooms $75 & up. SSI ok. Call 215-240-9499 52nd/Parkside room w/ cable, share bath & kitchen $500/mo, 215-806-7078 55xx Greene St., lg, sunny, furnished, renov, $115/wk, utils incl, 215-284-4901 C.B. Moore & 24th clean, single occpant, income verif $450/mo RJ 215-730-1613 East Oaklane $150/Week Lg furn room, new renov, close to trans. 215-820-3363 Mt. Airy Room, Seniors 75 & up/Companion. Call 267-588-7114 N. Phila Furnished Rooms. Use of Kitchen, No Drugs, $350/mo, 215-924-4078 S. Phila Furn Rms SS & vets welcome. No drugs, $100 & up, 267-595-4414 W. Phila Furn Rms, SS & Vets welcome, No drugs, $100 & up 267-586-6502 W Phila, use of living rm, dining rm, kit, w/d, avail now! $90 & up (267)334-8294


Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

www.philly.com

South Jersey B

B3

Armed patron kills 1, injures 5 in Phila. bar By Joseph Tanfani and Mark Fazlollah

36-year-old man once in his right calf and grazed two INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS women, ages 20 and 27, police A man who was booted said. Those three were in stafrom a Nicetown bar for ble condition. Before the shooting, a smoking a cigarette returned with a gun Sunday shortly af- bouncer had kicked the man ter midnight and killed one out of the Genesis Bar, 4421 patron and wounded five oth- Wayne Ave., police said. He returned shortly before 12:45 ers. The dead man was Carl a.m. and began shooting. The front door of the bar Sharper, 43, of North Philadelphia, police said. Sharper, was sprayed with bullet who apparently did not know holes. Witnesses described the the shooter, was planning to shooter as a bald, bearded be married this summer. black man in his 30s, 6 feet Two other victims were a tall, wearing a white shirt and woman, 44, shot multiple khaki pants. times in the abdomen and a No arrests had been made, man, 32, shot twice in the police said late Sunday. back, police said. Both were in critical condition at Temple Contact staff writer Joseph University Hospital. Tanfani at 215-8542684 or The gunman also shot a jtanfani@phillynews.com. WILLIAM B. PLOWMAN / NBC News

Gov. Christie, answering a question on “Meet the Press,” said: “I’m not abrasive at all. You know what people are tired of in politics?

They’re tired of blow-dried, tested answers that are given by political consultants to politicians, and everybody sounds the same.”

Christie touts his leadership

CHRISTIE from B1 president — a would-be president would “have to be sedated” to pick him — he is otherwise easygoing. “I’m huggable and lovable, David. I’m not abrasive at all. You know what people are tired of in politics? They’re tired of blow-dried, tested answers that are given by political consultants to politicians, and everybody sounds the same: Erh-erh-erh. I don’t

D I A M O N D S

S I L V E R

sound the same.” Christie said that despite his style, he and the New Jersey Democrats “didn’t demagogue each other” on the benefits bill, which allowed for compromise. Christie also said he had been able to muscle the bill through because he had sold the plan himself at dozens of townhall meetings. Obama, he said, needs to do the same sort of thing.

“If you’re the executive, you’ve got to be the guy who’s out there pushing and leading. You can’t lay back and wait for somebody else to do it. And I think if the president has made a mistake here, it’s this laid-back kind of approach where he’s waiting for someone else to solve the problem. “Some people say it’s a political strategy. No matter what it is, it’s not effective in solv-

ing problems. What we did in New Jersey proves that’s the effective way to do it. The executive needs to lead and then bring people to the table to forge compromise.”

Mon-Sat 10a.m. - 9p.m. Sunday 11a.m.-6p.m.

NOW OPEN

Granite Run Mall 610-556-1512

Mon-Sat 10a.m. - 9:30p.m. Sunday 11a.m.-6p.m.

The Court, King of Prussia Mall 610-354-9130

Mon-Sat 10a.m. - 9p.m. Sunday 11a.m.-6p.m.

ADOPTION ♥ ♥ Domestic Adoption

the costs of designing, staffing, and updating websites, noting that many volunteer agencies struggle to cover basic operational costs. But proponents say taxpayers deserve easy access to basic information about these entities. “Taxpayers deserve better. Open and transparent government is always the best approach, and that’s what this bill will accomplish,” said Assemblyman Dan Benson, who is sponsoring the measure in that chamber with Assemblyman Wayne DeAngelo, a fellow Mercer County Democrat. The agencies subject to the comptroller’s review were local authorities and commissions, fire districts, housing authorities, joint insurance funds, workforce investment boards, soil conservation districts, Urban Enterprise Zone development corporations, regional health commissions, and county parks commissions. The measure would mandate that all the entities have websites that include basic contact information for the person or member who oversees its operations; its mission statements, rules, resolutions, and policy statements; its budgets and audits for the last three years; annual comprehensive financial statement; and agenda meeting schedules and meeting minutes.

♥ Home Study Services ♥ Surrogacy In India ♥ Embryo Ed Series ♥Free Services to Pregnant Women

Join us for a free information meeting:

Learn About Domestic Adoption July 19, 6:30pm in Cherry Hill

Discover Domestic Adoption July 12, 7:00pm Free Online Webinar

Heartbeats: Surrogacy in India July 19, 7:00pm Free Online Webinar

856-665-5655 ♥ www.afth.org

first day classifieds Entertainment Center:Large, Mahogany. Piano: Lester Spinet. Bikes (3) Chopper style. Best offer for each. 267-467-9174 Washer, Whirlpool & Dryer, GE, gas; $500. Sofa, leather; $600. 215-878-6773

Boxer Pups, 2 Fem., reg, nice markings, shots/vet, born 3/30, $550, 717.278.6480 Cane Corso pups, reg, shots, all colors, born 4/29/11, $900/bo. (215)360-4727 PIT BULL PUPPIES, 8 wks, 2 males, $500. ADBA/UKC reg., S/W. (267)636-3573 Yorkshire Terrier - ACA, Female, 8 mo. old, all shots, $1000 obo, 267-506-8089

Housekeeper,etc, PT-FT, min. 5 yrs exp, refs,car,bkgd chk,Overbrook 215.290.2100

Stuttering Didn’t Silence His Story.

20/20’s John Stossel knows news. He also knows what it’s like to deal with a stuttering problem. John still struggles with stuttering yet has become one of the most successful reporters in broadcast journalism today. For more information on what you can do about stuttering, write or call toll-free: THE

STUTTERING FOUNDATION

®

A Nonprofit Organization Since 1947—Helping Those Who Stutter

www.stutteringhelp.org 1-800-992-9392

The Plaza, King of Prussia Mall 610-337-0137

Contact staff writer Matt Katz at 609-217-8355, mkatz@phillynews.com, or @mattkatz00 on Twitter. Read his blog, “Christie Chronicles,” at philly.com/christiechronicles

Transparency bill on week’s agenda BILLS from B1 line, many omit basic details such as financial reports, schedules, agendas, and meeting minutes. The Senate will consider the bill Monday, and the Assembly will likely vote Wednesday. “All too often it’s all but impossible to find out where and when [these authorities] meet, who serves on the boards, and even information as simple as phone numbers and basic budget information,” said Sen. Jennifer Beck (R., Monmouth), who is sponsoring the measure with Senate Majority Leader Barbara Buono (D., Middlesex). “It’s time that the local and regional authorities within New Jersey step into the 21st century and make this information publicly available and easily accessible.” The Comptroller’s Office analyzed the level of online transparency of the state’s 587 independent local authorities and commissions, which together spend more than $5 billion of public money annually and have more than $5 billion in public debt. They also account for about 10,000 employees in the state pension system. Only seven agencies satisfied all the transparency measures the office used to test how well they keep the public informed. Some officials said the report did not take into account

GET THE MOST CASH FOR YOUR GOLD, SILVER & DIAMOND JEWELRY.

3100 Walnut Grove Road, Suite 603 P.O. Box 11749 • Memphis, TN 38111-0749

12xx E. Chelten Ave 4 BR Sec. 8 ok Newly renovated. 215-424-2785 14xx S. Etting (Grays Ferry) 3BR $675+ $2025 move in required (215)365-4567 25xx W. Oakdale 3BR $700+utils newly remod., front porch. 609-332-2062

53xx Yocum St. 3Br/1Ba $750 hardwd flrs, new carpet. (267)565-8021 5615 Angora 3Br $785 lovely row, hw flrs, Sec 8 ok267.975.6489 56xx Litchfield St 3 br/1 ba $700+utils 14xx S 52nd St 3 br/1.5 ba $700+utils renovated, near transport., 267-574-6591 5957 Malta St. 3br $850 renovated, drive by & call 267-991-2825 NE Houses 3 BR $895+utils available immediately, move-in specials. Call 267-357-7892 or 215-783-0175 Norristown 1br+small office $900+utils Riverfront House, Port Indian Community, small yard, bsmnt, gar (267)377-0087 Rising Sun 3 BR/1.5 BA $700+ utils Seniors welcome, call 215-626-2594

"Close to the Fun!" Shawnee: 2 BR TH w/ hot tub, sleeps 6-8, week of 7/8, 7/15, or 9/2, $500. 856-461-1510

31xx Stirling St. 3br Section 8 ok, Call (215)669-1304 50th & Catharine 3BR $1,200+utils hrdwd flrs, W/D, side entr. 215-747-3157 50th & Osage Ave 1BR $700+utils privt entrance & hrdwd flrs, 215-747-3157 5915 Old York Rd. 1br $550+utils cred chk, 15 min to dwntwn 267.574.3658 61xx Wheeler St. 1 BR $525+ utils bkyd, storage, bsmnt, 215.290.1710 lv msg 6xx N. 57th St. 2BR $650 +utils info and appointment. 215-806-9584

73xx Ruskin Rd. 2br $790+utils 2nd flr, renov, w/d, garage (215)888-7491 9xx E. Tioga 1 BR $475+ utils 2nd floor, renovated, 215-424-2785

29xx OXFORD St. - Large Rooms $75 & up. SSI ok. Call 215-240-9499 52nd/Parkside room w/ cable, share bath & kitchen $500/mo, 215-806-7078 55xx Greene St., lg, sunny, furnished, renov, $115/wk, utils incl, 215-284-4901 C.B. Moore & 24th clean, single occpant, income verif $450/mo RJ 215-730-1613 East Oaklane $150/Week Lg furn room, new renov, close to trans. 215-820-3363 Mt. Airy Room, Seniors 75 & up/Companion. Call 267-588-7114 N. Phila Furnished Rooms. Use of Kitchen, No Drugs, $350/mo, 215-924-4078 S. Phila Furn Rms SS & vets welcome. No drugs, $100 & up, 267-595-4414 W. Phila Furn Rms, SS & Vets welcome, No drugs, $100 & up 267-586-6502 W Phila, use of living rm, dining rm, kit, w/d, avail now! $90 & up (267)334-8294


B4 B

South Jersey

www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Commentary By Daniel Rubin

Couple denied a chance to argue for citizenship

IMMIGRATION from B1 table — you can do that with a taxpayer ID number. But one last element made their case most compelling: Their deportation would result in unusual hardship to their youngest daughter, who choked 18 months ago while eating, leaving her with permanent brain damage. The 3-year-old, Cindy Borges-De Jesus, no longer speaks or walks. She is totally dependent on those who care for her — her parents and the nurses who spend 16 hours a day with her.

Because she was born here, Cindy is a U.S. citizen. And taxpayers are picking up the cost of her care. Her parents say they wanted to come clean so they could end a decade of limbo and be better able to support her. In the last three years, Piver had taken 10 clients to ICE for processing, and in half of those cases a judge granted permanent residency. Piver considered the Brazilians “the poster children for cancellation of removal cases.” But it’s hard to get a hit if

you can’t get up to bat. After about 90 minutes of conferring, ICE officials turned the couple away. According to Piver, the enforcement officer and his supervisors said the office had a policy not to open cases against people who were looking for relief in court. Piver isn’t sure there is such a policy. Maybe, he said, it’s that the law is applied inconsistently. Harold Ort, an ICE spokesman, said his agency had discretion whether to place peo-

ple in removal proceedings. Decisions are made, he said, “on a case-by-case basis, as appropriate.” Borges, 28, and De Jesus, 34, were looking for opportunity when they decided to move to the United States. She had just finished high school in 2000, and overstayed her tourist visa. He owned a small clothing factory, and walked across the border from Mexico, ultimately joining an uncle in Philadelphia. Within a week he was clean-

ing houses. Within a year he was working construction. She studied English, then worked as a domestic until having the first of their children seven years ago. De Jesus said permanent residency would allow him to earn a Pennsylvania driver’s license and find a better-paying job. Borges wants to be able to go to college and study occupational therapy so she can help her daughter. She said she had nearly broken under the emotional weight of car-

ing for a severely disabled child without the support of her parents, whom she hasn’t seen in a decade. “God help me,” she said. “I have to be strong to take care of my house, my husband, and my kids.” Seems to me ICE shouldn’t get to make this call. If the law allows for consideration in special cases, these people should have their day in court — at least for the sake of their daughter. Contact Daniel Rubin at 215-854-5917 or drubin@phillynews.com.

SHARPEN YOUR COOKING SKILLS WITH

Reading Terminal Market • Thursday, July 7, 2011 • 11 am – 1 pm

MICHAEL SPAIN SMITH

Join us at Thanks Giving In July! The event will feature celebrity chef cooking demos and help us celebrate the launch of Philadelphia’s new online food destination, philly.com/food. Come and get a taste of these great chefs: • Aaron McCargo, Jr., Food Network personality • Kevin Sbraga, Top Chef winner • Jack McDavid, owner, Down Home Diner • Jennifer Carroll, Top Chef contestant and Chef de Cuisine at 10 Arts Philabundance will be accepting food donations. Demonstrations are FREE; $5 charitable donation for each chef tasting.

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Monday, June 27, 2011

AGLOW

GLADYS ( nee Pressman) June 24, 2011. Wife of Jack. Mother of Mitchell Aglow (Marianne), Susan Cuttance (Christopher) and Lori Jacobson (Howard); also survived by 7 grandchildren and 2 great grandchildren. Relatives and friends are invited to Memorial Services Wednesday 1:00 P.M. GOLDSTEINS’ precisely ROSENBERG’S RAPHAEL SACKS, 6410 N. Broad St. Shiva will be observed at the Jacobson residence. Contributions in her memory may be made to your favorite charity. www.goldsteinsfuneral.com

ATTANASIO

MARY LOU (nee Mongelluzzo), on June 23, 2011, of Margate. Loving wife of Ed Attanasio. Devoted mother of Angel (Kevin) Packard and Luisa (Daniel) Robbins and daughter of the late Honorable Lewis and Rose Mongelluzzo. Relatives and friends are invited to her Viewing Wed., 10 to 10:45 A.M., at the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, Jerome and Ventnor Ave., Margate NJ. Funeral Mass, 11 A.M. Interment SS. Peter and Paul Cemetery at a later date. In lieu of flowers, contributions in Mary Lou’s name to Lupus Foundation of America Inc., 2000 ’L’ St. NW, Ste 710, Washington DC 20036. Condolences can be made at www.danjolell.com Arr. by D’ANJOLELL-STIGALE MEMORIAL HOME, Aston PA.

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COOPER

PATRICIA J. (nee Scully), on Thursday June 23, 2011, age 61, of Plymouth Meeting, PA. Beloved wife of the late John F. Cooper, III. Mother of Melissa (Todd) Yates. Sister of David M. Scully, Rosemary Mascaro, and Kathleen (Richard) Folino. Grandmother of Bailey Yates. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the Memorial Mass on Thursday, June 30, 2011 at 10:30 A.M. at Epiphany of Our Lord RC Church, 3050 Walton and Townshipline Road, Plymouth Meeting. Friends may call on Wednesday Evening from 7 to 9 P.M. at the MOORE & SNEAR FUNERAL HOME, 19 E. Germantown Pike, E. Norriton PA and Thursday Morning from 10 to 10:30 A.M. at the Church. Interment Valley Forge Gardens, King of Prusssia, PA. Memorial contributions may be made in her memory to the American Lung Association, 527 Plymouth Road, Suite 403, Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462.

DIAMOND

PAULINE D. (nee Doto), June 25, 2011 of Ft. Washington. Beloved wife of Edward T. Devoted mother of Myles and Elizabeth Diamond (Patrick Grady). Loving sister of Dr. Joseph Doto (Paula) and Diane Bieri (Robert). Aunt of Jeffrey, Jessica, Kaite, Laura and John. Relatives and friends are invited to the Viewing on Wednesday 9 to 10:15 A.M. at Queen of Peace Church, 820 North Hills Ave., Ardsley, followed by Funeral Mass at 10:30 A.M. Interment Private. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to the Abramson Cancer Center Development Office, 3535 Market St., Ste. 750, Phila., PA 19104. (Checks made to "Trustees of University of PA"). RICHARD S. "RICK", age 52, JOS. J. McGOLDRICK F.H. passed away on June 24, 2011. An educator of Broadcast Journalism at Temple University for 26 years. Beloved son of the late Harold MARGARET M. (nee Donovan) R. Beardsley, MD and the late on June 25, 2011. Beloved wife Alma M. Beardsley. Loving of the late Joseph W. P.F.D. brother of Harold R., III Loving mother of Joseph W., Jr. (Michelle), Donald J. (Becky), (Eileen) of IL, Daniel J. (Linda) David J. (Sheila), Susan M. of NJ, Michael T. of Phila. Also Seckinger, Jacqueline A. survived by 11 grandchildren Peterson (Jim), the late Joanne and 11 great grandchildren. E. "Jodi" Mallon (Michael), Dear sister of Sara Mueller. Patricia M. Beardsley (Brett Relatives and friends are Martin) and Cynthia E. Short invited to attend her Viewing (the late Michael). Also and Funeral on Wednesday 8:30 survived by his cherished A.M. from THE EDWARD J. nieces, nephews and many dear PETNER FUNERAL HOME friends. Relatives and friends (Family Owned and Operated), are invited to a Celebration of 6421 Frankford Ave. at Levick Rick’s life 1 P.M. Wednesday, St. followed by her Mass of June 29, 2011, Spring Mill Christian Burial 10 A.M. St. Manor, 171 Jacksonville Road, Leo’s Church. Int. Our Lady of Ivyland PA 18974. Interment Grace Cemetery. In lieu of will be private. Please omit flowers, donations made in her flowers. Donations in his memory to Shriner’s Hospital, memory to standup2cancer.org 3551 N. Broad St., Phila., PA would be appreciated. 19140 would be preferred by Campbell and Thomas Funeral Home her family. To express condolences www.campbellfh.com

BEARDSLEY

EDWARDS

FISH

CASPER

FLORENCE B. (nee A b r a m c z y k ), of Washington Twp.; formerly of Philadelphia; peacefully passed away on June 25, 2011. Floss is the beloved wife of the late Walter P. Casper, Jr; loving mother of Walter P. (Christine) Casper, III, Raymond A. (Jane) Casper and Charlotte (the late John) Candelori; dear sister of Lillian Chociay, Dorothy (Bob) Gardner, Jessie Gabriel, Bernice Moshinski; loving grandmother of 9; great grandmother of 12; sister in law of Naomi Casper & Helen Abramczyk and sister of the late Edward, Josephine Pokropski Alfreda Monaghan, Theodore, Walter Jr, Raymond and Charles Abramczyk; Relatives and friends are invited to attend Floss’ Viewing Wednesday evening 6:30 to 9 P.M. and Thursday morning after 8:30 A.M. in the McGUINNESS FUNERAL HOME, 573 Egg Harbor Road, Washington Twp. Funeral Mass Thursday 10 A.M. in SS. Peter & Paul R. C. Church, Ganttown, Road, Washington Twp. Entombment New Saint Mary’s Cemetery, Bellmawr. Tributes and memories may be shared at www.mcgfuneral.com

CLAY

CHARLES T. on June 24, 2011, age 68, of Upper Darby, PA. Beloved husband of Andrea M. Clay; loving father of Karen (Greg Basile) and Bryan (Ayse) Clay; grandfather of Becca and Noah; brother of Sandy(Robert) Bauer. Friends may visit the family Wednesday 12 Noon-1:00 P.M. at THE DONOHUE FUNERAL HOME, 8401 WEST CHESTER PIKE (cor. LYNN BLVD.), UPPER DARBY PA, 610-4490300. followed by his memorial service 1:00 P.M. at the funeral home. Interment private. In lieu of other expressions of sympathy, memorials in Mr. Clay’s name may be made to Penn Wissahickon Hospice, 150 Monument Rd., Suite 300, Bala Cynwyd, PA. 19004. Online condolences at: www.donohuefuneralhome.com

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MARIE A. (nee Trifiro) age 74 passed away Saturday June 25, 2011 at Treasure Coast Hospice, Ft. Pierce, FL. Born in Philadelphia, PA. Daughter of the late Sebastian and Josephine Trifiro. She was a resident of Richboro, PA prior to moving to Ft. Pierce, FL., 20 years ago. She was a very caring, and loving wife, mother, and grandmother who will be sadly missed by all whose lives she touched. Beloved wife of the late Russell E. Fish. She is survived by her 2 sons, Michael A. Fish and his wife Lorna of Richboro, and John R. Fish and his wife Patricia of Ft. Lauderdale, FL. Her sisters Cecilia Donahue and companion Harry A. Quinn of Philadelphia, Joanna Bockman of Southampton, her brother Sebastian of Philadelphia. Her 2 grandchildren Danielle and Jared of Richboro, and many nieces and nephews. Also survived by her companion, Joseph Nunnez of Ft. Pierce, FL. Funeral services will be held Wednesday June 29, 2011 from 11:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. at the HAISLEY FUNERAL & CREMATION HOME. Mass at 1 P.M. Wednesday June 29, 2011 at St. Marks Catholic Church. Int. at Riverview Memorial Park, Ft. Pierce FL. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the Treasure Coast Hospice, 1201 SE Indian St. Stuart, FL. 34997.

GEHAN

THOMAS P., June 23, 2011, beloved husband of the late Dorothy, devoted father of Thomas, Dennis and his wife Pam, also survived by 5 grandchildren and one great granddaughter. Relatives and friends are invited to his Viewing Wednesday 9AM BURNS FUNERAL HOME, 1428 E. Columbia Ave. (at Fkd. Ave.) followed by his service of Christian Burial 10AM. Interment Hillside Cemetery.

HAUGHEY

THERESE M., 82, of Holy Family Home, on June 24, 2011. Daughter of the late Patrick and Eleanor (nee Boyle) Haughey; sister of James, John, S.J., Kathleen, SND, Isabel, OSF, Eileen Harrington (John) and Daniel Houghey; she is also survived by many nieces, nephews and cousins. Memorial Mass will be 11 A.M. Wed from Holy Family Home, 5300 Chester Ave., Philadelphia 19143 where friends may call after 10 A.M. Contributions in her memory to Holy Family Home would be preferred. (TOPPITZER FUNERAL HOME )

HOWELL

WALTER L. June 21, 2011 after a lengthy illness. Survived by 3 children Cynthia, Gaynita and Derrick; one sister Muriel; one brother-in-law Sam Ancrum; 2 grandchildren; 2 great grandchildren; other relatives and friends. Service Wednesday June 29th, Our Lady of Hope Catholic Church, 5200 Broad St., 10:30 A.M. Mass. Viewing 9:30 A.M. Interment Holy Sepulchre Cem., Glenside, PA. Arr. by FOUNTAIN F.H.

HUDGEONS

MARC A., 56, of Lansdale, formerly of Orlando, FL, died June 25, 2011. He is survived by his wife, Karen E. (O’Neill) Hudgeons. He was a kind, unselfish, and loving husband and father. Marc was a successful businessman and a true entrepreneur. Most of all, he loved life and making people laugh. In addition to his wife, Marc is survived by three children, Hillary R., Hayley B., and Jake A. Hudgeons; and a brother, Tom Hudgeons (Denise). The Funeral Service is 5 P.M. Wednesday, June 29th at the BranchCreek Community Church, 100 S. Main St., Harleysville, PA 19438; friends may call at the Church at 3 P.M. until the time of the Service. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Marc’s memory to the Jake Hudgeons Education Fund, TD Bank, 290 Forty Foot Rd., Lansdale, PA 19446, Account # 4763486391. HUFF & LAKJER FUNERAL HOME, 701 Derstine Ave., Lansdale

O’NEIL

EDWARD “JON” on June 24, 2011, age 78, of Haddonfield, NJ, beloved husband of the late Dolores (nee Balara). Loving father of Marti Gustafson (Chris) of Haddonfield and Lindsay Hamilton (Brian) of Oreland, PA. Also survived by 5 grandchildren, Ellen, Jack and Owen Gustafson and Lucas and Gavin Hamilton and his brother, Frank O’Neil (Barbara). Mr. O’Neil was a US Marine Corp Veteran who served in the Korean War. His family will receive friends on Wednesday, June 29, 2011 from 10-10:45 AM at Christ the King R.C. Church, 200 Windsor Ave., Haddonfield, NJ, Funeral Mass will follow at 11AM.Interment New St. Mary’s Cem., Bellmawr, NJ. Arr. By: KAIN-MURPHY FUNERAL SERVICES, Haddonfield N.J.

PAUPST

KAUFMAN

ROSLYN (nee Wiesen), June 26, 2011. Wife of the late Stanley, mother of Carole (Philip) Scher and Alan (Rosalind) Kaufman, sister of Lila Katz; also survived by 4 grandchildren and 9 great grandchildren. Relatives and friends are invited to Graveside Services Wednesday 10 A.M. precisely at the Shalom Memorial Park (Sec. Gabriel), Pine and Byberry Roads. Family will return Wed. only to the residence of Carole and Philip Scher. Contributions in her memory may be made to a charity of the donor’s choice. www.goldsteinsfuneral.com

KELLER

JOSEPH J. of Philadelphia on June 24th, 2011. Age 80. Relatives and friends are invited to his Graveside Service Friday, July 1st at 10:00 A.M. in George Washington Memorial Park, 80 Stenton Ave. Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462. www.kirkandniceinc.com

WILLIAM JOHN, SR. "MOUNTAIN BILL" of Phila. PA, on June 25, 2011, suddenly after a motorcycle accident. Husband of Rowena (nee Wolfe) (he has been my sunshine for 26 years). Father of William J., Jr. (Rachel). Brother of Joe (Debbie), Jeff (Nancy), Wendy (Jim) and the late Wayne (Carol). Grandfather (Pappy) of Liam, Owen, Cassie and Abby. Uncle of Tammi, Kyle, Kevin, Johanna, David and Joey. Also survived by his dogs, Sofie, Lily, Widget and Sadie, cats Woody, Cubby and Lucy and many extended family members. Family will receive friends Wed. 6 to 8 P.M. at THE JAMES J. McGHEE FUNERAL HOME, 2nd St. Pike and Belmont Ave., Southampton, PA. Int. private. Donations may be made to SPCA, 350 East Erie Avenue, Philadelphia PA 19134. Further information is available at www.mcgheefuneralhome.com

REISBORD

NEIMAN

DOROTHY E. (nee Toogood) suddenly on June 25, 2011 of Holland, PA. Beloved wife of the late Robert F. Neiman who passed away in 2006 from complications of Alzheimer’s Disease and loving mother of the late Robert W. Neiman. She is survived by her loving children Dorothy Neiman, Richard Neiman, and Eileen Cain. She is also survived by 3 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren. Dorothy’s family will receive condolences on Wednesday from 10 A.M. until her Funeral Service at 11A.M. from the JOSEPH A. FLUEHR III FUNERAL HOME 800 Newtown-Richboro Rd. (at Holland Rd.) Richboro, PA 18954. Int. will follow at Union Cemetery, Richboro. In lieu of flowers contributions in her memory that will honor her late Husband may be made to Alzheimer’s Disease & Related Disorders, 100 N. 17th St., 2nd Floor, Phila., PA 19103. www.fluehr.com

ANNE (nee Lowenthal), died peacefully at home on June 17, 2011, at 102 years. Predeceased by her beloved husband of 72 years, Alex Reisbord. Survived by her daughters, Susan Reisbord and Joan Green and son-in-law Robert Brown; 4 grandchildren; 7 step grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren, as well as many devoted nephews, nieces and their offspring. A Memorial Service for family and friends is planned for July. Anne was a sculptor and a poet and was one of five centenarians profiled in a short film commissioned by the Mayor’s Office, which can be seen at: http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=DI a9x66DlAs. Memorial donations may be made to the Library for the Blind, 919 Walnut St., Phila. PA 19107-5289.

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OBITUARY

SHINDER

NAOMI (nee Snyder) June 26, 2011. Wife of the late Paul. Beloved mother of Joyce (David) Rosner and the late Elliott Shinder. Loving grandmother of Perri and Drew Rosner. Relatives and friends are invited to Graveside Services Tuesday 11 A.M. precisely at Shalom Memorial Park (Section Macabees) Shiva will be observed at the residence of Joyce and David Rosner Tuesday and Wednesday. Contributions in her memory may be made to Abramson Center Hospice, 1425 Horsham Rd, North Wales, PA 19454 or the Oral Cancer Foundation, 3419 Via Lide 205, Newport Beach, CA 92663. www.goldsteinsfuneral.com

PALMER

JOHN CLETUS "UNCLE JOHN" age 75, on June 22, 2011. Beloved husband of 55 years to Elizabeth (Aunt Betty) Nagle Palmer, son of Eleanor Dwyer Palmer, devoted father to Mary (Ken) Rhoades, Cathy McDevitt, Adele Palmer Rivera (deceased), loving grandfather of Michael (Lisa), Angela (Dan), Mary (Jim), Adele, Tammy (Derik), Kenny (Jean), Karen and Arthur, preceded in death by his granddaughters Adriana and Pamela, devoted greatgrandfather to Jacob, Adelle, Lela, Danny, Adrianna, Ryann, Jack, Ellie, James, Matthew, Shane, Cole and predeceased by great grandson Chase. Survived by siblings Betty (Jim) Roberts, predeceased by his sister Patricia and brother Cletus; also survived by Caroline (Andy) McGraw, John Nagle, Fred (Stephanie) Nagle, Fred (Stephanie) Nagle, Doris (Andy) Gonzaga, Arlene Nagle, Robert (Judith) Nagle and George Nagle (deceased). John loved being with his family, reading, sports, crossword puzzles and spending time with friends at the Lutheran Settlement House Senior Citizen Center. Funeral Mass will be held at 10 A.M. in St. Michael RC Church, 1445 N. 2nd St. on Wednesday June 29, 2011, where visitation will begin 8:30 A.M. Interment at the New Cathedral Cemetery. In lieu of flowers donations can be sent in his memory to Lutheran Settlement House Senior Citizen Center, 1340 Frankford Ave., Phila. PA 19125. ( McELVARR)

South Jersey B

SLIVINSKI JOHN

A. JR., "JACKIE". Suddenly June 25, 2011, beloved husband of Carla (nee Kim), loving son of Jack Sr. and Gerry (nee C r o m l e y ) , dear brother of Jennifer Wysocki and her husband Mike, brother-in-law of Robert Kim and his wife Lara, godfather of Nina and Charlie; also survived by his aunts and uncles: Annie and Felix, Sean and Cathy, Harriet, Raymond, Margie and Mike and m a n y cousins. Relatives, friends and members of the Philadelphia Fire Dept. are invited to his Viewing Tuesday Evening 6 to 9 P.M. and also Wednesday 8 A.M. to 9:30 A.M. B U R N S FUNERAL HOME, 9708 Frankford Ave. (So. of Grant Ave.) followed by his Funeral Mass 10:30 A.M. St. Timothy Church. Interment Westminster Cemetery. In lieu of flowers contributions to Local 22 Firefighters Widow Fund, 415 N. 5th St., Phila, PA 19123 in his memory would be appreciated. www.burnsfuneralhome.com

THOMPSON

KATHRYN ’’ANN’’ on June 23, 2011 of Broomall, PA. Loving wife of James K. Thompson; beloved mother of James K. Jr. (Toni) and Bruce A. Thompson; grandmother of Beckey J., James K. III, Bruce A. Jr. and Carly E. Thompson; sister of Evelyn Smith. Services and Interment private. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the charity of choice. Arrs. FRANK C. VIDEON , Broomall

THORSTENSEN

MAFALDA ROSE, age 83 of Cherry Hill on June 24, 2011. Beloved wife of the late Roy F. Devoted mother of Shelley Marie Thorstensen (Dale Baggerley) of Oxford, PA., Roy Martin (Mary) Thorstensen of Vineland and Brad Peter (Sylvie) Thorstensen of Haddon Twp. Loving grandmother of Graham, James, Eric, Martin, Gracellen Rose, Emilie and Roy Bernard. Mafalda was an assistant to the president of Pennsylvannia College of Podiatric Medicine. Relatives and friends are invited to attend her Memorial Mass Wednesday 10:30 A.M. at Christ Our Light RC Church, 401 N. Kings Hwy. Cherry Hill where the family will receive friends 9:30-10:30 A.M. Interment Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington VA at a date to be determined. Arrangements by MURRAY-PARADEE FUNERAL HOME of Cherry Hill.

WEBER

ELMER W., of Springhouse Estates and formerly of West Oak Lane, June 24, 2010. He was the son of the late Elmer W. Weber, Sr. and Elizabeth C. (nee Shee). Relatives, friends and employees of Philco-Ford are invited to Graveside Services, Wed. 9:30 A.M. at West Laurel Hill Cemetery, Bala Cynwyd, PA BISHOP F. H.

Express Condolences. See the Death Notices at Philly.com

Gertrude Fuchs, 99, activist and nurse By Sally A. Downey

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Gertrude Fuchs, 99, a Quaker activist and nurse, died Sunday, May 29, at Stapeley, a retirement residence in Germantown. Born in Hagen, Germany, Ms. Fuchs witnessed the devastation of World War I and the bombing of her family’s home. After the war, she had her first encounter with Quakers, who came from England and the United States to distribute food. As a teenager, she was an au pair to a family in France. She then attended Gertrude a commercial Fuchs college in Germany for two years. In 1931, she took a position as a nanny in England and studied nursing in Birmingham, becoming a nurse midwife. She told friends that she had intended to spend the rest of her life in England. In 1939, Ms. Fuchs returned to Germany to visit her parents and to deliver, as promised, the baby of a friend. Germany invaded Poland later that year, sealing the borders, and she was unable to leave. During World War II, she was head nurse at a women’s hospital in Cologne, Germany. Allied bombing reduced the city to rubble, and she told the Mount Airy Times-Express in 1997 that after one raid, “in my garden I found an arm with a wristwatch still on it. You dealt with this kind of stuff every day.” The Nazis questioned Ms. Fuchs, then a Congregationalist with strong pacifist beliefs, about how she would defend the hospital if the Allies came. She told them, “ ‘I would defend it with a pitchfork,’ and somehow they accepted that.” After the war, Ms. Fuchs was a translator for the Allies. In 1947, she joined a Quaker relief group and became a Quaker. Fifty years later, she was featured in a film, Love Amid the Ruins, about the Quakers’ work in postwar Germany; those efforts were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. In 1954, Ms. Fuchs emigrated to the United States. She was briefly a private-duty nurse in Delaware, riding her bike to see patients. After earning a bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of Pennsylvania, she worked for the Visiting Nurses Association in Philadelphia. She retired in 1976. Ms. Fuchs was a volunteer docent for more than 20 years at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, visiting schools with kits of artifacts from the museum’s collection. For many years, she lived in apartments in homes on the grounds of Awbury Arboretum in Germantown, where she gardened and kept bees, giving jars of honey to her many friends. She enjoyed hiking and traveled widely in the United States and Europe. She returned often to Germany and on several trips bought a car, usually a Volkswagen, that she shipped to the United States. She continued to drive well into her 90s. Weeks before she died, she spoke to a friend, Hollister Knowlton, about what had influenced her life. Religion “helps us find purpose in life,” she said. “Reading good books to find out what to do; being among good people, too; and music is another thing that helps us find our way.” Ms. Fuchs is survived by a nephew, Hans MartinSchaefer. A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 1, at Chestnut Hill Friends Meeting, 100 E. Mermaid Lane. Ms. Fuchs was a longtime member of the meeting and took leadership roles in the stewardship of the physical plant and on the committee that oversaw pastoral care. Contact staff writer Sally A. Downey at 215-854-2913 or sdowney@phillynews.com.


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South Jersey

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Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

OBITUARIES

The former advertising artist for The Inquirer painted this mural in the newspaper’s headquarters on North Broad Street.

James Heugh, 97, artist and illustrator By Sally A. Downey

cation Scholarship. After graduating in 1936, he studJames Heugh, 97, an artist ied in Europe on a Cresson and illustrator formerly of fellowship. Downingtown, died Sunday, In 1940, he married artist May 29, at Shawnee Gardens Frances Cowan, whom he had Healthcare & Rehabilitation met at a PAFA summer sesCenter in Shawnee, Kan. sion in Chester Springs. “He For most of his career, Mr. threw her into the pool,” said Heugh was a freetheir daughter, Nancy lance graphic artist Edmondson. and illustrator and During World War painted watercolors II, Mr. Heugh served for pleasure. in the Army in RichIn 1958, he won a mond, Va., designing gold medal at the Philgraphics and camouadelphia Art Directors flage. Club Show for an illusAfter retiring in tration of a speeding 1979 to Pinehurst, locomotive. His depic- James N.C., Mr. Heugh won tions of outer-space Heugh several prizes in reexploration were ingional exhibitions for cluded in a children’s his paintings and wildbook, What’s Going On in life sculptures. He was a dedicated gardener and enjoyed Space? In the 1960s and 1970s, Mr. golf and tennis. Mr. Heugh’s wife died in Heugh was an advertising artist for The Inquirer. He paint- 1999. He moved to the Mided a mural, depicting newspa- west in 2009 to be near his per production, in the com- daughter. posing room of the company’s In addition to her, he is surbuilding on North Broad vived by a son, J. Alan Heugh, and nieces and nephews. Street. A service will be scheduled. Mr. Heugh graduated from Frankford High School and attended the Pennsylvania Contact staff writer Sally A. Academy of the Fine Arts on Downey at 215-854-2913 or a Philadelphia Board of Edu- sdowney@phillynews.com. INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

IN THE NATION AND THE WORLD Christiane Noblecourt four years. Egyptologist, 97 Fred Steiner

Christiane Desroches Noblecourt, 97, a pioneering French Egyptologist who prodded Gen. Gamal Abdel Nasser to help salvage Nubia’s vaunted antiquities, died Thursday at a hospital in Epernay, east of Paris, where she had been taken after a recent stroke, said Anne Françoise, treasurer of a retirement home in the nearby town of Sezanne where Ms. Desroches Noblecourt lived the last few years. Born Nov. 17, 1913, in Paris, she developed a passion for Egypt after reading about the discovery of King Tut’s tomb in the early 1920s. She later studied at the Louvre and the Sorbonne. After an initial trip to Egypt in the late 1930s, she became the first woman to be put on a stipend with the Cairo-based French Institute of Oriental Archaeology — cracking a male-dominated world of Egyptology. After Egyptian officials began planning the Aswan High Dam on the Nile in 1954, Ms. Desroches Noblecourt met Nasser to air concerns that 32 ancient temples and chapels in southern Nubia were facing submersion. In an interview with Le Monde newspaper in 2007, she recalled how she told him to “let me handle it, I’ll go talk to UNESCO on your behalf,” and he “trusted me and let me do it.” Paris-based UNESCO — the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization — then helped mobilize nearly 50 countries for a vast project in the 1960s to dismantle, move, and reconstruct the antiquities — including massive statues of Pharaoh Ramses II at Abu Simbel, which were broken down into 1,000 pieces and rebuilt over

— AP

Music composer, 88

Television and film music composer Fred Steiner, 88, creator of the bold and gritty theme for the Perry Mason TV series and one of the composers of the Oscar-nominated score for The Color Purple, died of natural causes Thursday at his home in the town of Ajijic in the Mexican state of Jalisco, according to his daughter Wendy Waldman, a singer-songwriter. One of the busiest composers working in Hollywood in the 1950s and ’60s, Mr. Steiner also crafted music for Gunsmoke; The Twilight Zone; Star Trek; Have Gun, Will Travel; Rawhide; Hogan’s Heroes; and other TV series. He said he wanted to create music for Mason, writer Erle Stanley Gardner’s legal-eagle lawyer, that projected two key facets of his personality: suave sophistication and the underlying toughness that allowed him to go head-to-head with the criminals with whom he often came into contact. The piece he came up with, titled “Park Avenue Beat,” pulsed with the power of the big city and the swagger of a beefy hero played to perfection by actor Raymond Burr. Frederick Steiner was born Feb. 24, 1923, in New York City, the son of violinist, composer, and arranger George Steiner. He began playing the piano at 6 and took up the cello at 13. He received a scholarship to the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Ohio, where he studied with composer Normand Lockwood. His early jobs included composing, arranging, and conducting music for New York City-based radio shows in the 1940s. — Los Angeles Times

To Submit Obituaries The Inquirer welcomes obituary information from funeral directors, relatives and friends. Please submit information promptly. We want our obituaries to be timely. Recent photographs of publishable quality are desired.

To contact obituary writers ¢ For all obituaries: 215-854-2717 ¢ Fax: 215-854-2988

Photos with obituaries ¢ Delivery: 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. weekdays at the front desk, 400 N. Broad St., Philadelphia. ¢ E-mail: Contact the obituary writers at the above number.

Funeral announcements To submit a Paid Funeral Announcement, call 215-854-5800 or email Deathnotices@phillynews.com

JASON DeCESARE

Bible scholar Peter Enns gestures as he talks about notions of wisdom to a men’s group at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in

Whitemarsh. At the other end of the table is the Rev. Marek Zabriskie, who got the ball rolling on the yearlong Bible reading.

Surprises and conversation follow church’s Bible Challenge BIBLE from B1 not the same person.” The group’s recommended version is the Oxford Annotated Bible: the New Revised Standard Version, found in most Episcopal churches. Some are curling up with their family Bibles, while others are reading via apps loaded onto their iPads or Droids or Kindles or iPhones. One-year Bible readings are not unusual in evangelical churches, said Marshall Shelley, general editor of the Quest Study Bible and a vice president of Christianity Today magazine, but rarer in what he called “liberal” Protestant denominations such as the Episcopal Church. Shelley said he was not surprised to hear that members of St. Thomas’ Bible Challenge were quick to distance themselves from the violent figure of Yahweh. While most evangelicals are disturbed by the Bible’s

violence and drunkenness and sex, he said, they typically read the Bible at a younger age than do Catholics and mainline Protestants. By adulthood, he said, evangelicals are typically less jarred by the disturbing passages and view the two testaments as a continuum that culminates in Jesus, whose message is that “violence and domination are not the ultimate solution.” Only two original members of the project have dropped out, according to Zabriskie, who engages regularly with participants by e-mail at mzabriskie@stthomaswhitemarsh.org. The church has also created a Facebook site for the Bible Challenge at www.facebook.com/pages/St-ThomasWhitemarsh-Bible-Challenge/228202230533157 Much conversation has also taken place, as it did last week, on the grounds of the

parish. Joining Zabriskie in leading those conversations has been Bible scholar Peter Enns, who was on hand Wednesday at a gathering of the church’s regular “Burgers, Beer, and Bible” men’s group, about a third of whose regulars are part of the Bible Challenge. Among them was Tim Russell, 69, who said he shared Pratt’s dismay at the “blood and gore” of the Old Testament, but also the worship of false gods by such heroes as Solomon and Aaron, brother of Moses. Russell said he took breaks from some of the Old Testament’s more difficult passages by turning to the Psalms and the New Testament, with their “more relaxed view of the world.” Although a year’s completion time is the nominal goal, the pace and sequence of the readings is up to each person, said Zabriskie, rector at St.

Thomas for 16 years. He encourages readers to “skip over the boring parts if it helps them stick with the goal,” and to mix Old and New Testaments, Psalms, and Proverbs with each reading. The project is so popular that the church will renew it next year. So many participants have voiced concern over the violence, Zabriskie said, that Enns will devote some of next year’s teaching to the God figures of the Old and New Testaments. “Rape, sexual abuse, genocide in Rwanda, ethnic cleansing in the Balkans — these are things we read about in the newspapers,” he said. “We shouldn’t be surprised to discover them in texts that are 3,000 years old.” Contact staff writer David O’Reilly at 215-854-5723 or doreilly@phillynews.com.

Play makes a point about rape essay PLAY from B1 But instead of writing a screed, she went for laughs. Within three days of seeing the essay, which Rottenberg wrote for his online arts publication, the Broad Street Review, Blouin had whipped up her retort, a 30-minute play titled Dan Rottenberg Is Thinking About Raping You. “I wanted to get everyone in a room where we all affirm for each other that what he said was silly,” she said of her play, which was performed for the first and probably only time Saturday night at Plays and Players Theatre on Delancey Street. The real Rottenberg is on vacation in France. He said in an interview Sunday that he regretted his comments about Logan. “I think it was insensitive of me to refer to that picture,” he said. “She went through a horrific ordeal, and she deserves tremendous sympathy.” But his main point remains relevant, he said. “I think it’s naive for people to place their entire faith in the law or moral codes,” he said, “and they should learn to take some precautions.” In an e-mail, Rottenberg

also said he hoped his essay would generate “dialogue about male sex abuse and women’s responses to it.” Rottenberg has been a figure in the Philadelphia cultural scene for decades. From 1978 to 1997, he wrote an oped column for The Inquirer. In the early 1970s, he said, he helped pressure Chicago’s four daily newspapers into “reforming their male chauvinist attitudes toward women,” including forcing them to stop segregating employment ads by gender. Rottenberg, 69, promises he will post a “full reply to all the critics on the Broad Street Review site by Tuesday evening.” Coincidentally, his daughter Julie Rottenberg wrote for Sex and the City, a TV show whose female characters were so sexually liberated that some viewers found them unsympathetic. In Broad Street Review, Rottenberg was responding to an article by SaraKay Smullens, a Philadelphia therapist, about the prevalence of sexual abuse. Smullens praised Logan for speaking up about the problem. Smullens has known Rottenberg for years, admiring his

advocacy on some issues, but his recent stance stunned her, she said. “Dan has been a very fair editor when I have submitted work to him,” she said. “My primary concern about what he wrote is that it could promote the shame and blame of women, something I’ve spoken out against all my professional life.” She and about 80 others went to Plays and Players to see Blouin’s work, which benefited SlutWalk, a group that organizes marches to challenge the idea that it’s OK to blame victims of crimes. Blouin, 32, said fury had propelled her writing. “It was easy,” she said, because she lifted many ideas from his writing. “He wrote most of [the lines] himself.” The play had the character she called Rottenberg present his “Five-Point Plan for the Prevention of Sexual Assault” as if lecturing to a college class or an infomercial audience. The audience got the joke, laughing loudly and often. Actor Brendan Norton played the Rottenberg character as a scold and a creep who was also strangely endearing.

“My name is Dan Rottenberg,” the actor said. “I’m here to talk to you about an issue that can be really scary to talk about. That issue is female naivete.” The character then presented a series of educational scenes, including an explanation from a scientist (played by Lucas Nguyen) who used a drawing of a well-endowed man to explain that for men, the penis is the dominant organ. “Wow,” the Rottenberg character said. “Looking at this, it’s easy to understand why we have no choice but to put it in things and people.” Jennifer MacMillan played an audience member who popped up with questions like this: “You’re saying that a man needs to conquer an unwilling sex partner. But I thought my revealing attire meant that I want to be assaulted. How can I truly satisfy men if I’m not truly unwilling? I’m so confused!” “Don’t worry,” the Rottenberg character told her. “At the end of the day, it doesn't really matter what you want. It matters what men need.” Contact staff writer Miriam Hill at 215-854-5520 or hillmb@phillynews.com.


Monday, June 27, 2011

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Weather Report

Monday’s Forecast

After a comfortable weekend the heat and humidity return starting Monday. Temperatures will climb a bit in the afternoon but get even warmer Tuesday with higher humidity. There will be showers and thunderstorms moving through the area late Tuesday before temperatures drop slightly.

Monday

Tuesday

HIGH

HIGH

LOW

87 70

Scranton 83/64

Wednesday

LOW

HIGH

88 69

Getting warmer

New York

LOW

HIGH

85 62

Showers and thunderstorms late

Sun/Moon

Thursday

86/66

85/66

Lancaster 87/68

Asbury Park 80/67

Philadelphia

Wilmington

New

87/70

85/69

Vineland 87/65

Baltimore

Atlantic City 84/68

89/74

Water Temp

Dover

84/69

73

Cape May

Washington

81/69

89/72

Regional Forecast

Poconos Partly cloudy. High 81. Increasing

Marine Forecast

July 1

First

Full

July 8

July 15

Last

Air Quality

The worst pollutant in the region Sunday was particulates, produced mainly by motor vehicles and power plants. Good (G) . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-50 Carbon monoxide . . . .CO Moderate (M) . . . . . . . 51-100 Nitrogen dioxide . . . . .NO Unhealthful (U). . . . . 101-200 Particulates . . . . . . . . . PA Very Unhealthful (V) . 201-300 Sulfur dioxide . . . . . . .SO Hazardous (H) . . . . . 301-400 Ozone . . . . . . . . . . . . . OZ At a Pollution Standard Index rating of 100, the general population begins to experience irritation and other unhealthful effects.

Sunday’s Pollution Standard Index

Bristol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Burlington . . . . . . . . . . . . Camden. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chester . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Norristown. . . . . . . . . . . . Philadelphia. . . . . . . . . . . Trenton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wilmington . . . . . . . . . . .

G46 G44 G45 G48 G41 G45 G40 G35

High Pollutant Sunday

PA PA PA PA OZ PA PA PA

Low High

92 74

Hot and humid

Hot and humid

Montreal 81/66 Toronto Minneapolis Boston 79/59 75/64 79/65 Detroit 81/70 Pittsburgh New York 85/68 83/66 Chicago Philadelphia 84/66 Washington 89/72 St. Louis 93/72

Cape Henlopen to Virginia Beach Partly cloudy, chance of scattered storms. Wind north at 5 knots. Visibility reduced in occasional storms. Waves 2-3 feet.

Denver 78/57 Phoenix 115/86

Dallas 101/76

Thunderstorms Snow

City Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Boston Buffalo Charleston, S.C. Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville

Grasses, 4.3, very low; weeds, 19.4, moderate; trees, 4.3, very low; mold spores, 10625.8, very high SOURCE: www.asthmacenter.com

Philadelphia Almanac

Readings taken through 4 p.m.

Memphis 97/78

Ice

Monday 83/61/pc 99/67/pc 61/51/sh 93/73/t 79/65/pc 75/68/c 92/75/t 95/71/c 84/66/t 87/71/t 82/70/pc 101/76/s 78/57/pc 83/62/t 81/70/t 88/74/s 96/78/pc 89/69/t 91/75/t

Tuesday 84/65/sh 99/67/pc 61/51/sh 93/72/t 80/68/pc 72/63/t 91/76/t 94/73/t 75/62/pc 83/66/pc 77/65/t 99/77/pc 92/60/pc 80/64/pc 82/62/pc 88/73/s 95/77/pc 82/64/s 93/74/t

Cities Abroad

Temperatures

High Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 (1:49 p.m.) Record high for Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .100 (1952) 3 p.m. humidity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44% Low Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 (5:53 a.m.) Record low for Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51 (1960) Normal high/low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83/67 High/low same date last year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91/72 Season cooling degree days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 448 Last season cooling degree days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 517 Normal season cooling degree days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 274

City Acapulco Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Barbados Beijing Berlin Bermuda Brussels Buenos Aires Cairo Copenhagen Dublin Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul

Sunday’s barometer

6 a.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.92 rising Noon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29.96 falling 6 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.94 steady

Daylight sky conditions Sunday 60% clouds with 40% sunshine

Precipitation

Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.00 in. Month through Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.48 in. Year through Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.01 in. Normal through Sunday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.26 in. Deficit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.25 in.

Sunday 88/79/pc 75/61/pc 75/66/s 55/46/pc 111/84/s 91/81/pc 86/77/t 90/66/pc 72/55/pc 84/75/pc 75/59/s 50/32/s 95/na/s 64/48/pc 73/59/pc 91/73/pc 86/82/pc 86/63/s 57/34/s 95/70/s

New Orleans 94/76

MEXICO

Sunday 75/60/c 98/65/pc 64/53/c 92/72/pc 76/61/pc 72/61/sh 96/74/pc 88/63/pc 80/57/pc 74/63/t 77/57/pc 97/77/pc 91/61/pc 80/62/pc 81/61/pc 81/75/s 95/79/pc 74/64/t 94/70/pc

Monday 90/77/t 83/65/s 80/66/s 59/50/sh 113/85/s 88/77/t 87/81/t 89/69/s 80/60/pc 81/77/t 86/65/s 56/39/s 87/67/s 75/59/pc 62/50/sh 90/75/t 87/79/t 85/63/s 63/40/s 93/65/s

Tuesday 86/77/t 82/66/t 82/70/s 59/46/t 113/82/s 95/79/t 87/81/t 90/72/s 90/68/s 81/77/t 88/55/t 54/41/pc 90/70/s 75/66/s 63/45/pc 90/75/t 86/81/t 79/63/s 61/39/s 90/66/s

Fronts:

Atlanta 93/73

Stationary

Houston 96/78

Rain

M M M M M M M M

Delaware Partly cloudy. High 84. Becoming

In the Region

90 73

LOW

CANADA

Billings 76/55

Los Angeles 72/63

Pollution Forecast Monday

Friday’s pollen, count and discomfort levels:

Philadelphia (Chestnut St.) High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:31 a.m., 11:53 p.m. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:53 a.m., 5:54 p.m. Weather indications s = sunny; pc = partly cloudy; c = cloudy; sh = showers; t = thunderstorms; r = Delaware Breakwater High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6:09 a.m., 6:39 p.m. rain; sf = snow flurries; sn = snow; i = ice. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12:17 a.m., 11:59 a.m. City Sunday Monday Tuesday Cape May Allentown 77/57/pc 85/64/pc 85/68/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:36 a.m., 6:04 p.m. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:13 a.m. Atlantic City 86/64/pc 84/68/pc 84/72/sh Atlantic City (Steel Pier) Baltimore 82/60/pc 89/74/c 90/73/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:02 a.m., 5:30 p.m. Harrisburg 78/60/pc 87/68/c 84/68/t Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10:52 a.m. New York 79/66/pc 83/66/pc 84/71/sh Beach Haven (Little Egg Harbor) Pittsburgh 74/58/pc 85/68/c 82/62/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7:35 a.m., 7:56 p.m. Salisbury, Md. 85/66/pc 86/69/pc 90/70/t Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2:36 a.m., 2:24 p.m. Scranton 73/57/pc 83/64/pc 80/63/t Barnegat Inlet Washington 83/67/pc 89/72/pc 91/72/t High tide . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5:10 a.m., 5:31 p.m. Low tide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11:27 a.m. Wilmington 82/62/pc 85/69/pc 87/71/t

HIGH

Weather at noon Monday and forecast high/low temperatures

San Francisco 66/54

Delaware Bay Partly cloudy. Wind northwest

Tides Monday

Seattle 75/55 Portland 81/57

July 23

Jersey Shore Partly cloudy. High 84. Increasing clouds Monday night. Low 68. Chance of scattered showers Tuesday. High 84. mostly cloudy Monday night. Low 69. Chance of scattered showers Tuesday. High 88.

LOW

s = sunny; pc = partly cloudy; c = cloudy; sh = showers; t = t-storms; r = rain; rs = rain/snow; sf = flurries; sn = snow; i = ice

Ozone forecast available daily at 1-800-872-7261 and at www.dvrpc.org.

at around 5 knots. Visibility mainly unrestricted. Waves 1 foot or less.

HIGH

Sunday

National Forecast

Sun rises 5:34 a.m., sets 8:34 p.m. Moon rises 2:24 a.m., sets 5:20 p.m.

Manasquan to Cape Henlopen Partly cloudy. Wind northwest at around 5 knots. Visibility mainly unrestricted. Waves 2-3 feet.

clouds Monday night. Low 60. Chance of scattered showers Tuesday. High 80.

LOW

Warmer

Vancouver 68/57

Trenton

Saturday

88 70

Sunny and nice

85/64

87/68

HIGH

85 67

Sunny and nice

83/66

Reading

Friday

LOW

Allentown Harrisburg

B7

Exclusive EarthWatch 7-Day Forecast

Conditions updated throughout the day on www.philly.com

Monday’s Highs and Lows

South Jersey B

Warm Miami 89/78

Cold

City Sunday Kansas City, Mo. 89/69/pc Las Vegas 101/79/s Los Angeles 70/61/pc Memphis 93/78/pc Miami 91/78/pc Minneapolis 78/61/pc New Orleans 93/78/pc Orlando 90/73/t Phoenix 110/86/s Portland, Maine 71/57/pc Portland, Ore. 73/51/s Richmond 88/67/pc St. Louis 85/66/r Salt Lake City 80/59/s San Diego 71/61/pc San Francisco 68/53/pc San Juan 89/79/pc Seattle 71/48/pc Tampa 86/72/t

Monday 88/63/pc 105/82/s 72/63/s 97/78/pc 89/78/t 79/59/t 94/76/pc 90/73/t 115/86/s 77/59/s 81/57/c 93/72/t 93/72/t 87/65/s 74/62/s 67/53/s 87/76/t 75/55/c 93/75/t

Tuesday 82/68/pc 106/83/s 70/60/s 93/79/t 88/79/t 78/60/pc 93/77/pc 91/77/t 116/86/s 74/59/pc 77/57/sh 94/72/t 84/69/s 94/66/s 71/62/s 66/53/r 88/76/t 74/57/sh 91/76/t

City London Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Milan Montreal Moscow Nassau New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver

Monday 83/64/t 100/70/pc 60/46/pc 68/55/t 85/66/t 81/66/s 78/61/t 91/81/t 96/84/t 91/66/s 80/61/pc 75/65/sh 88/66/s 76/66/sh 89/77/t 74/55/s 64/45/s 83/71/sh 75/64/s 68/57/r

Tuesday 68/55/sh 95/63/pc 61/41/s 68/55/t 82/68/s 82/57/c 84/68/t 90/81/t 93/81/t 86/55/t 82/54/s 70/54/sh 91/72/s 81/70/s 88/81/t 82/59/pc 63/55/sh 84/70/pc 75/55/sh 63/54/sh

Sunday 79/59/pc 100/70/s 57/46/pc 77/57/pc 88/64/s 75/64/pc 79/64/pc 91/82/pc 86/79/pc 86/57/s 70/52/pc 88/68/pc 82/66/s 72/64/c 90/81/pc 70/54/pc 68/46/s 72/68/pc 72/63/pc 64/52/pc

Homes’ child injuries detailed After Pennsylvania acted, incidents in residential care declined slightly — but so did head counts. ASSOCIATED PRESS

during a summer program at the Benjamin Franklin Freshman Academy in Levittown.

Bucks district helps children meditate to control anxieties

MEDITATION from B1 their anxiety enough to reduce any medications they are taking, said Christina DiNicola, a pediatrician with the Myrna Brind Center of Integrative Medicine at Jefferson. Early studies show promising results in youngsters with attention-deficit disorders who use yoga and biofeedback to relax, DiNicola said. Allison incorporated a few yoga practices last year in the summer program, which the district operates with the Delaware Valley Children’s Center, an organization in Wrightstown that provides mental-health services. This year, Allison invited Gallagher, a therapist at the Delaware County Intermediate Unit, to lead a 30-minute session on meditation. At the school, Gallagher talked with students in three classes — first and second

graders, third and fourth, and fifth to eighth. Students ran quickly throughout the room, and then in slow motion in exercises designed to get them to notice differences in their body when moving quickly and moving slowly. Gallagher clinked a meditation bell to signal when to stop and go. He taught them about breathing deeply while standing up and while sitting down with their hands on their belly. He taught them to focus on sounds in their surroundings. “How do you feel?” Gallagher asked the class of older students. “My body feels more calm,” said Zachary Ford, 10. “My face feels like it loosened up.” In the class of third and fourth graders, Christine Smeltzer, 8, said her body felt like she wanted to take a nap. Christine said she might

use the techniques outside the classroom during times when she’s frustrated. That means when “kids are telling me what to do or bullying my friends,” she said. The breathing would help her feel “calm.”

other reasons. To prevent such injuries, the Department of Public Welfare began a program in 2006 to reduce the restraining of children by staff members. The newspaper said that injuries reported to the state had declined 7 percent from 2008 to 2010 — but that the number of juveniles in residential programs also had decreased during the same period. “Nobody goes out and wants to hurt kids. I believe that in my heart,” Angela Logan, the welfare department’s policy director, told the newspaper in an article published Sunday. Still, a review of the incident reports since 2005 showed that some children had been restrained for behavior such as “aggressive posturing” even though state bulletins say such

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Therapist Charles E. Gallagher does a team-building exercise with sixth to eighth graders

PITTSBURGH — The number of children injured in Pennsylvania’s 767 licensed residential programs is decreasing, but hundreds of children were still hurt in such facilities in the last six years, a newspaper found. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reviewed 361 reports that detail 264 injuries to children from January 2005 through December 2010 at residential facilities that house abused or neglected children, as well as those placed by courts for delinquency or other issues. The injuries included 21 fractured or broken bones and 18 cuts that required stitches, and, according to the newspaper, most were caused by staff members who restrained the children for misbehavior or

restraints are supposed to be used only as “an emergency measure of last resort.” The newspaper said its review and interviews with officials, parents, youths, and staff at some residential facilities showed that efforts to reduce restraint-related and other safety problems had been complicated by practical considerations, the entrenched habits of the staff at some facilities, and financial issues encountered by the publicly funded facilities. Cynthia Allen has pushed for changes since her son, Giovanni Aletriz, 16, died when staff put him in a hold that kept him facedown until he lost consciousness at Summit Quest Academy in Ephrata, Lancaster County, in February 2006. The 6-foot-1, 250-pound teen had enrolled in the residential facility after he was arrested and received a diagnosis of bipolar disorder while on juvenile probation.

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The Inquirer

Business People in the News. C3

A workplace dress code. Small But Mighty, C4

Market Watch. C2 B

Monday, June 27, 2011 ★ Section C

PhillyInc www.phillyinc.biz

Smaller mergers are signals, too

Billion-dollar deals may grab all the attention, but it’s when smaller firms with unfamiliar names get snapped up that I start thinking the merger market may be popping. PricewaterhouseCoopers L.L.P. tallied 1,276 announced transactions with a total value of $454 billion during the first five months of 2011. Over the same period of 2010, there were 1,336 transactions worth $327 billion. Now that suggests fewer deals are getting done for more money. But for both years, more than 36 percent of the deals struck have been for less than $1 billion, or transactions involving smaller companies. That’s a higher percentage than the 23 percent to 28 percent during the 2005 to 2007 boom years. And data tracked by the National Venture Capital Association also show an uptick in M&A activity among businesses that have attracted venture investment. Most of those companies could be considered small businesses. The trade group counted 109 venture-backed M&A deals in the first quarter; most of them were in the information-technology sector. One such IT firm that would get counted in the second quarter is the venture-backed ClickEquations Inc., which has about a dozen employees in Conshohocken. It was acquired by Channel Intelligence Inc., of Celebration, Fla., for an undisclosed amount. Using the federal government’s 500-employee threshold for small business, here are a few other deals that have been either announced or completed within the last month: 8 Philadelphia Gear Corp., of King of Prussia, was acquired in late May by the Timken Co., of Canton, Ohio, for $200 million. The privately held provider of gear drives has 220 employees and $85 million in annual revenue. 8 New Penn Financial L.L.C., a Plymouth Meeting mortgage lender with more than 400 employees, was bought in early June by New York-based Shellpoint Partners L.L.C. No terms were announced. 8 Multiband Corp., of Minneapolis, agreed June 16 to acquire WPCS International Inc., an Exton engineering and construction firm focused on the wireless industry, in a cash transaction valued at $22.3 million. WPCS has about $100 million in annual revenue See PHILLY INC on C8

Courtesy of Talson Solutions L.L.C.

Robert S. Bright of Talson Solutions has done audit and monitoring on Lincoln Financial Field, Citizens Bank Park, and other big projects.

Phila. firm keeps an eye on cost overruns, corruption.

Clean construction As walk-ups go, the headquarters of Talson Solutions L.L.C. is a cardiac workout: The climb from the doorstep of 306 Market St. to the homey confines of the consulting business Robert S. Bright founded 10 years ago is 64 steps. On his mother’s first visit, she had to sit down for a breather partway up, Bright said. Then again, he doesn’t make a living as a property scout. His expertise is finding waste and other forms of trouble in construction projects, from cost overruns to fraud. Locally, he has been hired for audit and construction-monitoring services on a number of prominent jobs, including Lincoln Financial Field, Citizens Bank Park, and Comcast Center. Internationally, the company is assisting the Office of Inspector General in planning and conducting the audits of the $5.2 billion Panama Canal expansion project, expected to run through October 2014. “The clearest indication of a reputation is who your clients are and [if] you see repeat clients,” said Peter S. Longstreth, president of Phila-

RON TARVER / Staff Photographer

Bright looks over a map of the Panama Canal, where his company has been overseeing a $5.2 billion expansion project, expected to run through October 2014. delphia Industrial Development Corp. PIDC used Bright’s company on both stadium projects. “He passes that test,” Longstreth said. Landing work is itself a challenge. Talson is a company of 14 employees and more than $2 million in annual revenue in a field dominated by accounting behemoths such

as Deloitte L.L.P., PricewaterhouseCoopers L.L.P., KPMG L.L.P., and Ian White. There are also an increasing number of small boutique firms. To illustrate the growing competitiveness, Bright noted that Talson recently lost out on a project in Las Cruces, N.M., that had attracted nine bidders. See TALSON on C8

Go to www.philly.com/ business to hear Robert S. Bright elaborate on the potential pitfalls of major construction projects.

Federal debt hurts small business — and the rest of us

ANDREW HARRER / Bloomberg News

Visitors look at the National Debt Clock in New York. Since their visit in April, the government deficit has risen to about $1.5 trillion.

The debate over the debt ceiling and the size of the federal budget deficit has put the spotlight on the “error of our ways” — trying to live beyond our means today at the expense of our future. The federal government has developed the bad habit of spending more than it is willing to ask us to pay for with taxes. We get all those “goodies,” but don’t have to pay for them with higher taxes. Instead, the government borrows the money, to be repaid some time in the future. Assume for the moment that there is no “rest of the world,” it’s just us. Then, a simple truth is obvious: If the government spends $1,000 and only taxes us $600, it must borrow $400. But it must borrow the $400 from us. When we lend money to the government

(through buying government bonds), we can’t spend it. So, either way, the government has $1,000 to spend and we have $1,000 less to spend. Total spending in our economy is the same, it’s just a question of who spends the money, us or the government. This is a political question that we try to answer at each election. If I get an extra dollar, do I want to buy what private firms make or what the government

makes? A second important truth: If we don’t save some of our money and put it in the “bank” (this includes insurance companies, stock brokers, and all that), then there is no money to be borrowed to “invest” in productive assets (finance the purchase of a new car or house or expand a business and hire new workers). In 2007, consumers saved only about 1 percent of their after-tax income, a poor performance. It was 10 percent in the 1970s and early 1980s. Chinese consumers save 40 percent. Small businesses get more than 90 percent of their operating funds from banks, which must depend on savers for the money to lend into the community. See SMALL MATTERS on C8


C2 B

www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Up-to-the-minute stock and mutual-fund quotes, customizable portfolios, company profiles, and more at http://go.philly.com/business From the Associated Press

Readers’ Choice Stocks Stock

AFLAC AGL Res AK Steel AMR ASA Gold AT&T 2056 AbtLab AbingtnBcp Accenture Aegon 7.25 Agilent Agnico g Aircastle AlcatelLuc Alcoa AllegTch AlliBcPa AlliantEgy Allstate AlpTotDiv Altria Amazon Ameren AMovilL AEP AmExp Ameriprise Amgen AmkorT lf Annaly ApolloInv Apple Inc ApldMatl Arbitron ArborRT ArcelorMit ArlingAst ArtesRes Atmel ATMOS AveryD AvisBudg Avnet Avon BHP BillLt BP PLC BP Pru Baidu Bard Barnes Baxter BenefMut BerkHa A BerkH B BestBuy BlackRock Blackstone BlockHR BorgWarn BoydGm BrMySq Bucyrus CBS B CLECO CSX s CVS Care CalaStrTR CallGolf CapitlSrce CarMax Carnival Caterpillar CedarF ChesEng Chevron Chicos Cintas Cisco Citigrp rs Coach CocaCola CognizTech ColgPal ColonPT CmwReit rs CompSci

Last

Chg

A-B-C

44.30 -.72 39.66 +.22 14.22 +.06 5.64 -.05 27.25 +.45 26.73 +.09 51.75 +.07 9.98 -.85 57.02 +3.07 24.76 +.03 48.49 +1.06 63.95 +1.85 12.20 +.29 5.19 +.05 15.23 +.51 60.01 +1.39 10.91 -.08 39.82 +.09 29.43 -.22 5.89 +.04 26.79 -.29 192.55 +6.18 28.26 -.13 50.78 +.98 37.10 -.54 48.34 -.16 55.40 -1.26 57.04 -.97 5.97 +.28 18.70 +.30 9.71 -.27 326.35 +6.09 12.40 -.01 38.30 +.40 4.60 +.24 32.02 +.49 31.88 +2.97 17.91 -1.31 13.06 +.50 32.30 +.39 37.19 +.54 15.80 +.10 30.16 +.17 27.53 +.17 88.61 +.06 41.90 -.26 109.00 +2.91 128.68 +11.00 107.52 -1.15 23.45 +.29 58.50 +.16 8.14 -.13 113100 -150 75.62 +.11 32.48 +1.47 184.39 -2.95 16.02 -.61 15.85 +.45 78.16 +6.64 8.24 +.42 28.93 +1.41 91.64 +.12 26.79 +.91 34.36 +.08 24.99 +.18 36.42 -.91 9.35 +.15 6.15 -.13 6.02 +.01 31.93 +2.68 37.30 +2.03 100.01 +4.06 18.71 +.41 28.01 -.01 97.90 -1.27 15.02 +.76 31.75 -.28 14.93 -.04 39.59 +1.29 58.66 -.65 64.93 -.69 71.14 +3.49 85.46 -2.42 19.80 -.30 25.14 +.58 37.09 -1.41

Stock ConAgra ConocPhil ConEd ConstellEn Cooper Ind CooperTire CornPdts Corning Cosi Inc Costco Cummins CypSemi DR Horton DTE Deere Dell Inc DeltaAir Dentsply DevonE Diageo Discover DiscLab rs Disney DomRescs DowChm DukeEngy DukeRlty EMC Cp EQT Corp EastChm EKodak EV FltRt EdisonInt Elan ElectArts EmersonEl EnbrEPt s EnCana g Entergy EntPrPt EsteeLdr Expedia ExpScripts ExtraSpce ExxonMbl FMC Tch s FamilyDlr FedExCp FedInvst FidNatInfo FifthThird FirstEngy Fiserv FordM FortuneBr FosterWhl Fox Chase FMCG s Frontline Garmin GenDynam GenMarit GenMills GenMot n GenuPrt GettyRlty GileadSci Goldcrp g GoldmanS Google vjGrace Graingr GraniteC HCC Ins HCP Inc HSBC HallmkFn Hanesbrds HarleyD HarrisCorp Harsco HartfdFn HltCrREIT HlthcrRlty Heinz

Last 25.20 71.43 52.40 37.14 58.14 19.90 53.56 17.55 .95 79.13 96.67 19.90

D-E-F

11.42 49.04 79.98 15.93 9.43 37.39 76.61 80.34 24.79 2.17 37.58 47.25 35.23 18.51 13.41 25.64 49.18 98.58 3.42 15.95 38.70 10.80 21.77 53.57 30.55 28.95 68.17 41.56 100.85 27.96 52.94 20.48 76.78 39.77 52.26 91.87 23.62 30.07 12.18 43.05 60.71 13.24 62.51 28.97 13.68 48.43 14.90

G-H-I

33.45 72.29 1.40 36.85 29.92 52.20 25.49 39.71 46.84 130.91 474.88 42.50 147.37 24.43 30.89 36.55 48.24 6.92 27.84 38.07 44.03 30.88 24.72 52.27 20.47 53.01

Chg +.55 -.50 -.38 +.45 -1.26 +1.16 +.07 -.25 -.01 -.50 +3.05 +.39 +.33 -.20 +1.45 -.09 -.15 +1.10 -.34 -.65 +1.70 +.19 -.46 -.41 +.64 -.23 -.04 -.19 -1.13 +3.56 +.05 -.19 -.54 +.52 -.47 +1.51 +1.84 -1.52 -1.18 +1.48 +3.53 +.93 -2.74 +.52 -2.24 -.26 -.34 +4.88 -.79 -.92 -.37 -.69 -.48 +.47 -.96 +.47 -.10 +.50 -.92 -.21 +.62 -.05 -1.10 +.92 +.96 -.46 +.18 +.39 -6.32 -10.14 +1.07 +2.83 -.84 -.37 -.54 -.77 -.26 +.40 +1.33 -.31 +.59 +.28 +.07 -.08 -.27

Stock Hershey HewlettP HillmCT pf HomeDp HonwllIntl HorMan HospPT HostHotls HuanPwr HudsCity Huntsmn HutchT iShBraz iShJapn iShDJDv IDEX InstFnMkts Intel IBM IntlGame IntPap IronMtn JA Solar Jefferies JohnsnCtl JoyGlbl JnprNtwk Kellogg Keycorp KimbClk Kimco KindME KindMM Kinross g Kraft KrispKrm L-3 Com Laclede LeggMason LibGlobA LibGlobB LillyEli LizClaib Loews MDU Res MEMC MFV MGM Rsts ManpwrGp Manulife g MarathonO MarinaB rs MktV Steel MarshM MStewrt MartMM Masco MasterCrd Mattel McClatchy McDnlds McKesson MedcoHlth Medtrnic Merck Metabolix MetLife MicronT Microsoft Middleby Mindspeed Monsanto MorgStan MotrlaSol n MotrlaMo n Mylan NCR Corp NYSE Eur NatlBevrg NatFuGas NatwHP NeenahP NtwkEq NJ Rscs Newcastle

Last 55.94 34.90 29.25 35.08 56.35 14.95 23.79 16.14 20.74 7.94 17.49 2.33 69.57 10.12 51.65 43.49 3.49 21.20 165.07 16.73 28.78 32.83

Chg +.28 -.10 -.10 +.55 +.50 +.14 +.88 +.05 -.40 -.23 +.69 -.26 -1.32 +.21 +.09 +.50 -.13 +.01 +.63 +.39 +2.21 +.53

Stock NewellRub NewmtM NewsCpA NextEraEn NokiaCp NordicAm NorflkSo NoestUt NorTrst NorthropG NwstNG Novartis NSTAR NuvPADiv Nvidia OGE Engy OcciPet OmegaHlt ONEOK Oracle OriginAg OrmatTc

5.57 20.12 39.17 86.65 30.02 54.76 7.93 65.36 18.08 71.41 65.42 15.14 34.60 9.13 84.54 37.31 31.25 42.27 42.30 36.76 5.34 40.79

+.48 -1.25 +2.06 +3.28 +.69 -.16 -.37 -.86 +.35 +.80 +2.83 +.08 +.12 +.10 +2.67 +1.10 -.62 +1.74 +1.86 -.57 -.31 +.23

22.04 8.08 7.84 12.20 52.37 16.20 49.55 .25 65.48 29.92 4.20 79.46 12.01 274.20 26.75 2.63 81.84 81.55 53.31 38.40 34.55 6.95 40.99 7.21 24.30 91.11 7.57 65.96 22.21 45.40 23.11 23.11 18.23 31.87 14.37 69.96 41.55 20.71 2.22 43.39 5.55

+.14 -.38 -.09 +.10 -.45 +.29 -1.04 -.02 +1.41 +.13 +.21 -1.40 -.12 +8.11 +.63 +.14 -.68 -.86 -1.87 +.21 -.84 +.05 +.62 -.62 +.04 +2.22 +.14 +.11 -.62 -.08 -1.67 +.85 +.46 -1.47 +.69 +.09 +.24 +.60 -.05 +.16 -.04

J-K-L

M-N-O

Readers’ Choice Funds

Weekly changes. Last 15.66 52.27 16.73 56.61 5.88 22.02 71.67 34.64 44.98 66.35 44.60 59.31 45.25 13.33 15.74 48.97 98.46 20.39 73.27 31.14 3.93 21.82

Chg +.94 +.68 +.68 -.02 -.14 -.60 +.70 -.09 -1.81 +1.66 +.48 -.93 -.01 +.11 -.07 +.46 -3.73 -.37 +3.90 -.05 -.61 -.65

Stock SthnCopper

Last 31.42

Chg +.63

SoUnCo

39.85

+6.44

SwstAirl

11.36

+.42

SwstnEngy

40.84

-.32

SpectraEn

26.45

-.18

Starbucks

37.35

+1.91

StarwdHtl

53.25

+1.37

Stryker

57.38

-.33

SubPpne

51.71

+1.60

Supvalu

8.57

-.08

Syngenta

64.93

+.86

Sysco

30.76

-.14

TE Connect

34.67

+.84

TECO

TelMexL

16.02

+.11

PG&E Cp POSCO PPG PanASlv PrtnrCm PattUTI PeabdyE Penney PepcoHold PepsiCo PetChina Petrobras PetsMart Pfizer PhilipMor PiedNG PioNtrl PlainsAA PlumCrk Potash s PwShs QQQ Praxair PriceTR ProctGam ProgrssEn ProgsvCp Prudentl PubStrg PPrIT Qualcom QstDiag Questar s RPM Rayonier Raytheon RedwdTr RschMotn RockwlAut RockColl RossStrs RBScotlnd RoyDShllA Ryder

41.81 104.05 87.16 29.66 15.61 28.32 57.04 34.24 19.18 68.45 140.65 31.87 44.81 20.08 65.10 29.38 84.44 62.60 39.20 52.54 54.38 103.29 56.51 62.59 47.18 20.56 59.71 110.73 6.41 54.19 59.41 17.59 22.32 63.01 47.93 15.03 28.57 80.62 60.19 77.60 11.40 67.36 52.75

-.37 +7.78 +2.41 +1.71 +.08 +.59 +3.17 -.05 -.09 -.27 +1.77 -.83 +1.42 -.18 -2.74 +.24 +.04 +2.46 +.02 +1.57 +.59 +2.23 -.72 -2.10 -.61 +.20 +.52 -1.04 +.09 +1.50 -1.15 -.09 +.64 +.60 -.84 -.05 +.82 +1.50 -.06 +2.42 -1.62 -1.09 +1.25

Teradata

57.43

+1.31

SAIC SCANA SLM Cp SabnR StJoe StJude SanDisk SaraLee Sasol SeabGld g SeagateT SealAir SearsHldgs SelectvIns SempraEn SenHous ShipFin SigmaAld SiriusXM SouthnCo

16.55 38.66 16.66 62.30 19.80 46.30 38.94 18.60 49.70 26.87 15.35 22.51 69.51 15.84 51.91 23.48 17.20 68.76 1.98 39.43

+.04 -.10 +.70 -.22 +.62 -1.89 -2.00 -.43 -1.06 +.55 +1.10 -.47 -4.51 +.13 -.82 +.17 -.08 +2.19 +.06 -.38

P-Q-R

S-T-U

18.50

-.11

TFS Fncl

9.43

-.26

TelefEsp s

22.90

-.79

Terex

26.09

-.27

TexInst

31.53

+.29

ThermoFis

62.51

+.29

3M Co

90.89

-.89

TimeWarn

34.46

-.67

TootsieR

28.48

+.37

TorDBk g

79.71

-.33

Toyota

81.29

+1.78

Transocn

59.81

-1.46

Travelers

56.68

-1.24

Tyson

18.90

+.72

UDR

24.03

-.60

UIL Hold

31.79

+.22

US Airwy

8.69

+.29

UnionPac

100.04

+.03

Unisys

24.37

+.13

UtdContl

22.99

-1.05

UPS B

71.12

+1.95

US Bancrp

23.92

-.57

USSteel

41.82

+.75

UtdTech

84.33

-.24

UtdhlthGp

50.46

+.50

UnivDisp

32.91

+1.17

V-W-X-Y-Z VF Cp

105.14

+2.34

ValeroE

23.18

-.92

VangTotBd

82.05

+.22

VarianMed

67.64

+1.44

VectorGp

18.06

-.07

Vectren

27.31

+.10

ViacomB

47.92

+.47

Vodafone

26.20

+.30

Vonage

4.42

+.34

WalMart

52.41

-.41

WREIT

31.44

+.03

WellsFargo

27.26

-.07

Weyerh

20.33

...

WholeFd

60.52

+4.93

WmsCos

28.55

+.24

131.33

+1.93

24.02

-.28

Wynn XcelEngy Xerox

9.89

+.04

Yahoo

14.89

+.19

ZhoneTech

2.28

+.05

Zimmer

61.50

-.55

ZweigTl

3.37

+.05

Fund NAV Alliance Bernstein IntlValAdv 13.46 LgCapGrA m 25.17 American Beacon LgCpVlInv 18.58 American Cent EqIncInv 7.26 GrowthInv 26.10 HeritInv 21.76 IntlBd 14.53 IntlDisIv d 10.57 RealEstIv 19.92 SelectA m 38.37 UltraInv 23.17 ValueInv 5.71 VistaInv 17.09 American Funds AMCAPA m 19.17 BalA m 18.20 BondA m 12.42 CapIncBuA m 50.57 CapIncBuB m 50.62 CpWldGrIA m 35.62 EurPacGrA m 41.45 FnInvA m 37.13 GrthAmA m 30.48 HiIncA m 11.35 IncAmerA m 16.86 InvCoAmA m 27.92 MutualA m 25.79 NewPerspA m 28.55 NwWrldA m 53.74 SmCpWldA m 38.40 WAMutInvA m 28.04 Artisan MidCap 35.37 Baron Asset b 57.05 Berwyn Berwyn d 29.26 Income d 13.47 BlackRock GlobAlcA m 19.60 GlobAlcB m 19.08 GlobAlcC m 18.25 GlobAlcI d 19.71 Brandywine Brandywin 27.07 CGM Focus 30.19 Realty 28.20 Calamos GrowA m 53.40 Cheswold Lane Funds IntlHiDiv d 13.14 Clipper Clipper 64.48 Columbia AcornZ 30.60 LfBalA x 11.30 DFA EmMktValI 34.07 DWS-Scudder GNMAS 15.58 GrIncA m 16.76 GrIncS 16.89 GvtSc m 8.91 HiIncA m 4.78 HlthCareS d 27.01 IntlS d 44.18 MgdMuniS 8.89 Davis NYVentA m 33.79 Delaware Invest DiverIncA m 9.38 LgValA m 15.79 Dodge & Cox Bal 71.53 Income 13.57 IntlStk 35.02 Stock 109.23 Dreyfus Dreyfus 9.12 TechGrA f 32.19 Eaton Vance BalancedA m 6.99 HiIncOppC m 4.41 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 31.22 Federated EqIncA x 17.43 KaufmanA m 5.45 Fidelity AstMgr20 12.98

Chg

Fund NAV Bal 18.55 BlChGrow 45.90 Canada d 56.46 CapApr 25.81 CapInc d 9.49 Contra 67.67 ConvSec 26.00 DivGrow 28.34 DivrIntl d 29.79 EmergAsia d 30.73 EmgMkt d 25.58 EqInc 44.45 EqInc II 18.35 ExpMulNat d 21.76 Fidelity 32.82 Fifty 18.14 Free2020 13.99 Free2025 11.65 Free2030 13.90 GNMA 11.74 GovtInc 10.66 GrowCo 87.46 GrowInc 18.32 Indepndnc 24.51 IntlDisc d 32.30 InvGrdBd 7.58 LatinAm d 56.30 LevCoSt d 28.92 LowPriStk d 40.33 Magellan 70.06 MidCap d 28.18 NewMille 29.96 NewMktIn d 15.81 Overseas d 32.21 PAMuInc d 10.74 Puritan 18.24 RealInv d 27.47 ShTmBond 8.54 StratRRet d 9.78 TotalBd 10.96 Value 69.36 Fidelity Advisor EmergMktA m 23.62 FltRateA m 9.81 HiIncomeA m 8.55 IntrDiscA m 32.06 MidCapA m 20.23 NewInsA m 19.89 SmCapGrA m 16.20 StratIncA m 12.58 Fidelity Select Banking d 16.80 Biotech d 83.91 DefAero d 78.99 Electron d 48.16 EnergySvc d 76.16 NatRes d 34.95 SoftwCom d 82.71 Tech d 93.70 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 45.09 500IdxInv 45.09 IntlIdxIn d 35.23 First Eagle GlbA m 47.42 FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 6.90 GoldPrM A m 42.88 Income A m 2.19 Income C m 2.21 IncomeB m 2.18 PA TF A m 10.18 StrInc A m 10.57 FrankTemp-Mutual Beacon A m 12.56 Beacon Z 12.66 Discov A m 29.68 QuestA m 17.90 QuestZ 18.06 Shares Z 21.32 FrankTemp-Templeton GlBond A m 13.77 GlBondAdv 13.73 Growth A m 18.52 IncomeA m 2.84 Franklin Templeton FndAllA m 10.81 GE ElfunDivr 17.64 ElfunIEq 18.84 ElfunTxE 11.58 S&SInc 11.54 S&SProg 40.31

-.13 +.15 -.08 -.03 +.17 +.67 -.09 -.06 -.08 +.16 +.16 -.05 +.53 +.09 -.01 +.02 -.31 -.31 -.31 -.20 +.05 +.10 -.02 -.05 -.11 -.04 -.14 -.18 +.03 -.07 +.58 +.80 +.49 ... -.05 -.05 -.05 -.05 +.72 +.74 -.16 +1.16 -.08 -.40 +.55 ... -.01 -.01 +.10 +.08 -.02 -.04 +.05 -.55 +.02 -.27 +.02 -.16 -.26 +.03 -.35 -.61 +.03 +.61 -.01 -.01 -.17 -.13 +.04 +.02

Chg +.01 +.50 +.22 +.18 +.01 +.65 +.17 +.06 -.12 +.44 +.19 -.33 -.15 +.01 +.05 +.30 ... -.01 -.01 +.04 +.03 +1.65 -.20 +.47 -.18 +.02 +.35 +.24 +.28 +.27 +.27 +.07 -.02 -.15 ... +.04 -.15 +.01 -.03 +.02 -.07 +.18 -.01 -.01 -.18 +.30 +.19 +.31 -.02 -.31 +1.22 ... +1.04 -.26 -.23 +1.17 +1.80 -.10 -.10 -.30 +.09 +.02 +.12 -.02 -.02 -.02 +.01 ... -.05 -.05 -.25 -.08 -.08 -.13 ... ... -.10 -.01 -.06 +.01 -.14 +.01 +.03 -.04

Weekly changes.

Fund NAV Gabelli AssetAAA m 50.40 GrowthAAA m 30.48 UtilA m 6.45 Harbor Bond 12.38 IntlInstl d 61.29 Hartford AdvHLSFIB b 19.77 AdviserA m 14.90 IntlOppA m 14.78 Heartland Value m 45.03 ING CorpLeadB 21.69 GlbEqDivB m 10.55 INVESCO CharterA m 16.72 ConstellA m 23.13 DivDivInv b 12.48 IntlGrA m 28.18 Ivy AssetStrC m 23.93 JPMorgan CoreBondSelect 11.70 Janus BalJ 25.68 ContrJ 13.70 EntrprsJ 60.83 J 28.89 OrionJ d 11.34 OverseasJ d 45.24 RsrchJ 29.57 TwentyJ 62.99 John Hancock HiYldA m 3.77 LifGr1 b 12.98 Kinetics Paradigm d 22.71 Lazard EmgMkEqtI d 20.99 Legg Mason/Western SpecInvC m 31.11 Loomis Sayles BondI 14.69 BondR b 14.64 Lord Abbett AffiliatA m 11.39 ClsscStckA m 28.36 GrOpportA m 23.19 SmCpValA m 31.87 MFS CoreGrA m 17.56 CoreGrB m 16.20 PAMuniBdB m 9.89 Matthews Asian India d 19.77 Munder Funds InternetA m 28.01 Mutual Advisor Vice m 18.69 Natixis StratIncA m 15.24 Neuberger Berman FocusInv 19.70 GuardnInv 15.15 PartnrInv 27.43 Nicholas Nichol 45.51 Nichol II I 21.92 Nuveen HiYldMunC m 14.82 Oakmark EqIncI 28.61 Intl I d 19.56 Oppenheimer DevMktA m 34.72 DevMktsC m 33.29 GlobA m 61.86 GlobOpprA m 29.77 MainStSelA m 12.13 PAMuniA m 10.61 StrIncA m 4.34 PIMCO AllAssetC m 12.14 AllAssetI 12.36 ComRlRStI 8.63 HiYldC m 9.31 LowDrIs 10.48 TotRetA m 11.01 TotRetAdm b 11.01 TotRetC m 11.01 TotRetIs 11.01 TotRetrnD b 11.01

Chg +.16 -.02 +.02 +.02 -.70 -.03 -.01 -.08 +.82 -.10 -.09 -.01 +.24 -.02 -.15 +.20 +.04 +.04 -.06 +.66 ... +.05 +.22 +.15 +.45 -.04 +.02 +.05 +.09 +.11 -.05 -.05 -.06 -.07 +.52 +.35 +.08 +.08 +.01 -.01 +.32 +.03 -.05 -.09 -.06 -.03 +.20 +.23 +.09 +.10 -.09 +.04 +.04 -.48 -.02 ... +.11 -.02 ... ... -.18 -.02 -.01 +.01 +.01 +.01 +.01 +.01

Fund NAV Pax World Bal b 22.76 Permanent Portfolio 47.72 Pioneer EqInc A m 26.54 HiYldC m 10.50 MidCpValA m 21.58 Prudential Investmen HiYieldB m 5.51 NaturResA m 52.90 Putnam ConvInGrA m 20.55 EqIncomeA m 15.58 GlbEqA m 9.28 GlbEqB m 8.37 GrowIncA m 13.47 MultiCapGrA m 51.23 MultiCapVal m 12.44 NewOppB m 44.15 Rainier SmMdCEqI 34.83 Royce PAMutInv d 11.99 PremierInv d 21.36 ValPlSvc m 13.38 Rydex/SGI MCapValA m 32.69 Schwab S&P500Sel d 19.92 Sentinel CmnStkA m 31.97 Sequoia Sequoia 139.51 T Rowe Price AfrcMdEst d 7.00 BlChpGr 38.58 CapApprec 20.90 EqIndex d 34.30 EqtyInc 23.81 GNMA 10.06 GrowInc 20.45 GrowStk 32.19 HealthSci 34.69 IntlStk d 14.21 LatinAm d 51.30 MidCapVa 24.31 MidCpGr 60.59 NewEra 50.41 NewHoriz 35.98 NewIncome 9.62 PerStrBal 19.38 Rtmt2010 15.69 SmCpStk 35.94 SpecGrow 17.90 TaxFHiYld 10.61 Value 23.68 TIAA-CREF IsRESecs x 10.74 MidValIn 17.72 Third Avenue IntlVal d 16.96 Value d 50.03 Thornburg IntlValC x 26.62 IntlValI x 28.91 Tocqueville Tocquevil m 22.65 Tweedy Browne GlobVal d 23.99 Vanguard 500Adml 116.80 500Inv 116.80 AssetA 24.77 BalIdx 21.86 CapOp d 33.12 CapOpAdml d 76.52 CapVal 10.90 Convrt d 13.50 DivGr 15.02 EmerMktId d 29.48 EnergyInv d 66.83 EqInc 21.28 EuropeIdx d 26.94 Explr 76.71 ExtndIdx 42.70 GNMA 10.99 GNMAAdml 10.99 GlbEq 18.20 GrIncAdml 43.93 GroInc 26.90 GrowthEq 11.05 GrowthIdx 31.84 GrthIdAdm 31.84

Chg -.06 -.11 +.01 +.03 +.04 -.01 +.20 +.09 -.01 +.01 +.01 -.06 +.45 +.07 +.39 +.85 +.15 +.25 +.20 +.21 -.04 -.18 +.03 -.15 +.46 -.06 -.08 -.14 +.03 -.06 +.38 +.25 -.04 -.08 -.03 +.55 ... +.76 +.02 +.03 -.01 +.49 +.04 +.03 -.12 -.08 +.12 -.19 +.12 -.13 -.21 +.01 -.17 -.83 -.80 -.05 +.05 +.37 +.86 -.02 +.08 -.05 +.12 -.74 -.13 -.58 +1.52 +.67 +.04 +.04 +.02 -.11 -.06 +.12 +.10 +.09

Fund NAV HYCor d 5.75 HYCorAdml d 5.75 HYT/E 10.36 HltCrAdml d 57.83 HlthCare d 137.02 ITBond 11.55 ITBondAdm 11.55 ITIGrade 10.07 ITTsry 11.72 InfPrtAdm 26.88 InflaPro 13.68 InstIdxI 116.55 InstPlus 116.56 InstTStPl 29.05 IntlExpIn d 16.33 IntlGr d 19.22 IntlStkIdxAdm d 26.10 IntlVal d 31.49 LTInvGr 9.58 LTTsry 11.43 LifeCon 16.63 LifeGro 22.37 LifeMod 19.95 MidCapGr 20.06 MidCp 21.13 Morg 18.34 MorgAdml 56.90 MuInt 13.61 MuIntAdml 13.61 MuLtd 11.09 NJLT 11.50 NJLTAdml 11.50 PALT 11.01 PALTAdml 11.01 PacificId d 10.36 PrecMtls d 24.16 Prmcp d 66.56 PrmcpAdml d 69.09 PrmcpCorI d 14.02 REITIdx d 19.44 STBond 10.67 STBondAdm 10.67 STCor 10.79 STFed 10.88 STGradeAd 10.79 STTsry 10.80 SelValu d 19.43 SmCapIdx 35.97 SmGthIdx 23.14 SmValIdx 16.23 Star 19.50 StratgcEq 19.64 TgtRe2015 12.71 TgtRe2020 22.57 TgtRe2030 22.06 TgtRe2035 13.29 Tgtet2025 12.86 TotBdAdml 10.80 TotBdInst 10.80 TotBdMkInv 10.80 TotIntl d 15.60 TotStIAdm 31.99 TotStIIns 31.99 TotStIdx 31.98 TxMGIAdm 57.05 USGro 18.54 ValueIdx 21.10 WellsI 22.49 WellsIAdm 54.50 Welltn 31.72 WelltnAdm 54.80 WndsIIAdm 46.93 Wndsr 13.54 WndsrAdml 45.69 WndsrII 26.43 Waddell & Reed Adv CoreInv A m 6.18 Weitz Hickory 40.05

Chg -.01 -.01 +.04 -.07 -.16 +.05 +.05 +.02 +.06 +.22 +.11 -.26 -.26 +.05 -.25 -.06 -.18 -.20 -.01 +.02 ... -.02 ... +.40 +.23 +.20 +.64 +.03 +.03 ... +.03 +.03 +.01 +.01 +.10 -.35 +.56 +.59 +.08 -.25 +.02 +.02 ... +.02 ... +.02 +.06 +.61 +.57 +.15 +.03 +.37 +.01 +.02 ... -.01 ... +.03 +.03 +.03 -.11 -.08 -.08 -.07 -.13 +.16 -.25 -.02 -.04 -.09 -.14 -.23 -.01 -.05 -.13 +.04 +.30

To add a stock or mutual fund to the above lists email us at BusinessNews@phillynews.com, or send your request to The Philadelphia Inquirer, Business News Department, P.O. Box 7788, Philadelphia, Pa., 19101

Local Stock Watch

Pct. EPS Fri Pct. Last 1-yr. 1-yr. shares 12 Div. Cur. Company Ex close chg. 4 wks. high low traded mos. yld. PE

This list includes publicly traded companies with

headquarters in the eight-county Philadelphia/South Jersey area. Some other locally significant companies with headquarters elsewhere are listed last. For each company, the data include an abbreviation for the exchange on which the stock trades, Friday’s close, percent change for the week and for the last four weeks, the one-year high and low, percentage of outstanding shares last week, twelve-months earnings per share and the percent change from the previous period, dividend yield, price-earnings ratio, and estimated price-earnings ratio. Exchanges: A=Amex, N=NYSE, 0=Nasdaq. Other abbreviations: NA=not reported, NE=no earnings,

NM=not meaningful, NC=not calculable, cc – P-E above 99, dd – loss in last year, n – new issue (within last year), pf – preferred, q – closed-end mutual fund, s – split in the last 52 weeks, vj – in bankruptcy or receivership. Pct. EPS Fri Pct. Last 1-yr. 1-yr. shares 12 Div. Cur. Company Ex close chg. 4 wks. high low traded mos. yld. PE

A ACMoore lf AdolorCp Airgas AlliBcPa AmWtrWks Amerigas AmeriBrgn Ametek s AquaAm AsteaIntl Auxilium BncpBnk BenefMut Brandyw BrynMawr

O O N O N N N N N O O O O N O

2.49 1.78 68.21 10.91 29.24 44.46 40.14 42.52 21.43 4.98 19.12

NA -8.5 3.56 1.71 0.30 -1.23 -5.8 +17.1 2.05 1.00 3.30 -0.54 +2.8 -0.2 71.28 60.31 6.40 2.93 -0.7 -0.3 11.70 8.54 1.70 0.25 +0.3 -1.9 30.70 19.92 3.10 1.63 +3.4 -1.6 51.50 40.38 0.50 1.55 -2.1 -2.2 42.50 27.09 3.50 2.41 +4.0 -0.3 47.00 26.46 2.10 1.96 -0.4 -4.2 23.79 17.00 1.90 0.97 +9.2 -4.6 7.64 1.61 0.80 -0.06 -2.6 -12.6 28.56 18.65 7.80 -1.14

B

9.98 +5.7 -1.1 10.34 6.17 8.14 -1.6 -2.9 10.55 7.15 11.06 -2.0 -11.8 13.08 9.82 19.81 +1.0 -4.2 21.45 15.97

C

CDI CIGNA CSS Inds CampSp CardioNet CentEuro Cephln ChrmSh Checkpnt Comcast CrownHold

N N N N O O O O N O N

13.13 48.42 20.08 33.90 5.26 11.14 79.89 3.94 17.31 23.58 38.09

DestMat s DiscLab rs DollarFn s Dorman

O O O O

18.39 +5.5 -11.9 25.28 11.88 2.17 +9.6 -11.1 5.40 1.71 20.61 -4.9 -7.0 23.50 9.93 37.85 +8.7 +2.5 49.32 17.84

eResrch

O 6.06

1.90 0.60 4.70 1.50

0.22 -0.23 -0.23 1.01

-2.4 -4.2 20.34 10.86 1.80 -0.33 -1.0 -2.1 50.84 29.12 4.70 5.26 +10.0 +10.1 21.55 14.87 1.90 0.58 -0.8 -2.1 37.59 32.66 4.30 2.42 +1.3 -5.4 7.21 4.00 2.10 -0.66 -4.9 -8.5 28.08 10.00 15.30 -1.14 +0.2 +0.1 81.11 54.15 9.80 6.57 +3.7 -1.0 4.93 2.84 5.90 -0.28 +5.6 -2.5 23.00 15.89 2.00 0.48 -0.3 -5.3 27.16 16.76 4.00 1.36 +2.3 -5.0 41.58 24.39 3.80 1.91

8.95

45 dd dd 20 dd 9 35 14 dd dd 12 dd 36 17 20

1.88 -1.68 1.11 2.69

3.8 0.0 0.0 0.0

10 dd 19 14

5.36 1.30 0.22

0.0

28

E

+0.2

0.0 0.0 5.4 3.0

dd dd 23 44 18 29 17 22 22 dd dd

4.0 0.1 3.0 3.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.9 0.0

D

NA

0.0 0.0 1.7 1.1 3.1 6.7 1.0 0.6 2.9 0.0 0.0

4.10 4.90 4.20 1.10

EndoPhrm Entercom Escalon

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F

0.0 0.0 0.0

14 7 dd

FMC Corp FstNiagara

N 83.10 +4.9 O 13.11 -3.1

-0.4 89.28 55.64 4.30 2.60 -6.8 15.10 11.23 6.40 0.78

0.7 4.9

32 17

GlbIndm rs

O 21.46 +3.2

-3.9 27.29 14.00 0.80 2.62

0.0

8

Harleys HarlySvc HlthCSvc s Hemisphrx Hersha Hill Intl

O O O A N N

29.89 -1.7 -5.3 37.81 29.50 0.80 2.79 15.25 -1.2 +0.9 15.85 14.00 0.10 1.34 15.91 -0.1 -5.0 18.37 12.27 1.80 0.53 0.39 -6.0 -17.0 0.62 0.33 0.60 -0.11 5.43 +3.4 -9.0 6.94 4.16 4.10 -0.12 5.65 +7.4 +37.5 7.38 3.59 2.30 0.15

4.8 5.0 4.0 0.0 4.4 0.0

11 11 30 dd dd 38

ICG Grp InnovSol InterDig inTestCp

O O O O

G H

I

12.11 -0.3 5.39 -2.7 38.31 +8.9 3.26 -1.5

J&J Snack

O 48.52 +1.1

Kenexa KenseyN Knoll Inc Kulicke

O O N O

-4.2 14.50 7.20 2.90 -3.8 6.28 2.12 0.20 -9.5 58.64 22.81 8.80 -7.1 4.67 2.15 0.80

J

0.91 0.20 2.84 0.72

-3.9 53.44 37.00 0.80 2.57

K

23.28 -6.4 -25.5 33.19 10.75 4.20 24.68 +1.6 -4.9 30.50 21.47 2.00 19.60 +12.7 +2.9 22.73 11.73 3.50 11.01 +7.9 -5.0 12.72 5.27 11.50

L

-0.39 1.82 0.76 2.18

0.0 0.0 1.0 0.0

13 27 13 5

1.0

19

0.0 0.0 2.0 0.0

dd 14 26 5

Lannett LibtProp LincNat

A 5.35 +5.1 N 32.37 +0.3 N 26.76 -0.7

+1.3 7.00 3.66 7.20 0.14 -9.3 36.15 27.18 3.90 1.10 -7.3 32.68 20.65 5.80 2.76

0.0 5.9 0.7

38 29 10

MalvernF MarlinBs MetPro

O 7.76 -1.1 O 11.46 -0.3 N 10.23 +1.8

-1.1 8.99 -7.1 13.74 -8.0 12.50

1.5 0.0 2.6

dd 29 24

M

N

5.05 NA -1.21 9.24 1.50 0.40 8.91 1.20 0.43

2.0

dd

ResrceCap

N 6.58 +3.6

NA

7.70

5.17 7.70 0.99

15.2

7

RoylBcPA

O 1.37

-9.9 -23.9

3.26

1.14 0.20 -2.00

0.0

dd

S SEI Inv

O 21.34

-1.1

-7.9 24.88 17.35 2.10 1.22

1.1

17

SL Ind

A 22.35

-3.9

+0.6 25.50 11.38 0.40 2.13

0.0

10

StoneMor

O 27.03 +0.6

+2.5 33.51 19.75 2.10 -0.43

8.7

dd

Sunoco

N 39.15 +0.6

-2.6 46.98 32.00 9.80 1.11

1.5

35

SunocoLg

N 84.08 +2.6

-0.7 91.03 69.23 0.90 9.36

5.7

9

T TE Connect N 34.67 +2.5

-5.2 38.59 23.85 2.20 2.64

2.1

13

TF Fincl

O 21.59

-1.8

+0.8 22.86 19.05

NA 1.46

0.9

15

Teleflex

N 59.48

-0.6

-3.4 64.05 47.92 3.50 3.73

2.3

16

TollBros

N 20.61 +3.3

-3.1 22.42 15.57 6.00 0.37

0.0

56

Triumph

N 96.15 +1.1

+4.1 100.93 63.69 6.30 6.42

0.2

15

U,V UGI Corp

N 31.25 +1.0

-3.2 33.53 24.90 2.70 2.38

13 6 dd 31 dd 16 dd dd dd 21 14

UnivHlthS

N 51.13

-1.6

-7.0 56.46 30.51 4.50 2.77

0.4

18

UnivstPa

O 15.31

-2.4

-6.2 20.41 15.00 1.10 1.01

5.2

15

UrbanOut

O 28.43

-1.3

-6.7 39.26 28.10 8.00 1.53

0.0

19

ViroPhrm

O 17.71 +2.5

-6.1 22.16 10.29 3.60 1.62

0.0

11

3 10 dd

VishayInt

+0.9

N 14.29 +3.6

3.74

13

30

0.0 0.0 1.5 7.4 4.1 1.1 0.0 0.0 3.4 2.3 2.4

USA Tech h O 2.35 +6.8

3.3

6.2

+1.1 -4.4 25.55 17.45 -3.5 -3.8 9.74 7.25 +1.8 +1.6 24.55 13.22 +4.7 +0.4 29.11 20.00 -2.2 -14.2 17.34 10.03 +1.2 -22.9 15.96 7.86 +4.0 +8.8 13.34 4.76 -2.4 -9.8 1.99 0.49 -1.0 -4.9 8.00 5.50 +0.5 -6.7 6.42 2.70 +1.8 -5.7 46.02 24.64

4.3 0.0 0.3

3.50 0.30 -0.94

-8.6 43.99 31.24 1.90 1.29

N O N N N N O O O N N

1.30 6.50 0.77 4.23 0.60 0.54 3.45 12.60-11.20

7.47

-0.8

-1.3

PHH Corp ParkeBcp PennVa PennVaRe PenRE PepBoy PhotoMdx ProPhaseL PruBcpPA PulseElec QuakerCh

N 2.09 +3.5 +0.5 3.78 O 5.25 NA -0.8 5.93 N 3.92 +0.5 -18.2 10.12

NA

N 38.99

0.0

RAIT Fin RCM RadianGrp

O 6.06

UnvHR

+0.5

R

RescAm

dd

-0.3

1.54 1.34 -1.06 0.84 -0.08 0.69 -2.64 -0.24 -0.05 0.21 2.85

dd

7

O 3.83

5.70 0.10 8.60 1.70 3.70 6.40 1.90 0.10 NA 1.70 2.80

0.0

0.0

Orthovta

P,Q

1.62 0.80 -0.60

N 24.37 +0.5 -12.0 41.32 17.04 3.60 3.36

43 16

19.80 7.65 14.73 26.00 14.62 10.78 10.40 0.83 5.80 4.44 40.49

3.30

Unisys

0.0 5.3

1.60 2.40 -0.08

-5.3 -16.3

dd

+0.1 11.68 5.59 0.30 0.27 -6.1 24.90 12.37 9.20 0.85 3.87

O 2.15

0.0

O 11.56 +0.6 O 13.25 +3.8

O

RepFBcp

0.46 5.00 -0.28

NobelLrn NutriSyst

|Business Daily E-mail Newsletter

O 38.63 +0.8 -7.0 44.53 21.30 5.20 2.79 N 8.13 +0.1 -13.5 13.63 4.97 3.30 1.21 O 1.18 -3.3 -9.2 1.85 0.68 0.60 -0.28

Pct. EPS Fri Pct. Last 1-yr. 1-yr. shares 12 Div. Cur. Company Ex close chg. 4 wks. high low traded mos. yld. PE

-9.6 19.36

6.50 7.50 2.11

0.0

7

W,X,Y,Z WPCS Intl

O 2.94 +0.7 +19.5

WestPhm

N 42.56

-0.3

4.74

2.20 5.60 -1.39

0.0

dd

-7.1 47.96 32.74 1.60 2.10

1.6

20

Others with large local operations Pct. EPS Fri Pct. Last 1-yr. 1-yr. shares 12 Div. Cur. Company Ex close chg. 4 wks. high low traded mos. yld. PE ACE Ltd

N 63.95

-0.6

-6.8 69.83 50.44 2.80 9.11

2.1

7

Aetna

N 43.28 +0.2

-0.7 46.01 25.00 6.00 4.36

1.4

10

AirProd

N 92.99 +3.3

-1.0 96.00 64.13 2.60 5.18

2.5

18

AstraZen

N 49.00

-0.5

-5.6 53.53 44.17 0.50 5.57

5.2

9

BkofAm

N 10.52

-1.5 -10.0 16.10 10.40 5.90 0.55

0.4

19

BkNYMel

N 24.64

-6.0 -11.1 32.50 23.78 4.00 2.09

2.1

12

Boeing

N 71.26

-3.9

-7.4 80.65 59.48 4.10 4.53

2.4

16

Buckeye

N 63.95 +0.7

+1.4 71.67 56.66 1.40 3.16

6.3

20

CBIZ Inc

N 7.25

-3.8

5.20 2.10 0.53

0.0

14

CarpTech

N 53.26 +11.2

+2.5 54.06 30.17 10.20 1.15

1.4

46

DelphiFn

N 28.13 +2.1

-2.1 32.62 21.55 3.00 3.34

1.7

8

DoverMot

N 1.92

-8.1

1.45 0.10 -0.19

0.0

dd

DuPont

N 51.96 +4.8

-1.1 57.00 33.73 3.40 3.56

3.2

15

EnerSys

N 31.93 +2.2

-9.2 40.32 20.74 3.40 2.27

0.0

14

Exelon

N 42.02 +0.7

+0.8 44.49 37.63 4.10 3.07

5.0

14

Finisar

O 16.06 +8.0 -32.3 46.09 11.98 24.20 1.07

0.0

15

FstNiagara

O 13.11

4.9

17

Fox Chase FultonFncl

-1.1

-0.5

7.75

2.25

-3.1

-6.8 15.10 11.23 6.40 0.78

O 13.68

-0.7

+3.3 14.03

9.13 6.10 0.11

0.6

cc

O 10.63

-0.4

-4.0 11.91

8.15 2.10 0.63

1.9

17

GenElec

N 17.97

-2.8

-7.6 21.65 13.75 2.60 1.13

3.3

16

GlaxoSKln

N 41.34

NA

-4.9 44.10 33.55 0.30

5.1 NA

HackettGp

O 5.09 +4.3

+6.7

5.21

2.70 2.50 0.35

0.0

15

IGI Labs

A 1.20

-4.0 +16.5

1.90

0.96 0.10 -0.19

0.0

dd

JPMorgCh

N 39.49

-3.2

-7.7 48.36 35.16 4.20 4.50

2.5

9

JohnJn

N 65.06

-1.9

-2.6 67.37 56.86 2.00 4.51

3.5

14

LockhdM

N 79.20

-1.0

+2.5 82.43 67.68 3.20 8.07

3.8

10

Merck

N 34.55

-2.4

-4.6 37.68 31.06 2.00 2.31

4.4

15

NatPenn

O 7.63 +2.4

+3.4

8.84

5.36 2.70 0.20

0.5

38

OraSure

O 8.16

-0.1

-5.3

9.00

3.18 2.00 -0.08

0.0

dd

PNC

N 56.61

-2.0

-9.5 65.19 49.43 7.00 6.61

2.5

9

PPL Corp

N 27.08

NA

-2.8 28.38 24.10 4.90 2.28

5.2

12

PnnNGm

O 39.34 +6.0

-2.7 40.70 22.35 3.50 1.52

0.0

26

PruBcpPA

O 5.80

-1.0

-4.9

NA -0.05

3.4

dd

PSEG

N 31.08

-1.5

-6.8 34.93 30.15 2.70 3.16

4.4

10

RiteAid

N 1.20 +12.1 +13.2

0.0

dd

SAP AG

N 58.19

Shire

O 89.53 +0.8

-4.0 96.77 60.52 1.10 1.87

0.4

48

SoJerInd

N 52.04 +2.0

-5.9 58.03 41.97 2.00 2.84

2.8

18

SunBcpNJ

O 3.25

-5.8 -14.5

5.58

3.00 5.20 -7.77

0.0

dd

SusqBnc

O 7.65

-7.4 -10.9 10.43

7.38 14.10 0.19

1.0

40

TenetHlth

N 5.99

-6.6

-6.4

3.92 13.80 2.04

0.0

3

TevaPhrm

O 47.15

-0.7

-6.6 57.08 44.86 2.70 3.43

1.8

14

TorDBk g

N 79.71

-0.4

-6.8 89.80 62.92 0.30 3.20

0.0

25

VerizonCm

N 36.00 +1.4

-1.8 38.95 25.79 2.80 1.69

5.4

21

VIST Fncl

O 6.98

-0.1

-3.5 10.00

6.55 0.50 0.33

2.9

21

WSFS

O 37.69

-3.1

-7.2 50.99 32.87 1.60 1.86

1.3

20

-3.4

8.00 1.47

5.50

0.86 6.70 -0.65

-3.5 68.39 43.37 1.00

7.70

NA

NA

1.4 NA

Find more business news and stocks online at www.philly.com/business, including:

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Monday, June 27, 2011

On the Boards Tama Copeman has been elected chairwoman of Mid-Atlantic Diamond Ventures, a yearround venture forum and entrepreneurship-advisory program owned and operated by the Fox School of Business at Temple University. Copeman is founder and chief executive officer of Alcyone*7, a management-advisory company, and founder and managing partner of Maya*7 Investments, an associated boutique investment company. Big Brothers Big Sisters Southeastern PA, a Philadelphia nonprofit organization that mentors youth, has elected Nick Bayer to its board. Bayer is president and CEO of Saxbys Coffee Worldwide L.L.C. Little Smiles of Philadelphia, a nonprofit group that helps children in local hospitals, hospices, and shelters, has elected the following members to its board: 8 Kate Patterson, executive director at Little Smiles Philadelphia. 8 Steve Grandizio, vice president at eXude Benefits Group Inc. 8 Jeff Mullen, president of Apple Vacations. 8 Matt Patterson, vice presi-

Rochelle Cameron to a

new post at Phila. airport.

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

dent of business development at Innovis Data Solutions. 8 John Miner, director of sales at Equifax Inc. 8 Glen Baskin, owner of Platinum Settlements. 8 Lori Plans, a registered nurse at Chester County Hospital. 8 Cate Weaver, a principal and sales director at CSG Global L.L.C. 8 Paul Gouge, senior project manager of Nationwide Funds. 8 Kathy Urbine, a registered nurse at Chester County Hospital. 8 Maria Quattrone, a Realtor at Maria Quattrone Real Estate Experts. 8 Mai-Linh Hoang, public relations director at Citadel. 8 Pat Laphen, a senior vice president at Susquehanna Bank. 8 Justin Grass, national account representative at Innovis Data Solutions. 8 Jessica Attanasio, account executive at Gregory FCA. 8 Erin Lavelle, principal and director of business development at First Heritage Agency Inc. 8 Tim Button, vice president, strategic accounts, at Magellan Hill Technologies L.L.C.

Nick Bayer

Frances Robertson Graham

nization, has elected Lori Kennedy and Marlene Stocks to its board. Kennedy is president of Shred Patrol L.L.C., Huntingdon Valley. Stocks is president and owner of Senior Transition Services Inc., Huntingdon Valley.

Lori Kennedy

Bros. The Arc of Delaware County, a nonprofit organization that advocates for children and adults with developmental disabilities, has named Alisha Boyd and Greg Paninos to its board. Boyd is a model for QVC. Paninos is an insurance representative with Mass Mutual Life Insurance Co. and its affiliates including uFinancial in Exton.

Frances Robertson Graham has been elected chairwoman of the board of trustees at Moore College of Art & Design. Graham is founder of Graham Interior Design and succeeds Penny Fox, who was named chair- Gerald E. Burns 3d has been woman emerita. reappointed a Hearing Committee member for the DisciDouglas R. Kuiken has been plinary Board of the Supreme elected chairman of the board Court of Pennsylvania, effective of New Jersey Manufacturers In- July 1. Burns will serve an adsurance Co. He is president of ditional three-year term for The Eastern Montgomery County Kuiken Bros. Co. Inc. Matthew District I, which encompassChamber of Commerce, a Jenkin- L. Wright was elected vice chair- es Berks, Bucks, Chester, Deltown business-advocacy orga- man. He is president of Apgar aware, Lancaster, Lehigh,

Mark R. Heim to CEO of HSC Builders.

Amber Mallon joins ParenteBeard.

Michael McCurdy to a

new post at Jones Lang.

Marlene Stocks

MinSec Holdings Inc. — a forprofit Wallingford, Delaware County, firm that operates minimum-security work-release and parole centers for the state — has named Joseph W. Marshall 3d, Henry Harbin, and Calvin Johnson to its board. Marshall is vice chairman of Stevens & Lee P.C., Philadelphia, and former chairman and CEO of Temple University Health System. Harbin is former CEO of Magellan Health Services Inc. and Green Spring Health Services. Johnson is executive medical officer of MinSec and

Michael Sontag to COO of James Viner to president of HSC Builders.

People in the News Brendan Shanahan was aging director of the financial- and professional-servic- named vice president/municies firm specializing in real es- pal trading, and Lauren N. Carter was named vice president/ The Leader’s Edge/Leaders tate. By Design, a Bala Cynwyd underwriting. Shanahan Safeguard Scientifics Inc., leadership-development, exec- Hopeworks ’N Camden, a non- joined the company from KeyWayne, said Philip Moyer had utive-coaching, and consult- profit organization helping in- banc. Carter joins it from TD joined the company as manag- ing firm, said Shelley Potente ner-city Camden youth, said Securities L.L.C. ing director, technology had joined as senior vice pres- it had named Michael Sontag group. Moyer most recently ident, client services. She pre- chief operating officer. He AMR Meetings & Incentives, was president and chief exec- viously was at Right Manage- previously was operations Newtown Square, has named utive officer of EDGAR On- ment, a talent- and career- manager for Monarch Art Melanie Pelouze director of line Inc. Safeguard Scientifics management firm, where she Plastics Co. L.L.C., a Mount sales for the incentive-travel Rochelle Cameron has been ap- is a private equity and ven- was responsible for business Laurel manufacturer of pack- and meetings-management pointed to lead the aviation, ture capital firm that focuses development and account aging and promotional items. company. Pelouze had been finance and administration di- on investments in technology management for firms with the director of Midwest and vision as deputy director at and life-sciences companies. headquarters in the Philadel- Janney Montgomery Scott West Coast sales for the ConPhiladelphia International phia region. L.L.C., the Philadelphia finan- vention and Tourism Board Airport. Cameron replaces ParenteBeard L.L.C. said Amcial-services company, said of Toronto, Canada, and the Edward Anastasi, who re- ber Mallon had joined the Phil- Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. has Janney Capital Markets had global project director for the tired. Cameron most recently adelphia certified public ac- promoted Michael McCurdy to added two people in its fixed- convention center in Munich, was the manager of financial counting and business adviso- international director, lead- income expansion. Germany. strategy and analysis with the ry firm as director of commu- ing its Philadelphia business Metropolitan Washington Air- nications. Most recently, Mal- and having responsibility for ADVERTISEMENT ports Authority, whose re- lon was director of public rela- all business lines and for 280 sponsibilities include operat- tions and operations at Agile- employees. He had been man-

HSC Builders & Construction Managers, Exton, said Mark R. Heim had been promoted to chief executive officer and James Viner to president. HSC Builders is a constructionmanagement firm serving the health-care, pharmaceutical, biotech, and higher-education industries. Heim had been president for 11 years. Viner had been vice president.

ing and maintaining Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and Washington Dulles International Airport.

C3

Gerald E. Burns 3d

Montgomery, Northampton and Philadelphia Counties. He will serve this term as senior member, the committee’s highest rank. He is a litigation shareholder at Buchanan, Ingersoll & Rooney P.C.

Hopeworks ’N Camden.

B

Cat, a Philadelphia branding and public relations agency.

former vice president and chief medical officer of Temple University Health System.

The Pennsylvania Bar Institute, Mechanicsburg, the continuing-education arm of the Pennsylvania Bar Association, has named the following officers and members to its board: 8 Paul C. Troy, a partner at Kane, Pugh, Knoell, Troy & Kramer L.L.P., Norristown, is president. 8 Sara A. Austin, a laawyer with the Austin Law Firm L.L.C., York, is vice president. 8 Penina Kessler Lieber, a lawyer with Obermayer, Rebmann, Maxwell & Hippel L.L.P., Pittsburgh, is secretary. 8 Mark A. Kearney, co-hiring shareholder and corporate secretary of Elliott, Greenleaf & Siedzikowski P.C., Blue Bell and Wilmington, is treasurer. In addition, the following four board members were elected to serve second threeyear terms: 8 Bonnie B. Leadbetter is president judge of the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania. 8 Jeffrey A. Mills is chairman of the litigation department at Nikolaus & Hohenadel L.L.P., Lancaster. 8 Jill E. Nagy is a lawyer at Nagy Law Offices with offices in Wyomissing and Johnstown, Pa. 8 Prince Altee Thomas is a lawyer at Fox Rothschild L.L.P. of Philadelphia and former supervisor of the Eastern Regional Office of the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Financial Enforcement Section. Two new board members were elected to three-year terms: 8 Kathleen D. Wilkinson is a partner at Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker L.L.P., Philadelphia. 8 Brett M. Woodburn is a lawyer at Caldwell & Kearns P.C., Harrisburg. Clarification An item in last Monday’s “On the Boards” for Craig R. Carnaroli, chairman of the University City Science Center did not include his current position at the University of Pennsylvania. He is an executive vice president. — Mike Zebe om

PHILADELPHIA CD & DEPOSIT GUIDE

Yields Available to Greater Philadelphia Area Residents

Insider Transactions Securities trades recently reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission by officers, directors, and principal shareholders of corporations based or having sizable employment in the Philadelphia area. Titles are as reported to the SEC.

Adolor Corp. John M. Limongelli, general counsel, bought 16,200 shares from $1.52 to $1.80 June 14 and 15 and now directly holds 188,700 shares.

Airgas Inc. Thomas M. Smyth, officer, sold 3,250 shares from $66.72 to $66.74 June 20 and now directly holds 2,907 shares.

Checkpoint Systems Inc. John W. Partridge Jr., director, bought 5,000 shares at $16.60 June 14 and now directly holds 12,000 shares.

Dorman Products Inc. Fred V. Frigo, officer, sold 20,000 shares at $34.84 June 16 and now directly holds 50,638 shares.

Jong Joseph Kim, chief executive officer, bought 49,350 shares at 63 cents June 16 and now directly and indirectly holds 15,433,200 shares.

Christian F. Martin IV, director, bought 1,342 shares at $7.45 June 17 and now directly holds 393,061 shares.

Resource America Inc.

Marlin Business Services Corp. George D. Pelose, chief operating officer, sold 3,781 shares at $11.72 June 14 and now directly holds 251,225 shares.

National Penn Bancshares Inc. Scott V. Fainor, chief executive officer, bought 30,000 shares at $6.86 June 15 and now indirectly holds 388,569 shares. Michael J. Hughes, chief financial officer, bought 7,500 shares at $6.87 June 15 and now directly holds 93,204 shares. Patricia L. Langiotti, director, bought 1,350 shares at $7.46 June 17 and now directly holds 37,270 shares.

Jonathan Z. Cohen, chief executive officer, bought 30,000 shares at $5.95 June 15 and now directly holds 1,905,830 shares.

SEI Investments Co. Alfred P. West Jr., director and beneficial owner, sold 75,000 shares at $22.22 June 14 and now directly holds 14,676,900 shares.

Triumph Group Inc. Joseph M. Silvestri, director, bought 10,000 shares from $94.10 to $94.15 June 15 and 16 and now directly holds 40,900 shares. SOURCES: Thomson Financial; SEC filings

new business offerings

Incyte Corp. Roy Alec Whitfield, director, sold 20,000 shares from $18.00 to $18.08 June 16 and 17 and now directly holds 813,082 shares.

Inovio Biomedical Corp.

Bankruptcies Pennsylvania Boyles Gulf Inc., 1501 Linden Way, King of Prussia; Chapter 7; no schedules available. Drum Construction Co. Inc., 2840 W. Clymer Ave., Telford; Chapter 11; no schedules available. 38 N. Front Street Associates L.L.C., 108 Pine St., Philadelphia; Chapter 7; no schedules available. Bankruptcy definitions: Chapter 7, debtor sells assets in return for discharge of debts. Chapter 11, debtor reorganizes under court supervision. Chapter 13, debtor arranges plan to repay debt. SOURCES: The Legal Intelligencer, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey.

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Discover Bank 866-238-1789

36 mo CD Min

60 mo CD Min

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First Priority Bank 866-561-6847

2 West Liberty Blvd www.fpbk.com Specials: Call us about our Combo Account!!

0.10 250

Fox Chase Bank 866-688-0307

4390 Davisville Road www.foxchasebank.com

0.50 0.50 0.10 1,500 100,000 500

0.35 500

0.65 500

0.90 500

0.95 500

1.60 500

1.60 500

Hyperion Bank 866-542-4479

199 W. Girard Avenue www.hyperionbank.com

NA 1.30 0.50 NA 100,000 399

0.75 399

1.00 399

1.15 399

1.40 399

1.75 399

2.40 399

1420 Locust Street 0.10 0.90 0.35 0.45 www.novabank.com 1 100,000 500 500 Specials: Rates available only in PA/NJ locations. Call 877-NOVABANK for details.

0.90 500

1.15 500

1.35 500

2.00 500

2.50 500

Specials: Call for special rates.

Specials: Call for special rates.

0.75 0.50 0.50 0.80 1.15 1.40 1.75 2.40 7,500 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000

Nova Bank 866-576-3053

3 Chester Pike www.sharonbank.com

0.25 0.50 0.50 0.65 1.00 1.15 1.35 250 25,000 1,000 10,000 10,000 10,000 10,000

624 Willowbrook Ln., Westchester 0.05 NA NA 0.85 www.Stonebridgebank.com 100 NA NA 500 Specials: SPECIALS: 14 Month CD APY = 1.20% ** 21 Month CD APY = 1.20%

NEW HOPE, PA

24 mo CD Min

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Stonebridge Bank 866-743-9647

A Growing Industry! Well Established. Great Reputation. Owner Retiring Must Sell No Exp. Nec.Training & Local Support. Mon. - Fri. 9-5 Will Finance. 800-675-3925

18 mo CD Min

541 Lawrence Rd., Broomall, PA 0.10 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.20 1.40 1.80 2.15 www.allianceanytime.com 99 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 Specials: All branches now open Monday through Saturday at 8:00 AM!

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Marketing, Digital Print & Graphics Business

12 mo CD Min

Alliance Bank 866-578-6347

Sharon Savings Bank 866-450-8714

Hersha Hospitality Trust Thomas J. Hutchison III, director, bought 50,000 shares from $5.26 to $5.29 June 17 and now directly holds 549,742 shares.

Institution/Phone

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1.15 500

1.30 500

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NA 2.25 NA 10,000 1.60 500

2.10 500

Vantage Point Bank 888-861-4980

1250 Virginia Drive, Suite 175 0.25 1.10 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 2.00 2.50 www.vantagepointbank.com 50 25,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 Specials: Call us about Vantage Point Plus and 1.1% APY Money Market Account

VIST Financial 866-419-1082

1767 Sentry Parkway www.vistfc.com Specials: Competitive Relationship Rates also available.

NA NA

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0.45 500

0.45 500

0.80 500

0.95 500

1.10 500

1.45 500

2.05 500

RATES & INFORMATION AVAILABLE ONLINE @ http://www.interest.com/?pid=i_PHIL

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Note: Rates effective as of 6/24/11 and may change without notice. Rates may change after the account is opened. N/A means rates are not available or not offered at press time. Yields represent annual percentage yield (APY) paid by participating institutions. Fees may reduce the earnings on the account. A penalty may be imposed for early withdrawal. Payout of interest is mandatory for certain non-compounding accounts Banks, thrifts, brokers and credit unions pay to advertise in the CD & Deposit Guide which is compiled by Bankrate. com®, a publication of Bankrate, Inc. © 2011 To appear in this table, call 888-768-4243. To report any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. • http://www.interest.com/?pid=i_PHIL


C4 B

www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

SmallButMighty

Is too much skin showing? Time to create a dress code By Joyce M. Rosenberg ASSOCIATED PRESS

It’s an uncomfortable summertime moment for many small-business owners: A female staffer shows up for work in the shortest of shorts. Or a male staffer arrives wearing a tank top. And they work in full view of customers or clients. Violations of the dress code aren’t confined to the summer months. But they tend to be more frequent than in colder months, when everyone covers up. Employers who do not like a lot of skin showing need to be crystal clear about a dress code. Chances are, most staffers do have a sense of how to dress for work. But having a dress code will help you avoid problems or resolve them easily. Here is what to keep in mind:

Dress codes are legal: Your staffer in a skimpy outfit

may protest when you say it is inappropriate dress for work. But you have the law on your side. Employers can require employees to wear certain kinds of clothes, and to ban other types from the workplace. Uniforms are required in some jobs. And some clothes can be forbidden because of safety issues. But the boss is also allowed to determine what kind of atmosphere the company is trying to project, and to require employees to conform with it. The law does require you to create a dress code that is, to use a legalism, gender-neutral. That means that you’re telling both sexes to dress appropriately. And the law does require that you don’t discriminate against someone’s religious beliefs — for example, by banning turbans or dreadlocks that are worn for

religious reasons.

What kind of atmosphere do you want? The biggest

concern that most business owners have in how staffers dress is the impression that customers have of the company. Many will not want a receptionist to have exposed bra straps and a very short skirt. Or a sales associate in a T-shirt. Companies may have different standards that depend on whether an employee meets with customers, says Rick Gibbs, a senior human resources specialist with Insperity Inc., a Houston HR provider. Someone who does meet customers at a manufacturer may be in business casual clothes. Someone in the warehouse may be in jeans and a polo shirt. And someone on the assembly line may wear construction-type clothes.

You will want to spell that out in your dress code. But even if your staffers do not meet with customers, you can still require that they dress to meet your standards. But be careful — you may not like a staffer’s style, but as long as he or she is wearing appropriate clothes for your workplace, you cannot ban the wardrobe choices.

What to put in the dress code: It’s a good idea to

explain at the start of the dress code why you are creating one. “Regardless of what we might think, there is an impression that’s created by certain ways of dressing that might have an impact on the business,” is Gibbs’ suggestion. You should also state any safety concerns you have. Gibbs recommends listing what is not acceptable. For example, tank tops, shirts without collars, see-through

Business Calendar Treasury Auctions 3-month and 6-month bills, June 27; 4-week bills, June 28; 1-year bills, June 28; 2-year notes, June 27; 5-year notes, June 28; 3-year notes, July 12; 7-year notes, June 29; 10-year notes, July 13; 30-year bonds, July 14; 10-year TIPS, July 21; 5-year TIPS, Aug. 18.

Monday Business Referral Luncheon presented by BNI, King of Prussia Chapter. Peppers restaurant, 236 Town Center Rd., King of Prussia; 610-792-2105. Reservations required. 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Networking Meeting presented by BNI, Fort Washington Chapter. Hilton Garden Inn, 520 Pennsylvania Ave., Fort Washington; 215-947-7784. www.bnidvr.com. Cost to attend is the cost of the meal. 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.

Tuesday Networking Meeting presented by

LeTip of Spring House, Old York Road Country Club, 801 Tennis Ave., Spring House; 215-646-0160. 7-8 a.m. Networking Meeting presented by LeTip Chester County East. Holiday Inn Express, 120 N. Pottstown Pike, Exton; 610-833-8517. Breakfast is free for first-time visitors. 7:01-8:30 a.m.

Wednesday 360 Leadership: Leading Across Organizational Levels presented by Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce. Union League of Phila., Meade Room, 140 S. Broad St.; 215-790-3675. www.greaterphilachamber.com. GPCC members $45, YPN member $40, nonmember $80. 8:30-10:30 a.m. Do You Have Your Own Business? Are You Thinking of Starting One? The Library Can Help, presented by Joan C. Divor, the Business Services Librarian for the Burlington County Library and hosted by National Association of Women Business Owners. Mount Holly Library and

Lyceum, 307 High St., Mount Holly; 609-923-5889. http://nawbosouthjersey.org. Members $10, nonmembers $18. Lunch included. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.

Week of July 4 ExecuNet Monthly Networking Meeting for Executives in Transition: Stop Looking for a Job! and Start Looking for Situations Where You Can Help, presented by Kelleher Associates L.L.C. Radisson Valley Forge, 1160 First Ave., King of Prussia; 610-293-1115. www.kelleherllc.com. $25 advance payment, $30 if not paid by July 5. 7:15-9:15 a.m. July 6. Senior Roundtable Networking Meeting for “C” Level Executives in Transition presented by Kelleher Associates L.L.C. Radisson Valley Forge Hotel, 1160 First Ave., King of Prussia; 610-293-1115. www.kelleherllc.com. $20. 9:30-11 a.m. July 6. Networking and Lunch, Speaker Allen Noll, “The Taxes, They Are A’Changin!” presented by PBN. Maggiano’s Little Italy, 205 Mall Blvd., King of Prussia. 610-792-2105.

www.pbnworks.com. Nonmembers $30. 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. July 6.

Coming Up Why Are You Selling What You’re Selling? presented by SMEI Philadelphia. Plymouth Country Club, 888 Plymouth Rd. Plymouth Meeting; 215-393-3144. www.smei.org. SMEI members $25, New SMEI members $275 (includes this event), nonmembers $45. 7:30-9:30 a.m. July 12. Business After Hours presented by Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce. Villanova University, Villanova Pavilion, 800 E. Lancaster Ave., Villanova; 215-790-3623. www.greaterphilachamber.com. GPCC members free, nonmembers $35. 5-7 p.m. July 12. Young Professionals Network (YPN) presented by Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce. 777 S. Broad St.; 215-790-3654. www.greaterphilachamber.com. YPN member free, GPCC Student member free, nonmember $20. 6-8 p.m. July 20.

fabrics, ripped or dirty jeans. You should be specific. If you ban skirts that are too short, what is too short? You need to provide the number of inches above the knee where a skirt’s hem must fall. Be sure you list clothes typically worn by men, and those that are worn by women. Not doing that can put you at risk of a discrimination suit. It’s a good idea to have a human resources expert or a labor lawyer look over your dress code.

Enforcing the dress code:

Gibbs says employers should speak privately to staffers who are dressing inappropriately and remind

them about the dress code and the reasons for it. He says the policy should also indicate that staffers who violate it will be asked to change what they wear. If they resist, you probably want to treat this as a performance and disciplinary issue. But be careful if you’re dealing with a young person who has never had a job before. Do not assume that someone has given them advice about dressing properly for work. Gibbs suggests having a conversation that lets the young staffer know, “we’re looking for you to be successful.” And discuss with him or her what proper workplace clothing is.

At the Convention Centers Conventions expecting 500 or more to attend. Date

Attendance

Convention Center International Society for Technology in Education: ISTE2 Jesus Awakening Movement Association1 American Association of Law Libraries2 Pennsylvania Board of Law Examiners3 Workready Philadelphia Program3 National Association of Black Journalists3 Association of Public Safety Communications Officials (APCO)3 Acts 413 Ministries (Ministry Leadership)3 Karousel Kats1 Shale Gas Insight 20113 World Tea Expo East2

Jun. 22-30

20,000

Jul. 6-10 Jul. 24-26 Jul. 25-27 Aug. 3 Aug. 3-6 Aug. 8-11

5,000 2,700 1,400 600 3,900 4,000

Aug. 19-20 Sept. 1-4 Sept. 7-8 Sept. 9-10

2,500 6,000 2,000 4,000

Jul. 16-17 Jul. 24-28 Aug. 2-4 Aug. 10-12 Aug. 13-15 Aug. 27 Aug. 27-28

2,000 7,000 8,000 500 3,000 2,000 5,000

Greater Philadelphia Expo Center Great American Guitar Show1 Philadelphia Gift Show2 Penn Atlantic Nursery2 Eastern Outdoor Regional Market2 AETA International Fair2 East Coast Reptile Super Expos1 Eagle Arms Weapons Show1

NOTES: 1. Open to the public 2. Trade show 3. Advance registration required SOURCES: Centers listed. Attendance estimates are as reported by event sponsors.

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610-722-0440

up to 417K up to 417K up to 417K up to 417K up to 417K (B) 21 North Main Street - Suite 9, Coopersburg, PA 18036 up to 420K

LOW purchase rates including FHA: FREE same day commitments

www.HamiltonNational.com

Call for Rates 4.0 2.75 4.37 Call for Rates 3.375 0 3.70

0 0 0 0

UNITED SAVINGS BANK NO CLOSING COST option available. Lock your rate before theymre gone.

15 yr Fixed Jumbo 30/15 Fixed Jumbo 30 20% Up to 417,000 30 yr Fixed Jumbo Consistently Low Rates! Apply online 24/7 and save! 20 Fixed Jumbo

FIRST AMERICAN MORTGAGE

Loan $

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30 20% up to 417K In Business and writing mortgages for 45+ years. We are INVESTMENT property professionals including commercial 30 20% up to 417K Great Commercial, Construction, Investment and Jumbo Rates check PRICE FINANCIAL out online. open late nights/ all weekend Rates shown above are bi-weekly 30 20% up to 417K payment schedule with a auto withdraw rider 30 3.5% up to 417K LIC#5420 (B) 3081 West Chester Pike, Newtown Square, PA 19073 LIC#2339 (B) 400 E. Lancaster Avenue., Wayne, PA 19087 30 20% up to 1mm 800-220-7334 PRUDENTIAL SAVINGS BANK 215-755-1500 30 20% up to 1mm HAMILTON NATIONAL MORTGAGE COMPANY

30 yr Fixed 30 yr Fixed 15 yr Fixed 10 yr Fixed

4.75 4.25 4.125 4.375

Lock Min Down

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LIC#1266 Points

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20% 20% 20% 20% 20% 20%

APR

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610-359-8282 PRICE FINANCIAL SERVICES

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Points

420K PA JUMBO LOAN SPECIALIST! 90% LTV JUMBOS.

• We Are The Premier 203(k) Lenders in PA

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0 0 0 0 0 0

20 yr Jumbo

420K

Rate

OLD GLORY MORTGAGE, INC.

30 yr Fixed Jumbo AlliedMg.com 20 yr Fixed Jumbo 4.66 30 15% Over 417K 15 yr Fixed Jumbo 10/1 Jumbo ARM

• Pre-Approvals Granted within One Hour

30 yr Fixed 30 yr Fixed 20 yr Fixed 20 yr Fixed (A) 418 Stump Road, Suite 100, Montgomeryville, PA 18936 27755 15 yr Fixed CREDENCE MORTGAGE 610-355-8225 15 yr Fixed 4.375 3.625 2.625 4.125 3.50 4.000

417K

up to$417K • Reverse Mortgages. Get You Cash Now up to$417K • PHFA Loans: Up to $3000 Assist up to$417K up to$417K (A) 7 Bala Ave, Ste 108 Bala, Cynwyd, PA 19004 Program Rate Rate Points APR Lock Min Down Loan $ up to $417K Program

LOCAL PA LENDER - LOW FEES & RATES!/ RUSH PURCHASE DEPT FHA & VA SPECIALISTS!!!/XPRESS REFI NOW! - 30 DAYS 24 HR. PREQUALIFICATION/ APPLY ONLINE 24/7 INVESTMENT/2ND HOMES/203K RENOVATION MONEY.

30 yr Fixed 15 yr Fixed 5/1 ARM FHA 30 yr Fixed 5/1 Jumbo Arm 7/1 Jumbo Arm

610-660-4777

5%

LIC#1266

20% 20% 20% 20% 20%

Program

W E E K

0 4.36 30 3.5%

www.colonialmort.com

60 60 60 60 60

T H E

A LLIED M ORTGAGE G ROUP

800-957-1550/215-661-1200

4.40 4.75 3.79 3.28 4.56

O F

30 yr Fix to 417,000 15 yr Fix to 417,000 5/1 ARM to 417,000 10/1 ARM to 417,000

888-744-0506

4.250 3.500 2.500 3.625

0 0 0 0

4.30 3.59 2.87 3.43

http://www.aimloan.com

30 30 30 30

20% 20% 20% 20%

View GFE Online 24/7! Apply & Lock Online 24/7!

(A) 4121 Camino Del Rio South, San Diego, CA 92108

417,000 417,000 417,000 417,000

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CHECK RATES DAILY @ www.interest.com

LENDERS, TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS FEATURE CALL BANKRATE.COM @ 888-509-4636 R AT E S & I N F O R M AT I O N AVA I L A B L E 2 4 H R S A D AY, 7 D AY S A W E E K O N T H E I N T E R N E T @ h t t p : / / w w w. i n t e r e s t . c o m / ? p i d = i _ P H I L Legend: The rate and annual percentage rate (APR) are effective as of 6/22/11. © 2011 Bankrate, Inc. http://www.interest.com. The APR may increase after consummation and may vary. Payments do not include amounts for taxes and insurance. The fees set forth for each advertisement above may be charged to open the plan (A) Mortgage Banker, (B) Mortgage Broker, (C) Bank, (D) S & L, (E) Credit Union. “Call for Rates” means actual rates were not available at press time. All rates are quoted on a minimum FICO score of 700. Conventional loans are based on loan amounts of $165,000. Jumbo loans are based on loan amounts of $435,000. Points quoted include discount and/or origination. Lock Days: 30-60. Annual percentage rates (APRs) are based on fully indexed rates for adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs). The APR on your specific loan may differ from the sample used. Fees reflect charges relative to the APR. If your down payment is less than 20% of the home’s value, you will be subject to private mortgage insurance, or PMI. Bankrate, Inc. does not guarantee the accuracy of the information appearing above or the availability of rates and fees in this table. All rates, fees and other information are subject to change without notice. Bankrate, Inc. does not own any financial institutions. Some or all of the companies appearing in this table pay a fee to appear in this table. If you are seeking a mortgage in excess of $417,000, recent legislation may enable lenders in certain locations to provide rates that are different from those shown in the table above. Sample Repayment Terms – ex. 360 monthly payments of $5.29 per $1,000 borrowed ex. 180 monthly payments of $7.56 per $1,000 borrowed. We recommend that you contact your lender directly to determine what rates may be available to you. To appear in this table, call 800-509-4636. To report any inaccuracies, call 888-509-4636. • http://www.interest.com/?pid=i_PHIL


Monday, June 27, 2011

C5

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

education

healthcare JOBS BY CATEGORY

healthcare • Administrative • Assistants • Billing • Clinical • Dental • EMTs/Paramedics • General Healthcare • Home Health • Laboratory • Mental Health • Nursing • Pharmaceutical/Biotech • Pharmacy • Physicians • Radiology • Social Services • Therapy • Vision

Dental Assistant/Hygiene FAIRLESS HILLS, PA

Bright, energetic individual for a high tech office. X-ray cert.ified. Call 215-946-3655 or fax 215-547-7762

DENTAL LAB TECHNICIAN Philadelphia Area

Exp’d Denture, C&B, Quality Control Tech’s, and Lab Managers for high quality Dental Lab. 215-699-8861

Healthcare Positions

CHESPENN HEALTH SERVICES A network of community health centers in Chester and Delaware Counties is expanding and seeking qualified applicants for the following positions: FT/PT Family Medicine Physician, Director of Information Systems, and PRN Medical Assistants, Dental Assistants and RNs. Fax resume to HR at 610-485-4221 or email to HR@chespenn.org EOE

Mobile Phlebotomist

Director of Nursing

Philadelphia Suburb

Phoebe Wyncote, a premier provider of nursing and rehabilitative services for older adults, is seeking a proven leader to fill the position of Director of Nursing. We are seeking a registered nurse with proficient coaching and supervisory skills, experience leading work teams, superior customer service and communicative skills, along with the ability to develop and maintain a nursing program that is compatible with the mission and values of Phoebe Wyncote and in compliance with all state and federal regulations. The successful candidate will possess a current Pennsylvania Registered Nurse license. In return, Phoebe offers a generous benefits package which includes a comprehensive Health, Hospitalization, Drug and Dental package within 30 days of hire, Life, and Disability coverage, a generous amount of paid time off, an excellent work environment, and a competitive salary commensurate with exp. Interested applicants are invited to submit resume to: Human Resources Phoebe Wyncote 208 Fernbrook Avenue Wyncote, PA 19095 215.461.2112/FAX 215.390.6640 rwade@phoebe.org

Phila., Surrounding Counties & South Jersey Counties

To advertise call 1.800.341.3413 or email recruitment@phillynews.com

Residential Counselor / Life Skills Assistant Flourtown, PA

A Personal Care Home for people with psychiatric diagnosis or brain injury has positions avail. CPR, 1st Aid, PA dr. lic’s req’d. Experience necessary. Please call 215-836-1844 EOE

SLEEP STUDY UPenn Sch of Med, Phila, PA

UPenn Sch of Med sleep research studies Must be healthy, 21-50 yr w/ regular sleep sched. Financial com pensation is provided. 215-573-5855

Medical Billing Clerk King of Prussia

Large multi-specialty group in King of Prussia is looking for a billing Rep. Candidate should have 3-5 yrs exp, be self-motivated and multitask. Coding exp a plus. Excellent salary & benefits. EOE. Email: mventura@academicurology.com or fax resume to 484-381-8028.

Clinical Supervisors

Phila: NE Comm. Ment. Hlth Ctr.

F/T. Supervise/evaluate clinical MH staff. Review intake assignmts; caseload; documentation. Req. PA license: LPC/LCSW/LSW; Master’s degree/foreign equiv. in clinical MH field.; 3 yrs. exp. post- Masters as MH therapist/substance abuse therapist & must include min. 6 mos. supervisory exp. Please email resume & C.V: nseier@lvcmhc.com

Pediatric Cardiac Sonographer Med. Univ. of South Carolina

Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) Children’s Hospital announces an opportunity for an experienced Pediatric Cardiac Sonographer with interests in teaching fellows and performing trans-thoracic, trans-esophageal and fetal echocardiograms. Pediatric experience is a must! MUSC is the interventional and surgical center for The Children’s Heart Program of South Carolina, a collaboration of all the Pediatric Cardiology programs in the state of South Carolina, and rated among the Top 20 programs nationally for Children’s Heart Services (US News and World Report). Interested candidates can apply at www.muscjobs.com for posting # A008522. MUSC located in Charleston, South Carolina, a vibrant coastal city that honors its past, thrives in its present and embraces future growth. MUSC offers a unique lifestyle with coastal living. The beaches and parks are a quick getaway for those looking for a relaxing retreat. Likewise, historical downtown Charleston offers exciting yearly events such as Spoleto, art walks and the Cooper River Bridge Run. We offer a competitive compensation and benefits package in a progressive environment! We have many other positions available as well such as Perinatal Sonographer, OR Nurse Manager, and Manager of Web Resource Services! Please view all of our current openings at www.muscjobs.com or contact us at 1-800-468-7276.

"Promoting Workplace Diversity An Equal Opportunity Employer"

TO OUR READERS

Advertisements are the property of Philadelphia Media Network and/or its advertisers and are subject to contracts between them. The classified listings and individual advertisements are subject to the copyright in this edition owned by PMN and/or to copyright interests owned by its advertisers and/or PMN. Reproduction, display, transmission or distribution of the listings or individual advertisements in any format without express permission of PMN and/or its advertisers is prohibited.

Hamilton, NJ Work for award-winning Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Hamilton, serving central NJ with more than 30 medical specialties all committed to excellence. At RWJ Hamilton, you will join a team of dedicated professionals and caring co-workers, working in a culture of empowerment. RWJ Hamilton is seeking a Full Time Marketing/Public Relations Director. Responsibilities: The Director will plan, implement and evaluate the operations of all RWJ Hamilton Marketing/Public Relations Department functions and oversee personnel, managing resources to successfully achieve communications objectives. The ideal candidate is an experienced healthcare marketer who blends strategy, leadership and creativity to implement a comprehensive marketing plan and develop communication priorities in support of RWJ Hamilton’s mission, strategic plan and business objectives. Individual has responsibility for branding RWJ Hamilton, marketing, advertising, employee and physician communications, media relations, public relations and special events management. MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS AND REQUIREMENTS Requires a minimum Bachelor’s Degree in related field required: marketing, public relations, journalism. At least 8 years of marketing and management experience preferred. If you are passionate about delivering excellence in healthcare every day and desire an open, supportive environment that can help you realize your own personal career goals, we want to hear from you today. Apply online at rwjhamilton.org or fax 609.584.6525.

Director of Med/Surg/Ortho/Rehab Sellersville, PA

Grand View Hospital currently seeks a Director to assume 24-hour responsibility for coordination, planning and interactive operations of the nursing unit and services including, but not limited to, patient care standards, marketing, education, community outreach, planning / measurement, project management and programs /activities implemented under the management team. Qualified candidates will possess a BS in Healthcare, Nursing or Allied Health discipline (MS preferred); 3-5 years of related nursing experience; and administrative experience with fiscal responsibility. Certification in specialty or nursing administration is preferred. We offer competitive compensation and benefits, and an outstanding team. Apply online at www.gvh.org. EOE

Professional positions 12 months immediate openings:

Elementary Principal- PA Certified, Strong Leadership skills & ability to achieve academic results, Assistant Principal Middle School – PA Certified, Exp. with urban youth preferred.

10-month salaried PA certified positions:

Bryn Mawr • Newtown Square Visit www.orthspec.com

Physical Therapists & Licensed Physical Therapist Assistants Phila & Norristown areas

Join our outpatient team. Immed. FT/PT positions. Great environment. Competitive salary, exc. benefits & 401k. Fax resume 610.927.4903 email: cdavis@dynamicpt.com

education JOBS BY CATEGORY

education

• Accounting • Admin. Clerical • Advertising • Architects • Automotive • Banking • Biotech/R&D/Science • Building Construction • Business/Strategic Management • Creative/Design • Customer Support/Client Care • Drivers • Editorial/Writing • Engineering • Finance • Food Service • Government-Municipal • Hospitality • Human Resources • Installation/Maintenance/Repair • Insurance • IT/Software Development • Legal • Manufacturing • Marketing/Product • Other • Production/Operations • Project/Program Management • Purchasing • Quality/Assurance/Safety • Retail/Sales/Business Development • Security • Skilled Trades • Telecommunications • Telemarketing • Transportation/Logistics • Warehouse/Shipping/Receiving • Help Wanted Part Time • Work at Home • Job Fairs • Career Services

School Psychologist - PA Certified Strong emphasis on Psychological Educational Testing, functional behavior assessments and behavior plans. Exp. with urban youth in grades K-8 preferred.

Hourly openings:

Front Office Aides, Teaching Assistants (Associate Degree required), Building Aides, Cafeteria Aides and Bathroom Attendants.

HR Director 200 E. 5th Street, Chester, PA 19013 or fax to 610-490-4004. You may also send via e-mail at HR@chestercommunitycharter.org

Education

Evaluation & Research Coordinator Woodbury, New Jersey Woodbury City Public School District has the following position available for the 2011-12 school year: Evaluation & Research Coordinator • Develop data collection instruments, analyze data, analyze test performance, and report scores and other research results to schools and the community • Strong knowledge of social science research and evaluation methodology, statistics, and data processing; extensive knowledge of data processing software • Master’s degree in area related to the position Position opened until filled. Screening of resumes will begin July 11, 2011. Please go to the district’s website at www.woodburysch.com and follow the instructions under "Employment Opportunities" to express your interest.

Family and Consumer Science Burlington, NJ Burlington Township School District anticipates the following opening: Family and Consumer Science NJ Certification Required Send resume & copy of cert. to resumes@burltwpsch.org EO/AA Employer Deadline July 1, 2011

• Administrative • Admissions • Elementary Education • Guidance Counselors • High School • Higher Education • Pre-K • School Psychology

GUIDANCE COUNSELOR

PA Cyber Charter School (Del. Co.)

Crum Lynne, PA. Qualifications include: Master’s degree in Education; State Certification in Guidance Counseling & current clearances. Excellent employer paid, benefits. Send resume to: Mimi L. Wilson, Director of Human Resources, 1000 3rd St., Suite #3, Beaver, PA 15009 or email: mwilson@pacyber.org

• Secondary Education • Special Education

NURSE PRACTITIONER Doylestown Hospital

Our Occupational Health Services department is currently seeking a temporary fulltime CRNP with a minimum of one (1) year experience and current PA license. For immediate consideration please apply online at www.dh.org. EOE.

Nursing Assistant Instructors Philadelphia

See ad in Education section. Resume to cglatts@mercyvhs.org or fax MVHS 215-228-6337

PRN: OR RN, ORT & PACU RN Jersey Shore ASC

Experience Required, Fax resume: (609)601-7910

To learn more or to find the right person for your job, visit your local partner at philly.com/monster

To advertise call 1.800.341.3413 or email recruitment@phillynews.com

CEO

Philadelphia

Charter School is seeking an innovative administrator to lead elementary school. The CEO is charged with developing the vision, adhering to policies, achieving goals, complying with regulations/requirements, managing operations, leading personnel and assisting the Board of Trustees in fulfilling its responsibilities. The CEO is responsible for business administration functions, fiscal activities management, oversight of principal’s direction of academic programs of the school and maintaining an active interest in parent & student issues. Background in business management preferred. Send letter of interest, resume and references to: CEO Search, ATTN: Joe Venditti, FTCHS, 5301 Tacony Street, Box 310, Philadelphia, PA 19137

jobs

Additional 10 month salaried positions:

Pennsylvania Area

Physical Therapist Physical Therapy Assistant

Philadelphia

• F/T Nursing Assistant Instructors, RN with PA license 1 yr. LTC exp. • P/T Electrical Instructor Forward resume to cglatts@mercyvhs.org or fax MVHS 215-228-6337

JOBS BY CATEGORY

SALES - PHARMACEUTICAL Industrial Pharmacy Management (IPM), the nation’s leader in physician office dispensing is seeking an experienced medical sales professional in your area. Total compensation package includes salary ($65,000 – 120,000), full benefits (401K) and commission structure. The candidate should have a bachelor’s degree, excellent verbal and written communication skills and experience with local medical practices (emphasis on orthopedics) with considerable workers compensation and personal injury clientele. Feel free to visit our website at www.ipmrx.com. For further information and to apply, please send your resume to info@ipmrx.com

VOCATIONAL INSTRUCTORS

Special Ed Teachers - HQT Middle School, Elem. Art Teacher, Middle School Math, English, Social Studies, Health/PE and Technology Teachers.

P/T Instructional Course Designer Pomona, NJ

TO OUR ADVERTISERS

By placing an advertisement, you agree that the advertisement as it appears will become the property of Philadelphia Media Network and you assign to PMN all ownership interest, under the Copyright Act of otherwise, in the advertisement as it appears in the newspaper. Unless notified to the contrary by PMN, you are granted a license to place the same ad in the media. Delinquent accounts are subject to reasonable collection charges.

CCCS has 5 Elementary & 2 Middle schools located at two campuses in Chester, PA, 5th & Madison, and Bethel & Highland Rd. Openings for the 2011-2012 school term include the following:

Please send cover letter, resume, and certifications; Child Abuse, Criminal & FBI are required for all positions (if you do not have current clearances, you will be required to obtain them prior to employment) to:

Must have 2 years experience, reliable car and PC. Great rates. Fax resume: 267-763-1519

DIRECTOR OF MARKETING/PUBLIC RELATIONS

Chester Community Charter School (CCCS)

Richard Stockton College , School of Graduate and Continuing Studies, seeks a part-time professional Instructional Course Designer to develop training curricula specific to the field of child welfare and human services. Graduate degree in human services discipline required, MSW preferred. The applicant must be familiar with the Department of Children and Families, Division of Youth and Family Services. Specific familiarity with the new Case Practice Model is desired. Experience in designing, developing and revising curriculum for human services professionals required. For complete position description, see our website, www.stockton.edu/cs

EOE

Chemistry & Physics Teacher Devon, PA

Devon Preparatory School a private, Catholic, boys school grades 6-12 seeks exp., qualified individual for the combined position of chemistry & physics teacher. Forward CL & resume to: headmaster@devonprep.com or mail: Rev. James J. Shea, Sch.P. 363 N. Valley Forge Road Devon, PA 19333

PT. Comp. Science Teacher Devon, PA

Devon Preparatory School a private, Catholic, boys school grades 6-12 seeks experienced, qualified individual for the part-time position of computer science teacher. Candidate should have experience with Microsoft Office 2010, HTML at the "tag" level and the ability to teach programming using Visual Basic 6 and 10. Java programming experience a plus. This position requires the ability to troubleshoot LAN, printer and PC hot-line problems. Interested candidates should send cover letter and resume to: Rev. James J. Shea, Sch.P. 363 N. Valley Forge Road Devon, PA 19333 E: headmaster@devonprep.com

Main Line Pre School

Exp’d. Exc. benefits, Competitive wages. Please fax: 610-525-5677 or email: ccresume2@gmail.com

Nursery/Pre-K Teacher F/T Broomall, PA

HillviewNurserySchool@yahoo.com

To advertise call 1.800.341.3413 or email recruitment@phillynews.com

TEACHERS

BUCKS COUNTY, PA Be Appreciated! Spanish, HS Math, HS Physics, HS Science certified teachers. FT. Fax resume to 215-493-0887

Assistant Principal Folcroft, PA

Southeast Delco School District is seeking a FT/12 mo. Asst Principal, Gr. 1 to 8 building starting on or about Aug. 1 , 2011 to assist the principal w/leading the school through the supervision of teachers, student discipline & student accounting. Must have knowledge of C&I, teacher supervision/evaluation, and student discipline. Exp. w/a diverse student body desirable. Starting salary commensurate w/prior experience. Send letter of interest, resume, standard teaching applic., copy of principal certification, undergrad/grad transcripts, Acts 34, 114 & 151 clearances, and 3 letters of recommendation to Southeast Delco School District, Attn: HR Office, 1560 Delmar Dr., Folcroft, PA 19032. Deadline July 7th. EOE

Certified School Psychologist

Administration Leader Wayne, PA

An A++ rated property and casualty insurance company located in Wayne, PA seeks an experienced and energetic administrative leader. Applicant must have people leadership experience with a background in a customer service and transactional processing. Property and Casualty insurance experience preferred but not required.

If you are interested in working in a winning environment please submit your resume to: recruiting@usli.com, USLI, P.O. Box 6700 Wayne, PA 19087 Fax: 610-688-4391. Compensation includes a competitive salary, bonus, fully paid major medical, hospitalization and dental benefits, a profit sharing program, an on-site gym and other exc. benefits. USLI maintains a smoke-free campus for all employees and visitors.

Exec. Secretary/Retail Mgr. Ocean City, NJ

For large Retail/Real Estate business in Ocean City, N.J. Good pay, Benefits & Apt. if needed. Must be willing to work 70 to 80 hrs. per wk. during summer months. Direct inquiries & Resumes to akazmarck@aol.com.

WESTTOWN SCHOOL

Westtown School, a PK-12 day and boarding school of 700 students, seeks a Certified School Psychologist to provide psychoeducational testing for students in the middle and high schools; consulting with staff in the areas of Admission, Learning Resources, and College Guidance; and communicating with parents and outside professionals regarding students he/she is evaluating at Westtown. This is a four day a week, 10-month position. Send cover letter and resume to: L. Jay Farrow, Westtown School, 975 Westtown Road, West Chester, PA 19382; fax: 610-399-3760; or email: employment@westtown.edu

Latin Teacher

Plymouth Meeting, PA

Infant-Pre School Teachers

jobs

Colonial School District seeking to fill PT Latin teacher position; PA teaching req; exc sal & bnfts; Mail letter of interest resume & clearances to CSD, HR Dept, “Latin Teacher Search”, 230 Flourtown Rd, Plymouth Mtg, PA 19462. Deadline 07/5/11 EOE

AUTO TECH

Ardmore & Plymouth Meeting

SIGNING BONUS The A rm en organization is seeking exp GM techs for both our Ardmore and Plymouth Mtg locations. Signing bonus available to qualified applicants. If interested, contact Rick Bradley 610-642-3700.

AUTO TOP TECHNICIANS Willow Grove, Roslyn, Jenkintown

Sussman Automotive is seeking quality individuals who do quality work. Top dollar paid for diagnostic expert/repair specialists. Sales have doubled in the last year. Busy shop! 50K A YEAR GUARANTEED for those who qualify. Complete compensation. pkg. Must have State & Emission License & valid PA driver’s lic. Prior Hyundai or Kia exp helpful SUSSMAN AUTOMOTIVE • Honda • Acura • Mazda Hyundai • Kia Contact: Chris Oyer, Svc Dir located at Sussman Honda 215-657-7050 - ext 1204 coyer@sussmanauto.com

LOT ATTENDANT ARDMORE, PA

Valid D/L. exp pref, not nec. Martin Main Line, 123 E. Lancaster Ave.


C6

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

www.philly.com

jobs We’ll help you put it together. Finding the right job. Finding the right candidate. Continuing education. Work-force training. Career advancement. It’s a giant puzzle, but MEGA can help you put all the pieces together. With our free seminars, organizational savvy and years of experience, MEGA is more than just a career fair — it’s a road map to the rest of your professional life.

DRIVERS

Bensalem, PA

Tired of driving someone else’s truck? Is it time to take your driving career to the next level? WANT TO BE A CLASS A CDL OWNER OPERATOR AND START YOUR VERY OWN BUSINESS WITH NO MONEY DOWN? If you are a qualified Tractor Trailer Driver, boy do we have a program for you. Good steady work with paid training and a sign on bonus too. Add to that fuel at just $1.35 per gallon, a cash/fuel card, free parking & health benefits available. What an Excellent Opportunity! Call Rich 800-333-2855 x307

"SAFETY FOCUSED QUALITY DRIVEN, our CSA rating reflects our commitment" Great Pay & Benefits, Pd. Orientation, Assigned Truck, Fuel Card, Pre-Pass. **$500 Sign-on Bonus** Must have: TWIC Card, CDL-A with Hazmat and Tanker Endorsement 18 mo. current TT exp. EOE/M/F/V/D

BLACK HORSE CARRIERS Local runs, Mon. thru Fri. work week, home daily, multiple stops. AM Dispatch, Average $850 plus a week. We also have part-time work available. The full time positions come with full Benefits, 401K, and paid holidays/vacation. Requires 3 yrs. Tractor trailer exp. and a Class A CDL with a clean MVR. For interview contact 215-676-7191 ext. 100 or email glenn.giglio@blackhorsecarriers.com EOE. Drug Testing is a condition of employment.

Job Seekers: For more information and to pre-register, go online to www.philly.com/mega Deadline to pre-register is 3pm Monday, September 19.

RECRUITERS: REGISTER BY JULY 29 AND RECEIVE 25% OFF THE PACKAGE OF YOUR CHOICE! Booth only packages do not apply

Collision Service Estimator Conshohocken, PA

We are a multi-franchise dealership looking for qualified Collision Service Estimators. ASE and I-CAR trained preferred. Experienced with Pathways and ADP estimating and DRP a plus. We are a top quality state-ofthe-art repair facility that is looking for candidates who are selfmotivated, professional, organized, accurate, able to multi-task, can motivate and possess the ability to work under pressure. Good follow through with an emphasis on quality and strong customer service skills are a must. Full company benefits, excellent compensation package and additional training is available. Res to: Conicelli Autoplex 1200 Ridge Pike Conshohocken, PA 19428 Attn: Donna Conicelli donnac@conicelliautoplex.com or apply online at www.conicellitoyota.com/ employment.htm

CHIEF CREDIT OFFICER

CARPENTERS APPRENTICES The New Jersey Regional Council of Carpenters JATC is accepting applications for apprenticeship for the following trades:

Carpenter | Floorlayer | Millwright | Cabinetmaker Residential Carpenter | Drywall Finisher Apprenticeship consists of 1,200 hours of “on the job” and related classroom training per year over five years, totaling some 7,000 hours. No wages or compensation are provided by the NJ Regional Council of Carpenters or any local union for time spent during school-related training. However, during the on-the-job training segment, when such training is available, the rate of pay will begin at 40% of the current journey level rate. Percentile raises can be earned every six months based upon performance. All recruitment, selection, employment and training of apprentices during their apprenticeship shall be without discrimination because of race, color, religion, national origin, sex or disability. The sponsor will take affirmative action to provide equal opportunity in apprenticeship. APPLICATIONS FOR APPRENTICESHIP ACCEPTED THROUGHOUT THE YEAR.

Qualifications for Apprenticeship

Roebling Bank: Roebling, NJ

For more information call: This position will be responsible for the lending and credit functions of a Kenilworth Training Center | (908) 241-8866 $165 million community bank. Ensure Trenton Training Center | (609) 392-0028 that acceptable credit standards are maintained and that loans conform Mullica Training Center | (609) 567-5675 to established policies. Manage lending staff regarding underwriting, Or visit one of the following web sites: credit review, documentation and loan structure. Determine the approWWW.NJCTF.ORG or WWW.NJCF.ORG priate grading of credits in conformance with regulatory guidelines and assist in the establishment of reserve levels. Review operating policies and procedures and the implementation of approved changes. Prepare monthly reports and presentations to the Board regarding originations, delinquency and general Allentown, PA loan reporting matters. The sucCenter City Philadelphia Get What You Need at Western! cessful candidate should have a And Other trainee pos. at Hotels & New Allentown Teminal Now Open! bachelor degree and 5-10 years of Hospitals. No exp nec to $14/hour Hiring for Dry Van and banking experience managing com- Pal Agy, 107 W Girard 215-425-7530 Flatbed Divisions mercial and installment lending acOTR and Regional Runs tivities. Please email your resume Excellent Starting Pay to: drinaldi@roeblingbank.com and Top Miles!

CLEANERS

CLEANERS

Commercial Project Sales Philadelphia

See our display ad for Sales Engineer in the Sales section. Elliott Lewis

CONSTRUCTION

KING OF PRUSSIA, PA Centimark Corporation, has immediate openings for Roofers (la borers). We offer a Competitive salary, medical, dental, vision, life insurance, paid Holidays and vacation, 401K program and job advancement opportunities. If you are dependable and hard working, THEN WE WANT YOU TO JOIN TEAM CENTIMARK! For More Information Apply in person (M-F, 8am-4pm), at: (298 Hansen Access Road, King of Prussia, PA 19406) or call (800) 759-9880. EOE and Drug Free Workplace.

Company OTR/ Regional Drivers OUR D RIVERS G ET THE BEST DO YOU? We know what you’re worth! •Weekly home time! •Primarily NE loads •Great Health & Dental Ins. •Late-model Petes & Freightliners •Paid Orientation & Assigned Trucks 800-999-7112 EOE Apply Online: www.kreilkamp.com 1+ years verifiable driving exp. w/CDLA

Drivers

Philadelphia Location

Hi Income Flex hrs. Limo cab drivers needed. Call 215-331-4660

Drivers

Northeast Region

Regional,Dedicated & OTR Opportunities Availalble •Great Pay • Great Miles •Great Hometime •CDL-A Required CDL training is available Call (866) 809-5083

DRIVERS/PARATRANSIT Abington, PA

•Previous experience preferred •PA license and good MVR •At least 21 years old Call 215-517-7937

Driver-CDLA

Great Equipment, Home Time & Benefits $500 Sign-On Bonus for Flatbed Drivers CDL-A and Good Driving Record Required Recruiters now available til 9pm central 888-698-3207

DRIVERS

DRIVERS

Phila. & Surrounding Area

Independent Contractors-Flat Bed Trucks available for Lease SIGN-ON BONUS!!!! BIG E TRANSPORTATION, LLC Several positions available immediately for motivated and customer oriented Class A CDL Independent Contractor drivers for local daytime flatbed deliveries to Home Depot customers in your Philadelphia, Central PA, Honesdale, Dickson City, Lancaster, Harrisburg and surrounding areas. Contractors must be familiar with the local area, have 2 yrs. driving exp., provide a clean MVR, have a "Can Do" Attitude and be the "BEST" at customer service. Moffett experience is preferred. $2000 sign on bonus availa ble to qualified candidates. Competitive Pay-Safe, compliant drivers need only apply. To inquire, please call: 877-795-1505 Ext. 5365 Or fax resume 866-639-4773 EOE/M/F/D/V

Chief Credit Officer

Burlington County, NJ

For all information & to apply, please refer to our complete job listing under Jobs; Banking.

Chief Financial Officer Collingswood, NJ

Volunteers of America Delaware Valley seeks CFO. Requirements include: BS/BA in Accounting/Finance, pref. CPA or MBA. Financial Management experience, preferred non-profit. Tax-exempt debt, income tax related issues experience. Risk Management skills. Excellent communication, computer, and interpersonal skills. For more information & to apply, visit www.voadv.org/careers. EEO/AA

DRIVERS

Vitran Express Inc. LTL regional trucking has openings for F/T CDL Class A city & road drivers with hazmat and twin endorsements, 2 years safe driving. Full time incl: •Start rate local class A $20.20/hr •Road rate up to $.435/mile •Road 1-2 day dispatches and home every weekend •Blue Cross/Blue Shield medical benefits •401 (k) •Paid holidays, vac & personal days Applications accepted 6/27/117/2/11 by appt only. Please call: 610696-2950. Apply in person at: Vitran, Express, Inc. 1200 Wrights L a n e West Chester, PA 19380 E.O.E.

Cook St. Davids Golf Club

Premier Private Golf Club on the Main Line is searching for experienced line cooks.The applicant must have three years of prior experience. Please forward resumes to john@stdavidsgc.com

KITCHEN HELP

Skippack Village, PA

Full Time, various positions available. Great working environment. Please call 610-584-1146 for more information.

Drivers

S. Jersey-based Operation Now Hiring!

Megabus, A Coach USA Company, a leading public transportation company, is now hiring. Requires a valid CDL with passenger and air-brakes endorsements. No moving violations in the last three years and a clean criminal background check. Earn $19.00 per hour after you have completed all of your classroom and behind-the-wheel training. E-mail: barbara.guzman@coachusa.com. EOE

DRIVERS

CLASS-A CDL OWNER OPERATORS Regional, OTR & Dedicated Postions •$5000 Sign on Bonus •Home Weekly •Great Company Culture •Tanker & Hazmat •Endorsements and 1 yr •Tractor Trailer exp reqd. CALL FOR DETAILS: 866-929-5098 or 800-782-6573 x5104

DRIVERS

Philadelphia Area

Great opportunity for year round work for qualified Flooring subcontractors. Must have own van, tools, General Liab., workmen’s comp, Corp or LLC, valid Soc Sec # and DL and be able to pass a back ground check. Call Yveline 877-577-1277 ext 1180 or visit http://contractor.us-installations.com

Regional Company Drivers

To learn more or to find the right person for your job, visit your local partner at philly.com/monster

Send resume to: DVMMA, 1015 York Rd, Willow Grove, PA 19090, Attn: E Downes; or email: edownes@dvit.com or Fax: (215)706-0895

Network Specialist Cecil County, MD

Cecil County Dept. of Information Technology is seeking a Network Specialist. Starting salary is $43, 139/yr. High School Diploma or G.E.D. One (1) to three (3) year’s experience in all relevant Network Administration and VOIP. For additional information, visit www.ccgov.org. Submit an application with a detailed resume to: Human Resources Department, 200 Chesapeake Blvd, Suite 2800 Elkton, MD 21921 E-mail: JOBS@ccgov.org or fax to: 1-888-522-7158. Deadline: June 28th, 2011. EOE/AA/ADA.

Research Analyst Philadelphia

Holy Family University seeks applications for a Research Analyst. For more information visit http://extra.holyfamily.edu/hr/job.asp EOE

Software Engineer, Staff Malvern, PA

Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc. seeks Software Engineer, Staff at Malvern, PA facility. Serve as a technical lead of the development of clinical healthcare domain projects, ensuring compliance w/ Health Level 7 (HL7) standards. Guide design, maintenance, enhancement, testing, implementation, & support of software. Reqs: Bachelor’s in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, Management Information Systems, Software Engineering or related (or foreign equiv) + 8 yrs of exp. in job offered or in an acceptable alternate occupation. Prior exp. must incl. serving as a technical lead of the development of clinical healthcare domain projects. Prior exp. must incl. multi-year object oriented analysis utilizing C++, Visual Basic 6 (VB6), & Java programming in a Windows environment. Prior exp. must incl. MSSQL development in a large-scale relational database & web development utilizing HTML, JSP, Servlets, & JavaScript. Prior exp. must also incl. performing unit testing or acceptance testing framework such as Fitnesse & JUnit. Prior exp. must also incl. Health Level 7 (HL7) standards. Mail resumes to: Pamela Ridgeway, Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc., 51 Valley Stream Parkway, Malvern, PA 19355. Reference job code AS/PR. Applicants must be authorized to work in the US permanently.

Norristown, PA

DEPUTY EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

Small firm seeks person for QA testing, end-user support and documentation for medical software. Requirements include excellent interpersonal skills, comfortable working with a small team, strong written, verbal, computer and technical skills. Compensation package $30$50K No recruiting firms. USPS mail only: Medical Data Systems, PO Box 574, Wayne PA 19087

ICC Property Maintenance & Housing Inspector certification pref’d. Valid PA DL; HS dip or equiv and successful bkgrnd check req. Hourly salary based on certifications. Good benefits. Deadline to Apply 7/11/11. EOE Municipality of Norristown Human Resources 235 E. Airy St, Norristown, PA 19401

Bryn Mawr, PA

LEWISBURG, PA

The Union County Housing Au thority is seeking applicants for Deputy Executive Director. Responsibilities include assisting the Executive Director in managing all housing and community development programs. Administration, supervisory, budgeting, financial, grant writing, development and construction knowledge and skills required. Education and job experience requirements apply. Minimum salary is $50,000 plus full benefits; however, employment will be through an employment contract. PA State Civil Service requirements do not apply. Detailed information may be obtained from the Housing Authority; 1610 Industrial Blvd.-Suite 400; Lewisburg, PA 17837. 570-5221300. (E) uncojere@dejazzd.com.

Police Officer

Lower Merion Police Dept.

Montgomery County, Recruiting for Probationary Police Officer. See our website for additional information: www.lowermerion.org

Maintenance Flourtown

Part Time. Personal care home has opening for competent person w/tools & PA drivers lic. Local apps pref’d. Some housekeeping req’d eoe Call 215-836-1844

Hotel Trainees Center City

No exp. Housekeeping, Dishwasher, Room Service Server. To $14/hr Pal Agy, 107 W Girard 215-425-7530

Cutting Room Manager

On-Call Job Coach

Exp’d in manual cutting of cloth for military uniform manufacturer. Salary commensurrate w/ exp. Apply in person: Crown Clothing Co. 609 Paul St., Vineland, NJ 08360 or call 856-691-0343 EOE

Langhorne, PA & Surrounding Area

$1000 gross pay per week or more. Liquid tankers, Sleeper truck positions available. Paid vacations & holidays, paid personal & sick days. Paid orientation/training & paid uniforms. Electronic Paperless Logs & Late Model Freightliners. CSA 2010 Ready, Class ’A’ CDL with Proper Endorsements required. Minimum 2 years OTR experience, a good MVR & safe driving record are required. Applicants may have no more than 3 moving violations in previous 3 years & No DUI’s in past 5 years. Please Apply online at: www.foodliner.com

Seasoned professional with 5+ yrs experience handling PA WC claims. Must be able to handle all aspects of claim from first report through closing, including litigation & settlements. Competitive salary, excellent benefits.

Software QA Testing and End User Support

Code Enforcement Officer

Warminster, PA

Auto Glass Dist. FT/PT. M U S T have clean driving record. N O POINTS/SUSPENSIONS. CDL not req’d. W/H responsibilities with heavy lifting. Drug testing. M ust apply in person at 51 Ash Cir, Warminster PA 6/27-6/29 9am4pm. No Phone Calls

Bensalem, PA

Owner Operators needed for our busy terminal. Class A CDL with 2 Yrs Verifiable Driving Exp Req’d. Steady Chemical, Acid, & LPG work available. Sign On Bonus Available • Fuel at just $1.35 Per Gallon • Paid Orientation and Training • Health Benefits Package Available • Fuel and Cash Card • Weekly Settlements with Direct Deposit • Lease Purchase Tractors Avail • Free Secure Terminal Parking • No Gimmicks - Just Good Steady Tank Work Call Rich at 800-333-2855 x307 www.lindencompanies.com

Flooring Installers

Willow Grove, PA

Regional Openings

VARIOUS LOCATIONS

• Must be at least 18 years of age at time of entry. • Must provide documentation of educational background. • Must qualify for interview by obtaining a passing score of 70% or higher on qualifying test. • Must possess and maintain a valid driver’s license. • Must pass a physical and drug test.

Seeking full time experienced electrician for 110V - 480V phila licensed prefered

Senior PA WC Adjuster

Hiring Regional Drivers In Croydon, PA Region for Out & Back Runs

Local Runs

10am – 3pm • Lincoln Financial Field

Due to Expansion Immediate Drivers Needed $65,000 /yr. + Earn up to $4,000 Safety Bonus! • HOME DAILY • DEDICATED CUSTOMER • Runs in PA, NJ, NY, DE CDL-A w/ 2 yrs. experience and 1 yr. tanker exp. Requires hazmat/tanker 800-879-7826 www.ruan.com Dedicated to Diversity. EOE

Croydon, PA

Drivers

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2011

Based in Bethlehem, PA

Electrician NE Phila, PA

Regional Drivers

Apply Online at www.hytt.com/jobsForDrivers Call 866-811-2765

Employers & Career Services /Resources Providers: For more information and to reserve your booth, call 215.854.4140 or email careerfairs@p phillynews.com. Deadline to register is 3pm Friday, September 16.

KDRIVER RUAN

Philadelphia

Intercommunity Action (Interac) a private, not for profit, health and human service agency, seeks an OnCall Job Coach to join our staff. A Bachelor’s degree and one year exp reqd. Must have an interest in providing direct services to adults with intellectual disabilities in a community-integrated work setting. Experience in job coaching preferred. A valid driver’s license plus 1 year driving experience necessary. Starting rate is $9/hr. We offer an outstanding benefits package. If interested, forward resume to: szales@intercommunityaction.org or fax to: 215-509-6028. Interac is an EOE.

Production Supervisor

For all application information & information on our available Maintenance positions, please see our full job listing under Jobs; Manufacturing

Vineland, NJ

Machine Shop Inspector Huntingdon Valley, PA

Must be familiar with in-process & final inspection procedures involving precision machined parts. CMM exp. helpful, but not necessary. O/T, company paid medical, 401k available. Apply H & K Tool & Machine Co., Huntingdon Valley, Phone 215.322.0380, Fax 215.355.1217

Quality Control Inspector (2nd shift) JPMC: Southampton, PA

Medical Device Manufacturer, seeks Q.C.I. w/the following qualifications. Exp. w/precision-machined components; able to read mechanical drawings (incl. inch, mm, GD&T); Proficient w/ mechanical & optical measurement & test equip.; good communication & people skills, i.e; a team player, able to work independently & make decisions with confidence. Knowledge of ISO & FDA standards & requirements - a plus. Please email resume to: hr@jademed.com or mail to: JPMC, Attn: HR, 105A James Way, Southampton, PA. 18966


Monday, June 27, 2011

C7

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Engineering

reDeFineD

This is how I work to make critical repairs to support my crew to support my ship. This is how I work to build my future and take command of my career

Valero Energy Corporation is committed to delivering long-term value to all stakeholders - our employees, communities, investors and customers – by pursuing profitable, value-enhancing strategies with a focus on world-class operations. Realizing our employees are our greatest asset, we help them develop and grow personally while empowering teams to achieve together. We have the following opportunities at our corporate headquarters in San Antonio.

with Military Sealift Command.

FCC TeChnol ogy DireC To r resp onsibilities include: Establishing key processing Best Practices to improve profitability. Oversees the development and application of FCC hardware, process and catalyst technology throughout the refinery circuit. Seeks to apply emerging FCC technology for strategic advantage. requir ements include: Bachelor’s degree in Chemical Engineering or Mechanical Engineering required. Master’s degree preferred. Minimum fifteen years experience in the refining or petrochemical industry required, economics background helpful.

TeChnol ogy DireC To r – A lk yl ATion resp onsibilities include: Establishing key Best Practices to improve safety, reliability and profitability. Provides subject matter expert guidance and process technology support throughout the refinery circuit; Seeks to apply emerging Alkylation technology for strategic advantage. requir ements include: Bachelor’s degree in Chemical Engineering or Mechanical Engineering required. Master’s degree preferred. Minimum fifteen years experience in the refining or petrochemical industry required, economics background helpful.

Interested applicants must apply online at www.valero.com Valero Energy is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer that values the ideas, perspectives and contributions of our diverse workforce.

Operator

Morristown, NJ, Indianapolis, IN, & Greensboro, NC

Clondalkin Pharma & Healthcare formally known as Keller Crescent is seeking employees with the following skills: Bindery folder set-up, flexo label press operators, and label slitter/rewinder operators. Relocation assistance and Competitive salary offered to qualified candidates. Please email resume to plawrence@clondalkingroup.com or fax to 336-292-2767. EOE

Production Supervisor Roanoke, VA

The leadership team of Maple Leaf Frozen Bakery seeks highly skilled & experienced Production Supervisors. Do you have the drive and desire to be part of North America’s largest bakery? If so, please submit your resume, including references & salary requirements by email to: Laura.frank@mapleleaf.com or fax it to 540.345.1010 Qualified applicants should have a degree (in a relevant field) & a min. of 3 years manufacturing experience (preferably in a food plant). Strong leadership & communication skills are critical. Familiarity with 6 Sigma concepts and application is preferred. Shift & weekend work are compulsory. Maple Leaf offers a competitive salary & benefits package. Relocation is covered. EOE

Purchasing Assistant

LTL trucking co. seeks Mechanics w/ min. 5 yrs exp in a diesel shop, own tools are req., CDL-B a plus. Service, PM’s, welding, tires, routine maint. Excellent salary & benefits, paid holidays, flexible hours, a great environment, Call 866.676.0757 for interview.

PT, handling supplies & deliveries, IT skills a +. Send resume w sal req to: mdimichele@kensingtonhopsital.org or fax 215-965-2344

Heavy Refrigeration Mechanic Newark, De

Under general supervision, performs skilled work in the inspection, preventive and applied maintenance, adjustment, and repair of components in refrigeration systems above 20-ton capacity. Employee is required to work on electrical, electronic, and pneumatic equipment, including high voltage. Requires a high school diploma, GED, or equivalent. Minimum of four (4) years journeyman experience as a refrigeration mechanic on systems rated at 20 tons or greater. A certificate of completion as a Universal technician as required by 40 CFR Part 82, Subpart F, of the Federal Clean Air Act. Experience in the maintenance and repair of domestic, commercial and industrial refrigeration systems and satisfactory completion of four-year R.S.E.S. (Refrigeration Service Engineer Society) program or equivalent.

Philadelphia Area

Adjusters Needed PA/NJ

PT 30k - FT 80k, No experience necessary, will train Email: pubinsadj@yahoo.com

Various Openings Philadelphia

Conrail is a Switching and Terminal Railroad Company with operations in Northern and Southern New Jersey, Philadelphia Pennsylvania and Detroit Michigan geographical areas. Employment opportunities are listed on the Conrail website at www.conrail.com Conrail is an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative Action Employer

MAN/CNC mill; CNC Lathe Wire & Sinker EDM, 1st Class Close toler /own set-ups; job shop exp. Vitols Tool & Machine 215-464-8240

Mechanic

Product Development Manager

Fres-Co Systems Telford, PA

Responsibilities include development of new packages & material for clients. Work w/marketing, product managers & suppliers. Bachelors Degree & 8-10 yrs exp required. Email resume: Tmamenko@fresco.com

Aston, Pa

Diesel truck mechanic, welding a +. Troubleshoot & maintain a variety of construction equipment. Hours noon to 8:30 p.m. Exp’d. Drivers License - drug free environment. Apply in person Allstate Power Vac 2527 Market St, Aston, PA 19014. EOE.

Mechanic-Rebuilder /Trans-Rear

Center City

To learn more or to find the right person for your job, visit your local partner at philly.com/monster

$500 - $700 Weekly. Be part of a professional team. Training Provided, Advancement opportunities.Get paid every week! Call 215-399-0544 to schedule an interview.

Elliott-Lewis is a leading mechanical, construction and service HVAC company in the Delaware Valley. We are seeking a seasoned, highly motivated SALES ENGINEER who will be responsible for all aspects of commercial project sales.The successful candidate must be an organized, self-motivated and detail-oriented with a drive to succeed.

Responsibilities:

Carriers Wanted

Chalfont, Hilltown, Sellersville, Silverdale Reliable Insured car Call 215-230-4681

Carriers Wanted

Chester and Montgomery Counties

Reliable Insured car Call for specific information Chester County -610 524 7308 Montgomery County 215 854 4493 610 650 0263

Media Area

PREPRESS YORK, PA

STRINE PRINTING COMPANY seeks experienced persons for the following two opportunities: •Digital Press Operator Seeking an experienced operator to run process color and variable data work, on various pcs of digital equipment, including some large format digital presses •CAD Operator Seeking an experienced operator to bring a job from conception to a completed die cut project. experience with Cimex or Artios is helpful. This position will work closely with sales, estimating, planning and die making personnel. Work includes working with paperboard, corrugate, and plastics. Both positions are available on second shift [3p - 11.20p]; a minimum of five years experience is desired for both opportunities. Please visit our website to apply www.strine.com. Strine is an equal opportunity employer

Independent Contractors Philadelphia Area

We need self motivated, sales oriented individuals to manage circulation sales for the Inquirer and Daily News in the Philadelphia Region. Area earnings can vary from $200 – $1000, more time more profits. Must have a valid driver’s license, valid insurance and reliable vehicle. Needed availability starts at 6am. Monday- Friday and Sunday. If interested, please call 215 854 4883

Sales

Commission Sales Reps Philadelphia Area

Part-time, flexible hours Ability to make $300-$500 per week part-time, $1000 or better full-time Must have a vehicle with valid driver’s license and insurance.

SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS

For information, call Keystone Marketing Bob Merrihew 215-205-2056

Growing Textile Manufacturer in NE Phila, has an immediate opening for experienced Industrial Sewing Machine Operators. Min of 2 years running Ind. Sewing Machines required. (4) 10 Hr Days,Mon–Thur. 7a–5:30p. Some OT. Excellent Attendance Required. Paid Vacation & Holidays.

Philadelphia Area

N.E. Philadelphia

Registration Reps

SALES ENGINEER - Commercial Project Sales

• Generates construction project sales by aggressively developing new business • Identifies potential sales opportunities within existing customer base • Conducts site surveys, estimates, prepares and proposes HVAC related construction solutions • Performs project and account management including but not limited to managing, supervising, planning and communicating • Ensures projects are implemented successfully within budget and on schedule • Utilizes technical knowledge and experience to assist customers in answering questions related to HVAC systems, system applications, installation, operation, maintenance and problem resolution • Actively participates in professional organizations

Requirements:

8-10 years experience selling HVAC design and construction and/or project management experience; or equivalent combination of education and experience. Successful candidate will possess the ability to handle multiple assignments with proven negotiating, interpersonal, communication and analytical skills. ASHRAE membership and LEED certification highly desirable. We offer a competitive compensation & benefit package, including health and 401K plans along with an excellent working environment. We are an equal opportunity employer committed to affirmative action and diversity. Interested candidates should submit a resume along with salary requirements to the human resources department at:

Must have drivers license, valid insurance and a reliable vehicle. The route pays $300 a week, and is 7 days a week with early morning hours. If interested, please call: 610-446-6149

South Jersey

CCC Heavy Duty Truck Parts Co. Has the following position avail: exp. HD Truck trans/diff. rebuilder. Bench work. Fax resume 856-6625820 or call Jim 1-800-257-8126

Philadelphia

Carrier Wanted

For a complete job description including work schedule please visit www.udel.edu/udjobs

MACHINISTS

Hamilton, NJ

MSC is an equal opportunity employer and a drug-free workplace.

If your not making $15 per hour You need to see us asap while positions last. No Experience Necessary Full training and advancement opportunity Call 215 739-1099 for Interview. Ask for Norm

The UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE is an Equal Opportunity Employer which encourages applications from Minority Group Members &Women.

"See our ad in Healthcare under Management"

Thursday, June 30, 2011 10:00AM - 2:00PM CareerLink Center 990 Spring Garden Street Philadelphia, PA

General Employment

Employment offers will be conditioned upon successful completion of a criminal background check. A conviction will not necessarily exclude you from employment.

Director of Marketing/Public Relations

Seafarer Day

Diesel & Trailer Mechanics

Elite Express: Pennsauken, NJ

Submit a current resume, one-page cover letter, and names, addresses, and telephone numbers of at least three references preferably by email to hremployment@udel.edu, or by mail to Office of Human Resources, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716.

PHILADELPHIA

Actively recruiting for all departments. See www.sealiftcommand.com for a complete list of positions. Call 1-866-867-0879 to speak with a recruiter or visit us at this upcoming event.

Qualified Applicants Only. Apply in Person, Tue – Thur after 10:00AM. EHMKE MFG. CO. INC. 4200 Macalester Street Philadelphia PA 19124 EOE

Sales

If you live in the following zipcodes: 19111, 19124, 19135, 19136, 19149, 19154 GREAT JOBS for STUDENTS! Earn $150-$250 Per Week MAKE YOUR OWN SCHEDULE! 215-207-0971 P & M Consulting, LLC

2900 Black Lake Place, Philadelphia, PA 19154 HR1@elliottlewis.com, Fax: (215) 698-4436

Sales Managers/Reps Needed! Philadelphia Area

Most Companies are downsizing! We are expanding! We are a promotional kiosk company selling subscriptions in stores. Earn weekly paychecks Sales Manager Position Looking for person with good management skills to sell/train /manage Sales Rep Position Well-spoken ambitious Hard Working Individuals needed Must have reliable car and cell phone Part time or Full time positions available Flexible hours Evenings, Mornings, Weekends Fast training and support on a weekly basis. This is an ideal job for College Students or Seniors Quick Sales Associates Inc. www.quicksalesassociates.com randyhcohen@yahoo.com Fax: 215-233-3151 Call Randy Cohen to set up an Interview or observation: 610-633-0721

Sales

Philadelphia & Vicinity

Part Time/Full Time Earn $2000-$3000 a month Paid weekly! ! Must have reliable transportation Please call Vince @215-551-9900 Or e-mail your resume to circulationusallc@yahoo.com

SALES REPRESENTATIVE PHILA/SJ TERRITORY

Industry leading equipment co seeks sales pro for Phila/S Jersey terr. $50K base+comm, benefits, car allow, phone, laptop, home office. Required: negotiation, lead generation, communication, & computer skills, 2+ yrs exp, bach degree. Resume to jobs@equipmentmarketers.net.

STUDENT JOBS

Newspaper subscription sales Flexible Hours, Good Money If you live in the following ZIP CODES: 19111, 19115, 19124 19135, 19136, 19148 Please Call 215-910-0353 Call today start tomorrow!

Get better matches to your job opportunities with unprecedented efficiency.


C8 B

www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Small Matters

Talson

no major problems or surprises, Lutz said. Still, he said, he found it reassuring to have “another set of eyes looking at it from an accountContinued from C1 Continued from C1 ing side.” If the government runs a “Some of them were peoLutz said Bright had ex$400 deficit and borrows the ple we know, some were new pressed concern early on money by selling Treasury folks,” he said. about the pace of the bonds to us, it reduces the All are responding to a de- project. Work wasn’t being amount of money available to mand for transparency contracted out at a rate finance investment. Since the Bright attributes to the Bern- Bright believed was needed Treasury will pay any interest ie L. Madoff scandal and the to complete the Comcast rate it must in order to borrisk-management debacle Center on time and avoid row what it needs (Why not? on Wall Street that brought budget overruns and other We pay it in taxes), private down Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. problems. That was because borrowers, who are sensitive and Lehman Bros. Holdings tenant Comcast Corp. initialto interest rates, will get whatInc. ly was supposed to occupy ever is left. Those spending big money about 500,000 of the buildon capital projects — such ing’s 1.2 million square feet. Bad sign: Low rates as government The media comThe government deficit toagencies, private Companies like pany then comday is about $1.5 trillion. The developers, and mitted to taking government borrows about the boards of di- Talson respond about 1 million 40 cents for every dollar it rectors of hospifeet, Lutz to demand for square spends. So why haven’t intertals and universisaid. transparency est rates risen to shut out prities — come to “That required vate borrowing? In the recesBright wanting a number of that Bright sion, private spending, and assurances, he changes to the attributes to building,” he the need to borrow to finance said. His initial it, fell significantly. Car purresponse: said. “Having the Madoff chases fell from 15 million a “What’s keeping somebody else scandal. year to nine million. So, less you up at night?” that can look at auto credit is needed. HousTheir answers that and make ing starts are 1.7 million units are as wide-ranging as the sure it’s all adding up right lower than they were at their J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / Associated Press trouble-shooting Talson of- gives you a lot of comfort peak in 2006. That’s a lot of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner (right) is followed by budget director Jacob Lew into budget fers: Does the contract ade- and keeps everyone on their missing construction loans — negotiations on Capitol Hill. Solving the debt problem has been politically difficult. quately protect against cost toes.” and jobs. A record-high peroverruns? Are contractors That’s especially imporcentage of small-business somehow increase substan- the pressure, but consumers terest rates and higher taxes. following project specifica- tant on public projects, said owners report having no inter- tially, private borrowers will have been poor savers. The Let’s hope our politicians tions? Are jobs being let on PIDC’s Longstreth: “It’s the est in a loan. have to compete with the gov- credit to finance growth will have what it takes to start time? Is the project on track public’s money.” In short, private credit de- ernment for our savings, and be harder to come by and dealing with this before glo- to meet deadline? Are we For Bright, 50, of West mands are weak, so the large we know who will win that more expensive as interest bal financial markets decide getting ripped off? Mount Airy, a career of numfederal deficit is not affecting battle. rates rise. to do the job. Two-year govWhile declining to provide bers-crunching and construcinterest rates as much, espeYou might remember (in As the debt piles up, the ernment bonds in Greece details, Bright said his work tion-related sleuthing seems cially with the Federal Re- the 1980s) 17 percent mort- burden of the interest pay- now have interest rates of had uncovered criminal ac- a natural fit. He has a bacheserve buying them up by cre- gage rates, a 21 percent ments will require more and 30 percent. No government tivity that led to jail terms. lor’s degree in mechanical ating new “money” — prime rate of interest, and more tax revenue to cover it. can survive that for long, not Mostly, those hiring capi- engineering from Rensse$600 billion in a program end- 15 percent coupons on None of this is good for small even ours. tal-project consultants — of- laer Polytechnic Institute ing this month. 10-year Treasury bonds. business, which historically ten these are people whose and an M.B.A. from the The private economy will Here’s the bottom line: produces half of the private William Dunkelberg is a primary jobs are something Wharton School. Besides, he recover, and with it the deWe will be competing with GDP (excludes government) professor of economics at other than construction — added, “I just love to watch mand for money to finance the government to borrow and employs two-thirds of the Temple University and a want peace of mind, and things get built.” 15 million new car purchases, money from the savings that private-sector workforce. somebody other than themBright’s growth plans for nationally recognized expert on a million new houses, and the consumers put in our finanPaying the interest on small business and the small selves handling the sticky Talson (named after his chilexpansion of millions of small cial institutions. If consumers $15 trillion to $20 trillion in fed- business economy. Contact him business of questioning con- dren, Taylor and Jason) inbusinesses. Unless savings save more, that will help ease eral debt will bring higher in- at dunk@temple.edu. tractors about their work. clude opening offices in “It was really nice to have New York and Atlanta and independent perspective,” overseas, initially in PanaAstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals large solar-generation said work is done on its Jim Lutz said of Talson’s ma. To build business L.P. announced the projects lately. 3.5-megawatt solar farm role as construction auditor abroad, Talson International At the end of May, Siemens completion of a 7,300 across from its corporate on the $250 million Comcast was formed last year. Energy Inc. said it had been solar-panel installation on headquarters in Hanover, Center, completed in 2008. Longstreth said he hopes hired by a New York its Wilmington corporate Pa. With 15,092 solar panels Lutz is senior vice president Talson makes one other Continued from C1 investment company to campus June 17. That’s a for that project, I’m glad I of development for Liberty move — to a building with and about 500 employees. build a solar farm in 1.7-megawatt peak project didn’t have to count them. Property Trust, which has an elevator. On his visits to Eastampton, Burlington on building rooftops, the top an ownership stake in the the current offices, he said, County. Scheduled for of a parking garage, and a 56-story office tower and “I was a little out of breath.” Contact Mike Armstrong completion in September, nearby field. manages it. at 215-854-2980 or Maybe I’m noticing it the power plant would have Finally, Snyder’s-Lance Inc., The project was “well man- Contact staff writer Diane marmstrong@phillynews.com. more because it’s summer, a 3-megawatt peak. the big pretzel and aged” by general contractor Mastrull at 215-854-2466 or Read his blog, “PhillyInc,” at but there have been a lot of Pharmaceutical giant snack-food manufacturer, L.F. Driscoll and resulted in dmastrull@phillynews.com. www.phillyinc.biz.

Philly Inc

Turn on the sun

Security Officers

West Chester, PA PT, All Shifts

Good starting rates. Must have valid DL, clean CBC & MVR. Exp a plus; will train. Call 609-386-2288 or 610362-0110, fax resume: 610-362-0113 EOE.

Telecommunicator/ Dispatch

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Seeking candidates for Dispatch level positions. Must have a thorough understanding of procedures and practices of a security dispatch center (9-1-1 type). Must be familiar with the technology and equipment required for effective dispatch. Chosen applicants will have exp in dealing with federal, state and local agencies in the handling of emergencies. Dispatch positions require 2+ years of 9-1-1 experience. Excellent customer service skills reqd. Shift work required. Full time positions with complete benefit package. Resumes to jobs@gcs-usa.com.

Electrical Instructor P/T Philadelphia

See ad in Education section. Resume to cglatts@mercyvhs.org or fax MVHS 215-228-6337

Electrical Project Manager

Bucks, Montco & Chester Cty

Suburban Phila Electrical Contractor looking for individual with experience in electrical project managment and estimating. PE and Autocad experience a plus. Entry level engineer will be considered. Vehicle and drivers license required, Email resume and salary requirements to : electrical _pm@yahoo.com

Electrician and Instrumentation Technician NEWARK, DE

3M’s Newark, DE facility is seeking an Electrician and Instrumentation Technician. Must possess an associate’s degree or higher in an electronics or instrumentation discipline and a minimum of 3 years of experience as an Electrician and Instrumentation Technician. This position requires the ability to work varying shifts, extended hours, fixed shifts, overtime, and weekends if needed. For a complete description, and to apply for consideration, go to 3M’s Careers Web Site (http://3m.com/careers-us). Enter "1104535" into the "Search Jobs" field, and click "Search Jobs". To view the description, click on the title of the position. 3M is an EEOE.

TO HIS FAMILY, HE WORKS IN HR. TO HIS COMPANY, HE’S THE REASON THEY GREW FROM 4 EMPLOYEES TO 84 WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT.

LABORERS

Sr. Director: Program Services

Furniture movers needed for Philadelphia Schools. MUST be able to lift 75lbs. No convictions. Previous exp. and refs required. Call after 9am 215-864-0500

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PHILADELPHIA

Utility Operator/Mechanic Newark, De

12 Hour Shift Schedule 6:00am6:00pm & 6:00pm-6:00am This Schedule will Produce Work Weeks of 48-40-44-36 Hours. Individual must possess thorough knowledge of the methods and principles of water-tube boilers; knowledge of boiler management and burner management systems, fuel and air ratio mix methods, and stack analysis. Demonstrates ability to work with boilers manufactured by Combustion Engineer, English, Keeler, Titusville, and other major manufacturers. Understands the operation of steam pressure reducing equipment, air-loaded and selfcontained, manufactured by Leslie, Spence, and others. Requires a high school diploma, GED, or equivalent. Minimum of four years experience in the maintenance, operation, and repair of high pressure steam boilers (greater than 70,000lbs/hr), air compressors, pumps, and fans etc. in the maintenance and repair of commercial and industrial boiler systems and all related equipment throughout the campus. For a complete list of qualifications and responsibilities please visit www.udel.edu/udjobs. To apply submit a current resume, one-page cover letter, and names, addresses, and telephone numbers of at least three references preferably by email to hremployment @udel.edu, or by mail to Office of Human Resources, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716. Employment offers will be conditioned upon successful completion of a criminal background check. A conviction will not necessarily exclude you from employment. The UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE is an Equal Opportunity Employer which encourages applications from Minority Group Members & Women.

Welder / Fitter Camden, NJ ASME Code shop requires welders experienced in GTAW and other pro cesses and accomplished fitters with pressure vessel experience. Experience with X-ray quality work needed. email: bblyth@josephoat.com.

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IMPORT COORDINATOR WARMINSTER

Notations, Inc., a major women’s apparel mfg., seeks an Import Coordinator to handle daily int’l logistic operations, coordinate freight, process freight billing; must be detail oriented. Min. 1-2 yrs exp in int’l logistics. Compet. salary/bnfts. Email resume: impresume@notations.com

Newspaper Warehouse Coordinators/Messengers Jersey Shore

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Wednesday, June 29, 2011 • 8:00 am – 2:30 pm Crowne Plaza Hotel • 2349 Rt. 70 West • Cherry Hill, NJ • Seeking skilled SMT hand solderers with experience in electronic assembly • Seeking candidates with 2+ years of formal electronic technology training and experience in troubleshooting electronic circuits to the component level • Positions are available on 1st, 2nd and 3rd shifts (including weekends) • Must be a U.S. citizen with the ability to pass a background check and obtain security clearance • We will be interviewing qualified applicants on-the-spot Come join us and be L-3. Visit us online for more information using requisition #022601 for Operations Associates and #022602 for Electronic Testers/Assemblers.

Apply at www.L-3jobs.com L-3 Communications Corporation is proud to be an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. L-3 provides equal employment opportunity for all persons, in all facets of employment. L-3 maintains a drug-free workplace and performs pre-employment substance abuse testing and background checks.


The Inquirer

Johnson takes over Nats. D6

Germans win World Cup opener. D3

Gonzo: Boston fans are insufferable. D2 * C

Monday, June 27, 2011 ★ Section D

Tri-mendous: Phila. records fall

Potts and Wassner establish new marks at seventh annual triathlon. By Phil Anastasia

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Andy Potts calls triathlon a “family and friends kind of sport” because it’s out of the mainstream. That truly was the case for the top male and female finisher at Sunday’s seventh annual Philadelphia Insurance Triathlon. Potts and Rebeccah Wassner set course records en route to victory, and each credited the presence of familiar faces in the crowd with providing an extra boost during the most demanding parts of the three-

event endurance race in Fairmount Park. “This is the closest I’ve been to a home course,” said Potts, a Hershey, Pa., native who spent much of his youth living in Princeton. “It’s very special to me to win here.” The 34-year-old Potts, the hottest competitor on the top professional triathlon series, set a course record with a time of 1 hour, 46 minutes, 5 seconds in a race that included a .9-mile swim, a 24.8-mile bike ride, and a 6.2-mile run. See TRIATHLON on D3

RON TARVER / Staff Photographer

Men’s winner Andy Potts, who grew up in Princeton, said he felt he was on a home course “with so many friends and family here.”

Doc Gets All A’s

RON CORTES / Staff Photographer

Roy Halladay pitched his fifth complete game of the season in the 3-1 victory over Oakland, joining the Tigers’ Justin Verlander and the Yankees’ CC Sabathia as the majors’ only 10-game winners.

Halladay wins his 10th, going distance for Phils

Rollins punches way out of batting slump By Tim Rohan

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

The prizefighter emerged from a back room to answer questions about his latest spoils. He was cloaked in a long, white, red-pinstriped Phillies bathrobe with “ROLLINS 11” embroidered on the back. “All you’re missing is the gold championship belt,” a reporter said. Jimmy Rollins wasted no time Sunday starting on his first fourhit game since May 21, 2009, rapping the first pitch out of Oakland starter Josh Outman’s hand for a single to left. Rollins and Roy Halladay combined to

knock out the A’s, 3-1, at Citizens Bank Park, and the shortstop basked in the spotlight after breaking an 0-for-15 slump over his last 31/2 games. “I wasn’t struggling,” Rollins said. “I mean, I hit some balls hard, but I just didn’t have any hits for my last 15 at-bats. That’s not struggling, it was only three games — no hits, no runs, may have been on base once. “Had it been five games, that would’ve been struggling,” he added with a smile. “Jimmy has had some good games,” Phillies manager Charlie Manuel said. “His consistenSee ROLLINS on D6

By Matt Gelb

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

Roy Halladay squatted in shallow right field at Citizens Bank Park more than an hour after throwing 113 pitches for a complete-game, 3-1 Phillies victory over Oakland. Now he was Dad, and it was time to play catcher. Cliff Lee was pitching and Halladay’s youngest son, Ryan, held a big orange bat. He fouled off an underhanded Lee toss

Jimmy Rollins found his stroke Sunday, going 4 for 4 with a double. He scored two runs.

and Halladay, wearing blue shorts instead of his white baseball pants, sprang up to chase the ball. It took merely 2 hours and 14 minutes for Halladay and the Phillies to defeat the A’s on Sunday, so the family day celebration in an empty ballpark could commence early. There was beauty in just about every moment of Halladay’s day. See PHILLIES on D6

A’s 1 Phillies 3 Next: Red Sox at Phillies, Tuesday at 7:05 p.m. ¢ Cole Hamels’ next start will likely cost him an all-star shot. D6.

HALLADAY’S IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA LINE 9 8 1 1 0 4 113 2.40

AT&T NATIONAL AT ARONIMINK 8 THURSDAY-SUNDAY IN NEWTOWN SQUARE 8 TV: CBS3 AND GOLF CHANNEL

Defending champ aims to regain mojo

British Open on horizon; many stars skip this trip By Joe Juliano

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

It’s not exactly an ideal spot that the AT&T National has on the schedule when trying to attract the worldwide names for its tournament. The gap between the U.S. Open and the British Open is less than four weeks, so some like to take extended time off, and others like to go to Europe to play an event or two there before the granddaddy of all majors. Look at the PGA Tour players who are skipping the AT&T,

which begins Thursday at Aronimink Golf Club. Dustin Johnson, Sergio Garcia and Retief Goosen played this past weekend at the BMW International in Munich, Germany. Bubba Watson will tee it up this week at the French Open. And next week, a host of Tour members will be at Castle Stuart for the Scottish Open at Inverness, warming up for the Open Championship. That group includes Phil Mickelson, Luke Donald, Matt Kuchar, See FIELD on D7

By Joe Juliano

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

ELIZABETH ROBERTSON / Staff Photographer

Justin Rose at the 11th hole en route to victory in

last year’s AT&T National at Aronimink Golf Club.

When Justin Rose saw Aronimink Golf Club for the first time last year, he felt his best approach was, in his terms, to “take what you can get.” He got plenty. He set a course record of 64 in the second round of the AT&T National, grabbed a 5-stroke lead with nine holes to play, and held off a charge by Ryan Moore to capture the tournament by 1 shot for his second PGA Tour win in

the span of about a month. “If there’s one thing about not having played a golf course before, you come into it with no preconceived notions,” Moore said earlier this month in a conference call with reporters. “You formulate a strategy based upon how you see it for the very first time. You play it as you see it and you play it as you feel comfortable.” As the defending champion, Rose hopes the comfort level is See ROSE on D7


D2 C

www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

How weet It Is @magelb Matt Gelb

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The Oakland A’s, an American League team, feature a lineup today with a combined 14 home runs.

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Boston fans: Enough already

If there’s a reason to end interleague play, this is it. The next few days figure to test our collective patience and sanity. Brace yourself: Boston fans are coming. The Phillies will begin a three-game series with the Red Sox on Tuesday. Over the course of the season, the Fightin’s do all sorts of promotional giveaways, everything from hats to bobbleheads. This would be a good time for a different kind of freebie: maybe noise-canceling headphones or, if those aren’t enough and more drastic measures are needed, surplus World War II-era cyanide pills. One bite and the suffering will be over. They’ve gotten out of control, these Boston fans. They’ve mutated. There was a time when they took a perverse pride in their suffering, when they romanticized their lack of sports luck. Then the Pats won and the Sox won and the Celtics won and, more recently, the Bruins won. Whatever humility Bostonians had was long ago traded for some of those giant “We’re No. 1” foam fingers and a slew of omnipresent smug smiles. The people in Boston have become obnoxious, arrogant, condescending. And those are just my friends up there. The rest are worse, an openly supercilious lot who never hesitate to tell you exactly how good they have it. Pride, as Marsellus Wallace said, will mess with you. Boston has always been a great beer town — try Bukowski Tavern or Sunset Grill if you venture up that way — but the favorite intoxicant these days is victory. The city is hammer drunk on titles. Since 2002, the Patriots have won three championships, the Sox have captured two, while the Celtics and Bruins claimed one each. As a result, the fans there have become the sports equivalent of the mouthy businessman who gets loaded at the bar and won’t shut up about how much money he’s made and how much better his life is than yours. He drones on

ELISE AMENDOLA / Associated Press

Some fans have all the luck. Bruins followers live it up after the

Stanley Cup conquest. Red Sox fans have seen two parades.

and on about his summer house and his expensive cars and his cushy Rich & Famous lifestyle while you order up another happy-hour discount brew and thumb the already well-worn want ads. The Karmic bartender needs to cut them off. Their gloating is insufferable. “Since he was born, I’ve been to every parade with my son,” Michael Kairevich III told the Boston Globe after the Bruins beat the Vancouver Canucks. According to the story, the dad and the boy even have a special parade route spot in front of the Four Seasons Hotel. They go there after each title. It’s sickening. There’s a whole generation of mini-monsters just like that running around up there, figuring

it’s their birthright to stand outside some fancy hotel every year and get showered with more confetti. You can almost hear the little prepubescent elitists squawking. Aftah wahtin three lawng yee-ahs, the drought is ovah. We have anothah championship. Hawkey is bahhhck in Bawston. The older fans are just as bad. After the Bruins won the Stanley Cup, I asked my buddy Flan, who lives up there, whether people were rioting in Central Square — a particularly lawless area of Cambridge where Flan and I once watched two hobos fight in the middle of Massachusetts Avenue. (True story.) “Nope,” Flan said. “We act like we’ve been there before.”

I’m seriously considering rescinding his wedding invitation. But I suppose it isn’t entirely Boston’s fault that it’s overrun with smarmy, self-satisfied fans. The media have happily fed the town’s ego for years and continue to overstuff it at every opportunity. A quick review of the latest saccharine platitudes served to Boston reveals a menu sure to make the heads there grow fatter still. Let’s see, there was the “No one can beat the Red Sox” declaration on SportsCenter last week, along with the requisite “City of Champions” headline employed by the Boston Globe and Montreal Gazette following the Bruins title. WEEI.com — the online arm of the main sports-talk radio station in Boston — went with a navel-gazing piece, “Why we win,” while every outlet from Boston magazine to ESPN.com to the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle ran stories billing the city as “Title Town.” It won’t be long now until Boston adopts Jay-Z’s “Already Home” as its official anthem. But really the fact is, we not in the same bracket/Not in the same league, don’t shoot at the same baskets. In the interim, Boston Globe and SportsIllustrated.com columnist Dan Shaughnessy — a man who’s written about Boston sports for decades — summed up the vomit-inducing situation perfectly in the first sentence of a recent piece. The story appeared under the obligatory headline you might expect: “Being a sports fan in Boston has become an embarrassment of riches.” “The rest of the country,” Shaughnessy wrote, “must be sick of us in Boston.” Pass the Pepto. Contact columnist John Gonzalez at 215-854-2813, gonzalez@phillynews.com or @gonzophilly on Twitter. Read his past columns at philly.com/gonzo

ThINQing Out Loud

World Cup: Women’s crown jewel

After the passage of Title IX, the 1999 Women’s World Cup remains the most significant women’s sporting event ever held in this country. As far as team sports go, what else is even close? Among all events, it’s way up the list. I understand why Billie Jean King vs. Bobby Riggs deserves its place in the history books. But in terms of real impact, a soccer team filling stadiums and getting massive media attention — and winning, as the country stopped to watch — that had far more influence than a top women’s player, already a worldwide star, beating an old man, great schemer that Riggs was. A generation of athletes — including all the women now playing in college — grew up thinking it was no big deal that women filled those stadiums and got that massive media attention solely because of their athletic skill. Wissahickon High graduate Katie O’Donnell, a recent University of Maryland graduate and now a world-class field hockey player, mentions Mia Hamm when pressed for a role model. Not that O’Donnell grew up dreaming of being Mia, but Hamm and her teammates set a standard that O’Donnell is now living up to in another sport. The 1999 U.S. team really was a team. It’s kind of ironic that the lack of a domestic league for women actually benefited that group. They were not an all-star team, occasionally getting together before competitions. They all had established roles, on and off the field. It’s possible that victory in 1999 wouldn’t have happened if they had a league. (Everyone on that

remain bigger names than the current team members. Their names still appear in Nike ads. But they earned that status on the field, as everybody watched. And the crowds in Germany this summer are another part of their legacy. After ’99, other countries saw the possibilities. Many countries such as Germany and the Scandinavian nations already were advanced in giving women athletic opportunities. But ’99 showed the commercial possibilities.

A strangely typical soccer scene

MICHAEL CAULFIELD / Associated Press

A shirtless Brandi Chastain rejoiced after

the U.S. World Cup victory in 1999.

team knew how to do her job. Best illustration: Kristine Lilly staying on the goal line on a corner kick by China in the final. Lilly headed the potential Chinese game-winner away, setting up the heroics by Brandi Chastain later on.) I covered that team, and every U.S. game in the ’99 World Cup — and covered the decade-long run-up to ’99 — getting a front-row seat for the whole phenomenon. Another irony: The soccer players overplayed their hand after the World Cup, believing that crowds would continue to come for a domestic league. The WUSA went through too much money too quickly and eventually folded because of it. The current Women’s Professional Soccer League seems to have a better plan for long-term survival. Now, Chastain and Julie Foudy and Hamm, and their ’99 coach Tony DiCicco, are the TV commentators, offering real expertise. These women

You can’t blame U.S. goalkeeper Tim Howard for getting upset at the postgame fiasco at Saturday’s CONCACAF Gold Cup final. Mexico earned a 4-2 victory, coming from 2-0 down. Howard’s complaint was that the postgame ceremony was entirely in Spanish, without even an English translation. What’s the big deal? The game was at the Rose Bowl. Where else in the world would the host country be treated as a visitor? Howard had no gripe that fans of Mexico took over the Rose Bowl. He expected that. He just didn’t expect it to be taken to an official level. Tune in to Bill O’Reilly for more coverage.

Questions …

With Jack McKeon and Davey Johnson back in manager uniforms, is it inevitable that Tommy Lasorda suits up again? … Did you tune in to watch a little golf Saturday after that 19-year-old amateur shot a 60 in Hartford on Friday? … Can ESPN have Ian Darke do the NBA and NFL as well as soccer? Maybe golf, too? (And any other sport Mike Tirico is involved in.) Contact staff writer Mike Jensen at 215-854-4489 or mjensen@phillynews.com.

@lazershow2point Dustin Pedroia

ahh baseball #Wonderful

@BroadStBull Sam Carchidi

Homer says team “got bigger and added skill and competitiveness” in draft.

In Your

ace

Tell us about your favorite ballpark experience. Join the conversation on our Facebook page at facebook.com/sportsinq or e-mail us at sportsinq@phillynews.com. The best entries will run on the SportsInq page. Bobo Newsome delivers

Joe Franzini, Drexel Hill I was 8 years old when I went to my first baseball game in the late ‘40’s. Since then I have seen a legion of games beginning at Shibe Park, including many of the now-extinct Sunday, holiday, and twi-night doubleheaders. Never, however, did I ever come close to catching or retrieving a foul ball, although one night I did come home with a coveted prize. My mother took me to see the A’s (my team!) play the Yankees in 1952. She bought box seats and we sat in the first row directly behind the A’s dugout. Bobby Shantz, who was a 24-game winner that year, was pitching against Allie Reynolds. I was in total awe to see my usually last-place A’s so up-close. As the game was about to begin, the ballplayers descended into the dugout. One of the players, a pitcher, had played for many other teams and was concluding his career with the A’s. He happened to look up and our eyes met, whereupon he flipped me the baseball held in his hand without so much as a smile or wink. His name was Bobo Newsome. It was a long time ago but for me a very cherished moment in time. Unfortunately, Bobby Shantz got rocked that night, losing, 12-2, as Gil MacDougal hit two homers. Now, needless to say, whenever I’m visiting Citizens Bank Park, the last thing I want to see is a foul ball coming toward me.

BlogoSports Tight end from Massachusetts chooses Owls

Owls Inq: www.philly.com/philly/blogs/owlsinq/ Jameson McShea, a rising senior at Boston College High in Massachusetts, gave an oral commitment Saturday to play football at Temple, according to reports. The 6-foot-4, 240-pounder becomes the Owls’ ninth commitment for the Class of the 2012. McShea chose Temple over a scholarship offer from Elon. He was also receiving interest from Boston College, Duke, Maryland, Northwestern, Connecticut, and Penn State. According to ESPNBoston, McShea is hard to bring down and has good hands. — Keith Pompey

Flyers’ top pick doesn’t lack confidence

Broad Street Bull: philly.com/philly/blogs/inqflyersreport/ In Friday’s first-round of the NHL draft, the Flyers selected 18-year-old Sean Couturier, a 6-foot-4, 197-pound center who hopes to earn a lineup spot this season. Hey, the kid doesn’t lack confidence. The high-scoring Couturier was drafted with the eighth overall pick, acquired from Columbus Thursday in the Jeff Carter trade. A native of Phoenix, Couturier had 36 goals and 60 assists in 58 regular-season games for Drummondville in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League last season. His plus-55 rating was second in the league. Here were Couturier’s thoughts in a conference call after he was selected on Friday: Q: What was your initial reaction when you heard your name called? You were projected in the five spot. You fell a little bit. But what was going through your mind while you were sitting there? Couturier: I was just enjoying the moment. I’m really happy to be part of the Philadelphia Flyers. It’s a great honor. I mean, it’s a wonderful day. Q: What do you know about the organization? Couturier: I mean, they have a lot of history. It's a great team, big guys. I'm looking forward to being part of it. Q: Today after they traded away two centers, did you like the thoughts of there being an opening there? Couturier: Yeah, maybe, but I think it's going to be up to me to work hard this summer and show what I’ve got. I can’t control the decision after that. But my main goal for sure is going to be part of the team. Q: Have you set a goal for yourself or path for yourself of where you want to be this time next year? I mean, obviously you’re signed up with the Flyers, but do you have any thought on when you want to be there? Couturier: For sure my main goal is going to be to try to make a spot on the roster. We’ll go from now and work hard, keep working hard during the summer and improve myself and be ready for camp. Once I get there, I just want to show what I’ve got. — Sam Carchidi

Online Sports Poll Which 10-game winner would you rather have? 1. Roy Halladay 2. CC Sabathia 3. Justin Verlander

Respond at www.philly.com/sportspoll


Monday, June 27, 2011

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

C

D3

German women open World Cup with a victory

Auto Racing

Busch tops Gordon on Sonoma road course

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SINSHEIM, Germany — On SONOMA, Calif. — The turna great day for women’s socaround for Kurt Busch contincer, it was a good day for Euued Sunday with a dominatrope’s teams. ing run at Infineon Raceway The World Cup started Sunthat led to his first career RON TARVER / Staff Photographer day with two stadiums overroad course victory. Fit to be tri’d: After the Schuylkill swim, a sea of cycles was perhaps the least of the challenges flowing with goodwill, color Busch led a race-high 75 triathlon competitors faced as they chased personal bests and a share of $40,000 in prizes. and the cheer of nearly laps and beat Jeff Gordon by 100,000 fans. There were also almost 4 seconds for his first four goals, including one stunvictory of the season. It’s a ner. marked turn for Busch, who Germany, the two-time deunraveled over his team rafending champion, survived dio at Richmond last month opening-game jitters to beat because of how poorly his Canada, 2-1, in Berlin and Dodge had been running. showed that the hosts will be The rant led to behind-thethe team to beat. scenes changes at Penske “It is fantastic,” said GermaRacing that have sparked ny’s No. 1 fan in the stands, both Busch and teammate Chancellor Angela Merkel. TRIATHLON from D1 the Schuylkill. Brad Keselowski, who won at France won the opener “I really wanted to perform Cameron Dye, a 27-year-old Kansas earlier this month. well with so many friends and from Boulder, Colo., who is against Nigeria, 1-0, in SinBusch, despite three consecu- family here,” said Potts, who Watch video No. 2 in the Toyota Cup sheim to leave the continentive poles, was winless but collected the $10,000 winner’s of the event at points race, took over the tal neighbors in charge of inching closer and closer. http://go.philly.com/triathlon share of the $40,000 purse lead during the bike portion, Group A. The United States It finally came on a road and also extended his lead in which included a ride across begins play in the 16-team course, of all places. Busch the Toyota Cup points series. Falls Bridge and up Lemon tournament Tuesday, facing was winless in 10 career Wassner, a 35-year-old Wassner said. Hill, but was slowed by a me- North Korea in Group C in starts at both Sonoma and from New York, won the womLaurel Wassner didn’t be- chanical problem with his Dresden. Watkins Glen, the only two en’s race for the fourth time lieve a word of it. Beyond the games thembike. road courses on the Sprint but broke two hours for the “I saw it in her eyes yester“It wasn’t a flat tire, but it’s selves, the upbeat spirit of Cup circuit. first time, crossing the finish day,” Laurel said. “It hit me: never good to have to stop the women’s game stood out Gordon, who caused sever- line in 1:59:36. She’s going to win tomorrow. and get off your bike, especial- Sunday. Riding the spirit of al accidents on the course Wassner’s family ties She has an iron will.” ly when you are in the lead,” the crowds, the atmosphere last year, finished second and played an even larger role in approached that of the men’s Rebeccah Wassner said her Dye said. congratulated Busch in Victo- her victory as she competed hip was bothering her during In second at the start of the 2006 World Cup — also in ry Lane. along with her twin sister, the running portion of the run, Potts surged in front and Germany — even if the action Carl Edwards, who decided Laurel, who finished third in race but that she pushed pulled away from a group rarely did. Friday to skip Saturday’s Na- 2:00.07, and drew inspiration through after seeing her that included second-place One clear exception came tionwide Series race at Road from the sight of her younger younger sister in the crowd. finisher Matt Reed (1:46:47) at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium. America, finished third. sister, Sarah, among the “That was the point when I and third-place finisher Greg Canada’s Christine Sinclair, crowd at a crucial portion of said to myself, ‘This is what I Bennett (1:48:48). Dye was playing with a broken nose for most of the second half, the race. do,’ ” said Wassner, who also fourth in 1:48:23. Formula One “She wasn’t even supposed won $10,000 for finishing “I didn’t get off good in the highlighted the day with a VALENCIA, Spain — Red to be here,” Rebeccah said of first. swim, but I was happy with the stunning, perfectly curled Bull driver Sebastian Vettel Sarah. “Once I saw her, I was Potts said he had about 10 bike and run,” said Reed, a free kick late in the game. won his sixth race of the sea- like, ‘That’s it. I’m doing or 12 family and friends in 35-year-old who, like Dye, lives That briefly gave Canada son at the European Grand this.’ ” attendance, including the in Boulder. “I was happy to fin- hope, but Germany survived Prix, building on his already Wassner has been ham- mother of his best friend in ish second. Andy is having such on grit. commanding Formula One se- pered by a hip injury this sea- second grade in Hershey. “The doctors told me her a strong season. He’s the man ries lead. nose was broken, but she son and wasn’t sure she could “I recognized her voice,” to beat right now.” Vettel edged Fernando complete the running portion said Potts, who lives in Coloasked me to let her play,” CanAlonso of Ferrari for his sec- of Sunday’s race. She told her rado Springs, Colo. Contact staff writer Phil Anastasia ada coach Carolina Morace ond straight victory along Va- twin as much on the bus ride Potts, a former all-Ameri- at 856-779-3223, lencia’s street circuit. It was to the start of the event. can swimmer at the Universi- panastasia@phillynews.com, or the German’s fifth win this “I told Laurel, ‘Maybe I’ll ty of Michigan, was in first @PhilAnastasia on Twitter. season starting in pole and just do the swim and bike,’ ” place after swimming across came in stifling 115-degree Top Finishers weather. MEN Red Bull teammate Mark 1. Andy Potts, Colorado Springs, Colo., 1:46:05 2. Matt Reed, Boulder, Colo., 1:46:47 Webber was third after start3. Greg Bennett, Boulder, Colo., 1:46:48 ing on the front row. 4. Cameron Dye, Boulder, Colo., 1:48:23 Vettel’s 16th career victory 5. Chris Foster, Redondo Beach, Calif., 1:49:32 6. Andrew Yoder, Columbia, Pa., 1:49:41 stretched his overall lead to 7. David Thompson, St. Paul, Minn., 1:50:54 77 points. 8. Timothy Reed, New South Wales, 1:51:49 ASSOCIATED PRESS

In Fairmount Park, triathletes transcendent

Toyota/Save Mart 350

In Sonoma, Calif. Starting position in parentheses 1. (11) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 110 laps, $293,300. 2. (13) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 110, $234,486. 3. (23) Carl Edwards, Ford, 110, $204,791. 4. (9) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 110, $179,508. 5. (8) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 110, $141,066. 6. (1) Joey Logano, Toyota, 110, $131,250. 7. (12) Jimmie Johnson, Chev., 110, $148,561. 8. (14) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 110, $104,325. 9. (26) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 110, $139,111. 10. (15) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 110, $117,758. 11. (19) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 110, $134,491. 12. (29) David Gilliland, Ford, 110, $105,333. 13. (7) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 110, $125,511. 14. (33) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 110, $123,761. 15. (2) Jamie McMurray, Chev., 110, $122,464. 16. (24) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 110, $110,920. 17. (3) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 110, $92,400. 18. (28) Robby Gordon, Dodge, 110, $97,408. 19. (16) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 110, $90,625. 20. (6) Kasey Kahne, Toyota, 110, $101,658. 21. (25) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 110, $90,525. 22. (17) J.Pablo Montoya, Chev., 110, $118,533. 23. (22) Greg Biffle, Ford, 110, $96,275. 24. (32) David Reutimann, Toyota, 110, $107,533. 25. (5) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 110, $118,700. 26. (43) Andy Pilgrim, Chevrolet, 110, $78,475. 27. (42) Chris Cook, Ford, 110, $78,825. 28. (30) Boris Said, Chevrolet, 110, $86,797. 29. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 110, $84,625. 30. (38) Michael McDowell, Toyota, 110, $75,475. 31. (36) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 110, $73,800. 32. (39) Terry Labonte, Ford, 110, $73,630. 33. (40) Brian Simo, Ford, 109, $74,470. 34. (27) Casey Mears, Toyota, 108, $73,405. 35. (41) Andy Lally, Ford, 104, $82,770. 36. (10) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 103, $100,374. 37. (4) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 99, $121,350. 38. (21) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 91, $99,255. 39. (20) T. Stewart, Chev., accident, 6, $118,208. 40. (31) Joe Nemechek, Toy., trans., 66, $72,625. 41. (18) D.Earnhardt Jr., Chev., heat, 45, $80,450. 42. (37) Mike Skinner, Toy., ignition, 10, $72,355. 43. (35) P.J. Jones, Dodge, susp., 5, $72,724. Average speed of winner: 75.411 m.p.h. Time of race: 2 hours, 54 minutes, 10 seconds. Margin of victory: 2.685 seconds. Caution flags: 5 for 17 laps. Lead changes: 12 among 9 drivers. Top 12 in points: 1. C.Edwards, 573; 2. K.Harvick, 548; 3. J.Johnson, 540; 4. Ku.Busch, 539; 5. Ky.Busch, 536; 6. M.Kenseth, 521; 7. D.Earnhardt Jr., 508; 8. C.Bowyer, 496; 9. J.Gordon, 480; 10. R.Newman, 475; 11. D.Hamlin, 463; 12. T.Stewart, 460.

RON TARVER / Staff Photographer

Rebeccah Wassner, 35, won the women’s race for the fourth time but broke two hours for the first time, at 1:59:36.

Sunday’s Results In Sinsheim, Germany France 1, Nigeria 0 In Berlin Germany 2, Canada 1 Monday’s Games In Bochum, Germany Japan vs. New Zealand, 9 a.m. In Wolfsburg, Germany Mexico vs. England, Noon Tuesday’s Games In Leverkusen, Germany Colombia vs. Sweden, 9 a.m. In Dresden, Germany United States vs. North Korea, 12:15 All matches will be televised by ESPN or ESPN2.

said. “I asked if it would be dangerous, but Christine is a smart player — she knows what she can do and what she can’t do.” It was the first goal Germany had conceded in the World Cup since 2003. At the site of the men’s final five years ago, hundreds of German flags came out as Kerstin Garefrekes scored Germany’s first goal in the 10th minute and the home team support continued the rest of the evening. “The fans were great,” Neid said. “People had the feeling it could be getting close and they really got behind us. I thought it was a brilliant reaction.” In the opening ceremony, a globe was revealed to have mirrors that reflected some of those in the sellout crowd of 73,680. Before the game started, waves rippled across the stadium. From Berlin’s daunting stadium, the contrast could hardly be greater nearly 400 miles south of the capital — the bucolic setting of the Rhein-NeckarArena, surrounded by wheatfields and an old hilltop castle.

SCOTT HEAVEY / Getty Images

Germany’s Celia Okoyino Da Mbabi celebrates after scoring the

game-winner against Canada. The defending champ won, 2-1.

Krais places a close 2d in U.S. track heptathlon By Elliott Denman

cluding event of the heptathlon, and Krais raced out to a EUGENE, Ore. — Ryann huge early edge on her 11 purKrais came to historic Hay- suers, reaching the 400 post ward Field as the NCAA hep- in just under 60 seconds. If tathlon champion. she kept it up, But the Kansas State junior she’d have had out of Methacton High knew a lifetime-best that she would be facing a performance pack of internationally-tested and the gold “hep” veterans in the U.S. medal. track and field championBut the pace ships and would be lucky to told and she place in the top six. settled for a It turned out a whole lot bet- clocking of 2 Ryann Krais ter than that. minutes, 8.96 Krais, 21, rallied from far seconds, worth down to come within a mere 980 points, for a total score of 28 points of winning it all on 6,030 and the silver medal. Sunday. The gold went to veteran It all boiled down to the 800 Sharon Day, who ran the 800 meters, the seventh and con- in 2:16.53 to finish with a FOR THE INQUIRER

European Grand Prix

In Valencia, Spain 1. Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull, 57 laps, 1:39:36.169, 115.617 mph. 2. Fernando Alonso, Ferrari, 57, 1:39:47.060. 3. Mark Webber, Red Bull, 57, 1:43.424. 4. Lewis Hamilton, McLaren, 57, 1:422.359. 5. Felipe Massa, Ferrari, 57, 1:427.874. 6. Jenson Button, McLaren, 57, 1:436.234. 7. Nico Rosberg, Mercedes, 57, 1:41:14.259. 8. Jaime Alguersuari, Toro Rosso, 56, +1 lap. 9. Adrian Sutil, Force India, 56, +1 lap. 10. Nick Heidfeld, Renault, 56, +1 lap. 11. Sergio Perez, Sauber, 56, +1 lap. 12. Rubens Barrichello, Williams, 56, +1 lap. 13. Sebastien Buemi, Toro Rosso, 56, +1 lap. 14. Paul di Resta, Force India, 56, +1 lap. 15. Vitaly Petrov, Renault, 56, +1 lap. 16. Kamui Kobayashi, Sauber, 56, +1 lap. 17. Michael Schumacher, Mercedes, 56, +1 lap. 18. Pastor Maldonado, Williams, 56, +1 lap. 19. Heikki Kovalainen, Team Lotus, 55, +2 laps. 20. Jarno Trulli, Team Lotus, 55, +2 laps. 21. Timo Glock, Virgin, 55, +2 laps. 22. Jerome d'Ambrosio, Virgin, 55, +2 laps. 23. Vitantonio Liuzzi, HRT, 54, +3 laps. 24. Narain Karthikeyan, HRT, 54, +3 laps. Drivers Standings after eight of 20 races 1. Sebastian Vettel 186 points. 2. Jenson Button, 109. 3. Mark Webber, 109. 4. Lewis Hamilton, 97. 5. Fernando Alonso, 87. 6. Felipe Massa, 42. 7. Nico Rosberg, 32. 8. Vitaly Petrov, 31. 9. Nick Heidfeld, 30. 10. Michael Schumacher, 26.

9. Holden Comeau, Philadelphia, 1:52:00 10. Stephen Hackett, Boulder, Colo., 1:52:53 WOMEN 1. Rebeccah Wassner, New Paltz, N.Y., 1:59:36 2. Alicia Kaye, Clermont, Fla., 2:00:06 3. Lauren Wassner, New York, 2:00:17 4. Nicole Kelleher, Charlottesville, Va., 2:01:59 5. Lindsey Jerdonek, Washington, D.C., 2:02:10 6. Sara McLarty, Clermont, Fla., 2:03:43 7. Amanda Stevens, Enid, Colo., 2:04:35 8. Jenna Parker, Santa Monica, Calif., 2:05:20 9. D’Ann Arthur, Dallas, Texas, 2:05:35 10. Misato Takagi, Los Angeles, Calif., 2:06:08

Women’s World Cup

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6,058 score. They had the IAAF world championships, coming to Daegu, Korea, in late August, in their sights. But since it took a score of at least 6,150 points to reach the “A” qualifying standard, and 5,950 for the “B,” only Day is likely to go to Korea because a country can enter only one “B” qualifier. Krais opened her second day of action with a long jump of 19 feet, 8 inches and improved all the way to 132-11 in the javelin to set the stage for the concluding drama of the 800. “I’ve had a long season and I’ve made a lot of progress,” Krais said. “Even if I don’t go to worlds, this sets me up

pretty well for next year’s Olympic trials. Of course, that’s what I really have my heart set on. “Now, after this, making the Olympic team is no longer just a dream. It’s a real possibility. Maybe, just maybe, it could happen.” Hyleas Fountain, the 2008 Beijing Olympic silver medalist, slumped to sixth with 5,861 points. Philadelphian Nia Ali, a recent Southern California graduate and another NCAA champion, claimed fifth in the 100-meter hurdles final at 12.86. In the semifinals, she finished in 12.76. “It wasn’t my best race, by far,” Ali said. “I hit a hurdle,

the fourth one, and lost all my momentum. After that, I was done.” Shameka Marshall, the former Rutgers star who is now an assistant coach at Temple, placed seventh in the women’s long jump at 21-83/4. Penn freshman high jumper Maalik Reynolds, who claimed a silver medal at the Junior Nationals in Eugene, cleared 7-01/2 to earn a tie for 12th. Joe Kovacs, a Penn State senior out of Bethlehem Catholic High School, finished 14th in the shot put (62-10). Philadelphian Nicholas Berra was nosed out by winner Mark Gomes in the exhibition Masters 1,500 meters, 4:01.73 to 4:02.63.


D4 C

www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

STANDINGS

INTERLEAGUE GAMES AT NATIONAL LEAGUE PARKS

Longoria, Rays win slugfest ly ruled in play and he was thrown out at second. The call was changed following the replay, and that made the score 7-7.

Rays 14, Astros 10

BOB LEVEY / Getty Images

Evan Longoria connects on a three-run homer — his second of the game — in the ninth against Houston. Tampa Bay won a wild one, 14-10. Longoria hit a two-run shot in the sixth.

Tampa Bay Houston Tampa Bay Damon lf Zobrist rf-2b Longoria 3b B.Upton cf S.Rodriguez 2b d-Joyce ph-rf Kotchman 1b Shoppach c c-Jaso ph-c E.Johnson ss Howell p Jo.Peralta p A.Russell p e-W.Davis ph Farnsworth p Niemann p a-Ruggiano ph C.Ramos p b-Fuld ph J.Cruz p Brignac ss Totals

301 102 122 200 AB R H 6 3 4 5 4 3 6 3 4 5 2 2 2 0 0 2 1 1 5 0 2 3 0 0 2 0 0 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 46 14 19

043 – 120 – BI BB 0 0 1 1 5 0 4 1 0 2 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 4

14 10 SO 0 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 13

19 1 14 0 Avg. .274 .268 .253 .228 .224 .310 .343 .182 .220 .204 ------.500 --.333 .305 --.241 --.182

Houston Bourn cf Keppinger 2b Melancon p Escalona p f-Michaels ph Pence rf Ca.Lee lf-1b C.Johnson 3b Wallace 1b W.Lopez p M.Downs 2b Barmes ss Corporan c Happ p Bourgeois lf Totals

AB R H BI BB SO Avg. 5 1 1 1 0 0 .282 3 3 3 2 0 0 .336 0 0 0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 0 0 --1 0 0 0 0 0 .203 5 1 1 0 0 2 .315 4 0 2 3 0 0 .268 4 1 1 0 0 0 .244 3 1 1 0 0 1 .293 0 0 0 0 0 0 --1 1 1 2 0 0 .280 4 1 2 1 0 1 .218 3 1 1 0 0 0 .122 1 0 0 0 0 1 .292 2 0 1 0 0 0 .364 36 10 14 9 0 5

HOUSTON — Down by a run with two outs and the bases loaded in the eighth inning on Sunday, Tampa Bay Rays manager Joe Maddon wrestled with whether to send up his last remaining position player as a pinch-hitter. Maddon did it and quickly knew he’d made the right decision. Matt Joyce delivered a goahead, pinch double that sent the Rays past Houston, 14-10, for a three-game sweep. Evan Longoria contributed two homers and five RBIs. Joyce didn’t think Maddon was going to use him then. “I didn’t have my batting gloves on because I didn’t expect to hit for [Sean Rodriguez] because I kind of expected to hit for a pitcher in a later inning,” Joyce said. B.J. Upton homered for the third straight day and tied a season high with four RBIs for the Rays, who have won four

in a row to improve to a seasonhigh 10 games over .500. Longoria came within a triple of the cycle and had his first multihomer game since 2009 — one of his homers was initially ruled a single until the call was overturned after a video replay review. Longoria had eight hits, including three home runs, and 10 RBIs in the series while going without batting gloves for the first time since his rookie season. “I don’t know, I feel pretty good right now,” he said. “It’s all in the way my swing’s feeling and it just so happens that it started happening without the batting gloves. So I’m just going to continue until either my hands go or I’ve got to change it up again.” Joyce’s two-out, two-run double put the Rays ahead, 9-8. Casey Kotchman followed with a two-run single. With all their position play-

ers used, Tampa Bay sent Saturday’s starting pitcher, Wade Davis, to bat as a pinchhitter in the ninth. He got his first career hit on a single to right field to make him the first pitcher in Rays history to get a hit as a pinch-hitter. He was later thrown out at home in a collision that shook up catcher Carlos Corporan. Longoria then hit a threerun homer with two outs to give the Rays a four-run lead. The Astros had taken an 8-7 lead in this wild, back-andforth game on a solo homer by Jeff Keppinger off J.P. Howell (1-1) in the seventh. “After the fourth inning, I felt like we had already been through nine innings,” Houston manager Brad Mills said. Longoria’s first homer was a two-run shot and came in the sixth. The ball, which bounced off the hands of a fan in the first row of the Crawford Boxes, was original-

a-struck out for Niemann in the 4th. b-flied out for C.Ramos in the 5th. c-popped out for Shoppach in the 7th. d-doubled for S.Rodriguez in the 8th. e-singled for A.Russell in the 9th. f-popped out for Escalona in the 9th. E: Shoppach (2). LOB: Tampa Bay 9, Houston 2. 2B: Zobrist (25), Longoria (13), Joyce (17), Kotchman (14), E.Johnson (3), Keppinger (6), Pence (22), Ca.Lee (20), C.Johnson (18), Wallace (19), Barmes (11), Corporan (1). 3B: Ca.Lee (3). HR: B.Upton (11), off Happ; Longoria (8), off W.Lopez; Longoria (9), off Melancon; Keppinger (2), off Howell; M.Downs (6), off Jo.Peralta. RBIs: Zobrist (40), Longoria 5 (33), B.Upton 4 (41), Joyce 2 (38), Kotchman 2 (22), Bourn (26), Keppinger 2 (13), Ca.Lee 3 (41), M.Downs 2 (21), Barmes (12). SB: Bourn (33). CS: Bourgeois (4). S: Corporan, Happ. SF: Keppinger. RLSP: Tampa Bay 6 (Shoppach, B.Upton 2, Fuld 2, Jaso); Houston 2 (C.Johnson, Barmes). RA: B.Upton, C.Johnson, Corporan. GIDP: Bourgeois. DP: Tampa Bay 1 (Longoria, Kotchman). Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Niemann 3 7 5 5 0 2 66 5.58 C.Ramos 1 2 2 1 0 0 14 4.13 J.Cruz 2 1 0 0 0 2 30 3.14 Howell (W 1-1) 1 1 1 1 0 0 13 9.31 Jo.Peralta 0 2 2 2 0 0 10 4.00 A.Russell (H 2) 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 2.63 Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 1.99 Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Happ 5 9 5 5 3 8 111 5.54 Lopez(L1-4,BS)21/3 4 4 4 0 2 47 3.18 Melancon (BS) 11/3 6 5 5 1 2 38 3.11 1/3 0 0 0 0 1 6 2.08 Escalona Jo.Peralta pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. IR-S: Melancon 2-2, Escalona 1-0. WP: Niemann, W.Lopez, Melancon. Balk: W.Lopez. Umpires: Home, Tony Randazzo; first, Larry Vanover; second, Brian Gorman; third, Jim Wolf. T: 3:50. A: 23,965 (40,963).

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Brewers 6, Twins 2

Red Sox 4, Pirates 2

Giants 3, Indians 1

MILWAUKEE — Ryan Braun extended his hitting streak to 17 games with a tiebreaking homer and Milwaukee beat Minnesota. Braun connected for a tworun shot in the fifth inning. Chris Narveson (5-5) helped himself with an RBI double. The punchless Twins, using a watered-down lineup decimated by injuries, have scored only eight runs in losing five consecutive games. Jonathan Lucroy had a triple, a double, a walk, scored two runs and had an RBI for Milwaukee, which swept the three-game series and has won four of five.

PITTSBURGH — Andrew Miller got his first win with Boston, scattering five hits over six innings as the Red Sox snapped a four-game losing streak. Miller (1-0) struck out four and allowed just one earned run. Recently promoted from the minors, he got his first AL victory since 2007 with Detroit. The Pirates tied a season high with four errors, preventing them from moving three games above .500 this late in the season for the first time in 12 years.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Padres 4, Braves 1 SAN DIEGO — Jason Bartlett hit a bases-loaded infield single for the tying run with two outs in the eighth inning and Orlando Hudson followed with a two-run single as San Diego rallied past Atlanta. Cory Luebke, making his first start of the season for the Padres, combined with four relievers on a two-hitter. Both of Atlanta’s hits were doubles. The Padres have won four of five overall.

Atlanta San Diego Atlanta Schafer cf Heyward rf C.Jones 3b Freeman 1b Uggla 2b D.Ross c Ale.Gonzalez ss McLouth lf T.Hudson p O'Flaherty p Linebrink p d-Hinske ph Venters p Proctor p Totals

000 000 AB R 4 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 3 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 29 1

San Diego AB Venable rf 4 Bartlett ss 4 O.Hudson 2b 5 Headley 3b 3 Rizzo 1b 3 c-Ludwick ph 1 M.Adams p 0 f-Alb.Gonzalez ph 1 H.Bell p 0 Denorfia lf 2 Maybin cf 3 K.Phillips c 3 e-Ro.Johnson ph-c 0 Luebke p 1 a-Richard ph 1 Spence p 0 Qualls p 0 b-Guzman ph-1b 1 Totals 32

000 010 – 1 000 04x – 4 H BI BB SO 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 3 11

2 2 11 1 Avg. .222 .227 .261 .269 .177 .308 .246 .242 .069 ----.248 -----

R H BI BB SO 0 2 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 2 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 4 11 4 6 10

Avg. .244 .253 .239 .296 .167 .254 --.203 --.298 .257 .224 .180 .000 .083 ----.308

a-singled for Luebke in the 5th. b-doubled for Qualls in the 7th. c-grounded into a fielder's choice for Rizzo in the 7th. d-grounded into a fielder's choice for Linebrink in the 8th. e-sacrificed for K.Phillips in the 8th. f-struck out for M.Adams in the 8th. E: Ale.Gonzalez (7), D.Ross (1), Venable (2). LOB: Atlanta 4, San Diego 13. 2B: Schafer (4), McLouth (11), Guzman (2). RBIs: Bartlett (21), O.Hudson 2 (12), Headley (29). SB: Bartlett (15), Denorfia (6). CS: Bartlett (5). S: Bartlett, Ro.Johnson. RLSP: Atlanta 2 (Heyward 2); San Diego 6 (K.Phillips 2, O.Hudson, Ludwick 2, Alb.Gonzalez). GIDP: K.Phillips. DP: Atlanta 1 (T.Hudson, D.Ross, Freeman). Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA T.Hudson 6 6 0 0 3 8 104 3.51 2/3 1 0 0 O'Flaherty 1 1 20 1.27 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 2 3.41 Linebrink Venters(L 4-1,BS) 2/3 4 4 4 2 0 25 1.29 1 /3 0 0 0 0 1 4 3.21 Proctor San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Luebke 5 1 0 0 2 6 75 2.86 Spence 11/3 0 0 0 0 2 13 0.00 2 Qualls /3 0 0 0 0 2 9 3.03 M.Adams (W 3-1) 1 1 1 0 1 1 20 1.31 H.Bell (S 20) 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 2.61 IR-S: Linebrink 3-0, Proctor 2-0. IBB: off O'Flaherty (Headley), off Venters (Guzman). HBP: by O’Flaherty (Venable). Umpires: Home, Vic Carapazza; first, Brian Runge; second, Dana DeMuth; third, Kerwin Danley. T: 2:53. A: 24,048 (42,691).

Minnesota Milwaukee Minnesota Revere cf A.Casilla 2b Cuddyer rf-1b Valencia 3b L.Hughes 1b Perkins p Repko lf Nishioka ss Butera c a-Mauer ph-c Pavano p b-Thome ph 1-Duensing pr Mijares p Al.Burnett p Tosoni rf Totals

010 000 AB R 4 0 4 0 4 0 4 1 3 1 0 0 4 0 4 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 34 2

Milwaukee AB R.Weeks 2b 4 Morgan cf 3 d-C.Gomez ph-cf 1 Braun lf 4 Fielder 1b 4 McGehee 3b 4 C.Hart rf 4 Y.Betancourt ss 4 Lucroy c 3 Narveson p 2 Hawkins p 0 Loe p 0 c-Jo.Wilson ph 1 Axford p 0 Totals 34

000 100 – 2 032 10x – 6 H BI BB SO 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 2 2 10

8 2 10 0 Avg. .272 .251 .292 .216 .246 --.194 .200 .175 .200 .000 .244 .000 ----.182

R H BI BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 1 2 .290 1 1 1 0 1 .330 0 0 0 0 0 .220 2 1 2 0 0 .308 0 1 1 0 2 .305 0 0 0 0 1 .227 0 1 0 0 2 .271 1 3 0 0 0 .241 2 2 1 1 0 .281 0 1 1 0 0 .167 0 0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 1 .219 0 0 0 0 0 --6 10 6 2 9

a-lined out for Butera in the 7th. b-singled for Pavano in the 7th. c-struck out for Loe in the 8th. d-fouled out for Morgan in the 8th.1-ran for Thome in the 7th. E: L.Hughes (3), A.Casilla (8). LOB: Minnesota 7, Milwaukee 8. 2B: Cuddyer (16), Lucroy (8), Narveson (1). 3B: Valencia (1), Lucroy (1). HR: Braun (16), off Pavano. RBIs: Repko (7), Thome (13), Morgan (13), Braun 2 (59), Fielder (68), Lucroy (33), Narveson (2). SB: Repko (3), Braun (17), Y.Betancourt 2 (2). S: Narveson. RLSP: Minnesota 5 (Butera, Valencia, A.Casilla 2, Tosoni); Milwaukee 4 (Braun 2, R.Weeks, C.Gomez). GIDP: Tosoni. DP: Milwaukee 1 (Axford, Y.Betancourt, Fielder). Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Pavano (L 5-6) 6 8 5 5 1 5 102 4.24 1 Mijares /3 1 1 0 0 1 10 4.08 2/3 0 0 0 Al.Burnett 0 2 9 5.64 Perkins 1 1 0 0 1 1 16 2.03 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Narvesn(W 5-5) 62/3 5 2 2 2 7 108 4.42 Hawkins (H 8) 1/3 1 0 0 0 1 5 0.46 Loe 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 4.78 Axford 1 2 0 0 0 1 13 2.55 IR-S: Al.Burnett 1-0, Hawkins 2-0. IBB: off Perkins (R.Weeks). HBP: by Pavano (Morgan). WP: Pavano. Umpires: Home, John Tumpane; first, Derryl Cousins; second, Ron Kulpa; third, Dan Bellino. T: 2:44. A: 41,624 (41,900).

Boston 000 101 200 – 4 6 2 Pittsburgh 000 110 000 – 2 5 4 Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Ellsbury cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .303 Pedroia 2b 5 0 1 1 0 1 .276 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 3 0 2 0 2 0 .361 Youkilis 3b 3 1 1 1 1 0 .275 J.Drew rf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .232 D.McDonald rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .109 Saltalamacchia c 3 1 1 0 1 1 .258 Reddick lf 3 0 0 1 0 0 .414 Scutaro ss 3 1 0 0 1 0 .276 A.Miller p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .000 b-Ortiz ph 0 1 0 0 1 0 .311 Aceves p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Bard p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Cameron ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .154 Papelbon p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 32 4 6 3 6 6 Pittsburgh Tabata lf 1-G.Jones pr-rf d'Arnaud 3b A.McCutchen cf Walker 2b Diaz rf-lf Overbay 1b Cedeno ss Fryer c Ja.McDonald p a-Br.Wood ph Ti.Wood p Moskos p Resop p D.McCutchen p d-Paul ph Totals

AB 1 4 4 4 3 4 4 2 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 32

R 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

H BI BB SO Avg. 1 0 0 0 .265 1 0 0 1 .251 1 0 0 0 .250 1 1 0 1 .285 0 0 0 1 .252 0 0 0 1 .254 0 0 0 0 .228 1 1 1 0 .240 0 0 1 1 .000 0 0 1 1 .107 0 0 0 0 .227 0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 --0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .267 5 2 3 6

a-flied out for Ja.McDonald in the 6th. b-walked for A.Miller in the 7th. c-grounded out for Bard in the 9th. d-flied out for D.McCutchen in the 9th.1-ran for Tabata in the 1st. E: Scutaro (5), Reddick (1), Ja.McDonald (1), A.McCutchen (5), Moskos (2), d'Arnaud (1). LOB: Boston 10, Pittsburgh 8. 2B: Saltalamacchia (12). RBIs: Pedroia (34), Youkilis (55), Reddick (9), A.McCutchen (39), Cedeno (21). SB: Ellsbury (25), Pedroia (15). CS: D.McDonald (2). S: Ellsbury. SF: Youkilis, Reddick, Cedeno. RLSP: Boston 6 (J.Drew, D.McDonald 5); Pittsburgh 2 (A.McCutchen, Diaz). RA: Pedroia, Reddick. Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA A.Miller (W 1-0) 6 5 2 1 2 4 109 3.09 Aceves (H 5) 1 0 0 0 0 0 11 3.62 Bard (H 15) 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 2.39 Papelbon (S 14) 1 0 0 0 1 1 15 3.90 Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Ja.McDonald 6 5 2 0 2 5 101 4.52 Ti.Wood (L 0-2) 0 0 1 1 1 0 4 5.40 Moskos 0 0 1 0 1 0 7 2.63 Resop 1 0 0 0 1 0 15 3.57 D.McCutchen 2 1 0 0 1 1 32 2.25 Ti.Wood pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.Moskos pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. IR-S: Moskos 1-0, Resop 3-2. IBB: off Resop (Ad.Gonzalez), off D.McCutchen (Ad.Gonzalez). HBP: by A.Miller (Walker). Umpires: Home, Greg Gibson; first, Sam Holbrook; second, Todd Tichenor; third, Gerry Davis. T: 3:21. A: 39,511 (38,362).

EAST PHILLIES Atlanta Washington New York Florida CENTRAL Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago Houston WEST San Francisco Arizona Colorado Los Angeles San Diego

W 49 44 40 39 34 W 44 41 39 40 31 28 W 44 43 38 35 34

L 30 35 38 39 43 L 35 38 38 39 46 51 L 34 36 39 44 45

RESULTS

Pct .620 .557 .513 .500 .442 Pct .557 .519 .506 .506 .403 .354 Pct .564 .544 .494 .443 .430

GB – 5 81/2 91/2 14 GB – 3 4 4 12 16 GB – 11/2 51/2 91/2 101/2

SUNDAY PHILLIES 3, Oakland 1 Tampa Bay 14, Houston 10 Toronto 5, St. Louis 0 LA Dodgers 3, LA Angels 2 Florida at Seattle SATURDAY Oakland 4, PHILLIES 1 LA Angels 6, LA Dodgers 1 Tampa Bay 7, Houston 2 Atlanta 10, San Diego 1 Florida 4, Seattle 2

Streak W-1 L-1 W-1 W-2 W-1 Streak W-3 L-3 L-1 L-1 L-2 L-3 Streak W-5 L-2 L-2 W-1 W-1

Home 30-13 22-17 22-13 18-20 17-25 Home 29-11 21-18 19-20 22-19 16-22 13-28 Home 24-13 22-17 19-19 19-24 16-27

Away Last 10 19-17 6-4 22-18 6-4 18-25 8-2 21-19 5-5 17-18 2-8 Away Last 10 15-24 5-5 20-20 3-7 20-18 5-5 18-20 4-6 15-24 4-6 15-23 3-7 Away Last 10 20-21 5-5 21-19 6-4 19-20 6-4 16-20 4-6 18-18 4-6

Boston 4, Pittsburgh 2 Milwaukee 6, Minnesota 2 San Diego 4, Atlanta 1 San Francisco 3, Cleveland 1

San Francisco 1, Cleveland 0 Pittsburgh 6, Boston 4 Toronto 6, St. Louis 3 Milwaukee 4, Minnesota 3

AHEAD

MONDAY’S GAMES

2011 Team 2010 Club/Time Odds Pitcher W- L ERA W- L vs.Opp Rockies –120 Chacin (R) 8- 4 2.71 11- 4 1- 0 at Cubs/2:20 +110 Garza (R) 3- 6 4.11 4- 9 0- 2 Indians +155 Talbot (R) 2- 4 4.91 3- 5 0- 0 at D’backs/9:40 –165 Kennedy (R) 8- 2 2.90 11- 5 0- 0 3- 8 4.76 5-11 0- 0 Royals +145 Francis (L) at Padres/10:05 –155 Latos (R) 4- 8 4.22 6- 8 0- 0 ODDS: Number with favorite (—) indicates amount needed to wager to win underdog (+) indicates amount won if $100 is wagered. TEAM W-L: Team’s record in games this pitcher starts.

TUESDAY’S GAMES Boston at PHILLIES, 7:05 Texas at Houston, 8:05 White Sox at Colorado, 8:40 Kansas City at San Diego, 10:05

Last 3 Starts W-L IP ERA 2- 0 202/3 0.87 1- 1 17 4.24 0- 2 16 6.19 2- 0 22 2.45 1- 2 162/3 5.94 0- 2 17 5.29 $100; Number with

San Francisco at Cubs, 2:20, 1st San Francisco at Cubs, 8:05, 2d Cleveland at Arizona, 9:40

By Don McKee, Inquirer Staff Writer A one-two punch that will knock you out

As the 2011 season approaches the halfway point, the hottest duo in the National League right now is in Milwaukee. And we’re not talking Laverne & Shirley. Ryan Braun and Prince Fielder have combined for 37 homers and 127 RBIs. “They’re both hitting better than .300,” writes Michael Hunt of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinal. “They’re both leading MVP candidates at this point. They’re MORRY GASH / AP both going to be on the all-star Ryan Braun celebrates team. And they’re both just 27 years with Prince Fielder old.” (28) after a homer. They’re the best one-two punch in Milwaukee since Robin Yount and Paul Molitor. Maybe since Hank Aaron and Eddie Mathews. In 1959, Mathews had 46 home runs and 114 RBIs. Aaron had SAN FRANCISCO — Madi39 and 123. The next season, Aaron had 40 and 126; son Bumgarner bounced back Mathews 39 and 124. from a one-out, eight-run perYount, Molitor, Aaron, and Mathews all are in the Hall of formance with one of his best Fame. But they pale in comparison to the greatest duo of starts, striking out a careerall: In 1927 Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig combined for 107 high 11 batters in seven inhomers and a stupefying 339 RBIs. nings to help San Francisco beat Cleveland and complete Contact staff writer Don McKee at dmckee@phillynews.com. a three-game sweep. This article contains information from the Associated Press. Chris Stewart hit a two-run double for his first RBIs in more than four years and ST. LOUIS — Ricky Romero LOS ANGELES — Clayton Aubrey Huff added an runscoring single for the Giants, threw a four-hitter for his sec- Kershaw outlasted Jered who have won five straight ond career shutout and Weaver in a matchup of Los following a season-worst five- helped break it open with the Angeles aces and the Dodgers rallied for two runs in the first hit of his career. game losing streak. J.P. Arencibia homered and bottom of the ninth to preBut the story of the game was Bumgarner (4-9), who Yunel Escobar had two hits vent an Angels sweep in the showed no lingering effects and an RBI for Toronto, Freeway Series. Pinch-hitter Aaron Miles, from his historically bad out- which had lost four in a row ing against Minnesota on before arriving at Busch Sta- batting for Kershaw, drove in dium. Toronto climbed back the tying run in the ninth on a Tuesday. sacrifice fly and Tony Gwynn He gave up hits to the first to .500. The Cardinals are 1-5 since Jr. won it with a two-out sineight batters he faced against the Twins and became the Albert Pujols was sidelined gle off Jordan Walden. Kershaw (8-3) tied a season first pitcher since 1900 to for an anticipated six weeks high with 11 strikeouts. The give up nine hits and record with a broken left wrist. Toronto 010 004 000 – 5 10 0 23-year-old lefty now has 128 just one out in a game. St. Louis 000 000 000 – 0 4 1 strikeouts, passing Roy HallaCleveland 000 001 000 – 1 6 2 Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. day (123) for the NL lead. San Francisco 021 000 00x – 3 7 0

Blue Jays 5, Cardinals 0 Dodgers 3, Angels 2

Cleveland Brantley lf O.Cabrera 2b A.Cabrera ss C.Santana 1b G.Sizemore cf Duncan rf Marson c Everett 3b Carmona p a-Hafner ph R.Perez p J.Smith p Totals

AB 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 1 0 0 32

R 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H BI BB SO 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 1 1 16

Avg. .277 .243 .293 .228 .225 .212 .233 .217 .000 .338 -----

San Francisco Torres cf B.Crawford ss P.Sandoval 3b M.Tejada 3b Huff 1b C.Ross lf Schierholtz rf Hall 2b C.Stewart c Bumgarner p Affeldt p Totals

AB 3 4 3 1 4 3 3 3 3 2 0 29

R 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3

H BI BB SO Avg. 0 0 1 0 .235 1 0 0 2 .185 2 0 0 0 .290 0 0 0 0 .223 1 1 0 1 .244 1 0 1 2 .262 0 0 0 0 .251 1 0 1 0 .224 1 2 1 0 .171 0 0 0 0 .154 0 0 0 0 .000 7 3 4 5

a-struck out for Carmona in the 7th. E: G.Sizemore (1), Marson (2). LOB: Cleveland 5, San Francisco 8. 2B: O.Cabrera (10), G.Sizemore (17), P.Sandoval (4), C.Stewart (2). RBIs: A.Cabrera (44), Huff (39), C.Stewart 2 (2). SB: Hall (2). CS: G.Sizemore (2), Hall (2). S: Bumgarner. RLSP: Cleveland 3 (Duncan 2, G.Sizemore); San Francisco 6 (Bumgarner, Schierholtz 2, B.Crawford, Torres, C.Stewart). RA: A.Cabrera, G.Sizemore, Huff. GIDP: Hall. DP: Cleveland 1 (O.Cabrera, A.Cabrera, C.Santana). Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Carmona (L 4-10) 6 7 3 3 3 4 107 5.89 R.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 1.14 J.Smith 1 0 0 0 1 0 13 1.08 San Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bumgarnr (W 4-9) 7 6 1 1 1 11 112 3.84 Affeldt (S 2) 2 0 0 0 0 5 24 3.51 HBP: by J.Smith (Schierholtz). Umpires: Home, Hunter Wendelstedt; first, Brian Knight; second, Jerry Layne; third, Bob Davidson. T: 2:42. A: 41,978 (41,915).

Y.Escobar ss 4 A.Hill 2b 5 Bautista rf 5 Lind 1b 4 J.Rivera lf 4 1-R.Davis pr-cf 1 Encarnacion 3b 4 Jo.McDonald 3b 1 C.Patterson cf-lf 3 Arencibia c 3 R.Romero p 4 Totals 38

0 2 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 1 5 10

St. Louis Theriot ss Valdes p Schumaker 2b Holliday lf Berkman 1b 2-Jay pr A.Brown rf Rasmus cf T.Cruz c Descalso 3b McClellan p M.Boggs p Motte p a-Kozma ph-ss Totals

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

AB 4 0 4 3 4 0 4 2 3 2 2 0 0 0 28

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 5

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 4

0 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 8

.277 .247 .325 .314 .253 .231 .255 .189 .263 .228 .167

H BI BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 0 .293 0 0 0 0 --1 0 0 1 .252 0 0 0 0 .330 1 0 0 1 .297 0 0 0 0 .306 1 0 0 1 .182 1 0 0 1 .260 0 0 0 0 .258 0 0 1 0 .244 0 0 0 1 .148 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 --0 0 1 0 .176 4 0 2 5

a-walked for Motte in the 8th.1-ran for J.Rivera in the 7th. 2-ran for Berkman in the 9th. E: Berkman (5). LOB: Toronto 11, St. Louis 5. 2B: Y.Escobar (10), J.Rivera (11), A.Brown (1). HR: Arencibia (11), off McClellan. RBIs: Y.Escobar (27), C.Patterson (30), Arencibia (35), R.Romero 2 (2). SB: J.Rivera (3). S: Rasmus. RLSP: Toronto 5 (J.Rivera, Arencibia 2, Bautista, C.Patterson); St. Louis 1 (McClellan). GIDP: A.Brown. DP: Toronto 2 (Bautista, Lind), (Jo.McDonald, A.Hill, Lind). Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA R.Romero (W 7-7)9 4 0 0 2 5 106 2.74 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McClelln (L 6-4) 51/3 8 5 5 3 4 93 4.02 M.Boggs 12/3 1 0 0 1 2 24 2.83 Motte 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 2.81 Valdes 1 1 0 0 0 2 23 0.00 IR-S: M.Boggs 2-0. IBB: off R.Romero (Descalso), off McClellan (Arencibia), off M.Boggs (C.Patterson). HBP: by R.Romero (Holliday), by Valdes (Lind). Umpires: Home, D.J. Reyburn; first, Ted Barrett; second, Tim McClelland; third, Marvin Hudson. T: 2:27. A: 36,542 (43,975).

Los Angeles (A) Los Angeles (N) Los Angeles (A) M.Izturis 2b Aybar ss H.Kendrick lf V.Wells rf Trumbo 1b Callaspo 3b Bourjos cf Mathis c Weaver p a-Abreu ph S.Downs p Walden p Totals

AB 4 3 4 4 4 3 2 3 2 1 0 0 30

000 000 R 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

Los Angeles (N) Gwynn Jr. lf Blake 3b Ethier rf Kemp cf Loney 1b Uribe 2b 1-D.Gordon pr Navarro c 2-Oeltjen pr Carroll ss Kershaw p b-Miles ph Totals

AB 5 4 4 4 4 3 0 2 0 3 3 0 32

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 3

000 101 000 102 H BI BB 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 2 0

– 2 – 3 SO 0 0 1 3 1 3 1 1 0 1 0 0 11

6 0 8 1 Avg. .293 .287 .303 .205 .257 .272 .253 .191 .000 .285 -----

H BI BB SO Avg. 3 2 0 0 .230 0 0 0 0 .236 2 0 0 2 .317 1 0 0 1 .327 0 0 0 0 .276 0 0 1 1 .205 0 0 0 0 .231 0 0 2 1 .170 0 0 0 0 .188 1 0 0 0 .300 1 0 0 0 .297 0 1 0 0 .309 8 3 3 5

Two outs when winning run scored.a-struck out for Weaver in the 8th. b-hit a sacrifice fly for Kershaw in the 9th.1-ran for Uribe in the 9th. 2-ran for Navarro in the 9th. E: Loney (3). LOB: Los Angeles (A) 3, Los Angeles (N) 8. 2B: Aybar (14), Mathis (7), Ethier (20). 3B: Gwynn Jr. (2). HR: Wells (9), off Kershaw. RBIs: Kendrick (26), Wells (24), Gwynn Jr. 2 (10), Miles (19). SB: Gordon (5). S: Aybar, Carroll. SF: Miles. RLSP: LA (A) 3 (Wells, Callaspo, M.Izturis); LA (N) 3 (Uribe, Blake 2). RA: Kendrick. GIDP: Mathis. DP: LA (N) 2 (Carroll, Uribe, Loney), (Kershaw, Carroll). Los Angeles (A) IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Weaver 7 7 1 1 1 4 110 1.97 S.Downs 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 1.75 Walden (L 1-2,BS) 2/3 1 2 2 2 0 27 2.94 Los Angeles (N) IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kershaw (W 8-3) 9 6 2 2 0 11 114 2.93 HBP: by Kershaw (Bourjos). Umpires: Home, Tom Hallion; first, Phil Cuzzi; second, Bill Miller; third, Chris Conroy. T: 2:50. A: 43,104 (56,000).


Monday, June 27, 2011

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

STANDINGS

INTERLEAGUE GAMES AT AMERICAN LEAGUE PARKS Yankees 6, Rockies 4

LEON HALIP / Getty Images

Pitcher Aaron Heilman hands the ball to Diamondbacks manager Kirk Gibson after getting yanked in the eighth inning, when he allowed two runs. The Tigers won, 8-3.

Tigers score 7 in 8th, put bite on D’backs ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT — Don Kelly entered the game as a pinch-hitter and batted twice before the inning was over. It was an unusual experience for the Detroit utilityman — and a sign that the Tigers’ offense is beginning to live up to its potential. Miguel Cabrera hit a goahead single and the Tigers scored seven runs with two outs in the eighth to beat the Arizona Diamondbacks, 8-3, on Sunday. Kelly started the rally with a one-out single with the Tigers down a run. By the time he came to the plate again, Detroit led, 7-2. “It doesn’t happen too often, but we like it when it does,” Kelly said. Detroit was playing in front of its third home sellout of the season — the team retired former manager Sparky Anderson’s No. 11 before the game. Jhonny Peralta gave the Tigers a 1-0 lead in the second with his 12th homer, but the Tigers trailed, 2-1, until their big eighth inning. Kelly singled off reliever Aaron Heilman (4-1). After Austin Jackson struck out, Casper Wells drew a walk. David Hernandez then came on and didn’t retire any of the four batters he faced.

He walked Magglio Ordonez on four pitches to load the bases for the always-dangerous Cabrera, who appeared to get jammed but managed to line a two-run single to left. Hernandez then gave up RBI singles to Victor Martinez and Peralta. “We never quit, that’s for sure,” Martinez said. And they didn’t stop. Brandon Inge hit a two-run single off Bryan Shaw to make it 7-2, and Kelly — batting again — reached on an error, with another run scoring. “We played a tough game, but they’ve got a great offense and they got everything rolling all at once,” Arizona outfielder Chris Young said. “That’s why you have to get all 27 outs.” The Tigers are averaging 5.1 runs a game in June. Cabrera, Peralta and Martinez have hit well all season, and Ordonez is showing signs of turning around a poor start. “We hit some of them good, some of them not so good — but wherever we hit them, they found a gap, found a hole,” manager Jim Leyland said. “That was the big thing. Miguel had a big two-out hit, that’s golden. That’s what he’s good at.”

Tigers 8, D’backs 3 Arizona Detroit Arizona Bloomquist 2b S.Drew ss J.Upton rf C.Young cf Montero c W.Pena dh Nady 1b G.Parra lf R.Roberts 3b Totals

000 010 AB R 4 0 3 0 5 0 5 1 4 1 4 0 4 0 4 0 4 1 37 3

000 201 – 3 000 07x – 8 H BI BB SO 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 3 1 0 0 12 3 3 4

12 1 10 0 Avg. .260 .271 .305 .257 .282 .174 .259 .276 .257

Detroit A.Jackson cf C.Wells rf Ordonez dh Mi.Cabrera 1b V.Martinez c Jh.Peralta ss Boesch lf R.Santiago 2b Inge 3b Raburn 2b a-Kelly ph-lf Totals

AB 4 3 3 4 4 4 4 0 4 2 2 34

R H BI BB SO 0 0 0 1 4 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 2 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 3 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 8 10 7 3 10

Avg. .248 .256 .186 .330 .333 .308 .299 .209 .208 .199 .266

a-singled for Raburn in the 8th. E: R.Roberts (7). LOB: Arizona 10, Detroit 5. 2B: C.Young (21). HR: Jh.Peralta (12), off J.Saunders. RBIs: J.Upton (40), Montero (39), R.Roberts (33), Mi.Cabrera 2 (52), V.Martinez (44), Jh.Peralta 2 (45), Inge 2 (14). SB: Bloomquist (8), C.Young (9), Montero (1). CS: R.Roberts (5). RLSP: Arizona 6 (J.Upton, S.Drew 2, Nady 2, C.Young); Detroit 2 (V.Martinez, A.Jackson). GIDP: W.Pena. DP: Arizona 1 (R.Roberts, Nady); Detroit 1 (Raburn, Jh.Peralta, Mi.Cabrera). Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.Saunders 7 4 1 1 1 8 103 4.14 2 Heilmn (L 4-1,(H) /3 1 2 2 1 1 18 6.99 Hernandez (BS 2) 0 3 4 4 1 0 15 3.50 1/3 2 1 0 Shaw 0 1 14 4.15 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Penny 62/3 8 2 2 1 2 89 4.66 Alburq’ (W 5-1) 11/3 2 0 0 1 2 25 1.95 2/3 2 1 1 Furbush 1 0 19 2.75 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 1 2.51 Valverde Da.Hernandez pitched to 4 batters in the 8th. IR-S: Da.Hernandez 2-2, Shaw 2-2, Alburquerque 2-0, Valverde 2-0. Umpires: Home, Chris Guccione; first, Mark Carlson; second, Mike Everitt; third, Mike Muchlinski. T: 3:06. A: 41,036 (41,255).

Nationals 2, White Sox 1 Royals 6, Cubs 3

Orioles 7, Reds 5

CHICAGO — Danny Espinosa hit a two-run homer in the seventh inning to lift Washington over Chicago. Hours after the Nationals hired Davey Johnson as manager, they won their final game with interim skipper John McLaren at the helm. Livan Hernandez (5-8) struck out a season-high nine as he baffled the White Sox for 62/3 innings. Phil Humber (7-3) carried a no-hit bid into the sixth, but a two-out walk in the seventh was followed by Espinosa’s 14th home run.

BALTIMORE — Derrek Lee and Mark Reynolds homered in a four-run fourth inning, Luke Scott added a solo shot in the seventh, and Baltimore defeated Cincinnati. Baltimore totaled nine home runs in taking two of three from the sputtering Reds. The team combined for 16 homers in the series, including 14 in the last two games.

Washington Chicago Washington Bernadina cf Werth rf Zimmerman 3b L.Nix dh Morse 1b Espinosa 2b W.Ramos c Hairston Jr. lf Cora ss a-Desmond ph-ss Totals

AB 3 4 4 4 3 3 2 3 2 1 29

000 001 R 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2

Chicago Pierre lf Vizquel ss Quentin rf Konerko 1b A.Dunn dh Rios cf Pierzynski c Teahen 3b b-Lillibridge ph Beckham 2b c-Al.Ramirez ph Totals

AB 5 4 3 4 4 4 4 2 1 3 1 35

R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

000 200 – 2 3 0 000 000 – 1 8 0 H BI BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 0 .282 0 0 0 2 .228 0 0 0 1 .232 0 0 0 2 .276 0 0 1 1 .300 1 2 1 0 .242 0 0 1 0 .242 2 0 0 0 .263 0 0 0 0 .243 0 0 0 1 .226 3 2 3 7 H BI BB SO 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 8 1 2 11

Avg. .251 .276 .258 .324 .173 .224 .296 .211 .269 .226 .284

a-struck out for Cora in the 7th. b-struck out for Teahen in the 9th. c-flied out for Beckham in the 9th. LOB: Washington 4, Chicago 9. 2B: Pierre (6), Quentin (22). HR: Espinosa (14), off Humber. RBIs: Espinosa 2 (47), Konerko (60). RLSP: Washington 3 (W.Ramos, Werth, Desmond); Chicago 4 (A.Dunn 2, Rios, Vizquel). RA: Bernadina, Cora, Konerko. GIDP: Zimmerman. DP: Chicago 1 (Vizquel, Beckham, Konerko). Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hernandz(W5-8)62/3 8 1 1 2 9 123 3.81 1 Clippard (H 21) /3 0 0 0 0 0 6 2.00 S.Burnett (H 9) 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 5.00 Storen (S 19-22) 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.90 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Humber (L 7-4) 62/3 3 2 2 3 4 109 2.89 Sale 21/3 0 0 0 0 3 27 4.11 IR-S: Clippard 1-0, Sale 2-0. HBP: by Humber (Bernadina). Balk: Humber. Umpires: Home, Marty Foster; first, Bill Welke; second, Jeff Nelson; third, Mike Estabrook. T: 2:56. A: 24,057 (40,615).

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Alex Gordon extended his hitting streak to 13 games with an RBI double in a four-run first inning and Luke Hochevar won another afternoon start as Kansas City beat Chicago. Hochevar is 9-3 with a 4.43 ERA in 14 day starts the last two seasons, compared to 2-11 with a 5.28 ERA in 21 appearances at night. He picked up just his second victory in his last 10 starts, with both coming in afternoon games. Chicago Kansas City Chicago Fukudome rf S.Castro ss Ar.Ramirez dh C.Pena 1b Re.Johnson cf DeWitt 3b A.Soriano lf Soto c LeMahieu 2b Totals

001 400 AB R 4 0 4 0 3 0 4 0 4 1 4 1 2 0 3 1 4 0 32 3

Kansas City Me.Cabrera cf Hosmer 1b Butler dh A.Gordon lf Francoeur rf Moustakas 3b Treanor c A.Escobar ss Getz 2b Totals

AB 5 4 4 4 4 3 2 3 3 32

200 000 – 3 200 00x – 6 H BI BB SO 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 3 8 3 4 11

8 1 13 1 Avg. .282 .326 .283 .222 .351 .273 .269 .225 .243

R H BI BB SO Avg. 1 2 0 0 0 .277 1 2 1 0 1 .267 1 1 1 0 1 .303 1 2 1 0 0 .293 0 3 1 0 0 .264 0 0 0 1 1 .240 1 1 1 1 0 .214 0 1 0 0 1 .252 1 1 1 1 0 .262 6 13 6 3 4

E: C.Carpenter (1), Hosmer (5). LOB: Chicago 7, Kansas City 7. 2B: Re.Johnson (11), Soto (13), A.Gordon (23). HR: Soto (7), off Hochevar. RBIs: DeWitt (7), Soto 2 (18), Hosmer (25), Butler (34), A.Gordon (44), Francoeur (46), Treanor (14), Getz (18). CS: A.Gordon (5), Francoeur 2 (2). S: A.Escobar. SF: Treanor. RLSP: Chicago 4 (LeMahieu 4); Kansas City 2 (Me.Cabrera 2). RA: DeWitt, Moustakas. GIDP: Fukudome, S.Castro, Ar.Ramirez. DP: Chicago 1 (Soto, Soto, DeWitt); Kansas City 3 (A.Escobar, Getz, Hosmer), (Moustakas, Getz, Hosmer), (Moustakas, Getz, Hosmer). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA R.Wells (L 1-2) 6 10 6 6 2 2 96 6.25 J.Russell 1 0 0 0 0 1 7 5.31 C.Carpenter 1 3 0 0 1 1 25 1.80 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hochevr(W 5-8)52/3 7 3 3 3 5 88 4.96 L.Coleman (H 3) 1 0 0 0 1 3 26 2.82 1/3 0 0 0 Collins (H 4) 0 0 4 3.86 Crow (H 8) 1 0 0 0 0 2 10 1.40 Soria (S 13-18) 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 4.24 R.Wells pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. IR-S: J.Russell 1-0, L.Coleman 2-0, Collins 1-0. HBP: by L.Coleman (Ar.Ramirez). Umpires: Home, Mark Ripperger; first, Tim Timmons; second, Jeff Kellogg; third, Eric Cooper. T: 2:43. A: 28,401 (37,903).

Cincinnati Baltimore Cincinnati Heisey rf B.Phillips 2b Votto 1b J.Gomes dh F.Lewis lf Stubbs cf R.Hernandez c Cairo 3b Janish ss b-Rolen ph Totals

000 001 AB R 6 1 4 2 2 0 3 0 3 0 5 0 5 1 5 1 4 0 1 0 38 5

Baltimore AB Hardy ss 4 Markakis rf 5 Ad.Jones cf 4 Guerrero dh 4 D.Lee 1b 4 Scott lf 3 Pie lf 0 Mar.Reynolds 3b 3 B.Davis 2b 2 a-Andino ph-2b 1 Tatum c 2 Totals 32

013 001 – 5 401 10x – 7 H BI BB SO 2 1 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 1 2 2 0 1 2 1 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 5 8 7

9 0 11 2 Avg. .271 .291 .318 .221 .267 .254 .316 .278 .228 .264

R H BI BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 1 0 .304 0 3 2 0 0 .277 1 2 0 0 1 .294 1 1 0 0 2 .282 1 1 3 0 2 .242 1 1 1 1 2 .237 0 0 0 0 0 .243 1 1 1 1 0 .227 2 2 0 1 0 .364 0 0 0 0 0 .246 0 0 0 1 1 .300 7 11 7 5 8

a-was announced for B.Davis in the 7th. b-grounded out for Janish in the 9th. E: Mar.Reynolds 2 (18). LOB: Cincinnati 14, Baltimore 7. 2B: Cairo (5), Ad.Jones (14). HR: B.Phillips (6), off Guthrie; R.Hernandez (8), off Gregg; D.Lee (6), off H.Bailey; Mar.Reynolds (14), off H.Bailey; Scott (9), off Chapman. RBIs: Heisey (29), B.Phillips (41), J.Gomes (30), F.Lewis (10), R.Hernandez (19), Markakis 2 (30), D.Lee 3 (22), Scott (22), Mar.Reynolds (38). SB: Markakis (6), B.Davis (1). CS: Mar.Reynolds (1). S: Tatum. RLSP: Cincinnati 6 (F.Lewis, Heisey, Stubbs 3, B.Phillips); Baltimore 3 (Mar.Reynolds 2, Ad.Jones). Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA H.Bailey (L 3-2) 5 9 5 5 2 5 89 3.86 Arredondo 1 1 1 1 1 1 26 3.66 Chapman 1 1 1 1 1 2 22 6.60 Cordero 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 1.57 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Guthrie (W 3-9) 52/3 6 4 4 4 5 111 3.93 Rapada 0 0 0 0 1 0 6 7.15 Johnson (H 12) 11/3 2 0 0 2 1 25 2.33 Uehara (H 9) 1 0 0 0 1 1 15 2.25 Gregg (S 14-18) 1 1 1 1 0 0 16 3.26 Rapada pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. IR-S: Rapada 2-0, Ji.Johnson 3-2. WP: Arredondo. Umpires: Home, Alan Porter; first, Fieldin Culbreth; second, Gary Cederstrom; third, Adrian Johnson. T: 3:10. A: 27,809 (45,438).

NEW YORK — Eduardo Nunez hit a tiebreaking RBI single in the seventh inning after shortstop Troy Tulowitzki made an error, Nick Swisher and Jorge Posada hit consecutive homers, and New York beat Colorado. Mark Teixeira homered for New York and Alex Rodriguez drove in a run for his sixth straight game. Ty Wigginton connected twice for his second multihomer game this week, and Chris Iannetta also homered for Colorado. New York improved to 22-4 in day games. Posada walked with one out in the seventh and advanced to second when Russell Martin’s sharp grounder hit off Tulowitzki’s glove. Nunez singled off Matt Belisle (5-3) and pinch-runner Chris Dickerson crossed home plate with a belly-flop slide. Joba Chamberlain, out after having Tommy John surgery, immediately tweeted “Do it Nunez!!!” after the shortstop filling in for Derek Jeter, who turned 37 on Sunday, gave New York the lead. Colorado New York Colorado C.Gonzalez cf J.Herrera 2b Helton 1b Tulowitzki ss Giambi dh S.Smith rf Wigginton 3b Blackmon lf Iannetta c Totals

AB 2 4 2 4 4 4 4 4 4 32

New York AB Gardner lf 4 Granderson cf 3 Teixeira 1b 4 Al.Rodriguez 3b 4 Cano 2b 4 Swisher rf 4 Posada dh 2 1-Dickerson pr-dh 0 Martin c 3 E.Nunez ss 3 Totals 31

010 021 000 000 031 11x R H BI BB 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 3 2 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 4 7 4 3 R 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 6

– 4 – 6 SO 2 0 0 1 2 2 1 1 1 10

7 1 7 2 Avg. .280 .240 .305 .273 .264 .314 .275 .290 .234

H BI BB SO Avg. 1 0 0 0 .281 0 0 1 1 .276 1 1 0 0 .247 1 1 0 1 .300 1 0 0 0 .290 1 2 0 1 .245 1 1 1 0 .234 0 0 0 0 .294 0 0 0 0 .230 1 1 0 0 .247 7 6 2 3

1-ran for Posada in the 7th. E: Tulowitzki (4), Martin (5), E.Nunez (9). LOB: Colorado 5, New York 3. HR: Wigginton 2 (12), off Nova 2; Iannetta (10), off Nova; Swisher (9), off Nicasio; Posada (8), off Nicasio; Teixeira (23), off Mat.Reynolds. RBIs: Helton (33), Wigginton 2 (32), Iannetta (30), Teixeira (58), Al.Rodriguez (51), Swisher 2 (38), Posada (25), E.Nunez (12). SB: C.Gonzalez (12), Iannetta (2), Gardner (16). SF: Helton. RLSP: Colorado 4 (Giambi 2, Blackmon, Helton); New York 2 (Cano, Granderson). RA: J.Herrera, Helton, Tulowitzki. GIDP: Blackmon, Iannetta, Cano. DP: Colorado 1 (Tulowitzki, Helton); New York 2 (Al.Rodriguez, Cano, Teixeira), (E.Nunez, Cano, Teixeira). Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Nicasio 5 4 4 4 1 2 84 5.08 Belisle(L5-3,BS) 11/3 2 1 0 1 0 28 2.27 Mat.Reynolds 2/3 1 1 1 0 0 16 3.70 Lindstrom 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 2.64 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Nova 6 6 4 4 3 4 99 4.26 Ayala 0 1 0 0 0 0 7 1.48 Logan (W 2-2) 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 3.32 Robertson (H 15) 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 1.15 Ma.Rivera (S 20) 1 0 0 0 0 3 14 1.78 Ayala pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Nicasio pitched to 2 batters in the 6th.Mat.Reynolds pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. IR-S: Belisle 2-1, Mat.Reynolds 2-0, Logan 1-0. Umpires: Home, Brian O'Nora; first, Alfonso Marquez; second, Ed Hickox; third, Ed Rapuano. T: 3:11. A: 47,894 (50,291).

EAST New York Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore CENTRAL Detroit Cleveland Chicago Kansas City Minnesota WEST Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland

W 45 45 44 39 35 W 42 40 38 33 32 W 41 39 38 35

L 31 32 34 39 40 L 36 36 41 45 44 L 38 40 39 44

RESULTS

Pct .592 .584 .564 .500 .467 Pct .538 .526 .481 .423 .421 Pct .519 .494 .494 .443

GB Streak – W-2 1/2 W-1 2 W-4 7 W-3 91/2 W-1 GB Streak – W-2 1 L-3 41/2 L-1 9 W-2 9 L-5 GB Streak – L-2 2 L-1 2 L-1 6 L-1

SUNDAY Detroit 8, Arizona 3 NY Yankees 6, Colorado 4 Washington 2, White Sox 1 SATURDAY NY Yankees 8, Colorado 3 Detroit 6, Arizona 0 White Sox 3, Washington 0

AHEAD

Home 25-18 22-16 18-18 17-18 22-19 Home 24-15 24-14 19-20 23-24 14-16 Home 23-16 15-20 21-18 19-16

C

D5

Away Last 10 20-13 7-3 23-16 5-5 26-16 8-2 22-21 5-5 13-21 5-5 Away Last 10 18-21 5-5 16-22 4-6 19-21 5-5 10-21 3-7 18-28 5-5 Away Last 10 18-22 5-5 24-20 6-4 17-21 4-6 16-28 6-4

Baltimore 7, Cincinnati 5 Kansas City 6, Cubs 3 NY Mets 8, Texas 5 NY Mets 14, Texas 5 Cincinnati 10, Baltimore 5 Kansas City 3, Cubs 2

MONDAY’S GAMES

2011 Team 2010 Club/Time Odds Pitcher W- L ERA W- L vs.Opp Blue Jays +160 Stewart (R) 0- 1 5.91 0- 2 0- 0 at Tigers/6:05 –170 Scherzer (R) 9- 3 4.61 11- 5 1- 0 Reds +120 Leake (R) 6- 4 4.19 7- 5 0- 0 at Rays/7:10 –130 Hllickson (R) 7- 6 3.09 8- 6 0- 0 Dodgers +120 Billingsley (R) 6- 6 4.48 7- 9 0- 0 –130 Blackburn (R) 6- 5 3.15 7- 8 0- 0 at Twins/8:10 Nationals +115 Lannan (L) 5- 5 3.40 10- 6 0- 0 at Angels/10:05 –125 Santana (R) 3- 8 4.22 6-10 0- 0 Braves +105 Beachy (R) 2- 1 3.22 5- 4 0- 0 at Mariners/10:10 –115 Bedard (L) 4- 5 2.93 8- 6 0- 0 ODDS: Number with favorite (–) indicates amount needed to wager to win underdog (+) indicates amount won if $100 is wagered. TEAM W-L: Team’s record in games this pitcher starts.

TUESDAY'S GAMES NY Mets at Detroit, 7:05 Pittsburgh at Toronto, 7:07 LA Dodgers at Minnesota, 8:10 Washington at LA Angels, 10:05

Last 3 Starts W-L IP ERA 0- 1 102/3 5.91 2- 1 182/3 4.34 1- 2 21 3.00 0- 3 182/3 4.82 1- 2 14 9.00 1- 1 211/3 1.69 2- 0 19 1.89 0- 3 182/3 3.86 1- 0 14 2.57 1- 1 18 1.00 $100; Number with

St. Louis at Baltimore, 7:05 Cincinnati at Tampa Bay, 7:10 Florida at Oakland, 10:05 Atlanta at Seattle, 10:10

By Sandy Spieczny, Inquirer Staff Writer No J.D. in Philly?

J.D. Drew is due in

town with the Red Sox on Tuesday.

Maybe Phillies fans can forget about J.D. Drew this trip. The Boston Red Sox rightfielder left Sunday’s game against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the second inning after hurting himself during batting practice. The Red Sox said Drew hurt his left eye after fouling off a pitch that ended up hitting him in the face in the batting cage. There was no immediate word on whether he will be available on Tuesday, when Boston starts a three-game series at Citizens Bank Park.

Remembering Captain Hook

On the day the Detroit Tigers retired Sparky Anderson’s number, former pitcher Milt Wilcox reflected on how the Hall of Fame manager might have felt if he’d been alive to see the ceremony. “He wouldn’t want all of the limelight and stuff like that — which he never did want — but he’s such a great guy, and he deserves everything that they’re showering on him now,” Wilcox said. “More so than just being a baseball ARLINGTON, Texas — manager, he was just a great guy. I think that’s what most Jose Reyes had four hits and of the players realized about him — yeah, he was a good scored three runs, rookie Dil- manager, maybe even a great manager, but he was a great lon Gee pitched six effective person.” The Tigers retired Anderson’s No. 11 before Sunday’s innings, and New York beat game against Arizona. Anderson, who died in November, Texas. Gee (8-1) recovered from a managed Detroit to the World Series title in 1984. shaky start in the follow-up to his only loss of the season. Still retired — don’t ask Making his first appearance Joe Torre sat at a microphone wearing pinstripes for the against the Rangers, he al- first time in nearly four years, Yankees cap resting lowed three runs and eight precariously high on his head as it had for 12 seasons. hits with two walks. Lou Piniella joined Torre as a first-timer at the 65th Gee has given up only eight Yankees Old Timers’ Day, and both were equally emphatic earned runs in five June about staying “retired.” starts. Daniel Murphy added three Contact staff writer Sandy Spieczny at sspieczny@phillynews.com. hits for the Mets, who have This article contains information from Inquirer wire services. won four of five overall and took two of three from the AL West leaders.

Mets 8, Rangers 5

New York Texas New York Jos.Reyes ss Turner 3b Beltran dh Bay lf Hairston rf R.Paulino c Dan.Murphy 1b Pagan cf R.Tejada 2b Totals

140 200 AB R 5 3 5 0 4 0 5 0 5 0 4 2 4 2 4 1 4 0 40 8

Texas Kinsler 2b En.Chavez cf Mi.Young dh A.Beltre 3b N.Cruz rf Moreland 1b Dav.Murphy lf Teagarden c A.Blanco ss Totals

AB 4 5 5 5 5 3 3 4 4 38

002 001 – 8 010 002 – 5 H BI BB SO 4 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 14 6 1 3

14 2 10 2 Avg. .341 .266 .278 .234 .243 .327 .296 .237 .281

R H BI BB SO Avg. 1 0 0 1 0 .235 1 2 1 0 0 .321 1 2 3 0 0 .323 1 1 0 0 0 .263 0 1 0 0 0 .240 0 1 1 1 0 .286 0 0 0 1 0 .233 0 1 0 0 0 .190 1 2 0 0 1 .188 5 10 5 3 1

E: Turner (6), R.Tejada (2), A.Beltre (9), D.Holland (1). LOB: New York 6, Texas 9. 2B: R.Paulino (5), Dan.Murphy (12), En.Chavez 2 (6). 3B: Jos.Reyes (14). HR: Mi.Young (7), off Gee. RBIs: Jos.Reyes (32), Beltran 2 (49), Bay (16), Dan.Murphy (26), R.Tejada (14), En.Chavez (8), Mi.Young 3 (53), Moreland (23). SB: Jos.Reyes (28). CS: Dan.Murphy (4), Pagan (4). RLSP: New York 2 (Hairston, Turner); Texas 6 (Teagarden 2, Kinsler, Dav.Murphy, En.Chavez, N.Cruz). RA: Jos.Reyes, Turner, Beltran, Mi.Young, A.Beltre. GIDP: Dan.Murphy, Kinsler. DP: New York 1 (Turner, R.Tejada, Dan.Murphy); Texas 1 (Kinsler, A.Blanco, Moreland). New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gee (W 8-1) 6 8 3 3 2 1 102 3.32 Beato 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 3.44 2 /3 0 0 0 0 0 5 3.66 Byrdak 1/3 0 0 0 Isringhausen 0 0 5 2.92 Fr.Rodriguez 1 2 2 2 1 0 27 3.65 Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Holland (L 6-3) 6 12 7 3 0 0 103 4.68 Tateyama 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 3.31 1/3 1 0 0 Rhodes 0 0 6 4.58 M.Lowe 11/3 1 1 1 1 1 19 4.18 1/3 0 0 0 Feliz 0 0 3 3.18 D.Holland pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. IR-S: Tateyama 1-0, M.Lowe 1-0, Feliz 1-0. IBB: off M.Lowe (Beltran). PB: Teagarden. Umpires: Home, Andy Fletcher; first, Tim Welke; second, Jim Reynolds; third, Mike DiMuro. T: 3:03. A: 37,879 (49,170).

Minor Leagues

Moss homers, IronPigs win BY THE INQUIRER STAFF

ALLENTOWN — Brandon Moss clubbed a three-run homer to key a four-run eighth as the Lehigh Valley IronPigs beat the Charlotte Knights, 5-2, in the International League on Sunday.

Akron 12, Reading 2

AKRON, Ohio — Matt McBride had an RBI single and a run-scoring double in the Aeros’ 10-run first in the Eastern League romp.

Trenton 6, New Britain 2

Frederick 6, Wilmington 2

FREDERICK, Md. — Adam Donachie had a homer and three RBIs as the Keys beat the Blue Rocks in the Carolina League.

Camden 6, Road Warriors 5

Raul Padron’s RBI double in the bottom of the 11th gave the Riversharks the win in the Atlantic League game at Campbell’s Field. Charlotte Lehigh Valley

WP: Schwimer (4-0). LP: Lindsay (2-1). HR: LV–Moss (12) . A: 9.515.

NEW BRITAIN, Conn. — Dellin Betances gave up only one hit in six shutout innings as the Thunder beat the Rock Cats in the Eastern League.

Reading Akron

Lakewood 3, Delmarva 2

Delmarva Lakewood

LAKEWOOD, N.J. — Ervis Manzanillo struck out six in five innings to pitch the BlueClaws past the Shorebirds in the South Atlantic League.

Lakeland 5, Clearwater 2

LAKELAND, Fla. — Darrin Ruf had two doubles and two RBIs, but the Threshers fell to the Flying Tigers in the Florida State League.

200 000 000 — 2 9 0 100 000 04x — 5 8 1

000 020 000 — 2 6 0 (10)10 100 00x — 12 12 0

WP: Gardner (5-5). LP: Rosenberg (2-3). A: 2,830. Trenton New Britain

011 021 100 — 6 13 1 000 000 200 — 2 6 1

WP: Betances (4-3). LP: Suarez (1-2). HR: T–Pirela (4), Mack (4). A: 6,507. 000 020 000 — 2 8 1 100 020 00x — 3 9 0

WP: Manzanillo (5-4). LP: Berry (1-5). Sv: Sosa (9). A: 7,350. Clearwater 000 002 000 – 2 6 1 Lakeland 030 000 11x – 5 8 1 WP: Nelson (4-9). LP: Cosart (6-5). Sv: Faulk (19). A: 318. Wilmington 001 000 001 – 2 7 0 Frederick 000 002 31x – 6 6 0 WP: Bundy (7-5). LP: Sample (5-5). Sv: Gleason (20). HR: F–Donachie (3). A: 6,133. Road Warriors 020 030 000 00 – 5 11 2 Camden 320 000 000 01 – 6 17 1 WP: Koplove (2-1). LP: Thomas (1-4). HR: RW–Mooney (3). A: 4,779.


D6 C

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Hamels likely out of all-star mix By Matt Gelb

Star Game from appearing in INQUIRER STAFF WRITER the game. They can be selectThe decision to start Cole ed as all-stars, and Hamels Hamels in Thursday’s series fi- likely will receive that honor, nale against Boston has more but then must be replaced on ramifications than simply al- the roster. lowing the lefthanded ace to With Hamels slated to face face one of the Red Sox, Kyle Kendrick will baseball’s pitch the first game in ToronPhillies best offenses. to on Friday. That means Roy Notes By bump- Halladay will make his triuming Hamels phant return to Toronto on into the rotation spot vacated Saturday. Halladay spent 12 by Roy Oswalt, Hamels is likely seasons as a Blue Jay. to make three more starts be“I feel like it’s any other fore the all-star break instead start,” Halladay said. “It’s of just two. It also means been long enough for me Hamels surely will not pitch where that’s not really somein the All-Star Game. thing that’s in the forefront. That is something the Phil- I’ve been out of there for a lies and pitching coach Rich while; I just feel like it’s a Dubee probably won’t lose regular road start. Obviously, sleep over, and justifiably so. it’s the first time back, but I A chance for Hamels to face don’t really anticipate anythe Red Sox and squeeze in thing different than any other another outing against Atlan- road start.” ta on the final day of the first Toronto plans to honor Halhalf is obviously more impor- laday before one of the tant than pitching in an exhi- games. bition game in Phoenix. A rule enacted by Major Ibanez’s drought ends Raul Ibanez started against a League Baseball last season prohibits pitchers who start lefthander in Sunday’s 3-1 vicon the Sunday before the All- tory over Oakland and went

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

hitless in his first three atbats to extend his drought to 18 at-bats without a hit. Finally, in the eighth inning, Ibanez smacked a single to center. It was an otherwise meaningless hit — and Ibanez is still 1 for his last 19 — but it was something. “I think it’s good because we have an off day [Monday],” Charlie Manuel said. “He might not have slept tonight. It’s good for him, really. It’s good to see him hit the ball hard, get a hit.” Ibanez had a hitless streak of 35 at-bats earlier this year. He is hitting .233 this season.

A good test

The Phillies scored a total of five runs in the weekend series against the A’s but still took two of three. It should be noted that Oakland entered the weekend with the best ERA of any American League team. It came against a sub-.500 squad, but for a stymied Phillies offense to scratch out two wins against a decent staff, it will go down as a successful

weekend. “That’s a testament to how good our pitching staff is,” Jimmy Rollins said. “They can compete with anybody. You hear about Oakland’s staff a lot, and rightfully so. … They put themselves in position to win. They get the outs, get the ground balls, and they had a pretty good defensive team.”

Extra bases

Ryan Howard faced old college teammate Brad Ziegler in the seventh inning, but the confrontation was mild. Ziegler issued an intentional walk. The two played together at Missouri State University. Ziegler was a Phillies draft pick in 2003. He was released and has since become one of the league’s best middle-inning relievers. … Coco Crisp had two hits off Halladay. He is 13 for 42 (.310) against the ace in his career. … In the span of a week, Manuel went from the majors’ oldest manager to its third-oldest. The newly hired Jack McKeon (80) and Davey Johnson (68) are Manuel’s elders.

Halladay goes 9 to win 10th for Phils

PHILLIES from D1 The righthander is so efficient at making difficult tasks appear rudimentary. He has five complete games in 2011, more than 24 of the 29 other major-league teams. Halladay has finished 14 of the 50 regular-season starts he has made as a Phillie. With that sort of frequency, it’s almost easy to take for granted, right? “I guess you can,” Charlie Manuel said. That’s the thing about Halladay, who should be considered the favorite to start for the National League in the AllStar Game on July 12. He is 10-3 with a 2.40 ERA in a league-leading 1271/3 innings. The Phillies are 14-3 in games he starts. Halladay allowed one run on eight hits, but three of them were softly-hit bloops and two more were infield singles. He was dominant. His own teammates still marvel at the sight. “I always feel like I’m watching him pitch for the first time,” Ryan Howard said. In the bullpen, a depleted relief corps could watch the scoreboard and have an idea how this one was ending. Through four innings, Halladay had thrown 46 pitches. After five, it was up to 60 before a six-pitch sixth and then it was 85 pitches through seven innings. Coco Crisp grounded out to first to finish the eighth and Halladay was at 100 pitches. The decision was easy.

Athletics Phillies

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

PLAY-BY-PLAY First Inning

ATHLETICS: Roy Halladay pitching for the Phillies. Jamie Weeks fouled out to the catcher. Cliff Pennington grounded out to second. Coco Crisp doubled to right. Hideki Matsui struck out swinging. PHILLIES: Josh Outman pitching for Oakland. Jimmy Rollins singled to left. Placido Polanco doubled to left, Rollins advanced to third. Shane Victorino singled to left, Rollins scored, Polanco to third. Ryan Howard grounded into a double play, second to shortstop to first, Polanco scored, Victorino out at second. Ben Francisco walked. Carlos Ruiz flied out to center. PHILLIES 2, ATHLETICS 0

Second Inning

ATHLETICS: Conor Jackson doubled on a pop-up to second baseman Wilson Valdez. Ryan Sweeney singled to shortstop. Scott Sizemore grounded into a double play, third to first, Jackson out at third, Sizemore advanced to second. Landon Powell grounded out to second.

9 0 X

R H E 1 8 0 3 10 0

second. David DeJesus batted for Outman and struck out looking. PHILLIES: For Oakland, Brad Ziegler relieved Outman. Rollins singled to right. Rollins to second on a passed ball. Polanco grounded out to second, Rollins moved to third. Victorino popped out to second. Howard was intentionally walked. Howard stole second. Francisco struck out swinging.

Eighth Inning

ATHLETICS: Weeks flied out to left. Pennington struck out looking. Crisp grounded out to first. PHILLIES: Ruiz grounded out to shortstop. Ibanez singled to center. Valdez grounded out to the pitcher, Ibanez to second. Halladay grounded out to first.

Ninth Inning

ATHLETICS: Matsui grounded out to first. Jackson singled to second. Sweeney grounded into a double play, shortstop to first, Jackson out at second. PHILLIES 3, ATHLETICS 1 Source: MLB.com.

PHILLIES: Raul Ibanez struck out swinging. Wilson Valdez grounded out to second. Roy Halladay singled to center. Rollins doubled to center, Halladay advanced to third. Polanco grounded out to shortstop.

BOX SCORE

Third Inning

Oakland J.Weeks 2b Pennington ss Crisp cf Matsui lf C.Jackson 1b Sweeney rf S.Sizemore 3b Powell c Outman p a-DeJesus ph Ziegler p Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 1 0 33

R 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

PHILLIES Rollins ss Polanco 3b Victorino cf Howard 1b B.Francisco rf Ruiz c Ibanez lf W.Valdez 2b Halladay p Totals

AB 4 4 4 2 3 4 4 4 4 33

R H BI BB SO Avg. 2 4 0 0 0 .260 1 2 0 0 0 .289 0 1 1 0 0 .291 0 0 0 2 0 .253 0 1 1 1 1 .225 0 0 0 0 0 .253 0 1 0 0 1 .233 0 0 0 0 2 .242 0 1 0 0 1 .073 3 10 2 3 5

ATHLETICS: Josh Outman grounded out to shortstop. Weeks grounded out to first. Pennington struck out swinging. PHILLIES: Victorino popped out to first. Howard flied out to left. Francisco grounded out to third.

Fourth Inning

ATHLETICS: Crisp singled to the pitcher. Matsui grounded out to second, Crisp to second. Jackson popped out to first. Sweeney singled to center on a deflected pop-up by shortstop Rollins, Crisp scored. Sizemore flied out to left. PHILLIES 2, ATHLETICS 1 PHILLIES: Ruiz flied out to right. Ibanez flied out to center. Valdez struck out looking.

Fifth Inning

ATHLETICS: Powell grounded out to the pitcher. Outman grounded out to shortstop. Weeks grounded out to first. PHILLIES: Halladay struck out swinging. Rollins singled to shortstop. Polanco singled to center, Rollins advanced to third. Victorino flied out to right. Howard walked, Polanco to second. Francisco singled to the pitcher, Rollins scored, Polanco to third, Howard to second. Ruiz flied out to center. PHILLIES 3, ATHLETICS 1

Sixth Inning

ATHLETICS: Pennington grounded out to second. Crisp grounded out to first. Matsui grounded out to second. PHILLIES: Ibanez grounded out to second. Valdez struck out swinging. Halladay grounded out to second.

Seventh Inning

ATHLETICS: Jackson singled to center. Sweeney flied out to left. Sizemore doubled to right, Jackson advanced to third. Powell popped out to

H BI BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 0 .309 0 0 0 2 .243 2 0 0 0 .264 0 0 0 1 .222 3 0 0 0 .265 2 1 0 0 .287 1 0 0 0 .270 0 0 0 0 .190 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 1 .225 0 0 0 0 --8 1 0 4

a-struck out for Outman in the 7th. LOB: Oakland 5, PHILLIES 9. 2B: Crisp (17), C.Jackson (8), S.Sizemore (5), Rollins (13), Polanco (11). RBIs: Sweeney (9), Victorino (29), B.Francisco (28). SB: Howard (1). RLSP: Oakland 4 (Matsui, Powell, DeJesus 2); PHILLIES 7 (Polanco 2, Ruiz 2, B.Francisco 2, Halladay). RA: Matsui, Polanco, W.Valdez. GIDP: Sweeney, S.Sizemore, Howard. DP: Oakland 1 (J.Weeks, Pennington, C.Jackson); PHILLIES 2 (Polanco, Howard), (Rollins, Howard). Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Outman (L 3-2) 6 8 3 3 2 4 96 3.10 Ziegler 2 2 0 0 1 1 40 2.00 PHILLIES IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Halladay (W 10-3) 9 8 1 1 0 4 113 2.40 IBB: off Ziegler (Howard). PB–Powell. Umpires: Home, Angel Campos; first, Chad Fairchild; second, Joe West; third, Angel Hernandez. T: 2:14. A: 45,863 (43,651).

Rollins punches out of his slump

ROLLINS from D1 Francisco said, noting Outcy at times hasn’t been real man’s low-90’s fastball and good. He’s due for a good heavily used change-up. streak. He’ll usually hit a periRollins admired one changeod where he’s very consis- up, which turned out to be a RON CORTES / Staff Photographer tent. Hopefully, today might long double that he sent off Roy Halladay gets congratulations from Placido Polanco after the final out as they leave the field. help him get into one. His the center-field wall in the swing has been real good at second inning. In the fifth, he “That was a lot of fun to been throwing a lot. So you pitches to do that in the times. Today, he was very reached on an infield single up the middle that Oakland watch,” reliever David Hern- definitely want to get as far ninth. Hideki Matsui ground- good against the lefty.” First pitch: single. Then shortstop Cliff Pennington don said. as you can, on a day when ed out to first. Conor Jackson Halladay, who is condi- you might be a little bit short singled on a pop-up. That Placido Polanco hit Outman’s could not field cleanly. Rolltioned physically and mental- down there and be able to only set up a game-ending fourth pitch for a double and ins added another single off ly to pitch nine innings every save those guys from throw- double play off the bat of Shane Victorino slapped the reliever Brad Ziegler in the time he is handed the ball, ing. Sometimes, especially for Ryan Sweeney on a 93-m.p.h. 6-foot-1 lefty’s seventh pitch seventh. This season has been up said he was more cognizant a starting pitcher, it feels Halladay fastball for outs through the left side, scoring Rollins for a 1-0 lead. Instant and down for Rollins, who than usual of the necessity to good to be able to give those Nos. 26 and 27. raised his average to .260 on last longer. Without Ryan guys a break.” Halladay slapped his glove offense. “Be aggressive,” Victorino Sunday. April was kind to Madson, who is nursing a It also helps when a pitcher into his hand. He shook catchhand injury, the duties of a like Halladay is afforded an er Carlos Ruiz’s hand and said of the game plan. “[Out- Rollins (.282 average). May ninth inning in a close game early lead, as he was Sunday. tapped him on the behind. An- man] was around the plate. … was not (.242). And June has would be shared by two Jimmy Rollins was 4 for 4 and other game started by Halla- So that’s all you try and do. been downright mean: He is young arms — Antonio Bas- both Placido Polanco and he day ended with him on the Just go out there and try and batting .221 for the month. “That’s baseball,” Polanco tardo and Michael Stutes. were on base before Oakland mound, and no matter how get on him early.” Outman, a 26-year old with said. “Same game. He works “You’re definitely con- lefthander Josh Outman re- often it happens, it’s still a a 3.10 ERA, had been tough hard. And [he’s] trying — scious of it,” Halladay said. corded an out. They scored on sight to behold. against lefties all season, but we’re all trying here.” “Hopefully Ryan is going to a Shane Victorino single and righthanders were batting 42 Rollins had a similarly be back for Boston. But Howard’s double-play ball. Contact staff writer Matt Gelb points higher and also had an strong game on June 18 when Stutes has been throwing a All Halladay had to do was at mgelb@phillynews.com impressive on-base percent- he went 3 for 4 in a win over lot; a lot of those guys have finish it off. It took just 13 or @magelb on Twitter. age (.330) against him. Seattle’s Cy Young Award winThe switch-hitting Rollins ner, Felix Hernandez. Eight usually struggles on the right days later, he was 4 for 4 with side of the plate, with a .213 a double and scored two runs average as a righty entering the against the A’s. The 32-year game, but everything seemed old champ was back on top. simpler against Outman. He had gone 3 for 25 beASSOCIATED PRESS Ben Francisco said that the tween at-bats against Hernana career lasting from 1965 CHICAGO — Davey through 1978. He played a to- Phillies hitters noticed early dez and Outman. Johnson was named manager “My brother even called me tal of 122 games for the Phil- on that Outman was pitching of the Washington Nationals lies in 1977 and 1978 — a sea- them backward — starting the other day, and was like, on Sunday, three days after son when he set a major out with off-speed pitches ‘You need to concentrate Jim Riggleman stunned the league record with two pinch- and breaking balls instead of against the scrubs, too,’ ” Rollteam by resigning. fastballs — and they were ins said, adding that he knew hit grand slams. Johnson will manage the Even though he hasn’t man- waiting on that, looking for Outman was a good pitcher. rest of the season and his “And I was like, ‘Believe aged in the majors for 11 something high in the zone. first game will be Monday “[He] was a normal lefty,” me, I’m trying.’ ” years, Johnson did skipper against the Los Angeles AnTeam USA in the 2009 World gels. He has been a senior adBaseball Classic, the 2008 viser with the team since Olympic team in Beijing, and 2009, though he hasn’t mantwo summers ago managed aged in the big leagues since amateur players in a Florida 2000 with the Los Angeles summer collegiate league. Dodgers. ROB CARR / Associated Press Rizzo said he talked with sevJohnson also agreed to a Davey Johnson (second from right) during Nationals spring eral other people about the job As a final tribute to Philadelphia’s old three-year consulting con- training in 2010. He will manage for the rest of the season. but did not formally interview American League franchise visiting for tract through 2013 that will them because Johnson was easthe weekend, Bobby Shantz donned his allow him to remain with the will leave the team after the spect that he has in that ily his first choice after Rigglegame and be reassigned to room, even before he sets white Philadelphia A’s jersey to throw out team and help select a succesman bolted. the first pitch before Sunday’s game. sor for next season. It could scouting duties within the or- foot in there as manager, is “When we got the news, ganization. second to none.” Shantz, looking quite spry at age 85, was be him. the American League MVP in 1952. He Johnson was not available you automatically go into Less than an hour before “Davey’s a perfect fit for was 24-7 with a 2.48 ERA for a team that this job at this particular game time Sunday, a loud for comment Sunday and ‘Plan B’ mode and try to think finished 79-75. He also won eight Gold Bobby time. He’s a guy with a track round of applause could be would not be returning calls, outside the box,” Rizzo said. Gloves during his 16-year career. record that’s beyond re- heard coming from the Na- a team spokesman said. He “We had to make decisions Shantz He delighted the crowd with his pitch. A proach. He knows the system, tionals’ clubhouse as Rizzo was scheduled to join the rationally and clearly, but set of fans at Citizens Bank Park held up a he knows the staff, he knows thanked McLaren. At the team later for the flight to quickly. We were fortunate to have such a clear-cut and “Put Shantz in Cooperstown!” sign. — Matt Gelb the major league club and same meeting, Rizzo in- Los Angeles. The 68-year-old Johnson easy alternative right there.” he’s a terrific baseball guy formed the team of Johnson’s Riggleman resigned abruptand a proved winning manag- hiring — not a well-kept se- managed the Mets, Dodgers, er,” general manager Mike cret over the last three days. Reds, and Orioles over 14 sea- ly Thursday after the NationRizzo said. “It’s an extremely positive sons and compiled a 1148-888 als beat Seattle, unhappy that Interim manager John reaction. They all know Dav- record. He led the 1986 Mets Rizzo declined to have a conMcLaren ran the team for the ey, he’s been in spring train- to a World Series champion- versation about picking up Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday third straight game in Sun- ing, in uniform,” Rizzo said. ship, and 11 of his teams fin- his option for 2012. The deparNo Red Sox Red Sox Red Sox @Blue Jays day’s series finale against the “They’ve interacted with him, ished first or second 14 times. ture was stunning for its timGame 7:05 7:05 1:05 1:07 He played for the Orioles, ing — the Nationals have won Chicago White Sox. Riggle- they know his resumé and Scheduled PHL17 CSN CSN CSN man’s former bench coach just talking to him, the re- Braves, Phillies, and Cubs in 13 of their last 15 games.

New leader in Washington: Johnson

PHILLIES EXTRA

A’s great Shantz makes first pitch

PHILLIES’ NEXT FIVE


Monday, June 27, 2011

Golf

Major coup: Tseng takes LPGA title ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Yani Tseng left no doubt she’s the best female player in the world, running away with the LPGA Championship by 10 strokes Sunday and, at 22, becoming the youngest to win four LPGA majors. The top-ranked Tseng closed with a 6-under 66 to finish 19-under 269 at Locust Hill Country Club, matching the LPGA record low score at a major in winning $375,000 at the $2.5 million event. And her dominating performance came a year after Cristie Kerr shot the same score to win the tournament by a whopping 12 strokes. Tseng bettered Se Ri Pak, who was 24 when she won her fourth major.

PGA

CROMWELL, Conn. — Fredrik Jacobson closed out his first PGA Tour title, shooting a 66 in the final round of the Travelers Championship. Jacobson, who joined the Tour eight years ago and has three career wins in Europe, had just one bogey in the tournament and finished at 20-under par, 2 shots off the course record. John Rollins and Ryan Moore each shot a 63 and tied for second. Moore missed a four-foot par putt on 18 that would have kept him tied for the lead. Nineteen-year-old UCLA star Patrick Cantlay, who shot a course-record 60 on Friday, finished at 11-under par after shooting 72 and 70 over the weekend.

ter the first round of the PGA Professional National Championship at Hershey Country Club. Sorenson and Erdmann each shot 65 over the East course, which is a par-71, while Alexander fired a 66 on the West course, a par-72. Each of the 312 players in the field plays one round on the East and West courses before the 36-hole cut, and the final two rounds are on the East course. Bill Sautter of Ocean City, N.J., carded a 2-under 69 on the East course to lead the 15-member delegation from the Philadelphia Section PGA. Rich Steinmetz of Gilbertsville and Cleve Coldwater of Clarks Summit each posted a 1-under 71 on the West course. Mark Sheftic of Blue Bell was at even par along with Bill Walker of Riverton, N.J., and John Allen of Media. Stu Ingraham of Broomall and David McNabb of Newark, Del., were at 1 over.

Champions Tour ENDICOTT, N.Y. — John Huston shot a 7-under 65 to win his first Champions Tour title, taking advantage of three straight bogeys by Mark Wiebe to capture the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open. Huston finished at 16-under 200 in his third Champions Tour start since turning 50 on June 1, earning a 3-shot victory over Nick Price (66). Wiebe was another shot back after a 71.

European Tour

PGA Club Pros

MUNICH — Pablo Larrazabal birdied the fifth playoff HERSHEY, Pa. — Jeff So- hole to beat fellow Spaniard renson of Blaine, Minn.; Scott Sergio Garcia and win the Erdmann of Tigard, Ore., and BMW International Open. Lonny Alexander of New Braunfels, Texas, were tied Inquirer staff writer Joe Juliano for the lead at 6-under-par af- contributed to this article.

HUNTER MARTIN / Getty Images

Yani Tseng putts for eagle on the eighth hole during the final

round of the Wegmans LPGA Championship. She shot a 66.

St. Augustine lineman chooses Penn State By Marc Narducci

stine team that won the NJSIAA Non-Public A state Austin Johnson didn’t take championship last season. long to make his college deciJohnson became the secsion. The 6-foot-5, 280-pound ond South Jersey senior-to-be two-way lineman from St. Au- to make an oral commitment gustine Prep was offered a to Penn State. In the spring, football scholarship over the West Deptford offensive lineweekend to Penn State and man Jamil Pollard also comaccepted it on the spot. mitted to the Nittany Lions. Johnson was attending a A high school football rePenn State football camp, and cruit cannot sign a letter of he didn’t need a sales pitch intent until Feb. 1. from the Nittany Lions to Penn State was familiar make an oral commitment. with St. Augustine; it is also “I have liked Penn State the alma mater of Nittany Lisince I was young, and once I ons defensive end Jack Crawgot the Penn State offer I was ford. going to take it,” Johnson “I am excited about having said Sunday in a telephone in- the opportunity to go to Penn terview. State,” said Johnson, a resiJohnson said he also consid- dent of Galloway, Atlantic ered offers from Rutgers and County. “It’s my dream Boston College. school.” An honorable mention allCape Atlantic League selec- Contact staff writer Marc tion, Johnson said he was re- Narducci at 856-779-3225, cruited to play defense. He mnarducci@phillynews.com, or was a starter on the St. Augu- @sjnard on Twitter INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

LPGA Championship a-amateur Yani Tseng, $375,000 …………66-70-67-66–269 Morgan Pressel, $228,695 ……69-69-70-71–279 Suzann Pettersen, $132,512 ……72-72-69-67–280 Paula Creamer, $132,512 ……67-72-72-69–280 Cristie Kerr, $132,512……………72-72-67-69–280 Meena Lee, $77,630 …………68-73-70-71–282 Stacy Lewis, $77,630 …………69-72-70-71–282 Maria Hjorth, $53,840 ……………71-71-70-71–283 Pat Hurst, $53,840 ……………70-67-75-71–283 Mika Miyazato, $53,840 ………72-72-68-71–283 Azahara Munoz, $53,840 ……70-71-71-71–283 Amy Yang, $42,445 ……………70-69-74-71–284 I.K. Kim, $42,445 …………………73-70-69-72–284 Amy Hung, $33,765 ……………69-73-73-70–285 Heather Bowie Young, $33,765 72-70-73-70–285 Inbee Park, $33,765 ……………73-69-71-72–285 Katie Futcher, $33,765 ………75-68-69-73–285 Hee Young Park, $33,765 ……69-69-72-75–285 Cindy LaCrosse, $33,765 ……70-69-69-77–285 Brittany Lincicome, $26,795 …74-72-71-69–286 Sun Young Yoo, $26,795 ……73-72-72-69–286 Paige Mackenzie, $26,795 ……72-73-70-71–286 Karrie Webb, $26,795 …………74-69-71-72–286 Candie Kung, $26,795 …………71-71-71-73–286 Hee-Won Han, $22,162 ………71-72-74-70–287 Anna Nordqvist, $22,162 ……73-70-74-70–287 Jimin Kang, $22,162 …………71-70-73-73–287 Pornanong Phatlum, $22,162 71-72-71-73–287 Tiffany Joh, $22,162 ……………71-70-72-74–287 Jennifer Song, $18,531 ………72-72-72-72–288 Reilley Rankin, $18,531 ………73-68-74-73–288 Angela Stanford, $18,531 ……68-72-74-74–288 Momoko Ueda, $18,531 ………72-69-71-76–288 Karen Stupples, $14,232 ………72-74-78-65–289 M.J. Hur, $14,232 ………………70-75-76-68–289 Jiyai Shin, $14,232 ……………75-71-73-70–289 Se Ri Pak, $14,232 ……………78-68-72-71–289 Juli Inkster, $14,232 ……………74-70-73-72–289 Catriona Matthew, $14,232 ……73-69-75-72–289 Michele Redman, $14,232 ……73-70-73-73–289 Yoo Kyeong Kim, $14,232 ………72-72-71-74–289 Hee Kyung Seo, $14,232 ……71-73-71-74–289 Taylor Leon, $10,285 …………75-70-75-70–290 Eun-Hee Ji, $10,285 …………70-76-73-71–290 Mindy Kim, $10,285 ……………70-75-74-71–290 Mi Hyun Kim, $10,285 …………75-67-76-72–290 Na Yeon Choi, $10,285 ………73-70-74-73–290 Jennifer Johnson, $10,285 ……69-76-72-73–290 Karin Sjodin, $10,285 ……………72-70-73-75–290 Shanshan Feng, $8,138 ………75-66-80-70–291 Kristy McPherson, $8,138 ……72-74-74-71–291 Sarah Jane Smith, $8,138 ……73-72-75-71–291 Julieta Granada, $8,138 ………73-73-73-72–291 Sarah Kemp, $8,138 …………74-71-74-72–291 Beatriz Recari, $8,138 …………71-74-73-73–291 a-Danielle Kang ………………74-70-72-75–291 Becky Morgan, $6,249 ………75-71-78-68–292 Christel Boeljon, $6,249 ………73-72-77-70–292 Sophie Gustafson, $6,249 ………73-72-76-71–292 Ryann O'Toole, $6,249 ………69-76-76-71–292 Leta Lindley, $6,249 ……………72-72-75-73–292 Dewi Claire Schreefel, $6,249 73-72-74-73–292 Lorie Kane, $6,249 ………………73-72-73-74–292 Laura Davies , $6,249 ……………75-71-70-76–292 Jeehae Lee, $6,249 ……………74-72-69-77–292 Stacy Prammanasudh, $6,249 68-73-74-77–292 Katherine Hull, $6,249 …………70-72-72-78–292 Jennie Lee, $5,196 ……………72-71-78-72–293 Jenny Shin, $5,196 ………………72-70-79-72–293 Natalie Gulbis, $5,196 …………71-73-72-77–293 Minea Blomqvist, $5,196 ………69-69-77-78–293 Kyeong Bae, $4,883 …………72-74-75-73–294 Michelle Wie, $4,883 …………72-72-75-75–294 Haeji Kang, $4,883 ……………74-72-71-77–294 Sherri Steinhauer, $4,729 ……73-73-76-73–295 Silvia Cavalleri, $4,729 ………75-69-77-74–295 Grace Park, $4,641………………73-73-73-77–296 Diana D'Alessio, $4,582 ………68-77-80-76–301

Travelers Championship a-amateur Fredrik Jacobson (500), $1,080,000 …………………………………65-66-63-66–260 John Rollins (245), $528,000 …65-68-65-63–261 Ryan Moore (245), $528,000 …64-70-64-63–261 M. Thompson (135), $288,000 67-65-68-62–262 James Driscoll (110), $240,000 69-64-64-67–264 Kevin Streelman (92), $201,000 66-70-63-66–265 Andres Romero (92), $201,000 64-67-67-67–265 Bryce Molder (92), $201,000……65-66-64-70–265 Tom Gillis (73), $156,000 ……66-69-66-65–266 Brian Davis (73), $156,000 ……65-67-68-66–266 John Merrick (73), $156,000 …67-66-66-67–266 Blake Adams (73), $156,000 ……66-66-66-68–266 Bo Van Pelt (57), $112,500 ……66-65-69-67–267 Brendan Steele (57), $112,500…68-64-67-68–267 Nick Watney (57), $112,500 …65-65-68-69–267 Webb Simpson (57), $112,500…66-65-67-69–267 David Toms (51), $78,514 ……69-66-69-64–268 Chris Stroud (51), $78,514 ……66-69-67-66–268 Heath Slocum (51), $78,514 …70-63-68-67–268 David Mathis (51), $78,514 ……67-65-68-68–268 Tommy Gainey (51), $78,514 …66-69-65-68–268 Johnson Wagner (51), $78,514 65-63-71-69–268 D.J. Trahan (51), $78,514 ……69-62-68-69–268 Steve Flesch (43), $46,425 ……68-68-70-63–269 Bud Cauley (0), $46,425 ………68-67-69-65–269 Zach Johnson (43), $46,425 …65-68-70-66–269 Ian Poulter (43), $46,425 ………68-68-66-67–269 Carl Pettersson (43), $46,425 …68-68-65-68–269 Brandt Snedeker (43), $46,425 70-63-67-69–269 Aaron Baddeley (43), $46,425 67-67-66-69–269 J.J. Henry (43), $46,425…………68-67-65-69–269 a-Patrick Cantlay ………………67-60-72-70–269 Jhonattan Vegas (36), $33,960…69-67-68-66–270 Chris DiMarco (36), $33,960 …66-66-70-68–270 Martin Laird (36), $33,960 ……68-67-66-69–270 Vaughn Taylor (36), $33,960……65-66-69-70–270 Alexandre Rocha (36), $33,960 65-66-69-70–270 Bubba Watson (31), $27,000 …66-69-69-67–271 Tim Petrovic (31), $27,000 ……66-69-68-68–271 David Hearn (31), $27,000 ……66-67-70-68–271 Jerry Kelly (31), $27,000 ………69-66-67-69–271 Spencer Levin (31), $27,000 …67-68-66-70–271 Shane Bertsch (24), $18,840 …67-63-75-67–272 Vijay Singh (24), $18,840 ……67-68-69-68–272 Morgan Hoffmann (0), $18,840 68-67-68-69–272 D.J. Brigman (24), $18,840 ……68-67-68-69–272 Tag Ridings (24), $18,840 ……65-68-69-70–272 Charley Hoffman (24), $18,840…67-67-68-70–272 Ricky Barnes (24), $18,840 ……68-65-68-71–272 Colt Knost (24), $18,840 ………67-68-65-72–272 Hunter Mahan (24), $18,840 …71-63-66-72–272 Scott Verplank (18), $14,310 …67-69-69-68–273 Joseph Bramlett (18), $14,310 68-67-69-69–273 Aron Price (18), $14,310 ………69-66-68-70–273 Joe Durant (18), $14,310 ……67-68-68-70–273 Chris Couch (14), $13,680 ……65-69-68-72–274 Paul Stankowski (14), $13,680 67-68-66-73–274 Brandt Jobe (14), $13,680 ………65-69-67-73–274 Carl Paulson (11), $13,260 ……69-66-71-69–275 J.B. Holmes (11), $13,260 ………68-67-71-69–275 Ben Crane (11), $13,260 ………66-70-69-70–275 Fran Quinn (11), $13,260 ……71-63-69-72–275 Padraig Harrington (7), $12,780 69-67-71-69–276 Michael Bradley (7), $12,780 …65-69-72-70–276 Keegan Bradley (7), $12,780 …71-65-68-72–276 Sean O'Hair (7), $12,780 ………66-67-68-75–276 Lee Janzen (2), $12,240 ………66-67-75-69–277 Nate Smith (2), $12,240 ………71-65-70-71–277 Dean Wilson (2), $12,240 ……68-68-70-71–277 Briny Baird (2), $12,240 ………70-66-68-73–277 Michael Putnam (2), $12,240 …65-70-69-73–277 John Daly (1), $11,880 ………69-67-71-74–281 Zack Miller (1), $11,760 ………70-66-76-72–284 Daniel Summerhays (1), $11,64069-67-75-74–285

B

Rose hopes to regain his magic at Aronimink ROSE from D1 high once again. “You have the excitement and the energy that you can really gain from good memories,” he said. “You know to get the job done, you have to stick to a process. The best way to get the job done is to stay in the moment. So that will be very much my approach to it. But it’s nice to sort of relive the memories again.” The AT&T National victory came one week after he suffered a final-round collapse at the Travelers Championship, where he closed with a 75. He said what happened at Aronimink was “the first time I felt like I closed out a tournament in a way I could be proud of,” dealing with emotions and executing the right shots under pressure. It became a career year for Rose, 30, who wound up pocketing more than $3.6 million. He has played solidly this year with three top-10 finishes, the best being a tie for third at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill. However, he has missed the cut in each of his last two tournaments — the Memorial, where he also was defending champ, and the U.S. Open. He said he is excited about the work he has done on his game with coach Sean Foley, and it shows up in one significant statistic: He is among the PGA Tour leaders in greens hit in regulation with more than 71.3 percent accuracy. However, his putting has not been up to his standards. He is 143d in total putting and has struggled in particular with his mid-range efforts, connecting on just 8.6 percent of his tries from 15 to 25 feet. He missed the cut at the Memorial by a stroke because of a second-round 75 that included 21 putts on the back nine. He called his putting there “unleashing oil on the greens.” “It seems like I’m a ways away, but I know that putting is such an interesting area of the game,” he said. “And it revolves more around confi-

MICHAEL BRYANT / Staff Photographer

Justin Rose acknowledges the crowd after a birdie at No. 6 during last year’s win in the AT&T National at Aronimink. dence than anything else. I believe I’m a good putter. I’m a streaky putter but I have the ability to putt well. I just need that little spark or something to get the confidence going.” Maybe he’ll find it this week at Aronimink. He putted well last year but he felt the keys to his victory there were driving the ball in the fairway, and patience. “I look at it as a golf course you can’t bully at all,” he said. “You can’t chase scores on it. It’s about keeping the ball in play, keeping it under the hole, and taking your chances when they come. If you start trying to find those birdies, then you start making bo-

geys. So for me, it was a test of patience more than anything.” The native of South Africa would like to duplicate that strategy this year on a course he likes. Until the competition begins, however, he may want spend a few moments savoring his 2010 victory after he arrives. “When you turn up to the tournament, typically there’s one or two more pictures of you around the place,” he said. “And it’s nice to be able to relive what was a great experience.” Contact staff writer Joe Juliano at 215-854-4494 or jjuliano@phillynews.com.

Top PGA players have other plans FIELD from D1 Graeme McDowell and Brandt Snedeker. Justin Rose, the AT&T National’s defending champion, will hop a plane Sunday night from Philadelphia to be part of the field in Scotland after completing play at Aronimink. Another issue is that three of the top four players in the world — U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy, Lee Westwood and Martin Kaymer — are not members of the PGA Tour, meaning they are not required to play in a minimum number of tournaments to keep their cards. For his part, McIlroy al-

ready has said he will not tee it up again in competition until the British Open, beginning July 14 at Royal St. George’s in England. Hey, he deserves a long celebration. So thanks to a combination of factors, only four members of the top 20 in the World Golf Rankings — Nick Watney (15), K.J. Choi (16), Jim Furyk (19), and Hunter Mahan (20) — will be at Aronimink. But that doesn’t exactly mean the cupboard is bare for the week in Newtown Square. There are players who will appeal to just about everyone. 8 There are 12 winners of

2011 PGA Tour events, including two-time winner Mark Wilson. Two earlier winners — Gary Woodland and Jhonattan Vegas — were the talk of the Tour earlier this year. 8 Three-time major winner Ernie Els and former AT&T National champion Anthony Kim will be making their first appearances at Aronimink, as are former U.S. Open titlist Geoff Ogilvy and Adam Scott. 8 There’s also the local contingent (Sean O’Hair, Jim Furyk), other major winners (Vijay Singh, Lucas Glover, Justin Leonard), and crowd favorites for the young (Rickie Fowler, Camilo Villegas) and old (Rocco Mediate, Paul Goydos).

The Lineup at Aronimink

Dick's Sporting Goods Open In Endicott, N.Y. John Huston (263), $262,500 ………65-70-65–200 Nick Price (154), $154,000 …………66-71-66–203 Mark Wiebe (126), $126,000 ………65-68-71–204 Jim Gallagher, Jr. (95), $94,500 ……74-66-65–205 Joey Sindelar (95), $94,500 ……68-69-68–205 Peter Senior (60), $59,500 …………70-69-67–206 Peter Jacobsen (60), $59,500 …67-71-68–206 Ted Schulz (60), $59,500 ………71-67-68–206 Jay Don Blake (60), $59,500 ……68-68-70–206 Jim Rutledge (39), $38,850 …………69-71-67–207 Hale Irwin (39), $38,850 ……………70-70-67–207 Lee Rinker (39), $38,850 ……………72-68-67–207 David Frost (39), $38,850 ………73-66-68–207 Mark Calcavecchia (39), $38,850 …71-68-68–207 Tom Lehman, $28,875 ……………71-71-66–208 Gil Morgan, $28,875 ……………69-71-68–208 Phil Blackmar, $28,875 …………70-69-69–208 Joe Ozaki, $28,875 …………………72-67-69–208 Steve Lowery, $22,444 …………67-73-69–209 Brad Bryant, $22,444 ……………70-70-69–209 Lonnie Nielsen, $22,444 ……………70-68-71–209 Hal Sutton, $22,444 …………………67-70-72–209 Tom Pernice, Jr., $17,938 ………74-71-65–210 Olin Browne, $17,938 ………………72-70-68–210 John Cook, $17,938 ………………67-71-72–210 Ronnie Black, $17,938 ……………66-72-72–210 Chien Soon Lu, $14,204 ……………75-70-66–211 Tom Jenkins, $14,204 ………………71-71-69–211 Fred Funk, $14,204 …………………71-71-69–211 Tim Simpson, $14,204 ……………71-67-73–211 Dick Mast, $14,204 …………………72-66-73–211 Bobby Wadkins, $14,204 ………68-69-74–211 Mike Goodes, $11,025 …………73-71-68–212 Jim Thorpe, $11,025 ……………71-72-69–212 Fuzzy Zoeller, $11,025 …………71-71-70–212 Mark Brooks, $11,025 ………………71-70-71–212 Robert Thompson, $11,025 ……71-69-72–212 Gary Koch, $8,575 ………………68-75-70–213 Steve Pate, $8,575 ………………72-72-69–213 Keith Fergus, $8,575 ……………70-73-70–213 Keith Clearwater, $8,575 ……………70-72-71–213 Mike Reid, $8,575 ……………………72-70-71–213 Larry Mize, $8,575 ………………71-70-72–213 Tom Watson, $8,575 ……………72-67-74–213 Jay Haas, $6,125 ……………………74-73-67–214 David Eger, $6,125 ………………76-69-69–214 Andy Bean, $6,125 ………………71-72-71–214 ALSO Jay Sigel, $3,413 ……………………72-76-68–216

D7

Chris DiMarco

Ernie Els

The field for the AT&T National, subject to change as the week goes on: Blake Adams Robert Allenby Stephen Ames Stuart Appleby Arjun Atwal Ricky Barnes Cameron Beckman Notah Begay III Matt Bettencourt Kris Blanks Steven Bowditch Keegan Bradley Michael Bradley Joseph Bramlett A-Patrick Cantlay Greg Chalmers Kevin Chappell K.J. Choi Erik Compton Michael Connell Chris Couch Ben Crane Ben Curtis Brian Davis Brendan de Jonge Graham DeLaet Chris DiMarco

Sean O'Hair

Jason Dufner Joe Durant Steve Elkington Ernie Els Rickie Fowler Harrison Frazar Jim Furyk Tommy Gainey Robert Garrigus Bobby Gates Brian Gay Tom Gillis Lucas Glover Paul Goydos Bill Haas Hunter Haas David Hearn J.J. Henry Tim Herron Charley Hoffman J.B. Holmes Billy Horschel Charles Howell III Billy Hurley III Ryuji Imada Trevor Immelman Fredrik Jacobsen Matt Jones Anthony Kim Chris Kirk Marc Leishman

Vijay Singh

Justin Leonard Spencer Levin Bill Lunde Hunter Mahan Steve Marino Troy Matteson Billy Mayfair Scott McCarron William McGirt Rocco Mediate John Merrick Troy Merritt Shaun Micheel Zack Miller Bryce Molder Ryan Moore Kevin Na Sean O’Hair Nick O’Hern Joe Ogilvie Geoff Ogilvy Jeff Overton Rod Pampling Pat Perez Tim Petrovic Carl Pettersson D.A. Points Alex Prugh Chez Reavie Chris Riley Andres Romero

Rocco Mediate Justin Rose Adam Scott Michael Sim Webb Simpson Vijay Singh Heath Slocum Kevin Stadler Scott Stallings Kyle Stanley Kevin Streelman Chris Stroud Vaughn Taylor Josh Teater Roland Thatcher D.J. Trahan Cameron Tringale A-Peter Uihlein Bo Van Pelt Jhonnatan Vegas Camilo Villegas Johnson Wagner Jimmy Walker Nick Watney Boo Weekley Mike Weir Charlie Wi Garrett Willis Dean Wilson Mark Wilson Gary Woodland


PA D8

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

www.philly.com

Seven steps to achieving work-life balance And in nearly one-half of households, all adults are working. And yet, children still need to be taken to the doctor, and elderly parents still need care. Moreover, more adults are attending school. These and other changes have caused many workers to face conflicts between their work and personal lives.” Playing the octopus Wikipedia defines work-life balance as a broad concept that includes proper prioritizing between work (i.e., career, ambition) and life (i.e., health, pleasure, leisure, family, spiritual development). If you feel you need a better balancing act, understand that you needn’t strive for a perpetually equal balance between your work and personal life. That is, sometimes one will take precedence over the other for a period of time. For example, if you’re on deadline for a major project at work, you may need to put in more hours for a few weeks. Similarly, if a family member is ill, you may need to find some extra time in your schedule to care for him or her. That said, the dangers of not striking the right work-life balance within a given time period is that you may end up fatigued or even burned out; less productive in all aspects of your life, not just work; and isolated from friends and family.

Remember when there was a clear demarcation between work and home? Ah, but to be able to travel back in time to such sweet days. Today’s workplace pressures to do more with less, coupled with communications technologies that may enable you to work from just about anywhere, means your job responsibilities are likely to invade your personal time more often than you like. The result is a sort of mishmash of time during which you try to complete several tasks — for work, family, yourself, home, community — all at the same time. “American society has changed dramatically over the past half century,” wrote the authors of “Work-Life Balance and the Economics of Workplace Flexibility,” a 2010 report from the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers. “Women [today] comprise nearly one-half of the labor force.

The seven steps 1. Log your time. Start the rebalancing act by keeping track of everything you do during a typical week and how long each act takes. This includes work, commuting, sleep, eating meals, leisure time, study time, family time, etc. CNN offers an online calculator that can help you keep track, www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/worklife/06/04/balance.calculator. Knowing how long each of your duties takes up within the 168 hours you get each week is a good place to start. 2. Take advantage of employer options. “Ask your employer about flex hours, a compressed workweek, job sharing, telecommuting or other scheduling flexibility,” advised the authors of “Work-life balance: Tips to reclaim control” posted on the MayoClinic.com website. “The more control you have over your hours, the less stressed you’re likely to be.” 3. Learn to say no. Easier said than done, of course, but still, this is a good trait to adopt. Look at the list of your

activities from step 1, and drop those that sap your time and energy and aren’t likely to result in helping you reach an important life goal. Learning to say, “I’m sorry; I simply don’t have the time for that” is hard, especially if you’ve been the go-to person for your family members and colleagues. But it’s better to do fewer things well than to do too many things poorly. 4. Leave work at work. If you have a boss who likes to spend his evenings catching up on e-mails, and he expects you to respond to his non-emergency queries at midnight, you may need to have a quiet conversation with him. (Maybe you’ll even want to copy this article and give it to him.) The point is that while you may now have the technological means to continue working at all hours of the day and night, do you really want to? More importantly, do you really need to in order to be a stellar employee? And how stellar could you be if you’re exhausted and fuzzy-brained from lack of sufficient sleep? 5. Rethink your errands and chores. If you can afford to hire a home cleaning service, do it. Run your errands in batches. Do one load of wash every day, perhaps while you’re making dinner, so the laundry doesn’t build up to an all-day Saturday chore. Keep a daily to-do list to help you stay organized. Put family events on a weekly calendar accessible to everyone in your household so there are no time-consuming miscommunications about schedules. In short, make a concerted effort to find the time-wasters in your schedule, and if you can’t eliminate them, get creative with how to minimize the amount of time they take. 6. Build downtime into your schedule. That one hour a week you’ve scheduled to get a manicure, a massage or any other pampering service is not wasted time. It’s your time, and you should not feel guilty about taking it. Love to read? Schedule, say, a half-hour a day for it. Learning to play a musical instrument? Schedule your practice sessions. Teach yourself the often-difficult task of nurturing you. Remember, a little downtime and relaxation can go a long way. 7. Get healthy. Squeezing a little exercise into your day actually gives you more energy for all of your other activities. Also, a healthy diet gives you the proper fuel to be productive. Lastly, get mentally and emotionally healthy by participating in something that makes you feel joyful, satisfied and centered.

THIS CONTENT PRODUCED BY THE ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT

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legal notices Legal Notices

Legal Notices

NOTICE OF SALE LEGAL NOTICE: On July 14th, 2011, at 9:00 am. Rouse/Chamberlin, Ltd., as receiver ("Receiver"), is scheduled to conduct an auction at Ballard Spahr LLP, 1735 Market Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103. The items to be auctioned off are real property consisting of the following: Sawgrass Bay houses and building pads, Clermont Township, Lake County, Florida. Also being placed for sale by auction are certain contract rights associated with such real property. NOTE THAT THESE ASSETS, BOTH REAL ESTATE AND PERSONAL PROPERTY, WILL NOT BE AUCTIONED SEPARATELY AND ARE BEING OFFERED AS A NON-SEVERABLE PACKAGE. ALL SALES ARE SUBJECT TO APPROVAL BY THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA. Receiver has already received an initial bid for the assets to be auctioned. Receiver will be accepting additional bids by U.S. Mail until July 7th, 2011. All bids must be submitted to Receiver before that date and must satisfy certain terms and conditions set forth in a court order approving the sale and auction procedures (the "Order"). Only those bidders who are eligible will be permitted to participate in the auction. For eligibility information and further information regarding this auction, including a copy of the Order, contact Dave England, at Rouse / Chamberlin, Ltd., 500 Exton Commons, Exton, PA., 19341, (610)-5943701. All inquiries regarding the auction must be made to Receiver prior to 5:00 p.m. on July 7th, 2011. Bidders must contact Receiver prior to the auction as all bidders must present proof of qualifications to place a bid at the auction. NOTE THAT, PURSUANT TO PARAGRAPH 19(e) OF THE ORDER, IF RECEIVER DOES NOT RECEIVE ANY QUALIFIED BIDS OTHER THAN THE INITIAL BID, THE SCHEDULED AUCTION OF THE PROJECT ASSETS WILL NOT BE HELD, AND THE INITITAL BID WILL BE DEEMED SUCCESSFUL AND PRESENTED TO THE COURT FOR APPROVAL. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, under Philadelphia Home Rule Charter Section Number 8-407 and 7-400 that on June 21, 2011, Amendment to PCHR Regulation 400:01(b); REQUEST FOR Complaint Form and PROPOSAL NOTICE Filing promulgated by FOR THE COUNTY the Philadelphia ComOF CHESTER: mission on Human The County of ChesResources was filed ter solicits proposals with the Department for Fire & Emergency of Records, Room Medical Services RF 158, City Hall. Anyone Paging System Infraaffected thereby may structure Replacefile written request for ment (Re-Issue) – hearing with the DeRFP #1106-02. partment of Records To obtain a complete within thirty (30) days copy of the Request from the above date. for Proposal, please Joan T. Decker reference web site Commissioner of Records http://www.chesco. org/contracts. If you do not have internet access, you may contact the Department of Procurement and Community College General Services at of Philadelphia 610-344-6325. Board Trustees Meeting, August 4, Canceled SEPTA The August 4, 2011 INVITATION TO BID Board of Trustees SEPTA will accept meeting has been Sealed Bids in SEPcanceled. The next TA’s General Offices, meeting of the Board 1234 Market St., 11th of Trustees is schedFl., Philadelphia, PA uled for Thursday, 19107 for the followSeptember 1, 2011 at ing procurement. 3:00 p.m. in the Mint Bids will be accepted Building’s Isadore A. until the time and date Shrager Boardroom, listed below and will 1700 Spring Garden open in Conference Street. Room unless noted PUBLIC NOTICE below: 11-078-OID - Printing The Philadelphia Housing Authority will of Timetables - 2012 hold a Board of ComOpens: 11:00 am, missioner Meeting to Thurs., July 7, 2011, be held on Thursday, Buyer: Orysia Duda, June 30, 2011 at 4:00 (215) 580-8320, p.m., at The Philadel oduda@septa.org phia Housing Author Prospective bidders ity, 12 South 23rd may obtain a CD ROM Street, 6th Floor, copy of the contract Multi Purpose Room, documents by submitPhiladelphia, Pennsylting a written email vania. request to the ProMichael P. Kelly curement Officer or Administrative Contract AdministraReceiver tor for this project.

Proposals & Bids

Meeting Notices


Monday, June 27, 2011

SportsInBrief Quiet, please: Tennis resuming

while Maya Moore led Minnesota with 21. 8 Jia Perkins scored 25 points, and the host San Antonio Silver Stars beat the After Sunday’s traditional Atlanta Dream, 92-86, to imday off at Wimbledon, ac- prove to a WNBA-best 6-1. tion resumes Monday with 8 Cappie Pondexter scored 22 all 16 men’s and women’s points to lead the New York fourth-round matches. Liberty to a 77-67 victory Two stand out in particu- over the Los Angeles lar. Top-seeded Rafael Nadal Sparks. takes on No. 24 Juan Martin 8 Crystal Langhorne (Willingdel Potro of Argentina, while boro High) scored 23 points, No. 23 Venus Williams faces and the Washington Mystics No. 32 Tsvetana Pironkova of snapped a four-game skid Bulgaria in a rematch of the with an 83-63 win over the 2010 Wimbledon quarterfi- visiting Tulsa Shock. nal won by Pironkova. The last American man in the 8 NHL: The Los Angeles field, No. 10 Mardy Fish, will Kings traded Ryan Smyth to be playing 2010 runner-up To- the Edmonton Oilers for formas Berdych. ward Colin Fraser and a seventh-round pick in the 2012 MLS: Marco Pappa’s long-dis- draft. The 35-year-old Smyth tance goal in the 58th had 23 goals and 24 assists minute lifted the Chicago in 82 games last season. Fire to a 1-1 tie with the New York Red Bulls in Bridge- 8 HIGH SCHOOLS: Horace view, Ill. The point for the Spencer III, a 6-foot-8 gradutie pulled New York within ate of Klinger Middle School two of the Union for the in Southampton, Bucks Eastern Conference lead. County, will enroll at Will8 Tyson Wahl and Alvaro Fernan- iam Tennent High as a freshdez scored six minutes apart man. He is regarded as the late in the first half to rally nation’s second-ranked basthe Seattle Sounders to a 2-1 ketball player in the Class of victory over the visiting 2015, according to HYPEBasNew England Revolution. ketball. Though Spencer 8 Andres Mendoza scored lives near Tennent, it was twice and the Columbus believed the 14-year-old Crew rallied at home to beat would go out of his district the shorthanded Colorado to join a basketball powerRapids, 4-1. house. “Tennent is a place 8 NFL: Terrell Owens has un- that he really wants to go dergone surgery to repair a to,” said his father, Horace torn anterior cruciate liga- Spencer Jr. “His friends will ment in one of his knees for be there.” a previously undisclosed injury, according to sources fa- 8 BOXING: Welterweight Mike miliar with the situation. Jones finished off Raul Munoz Owens, 37, was unavailable with a second-round technical for comment, but sources knockout at the Asylum Arena said the surgery by orthope- in South Philadelphia on Saturdist James Andrews occurred day night. The decisive shot, a in the last month. One hook to the head, came with source said the receiver was 50 seconds remaining in the hurt while taping a televi- round. Jones, who grew up in sion show for VH1. Mount Airy, is 25-0. Munoz dropped to 22-14-1. 8 WNBA : Katie Douglas 8 At the USA Boxing national scored 22 points, including championships in Colorado the go-ahead basket with Springs, Colo., Jesse Hart of just over a minute to play, to Philadelphia won the help the Indiana Fever beat 178-pound weight division the Minnesota Lynx, 78-75, over Jerry Odom of Bowie, Md., in Minneapolis. Tamika Catch- on a medical disqualificaion. ings added 17 for Indiana, — Staff and wire reports

FORECLOSURE AUCTION 150+ Homes, Bid Online: 7/8 Open House: 6/25, 7/2 & 9 Auction.com RE Brkr RB067122 Auction Firm RY000927 Mark Buleziuk AU005557

homes for rent

14xx S. Etting (Grays Ferry) 3BR $675+ $2025 move in required (215)365-4567

15xx S. Stillman 2 BR $725+ utils credit check, call 215-878-9309

1936 Gerritt St. 2br/1ba Row $750+utils renovated, yard, hdwd flrs 856-803-0366

26xx S. Bonaffon 3Br $825+ utils hw flrs,$2475 mvn,avail 8/1 215.365.4567

53xx Yocum St. 3Br/1Ba $750 hardwd flrs, new carpet. (267)565-8021

55xx Wheeler new 2BR $695+utils hw flrs, lrg yd, nr transp., 215-280-9200

56xx Litchfield St 3 br/1 ba $700+utils 14xx S 52nd St 3 br/1.5 ba $700+utils renovated, near transport., 267-574-6591

63xx Regent St. 3br/1ba section 8 ok, (215)620-5508

65xx Regent St. 3 BR $725+ utils backyard, washer, Call 215-964-4113

7xx Ceil St 3br $850/mo Mod Kit/ba, crpt, ceil fans 610-284-1436 8xx S Cecil St. 3br/1ba $750/mo. newly remod, 1st, last, sec. 267-278-2309

17xx N 53rd. 3br/1ba $800/mo. large rooms, avail now (215)601-5182

1xx N. Ruby 3Br/2Ba $950 mod, close transp, Sec 8 ok 215-868-0481

4xx Brown St 2br carriage house $725 nwly ren, hdwd throughout 215.409.8383

52xx Westminster Ave. 3br+den $950+ totally renovated, $35 app.(215)208.3972

5615 Angora 3Br $785 lovely row, hw flrs, Sec 8 ok267.975.6489

252 N. Simpson Street 3br/1.5ba $850 www.perutoproperties.com 215.740.4900

21xx Tioga 7br/3ba $1750 W/D, new baths, Sec 8 OK. 215-518-5984

25xx W. Oakdale 3BR $700+utils newly remod., front porch. 609-332-2062

32xx Bambrey St. 3 BR/1 BA $650 2 month sec., 1 month rent, 215-548-1451

46xx N Palethorp 2BR $700/mo+all utils 1st month + 2 month sec. 215-324-6578

Rising Sun 3 BR/1.5 BA $700+ utils Seniors welcome, call 215-626-2594

12xx E. Chelten Ave 4 BR Sec. 8 ok Newly renovated. 215-424-2785

2xx W Coulter St. sm 3BR $695+utils 3 mo required., renovated, 267.385.6078

Spencer St. 3br/1ba $750 nice location 215.879.0467, 267.702.7106

63xx Woodstock St. 3br/1.5ba row home, spacious kitch, 215.324.1365

31xx Stirling St. 3br Section 8 ok, Call (215)669-1304

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

40XX Creston St. 3BR/2BA $920/mo Mayfair/Wissinoming section. Spacious end unit, finished basement, eat in kitchen w/dishwasher, disposal. Covered front porch, near the park and public transportation. 3 months to move in. 215-378- 7722 5957 Malta St. 3br $850 renovated, drive by & call 267-991-2825 NE Houses 3 BR $895+utils available immediately, move-in specials. Call 267-357-7892 or 215-783-0175 PENNYPACK PARK 3+br 3ba 2sty, patio w/d bsmt Pets! Locators 215-922-3400

Upper Darby 3BR $950/mo. section 8 ok, close to trans 610.459.3990 Upper Darby 4br/1ba $975/mo ex cnd, w/w cpt, lrg house 484.270.8639

Bala Cynwyd 4br/2.5ba $3300 charming neighborhood (336)549-1802

Blue Bell Lg 2br/1.5ba twnhse $1245+ut w/d, basement, fireplace, (714)434-1009 Kulpsville 3br/2.5ba twnhse $1359+util den, bsmt, gar, deck, FP, 610-584-9262 Norristown 1br+small office $900+utils Riverfront House, Port Indian Community, small yard, bsmnt, gar (267)377-0087

Washington Twp. 3br/2.5ba $1900+ utils, 1car garage, no pets 856-803-0366

resorts/rent N. Wildwood 2+br apts from $99/night 2 blocks to bch/boardwalk 609.729.0561 N. Wildwood 2Br condo $1,200/wk pool, pkg, avail. 7/9-7/16. (856)468-1651 WILDWOOD clean 2-3br, low rates Wkly Cable, pkg, nr beach 609-522-7678

N. WILDWOOD 3BR Condo Available 7/9-7/16; 8/20 thru Oct. 267-679-2171

OC, NJ Beachfront 5BR/4BA $4000 7/16-7/23. 973.538.7176or 609.425.0176 Stone Harbor 4 BR/2 BA $1500-$2200 6/25, 7/16 & 23, (856)424-2319

"Close to the Fun!" Shawnee: 2 BR TH w/ hot tub, sleeps 6-8, week of 7/8, 7/15, or 9/2, $500. 856-461-1510

OCEAN CITY, MD 3br $1,200 slp 8, 1 blk bch, June-Sept 267-934-3711

apartment marketplace

MLS

WPS

W

L

T Pts.

GF

GA

UNION New York Columbus Houston D.C. United Chicago Kansas City New England Toronto WEST

7 5 6 4 4 2 4 3 2 W

4 3 4 6 5 4 6 8 7 L

5 26 9 24 6 24 7 19 6 18 11 17 5 17 6 15 9 15 T Pts.

19 27 20 21 21 18 19 13 16 GF

14 21 17 22 27 21 21 21 29 GA

Los Angeles 9 2 8 35 25 15 Dallas 9 4 4 31 24 17 Seattle 8 4 7 30 25 18 Salt Lake 7 3 5 26 18 9 Colorado 5 5 7 22 19 21 San Jose 5 5 5 20 20 17 Portland 5 7 3 18 18 26 Chivas USA 4 7 5 17 20 21 Vancouver 2 7 8 14 18 24 Three points for a win, one point for a tie. SUNDAY’S RESULTS Chicago 1, New York 1, tie Seattle 2, New England 1 Columbus 4, Colorado 1 SATURDAY’S RESULTS UNION 3, Chivas USA 2 D.C. United 2, Houston 2, tie San Jose 0, Los Angeles 0, tie Kansas City 2, Vancouver 1 Dallas 4, Portland 0 Salt Lake 3, Toronto 1 SATURDAY’S GAMES UNION at D.C. United, 7 Vancouver at Toronto, 12:30 Columbus at Dallas, 9 Chicago at Chivas USA, 10 New York at San Jose, 10:30 Kansas City at Portland, 11 THIS SUNDAY’S GAME Houston at Colorado, 9

Arena Football League National Conference WEST y-Arizona Utah Spokane San Jose CENTRAL Chicago Dallas Tulsa Kansas City Iowa

W 13 7 7 5 W 10 9 6 5 3

L 2 7 7 9 L 4 5 8 10 11

T 0 0 0 0 T 0 0 0 0 0

Pct. .867 .500 .500 .357 Pct. .714 .643 .429 .333 .214

PF 923 860 817 774 PF 753 835 651 710 705

PA 707 855 774 850 PA 659 788 661 807 877

American Conference SOUTH W L T Pct. y-Jacksonville 13 1 0 .929 Georgia 9 6 0 .600 Orlando 8 6 0 .571 Tampa Bay 6 8 0 .429 New Orleans 2 12 0 .143 EAST W L T Pct. Pittsburgh 8 6 0 .571 Cleveland 8 6 0 .571 SOUL 5 10 0 .333 Milwaukee 4 10 0 .286 y-clinched division SUNDAY’S RESULT Chicago 58, Iowa 48 SATURDAY’S RESULTS Arizona 55, SOUL 54 Cleveland 82, San Jose 21 Jacksonville 66, Tampa Bay 41 Georgia 64, Orlando 34 Pittsburgh 39, Milwaukee 38 Dallas 55, Tulsa 48 Spokane 75, New Orleans 54 FRIDAY’S GAMES New Orleans at Tampa Bay, 7:30 Pittsburgh at Orlando, 7:30 Tulsa at Iowa, 8:05 Utah at Chicago, 8:30 Jacksonville at San Jose, 10:30

PF 895 844 752 639 605 PF 666 685 776 601

PA 646 781 726 757 783 PA 727 604 829 660

40th & Baring 1BR $620 to $700 + E&G 2nd flr, gd trnsp, 3 mo adv, gd credit neg. No Drugs/Smoking 215-222-6060 50th & Catharine 3BR $1,200+utils hrdwd flrs, W/D, side entr. 215-747-3157 50th & Osage Ave 1BR $700+utils privt entrance & hrdwd flrs, 215-747-3157

51xx Spruce Ave. Efficiency $575+utils central air, Call (609)617-8639

62nd & Lancaster lrg 1Br/1Ba $650+elec nice block, 1st, last & sec. (215)878-5056 73xx Ruskin Rd. 2br $790+utils 2nd flr, renov, w/d, garage (215)888-7491 Various 1, 2 & 3 BR Apts $725-$895 www.perutoproperties.com 215.740.4900

Balwynne Park 2 BR $840+ W/D, C/A, W/W, Garage. 484-351-8633

15xx Ontario St. Efficiency $450 off of Temple campus, call 215-867-9517 16xx W. Huntingdon 1br $425+utils newly renov, $1275 move in 215.559.9289 18xx N 33rd St 2BR $650+utils 1st,last,sec.Nwly ren, 3rd flr 484.645.1384 21xx W. Venango 1br $550 +utils/sec. Large, LR, kitch, a/c, renov 215-704-2520 2303 N 18th St. 1br $475+utils 2 mo sec, 1 mo rent. 215-548-5938 2511 N. 33rd St. 2nd flr 1.5br $550 $1650 move in, (215)365-4567 37xx N. 15th St. 1BR 1st flr back yard sec 8 ok 215-792-6620 6XX E. Indiana studio 3rd flr $450 Beautiful, cozy, near trans. 267-481-4520

1, 2, 3, 4 Bedroom FURNISHED APTS LAUNDRY - PARKING 215-223-7000

Temp. Hosp area 3 & 4br apts Avail Now 1st Mo. Rent Special 215.386.4791 or 4792

9xx S. 19th St. 1br $700+utils with kitchen & bathroom. (215)546-0167

57xx Park Ave 1br $565 heat water incl. renovated, 1+1 sec, 215.695.3007 ext 223

1100 S 58th St. Studio, 1br & 2br apts newly renov, lic #362013 267-767-6959 59th & Springfield 2br/1ba $675 w/w crpt, spacious liv rm, 610-960-6917 61xx Wheeler St. 1 BR $525+ utils bkyd, storage, bsmnt, 215.290.1710 lv msg 64th & Woodland 2br 1st flr $750 2nd flr 2br +w/d $800. (215)382-2232

330 E. Olney 2br duplex $700+ 1st flr, modern kitchen (215)680-4473 3xx E. Clarkson 1 BR $575/mo. $1150 move in. hdwd flrs, 267-602-6739 5915 Old York Rd. 1br $550+utils cred chk, 15 min to dwntwn 267.574.3658 Residential Life: Studio, 1Br & 2Br apts Spacious & Bright Apts near LaSalle Univ. Regional Leasing Office-5600 Ogontz Ave Call or Come in M-F 9a-5p 215.276.5600 1st Month Free to Qualified Applicants

40xx Aspen St. 1br $575 1st flr, grt cond, hdwd, w/d 215.409.8383 42xx Stiles 2Br $650 incl utils, near trans, 215-280-9200 55xx Girard Ave. 2 BR $750+ utils $2250 move in, Must See! 215-284-7944

W L T Pts GF GA W. New York 6 1 2 20 20 10 INDEPENDENCE 5 2 3 18 19 9 magicJack 5 4 0 14 14 17 Sky Blue 3 3 3 12 11 10 Boston 3 5 3 12 12 13 Atlanta 1 8 3 6 7 24 Three points for victory, one point for a tie. SATURDAY’S RESULT INDEPENDENCE 3, magicJack 1 JULY 6 Sky Blue FC at INDEPENDENCE, 7 JULY 9 W. New York at INDEPENDENCE, 7 magicJack at Sky Blue FC, 7 JULY 10 Atlanta at Boston, 6

WNBA EAST

W

L

Pct.

GB

Indiana Connecticut Chicago New York Washington Atlanta WEST

6 4 4 4 2 2 W

3 3 4 4 5 7 L

.667 .571 .500 .500 .286 .222 Pct.

– 1 11/2 11/2 3 4 GB

.857 .667 .625 .571 .571 .111

– 11/2 11/2 2 2 6

San Antonio 6 1 Seattle 4 2 Minnesota 5 3 Los Angeles 4 3 Phoenix 4 3 Tulsa 1 8 SUNDAY’S RESULTS San Antonio 92, Atlanta 86 New York 77, Los Angeles 67 Washington 83, Tulsa 63 Indiana 78, Minnesota 75 SATURDAY’S RESULTS Indiana 75, Connecticut 70 Phoenix 86, Chicago 78 MONDAY’S GAMES No games scheduled. TUESDAY’S GAMES Phoenix at Indiana, 7 San Antonio at Chicago, 8 Los Angeles at Connecticut, 8

Transactions Baseball Cincinnati Reds: Activated RHP Homer Bailey from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Carlos Fisher to Louisville (IL). Milwaukee Brewers: Optioned RHP Mark DiFelice to Nashville (PCL). San Diego Padres: Recalled RHP Anthony Bass from San Antonio (Texas). Optioned RHP Evan Scribner to Tucson (PCL). Washington Nationals: Named Davey Johnson manager. Chicago White Sox: Placed LHP John Danks on the 15-day DL. Called up LHP Hector Santiago from Birmingham (SL). Minnesota Twins: Placed OF Delmon Young on the 15-day DL. Recalled OF Rene Tosoni from Rochester (IL). EASTERN LEAGUE READING PHILLIES: Announced C John Suomi was assigned from Lehigh Valley (IL).

Ice Hockey Los Angeles Kings: Traded LW Ryan Smyth to Edmonton for C Colin Fraser and a 2012 seventh-round draft pick.

Read The Inquirer’s 76ers blog, “Deep Sixer,” by Kate Fagan at http://go.philly.com/dsix

FIRST POST 12:25 P.M. 1st-$22,000, 3&up. Claiming $7,500 5&1-2 furlongs PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Avalanche Attack (R. Montanez) x107 3-1 2 African Knight (J. Hampshire, Jr.) 119 5-2 3 Will Endure (Samuel Bermudez) 119 15-1 x107 6-1 4 Fort Pyramid (Kyle Frey) 5 Captain Twitch (Wesley Ho) 112 7-2 6 Senor Louie (Angel Arroyo) 112 8-1 7 Cape Finisterre (Kennel Pellot) xx112 9-2 2d-$25,000, 3&up. Claiming $5,000 6 furlongs PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Lots of Tricks (Felix Ortiz) 121 6-1 2 Hot Minute (Irad Ortiz, Jr.) x115 5-1 119 5-2 3 Jimmymac Bear (Wesley Ho) 4 Catalina Fog (Anibal Prado) 119 12-1 5 Grand Captain (K. Carmouche) 119 8-5 119 9-2 6 Casa d’Oro (Oliver Castillo) 3d-$23,000, 3&up. Claiming $7,500, One mile&70YDS PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Lake Friends (Kennel Pellot) xx112 5-1 2 Lookintogetout (R. Montanez) x110 5-2 119 9-2 3 Summiting (Jose Ferrer) 4 Itineris (J. Acosta) 119 7-2 5 Storm Wind (J. Hampshire, Jr.) 119 8-1 6 Race Caller Luke (J. Nguyen) xx112 15-1 7 Oil Man IRE (Stewart Elliott) 119 6-1 8 Irish Eddie K (Channing Hill) 119 8-1 4th-$24,000, 3&up. Claiming $10,000 $8,000, One mile PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Flagged (Navin Mangalee) 119 4-1 2 Sortano (Rosario Montanez) x106 3-1 3 Revelator (Stewart Elliott) 113 5-2 115 5-1 4 Diva's Duke (Eriluis Vaz) 5 Surgeon Nate (Victor Molina) 111 12-1 119 10-1 6 Meow Gibson (K. Carmouche) 7 Running Runer Run (Angel Arroyo) 119 9-2 5th-$45,000 3,4&5YO Maidens. SPECIAL WEIGHT 6&1-2 furlongs PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Waterfall (Navin Mangalee) 116 9-2 1a Weave It to Me (Navin Mangalee) 116 9-2 2 Valuable Gem (Eriluis Vaz) 116 15-1 3 Mr. Bad Guy (Angel Arroyo) 123 10-1 116 12-1 4 Epic Move (Victor Molina) 5 Research Report (Irad Ortiz, Jr.) x111 2-1 6 Cortado (Kendrick Carmouche) 116 3-1 116 4-1 7 Tribute (Roberto Alvarado, Jr.) COUPLED -a- Waterfall & Weave It to Me 6th-$23,000, 3&up. Claiming $7,500, One mile&70YDS PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 El Dubai (Angel Arroyo) 119 7-2 2 Liberty St. Outlaw (Paco Lopez) 121 5-2 3 Ten Bells (Rosario Montanez) x116 10-1 4 Calculate (Victor Molina) 119 8-1 5 Celeritas Plus (Kennel Pellot) xx112 5-1 6 Marine Major (J. Hampshire, Jr.) 119 8-1 7 Secret Infatuation (K. Carmouche)119 9-2 121 12-1 8 Can Ya Try (Oliver Castillo) 9 Moneymoneymoney (Eriluis Vaz) 119 15-1 7th-$25,000, 3&up. STARTER ALLOWANCE 6 furlongs PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Joe the Dude (K. Carmouche) 113 8-5 x113 12-1 2 Bosox Fan (Kyle Frey) 3 Gratitat (Antonio Lopez) xx116 12-1 120 3-1 4 Candy Heart (Hiram Rivera) 5 Beacon Hall (J. Acosta) 116 12-1 6 Asfatewouldhaveit (R. Montanez) x106 10-1 x106 15-1 7 Arctic Raven (Kennel Pellot) 8 Rapala (Angel Arroyo) 118 9-2 9 Gold Score (Frankie Pennington) 118 12-1 8th-$23,000, 3&up (mares and fillies). Claiming $7,500, One mile PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Third Time Lucky (F. Pennington) 119 7-2 2 Lady Durlyn (Irad Ortiz, Jr.) x114 5-2 3 Silver Kisses (Rosario Montanez) x116 12-1 119 15-1 4 Habby Quatorze (Angel Arroyo) 5 Serene Queen (Jose Ferrer) 123 8-1 6 Calamari (Victor Molina) 119 4-1 119 5-1 7 Comet Road (Carlos Cruz) 8 Tres Bien Ensemble (Kyle Frey) x114 15-1 9 Record High (Kristina McManigell) 119 20-1 9th-$48,000, 3&up (mares and fillies). ALLOWANCE 5 furlongs TURF PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Maribels Graygirl (Carlos Cruz) 118 20-1 118 12-1 2 Seychelles (Victor Molina)

apartment marketplace 59xx Belmar Terrace 1 BR $550+ utils LR, kitch, BA, $1100 mve in, 267.210.3899 64th & Vine lg 1 BR $650 new crpt, 3rd flr, Sec 8 ok, 610-649-9009 6xx N. 57th St. 2BR $650 +utils info and appointment. 215-806-9584 Parkside area 1br & 2br $550-$800 hdwd flrs, newly renov, PHA, section 8 ok across Fairmount Park (215)791-2722 Parkside Area 3 BR $900+ utils newly renovated, new kitchen & bath, Section 8 ok. Call 267-324-3197 Residential Life: Studio, 1br & 1br+den apts, Spacious & Bright, near Penn/Drexel Regional Leasing Office-216 S. 48th St. Call or Come in M-F 9a-5p 267.467.9681 $200 off 1st month: Qualified Applicants W. Phila 3 & 4 br apts Avail Now 1st Mo. Rent Special 215.386.4791 or 4792

Broad & Hunting Park 1 BR $575+ Newly renov, pay gas & elec, move-in immed. Call 215-621-7923

C

D9

Parx Racing Entries

Scoreboard EAST

*

1 BR & 2 BR Apts $695-$835 spacious, great loc., upgraded, heat incl, PHA vouchers accepted 215-966-9371 236 W WALNUT LN effic/1br fr $540 SPECIALS AVAILABLE! HISTORIC APTS Close to transp. 215-849-7260 2xx Abbottsford & 49xx N. 11th St. 2Br $675+. 1st/last/sec. 215-455-1220 5220 Wayne Ave. Studio & 1 BR newly rehab, Lic# 507568, 267.767.6959 5321 Wayne Ave Efficiency $550 1br $600, 2br $700. (215)776-6277 6317 Morton St 1BR $630 Newly renovated. Near bus stop. 2nd floor. Storage. Gar parking. 215-852-3968 GERMANTOWN Studios, 1 & 2 BR Various $$ Beautiful Apts. 215-849-1622 GREENE & HARVEY -SUMMER SPECIAL! Lux. 1BR’S Newly dec, w/w, g/d, a/c, ca ble ready, Laundry/Beauty parlor/off st prkg. 215-275-1457 215-233-3322

MOUNT AIRY 1br $470+utils newly renovated, Call (215)248-2961

Mt. Airy Apts @ Great Prices

10 locations. Beautiful Studios, 1 & 2 BR. CALL FOR SPECIALS! 215-247-5614 W. Mt. Airy 2 BR/1 BA $1050+ utils In restored Mansion, LR, hw flrs, mod kit w/ ceramic flrs, SS appls, w/d, c/a, off st prkg, Call A Jefferson @ 215-849-4343

6515 N 8th St. 1 BR Newly renov. Lic# 212705, 267-767-6959 W. Oaklane 2 BR $635+utils prvt entr, newly renov, nice 215-432-7618 W Oaklane 68th Ave 2 BR $650 Logan,1 br $595,1st/last/sec 215.276.1949

9xx E. Tioga 1 BR $475+ utils 2nd floor, renovated, 215-424-2785

42xx Frankford Ave. 1 BR $580 Nice & clean, No pets 215-289-2973 4638 PENN ST. 1br $550 Efficiency $435 w/w, close to transp. 267-235-5952 4840 Oxford Ave Studio, 1br & 2br apts Ldry,24/7 cam lic# 214340 267.767.6959

6812 Ditman St. 1 BR prkg,lndry fac. 267-767-6959 Lic# 212751 Frankford & Knights 2BR duplex $800+ w/w, garage, yard, No pets, 610.565.9787 Old Bustleton/Welsh 2br $750+ 2nd fl Dpx sep ent pvt Lndy 267.825.4043

WARMINSTER - Large 2 BR $799 month or $899 with FIRST MONTH FREE!! Pets & smoking ok. We work with credit problems. Call for details. Other unit sizes avail. 215-443-9500

Malvern/Great Valley area 1BR/1BA $799. 484-467-4766

14xx S.58th St. & 21xx W. Hunting Park Ave $375/mo. All utils inc. Access to kitchen, Singles pref’d, 215-787-7956 27/Lehigh, Furn, refrig, micro, w/w $85 & $90/wk, $195 move in. 215-416-6538 29xx OXFORD St. - Large Rooms $75 & up. SSI ok. Call 215-240-9499 34xx N 18th St. - clean room, $450/mo. use of entire house, 267-670-2662 4th & Diamond furn rm refrig micro. ww $85/wk, $215 move in. 267-650-8427

3 Ashton Girl IRE (Kyle Frey) x113 10-1 4 Caribbean Lady (Paco Lopez) 111 5-2 5 Taking a Chance (Oliver Castillo) 118 10-1 6 Amnesian (Angel Arroyo) 118 4-1 7 Look At Me Dance (Eriluis Vaz) 118 7-2 8 Try and Catch Me (K. Carmouche) 118 8-1 9 Lemony Fresh (Jose Ferrer) 120 15-1 10 Funzionare (Navin Mangalee) 118 8-1 10th-$22,000, 3&up (mares and fillies). Claiming $7,500 7 furlongs PN Horse (Jockey) Wgt Odds 1 Callipygian Dream (K. Pellot) xx112 12-1 2 Raven’s Dancer (Kyle Frey) x114 5-1 3 Feldberg (Irad Ortiz, Jr.) x114 5-2 4 Adorable Jean (Alex Bisono) 112 15-1 119 20-1 5 Alex’s Sis Casey (Felix Ortiz) 6 Muchado (Carlos Esquilin) xx112 20-1 7 J J’s Fallen Star (J. Hampshire, Jr.) 119 6-1 8 Molto Bene (Rosario Montanez) x118 7-2 9 Gilded Royale (Angel Arroyo) 114 12-1 10 Favorite Ways (Edwin Rivera) 114 8-1

Parx Racing Results 1st—$28,000 3,4&5YO mdn cl, $25,000 $20,000 5f Tennis Racket (K. Carmouche) 2.80 2.10 2.10 H O’s Birthday (Kennel Pellot) 5.20 3.20 Bigbossman (Josiah Hampshire, Jr.) 3.00 Exacta (1-3) paid 11.40. Trifecta (1-3-5) paid 34.80. Off 12:27:18. Time 0:58:1. 2d—$25,000 3YO up, cl, $5,000 1 MILE Hefferman (Kennel Pellot) 25.40 9.20 3.60 Born to Cus (Kendrick Carmouche) 2.80 2.10 Brecciate (Rosario Montanez) 2.10 Exacta (2-6) paid 87.40. Trifecta (2-6-3) paid 151.20. Double (1-2) paid 39.60. Off 12:53:41. Time 1:38:2. 3d—$22,000 F&M 3,4&5YO mdn cl, $12,500 $10,500 5f Graceful Winds (Stewart Elliott) 11.00 6.20 3.60 Honor’s Return (Rosario Montanez) 6.60 4.00 Alkinator (Alex Cintron) 3.40 Exacta (6-1) paid 67.20. Trifecta (6-1-3) paid 173.20. Pick 3 (1-2-6) paid 266.80. Off 13:20:49. Time 1:00:0. Scratched- Ponte Bella. 4th—$31,000 F&M 3YO up, cl, $16,000 $14,000 1 MILE&70YDS TURF Raiders Fan (Rosario Montanez) 16.80 7.80 4.80 Zubani (Kennel Pellot) 9.60 5.60 Victorious Halo (Kendrick Carmouche) 3.00 Exacta (8-2) paid 135.80. Trifecta (8-2-1) paid 610.20. Double (6-8) paid 102.20. Pick 3 (2-6-8) paid 2 of 3 $68.00. Off 13:52:08. Time 1:42:1. Scratched- On a High Cloud, Smart Tori. 5th—$23,000 F&M 3YO up, cl, $7,500 6f Count the Tears (Victor Molina) 13.00 4.40 2.20 Whisper Tothesouth (Stewart Elliott) 2.80 2.40 Backlit Sky (Kyle Frey) 2.60 Exacta (9-5) paid 41.00. Trifecta (9-5-4) paid 79.00. Pick 3 (6-8-9) paid 1,277.80. Off 14:16:16. Time 1:11:1. 6th—$23,000 3YO up, cl, $7,500 1&1/16 MILE Love to Be Wicked (R.Alvarado) 17.00 6.20 5.20 Monte (Kendrick Carmouche) 3.80 3.20 Skip Point (Kristina McManigell) 4.80 Exacta (11-9) paid 54.80. Trifecta (11-9-2) paid 304.40. Pick 3 (8-9-11) paid 771.60. Superfecta (11-9-2-6) paid 2,518.80. Off 14:43:27. Time 1:45:3. Scratched- Fairness for All. 7th—$23,000 3YO up, cl, $7,500 51/2f Sir Dance a Lot (J. Hampshire) 12.00 6.80 4.00 Midnight’s Child (Rosario Montanez) 7.40 4.00 Drink At Last Call (Roberto Alvarado, Jr.) 3.20 Exacta (3-1) paid 95.60. Trifecta (3-1-7) paid 305.20. Pick 3 (9-11-3) paid 447.60. Off 15:08:55. Time 1:04:1. 8th—$48,000 3YO up, ALLOWANCE OPTIONAL CLAIMING $25,000 1 MILE High On Candy (K. Carmouche) 7.00 3.60 2.80 Calvello (Eriluis Vaz) 4.20 3.20 Sloane Ranger (Stewart Elliott) 3.20 Exacta (2-5) paid 35.20. Trifecta (2-5-3) paid 77.40. Double (3-2) paid 63.60. Pick 3 (11-3-2) paid 355.20. Pick 4 (9-11-3-2) paid 3,330.60. Pick 6 (6-8-9-11-3-2) 3 correct paid 16.40. Off 15:35:10. Time 1:37:1. Scratched- Nostalgic Bid. 9th—$45,000 3,4&5YO MAIDEN SPECIAL WEIGHT 1&1/16 MILE TURF Le Troubadour (Alex Cintron) 14.00 7.80 4.80 Elidefeatspeyton (Kennel Pellot) 11.60 6.40 Lewahdizaniwho (Josiah Hampshire, Jr.) 4.00 Exacta (10-8) paid 198.40. Trifecta (10-8-7) paid 1,096.20. Pick 3 (3-2-10) paid 354.80. Superfecta (10-8-7-6) paid 6,726.00. Off 16:03:20. Time 1:44:2. Scratched- Cantona. Total handle: $1,035,393.55.

$275 & Up For Junk Cars Call 215-722-2111

52nd/Parkside room w/ cable, share bath & kitchen $500/mo, 215-806-7078 55xx Greene St., lg, sunny, furnished, renov, $115/wk, utils incl, 215-284-4901 56th and Walnut $90-$110 week Access to kit utils incl. 267-230-5875 58xx Warrington Ave. clean, furnished rooms, $125/wk. (267)333-4586 61st & Race; B & Allegheny; 30th & Cumberland. Call 215-290-8702 6255 Limekiln Pike - Rooms for Rent Call 215-549-2111, between 9-9 8th & Erie Area - Single Occ Only, $75/wk, $300 move in, (267)597-8343

ALPHA CONVERTER Inc. Sell Them Direct, Buyers of Scrap Cata lytic Converters - Batteries - Aluminum Rims - Auto Rads. Call 856-357-3972

JUNK CARS & TRUCKS

$200 Cash & Up (267)241-3041

Junk Cars Wanted 24/7 Removal. Call 267-377-3088

ALL CA$H Today All Cycles & ATVs 215-639-3100 www.eastcoastcycle.com Harley Low Rider FXDL 1998 $6,900 17,880 mi., excellent cond. 215-906-9425

CHEVY Trailblazer 2004 $5590 4x4, excellent condition, 215-432-4580 Bryn Mawr Suburbs Priv ent, Serene, a/c, Cable, Near Trans, no kitch or laundry, No Smoking, $400/mo 610-525-5765 C.B. Moore & 24th clean, single occpant, income verif $450/mo RJ 215-730-1613 East Oaklane $150/Week Lg furn room, new renov, close to trans. 215-820-3363 Frankford area rooms $85 to $135wk newly renov Sec dep req 215-432-5637 Germantown Area: NICE, Cozy Rooms Private entry, no drugs (215)548-6083 Germantown, Clean furn. rooms, some with private baths. Call Jeff 215-805-3823 LaSalle College area - furn’d rm w/use of kitc. $100/wk. Ref’s. 267-693-5293 Mt. Airy Room, Seniors 75 & up/Companion. Call 267-588-7114 N. Phila Furnished Rooms. Use of Kitchen, No Drugs, $350/mo, 215-924-4078 N Phila Furn, Priv Ent $75 & up, SSI & Vets ok, nr trans. Avl immed 215.763.5565 S. Phila Furn Rms SS & vets welcome. No drugs, $100 & up, 267-595-4414 SW Phila Rooms for rent. $120 per week. Please call (215)901-7210 Temple Area: Rooms for rent in a newly renov 3 story home. Great loc., near trans. Group or single leases avail. Weekly rate plus + utils. Call Bee at (267)226-7054 West Phila, everything new, quiet, $450/mo. $125/wk. SSI ok (267)357.5559 W. Phila Furn Rms, SS & Vets welcome, No drugs, $100 & up 267-586-6502 W Phila, use of living rm, dining rm, kit, w/d, avail now! $90 & up (267)334-8294

automotive BMW 325i 2001 $6000 runs great, new insp, 164k (215)356-3282

Impala LT 3.5 2006 $13,500 25k, garage kept, silver (215)413-7157

CORVETTE 1985 $15,000 blk, 43K orig mi , must see, 610.324.7011

ACCORD LX 2003 $9499 72k mi., a/t, air, p/w, p/s, cruise, tilt, Non smoker car, very clean, (267)481-4522 Odyssey EX 2001 $5999 147k, 1 owner, dealer svcd 856.296.7419

LIBERTY 2004 $5500/obo blk, 5 spd, 132k, K of P. (909)215-9392

GRAND MARQUIS 2007 $15,500 Sedan, 26K mi, silver/tan lthr int, new ins, ex cond, 267-474-9845 or 267-251-4153

VW Beetle 1961 asking $8,500 fully restored, show cond., 302-220-6322

Freightliner Century Classic 2001 $16,500/obo. 250k mi., 484-318-5041

low cost cars & trucks Buick Century 1996 $1995 mint cond in/out, 73k mi, all pwrs, cold a/c,runs new,needs nothing 215.620.9383 Buick Park Ave Limited 1995 $2950/obo loaded, x-clean, leather, new insp, cold AC, runs great. Call 215-601-6665 Buick Regal 1999 $1450 runs good, cold a/c, 609-221-7427 Buick Regal Limited 1996 $2950 42k orig mi., mint cond, 610.667.4829 CADILLAC: 1999 Luxury Sedan Deville 4 door, full power, chrome wheels, deluxe sound system, original miles, very nice, $3985, Please Call 215-629-0630 Cadillac Catera 2001 Economy Sports Edition 4 door, sunroof, original miles, unusual oppurtunity, $4985. Special car for particular buyer. Carol 215-629-0630 Chevy Express Cargo Van 1999 $3,800 V8, AC, good cond., Call 215-840-4860 Chevy Impala SS 2004 $4650 supercharged, lthr, wing 267-592-0448 CHRYSLER Sebring JX 2000 $4500 V6, auto w/ OD, 69K mi, PL, PW, cruise, tilt,CD,pwr top cln convert., 215.639.3638 Dodge Cargo Van 2001 $3400 white, auto, air, power mirrors, high back captain seats, 130k, insp. 215-688-7992 Dodge Durango SLT 2000 $3999/obo grt cond, high mileage, dvd 215.677.6135 Dodge Pass. or Cargo Van 1995 $1,650 auto, cold AC, 75k, rns new 215.620.9383 Ford 1996 Luxury High top Conversion Van (new body style), orig. mi., gar. kept, quick private sale $3975. 215-922-2165 Ford Box Truck 1984 $2000 great for flea market (215)676-2939 Ford Expedition 2004 $4990 4WD, guaranteed trans, cln 215.432.1289 Ford Mustang Grande ’69 $5000 obo orig 302, auto, Holley 4bl, GT40 heads, new pans & rails, call 856-854-6299 Ford Taurus SE station wagon 1999 $1750 loaded, clean, 7 passenger. 215-280-4825 Ford T Bird LX 1996 $1250 loaded, clean, low miles, (215)280-4825 Ford Windstar LX Van 1998 $3250/obo ld’d, 1own, new insp, mint215.601.6665 Honda Civic EX 2001 $2999 4dr, needs minor TLC, 130k, 215.688.7992 JEEP Grand Cherokee 1994 $2990 70k orig,fully equipd, xx cln 215.432.4580 Lincoln Continental 2001 $4895 83k, sunroof, gorgeous. (610)524-8835 MERCEDES 190E 1993 $3,500 Runs great, sunroof, 140k miles, tan. Call 215-627-7444 Nissan Altima 2001 $3200 4dr, insp, auto, gd cond (267)798-6488 NISSAN Quest GXE 2000 $3300 1 owner, green, 116k excel, 215-900-6299


Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

www.philly.com

D10 B

LOTTERIES New Jersey Afternoon Evening 223 811 284 248 121 620 382 146 611 716 173 431 758 948

Daily Three-Digit Numbers Pennsylvania Afternoon Evening 497 923 313 385 785 120 691 056 612 055 258 521 248 699

29 20 30 29 26 24 18

28 42 43 31 36 41 35

Delaware Afternoon Evening 096 682 406 102 870 936 207 364 692 733 623 363 --344 Delaware Afternoon Evening 9267 2142 4645 5208 1767 2620 3013 5019 6593 8134 6603 5952 ---7038

48 46

30 47

19 27 25 45 34 33 29

20 33

Pennsylvania Match 6 June 20 03 07 13 June 23 17 22 26 23 08 26 28 28

19

46

59

51

46

29

32

32

28

25 19 26

15

Delaware Hot Lotto June 22 01 04 07 18 Hot Ball: 05 June 25 05 12 13 25 Hot Ball: 01 Delaware Cash 5 June 21 03 06 11 26 Doubler: 04 June 25 07 08 22 27 Doubler: 07 Mega Millions Game June 21 11 24 25 31 GoldMegaBall: 17 10 14 40 49 GoldMegaBall: 04 12

36

39

41

57

Powerball: 12 Powerplay: 04 Powerball: 12 Powerplay: 04

18

ON PAGE ONE

Presented By America’s Most Convenient Bank.®

PHOTO OF THE DAY

RON TARVER / Staff Photographer

LOCAL NEWS, SECTION B

Immigrant couple seek day in court

DANIEL RUBIN

How gang here made a living

A Brazilian couple living with an ailing child in Northeast Philadelphia want to be made permanent, legal residents of the United States.

THE MOB BUSINESS

The 50-count indictment against reputed leaders Joseph “Uncle Joe” Ligambi and Anthony Staino focuses on the mob’s core business: loan-sharking.

Christie touts his leadership

NATIONAL TV

Breathe in, breathe out

On Meet the Press, the governor offers President Obama some advice on how to run the country.

COPING SKILLS

Penn’s medical dean: Mr. Nice Guy

In Bristol Township, school officials teach meditation to special-needs students in a summer program.

IMPRESSIVE LEGACY

Arthur Rubenstein, stepping down as the leader of the School of Medicine, presided over a decade of progress.

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For results of special drawings call the state commissions.

State lottery commissions: Pennsylvania ………………800-692-7481 New Jersey ………………609-599-5800 Delaware …………………302-739-5291

June 25

Powerball June 22

June 24

New Jersey Pick 6 June 20 02 03 13 June 23 02 03 06 Delaware Multi-Win Lotto June 20 09 22 24 June 22 01 12 18 June 24 02 07 21

Other Numbers

New Jersey Afternoon Evening 9481 0605 6481 1613 0262 4499 9512 9483 0900 7559 2334 7964 2239 5265

Daily Four-Digit Numbers Pennsylvania Afternoon Evening 3040 1729 2260 4368 6485 9164 3408 0691 7899 0852 3628 7510 8933 5249

24 37 40 19 29 17 30 13 11 23 14 22 21 17

36 40 38 21 33 30 34

Evening 1 4 6 5 7 8 9 4 6 1 8 5 3 6 5 2 4 5 2 0 9 1 0 1 9 5 3 4 32 37 32 16 30 27 32

Triple the workout, three sports in one: Competitors in the seventh annual Philadelphia Insurance Triathlon were off and running … and cycling … and swimming Sunday morning in Fairmount Park.

The Most Convenient Way To Get Your News.

Inquirer Express Date June 20 June 21 June 22 June 23 June 24 June 25 June 26

Date June 20 June 21 June 22 June 23 June 24 June 25 June 26

30 26 30 15 15 24 30

6 5 7 8 2 2 6

11 10 13 10 17 20 15

10 27 28 11 18 13 24

Daily Five-Digit Numbers Pennsylvania Cash 5 June 20 05 06 June 21 07 25 June 22 05 24 June 23 08 10 June 24 09 11 June 25 05 07 June 26 06 13 Pennsylvania Treasure Hunt June 20 03 09 June 21 04 05 June 22 01 07 June 23 03 09 June 24 01 10 June 25 03 17 June 26 08 10 Pennsylvania Quinto Afternoon June 20 6 9 0 3 4 June 21 3 3 5 2 2 June 22 6 7 8 9 8 June 23 2 4 5 6 1 June 24 7 2 7 3 4 June 25 7 0 7 4 8 June 26 6 9 7 3 8 New Jersey Cash 5 June 20 13 29 June 21 02 19 June 22 05 20 June 23 03 05 June 24 03 08 June 25 08 22 June 26 10 22

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HEALTH & SCIENCE

ALWAYS ON

TV viewing the ‘green’ way

Even when you turn them off, set-top TV boxes keep gulping energy — $2 billion worth per year — to stay ever ready. There is a solution. E1.

‘LIFE IS FULL’

A duty to stay vitally active

Frank Herrelko, 98, of Lower Gwynedd, shares his life experiences in a book that chronicles his 34-year military career and then some. E1.

TV Tonight

Law & Order: LA: The detectives investigate the beating death of birthday party guests by party crashers. 10 p.m., NBC10

OPINION

EDITORIAL

City leaders pray for debt relief

Rather than contend with corporeal matters close at hand, Harrisburg is trying to engage divine forces. A14.

COMMENTARY

Murderers took secret to graves

The Bucks County district attorney knows who killed Candy Clothier in 1968, but he won’t identify them. A15.

TEAM

MONDAY JUNE 27

HOME GAME

RED SOX 1:05 CSN

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY JUNE 29 JUNE 30

RED SOX 7:05 CSN

FRIDAY JULY 1

BLUE JAYS 1:07 CSN

SATURDAY JULY 2

BLUE JAYS 1:07 PHL17

SUNDAY JULY 3

VIGILANTES 8:30 WMCN

D.C. UNITED 7:00 FSC

¢ Parx Racing, 12:25 p.m., Bensalem

Horse Racing

¢ Trenton Thunder vs. New Hampshire Fisher Cats, 7:05 p.m., Waterfront Park, Trenton

Minor-League Baseball

¢ Phillies vs. Red Sox, 7:05 p.m., Citizens Bank Park

Local Events Baseball

¢ Game 2: Florida vs. South Carolina, 8 p.m. (ESPN)

College Baseball World Series Finals

¢ FIFA World Cup: Columbia vs. Sweden, 8:45 a.m. (ESPN) ¢ FIFA World Cup: United States vs. North Korea, 11:45 a.m. (ESPN)

Women’s Soccer

¢ Wimbledon, women’s quarterfinals, 7 a.m. and 1 p.m. (ESPN2); 10 a.m. (NBC10)

Tennis

¢ PGA of America: PGA Professional National Championship, 3:30 p.m.

Golf on Golf Channel unless noted

¢ Los Angeles Sparks at Connecticut Sun, 8 p.m. (ESPN2)

WNBA

¢ Red Sox at Phillies, 7 p.m. (PHL17; MLB Network; WPHT-AM 1210, WUBA-1480: Spanish) ¢ Brewers at Yankees, 7 p.m. (MLB Network)

TV/Radio Baseball

TUESDAY

¢ Parx Racing, 12:25 p.m., Bensalem

Horse Racing

BLUE JAYS 1:07 CSN

SPORTS CALENDAR

TUESDAY JUNE 28

RED SOX 7:05 PHL17

Sports Blogs

The Phillies Zone: Cole Hamels will pitch Thursday’s game against the Boston Red Sox. www.philly.com/philly/ sports/blogs

MONDAY

TV/Radio Baseball

¢ Reds at Rays, 7 p.m. (ESPN)

Golf on Golf Channel unless noted

¢ PGA of America: PGA Professional National Championship, 3:30 p.m.

Tennis

¢ Wimbledon, 7 a.m. and 1 p.m. (ESPN2); 10 a.m. (NBC10)

Women’s Soccer

¢ FIFA World Cup: Japan vs. New Zealand, 8:45 a.m. (ESPN) ¢ FIFA World Cup: Mexico vs. England, 11:45 a.m. (ESPN)

College Baseball World Series Finals

¢ Game 1: Florida vs. South Carolina, 8 p.m. (ESPN)

Local Events Minor-League Baseball

¢ Lehigh Valley IronPigs vs. Charlotte Knights, 7:05 p.m., Coca-Cola Park, Allentown ¢ Trenton Thunder vs. New Hampshire Fisher Cats, 7:05 p.m., Waterfront Park, Trenton

RON CORTES / Staff Photographer

Roy Halladay pitched his league-leading fifth complete game of the season as the Phillies beat the Oakland A’s, 3-1, on Sunday.

BUSINESS

SMALL BUSINESS

Minding projects’ costs, and more

Robert S. Bright’s Talson Solutions L.L.C. provides audit and construction-monitoring services for jobs as diverse as the Comcast Center and the Panama Canal expansion. C1.

PHILLY INC.

M&A activity, with a local flavor

Several small businesses in the Philadelphia region are snapped up, amid signs the merger market may be popping. C1.

WEATHER

Here’s a look at the weather through early Tuesday morning. Full report, Section B.

6 a.m.

Partly cloudy, 67

9 a.m.

Partly cloudy, 73

Noon

Partly cloudy, 82

3 p.m.

Partly cloudy, 87

6 p.m.

Partly cloudy, 84

9 p.m.

Mostly cloudy, 78

Midnight

Mostly cloudy, 72

6 a.m.

Mostly cloudy, 70

MAKE EVERY PENNY

COUNT.

Visit one of our 1,100+ convenient locations from Maine to Florida

FREE Customer coin counting

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OPEN 7 DAYS • LEGENDARY SERVICE • HASSLE-FREE BANKING


The Inquirer

Katy Perry a confectionery delight. E4

Eddie Vedder adds charm to assets at the Tower. E5 B

Monday, June 27, 2011 ★ Section E

Check Up

The Inquirer Health Blog Online at www.philly.com/checkup

A gene mutation turns baby blue

K

risten Van Houten’s baby girl was born with a bluish tint to her skin, a fairly common condition that usually clears up in a minute or two. But baby Julia remained blue, because of lower-than-nor mal oxygen levels, despite no apparent problems with her heart or lungs. “It was scary,” recalled Van Houten of Toms River, N.J. “The doctors kept looking at her. … They weren’t exactly sure what was going on.” Within hours, the newborn was flown by helicopter from Ocean Medical Center in Brick, N.J., to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, where she made medical history of sorts. Researchers discovered that the baby had a previously unknown but benign mutation in a gene involved in making hemoglobin. They published their finding last month in the New England Journal of Medicine — naming the mutated protein “hemoglobin Toms River” after the baby’s hometown. Two genes called gamma globin are involved in making the form of hemoglobin found in fetal and newborn blood. Babies inherit a copy of each gene from both parents. Three of Julia’s four gamma globin genes were normal. The fourth had the mutation, slightly hampering the ability of her hemoglobin to bind to oxygen, said Mitchell J. Weiss, a pediatric hematologist at Children’s Hospital. “It was enough to change the color of the blood, but it wasn’t enough to seriously compromise oxygen delivery to tissues,” said Weiss, who collaborated on the paper with researchers from four other institutions. Within a few weeks, all babies start to make a different form of hemoglobin, which no longer involves the gene that bore Julia’s mutation. So her bluish skin color went away on its own. Four other such mutations are known to science, each named after the patient’s hometown. In the Toms River case, a key clue arose when Julia’s grandmother visited the hospital and recalled that the girl’s father, too, had been a blue baby with no serious consequences. Julia turned 3 last month. Her mom said she remains healthy, and her skin is reassuringly pink. — Tom Avril

ART CAREY / Staff

Frank Herrelko, 98, of Lower

Gwynedd, with some of the 350 medals he has won in senior athletic competition.

STERLING CHEN / Staff. Original DVR cable box image by Motorola

Even when you turn them off, TV set-top boxes keep gulping energy — $2 billion worth a year — to stay ever ready. There is a solution.

S

o your TV show’s over. You pick up the remote and press the button. Everything’s off, right? Not by a long shot. Possibly not even if all the little red lights are off. A new report shows that the set-top box in particular — the device that translates the signal from the cable, satellite, or other provider — keeps on guzzling power. And lots of it. In most cases, the report from the National Resources Defense Council found, the set-top boxes used almost as much power when they were off as when they were on. Over the course of a year, the total power use of some set-top configurations exceeds that of the big-screen TV they’re attached to. Or a newer-model refrigerator. Although the industry is promising improvement, at the moment there’s little an energy-conscious TV-watcher can do other than physically unplugging the thing — and putting up with a delay when you turn it back on. The NRDC report estimated that Americans are spending $3 billion a year to power their set-top boxes. Roughly 80 percent of households in the United States have some form of paid TV, and when you sign up, choices about which box to get are limited. The report found that the typical configuration of a highdefinition set-top box paired with a high-definition digital recorder uses more power than a 21-cubic-foot fridge. See GREENSPACE on E3

Always on

Energy Use Compared In average kWh per year.

S

ometimes it pays to trust a rat. At age 17, Frank Herrelko quit school and began working in a coal mine near his home in Western Pennsylvania to help his family pay off its debts. One day, during a break, he was throwing pieces of coal at the mine rats. “Son, don’t do that,” his father said. The rats are there for a reason, he explained. They have a sixth sense about impending disaster. Weeks later, Frank and his father were waiting for a coal car when Frank saw a rat scurry by and fetch her baby. Then the rat returned to retrieve a second baby. “Let’s get the hell out of here!” his father shouted. They’d scrambled barely See WELL BEING on E2

Typical household set-top box configuration

(1 HD-DVR, 1 HD set-top box)

446 New ENERGY STAR refrigerator (21 cubic feet, top freezer)

415 Recent model HD-DVR set-top box

275 ENERGY STAR version 4.1 42” LCD TV

180.5 Recent model HD set-top box

171 Compact fluorescent lightbulb (CFL)

17 100

200

300

SOURCE: National Resources Defense Council

400

This ‘Life in Full’ is a vitally active one

500

The Philadelphia Inquirer

To see a video about how Frank Herrelko stays active, go to: www.philly.com/herrelko.

‘Belief’ in evolution? It may be the wrong word By Faye Flam

W

TONY AUTH / The Philadelphia Inquirer (tauth@phillynews.com)

INQUIRER STAFF WRITER

hen the contestants in the Miss USA pageant last week were asked whether evolution should be taught in schools, many volunteered that they either “believed” or “didn’t believe” in the concept. “I don’t believe in evolution,” said Miss Alabama. “They should teach both sides since some people believe in evolution and some people believe in creation,” said Miss Arizona. “It’s something people believe in,” said Miss Florida. “I believe in evolution … and I like to believe in, like, the big bang theory,” said Miss California, who won the crown. Some scientists were not impressed, saying the use of the word belief as applied to evolution confused science with faith and discount-

ed evolution’s central role in biology. And though some opponents of N.J. Gov. Christie have wagged their fingers at a nonanswer he gave on evolution last May, scientists are sympathetic. At a news conference, Christie was asked whether he “believed in evolution or the theory of creationism,” acSee APES on E2 ADVERTISEMENT

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Personal Health Study rates Botox, Dysport in treating ‘crow’s-feet’ Are all wrinkle-relieving botulinum toxins created equal? For some readers (you know who you are) this is an important question. So you will be glad to know that a study by University of California-San Francisco researchers found that both tried-and-true Botox, approved in 2002, and rival Dysport, approved in 2009, were effective for lateral orbital rhytids — eye creases better known as “crow’s-feet.” However, Dysport was superior to Botox when patients squinted as hard a they could, according to the study, funded by the makers of the two brands of injections. For the study of 77 women and 13 men, each patient received one agent on the right eye, the other agent on the left. A researcher and the patient judged the patient’s results without knowing which agent was used on which side until the study was completed. Although Dysport turned out to be better at relieving wrinkles during “maximal contraction” of eye muscles, the researchers see a need for studies in other facial muscles. Their investigation (complete with photos) is in last week’s Archives of Facial Plastic Surgery. — Marie McCullough

Small diet changes can make a big difference, study shows Harvard University researchers have demonstrated what we all sort of know but hate to admit: Small changes in diet can add up to a big difference over time — for good or bad. Their study, published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine, analyzed self-reported information from more than 120,000 healthy, non-obese professionals who were followed for 20 years. On average, they put on less than a pound a year, but that added up to almost 17 pounds over two decades. The researchers correlated weight gain with changes in consumption of certain foods and beverages, as well as factors including exercise and TV watching. The impact of any single dietary change was small. For example, eating more desserts corresponded to gaining 0.7 pound over four years, while eating more fruits corresponded to losing that much over four years. However, the combined effect was hefty. Increased intake of potato chips, sugary beverages, and meats was associated with the greatest weight gains over 20 years, while eating more fruits, veggies, nuts, and whole grains was associated with the least weight gain. — M. M.

Even small amounts of alcohol affect drivers, research shows When it comes to drinking and driving, it may be that no amount of alcohol is safe. A new study reports that even “buzzed” drivers, with blood-alcohol levels well below legal limits, incur and cause more serious injuries than sober drivers. Current laws in U.S. states prohibit driving with blood-alcohol concentrations of 0.08 percent or more, but many other countries are stricter. Limits in Sweden and Japan are 0.02 percent and 0.03 percent, respectively. Now, researchers at the University of California at San Diego say that even a level of 0.01 percent may be measurably more dangerous than no alcohol at all. The current study analyzed all U.S. driving accidents involving at least one fatality from 1994 to 2008, focusing on injury severity. “Buzzed” was defined as up to a 0.01 blood-alcohol level. Compared with sober drivers, buzzed drivers’ accidents resulted in worse injuries to themselves, their passengers, and other people. The results are published in this month's issue of the journal Addiction. — Helen Shen

Advice from experts: Bathe before trips to water parks A message to parents visiting water parks this summer: Stop ignoring those “shower before entering” signs! The fear of mysterious substances floating down the lazy river is usually enough reason for parents to sway kids from swallowing pool water, but according to a recent poll by the University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital, only about 26 percent of parents surveyed thought it was important for their children to shower before getting into water-park pools. The study surveyed 865 parents of children ages 5 to 12 and found that nearly 4 in 10 of the families had visited a park in the last year. Only about 15 percent of the families surveyed thought there was a high risk for their kin to get sick from the water. Waterborne infections affect more than 10,000 Americans each year and are more common than drowning. Common recreational water illnesses such as cryptosporidiosis result in queasy stomachs and fever, and are spread by contact with contaminated water. Even though chlorine can kill most germs that cause illness, a simple solution is recommended by health professionals to help water-park staff maintain clean pools: Wash thoroughly with soap and water before swimming, check diapers often, and, as if it were not obvious, do not swim when you have diarrhea. — Juliana Schatz

How to Contact Us

The Inquirer’s medical and science staff welcomes your ideas. Please e-mail or call us if you’d like to share a news story or to comment on Health & Science. Editors Karl Stark, science and medicine editor, 215-854-5363 or kstark@ phillynews.com Don Sapatkin, deputy editor/health reporter, 215-854-2617 or dsapatkin@ phillynews.com On the Web Keep up with The Inquirer’s Health & Science coverage all week at www.philly.com/health

Reporters Tom Avril writes about science. 215-854-2430 or tavril@phillynews.com Sandy Bauers covers the environment, natural resources and wildlife. 215-854-5147 or sbauers@phillynews.com Stacey Burling writes about medical issues. 215-854-4944 or sburling@phillynews.com Faye Flam writes about science. 215-854-4977 or fflam@phillynews.com Marie McCullough covers women’s health, cancer and molecular medicine. 215-854-2720 or mmccullough@ phillynews.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Monday, June 27, 2011

Well Being By Art Carey

‘Life in Full’ full of activity WELL BEING from E1 100 feet when the roof of the chamber where they’d been working collapsed. “That rat saved my life,” Herrelko recalled the other day. And what a life it’s been, long and rich enough to warrant a book. In fact, Herrelko did just that. With the help of his son David, he wrote an autobiography that was published in 2008, Frank Herrelko: A Life in Full. The book chronicles Herrelko’s 34-year career in the Army and Air Force, from which he retired as a colonel. It includes such episodes as his tour of duty in Hawaii, where, as a young medic, he helped certify the health of prostitutes frequented by GIs. And the time he danced with Marlene Dietrich in Iceland. And the time he was chosen, because of his talent on the trumpet, to play “Ruffles and Flourishes” to welcome King George of England to the United States. Along the way, the reader comes to know a man of many skills and interests (musician, dancer, marksman, woodworker) and immense vitality and enthusiasm for life. The same can be said of Herrelko at age 98. All his life, he has taken care of his body by exercising and watching what he eats. In the 1980s, he learned about the senior Olympics and began competing at the state and national level in bowling and such track and field events as race-walking, the 50-meter dash, the high jump, long jump, triple jump, shot put, discus, javelin, and hammer throw. In 2003, he appeared in Sports Illustrated as one of the “Faces in the Crowd.” The magazine saluted him for winning nine gold medals (five in track and field, four in bowling) in his age group at the Huntsman World Senior Games in St. George, Utah, as well as a 10th as the overall track and field champion. In all, Herrelko has collected more than 350 medals for his athletic feats. He has become such a fixture at the Huntsman Games that he was inducted into its Hall of Fame. If he can enlist an escort, Herrelko plans to vie again in October. The competition is thinning in his age group, 94 to 99. Herrelko, who was born on June 8, 1913, still stands an inch over 6 feet and weighs 180 pounds, a weight he has maintained, give or take two or three pounds, since reaching adulthood. “God gives most people a pretty good body,” Herrelko said, “but many people don’t take care of it. The main thing is not to gain any excess weight.” He maintains his physique by walking. At least six times a day, he strides

ART CAREY / Staff

Frank Herrelko does bench presses at the fitness center at Spring House Estates,

Lower Gwynedd. Below, he sews, a favorite hobby, mending and altering for friends and fellow residents. “God gives most people a pretty good body,” he says, “but many people don’t take care of it. The main thing is not to gain any excess weight.”

the long corridors from his apartment to the lobby of Spring House Estates, the retirement community where he lives in Lower Gwynedd. Outdoors, he walks the campus trails. On Mondays, he bowls, usually with other residents, at a nearby alley. During one recent series, he averaged 170 scratch, with a high game of 190. Once or twice a week, he visits the fitness center, where he walks on the treadmill and lifts weights. “When I wake up, my pulse is 50,” Herrelko said. “During the day, it’s 62. That’s the pulse of a superathlete.” A while back, researchers at Johns Hopkins, impressed by his fitness, test-

ed and probed him over the course of three years as part of a human longevity study. For breakfast, Herrelko usually eats two eggs with bacon or ham. For lunch: soup. Supper consists of a variety of food but a constant accompaniment is one or two glasses of port wine. Some of that wine is given in gratitude by friends and other residents. One of Herrelko’s hobbies is sewing, and he does mending and alterations for free. Trained as a barber, he also gives haircuts. To keep his mind keen, he plays bridge and completes crossword puzzles. His memory is such that he can recite the Gettysburg Address, which he sometimes delivers dressed as Abraham Lincoln. Herrelko has four children, six grandchildren, and 12 great-grandchildren. His wife, Edie, who grew up in Bridgeport and to whom he was married 68 years, died last June at 94. “I sure miss her,” he said. “She was the best thing that ever happened to me.” He has conducted his life according to the advice of his father: “There’s nothing within reason that you cannot accomplish if you want to and are willing to work for it.” Contact columnist Art Carey at 215-854-5606 or acarey@phillynews.com.

Planet of the Apes By Faye Flam

‘Belief’ in evolution? It depends … APES from E1 ing. dismiss its breadth and scope. cording to the Star-Ledger. “That’s none A recent issue of the journal Science Ted Daeschler, associate director of of your business,” he retorted, which includes a story about a scientist who vertebrate zoology at the Academy of may not have won him the title of Mr. believes a virus causes mad cow dis- Natural Sciences, said it was frustrating Congeniality. Yet some thought it was a ease (the orthodox view blames an infec- to see evolution talked about as “just a reasonable response, considering the tious protein called a prion). She be- theory” or “a matter of belief,” since question. lieves it now because she hasn’t found these phrases obscure the central role Academics differ in their beliefs such a virus. If she does, its existence evolution plays in the life sciences. “It about the word belief. A number of them will no longer be a mere matter of be- actually unifies all fields of biological agree, however, that it can have multi- lief. sciences and makes them make sense,” ple meanings and is often misconOthers use the word belief in areas he said. “It’s not just this idea that hustrued, having the same denigrating ef- where different types of measurements man beings came from apes.” fect on evolution as the much-misunder- arrive at disparate answers, which has Daeschler said he sympathized with stood word theory. happened in the quest to date the split Christie when questioned on his belief “I have attempted, largely through between the chimp and human lineag- in evolution or creationism. “It’s a terrispurring on from several colleagues … es. A type of DNA analysis called a “mo- ble question,” he said. to never use the word In contrast, some did belief in talks,” said Arilike the question posed zona State University to the Miss USA hopephysicist and writer fuls. “The question ofLawrence Krauss. fers the opportunity to “One is asked: Does demonstrate the kind one believe in global of breadth (knowledge warming, or evolution, of history, culture, and and the temptation is science) that college to answer yes,” he graduates are expected said, “but it’s like sayto have, but often do ing you believe in gravinot,” said Eric Plutzer, ty or general relativipolitical science profesJULIE JACOBSON / Associated Press ty.” sor at Pennsylvania Miss USA contestants offered a variety of views on their “belief” in evolution. “Science is not like State University. religion, in that it doesn’t merely tell a lecular clock” indicates a somewhat Not all the contestants were necessaristory … one that one can choose to be- more recent split than is shown by the ly college grads, but their answers were lieve or not.” fossil record. So for now, some believe nevertheless revealing. Michael Shermer, the founder of Skep- the DNA and some believe the bones. Some addressed the teaching of evolutic magazine, also disapproves of the Physicist Krauss agrees that scien- tion as a revolutionary notion that had word belief as applied to science. “You tists tend to use belief when they lack never been tried. “I think it’s a great might say, ‘I believe in democracy’ or ‘I definitive evidence — as in “do you be- idea,” said Miss Delaware. “People will believe in gay marriage,’ ” said Sherm- lieve black holes exist and have a singu- have an issue with it,” opined Miss er, author of the book The Believing larity?” Utah. Brain. “But it is not reasonable to say ‘I It’s fair enough to apply the word to Most tried to advocate a middle believe in evolution,’ because this ideas that are still being debated within ground by approving of the teaching of would be like saying ‘I believe in gravi- the scientific community, said Gregory evolution along with “the other side,” or ty.’ ” Petsko, a biologist at Brandeis Universi- “creationism,” or “other theories,” or Others had less trouble with this locu- ty. But as ideas become established, the “belief in faith.” tion. Darwin himself discussed the be- word belief no longer applies. A few clearly advocated teaching evoliefs of his scientific colleagues in either “How we talk about things has a lot to lution, however. Miss Vermont did so, creationism or evolution, said Glenn do with how we think about them,” he and went on to say evolution was releBranch, deputy director of the National said, “and believe is the wrong word to vant to the way bacteria were becoming Center for Science Education. use in reference to evolution.” resistant to “drugs and whatnot.” And scientists today use the word all He said other established areas of sciOthers deflected. Miss Indiana said, the time, said University of Pennsylva- ence aren’t talked about this way. “Cer- perhaps wisely, that this might be a betnia linguistics professor Mark Liber- tainly plate tectonics isn’t. Atomic theo- ter issue for the government to work man, author of the blog “Language ry isn’t. Quantum mechanics isn’t. Each out than the contestants in a beauty Log.” Just a quick search of some jour- of these is as important to their respec- pageant. nal headlines revealed: “Do we still be- tive disciplines as evolution is to bioloWhich was surprisingly close to Chrislieve in the dopamine hypothesis? New gy.” tie’s answer to a follow-up question. data bring new evidence”; “Three reaAnd yet, evolution is still widely dis- Asked if creationism should be taught sons not to believe in the autism epi- cussed in the general public as a matter in New Jersey schools, he, too, said it demic”; and “Seven (and a half) reasons of belief. should be left up to governments — just to believe in Mirror Matter: From neuPenn philosopher of science Michael not the level of government he happens trino puzzles to the inferred Dark mat- Weisberg said the ambiguous use of be- to occupy. ter in the Universe.” lief can have a corrosive effect similar And yet, as these examples show, sci- to that of the word theory, which in sci- Contact staff writer Faye Flam at entists tend to use the word belief to be ence has a specific meaning but has 215-854-4977 or fflam@phillynews.com. synonymous with a suspicion, or hunch, been wrongly used not only to make Read her “Planet of the Apes” blog at when more definitive evidence is lack- evolution look speculative, but also to www.philly.com/evolution.


Monday, June 27, 2011

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Set-top box a power-slurper SideShow

GreenSpace By Sandy Bauers

GREENSPACE from E1 But that wasn’t the worst of it. When the researchers went into 50 homes and hooked up energy meters, they found that pressing the “off” button on the remote didn’t do much to stem the flow of electrons. “The aha moment was realizing that hitting the power button does next to nothing,” said Noah Horowitz, senior scientist for the New York-based nonprofit. “All it does is dim the clock.” If the box uses 30 watts of power when it’s on, it might use 29 watts when it’s “off.” The homeowners were horrified, Horowitz said. “Without fail,” he related, everyone thought that they were shutting down the power. Instead, they were adding $25 to $50 to their annual energy bill. The NRDC scientists estimated that of the $3 billion a year to power all these various boxes, $2 billion was expended when they were supposedly off. “These set-top boxes seem to be the biggest insomniac in the home,” Horowitz said. “They never go to sleep.” He figures it’s because there’s no incentive for change. The federal government has devised Energy Star standards for the boxes, and those that meet the standards (listed at www.energystar.gov) are an average of 30 percent more efficient. But Energy Star doesn’t address having an “off” button that means what it says. And since neither the manufacturer nor the signal providers are paying your electric bill, do they really care? Horowitz thinks they should. In an era of declining resources and increasing concern about climate change, energy efficiency is paramount. The typical home has myriad devices that consume power all the time — a gaggle of power-hungry microwave memories, stove-top clocks, cellphone chargers. Basically anything with a digital clock, a remote control, or a little red indicator light. This is also called standby power. It’s the trickle of electricity required to make sure the machine remembers the time and date, not to mention you, your remote, and your preferred settings. The latest estimate from scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California is that the average home has 40 products consuming standby power, accounting for 10 percent of residential electricity use. Set-top boxes are among the greediest, because they perform many of the same functions whether they are on or off. But they do vary. In its test of 50 homes, the NRDC found some “streaming devices,” which don’t do much other than accept the signal and adapt it, consume less than 10 watts. But the top-consuming digital video recorder used nearly 55 watts when it was on, and just over 50 when it was “off.” Representatives of Comcast, Verizon, and DirecTV said that they offered customers in this region many models and

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Craig and Weisz marry offscreen, too ASSOCIATED PRESS

Courtesy of Don Kennedy

Don Kennedy with his TV-cable box-DVD player/VCR setup on a movable cart in his

home in Swarthmore. To prevent the cable box from using power when the TV is off, he turns off everything using the power strip. that it was impossible to come up with a “typical” energy draw. Nevertheless, “this is something the entire industry is looking at,” said Comcast spokeswoman Jenni Moyer. She said the company was working closely with its equipment providers to increase energy efficiency. With the exception of a few older receivers that have been refurbished, DirecTV’s 2009 and later models are Energy Star-compliant, said spokesman Robert Mercer. In October, DirecTV plans to launch a receiverless scenario — no set-top box needed — that would further reduce energy consumption, Mercer said. Verizon also has been testing new delivery modes — Blu-ray players are one example. Another improvement, called an IP media server, would deliver service to as many as six TVs or other devices in a home, said spokesman Lee Gierczynski. The NRDC’s Horowitz would like to see things move a little faster. Europe is already way ahead. There, Sky Broadcasting offers a high-definition recorder that draws 23 watts in “on” mode and just 13 watts when the user initiates “light sleep” mode. Every night at 11, the boxes default to a “deep sleep” mode (unless the user overrides it) that consumes just 1 watt and requires only 90 seconds to become fully awake again. Meanwhile, what’s an American viewer to do? Ask the provider for an Energy Starcompliant box, for one. Or, as some committed folks are doing, simply unplug the thing. Or get a power strip with a switch. A variation of that is a “smart” power strip: Plug the

TV into the “control” outlet on the strip, and when the TV shuts off, the whole strip goes dark. The providers don’t recommend any of this. They say that if the box is fully off, it will miss updates that the box must download when the power returns, causing a delay. And, oh, aren’t we an impatient lot! But here’s a report from the Kennedy household in Swarthmore: Don Kennedy cares about energy use. He recently quit his information technology job an hour’s commute away so he could take one at a food co-op nearby — and ride his bicycle to work. Last month’s electric bill shows that he and his wife used just 306 kilowatt hours — about one third the national household average. They’ve made several changes to save energy, but a key habit, he said, is “we remember to turn things off.” Including their lone TV and Comcast set-top box, on a wheeled cart with an umbilical cord to a power outlet. When they’re not watching, it’s unplugged. Kennedy recently timed what happens when he reconnects: 8 Immediately: All channels available; channel number displayed when changing channels. 8 After six minutes: channel name displayed next to number. 8 After 10 minutes: name of program displayed. “We only watch a few channels anyway,” Kennedy said. “What you lose is the frills, not the necessities.”

Daniel Craig and Rachel Weisz, who play husband and wife in an upcoming film, have taken the roles to heart. Robin Baun of Slate PR, which represents Craig, says that the actor and Weisz have married. She did not offer any details. Craig is the latest James Bond and will star in The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. Weisz won an Academy Award for The Constant Gardener and starred in The Mummy. The two costar as a married couple in the unreleased film Dream House. Craig, 43, had a longtime girlfriend, Satsuki Mitchell, and has a daughter from a previous relationship. Weisz, 41, has a son with director Darren Aronofsky (Black Swan).

‘Cars 2’ takes the lead

Pixar Animation remains undefeated at the box-office races. The Disney unit’s animated sequel Cars 2 cruised to a No. 1 finish with a $68 million opening weekend,

according to studio estimates Sunday. That makes 12 wins in a row for Pixar since the company’s first feature film, 1995’s Toy Story. The original Cars had a $60.1 million debut in 2006, but factoring in today’s higher admission prices, it sold more tickets than Cars 2. Placing second was Cameron Diaz’s classroom comedy Bad Teacher with $31 million. The previous weekend’s No. 1 flick, Ryan Reynolds’ Green Lantern, fell to third place with $18.4 million.

No go for Lee museum

Efforts to build a Bruce Lee museum in the late kung fu movie star’s hometown of Hong Kong have stalled again. The Hong Kong government said Sunday that negotiations with the owner of Lee’s former home, businessman Yu Pang-lin, to convert the twostory house, now an hourly “love motel,” have broken down.

3 sisters: 1 religious, 1 gay, 1 devastated

Question: My religious-convert sister (RCS) has told my gay sister (GS) that RCS and her husband and children will not ever meet GS’s children (1-yearold twins). GS is still welcome to visit RCS and her family alone. RCS’s rationale seems to be that her children are getting old enough to ask hard questions, and she doesn’t know what to tell them about their aunts and their IVF cousins. I am devastated that our family apparently will never again be all together, not to mention incredibly angry and hurt. Our parents were never Contact staff writer Sandy Bauers at happy that GS is gay but man215-854-5147 or sbauers@phillynews.com. aged to cope, and have includVisit her blog at ed GS’s wife in the family for http://go.philly.com/greenspace. 10 years, so they are also upset at RCS’s announcement. I have not yet spoken to RCS, as this just happened. Excerpts from guest writers at The Inquirer’s Health Blog, at What on earth do I say and www.philly.com/checkup. do? I can’t participate in any family gathering to which GS covers all citizens. become like America’s. Many find it un- and her family are not invitA country crying, ‘Don’t take our Among his ideas is to promote greater believable that, at least until Obamacare ed, but I also can’t stand the national health care away!’ competition among providers, both pub- kicks in, millions of people in the United thought of cutting all ties lic and private. States who lack insurance can’t get need- with RCS and her family, givBy Robert Field, law and public health The outcry in response has been furi- ed care. en that I strongly disagree professor at Drexel University ous. Opponents have accused him of tryIn response to the backlash, Cameron with her choice of estrangeThe leader of a great democracy ing to make the one change that few in has scaled back his reform plan substan- ment in the first place. wants to make his mark by reforming England can abide — creating “Ameri- tially. His retreat is seen by some as a Answer: Instead of going at defeat, and it may come with a political RCS with outrage guns blazhealth care. He fears that if left un- can-style” health care. Most people in England like their sys- price. ing — or just going silent — touched, the system could become so We can take two lessons from this ex- try talking to her about the expensive that it will bankrupt the coun- tem just the way it is. A recent poll try. Others before him have tried for found that 59 percent believe it is the perience. First, the deeply emotional very narrowly defined issue envy of the world. An overwhelming ma- and divisive health-care debates we of what she says to her young comprehensive reform but failed. Political resistance to his plan is jority, 69 percent, sees the system as a have had in the United States are not fierce. He must proceed with extreme crucial element of British society and unique. It is a highly sensitive subject in caution. Above all, he must promise vot- want everything possible done to main- many countries. Monday’s Child Second, and perhaps more important, ers that the reformed system will look tain it. Only 15 percent would like the nothing like its dreaded counterpart system to be completely rebuilt — less critics of foreign systems should be carethan half the percentage who feel this ful of what they condemn. Opponents of across the Atlantic Ocean. Obamacare have stoked fears that it will The leader in this case is British way in the United States. The British don’t think their system is create British-style health care. They Prime Minister David Cameron. He wants to reform the National Health Ser- perfect. But nothing seems to scare may be throwing stones from a glass vice, the government-run system that them more than the thought that it could house.

Check Up

children. I believe RCS is demonstrating breathtaking cowardice and I would be outraged, but sometimes with family it’s helpful to get away from clashing principles (gasoline on a fire, usually) and try a more practical route. RCS is going to have to tell her kids something about gay people someday, since they’re bound to run across some eventually. If what she plans to say is something she can’t say to her sister’s (or a child’s) face, or can’t imagine having her kids parrot back to GS and family — then shouldn’t she reconsider her words? Ask her. A defensible belief is one that covers strangers and loved ones, adults and kids. It’s a long shot, but if she’s willing to discuss it with you — again, just this narrow, what-do-I-tell-my-kids question — then you two just might be able to work out phrasing that isn’t a cop-out the way estrangement is. Her “will not ever meet” edict is hyperbolic poo anyway, since the kids will decide for themselves whom they meet the moment they become adults. E-mail Carolyn Hax at tellme@washpost.com, or chat with her online at noon Fridays at www.washingtonpost.com.

Terrence has dreams of pro-football career By Patricia Mans

classes he enjoys most. Terrence dreams Therapy is helpBy Mitchell Hecht of a career in proing Terrence cope fessional football with issues resulting someday. For now, from the many sepaMcCLATCHY-TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE rations and losses ly if you have no spouse or planning now, not when a cri- a natural form of birth con- the 11-year-old is inQuestion: I am an 84-year-old children to provide ongoing sis occurs. You are on the trol referred to as lactation volved in a variety he has experienced. widow in pretty good health. care. Eager to have a perpath to success by addressing amenorrhea. Active breast- of activities. Like I’d like to remain in my home manent home, he The good news is that there these questions now. feeding of a baby in the ab- many boys his age, for the rest of my life, unlike are several trustworthy orgawould thrive with a sence of formula, rice-oat- he enjoys playing Terrence also many of my friends who have nizations to assist with find- Possibility of pregnancy meal cereal, or strained foods football and basket- likes computers loving, patient famialready moved into assisted- ing the resources needed for while breast-feeding ly that would prois said to be about 98 percent ball, skateboarding, and basketball. living facilities. My two chil- success in a home setting. vide a stable, struceffective in preventing preg- and riding his bike. dren live out of state and I’m One such organization is the Q: If I’m actively breast-feed- nancy. But once you give When he is indoors, tured environment not sure what my options are National Aging in Place Coun- ing my 5-month-old daughter, your baby other liquids or sol- he frequently can be found for him. He is very close to his for the future. How does cil (www.ageinplace.org). Its can I still get pregnant? I ids or skip a breast-feeding playing video games, watch- younger brother, although someone my age find out mission is to educate and pro- haven’t had any periods since session without pumping, the ing television, and listening they do not reside together, about resources to help as I vide resources to seniors so giving birth. prolactin level will drop and to R&B and rap music. He and it is important that they get older and need more aid? they may remain at home for A: While it’s true that the you’ll run the risk of un- also enjoys using computers. remain in contact. Terrence is How do I know who is trust- life, if that is their wish. brain’s milk-stimulating hor- planned pregnancy unless anAlthough Terrence can be a eligible for financial subsidy. worthy? There are local chapters in ev- mone, prolactin, suppresses other form of birth control is little shy when meeting new Answer: An impressive statis- ery state. Some of the compa- the production of the hor- used. people, he soon warms up, es- He and other children are tic that makes your question nies represented in an Aging mones that trigger ovulation pecially when the conversa- available for adoption by timely is that there are 10,000 in Place Council are in-home- and a menstrual cycle, any- Mitchell Hecht specializes in tion involves football or video approved applicants. For a free baby boomers turning 65 ev- care services, geriatric-care thing that creates dips in the internal medicine. Send games. In school, Terrence re- information packet, contact the ery day. If you want to re- managers, home-modification prolactin level could allow an questions to him at: “Ask Dr. ceives special-education ser- National Adoption Center, 1500 main in your home for life, services, elder and disability egg to be released. vices and benefits from the Walnut St., Suite 701, H.,” Box 767787, Atlanta, Ga. you need to rest assured that legal resources, transportasmall class size and individu- Philadelphia 19102. Call Prolactin levels during ac- 30076. Because of the large all home-care needs will be tion services, and many oth- tive breast-feeding should re- volume of mail, personal replies al attention. Computer and 215-735-9988, or visit the met over the years — especial- ers. The key here is to start main high enough to serve as are not possible. physical education are the website at www.adopt.org.

Ask Dr. H.

At-home help for the elderly

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THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Perry brings real talent to ‘Dreams’ tour By Katherine Silkaitis

in an era of self-made YouTube stars such as Justin BieA number of girls strolled ber and Rebecca Black, Perry around the Wells Fargo Cen- is a bit of a throwback. A perter on Friday night in lollipop- former with talent and desire, and cupcake-studded bras- she cut short her attempts to sieres. Also frequently sighted be a gospel singer in favor of were pepper- being molded into a pop star. mint-striped It would be an understateReview and fruit-in- ment to say that the change Music spired dresses, was successful. Even if her blue wigs, neon name isn’t instantly recognizminiskirts, and LED-lit cotton able, her songs are. Not only candy. are they seemingly everyIt was the Philadelphia stop where, but they are almost inof pop star Katy Perry’s nine- furiatingly catchy. They are month “California Dreams” pop anthems: emotional, uptour, and slightly bizarre out- beat, bombastic and full of fits with lots of sequins turned joie de vivre. out to be the norm. And though Perry, with her Since the release of her two backup singers, eight 2008 chart-topping album One dancers, and full band, has of the Boys, the 26-year-old been putting on the California singer has transformed her- Dreams performance for four self into a global celebrity. But months, she pulled it off with FOR THE INQUIRER

STEVEN M. FALK / Staff Photographer

Singer Katy Perry, with lollipop accents and fairy-tale staging, covered all of her hits at the Wells Fargo Center on Friday.

Silliness takes a bow

vigor, passion, and whimsy Friday night, with nary a scent of fatigue. A bit after 9, Perry emerged onto a stage decked out in lollipop and candy-cane staircases, cotton-candy-bordered projection screens and gumdrop cutouts. Wearing a red-andwhite dress with twirling peppermint, she launched into the title track from her second album, Teenage Dream. The crowd — mainly females of all ages, plus a smattering of love-struck junior high boys, boyfriends, husbands, and gay men — was ecstatic. Throughout the night, they belted out the lyrics with Perry, dancing in the aisles until security forced them back to their seats. Her two-hour performance covered all of her hits and

then some, including a few MTV Unplugged-style interpretations of tunes such as Willow Smith’s “Whip My Hair” and Jay-Z’s “Big Pimpin’.” There also were pyrotechnics, confetti, costume changes, a whipped-cream bazooka, and a cotton-candy cloud that hovered over the audience with Perry perched on top. Perry’s whimsical and humanizing stage banter, along with the show’s attention to detail and well-played effort to create a fairy-tale world, left a very satisfied crowd. From the choreographed dance routines to the well-executed special effects, it was a top-notch performance that left the audience still singing Perry’s songs long after the last notes of her closing song, “California Gurls.”

Review Music

Mighty like an orchestra The Wanamaker organ, age 100, took on Strauss and Rachmaninoff.

This production takes Shakespeare’s shortest, lightest comedy and plays it for laughs that all ages can enjoy.

By David Patrick Stearns INQUIRER MUSIC CRITIC

By Wendy Rosenfield FOR THE INQUIRER

At its heart, The Comedy of Errors is a ridiculous play with a preposterous premise. Scholars will point out its classical roots — two works by Plautus, conjoined — or its early window onto the playwright’s later inquiries into identity and power. But this Review Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival production, directed at the Theater fest for the second time by Russell Treyz (the first was in 1997), aims straight for the groundlings. It’s up to festival favorite Carl Wallnau as Syracusan merchant Egeon to set the story’s tone, and Treyz makes sure it is loud and clear by turning Egeon into a prop comic. He describes, with the assistance of baby dolls and stuffed animals, the shipwreck that separated him from his wife, one of his twin babies — both of whom are conveniently named Antipholus — and half of another set of twins — both named Dromio — whom he purchased to raise as his boys’ servants. Wallnau pulls ushers onstage to help dramatize his plight, and when the Syracusan Antipholus/ Dromio pair appear on the shores of Ephesus in search of their lost kin, Treyz widens the fun to include paying spectators. (Bald? Bearded? Consider yourself warned.) But this production belongs almost entirely to its Dromios, the diminutive Jacks to their masters’ twice-as-tall but not nearly as clever giants. Steve Burns plays Syracusan Dromio, with the always sympathetic Chris Faith as the Ephesian. And yes, Burns is the original host of Nickelodeon’s Blues Clues, a show whose young fans are old enough to thoroughly enjoy watching him mug, taunt, and swagger his way through a piece that, since it is one of Shakespeare’s shortest and

TV Today The Ellen DeGeneres Show (3

p.m., NBC10) — Lauren Graham; the cast of Jersey Shore; Usher performs.

How I Met Your Mother (8

p.m., CBS3) — When Nora causes Barney’s heart to literally skip a beat, he fears that he’s got a real cardiac issue.

Antiques Roadshow (8 p.m.,

WHYY TV12) — Fragile 1700s and 1800s miniature portraits and a 1964 Chrysler turbine automobile.

Gossip Girl (9 p.m., CW57) —

Jenny is tempted to venture back into Manhattan to meet Tim Gunn of Project Runway.

Law & Order: LA (10 p.m.,

NBC10) — Guests at a birthday party are beaten to death by a group of party crashers.

Daily Show With Jon Stewart

(11 p.m., COM) — Jennifer Aniston.

Conan (11 p.m., TBS) — Jason Sudeikis; Ke$ha performs.

Colbert Report (11:31 p.m., COM) — Grover Norquist.

Late Show With David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS3) — Shia LaBeouf; comic Bert Kreischer; Dawes performs.

The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (11:50 p.m., NBC10) — Jim Carrey; Selena Gomez.

Jimmy Kimmel Live (Midnight, 6ABC) — Louis C.K.; Missy Peregrym; Steel Magnolia.

Lopez

Tonight (Midnight, TBS) — Larry the Cable Guy; Gabrielle Anwar; Lloyd. The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson (12:37 a.m.,

CBS3) — Dennis Miller; Melissa Joan Hart.

LEE A. BUTZ

Featured in the Pennsylvania Shakespeare

Festival’s “Comedy” are Eleanor Handley (top), Lauren Orkus (left) and Abbie Richards.

The Comedy of Errors Playing at: Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival, Labuda Center for the Performing Arts, DeSales University, 2755 Station Ave., Center Valley, Pa. Through Sun., July 17. Tickets: $25 to $50. Information: 610-282-9455 or www.pashakespeare.org.

silliest, makes an excellent introduction to the canon. Eleanor Handley also holds her own here as neurotic, headstrong Adriana, wife of Ephesian Antipholus. Set designer Bob Phillips gets in on the levity with a purple-and-green Harlequin diamond-patterned rear facade, studded with windows like a Renaissance version of Laugh-In’s joke wall. Costumer Marla Jurglanis also has a bit of fun with the women’s headgear, including one wireframed fascinator featuring what appears to be a fishing lure, that might rival Princess Beatrice’s recent royal wedding topper. Though Treyz allows the action to sag during the second act, it is not entirely his fault; by Act 5, Shakespeare has pulled this plot to its outer limits. But in a wink at the audience, Treyz continues the joke even after the big reveal, an end worthy of the script’s credulity-stretching means.

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The Wanamaker organ arrived at its 100th birthday this week so fabulously refurbished and grandly enthroned in the second floor of the Center City Macy’s department store, you could almost believe this huge musical instrument (and Philadelphia institution) can do anything. Fearlessly, resident organist Peter Richard Conte capped a week of concerts Saturday with a program that, intentionally or not, competed with the Philadelphia Orchestra on its own territory. The program was Richard Strauss’ suite from the opera Der Rosenkavalier, in Conte’s own transcription, and a particularly intriguing plan for Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 — pianist Jeremy Filsell accompanied not by orchestra but the Wanamaker mammoth. Here was an organ created before most of America’s great orchestras became great. Now, it begins its second century when many cities wonder whether those same orchestras can be supported. By the end of the concert, however, any concerns that one might replace the other could be left at the Macy’s door. Though Strauss is business as usual for any orchestra, Conte’s tour de force transcription was fun to witness. His choice

SHARON GEKOSKI-KIMMEL / Staff Photographer

Organist Peter Richard Conte played the mammoth instrument,

accompanying Jeremy Filsell on a nearly overmatched piano.

of stops and timbres was refined, avoiding obvious primary colors, and he captured the elusive Viennese lilt in waltz sections. Yet musical seams — and gear shifts — were audible. Tempos often seemed dictated by the time the organist needed to manipulate the instrument. One couldn’t help listening with a mental checklist, comparing Conte’s version and Strauss’ original. Only in the Act 3 trio did I lose myself in the piece, when the music became a wall of sound that need not answer to any comparisons. The Rachmaninoff experiment had more compromises. The concerto’s ocean-of-music orchestration was easily approximated by the Wanamaker instrument, whose lack of sharp attacks and releases

wasn’t a problem the way it would be with, say, Beethoven. For logistical reasons, pianist Filsell was positioned quite apart from the organ, forcing him to commune with Conte through video monitors. Since the organ’s sound has an enveloping effect on everything around it, the piano had to be amplified; the sound quality, unfortunately, was penetrating and clattery. The almost Mozartean precision that Filsell brought to the music was a joy, often transcending the factors that are inevitable in an organ concert held in a department store — great for a special occasion, but not as a regular practice. Contact music critic David Patrick Stearns at dstearns@phillynews.com.

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THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

B

E5

Review Music

Charm now joins Vedder’s assets By A.D. Amorosi FOR THE INQUIRER

In his now 20-year role as Pearl Jam’s vocalist and lyricist, Eddie Vedder has been regarded as brooding, obtuse, intelligent, and intense. What he has probably never been thought of, until now, is charming. It is through his new solo efforts, the live Water on the Road Blu-ray and the sweet and aptly titled Ukulele Songs, that his levels of gracefulness have become apparent. During his sold-out solo show Saturday at the Tower Theater, with opener Glen Hansard and a few special guests, the elegant manner in which Vedder embraced songs old, new, borrowed, and blue was mesmerizing in a way that bested even his weightier performances with Pearl Jam. For all this allure and panache, Vedder never lacked for aggression. Starting with a long set of Ukulele Songs, his baritone vocals moved fluidly from low and impassioned to whispery and curious as his ukulele’s strum went from ticklish to hard. This dynamic drew the listener closer to the hurt heart of the melodically hokey “Sleeping by Myself” and the sad one-two punch of “Broken Heart” and “Light Today,” leaving Vedder to joke, “If

SHOWTIMES - MOTION PICTURE RATINGS G - All AGES ADMITTED, General Audience PG - All AGES ADMITTED, Parental Guidance Suggested PG-13 - Parents should give guidance for children under 13 R - Restricted under 17, Requires accompanying Parent or Guardian. NC-17 - Children under 17 not admitted.

r o t h m a n i n s t i t u t e o rt h o pa e d i c s

you don’t relate to these songs, I’m happy for you.” Vedder’s chattiness was a large part of the night’s enchantment, as was his exquisite instrumental prowess. Before a plucky version of Pearl Jam’s “Better Man,” he reminisced about closing down the Spectrum and welcomed a former employee, Charles DeFabio, to the stage for his 90th birthday. Vedder also talked about the lingering sorrow he felt visiting Manhattan’s Strawberry Fields, and that anguish fueled his version of Beatle John Lennon’s “You’ve Got to Hide Your Love Away.” And when he mentioned the passing of saxophonist Clarence Clemons, Vedder was joined by Hansard and Clemons’ nephew, Jake Clemons, who wowed the audience with his sax solo through a haunting version of Springsteen’s “Drive All Night.” While Vedder partnered with the Swell Season’s Hansard for a tenderly shimmering version of their “Falling Slowly,” and duetted with that same ensemble’s Markéta Irglova for the Tin Pan Alley standard “Tonight You Belong to Me,” he saved his best for cuts from his 2007 soundtrack album, Into the Wild, such as the clipped “Society” and a swampy but rollicking “Hard Sun.”

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UA MAIN STREET 6

UA OXFORD VALLEY STADIUM 14 3720-40 Main St., Manayunk (215) 482-6230 1-800-FANDANGO #(647) ADJACENT TO OXFORD VALLEY MALL (215) 750-3390 1-800-FANDANGO #(645) BAD TEACHER (R) (12:00 2:15 5:00) 7:45 10:30 PM H CARS 2 (G) (11:45 AM 2:30 5:15) 8:00 10:45 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (11:15 AM 2:00 4:45) 7:30 10:15 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (1:15) 6:45 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (1:45 4:30) 7:15 10:00 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) DP (1:00 4:00) 7:00 10:05 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (4:15) 9:50 PM

BAD TEACHER (R) (12:20 2:50 5:10) 7:50 10:30 PM H CARS 2 (G) BUCK (NR) (12:50 1:50 3:40 4:40) 6:30 7:30 9:20 (12:10 2:20) 5:10 7:20 9:30 PM 10:20 PM BEGINNERS (R) H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (12:15 1:15 2:40 3:40) 5:05 6:05 7:30 8:50 (1:20 4:10) 7:00 9:50 PM 9:50 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (12:00 1:30 2:40 4:00) 5:20 6:50 8:00 9:30 MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) 10:40 PM (1:30 3:05 4:00) 5:25 6:20 7:40 8:35 10:00 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (2:00 4:50) 7:20 10:10 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (2:10 4:30) 7:10 9:25 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) (2:20 5:00) 7:45 10:35 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP 2:30 5:00 7:30 9:45 PM (1:10 3:50 PM) THE HANGOVER PART II (R) X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) 2:35 5:05 7:35 9:50 PM (12:30) 3:30 6:45 9:40 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP THE TREE OF LIFE(PG-13) Mon: 4:00 (2:30 5:30) 8:10 10:45 PM 7:30 PM / MIDNIGHT IN PARIS(PG-13) KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) Mon: 4:00 7:00 9:15 PM (1:40 3:55) 6:20 9:10 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) DP Off Hwy. 611 and Easton Rd. (215) 491-4413 6:40 10:00 PM 1-800-FANDANGO #(337) BRIDESMAIDS (R) BAD TEACHER (R) (2:05 4:55) 7:40 10:25 PM (12:00 2:40 PM) H CARS 2 (G) Call Theatre for Show Information (11:40 AM 1:00 2:20 5:00) 6:20 7:40 10:25 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (11:00 AM 1:40 4:20) 7:00 9:45 PM DOUBLE DHAMAAL (NR) (Columbus Blvd.) Exit 20 off I-95 (12:30 3:30) 6:30 9:30 PM LANTERN (PG-13) (215) 755-2219 1-800-FANDANGO #(650) GREEN (11:35 AM 2:15 5:05) 7:50 10:30 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) Additional Free Lighted Parking Phoenixville, PA 610-917-1228 (11:10 AM 1:45 4:25) 7:10 9:50 PM THE GLOBE THEATRE PRESENTS THE www.thecolonialtheatre.com MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR (NR) (11:20 AM 2:00 4:40) 7:15 9:35 PM CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS (G) JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER 6:30 PM 6:30 PM SUMMER (PG) BAD TEACHER (R) (11:50 AM 2:10 4:30 PM) (1:10 3:40) 6:10 8:40 11:00 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) (11:15 AM 1:50 4:35) 7:20 10:00 PM H CARS 2 (G) Rt. 30 & Quarry Rd./Lancaster Pk. SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP (11:40 AM 12:50 2:20 3:30 5:00) 6:20 7:40 (610) 518-3404 1-800-FANDANGO #(336) (3:40) 9:15 PM 9:00 10:20 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) DP BAD TEACHER (R) H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (12:20 3:50) 7:05 10:05 PM (11:45 AM 2:10 4:55) 7:50 10:20 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (11:00 AM 1:40 4:20) 7:00 9:40 PM H CARS 2 (G) (11:45 AM 2:25 5:10) 7:45 10:10 PM (10:30 AM 12:45 1:20 3:30 4:15) 6:30 7:00 THE ART OF GETTING BY (PG-13) H KUNG FU PANDA 2 3D (PG) 9:15 9:45 PM 10:25 PM (11:05 AM 1:15 4:50) 7:25 9:40 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) (11:15 AM 2:00 4:45) 7:30 10:15 PM (12:10 1:30 2:50 4:10 5:30) 6:50 8:10 9:30 6:50 9:55 PM THE ART OF GETTING BY (PG-13) 10:50 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) DP 10:00 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (12:40 4:10) 7:30 10:15 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (11:30 AM 12:40 2:10 3:20 4:50) 6:00 7:30 (10:25 AM 11:30 1:05 2:20 4:00 5:55) 7:10 8:50 10:10 PM 8:45 10:05 PM Rt. 309 @ Richland Crossing MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (215) 536-7700 1-800-FANDANGO #(347) (10:55 AM 1:50 4:35) 7:40 10:35 PM (11:50 AM 2:15 4:40) 7:35 10:00 PM BAD TEACHER (R) MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER (12:00 2:30 5:20) 7:45 10:30 PM (10:40 AM 1:00 3:20) 6:20 9:00 PM SUMMER (PG) H CARS 2 (G) JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER (12:50 1:20) 3:40 (4:10) 6:30 7:00 9:20 (11:45 AM 2:00 PM) 9:50 PM SUMMER (PG) SUPER 8 (PG-13) H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (10:45 AM 1:35 3:55 PM) (1:50 4:30) 9:50 PM (11:00 AM 1:50 4:40) 7:30 10:20 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (11:00 AM 1:45 4:30) 7:20 PM (1:35) 4:25 7:15 10:05 PM (12:20 3:00 5:40) 8:20 10:55 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) SUPER 8 (PG-13) OC (12:05 3:10) 6:15 8:55 PM (11:25 AM 2:15) 5:05 8:00 10:45 PM (11:10 AM) 7:10 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) DP (11:15 AM 2:00) 4:30 7:10 9:40 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (12:30 3:45) 6:50 9:50 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (1:20 4:25) 7:25 10:30 PM (4:00) 10:10 PM (11:40 AM 2:50 5:35) 8:00 10:30 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) SUPER 8 (PG-13) OC KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) DP (12:00 2:40 5:20) 8:00 10:45 PM (12:40) 7:25 PM (12:15 3:05) 6:05 9:05 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) (11:45 AM) 3:10 6:50 9:55 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) (12:15 2:30 5:10) 7:20 9:45 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP (11:55 AM 2:55) 6:10 9:25 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON (12:10 2:40) 5:10 8:10 10:40 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) DP STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) (11:50 AM 2:25) 4:50 7:35 10:00 PM (1:00 4:00) 7:15 10:15 PM (12:25 3:40) 6:40 9:40 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON BRIDESMAIDS (R) DP BRIDESMAIDS (R) STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) DP (11:35 AM) 3:00 6:40 9:45 PM 6:45 9:30 PM (1:45 4:45) 7:50 10:40 PM

BUCKS COUNTY

REGAL BARN PLAZA STADIUM 14

CHESTER COUNTY

UA RIVERVIEW STADIUM 17

REGAL DOWNINGTOWN STADIUM 16

BAD TEACHER (R) (2:40 4:55) 7:40 10:00 PM H CARS 2 (G) (1:35 4:10) 7:00 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (2:10 4:50) 7:30 10:10 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (2:20 5:00) 7:50 10:25 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (1:50 4:30) 7:10 9:50 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (2:00 4:20) 6:40 9:20 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP (2:30 5:10) 8:00 10:30 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (12:50 4:00) 7:20 10:15 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP 9:30 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) (12:30 2:35 4:40 PM) BRIDESMAIDS (R) 6:50 9:40 PM

MONTGOMERY COUNTY Located on Mall Blvd. across from The Plaza King of Prussia 1-800-FANDANGO #(644)

THE GLOBE THEATRE PRESENTS THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR (NR) 6:30 PM 157 Bala Ave. - Off City Line Ave. 222-FILM #(588) BAD TEACHER (R) MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (11:30 AM 12:10 2:10 2:40 4:30 5:10) 7:00 1:15 4:15 7:15 9:25 PM 7:40 9:30 10:10 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP H CARS 2 (G) 1:00 4:00 7:00 9:30 PM (11:00 AM 1:40 4:50) 8:00 10:50 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) 1:30 4:30 7:30 9:45 PM (10:30 AM 1:10 4:20) 7:30 10:20 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (11:10 AM 12:50 1:50 4:40) 6:30 7:50 10:30 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (10:40 AM 1:20 3:40) 4:10 7:10 9:10 9:50 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (12:00 2:30 5:00) 7:20 9:45 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP (11:20 AM 2:00 4:45) 7:45 10:40 PM BAD TEACHER (R) X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) 12:30 2:55 5:15 7:40 10:05 PM (11:50 AM 3:30) 6:50 9:55 PM CARS 2 (G) THE HANGOVER PART II (R) 11:20 AM 1:50 4:20 6:50 9:20 PM (12:15 2:50 5:20) 7:55 10:45 PM CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) H KUNG FU PANDA 2 3D (PG) 11:50 AM 2:20 4:50 7:20 9:50 PM (10:45 AM 1:15 4:00) 6:45 9:15 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) 12:10 12:40 2:15 2:50 4:25 5:05 6:40 7:15 9:00 (1:00 3:50) 6:40 9:20 PM 9:35 PM H PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON SUPER 8 (PG-13) STRANGER TIDES IN DISNEY DIGITAL 11:30 AM 12:00 2:00 2:30 4:30 5:00 7:00 7:30 3D (PG-13) 9:30 10:00 PM (11:40 AM 3:00) 6:20 9:40 PM 109 W. Lancaster Ave. 222-FILM #(523) KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) BRIDESMAIDS (R) BAD TEACHER (R) 12:20 2:40 5:10 7:25 9:40 PM (12:20 3:20) 10:15 PM 12:30 2:50 5:20 7:50 10:10 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) 12:50 3:00 5:20 7:45 9:55 PM Located on Mall Blvd. across from 12:15 2:20 4:45 7:00 9:30 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) The Plaza King of Prussia 11:40 AM 2:10 4:40 7:10 9:45 PM 1:00 4:00 7:15 9:50 PM 1-800-FANDANGO #(644) SUPER 8 (PG-13) H SUPER 8: THE IMAX 12:00 2:30 5:00 7:30 10:00 PM EXPERIENCE (PG-13) BRIDESMAIDS (R) (10:50 AM 1:30 4:15) 7:15 10:00 PM CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) 1:15 4:15 7:40 10:10 PM (1:30 4:05) 6:45 9:25 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (1:45 4:00) 6:45 9:30 PM Edgmont Sq. Shopping Center @ Rt. 3

BALA THEATRE

DELAWARE COUNTY

ANTHONY WAYNE CINEMA

UA IMAX

New Jersey

REGAL EDGMONT SQUARE 10 (610) 325-8100

1-800-FANDANGO #(339)

BAD TEACHER (R) (12:30 2:50 5:30) 8:00 10:30 PM H CARS 2 (G) (11:30 AM) 2:00 (4:45 PM) H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (10:45 AM 1:15 4:00) 7:15 9:50 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (11:45 AM 2:30 5:00) 7:30 10:00 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (12:45) 3:15 (5:45) 6:40 9:15 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (12:00 2:15 4:30) 7:00 9:30 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) (12:15 2:45 5:15) 7:45 10:15 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (1:00 4:20) 7:20 10:20 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP 8:15 10:45 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) (11:15 AM 1:30 3:45 PM) MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) (11:00 AM 1:45 4:10) 6:50 9:20 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) 6:30 9:40 PM

REGAL MARKETPLACE STADIUM 24

Off Rt. 422 and Egypt Rd. (610) 666-6564 1-800-FANDANGO #(341)

BAD TEACHER (R) (12:10 1:00 2:30 3:20 4:50 5:40) 7:10 8:00 9:30 10:20 PM H CARS 2 (G) (11:45 AM 1:25 2:25 4:05 5:05) 6:45 7:45 9:25 10:25 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (11:15 AM 12:15 1:55 2:55 4:35 5:35) 7:15 8:15 9:55 10:50 PM DOUBLE DHAMAAL (NR) (1:15 4:25) 7:25 10:25 PM ANGEL OF EVIL (R) (1:40 4:30) 7:30 10:20 PM THE ART OF GETTING BY (PG-13) 7:55 10:30 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (11:00 AM 11:25 1:30 2:40 4:00 5:10) 6:40 7:40 9:10 10:10 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (11:40 AM 12:40 2:10 3:15 4:40 5:50) 7:10 8:20 9:40 10:50 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (11:20 AM 12:00 1:50 2:35 4:10 5:00) 6:30 One Block From 69th St. Terminal (610) 734-0202 1-800-FANDANGO #(654) 7:30 9:00 10:00 PM JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON SUMMER (PG) 3D (1:05 3:10 5:45 PM) Advance Tickets Now on Sale. SUPER 8 (PG-13) BAD TEACHER (R) (11:30 AM 1:20 2:20 4:20 5:15) 7:00 8:05 9:50 (1:15 4:00) 7:15 10:00 PM 10:45 PM H CARS 2 (G) X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (12:00 2:35 5:10) 7:45 10:20 PM (12:45 3:50) 7:20 10:30 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (1:30 4:15) 7:00 9:45 PM (11:10 AM 1:45 4:15) 6:50 9:20 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (12:50 4:00) 7:00 10:00 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (12:05 2:15 4:45) 6:55 9:05 PM (1:30 4:30) 7:30 10:30 PM H KUNG FU PANDA 2 3D (PG) MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (12:50 3:25 5:40) 8:10 10:40 PM (1:15 4:15) 7:15 9:50 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP (11:35 AM 2:05 5:20) 7:50 10:15 PM (1:25 4:25) 7:25 10:05 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) (1:20) 4:20 7:20 10:20 PM (1:10 4:25) 7:35 10:35 PM H KUNG FU PANDA 2 3D (PG) BRIDESMAIDS (R) (1:40 4:40) 7:40 10:10 PM (12:55 3:45) 7:05 10:05 PM

UA 69TH STREET

MONTGOMERY COUNTY

CAMDEN COUNTY

UA KING OF PRUSSIA STADIUM 16

(215) 918-1660 Rt. 30, One-half mile East of Route 202 (610) 251-0413 1-800-FANDANGO #(641)

Pennsylvania

REGAL RICHLAND CROSSING 12

Our physicians specialize in:

the Daily News and philly.com.

THE GLOBE THEATRE PRESENTS THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR (NR) 6:30 PM BAD TEACHER (R) THE GLOBE THEATRE PRESENTS THE (11:50 AM 12:20 2:40 3:10 5:00 5:30) 7:40 MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR (NR) 8:10 10:10 10:40 PM 6:30 PM BAD TEACHER (R) DP,DLP H CARS 2 (G) 1:35 4:15 7:30 10:20 PM (12:40 1:10 3:40 4:10) 6:30 7:00 9:20 9:50 PM CARS 2 (G) DP,DLP H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) 4:05 7:15 PM (1:50 4:40) 7:30 10:20 PM Regal Cinemas - UA Theatres CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) THE ART OF GETTING BY (PG-13) 1:05 10:05 PM REGmovies.com 6:55 9:10 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) DP,DLP 1:15 7:00 PM (OC) = Open Captioned GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (DA) = Descriptive Audio Available (12:30 1:40 3:30 4:30) 6:20 7:20 9:00 4:15 9:50 PM 10:00 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP,DLP H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) 1:30 4:40 7:35 10:30 PM (1:00 2:30 4:00 5:10) 6:50 7:50 9:30 10:30 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) DP,DLP MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) 12:50 3:40 10:35 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP,DLP (12:10 2:00 2:50 4:20 5:20) 7:10 8:00 9:40 1:25 3:55 10:25 PM 10:35 PM JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER SUMMER (PG) (2:15 4:35 PM) 4th Above Chestnut (215) 925-7900 SUPER 8 (PG-13) DISCOUNT PARKING at ON-SITE GARAGE (2:10 3:50 4:50) 7:45 9:25 10:25 PM 1 Blk. W. of Bustleton Ave. SUPER 8 (PG-13) OC ($6.50 with validation when parking after 5pm) 1619 Grant Ave. (215) 677-8019 1-800-FANDANGO #(651) (12:50) 6:40 PM CONAN O’BRIEN CAN’T STOP (R) BAD TEACHER (R) X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (1:00 3:10) 5:20 7:30 9:45 PM (11:25 AM 2:10 4:40) 7:00 10:15 PM (12:05 12:45 3:05 3:45) 7:05 10:05 PM H CARS 2 (G) THE TRIP (NR) THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (11:20 AM 1:50 4:25 PM) (1:15 3:45) 7:15 9:45 PM (12:15 2:45 5:15) 7:55 10:25 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) VIVA RIVA! (R) (11:40 AM 2:20 5:00) 7:40 10:20 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) (1:25 3:40) 7:20 9:35 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (1:30 3:55) 6:35 9:05 PM (11:30 AM 2:00 4:30) 7:30 10:00 PM REJOICE & SHOUT (PG) H KUNG FU PANDA 2 3D (PG) H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (1:15 3:55) 7:00 9:40 PM (2:05 4:25 PM) (12:00 2:30 5:15) 7:50 10:30 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) THE LAST MOUNTAIN (PG) MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (12:00 2:20 4:45) 7:15 9:45 PM (11:35 AM 1:40 4:00) 6:50 9:50 PM (1:00 3:15) 5:30 7:45 9:55 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON (11:50 AM 2:25 5:10) 7:45 10:40 PM STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) DP X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (11:55 AM 2:55) 6:15 9:15 PM (11:15 AM 2:05 5:05) 8:00 PM H PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP STRANGER TIDES IN DISNEY DIGITAL 2nd St. Between Chestnut & Walnut Sts. (215) 925-7900 7:10 10:25 PM 3D (PG-13) KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) THE TREE OF LIFE (PG-13) (11:45 AM 2:15 4:50 PM) 6:45 9:55 PM (12:00 1:00 3:00 4:00) 6:00 7:00 9:00 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) BRIDESMAIDS (R) 7:20 10:10 PM (1:20 4:15) 7:25 10:15 PM

214 Walnut St. (215) 925-7900 EVENING DISC. PARK...use AUTO PARK 2nd & Sansom St. after 12pm. $6.50 with validation

hip & knee

THEATRE TOM’W AT 8PM!

REGAL ENTERTAINMENT GROUP Regal Cinemas - UA Theatres REGmovies.com (OC) = Open Captioned (DA) = Descriptive Audio Available

BURLINGTON COUNTY REGAL BURLINGTON STADIUM 20

250 Bromley Blvd. Across from Burlington Ctr. (609) 239-3500 1-800-FANDANGO #(259)

BAD TEACHER (R) (11:50 AM 2:25 5:00) 7:30 10:05 PM H CARS 2 (G) (11:20 AM 12:00 2:15 2:55 5:10 5:50) 8:00 8:40 10:40 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (10:40 AM 1:30 4:20) 7:15 10:00 PM DOUBLE DHAMAAL (NR) (12:40 3:40) 6:40 9:40 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (10:35 AM 11:30 1:15 2:35 4:00 5:25) 7:00 8:10 9:50 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (11:00 AM 12:20 1:55 3:10 4:40) 6:10 7:40 9:00 10:30 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (11:40 AM 12:30 2:05 3:20 4:30 5:45) 6:55 8:20 9:25 10:35 PM JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER SUMMER (PG) (10:45 AM 1:20 3:55) 6:20 8:50 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) (12:10 2:45 3:50 5:35) 8:15 9:20 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) OC (1:00) 6:35 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (12:15 3:25) 6:30 9:35 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (11:55 AM 2:30 5:05) 7:50 10:25 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) DP (11:10 AM 1:40 4:10) 7:05 9:30 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) (12:50 3:30) 6:45 9:15 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) DP (12:05 3:15) 6:50 9:55 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) (610) 940-3893 (1:10 4:15) 7:20 10:15 PM

REGAL PLYMOUTH MEETING 10

1011 Ridge Pike 1-800-FANDANGO #(335) STADIUM SEATING IN SELECT AUDITORIUMS

GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (1:30 2:30 4:10 5:10) 7:00 8:00 9:40 10:40 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (1:00 2:00 3:40 4:40) 6:30 7:30 9:10 10:10 PM THE TREE OF LIFE(PG-13) Mon: 4:00 JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER 7:30 PM / MIDNIGHT IN PARIS(PG-13) SUMMER (PG) Mon: 4:00 7:00 PM / THE DOUBLE (1:15 3:30 PM) HOUR(NR) Mon: 4:00 PM / CERTIFIED X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) COPY(NR) Mon: 9:15 PM / GOODFEL(1:10 4:20) 7:20 10:30 PM LAS(R) Mon: 7:00 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) DP (12:50 3:50) 6:50 10:00 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (1:20 4:30) 7:15 9:50 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON 824 W. Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr 610-527-9898 STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) www.BrynMawrFilm.org Shows Vary Daily (12:55 4:00) 7:10 10:20 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) DP THE TREE OF LIFE (PG-13) 3:00 5:45 (1:40 4:50) 7:40 10:35 PM 8:30 PM THOR (PG-13) MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) 3:00 5:30 8:00 PM 6:40 9:30 PM

THE GLOBE THEATRE PRESENTS THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR (NR) 6:30 PM BAD TEACHER (R) DP,DLP 11:10 AM 12:10 1:25 2:25 3:55 4:55 7:15 8:00 9:40 10:35 PM CARS 2 (G) DP,DLP 10:30 AM 12:00 1:15 2:45 4:00 5:30 7:00 8:15 9:45 PM CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) 11:15 AM 2:00 4:45 7:45 10:30 PM THE ART OF GETTING BY (PG-13) DP,DLP 3:00 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) DP,DLP 12:50 3:40 6:45 9:35 PM GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) 11:50 AM 2:50 5:25 8:05 10:40 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) DP,DLP 10:40 AM 1:10 3:35 6:35 9:15 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP,DLP 10:35 AM 1:30 4:10 5:10 7:25 8:25 10:20 PM BEGINNERS (R) DP,DLP 11:20 AM 2:05 4:40 7:20 9:55 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) DP,DLP,CC 10:45 AM 1:55 7:10 10:10 PM THE TREE OF LIFE (PG-13) DP,DLP 11:45 AM 12:30 4:15 7:30 10:45 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP,DLP 10:25 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) DP,DLP 11:05 AM 2:05 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) DP,DLP 11:40 AM 2:10 4:25 7:35 10:15 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) DP,DLP 10:50 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) DP,DLP 3:30 6:30 9:20 PM RAVE CINEMA CLASSIC (2011) (NR) 1:00 PM

GLOUCESTER COUNTY REGAL CROSS KEYS STADIUM 12

Black Horse PK @ American Blvd. (856) 728-2500 1-800-FANDANGO #(265)

BAD TEACHER (R) (12:30 1:00 2:50 3:20 5:20 5:50) 7:45 8:15 10:05 10:35 PM ANGEL OF EVIL (R) (1:30 4:45) 7:40 10:40 PM GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (11:30 AM 1:20 2:20 4:05 5:05) 7:00 8:00 9:50 10:50 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (12:45 1:50 3:35 4:35) 6:30 7:30 9:20 10:20 PM JUDY MOODY AND THE NOT BUMMER SUMMER (PG) (11:45 AM) 6:50 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) (1:10 2:30 4:15) 7:20 9:10 10:25 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) (12:15 2:40) 6:40 9:00 PM H KUNG FU PANDA 2 3D (PG) (11:20 AM 1:40 4:25) 7:10 9:30 PM FAST FIVE (PG-13) (12:00 3:55) 7:15 10:15 PM

UA WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP 14

Rt. 555 & (Crosskeys)-Tuckahoe Rd. (856) 262-9300 1-800-FANDANGO #(602)

H CARS 2 (G) (11:00 AM 12:00 1:45 2:45 4:30 5:30) 7:15 8:15 10:00 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) (10:30 AM 11:30 1:15 2:15 4:00 5:00) 6:45 7:45 9:30 10:30 PM THE ART OF GETTING BY (PG-13) (10:55 AM 1:20 3:50 PM) MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (10:45 AM 11:15 1:30 2:00 4:15 4:45) 7:00 7:30 9:45 10:15 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) (10:35 AM 1:10 1:55 4:05 4:40) 6:50 9:40 10:25 PM SUPER 8 (PG-13) OC (11:10 AM) 7:35 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) (11:40 AM 2:25 4:55) 6:30 7:40 9:20 10:40 PM MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) (11:50 AM 2:50 5:20) 7:55 10:35 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) DP (11:20 AM 2:35) 6:40 9:50 PM H PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (PG-13) (2:05) 8:05 PM BRIDESMAIDS (R) (10:40 AM 1:35 4:25) 7:25 10:20 PM H THOR 3D (PG-13) (11:25 AM 5:10 PM)

Delaware

REGAL BRANDYWINE TOWN CENTER 16

Naamans Rd. & Rte. 202 Concord Pike (302) 479-0750 1-800-FANDANGO #(174) STADIUM SEATING IN SELECT AUDITORIUMS

THE GLOBE THEATRE PRESENTS THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR (NR) 6:30 PM BAD TEACHER (R) (12:20 2:10 2:40 4:30 5:10) 7:40 8:15 10:00 10:30 PM H CARS 2 (G) (11:45 AM 1:30 2:30 4:15 5:15) 7:00 8:00 9:45 10:45 PM Moorestown Mall (856) 222-9358 H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) 1-800-FANDANGO #(598) (2:00 4:45) 7:30 10:15 PM THE ART OF GETTING BY (PG-13) $6.00 All Day Tuesday. 3D up-charges apply. (1:40 4:35 PM) Holidays Excluded. GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (1:10 1:50 4:10 4:50) 7:10 7:50 10:10 BAD TEACHER (R) 10:45 PM (11:40 AM 2:30 5:20) 7:45 10:30 PM H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) H CARS 2 (G) (12:30 3:30) 6:30 9:30 PM MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) (1:20 4:10) 7:00 PM (1:20 4:00) 6:40 9:15 PM H CARS 2 IN DISNEY DIGITAL 3D (G) SUPER 8 (PG-13) (11:00 AM 1:50 4:40) 7:30 10:20 PM (1:00 3:40 4:20) 7:20 9:40 10:20 PM X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) DP GREEN LANTERN (PG-13) (12:10 3:45) 6:45 9:50 PM (1:35 4:25) 7:15 10:05 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP H GREEN LANTERN 3D (PG-13) (11:55 AM 2:15 5:00) 8:10 10:40 PM KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) DP (11:25 AM 2:15 5:05) 8:00 10:45 PM (12:00 2:20 PM) MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG-13) (11:10 AM 1:40 4:00) 6:50 9:40 PM (12:50 3:50) 6:50 9:20 PM PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON SUPER 8 (PG-13) DP STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) (11:35 AM 2:20 4:55) 7:35 10:10 PM (12:40) 6:20 PM THE HANGOVER PART II (R) DP BRIDESMAIDS (R) 7:45 10:35 PM 9:50 PM

UA MOORESTOWN


E6 B

www.philly.com

Monday, June 27, 2011

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Family Circus

Pickles

Non Sequitur

LIO

“Sorry, that’s how it is. I’m your sister, so you’re always gonna hafta be my brother.”

Baby Blues Sally Forth

Mutts Baldo

Carrie Rickey

Steven Rea

Funky Winkerbean

http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/onmovies

http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/flickgrrl

Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, only in The Inquirer

Talking About Television @philly.com Get Fuzzy

Inquirer TV critic Jonathan Storm chats online with Ellen Gray of the Daily News at noon Thursdays at www.philly.com. Read his blog at www.philly.com/philly/blogs/storm.

Get Fuzzy is on vacation. New strips will return July 4.

Bigar’s Stars

Zits

Overboard

The Piranha Club

Edge City

By Jacqueline Bigar

Happy Birthday This year, you might react to others and their choices often. It is also the same for others — they will have a similar reaction to you! You often act in a quirky manner, causing a strong reaction, especially publically. Aries (March 21-April 19) ★★★ Understand the expense of not handling your anger in an acceptable fashion. You don’t realize the behavior you trigger when you don’t express yourself. Tonight: No wild spending. Taurus (April 20-May 20) ★★★★★ Your high energy could provoke some reactions. At the same time, you gain a sudden insight into your own actions and spending. You could be expressing some good ideas, but are others hearing you? Tonight: As you like it. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ★★★ Know when to say little and listen. Friends act in the most unanticipated manner. You have a hard time sorting out what is important. Tonight: Make it OK to vanish. Cancer (June 21-July 22) ★★★★ You might want to juggle your schedule in order to accommodate a meeting. Evaluate what is happening with others, especially if you see that an element of confusion runs high. Tonight: Where the action is.

Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★★ A must appearance — whether it is unrelated to work or not — could be critical. Unexpected news marks your decisions. You might want to rethink a situation. Tonight: Out late. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★★★ Keep reaching out for others. You might want to brainstorm with others for another, more effective approach on a key issue or project. Tonight: Get past rigid thinking. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ★★★★★ You might want to do whatever is necessary to motivate a partner. This person might be stuck in rigid thinking. Once he or she gains a key insight, the situation will change, in a fashion you might not expect. Tonight: Say “yes” to an offer. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★ Continue to defer to others. Feel no need to pursue the path you have chosen. Watch what occurs when others have a similar situation or responsibilities as you. Tonight: Sort through offers. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ★★★ Know what your objectives are before you get started. Someone might be pushing you beyond your normal levels. Think positively about an unexpected offer. You could be quite sur-

prised. Tonight: Call it a night when you get tired. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ★★★★★ Creativity allows greater options and opens you up to a new idea. Listen with care to news that involves real estate, a family member or some other domestic matter. Tonight: Put your feet up. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ★★★★ You could be a bit more feisty than you realize. You create options when you think outside the box, although, an idea could be overwhelming to others. Find an easier way of explaining your ideas. Tonight: Happily mosey on home. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★★★ Keep conversations active. Refresh a situation with a new idea. You might be careless, as you are in your head. As a result, observe a tendency to be accident-prone. Do use good sense handling machinery or a car. Tonight: Join a friend. Born on this date Clothing designer Vera Wang, former presidential candidate Ross Perot, author Helen Keller

“By Jove, Holmes, that ruse of yours would not have occurred to me. I’d have tried to guess the clubs and I fear I would have misguessed.” “I might have failed at guessing also, Watson,” said Sherlock Holmes, “which is why I prefer to gather information and reason logically.” The two were at Holmes’ Baker Street digs, reviewing a match against Professor Moriarty. When Watson raised Holmes’ response of two diamonds, the great detective went straight to slam. Moriarty led a trump, and Holmes drew trumps with the A-K and next led the dummy’s king of spades. When East followed low, Holmes ruffed and ran the hearts to discard three clubs. He next led a club — and put up the king when East played low. Making six. “East would have covered the king of spades if he had the ace,”

Holmes explained, “but if Moriarty had both black aces, he surely would have led one. So I knew East had the ace of clubs.” “Amazing, Holmes.” “Eleemosynary ... I mean, elementary.”

Five-star forecast

Find Jacqueline Bigar’s daily horoscope and her weekly “Love and the Stars” online at http://go.philly.com/ horoscopes Reach her by e-mail at: jacquelinebigar@aol.com

Bridge By Frank Stewart

DAILY QUESTION: You hold: ♠ A 9 7 4 2 ♥ 10 6 4 3 ◆ 3 2 ♣ Q 10. Your partner opens one club, you bid one spade and he raises to three spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner promises a hand worth about 17 points in support of spades with four-card support. Since he didn’t open one notrump, his distribution will be unbalanced or semibalanced. You have only six high-card points, but your fifth spade will be a winner, and your queen of clubs is “working.” Bid four spades.


Monday, June 27, 2011

www.philly.com

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER

Dustin

Doonesbury

Jump Start

Beetle Bailey

Blondie

Peanuts

B

E7

Doonesbury is on vacation. New strips will return July 4.

Sherman’s Lagoon Hagar the Horrible

Pearls Before Swine Rex Morgan, M.D.

Ziggy

Crossword Puzzle

by Wayne Robert Williams

ACROSS 1 Block of paper 4 Compared (to) 11 Half a Eur. country, once 14 Pay attachment? 15 Utterly ridiculous 16 “Exodus”role 17 “Dallas” star 19 Brit. flyboys 20 Take care of 21 Energize a battery again 23 Go a few rounds 26 Floor 27 Police alert ltrs. 30 Grade sch. 32 Covers in goo 35 Stevedores’ grp. 36 Constant traveler 38 Dough 39 Scandinavian man’s name 41 Fencing maneuver 43 __ contendere 44 Pound and Stone 46 Conclusive evidence

48 Took off 49 Indoor convertible? 51 Lennon’s Ono 52 Ethnic ending 53 Bring about 55 Stool supports 57 Respectful Hindu titles 60 Kuwaiti rulers 64 Whitney or Wallach 65 33rd President 68 Heavy imbiber 69 Conceited one 70 Turkish honcho 71 Swallowed 72 Dana of “Desperate Housewives” 73 Chinese food additive DOWN 1 D.C. old-timers 2 Winglike parts 3 Challenge 4 Expose to view 5 Mag 6 Korean car maker 7 Cal Tech grad 8 City near Avignon 9 Passes into law

(Solution tomorrow)

10 Elliott of ling device “Trading 45 Boiled Places” 47 John of Creedence 11 Longtime “I’ve Clearwater Got a Secret” Revival host 50 Injure 12 Dull situation 54 Pope John Paul 13 Rampant II’s first name 18 Civil libs. 56 Tex. campus 22 Greek poet 57 Flat-topped hill saved by a 58 Oodles dolphin 59 Mlle. from 24 Like a cocked Madrid hat 61 Scholar of 25 Chart again Islamic law 27 Suffered 62 Cleaning sickness cloths 28 Public square 63 Impediment 29 “Can’t Get Enough of Your 66 Yang’s partner 67 Half a fly? Love, Babe” singer Saturday’s Puzzle 31 Get hitched to 33 Raines and Fitzgerald 34 Rhone tributary 37 Slobber 40 Nativeborn Israeli 42 Coup-

www.ADailyCrossword.com

6-27

Word Game

(Solution tomorrow)

Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. Solution tomorrow.

Difficulty level ★

6-27

Today’s Word — TRINAL (TRY-nul: Having three parts; threefold.) Average mark — 13 words Time limit — 30 minutes Can you find 20 or more words of four or more letters in TRINAL?

Saturday’s Word — POLITICAL: pact, pail, pall, patio, pica, picot, pill, pilot, pita, plait, plat, plot, politic, poll, opal, optic, optical, otic, laic, licit, lilac, lilt, local, lotic, iota, italic, taco, tail, talc, tall, till, tipi, toil, toll, topi, topic, topical, call, capitol, capo, cilia, clap, clip, clop, clot, coal, coat, coati, coil, cola, colt, copal, alit, allot, alto, atoll, atop

Dennis the Menace

Cryptoquote

6-27

WOT

EYQ

SW

MWOXTLGYSJWO ZWLJOK

JG

SPJOK.

SW —

NLTXTOS BLWU

GYQ

BLYOH

SPT

ZTJOK ELWOK

GPTTV

Saturday’s Cryptoquote: Remember, your body needs six to eight glasses of fluid daily — straight up or on the rocks. — P.J. O’Rourke

Wonderword

©2011 Williams Square, Inc.

Conceptis Sudoku

Saturday’s Solution

Jumble


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