4-11-13 Centre County Gazette

Page 1

THE CENTRE COUNTY

GAZETTE www.CentreCountyGazette.com

Spring Lawn & Garden Guide It’s time to plan your summer landscaping projects. Check out the Gazette’s guide to find out everything you need to know about planting flowers, adding shrubs and using mulch properly./Pages 14-18

April 11-17, 2013

Volume 5, Issue 15

FREE COPY

Center supports victims of abuse

Handmade bowls will aid area food bank

By SAMI HULINGS

BELLEFONTE — As far as fundraisers go, this one is unique. From 5 to 7 p.m. on April 19 at Faith United Methodist Church in Bellefonte, members of the community will have a chance to dine on all-you-can-eat pasta while helping the FaithCentre Food Bank. However, unlike other fundraisers, you won’t turn your dish in when you leave. Instead, you’ll take it with you.

By CHRIS MORELLI editor@centrecountygazette.com

shulings@centrecountygazette.com

STATE COLLEGE — Somewhere, at this very moment, a woman is being abused. Berated and assaulted, she is left bruised, broken and physically and emotionally scarred. She could be your neighbor, co-worker, student or family member, but you may never know of her abuse — until it is too late. According to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, 85 percent of all violence victims are women. One in every four women will somehow be affected by domestic violence in her lifetime, but only about one-quarter of all physical assaults, one-fifth of all rapes and one-half of all stalking incidents against women are reported. In an attempt to change those statistics, the Centre County Women’s Resource Center works throughout the year to aid those affected by domestic and sexual violence. April is Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention month in the United States. In addition to its 24-hour crisis hotline, emergency shelter, counseling and support groups, legal and medical advocacy program, transitional housing program and other agency referrals, the Women’s Resource Center also offers educational programs to abuse survivors, area service providers and the general public. All services offered by the center are free, confidential and professional. “Our mission here is really twofold. Of course it is to provide services for any victim, but it’s also to do primary prevention,” said Jody Althouse, CCWRC director of outreach and communications. According to Althouse, primary prevention is an important CCWRC program where members of her outreach team spread the message and vision of the center, prevention of abuse, through programs at local schools, church organizations, fairs and other local events. Programs include topics such as sexual assault, domestic violence, teen dating violence, sexting, child sexual abuse and mandated reporting. By presenting the public with information on these issues, Althouse hopes the general outlook on domestic and sexual abuse will change. “Our other goal is to change the social norm, change the culture that promotes rape, that accepts it, almost rewards it to an extent that the victim is blamed,” she said. Althouse said oftentimes when people read about a sexual assault in the newspaper, they question what the victim was wearing, how much alcohol she consumed during the night or why she was out alone.

Women’s Shelter, Page 5 Opinion ................................. 7 Health & Wellness ............ 8, 9

If you go Submitted photo

RELIEF EFFORT: Centre County Girl Scouts partnered with Dino’s Operation Shoebox to send 250 backpacks of school supplies to an orphanage and women’s shelter in Kabul. Called Operation BackPack, Port Matilda Girl Scout Troop 41230 had the help of other local Scouting troops, churches, organizations and people in the community to carry out the project.

Local Girl Scout effort spreads caring globally Operation BackPack helps the needy in Kabul By MARJORIE S. MILLER mmiller@centrecountygazette.com

STATE COLLEGE — Girl Scouts in Centre County recently took part in a project called Operation BackPack, a local philanthropic effort with an international impact. Local Girl Scouts partnered with Dino’s Operation Shoebox, a nonprofit that sends packages and letters to troops overseas, to collect and fill 250 backpacks of school supplies to be delivered to an orphanage and women’s shelter in Kabul, Afghanistan. Tara Mondock, troop leader of Junior Troop 41230, said her troop of nine fifthgrade Grays Woods Elementary students had the help of other local Scout troops, as well as a variety of area churches, organizations and residents to compile and stuff the sacks. The backpacks were delivered about three weeks ago to Operation Shoebox’s location in Pennsylvania Furnace, Mondock said. “They will then be shipped to Kabul and another orphanage where service

Education ........................... 10 Community ................... 11-13

Lawn & Garden Guide .. 14-18 Sports ............................ 19-23

men and women volunteering will put these supplies to great use,” she said. Mondock’s Port Matilda troop has been working with Dino’s Operation Shoebox for the past five years gathering Girl Scout cookies to send to soldiers. This year, the Scouts reached out to the new director, Paula Parker, to ask what else the organization needed help with, Mondock said. “There are many reasons that this is an important project,” Parker said. “The Afghan orphans don’t have enough funding to purchase many school supplies. Because of the hard work of the Centre County Girl Scouts and the partnership with Dino’s Operation Shoebox, each child will have a backpack of their own.” Beginning Feb. 22, the Girl Scouts collected and purchased supplies, and spread the word to family and friends. Drop-off points were established at local churches, Mondock said.

Girl Scouts, Page 4 Arts & Entertainment ... 24, 25 What’s Happening ....... 25, 26

What: All-you-can-eat pasta dinner in ceramic keepsake bowls When: 5-7 p.m., April 19 Where: Faith United Methodist Church, Bellefonte Cost: $25 More information: (814) 355-0880, ask for Nicole. For $25, those attending the all-you-caneat dinner will choose a bowl handmade by Penn State ceramics students. After the meal, the bowl goes home with its owner. The fundraiser is the brainchild of Penn State graduate student and teaching assistant Roberto Lugo. “I’ve always been taught to give back to the community,” Lugo said. “That’s just who I am.” Lugo said that the project’s roots began following a random trip into Bellefonte. He saw people entering and exiting the FaithCentre with food. He was drawn to the food bank and wanted to help, he said. “This all started when I was in the (FaithCentre) in Bellefonte. I saw a lot of people coming in for food, and I thought there had to be some way to help,” he said.

Fundraiser, Page 3

MAUREEN LOCKARD/The Gazette

FILL ’ER UP: Bowls just like this one will be up for grabs at an all-you-can-eat pasta dinner on April 19 in Bellefonte.

Group Meetings ................. 27 Puzzles ................................ 28

Business ........................ 29, 30 Classified ............................ 31


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THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

ChristinaWeaver Christina is a 2011 graduate of the Central PA Institute of Science and Technology and the Bellefonte Area High School. She completed the 3-year Early Childhood Program at CPI with honors and received the Outstanding Student Award in her program area. While at CPI, Christina maintained an “A� average in her academic classes. Her experiences through CPI included internships in life skills and first grade classrooms in the Bellefonte School District. Christina is currently enrolled in the Early Childhood and Special Education programs at Lock Haven University.

APRIL 11-17, 2013

Front and Centre RAISING FUNDS: A fundraising dinner was held earlier this month at the Old Gregg School to aid the Penns Valley Youth Center. Page 11

SHOWTIME: Students at Bellefonte Area High School will stage "South Pacific" this weekend in the auditorium. The musical runs through April 13. Page 24

RUNNERS UP: The Bellefonte Area High School softball team took second place at the B.J. Wetzler Memorial Tournament, losing to Bellwood-Antis, 1-0. Page 19

LAND SALE: The Chamber of Business and Industry of Centre County and a new partnership have agreed to the sale of properties in the Benner Commerce Park. Page 29

CORRECTION POLICY The Centre County Gazette corrects errors as soon as they are brought to our attention. Please contact us at editor@centrecountygazette.com to report a correction.

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

Fundraiser, from page 1 Lugo knows what it’s like to be in need. He grew up in Philadelphia. His family, he said, didn’t have things easy and often had to take advantage of food pantries. He hasn’t forgotten where he came from. “I’ve been there,” he said. “I’ve had to use a food bank. It’s tough.” Over the past several months, Penn State students have crafted the bowls. Some are plain, others are painted and some have ornate designs on them. Each one is unique, according to Lugo. “I asked my fellow graduate students to help and they really got behind the project,” Lugo said. “All of those who took part come from different places. I think that

came across in the project. Every bowl has a different story.” There will be approximately 120 bowls for sale, according to Lugo. The FaithCentre Food Bank serves approximately 800 people every month, according to executive director Nicole Summers. She said she is excited for the firstever all-you-can-eat pasta bowl fundraiser. “I think it’s pretty unique,” Summers said. “It’s not like a regular spaghetti dinner. We’re planning on having four different types of sauces. There will be a traditional Italian sauce, and my church is making a bolognese sauce. Some are simple, some are exotic. It’s going to be pretty yummy.” Since the bowls are refillable, diners will

PAGE 3 but this is really about all of us,” Lugo said. Summers said she is grateful that Lugo took on the project. “I’m really impressed with him. He’s going to graduate school and he’s taking time out to find students to make these bowls,” she said. “He’s done a really great job. These are really nice bowls for a really good cause.” You can reserve your bowl by calling the FaithCentre at (814) 355-0880.

have a chance to sample the sauces. There will also be bread and salad. Ice cream will be served for dessert. This isn’t the first time that Lugo has taken on such a project. When he was living in Kansas City, Mo., he helped at a local church that provided meals for the homeless. “For me, the big thing is doing something positive for the community. It does make you feel really good as an individual,

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MAUREEN LOCKARD/The Gazette

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THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

Girl Scouts, from page 1 The initial goal was to fill 101 backpacks, Mondock said, in celebration of the Girl Scouts’ 101st birthday. However, after Penn State’s Whitmore Lab donated hundreds more, that number quickly grew. “This is a start for the girls,” Mondock said. “They may want to do this every year.” Collected supplies include notebooks, paper, pencils, erasers, rulers, pens, highlighters, crayons and teacher supply boxes, Mondock said. “This is a huge project with benefits we may never see, not only for the Afghan community, but internationally as well,” Parker said. “It’s a big deal for the Girl Scouts as well. What a lesson for them. They are not only learning how to support our troops in this project … they are also giving to children in need in Afghanistan. This project is a real example of how even a group of young girls can have a worldly impact.” Mondock said the Girl Scouts have done

APRIL 11-17, 2013

a lot of community service in the local area, but Operation BackPack “really extended our reach globally.” “They can see what a difference they can make collectively,” she said. This project particularly “hit hard for them,” Mondock said, because the supplies they collected to send overseas will go to children their age, students just like them who do not have the same resources as they do. “They were eager to do it,” Mondock said. “It was an incredible thing to watch.” Parker, also co-founder of Military Families Ministry, said projects like these help young people get involved in doing something for someone else. “I think that community service needs to be an important part of our children’s lives,” she said. “I believe that this project will leave a lasting impression on many … not only the international troops serving alongside the U.S. troops, but the Afghan people as well. Watching the kids helping other kids a world apart from their own is an amazing experience and something

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they won’t soon forget.” Additionally, Operation BackPack may allow these orphanages to teach differently, and perhaps more effectively, Parker said. “Imagine the lifelong impact … they have a chance to get an education,” she said. “I would like to think this will open many doors and will positively impact the lives of these kids. We may never see the full impact on those involved in this project.” Donors who helped collect supplies, according to Mondock, include: Girl Scout troops 41230 and 40018, Girl Scouts in the Heart of PA’s State College Regional office staff, Bellefonte Area High School staff, Grays United Methodist Church, Halfmoon Christian Fellowship Church, St.

John’s Episcopal Church in Bellefonte, and the Mondock, Shannon and Parides families. According to its website, Dino’s Operation Shoebox was founded in 2003 in an effort to send support, snacks and personal care items to troops deployed outside of the U.S. The organization arranges “We Care” packages, wounded warrior bags, kids’ items bags, “Adopt a Troop,” “Troops for Teachers,” “The Incredible Bulk,” and troops groups, among other projects. The organization replies on donations and partnerships. Military Families Ministry and Dino’s Operation Shoebox work collaboratively. For more information, visit www.operationshoebox.com or www.militaryfamiliesministry.com.

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

Women’s Shelter, from page 1

“We let them know there is an agency supporting them,� she said. As assistant director of the Sylvia Stein Shelter, Hamilton also works to provide direct services to shelter residents in the form of counseling, goal-setting, safety planning, advocacy information and referrals. “It provides housing for women and their children who are fleeing domestic violence. What we offer in addition to merely a place to stay is on-site counseling,� she said. Though it is not a long-term shelter, the Sylvia Stein Shelter is staffed with counselors 24 hours a day, seven days a week. These counselors provide advocacy to help with goal-setting and support from the center. Hamilton said women also receive help from others in similar situations through “a lot of self-healing and group healing� in the domestic violence and sexual assault support groups offered at CCWRC. “They (the women) get a lot of support from one another. There is a lot of great discussion (in group),� she said. Group topics may range from the women’s feelings that day to specific situations. “It’s very exciting when things are not planned and it goes off in a very interesting way,� Hamilton said. “You always learn new things.� Being able to interact with the women who come to the center for help through group sessions and housing provides Hamilton with a unique experience. “The most fulfilling this is working

“Those questions should never be asked. The question that should be asked ‘Why did he do that?’ or ‘Why didn’t his friends stop him?’ Put the blame where it belongs, on the perpetrator, not on the victim,� she said. “That’s a huge part of our mission, to try to change that culture, to get people to realize that no woman, no girl, no grandmother, no aunt, no sister ever deserves to be raped regardless of where they are, what they are wearing or what they are doing.� To help aid victims of rape and sexual assault, CCWRC is also part of the Sexual Abuse Response Team (SART), a partnership between the State College Police Department, Mount Nittany Medical Center and CCWRC, where members of each organization are specifically trained to handle rape and sexual abuse incidents. Upon a man or woman’s arrival at Mount Nittany Medical Center for a rape exam, an advocate from CCWRC is called to the hospital. The advocate reports to the victim’s room within 30 minutes. Michele Hamilton, assistant director of shelter services, serves as one of the CCWRC SART advocates. “The victim can expect that we will be informed about sexual assault. We will work as a team,� she said. Hamilton said the advocate will work to make the victim as comfortable with the situation as possible by explaining the exam, the victim’s rights and the services offered to him or her by CCWRC.

PAGE 5

SAMI HULINGS/The Gazette

THE CENTRE COUNTY Women’s Resource Centre provides many different services to women in Centre County. with the women and seeing their strength, witnessing their stories and being part of working toward their goal,� she said. “It’s (the center) is a place for healing, Different people leave in different places. Even if the outcome is not exactly what they want, they have been able to work on other things. We work through

individual people and through prevention and education to really change the community.� For more information about the Centre County Women’s Resource Center, call (814) 238-7066 or visit www.ccwrc.org. To reach the center’s 24-hour crisis hotline, call 1-877-234-5050.

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PAGE 6

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

Pa. attorney general sues mobile home park owners By GENARO C. ARMAS The Associated Press

STATE COLLEGE — The owners of a Pennsylvania mobile home park should pay relocation expenses for residents who had to move after the park closed following its pending sale to a housing developer, the state attorney general’s office said Monday in a lawsuit. The suit, filed in Centre County, asked the Submitted photo court to require the owners to KATHLEEN KANE pay or restore money to residents who were forced to relocate. Attorney General Kathleen Kane said in the suit that Kenneth Mayes II and his sister, Sharon Mayes, violated the Manufactured Home Community Rights Act in closing Hilltop Mobile Home Park in State College on Feb. 28. Kane’s office said in a statement that the law required $4,000 in reloca-

tion expenses to residents who moved a single section manufactured home and that the owners must buy out the homes of residents who are unable or unwilling to find a “reasonably suitable replacement site.” The Mayes siblings have an agreement to sell Hilltop to Indiana-based Trinitas Ventures for about $6 million, according to the lawsuit. Trinitas is a developer of student housing; the 30acre Hilltop property is about 1½ miles from Penn State’s main University Park campus. The Associated Press left messages seeking comment at phone numbers listed for the owners and for a Trinitas representative. “The Mayes allegedly have provided relocation expenses to some mobile home owners, but not to others,” the attorney general’s office said in a statement. The lawsuit also asked the court to prevent the dissipation of the Mayes’ assets once the sale is completed. About 100 residents lived at Hilltop. The park had about 80 homes last summer, when residents were first notified of the potential sale, said Matthew Rooke of the Hilltop Resident Association.

Rooke, who was a renter, has since moved. He said a handful of residents haven’t left yet. “This is definitely good news for residents who were forced out and didn’t receive adequate compensation,” Rooke said. “People own their homes but lose all their value when the park closes — people who can least afford to relocate.” The payments would only apply to residents who owned their manufactured home on site — though it would not apply to about 10 units owned by the Mayes family and rented out. Renters have certain rights, but not to the payments outlined in the complaint, an attorney general’s office spokeswoman said. Trinitas in March asked the College Township Council last month to rezone the property to allow for a 275- to 300-unit housing complex geared toward college students, though a company representative said anyone could live there, according to the minutes of a March 7 council meeting. The request was forwarded to the local planning commission; the process could take at least six months before the council can take a vote on rezoning.

APRIL 11-17, 2013

Judges ruling may advance PSU cases By MARK SCOLFORO The Associated Press

HARRISBURG — For months, the criminal case against three former Penn State administrators accused of covering up abuse complaints about Jerry Sandusky has been in limbo while a judge considered their request to have the case thrown out. Judge Barry Feudale’s ruling Tuesday against Graham Spanier, Gary Schultz and Tim Curley could clear the way for a district judge to finally conduct the preliminary hearing that had once been scheduled for last December. But Feudale’s 16-page opinion and order anticipates that the defendants might want to take up the same issues he rejected before a county judge or a state appeals court. Feudale ruled he did not have jurisdiction and turned down their motions to throw out the grand jury report backing up the accusations and ruled against two other defense requests. Feudale said he would not have granted the defendants’ request that the charges be thrown out and emphasized that the case was out of his hands once the grand jury issued its report. But the judge did provide an analysis of the defense arguments that, he said, let him to conclude their motions lacked merit. The three are charged with perjury, obstruction, endangering the welfare of children, failure to properly report suspected abuse and conspiracy. The defendants had sought to exclude the testimony of Penn State’s former general counsel Cynthia Baldwin, based on her actions as she accompanied the men to grand jury appearances in Harrisburg in early 2011. The defendants argued that Baldwin’s actions violated their right to legal counsel, but Feudale said it “strains credulity to infer that they were somehow deluded or misrepresented by attorney Baldwin.” “In hindsight, perhaps I erred in not asking follow up questions about the role of corporate counsel Baldwin,” Feudale wrote. “I regret and perhaps committed error in not asking any follow-up questions, but while I am unaware what the response would have been, I fail to discern how such would persuade me at this stage why presentments should be dismissed.”

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY

GAZETTE 403 S. Allen St., State College, PA 16801 Phone: (814) 238-5051 Fax: (814) 238-3415 www.CentreCountyGazette.com

PUBLISHER Rob Schmidt

MANAGING EDITOR Chris Morelli STAFF WRITER Marjorie S. Miller

SALES MANAGER Don Bedell ADVERTISING CONSULTANTS Vicki Gillette Debbie Markel Kathy George Amy Ansari BUSINESS MANAGER Aimee Aiello AD COORDINATOR Bikem Oskin ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Gigi Rudella GRAPHIC DESIGN Beth Wood CONTACT US: To submit News: editor@centrecountygazette.com Advertising: sales@centrecountygazette.com The Gazette is a weekly newspaper serving Centre County and is published by Indiana Printing and Publishing Company. Reproduction of any portion of any issue is not permitted without written permission. The publisher reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement for any reason.

Dementia threatens our health, finances The United States and, undoubtedly, other developed nations, too, are facing a crisis that is cruelly inevitable, unaffordable and, further, not one we can do much about — at least yet. The crisis is dementia and its most common form, Alzheimer’s disease. The most extensive and rigorous study of the costs of dementia finds that it is America’s most expensive disease, $109 billion a year in direct medical costs. This makes it more expensive than the $102 billion we spend on heart disease and the $77 billion on cancer. Many forms of cancer and heart disease can be treated and even cured. Although the pace of research into experimental drugs has stepped up, there is no treatment yet to slow the course of the disease, let alone reverse or cure it. The medical costs alone understate Dale McFeatters is a the true cost of dementia, according to columnist for Scripps-Howard the report by the Rand Center for the News Service. Study of Aging. Considering such factors as the lost wages of family caregivers, the true cost is between $157 billion and $215 billion a year. One caregiver, who had to drop out of school to look after her impaired parents, said that “the financial impact of dementia is wiping out families.” Each case of dementia costs $41,000 to $56,000 a year, the study said, adding that the cost and the number of people with the disease will double within 30 years. “It’s going to swamp the system,” said Dr. Ronald Peterson, chairman of an advisory panel to the federal government. Dr. Michael Hurd, the lead author of the study, said 22 percent of Americans 71 and older — about 5.4 million — have mild cognitive impairment and 12 percent of those will go on to develop dementia each year. The Alzheimer’s Association estimates that 5 million Americans 65 and older suffer from Alzheimer’s. These numbers and their almost frightening rate of growth make it a national priority to find ways to prevent and treat the disease, and care for those who suffer from it.

DALE McFEATTERS

Unless labeled as a Gazette editorial, all views on the Opinion page are those of the authors.

Find us on Facebook. Search “Centre County Gazette.”

OPINION

PAGE 7

FBI choice key test for Obama As if President Barack Obama didn’t have enough on his plate, he has to look for a new FBI director who fits the national security profile that has become the bureau’s standard since 9/11. It may not be easy, considering that the often highly controversial position is more than just a job: It’s almost a jail sentence that spans 10 years of constant stress for anyone who expects to stay its full term. Since J. Edgar Hoover, the diDan K. Thomasson rector since the is a columnist for bureau’s foundScripps-Howard ing in 1935 until News Service. his death in 1972 at age 77, only one man has completed the assignment: current director Robert Mueller III, who is about to retire after a two-year extension ends in September. If the normal selection process holds to form, the nominee will not come from within the agency that Americans either despise, hold in awe or both. None of those mentioned as leading candidates for the job are from the upper echelons of the bureau, following a pattern that has been in effect since Hoover’s death. It is a precedent established by President Richard Nixon, who feared Hoover’s lieutenants as much as he did their boss. For the first time, there is speculation that a woman might be consid-

DAN K. THOMASSON

ered: Lisa Monaco, Obama’s chief adviser on counterterrorism. That would be in line with the shift in emphasis — from chasing criminals to counterterrorism — that Mueller managed to bring about. Skeptics argue that Monaco would be a difficult sell, despite significant experience in the Justice Department before taking the White House job. They also wonder whether she could handle the bureau’s two main power centers outside headquarters: the corps of special agents in charge of the bureau’s field offices and the retired and former agents’ association, both heavily male and both resistant to Mueller’s reform efforts. Another name being whispered is that of former U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald of Chicago. But that would be unlikely to fly with Republicans, who consider Fitzgerald politically tone deaf and can’t forget that he prosecuted Lewis “Scooter” Libby, former Vice President Richard Cheney’s chief of staff, for obstructing justice in an investigation into who leaked CIA employee Valerie Plame’s name to the press. They had a legitimate beef because Fitzgerald had concluded the leak didn’t constitute a crime before investigating Libby. It would be a difficult confirmation process. Others reportedly on Obama’s list include: Merrick Garland, chief judge of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals; James Comey, former deputy U.S. attorney general; and Neil MacBride, a U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia, who has prosecuted a number of national security cases. Resentment in the agent ranks against outsiders has diminished some in the years since Nixon shook

up the bureau with the appointment of an ex-submarine commander, L. Patrick Gray, to replace Hoover. However, there is lingering unhappiness over presidential failure to name — or, for that matter, give serious consideration to — a senior member of the bureau for the top post. Nixon’s appointment of Gray so infuriated Hoover’s lieutenants, as well those in bureau middle management, that the FBI became a major source of information for the press in the Watergate investigation that forced the president to resign. The closest a president has come to naming an insider to the director’s job was Louis Freeh, a short-term former agent who was serving as a federal judge when he was appointed. His tenure was controversial, caused in part by his decision to bring to the bureau’s top tier a group of assistants whose law enforcement experience was limited. His swift discipline of New York special agent in charge William Fox on the eve of his retirement for violating a gag order, his mishandling of the Olympic bombing incident in Atlanta, and his relentless efforts to expand the bureau’s turf earned him a number of enemies among fellow federal and state law enforcement agencies. He did succeed in building a strong FBI presence overseas, but ultimately ran afoul of the Clinton White House. Mueller, a former U.S. attorney in San Francisco, has won admiration for his success in shifting the bureau’s direction and preventing further assaults. He will be hard to replace. The appointment will be among the most important of Obama’s tenure.

Essay-grading software gets bad marks A New York Times headline last Friday, “Essay-Grading Software Offers Professors a Break,” struck an appealing chord with me. In my day job, I was facing a bleak weekend of grading: five sets of essays from my freshman writers. I could use a break. Few tasks are more mindnumbing and energy-draining than reading and evaluating essay after essay by students who are trying to learn to improve their writing. A laborsaving computer program that John M. Crisp teaches English at performs this Del Mar College in task has been a Corpus Christi, sort of Holy Grail Texas. His column for English teachis distributed by ers, and efforts to Scripps Howard News Service. Email produce such a program date to him at jcrisp@ the 1960s. delmar.edu. The results haven’t been encouraging. In fact, the history of attempts to take the labor out of grading papers is replete with stories of machines that gave high marks to nonsense and flunked the work of great essayists like George Orwell. Now, the Times reports, EdX, a nonprofit entity founded by Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has developed software

that “uses artificial intelligence to grade student essays and short written answers, freeing professors for other tasks.” EdX plans to make this boon to professors available, free of charge, to anyone who wants it. Still, I share the skepticism of Les Perelman, a retired director of writing and a researcher at MIT. Perelman has mounted a petition campaign against machine scoring of student essays in high-stakes exams, arguing that a computer will never be able to “read” in the way that a human can. Computers can efficiently evaluate features like sentence and word length but are incapable of taking into account the subtleties of good writing — elements like, quoting Perelman’s petition, “accuracy, reasoning, adequacy of evidence, good sense, ethical stance” and so on. In any case, the arduous task before me — and the prospect of free software that could perform it at the touch of an “Enter” key — provided an occasion to reflect on what happens when a teacher grades an essay and whether a computer could do the job just as well. Think of essay grading as having two parts. The essential task of every grader is to assign an evaluation to a piece of work, usually a number or a letter. The mind can absorb and evaluate with considerable consistency all of the complicated and elusive elements that contribute to the effectiveness of one human’s attempt to communicate with another in writing. And a good grader can make this evaluation fairly quickly and efficiently.

The Centre County Gazette welcomes letters to the editor and will endeavor to print readers’ letters in a timely manner. Letters should be signed and include the writer’s full address and telephone number so the authenticity of the letter can be confirmed. No

letters will be published anonymously. Letters must be factual and discuss issues rather than personalities. Writers should avoid name-calling. Form letters and automated “canned” email will not be accepted. Generally, letters should be limited to 350 words.

JOHN CRISP

Will a computer ever be able to do this? I’m doubtful, but history is filled with premature underestimations of what computers can do. The other part of grading, however, isn’t grading, at all, but instruction — let’s call it “feedback” — and this is the part that computers are going to have trouble with. Assigning a number or letter grade is relatively easy compared with the time- and energyconsuming task of entering into a brief written dialogue with another writer about her ideas and the way she expresses them. I’ve tried to find ways to use technology to streamline this process. If two students make the same mistake, why not produce a Word-processed response that can be pasted into the students’ texts as needed? The problem is that soon such mechanical responses take on the hollow ring of modern voice-response systems, which try to make you think that you’re talking to a human being, but never quite succeed: “Um, I’m having trouble understanding what you said. Could you repeat it?” I often remind my students that they’re smarter than computers, and they understand that writing involves communicating with other real human beings. The attraction of essay-grading software is obvious. It’s cost-effective and tireless. It doesn’t require an office or health insurance, and it isn’t concerned with job security. It’ll be interesting to see what kind of educational experience we choose to give to the modern student. Now, back to grading, the oldfashioned way.

Letters policy All letters are subject to editing. Letter writers are limited to one submission every 30 days. Send letters to 403 S. Allen St., State College, PA 16801. Letters may also be emailed to editor@centrecounty gazette.com. Be sure to include a phone number.


PAGE 8

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

HEALTH & WELLNESS Hospice, palliative medicine fills need From Gazette staff reports In life, we are told, you get what you pay for. In death, however, the same is not always true. “As a nation, we spend a disproportionate amount of healthcare money in the years preceding death,� said Dr. Franklin Berkey, a family medicine physician with Penn State Hershey Medical Group in State College who is board certified in hospice and palliative care medicine. “In fact, one out every four Medicare dollars is spent for the 5 percent of beneficiaries in their last five years of life. Considered individually, the numbers take on a greater understanding. A recent study conducted by the Mount Sinai School of Medicine estimated that a person will spend an average of $39,000 in out-of-pocket medical expenses in his or her last five years of life. An individual with a long-term illness such as Alzheimer’s dementia will spend an average of $66,000 in the same period. “Here’s the catch — these greater expenditures do not necessarily equal greater care or a longer life,� said Berkey. “In a terminal illness, the self-perpetuating pattern of tests and treatments often leads to side effects and extended hospital stays rather than to improved health or a longer life. Quite simply, sometimes disease treatment does not mean better care.� Palliative medicine is the medical specialty which focuses on symptom control rather than disease treatment. Hospice is a Medicare benefit in which a patient receives palliative care in their home through a coordinated team of health professionals. In the early stages of a significant dis-

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ease, hospice appropriately takes a back seat to curative medicine. However, when appropriate, the recognition of palliative medicine and hospice is not an admission of defeat, but rather of acceptance. Hospice is appropriate when a patient’s prognosis is estimated to be six months or less. Some patients enrolled in hospice die before this time, while other patients survive more than a year while receiving hospice care. In fact, hospice patients often live longer than similar patients not enrolled in hospice. In one study, congestive heart failure patients enrolled in a hospice program lived three months longer than similar patients not enrolled in hospice. More importantly, hospice patients report fewer distressing symptoms, avoid unnecessary trips to the emergency department, and report higher quality of life scores. Six months after the death of a hospice patient, the families of the deceased report less depression and usually have a better overall view of their loved one’s death. The hospice team — a hospice physician, registered nurse, physical and occupational therapist, social worker, clergymen, bereavement coordinator, and volunteers — work in conjunction with the patient’s primary physician to deliver compassionate care with the goals of improving quality of life and maximizing comfort. Care is provided wherever the patient calls home — their house, an assisted care facility, or a nursing home. Hospice is not only for cancer patients. In fact, about 50 percent of hospice patients have a diagnosis other than cancer, including congestive heart failure (CHF), dementia, generalized debility, and chronic obstructive pul-

From Gazette staff reports

LEWISTOWN — Family Health Associates Center for Weight Management and Nutrition will host its monthly bariatric surgery support group from 6 to 7 p.m. on April 18 in classroom 4 at Lewistown Hospital. The group meets every third Thursday of the month from 6 to 7 p.m. Sessions are moderated by Virginia M. Wray.

STATE COLLEGE — Some doctors say oral health is a window to one’s overall health. Dental disease and poor dental health can cause major complications, illness and even death. There are currently 1,800 individuals in Centre County on the waiting list at CVIM who need dental care but can not afford it. The dentists and hy-

needed to function. CVIM is asking for support to impact many more individuals in the community by providing the essential dental care and treatment. Donations give your neighbors the gifts of improved dental health and overall health, restored smiles and a new sense of confidence. For more information on how to donate, contact Sue Forster at sforster@cvim.net.

gienists at CVIM’s Dr. Richard M. Madore Dental Clinic perform emergency dental procedures, restorative work and routine hygiene visits. Before his untimely passing in 2010, Madore was the driving force behind establishing the dental clinic. In addition to volunteering countless hours caring for patients, he worked tirelessly to recruit other dentists to volunteer and secure equipment and supplies that the clinic

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monary disease (COPD). “Selecting hospice is about choices,� said Berkey. “Hospice enables the dying patient to choose where they live, how they live, and where they die.�

CVIM’s Madore Dental Campaign under way

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

PAGE 9

Bleed Blue at Blue-White Weekend blood drive set dent in reaching with the help of Penn State’s supportive community. “This is a great opportunity for area blood donors, alumni, friends, and families to not only help save lives, but support their community during one of the biggest Penn State events of the spring,� she added. The Red Cross, Penn State Athletics and Penn State Athletic partners have teamed up to feature special events, drawings and giveaways for the special Blue-White blood drive: ■Grand prize — Honorary Blue-White captain for the 2013 Blue-White Game with two club tickets, along with the SandsBethlehem package. ■Secondary grand prize No. 1 — Ingame field visit at the 2013 Blue-White Game for two with two club tickets, along

From Gazette staff reports UNIVERSITY PARK — The American Red Cross and Penn State Athletics are partnering on a new Bleed Blue at BlueWhite Weekend blood drive, set for (Friday) April 19 from noon to 6 p.m. at the campus Multi-Sport Indoor Facility. “Over the years, Blue-White Weekend has grown in popularity and now features a carnival, fireworks, food vendors, live music and other athletic events in addition to the Blue-White game on April 20. Many view it as Penn State’s unofficial spring reunion,� stated Marianne Spampinato, communications manager, American Red Cross, Greater Alleghenies Blood Services Region. “Our goal for our Blue-White blood drive is 100 donations, which we are confi-

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EDUCATION

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Bald Eagle Area schedules Family Science Night in April From Gazette staff reports WINGATE — A fun night of science for the whole family will be held at the Bald Eagle Area Middle-High School from 6 to 8 p.m. on April 12. Activities will take place in the middle-high school gymnasium, lobby, auditorium and large group instruction room. What to expect during the evening? See a 20-minute 3-D Movie about Mars in the large group instruction room, watch solar cars and robotics presentations from the middle and high school students, view an elementary poster science display de-

picting what students are learning in science classes now, and participate in several astronomy activities provided by Penn State University students. Spend some time inside Juniata College Science in Motion’s StarLab Planetarium, a portable planetarium outfitted with computers and projectors that will take students through an astronomy lesson. You can also view an amazing 43minute IMAX movie on BEA’s new 32-foot screen in the auditorium. “The Hubble: IMAX,” narrated by Leonardo DeCaprio, chronicles the effort of seven astronauts aboard the

APRIL 11-17, 2013

OUR WORLD

Space Shuttle Atlantis to repair the Hubble Space Telescope. The film’s goal is to make viewers feel as though they are voyaging through the cosmos, seeing through Hubble’s eyes and peering over the shoulders of astronauts as they work on the telescope — providing a closeness and understanding of the universe beyond the reach of still images. There will also be student door prizes and a family activity takehome bag for each family. The area of focus for Family Science Night is grades kindergarten through eight, but all members of the BEA family are invited to attend.

EXPLORING DIFFERENCES

Submitted photo

Submitted photo

STUDENTS AT Grace Lutheran preschool and kindergarten classes prepared to engage in their own Special Olympics sports at the church’s Miller Center gymnasium during the school’s Disability Awareness Week in March. During the week, representatives from Special Olympics, including an athlete, met with students to talk about the program and Olympians’ athletic accomplishments. Students also engaged in projects that introduced them to some of the challenges others face, such as visual, aural and physical limitations. The annual program is designed to help children understand we are all different, yet also the same, and to encourage them to reach out appropriately to others in friendship.

LEADERSHIP

ON APRIL 2, Mary Jo Miller, a corporate environmental coordinator for HRI Inc., visited Jena Jodon’s and Paula Hendershot’s third-grade classrooms at Pleasant Gap Elementary School. Miller based her presentation on how geology relates to an environmental career. The students just finished learning all about rocks and minerals and now have an understanding of how to use their knowledge in an environmental career. Miller focused her presentation on teaching the students about geology, taking care of the water, the importance of testing pH and how important it is for everyone to conserve energy. She also included many demonstrations to help the students see the effects of pollutants in our environment. She also emphasized how important it is to make sure we do everything we can to keep our Earth clean and free from pollutants.

Young Scholars announces honor roll From Gazette staff reports

BRITTANY BRADSHAW, business administration, management and marketing major at South Hills School, recently attended the Circle K International 51st District Convention. Circle K Clubs are the collegiate division of the Kiwanis Club. At the event in King of Prussia, Bradshaw was elected as the Lt. Governor of the Keystone District for Pennsylvania Circle K. Bradshaw has been an integral part of Lewistown Circle K Club, which is in its first year of operation at South Hills School.

Submitted photo

STATE COLLEGE — Levent Kaya, CEO-CAO at Young Scholars of Central PA Charter School in State College, recently announced 40 students have achieved honor roll or high honor roll distinction in grades five to eight. High academic standards and small class size have attributed to the fact that 50 percent or more of the students in each of these grades made the honor roll or high honor roll. As a no-tuition public school, YSCP is the largest charter school in the area with about 250 students enrolled in kindergarten to eighth grade. All students learn Chinese and Spanish in addition to core curriculum classes. More information available at www.yscp.org. High honor roll — Fifth grade: Willem Antonio Duiker; Sarah Ambrose; Tigerlilly Wing; Nathan Nguyen; Garrett Sakona; Sebastian Caceres. Sixth grade: Roshan Haque; Danila Berezin; Jackson Harper; Isha Chakraborty; David Skripnikov. Seventh grade: Maria Rebecca Duiker; Bryce Herman; Evelyn Kuo; Oliver Rose; Carlie Kovacik; Lilijana PetersSemak. Eighth grade: Erica Kuo. Honor roll — Fifth grade: Arif Demirci; Kyra Gines; Alsou Umarova. Sixth grade: John Craig; Thomas Dolheimer; Grace Pitterle; Calista Combs; Jason Gines; Riya Chakraborty; Jackson Taylor; Lance Hamilton; Daniel Sherry. Seventh grade: Audrey Foster; Onose Osagie; David Hornak; Daniel Sakona. Eighth grade: Hannah Yoder; Trevor Cady; Emma Riglin; Fger Alnajar; Ekaterina Soloveva; Jasmine McCoy-Hardy. For more information about Young Scholars, visit www.yscp.org.


COMMUNITY

APRIL 11-17, 2013

PAGE 11

Penns Valley Youth Center holds fundraising dinner By SAM STITZER pennsvalley@centrecountygazette.com

SPRING MILLS — On April 4, a fundraising dinner was held at the Old Gregg School Community Center in Spring Mills to benefit the Penns Valley Youth Center, which is located in the school. The center is sponsored by the Penns Valley Community Church, which meets in the Old Gregg School. The center, which opened in the fall of 2011, provides numerous programs for students in grades seven through 12 in the Penns Valley area. It provides after-school programs with snacks, recreation, video games, help with homework, workshops and other activities. Following the meal supplied by Hoag’s Catering of State College, Keri Miller, the center’s program/outreach coordinator, addressed the audience. She cited some statistics from the U.S. Department of Education — every day nearly 160,000 students nationwide stay home from school because they are afraid of being bullied. A total of 43 percent of students have no father living with them, and 85 percent of those students exhibit behavioral disorders. Nearly 70 percent of all high school dropouts come from fatherless homes. “The kids need a safe place where they can be themselves,” Miller said. The guest speaker for the evening was Penn State football coach Larry Johnson Sr.

Johnson has coached at Penn State for 19 years, including 15 years as defensive line coach. He praised the work of the youth center. “There’s something great happening in this small town,” Johnson said. He emphasized the importance of reaching out to the youth of today. “In every village, where every child is located, it’s our responsibility as adults and as a community to try and save them all,” he said. “Think about where you are today and who helped you along the way. “We’re in a good place today because someone extended a hand to us.” Speaking of his own youth, he noted that his mother had died and his father assumed the sole parenting role. “When Dad took over, I knew he had my back and was going to raise me the right way,” he said. Johnson noted that he had some great mentors who he believed in and trusted, and felt that it is our job to help children through problems. He told of his experience with football teams who went through trials and never quit. “I don’t want you to just love what you’re doing, I want you to have a real passion for what you’re doing,” he said. He received a standing ovation. Former Penns Valley Community Church youth pastor Tim Shutes founded the youth center. “It has far exceeded our expectations,”

SAM STITZER/For The Gazette

THE OLD GREGG School gymnasium was filled with more than 160 people. he said. According to Shutes, attendance by students at the center has gradually built up over the last year and a half. The center has recently added community projects, help with academics, workshops and other programs. Shutes recently left the church to take a similar position at a church in the

Philadelphia area. The youth center board was brought onstage and acknowledged for their work. The audience was encouraged to give financially to the center, as well as to volunteer their time to help with the various programs. For more information, call Keri Miller at (814) 422-3345.

American Legion hosts Renewable Energy NOW Fair By SAM STITZER pennsvalley@centrecountygazette.com

CENTRE HALL — A Renewable Energy NOW Fair was held at the Old Fort American Legion on April 6. The fair is a joint program of the Penns Valley Conservation Association and the West Penn Power Sustainable Energy Fund. The Penns Valley Conservation Association serves as a steward of the Upper Penns Creek watershed and all its communities. It works to protect and conserve Penns Valley’s waters, farmlands, forests and cultural heritage. The West Penn Power Sustainable Energy fund invests in the deployment of clean energy technologies throughout the West Penn Power service region in Pennsylvania. The fair featured many exhibits from the above organizations, as well as local firms which deal in renewable energy systems. Curt Bierly, representing the Stanly C. Bierly Company of Millheim showed a display featuring geothermal heating/ cooling systems which his company engineers and installs. He noted the great increase in efficiency the systems provide, especially in winter, as they use ground temperature (about 55 degrees) instead of sub-freezing outside air. The featured speaker for the fair was Robert Edwards, energy program specialist with the U.S. Army’s PA Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. Edwards is a professional geologist and certified energy manager. He has over 25 years experience in energy and water management. He spoke about the “The Army’s Energy Secu-

rity Vision and its Mission.” In his speech, Edwards noted that the Department of Defense is the largest energy consumer in the federal government and that 63 percent of the energy they use is for facilities. He noted that the DoD has reduced its energy consumption through conservation efforts by 13 percent during a recent eight year period, but their energy costs still increased by 52 percent over the same period due to increased fuel costs. “Even though we’re doing the right thing by reducing consumption, our costs are still going up,” Edwards said. He emphasized the importance of energy conservation by all citizens. He noted that efforts as simple as using more efficient light bulbs and appliances can have significant effects on energy use. “Just shutting off that light switch — that’s conservation,” he said. Edwards said that by 2025, it is DoD’s goal to obtain 25 percent of its energy needs from renewable sources. He showed examples of solar electric installations on DoD buildings, including one site in Kentucky which is a “net-zero” installation, meaning the site makes all the energy it needs to run without drawing from the local electric power grid. Following Edwards’ speech, Penns Valley residents Phil Yanak and Greg Williams, both of whom have installed groundmounted photovoltaic (solar cell) electric systems on their properties. Yanak said the monthly power bill for his Millheim home is $4 or $5 dollars. “That’s mostly the hookup fee,” he said. “Some months they owe me money.” Williams said that his 12 kilowatt system generates all the electricity needed to

SAM STITZER/For The Gazette

VISITORS PERUSED the exhibits at the Renewable Energy NOW Fair. run his Cooke Tavern Soups business in Penn Hall. He concurred with Yanak that sometimes he is actually feeding power back into West Penn’s grid for credit. He noted that solar cells work better in cooler weather because they lose efficiency when they get hot. Both men agreed that the systems are essentially maintenance-free, although Yanak said “I go out and brush the snow off it sometimes.” Regarding system costs, Yanak said his

5.2 kilowatt system cost about $38,000 to install, but that a significant percentage of that figure was offset by government grants for clean energy installations. He also mentioned that solar cells can be leased, which appeals to people who do not plan to live at one location for a lifetime. For more information on the Penns Valley Conservation Association and renewable energy, contact Mary Carol Frier at (814) 364-2847, or mcfrier@yahoo.com.

Rotary club to hold spaghetti dinner Garden club to meet From Gazette staff reports STATE COLLEGE — The Rotary Club of downtown State College will hold its annual spaghetti dinner from 4 to 7 p.m. on April 11 at the Mount Nittany United Methodist Church on Branch Road in State College. “This is an important fundraising event for our club,” said club president Mark Whitfield. “The dollars we

raise from this event go to support a number of vital human service organizations in the Centre Region.” For the convenience of many diners, the club offers both dine-in and carry out services. The people cooking and serving the dinner are members of the Rotary Club. The meal includes spaghetti, meatballs, rolls, salad, drink and dessert. Meals cost $8 for adults and

$4 for children 12 and under. Proceeds from the dinner will benefit the State College Area Food Bank, Centre County YMCA scholarships, vocational scholarships and other Rotary projects. Rotary International is a service organization that focuses on community and international service. One of its best-known projects is Polio Plus, a campaign to eradicate polio from the earth.

From Gazette staff reports BELLEFONTE — The Bellefonte Garden Club will host a meeting at 6:30 p.m. on April 16 at the First Presbyterian Church, 203 N. Spring St. in Bellefonte. The topic will be dividing perennials and moving your plants. Master Gardener Dixie Witt will show attendees how to correctly divide perennials and how to move flowers and plants to another location. This talk will be the precursor to the plant exchange in May.

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PAGE 12

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

PAWS ADOPT-A-PET Mia, a young pit bull female, is extremely friendly and will definitely be a great addition to most families. Mia is a special girl because she only has one kidney; but, like humans, dogs can easily have a great life without one of their kidneys. The only issue is that Mia may be more susceptible to urinary tract infections. Missing a kidney has not stopped Mia from being an active and loving girl. She is good with children, but her size and high energy may prove to be too much for young kids. Mia also gets along with some other dogs, but has not had much exposure to cats. Mia is crate trained and partially house broken, so she will need a little help from her new family to master this skill. If Mia sounds like a great fit for your family, you can visit her at PAWS, 1401 Trout Road in State College, or read more about her at http://www.centrecountypaws.org/ dogs/.

APRIL 11-17, 2013

Proceeds from race to benefit Newtown victims From Gazette staff reports UNIVERSITY PARK — Proceeds from the upcoming Jeremy Herbstritt Memorial 5K Run/Walk will be donated to the families of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings. The event will be held at 6:30 p.m. on April 16 on Curtin Road near the Intramural Building on the University Park campus. Cost for adult registration is $20. Registration for children 10 and under is $8. Participants may register online at http://bit.ly/Run4Jeremy2013 or by downloading a form at www.nvrun.com/apps/ app-herbstritt-13.pdf and mailing it in. The run/walk is named for Jeremy Herbstritt, a 1998 Bellefonte Area High School graduate who died during the 2007 Virginia Tech shootings. Herbstritt earned his undergraduate de-

JEREMY HERBSTRITT

grees in civil engineering, biochemistry and molecular biology from Penn State. He was a civil engineering graduate student at Virginia Tech. To honor Herbstritt, who was an avid runner, the department of civil engineering and the Nittany Valley Running Club established the

walk/run event. Proceeds from the annual event went to the goal of building a community track facility in his memory at Bellefonte Area High School. Donations are also being accepted at active.com/donate/JeremysRun2013.

Children’s festival scheduled

CHICK DAY! Saturday, April 13 at 12:30pm Join us for another fun, educational event where you will learn how to get your chicks off to the right start! We will have layers and broilers chicks on hand for sale, and we will be taking special orders for other breeds and species. While you’re here, pick up everything you need to get your brand new chicks started right — feed, shavings, heat lamps, feeders, waterers and more!

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From Gazette staff reports STATE COLLEGE — Global Connections and the Penn State University Office of Global Programs presents the International Children’s Festival, a celebration of international cultures, from 2 to 6 p.m on April 13 at the State College Area High School South Building. The event will feature Korean gayageum, Indonesian dance, Happy Valley Chinese School, Tir na Nog Irish dance, American hip hop performances and a

Global Grove dance party. Numerous craft projects will be available for children throughout the festival, including Egyptian cartouches, henna hand tattoos, Chilean rain sticks, European “stained glass,” Thai woven fish, stamp collecting and much more. An international dessert contest and silent auction will also be held. Entrance to the celebration is $10 for a family or $5 for an individual. For more information, call (814) 863-3927 or email globalconnections@ip.psu.edu.

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

Lathbury wins Farmland Trust’s annual preservation award From Gazette staff reports STATE COLLEGE — Centre Hall resident Norm Lathbury was named winner of the American Farmland Trust’s Pennsylvania Farmland Preservation Local Heroes Award. The award, which was presented to Lathbury April 4 at the Penn Stater Conference Center, is given in conjunction with the Pennsylvania Farmland Preservation Association. The award recognizes outstanding efforts to protect farmland, promote environmentally sound farming practices, and keep farmers on the land. As the Agricultural Land Preservation coordinator for Centre County, and co-founder and executive director of the Centre County Farmland Trust, Lathbury secured more than $2 million for the purchase of agricultur-

Submitted photo

NORM LATHBURY

vides technical training to develop skills and resources for the organization’s members, promotes standards among the farmland preservation sector, and provides comments on programs, regulations and legislation. American Farmland Trust is the nation’s leading conservation organization dedicated to saving America’s farm and ranch land, promoting environmentally sound farming practices and keeping farmers on the land. Since its founding in 1980 by a group of farmers and citizens concerned about the rapid loss of farmland to development, AFT has helped save millions of acres of farmland from development and led the way for the adoption of conservation practices on millions more. For more information visit www.farmland.org.

al conservation easements, helping to protect more than 4,000 acres of Centre County farmland. He also assisted local townships in establishing agricultural security areas that, under his guidance, enrolled more than 500

farms. The PFPA is a non-profit, nonpartisan statewide association of farmland preservation professionals dedicated to promoting and enhancing the interests of agricultural land preservation in Pennsylvania. It pro-

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LAUREL SANDERS/For The Gazette

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STATE COLLEGE — The State College Sunrise Rotary Club Lunch has launched its second annual Lunch with Leaders fundraiser. The club is selling raffle tickets for $5 each or five for $20 to win lunch for two people at Centre Hills Country Club with Penn State head football coach Bill O’ Brien. The lunch will be held in May based on availability of the coach and the winner. The Sunrise Rotary Club invited O’Brien to pick an organization to receive 50 percent of the proceeds from this year’s raffle. He chose to split the funds between the Pennsylvania Coalition against Rape and the Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network, both of which support victims of sexual abuse. State College Sunrise Rotary will receive the remainder of the proceeds. The club, now in its sixth year, upholds the Rotary motto “Service Above Self� by engaging in service projects and fundraising to support local and international organizations. Club meetings are held at 7:15 a.m. on Wednesday mornings at the Hotel State College. For more information or to purchase a raffle ticket please contact Larry Walker at (814) 404-6800.

Race will raise money for local families From Gazette staff reports STATE COLLEGE — Habitat for Humanity Greater Centre County is doing its part to better the community with its premier fundraising event, the HouseWalk. The third annual HouseWalk will be held at 7 p.m. on April 14 at Medlar Field at Lubrano Park. Registration for the event begins at 6 p.m. A current and growing problem in the Greater Centre County area is lack of housing available for low income families. HFHGCC works all year to help correct the problem. HFHGCC has helped 58 families in the last 29 years afford homes in the area. The families need help now, more than ever. Interested participants can register online at www.habitatgcc.org. Registration for adults is $20, for students (elementary through college) is $10. The maximum registration fee for a family is $60. Participants have the option to run or walk during the event. Prizes will be rewarded to the top fundraisers in each of the two team categories, 2-9 or 10-plus participants. To learn more about HFHGCC visit www.habitatgcc.org.

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PAGE 13

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PAGE 14

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

It’s time to plan landscape projects for the summer Mountain Conservation Co. in Boalsburg, said the best way to plan for summer landscaping is to prioritize what’s important personally, and then examine the budget. “Failing to plan equals failure,” he said. “I tend to examine what, if anything, went wrong last summer by reviewing past notes. Then (I) investigate any problems or potential problems like drainage, future growth of plans that may outgrow their location (and) dividing plants.” Although not a lot can be done with snow still on the ground, Markle said what can be accomplished is cutting back perennials or ornamental grasses. Next, he said, would be selective pruning of trees or shrubs that need thinning out. Markle’s recommendations for mulch is double ground hardwood bark mulch, as it helps with weed suppression, moisture retention, temperature control, and aids in the aesthetics of the bed by providing a “media that resembles nature.” “Mulches can be somewhat different in color, texture and wood content,” Markle said. “Hardwood bulk mulch is not ground-up pallets, and (is) best used for planting beds. Wood chips that are barkfree are best used in play areas. They are cleaner and softer in texture.” The process of putting down mulch involves many steps, Markle said. “Typically the beds are weeded several days prior to installation; the use of glyphosate (round-up) is a good product to control actively growing weeds,” he said. The next step is the edging of beds for a defined border, Markle said. This can be done with a shovel or power edger. “You may need to remove excess mulch from years past,” he said. “Don’t put 3 inches on top of 4 inches. A consistent 3 to

By MARJORIE S. MILLER mmiller@centrecountygazette.com

REEDSVILLE — Now may be a great time to plan landscape design projects for the summer, according to local experts who offer a wealth of advice and recommendations on avoiding summer lawn stress with proper landscaping. “It’s impossible to landscape with mulch and trees while there is snow on the ground,” said Max Peachey, wholesale mulch sales supervisor at Metzler Forest Products LLC. When it comes to choosing mulch, Peachey recommends a high percentage of bark. “The higher the bark content, the better the mulch,” he said. “With a high bark content, the chances of artillery spore fungus will be less. Mulches such as hemlock bark are excellent for avoiding artillery spore fungus and are … good for your soil.” Peachey said mulch, just like paint, should have adequate time to dry after it is laid. This allows the color to remain vibrant for a longer period of time, he said, regardless of whether the mulch is color-enhanced or natural. For planting flower beds, Peachey doesn’t recommend placing mulch against small flowers and plants because it can burn them. He said the best time to start planting flower beds is after the last frost of the season. “Make sure that plants are planted below the topsoil line and not in the mulch,” he said. “It can be beneficial to mix compost with your topsoil before planting and mulching. This boosts growth and adds nutritional value to your flowerbeds.” Derec Markle, agronomist at Yoder

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Topsoil is living, so it contains billions of microorganisms and insects that help enrich the soul by converting detritus into organic topsoil, Markle said. “Our lawns are void of these materials as we rake the leaves off every fall,” he said. “Adding compost helps build the soil’s profile, increase its water holding capacity, increase the cation-exchange capacity and reduce the amount of fertilizer that’s needed.” For more information about Metzler Forest Products, located on Timber Lane Road in Reedsville, visit www.mfp.bz. For more information about Yoder Mountain Conservation Co. call (814) 4666577.

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4 inches is plenty.” After the beds have been prepared, the mulch can be applied with a pitchfork 3 to 4 inches deep or as needed, Markle said. “Leave mulch off the plants by feathering the material about an inch deep near the base of the plant,” he said. “Overmulching creates a habit for insects and provides media for roots to grow upward girdling the plant, and essentially this buries the tree or shrub.” Another method to consider is topdressing, Markle said, which involves the application of compost, soil or sand over the surface of turf grass. “This practice helps turf in many ways,” he said.

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

PAGE 15

Key to successful landscaping: Plant what you like By LAURIE LYNCH Penn State Master Gardener

My daughter was probably 5 or 6 when she told me she wanted to change her name. Parenting doubts sent a shiver down my neck. “To what?” “Magnolia Forsythia Hyacinth Lynch.” It was springtime and we were making a lap around the neighborhood. A giant magnolia rained petals of ballerina pink, creating a lacy blanket on fresh green grass. Banks of bright yellow forsythia bounded through the alleyways, and the fragrance of hyacinths potted in front of the town library wafted in the air. Over the years, home landscape design has run the gamut from lawns and meatball-shaped yews to the studied intricacy of cottage gardens to sweeps of low-maintenance perennials. Garden themes focus on colors, creatures, bulbs, natives, tropicals, herbs, and edibles. There are shade gardens, bog gardens, and rock gardens; evening gardens and fragrance gardens; cutting gardens, heirloom gardens, and apothecary gardens; Japanese gardens and Native American gardens. Along the way, we’ve discovered that sunflowers are magnets for goldfinches. Bright red salvias are guaranteed to bring hummingbirds to kitchen window boxes. Bee balm attracts (guess what?) bees. Goldenrod will not make you sneeze (that’s ragweed) but it will draw butterflies into your backyard paradise. You may plant roses for your sweetheart, but if you are looking for real estate curb appeal, perhaps drifts of sedums, daylilies, and daffodils will do the trick.

Children aren’t the only reason to plant flowers in your landscape, but I’d venture to say they are the best. And for children, you don’t have to be a purist. The rules are simple: 1. Plant what you like. 2. Plant the right plant in the right place. No matter what your palette, if you plant it, they will come. Flowers invite family and friends into a living laboratory, an outdoor classroom, an adventure-filled activity center. They can also create a retreat, a quiet oasis, a private nook for dreaming and creativity, and yes, sometimes a snooze. There is beauty in the garden when the purple globes of Allium aflatunense “Purple Sensation” burst forth in spring. But when the dried scape and seedhead become a wand for a Halloween princess, something magical takes place. Take one look at Artemisia schmidtiana “Silver Mound” and you will know BananaStock where the fairies sleep. FORSYTHIA FLOWERS will add a splash of color to your landscaping. The poetry of folklore and the lavender wand sachets to keep the fragrance of summer in study of languages step into the flower garden and capture your undergarments drawer. childhood imaginations. Just think how intriguing a flower My daughter grew up in our garden. Now she attends menagerie sounds: snapdragon, turtle head, foxglove, hens graduate school in London. A few weeks ago, our Skype and chicks, bear’s britches, horsetail, cranesbill, toadflax, session veered from classwork and dissertation topics to a snakeroot, wormwood, leopard’s bane, goatsbeard, lamb’s beautiful tree she passed on her way to school. Some of the ear. For the romantically inclined: love-in-a-mist, bleeding branches were blooming with single white flowers; others, heart, bachelor’s buttons, forget-me-not, kiss-me-overwith full, puffy pink flowers. “I’ll send you a picture so we the-garden-gate, love-lies-bleeding, moonflower and can figure out what it is.” morning glory. Just close your eyes and see these names Sherlock Holmes has nothing on us. I checked the phocome alive: bearded Iris, black-eyed Susan, Jack in the pultos. I had read about the practice of gardeners planting two pit, Johnny jump-ups, coral bells, Canterbury bells, bells of trees in one large planting hole. So, I sent her back to the Ireland, snow on the mountain and candytuft. Explain to scene to investigate. Sure enough, there were actually two your favorite youngsters that the word “columbine” comes cherry trees growing side by side, their limbs entwined, from the Latin word “columba” meaning “dove.” Then, creating the vision of both white and pink flowers growing take a columbine flower, spurs pointing upward, and show on the same tree. You never know what those Brits will do them the cluster of doves dancing in a circle. for a little garden drama — or how far your backyard garIf that is not enough, switch to science. Bring a magnifyden will extend. ing glass into the garden and discover beneficial insects. Check out the cogs on the back of a wheel bug or notice that ladybug larvae look like alligators. Marvel at the way earthworms tunnel through the soil or how a seed smaller than a fingernail can grow into a 6-foot-tall sunflower by summer’s end. Hollyhocks and rose of Sharon shrubs may seem a bit old-fashioned and dowdy until you learn how to make 814-3 353-3323 dolls out of the flowers. A fully furled blossom turned ups 0 0ROFESSIONAL ROFESSION # #ARPE RPENTRY RY s 2EM MO ODELING N s 0 0AINTING N side down becomes the doll’s skirt, and the flower bud with s 7 7IND NDOW 2 2EPLACEME E LACEMENT s $RYWALL RYW s $ $ECKS ECK 3 3HEDS HED a bit of stem becomes the doll’s head. s &LOORING O R N s 0 0AINTING A NT N Fair Pricing Run across the lawn like the Pied Piper with the kids fols ,AWN (OME OM -AINTENA NTENAN NCE C Fully Insured lowing behind, releasing the silk and seeds inside ripened s 0 0LUMBING N s %LECTRICAL ECTR CA milkweed pods. Watch them float through the air on their Free Estimates parachutes. www.Mc ww ww w cCaslin nsHo omeRe Re esto sttora rat attio on.c com Or weave ribbons around lavender stems, making

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PAGE 16

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

CENTRE

There are plenty of options to spruce up your yard By SAMI HULINGS shulings@centrecountygazette.com

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

PAGE 17

Landscaping can conserve energy, save money Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, suggests placing trees, shrubs and other plants strategically around your house to “reduce heat radiation and cool the air before it Although the temperatures haven’t risen too much reaches your home’s walls and windows.” since the start of spring in Centre County, before you know The shading from trees placed near windows alone, the it the sun will be beaming through your home’s windows DOE said on its website, can reduce surrounding air temand your air conditioner will be working at full blast if it peratures by as much as 9 degrees, which can easily affect gets hot enough. air temperatures inside your house if placed near a winAccording to the U.S. Department of Energy, two-thirds dow. of households in America have air conditioners and each The first step to beginning a project like this is to figure year homeowners nation-wide spend more than $11 bilout the size, shape and location of the shadow that your lion collectively to air condition their homes. shading device will cast. This will allow you to make your If you’re looking to cut down on how much you spend landscaping efforts more effective for home energy reducrunning the cold air-blasting machine in your house, contion. sider doing a little work outside to help solve the problem. Then, decide what type of shading you need. Trees Jon Chu, communication specialist with the Office of come in a variety of sizes, densities and shapes, so finding what you need based on the climate you live in shouldn’t be a problem. To reduce the amount of sunlight that enters through your windows in the summer and still allow sun-generated heat to penetrate the home in the winter, the DOE says to use deciduous trees. These trees lose their leaves seasonally, which will shade your home in the summer while still allowing sunlight through in the summer. The DOE also recommends planting any trees far enough away from your house so its roots do not damage the foundation and so branches will not hit the siding or roof. If you live in a particularly sunny or windy region and want to eliminate the exposure of those elements Comstock to your home year-round, BUSHES AND shrubs can improve the look of your yard and help cut energy bills. the DOE says dense ever-

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THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

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SPORTS

APRIL 11-17, 2013

PAGE 19

Be-deviled Bellwood-Antis scores one run, makes it hold up against Bellefonte By PAT ROTHDEUTSCH sports@centrecountygazette.com

BELLEFONTE — The Bellefonte softball team needed a clutch hit in Saturday afternoon’s championship game of the B.J. Wetzler Memorial Tournament against Bellwood-Antis, but that hit never came. Bellewood’s Emily Nagle hit a first-inning home run and sneaky-fast pitcher Taylor Payne made that lone run stand up all day as the Blue Devils took home the championship trophy with a tense 1-0 victory over the Lady Raiders. Bellefonte did have its chances. It threatened several times to take the lead or at least tie, but Payne always found a way to thwart the Raiders in a 13-strikeout, four-hit performance. It was Bellefonte’s first loss of the season, against three wins, and it deprived freshman pitcher Rachel Bernier of a win in her first varsity start, despite giving up only five hits and the homer to Nagle. “One swing of the bat,” Bellefonte coach Gregg Kohlhepp said. “We played a great game and brought a kid out (Bernier) who hadn’t pitched varsity for us yet. We believe a lot in her, and she did a nice job in the game. “But again, they just had one kid with one swing of the bat and a lot of speed. We had a good relay system going, but she just did a better job. It comes down to it was a great pitcher’s duel.” Nagle’s homer at first looked like a nodoubt-about-it variety, but Bellefonte got to the ball quickly enough to make the play very close at home. With one out, the lefthander lifted the ball far over Bellefonte right fielder Sam Gates’ head. The relay

throws were all right on, but Nagle — running through a stop sign at third base — was able to just slide under the tag of Raider catcher Vanessa Cooper with the run. “Emily Nagle does it for us all the time,” Bellewood coach Jim Payne said. “Very fast, and takes advantage of just the slightest miscue. They threw it there (home) and she ran through the stop sign and made it. We were out there laughing about it later, but she made it. She’s a good player for us, lots of speed.” Three times in the game, Bellefonte put its leadoff hitter on base in an inning, but each time Payne was up to the challenge. In the first, Jessica McClenahan led off with a double and advanced to third on a ground out, but Payne got Cooper to pop out to end the inning. In the third, Olivia Ripka opened with a single, but she advanced only to second base as Payne forced two ground outs and then got a strikeout that ended the inning. The Lady Raiders best chance came in the fourth. Erica Divinney led off with a single, and then Cooper followed with another single that advanced Divinney to third and put runners at the corners with no outs. Payne, however, bore down and struck out Sarah Menna, Carly Chambers, and Taylor Maurer in order to end the Raiders’ threat. From there, Bellefonte was not able to mount another rally, and the Blue Devils held on for the win. “Taylor (Payne) was hitting her spots fantastic,” coach Payne (yes, Taylor’s father) said, “mixing in good off-speed stuff and hitting the spots we needed her to hit.

TIM WEIGHT/For The Gazette

BELLWOOD-ANTIS’ Emily Nagle slides under the tag of Bellefonte’s Vanessa Cooper during Saturday’s B.J. Wetzler Memorial Tournament at O’Leary Fields. She pitched a real good game for us.” Bellefonte’s Kohlhepp took the long view after his team lost its first game in a contest that resembled a playoff game more than an early-season tournament game. “You learn things from losses,” he said.

“If you take losses and don’t learn from them, you are not doing your job. It’s a great feeling to be four games in and only one loss and know we have work to do. The kids know we have work to do if we want to get to where we want to be at the end of the year.”

Penn State baseball team snaps 13-game losing skid By PAT ROTHDEUTSCH sports@centrecountygazette.com

UNIVERSITY PARK — The Penn State baseball team came up with perfect solutions for ending its 13-game losing streak against Wright State on Sunday afternoon: Put Greg Welsh on the mound, smash out 17 hits, score 11 runs, and, perhaps most of all according to coach Robbie Wine, relax. It worked, especially the relaxing part. Welsh pitched eight strong innings, gave up no earned runs, six hits, and walked only one. The Penn State hitters came alive, led with three hits each by J.J. Coban, Luis Montesinos, and Alex Farkes, and the Nittany Lions broke out early with five runs in the first two innings, two more in

the fifth, and then three in the seventh to put the game away. It all added up to a satisfying — and much needed — 11-3 victory over the Raiders that seemed to give the players and Wine some optimism as they go back into the Big Ten schedule this weekend. “It’s like we didn’t have a care in the world,” Wine said, “because we were playing our game. It’s what happens; we got 17 hits. “When you go through a stretch like we have been going through, it’s like pressure packed. The worst thing in the world’s going to happen to you, and today we just overlooked it.” Penn State started its offense quickly in the game. Jim Coates led off with a single, was sacrificed to second by Elliot Searer, and then after a fly out, scored on a single by Coban. J.J. White fol-

lowed with a double, and then Montesinos drove in both players with a seeing-eye single down the left field foul line that gave Penn State the early 3-0 lead. Wright State got a run in the top of the second when Kody Krizman singled and then scored after a hit by Cody Gardner and a Penn State error to make it 3-1. Penn State kept things going, however, with two more in the second inning. Aaron Novak led off with a double, Farkes singled, and after a sacrifice bunt by Tyler Kendall, Coates was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Searer then singled to score Novak, and then two outs later Coban singled to score Coates and make the score 5-1. In the fifth, Wright State scored two unearned runs after two costly Penn State errors by

Montesinos and first baseman White, and it began to look as if the Lions would again have trouble holding onto a lead. But Penn State came right back with two of its own in the bottom of the inning on a tworun double by Novak that put Penn State’s lead back to four runs at 7-3. Two innings later, the Lions added another three runs that essentially put things out of reach at 10-3. According to Wine, Penn State’s response in the fifth and seventh innings was more about attitude than anything else. “You know what, we’ve been through all of this, and we’re tired of it,” he said, “just keep playing the game and the best team wins. There was no tension, no upset, just keep playing. If you take the

positives out of what we’ve been through, you can be numb to all the bad things that can happen and just keep playing.” Welsh finished the eighth inning strong and then yielded to reliever Ryan Harper who cleaned up the ninth inning. The Lions added another run in the eighth to make the final score 113. “I basically had command of my fastball and my slider the whole game," Welsh said. “I just continued to mix it up to the hitters — different parts of the lineup, never pitching twice in the same location. “I have really good confidence, especially with a good win today. Our whole team should be confident that maybe we righted the ship today and we can turn something around.”

Bellefonte rallies past Clearfield for an extra-inning win By CHRIS MORELLI editor@centrecountygazette.com

BELLEFONTE — As the sun began to set on Friday at Bellefonte Area Middle School, the Lady Red Raiders found themselves in an extra-inning battle with District 9 foe Clearfield. The game was knotted at 4-4 when catcher Vanessa Cooper stepped to the plate. Cooper ripped a line shot down the left field line that rattled into the corner for a ground rule double. Had it not been for the ground rule double, Cooper would have had three bases, maybe more. Instead, she was stuck at second base — but not for long. Sarah Menna’s single up the middle scored Cooper with the game-winning run in a thrilling 5-4 extra-inning win on a chilly afternoon at O’Leary Fields. “It’s a game where I’m sitting there in the seventh and eighth

inning and I think, ‘Win or lose, we’re going to get something out of this game.’ You’re going to pick something up and be much better after it’s over,” said Bellefonte head coach Gregg Kohlhepp. “Obviously, it feels much better to win. It was a great test for a very young team.” Cooper did a nice job beating the throw to the plate, which sent the Bellefonte bench into a frenzy. According to Kohlhepp, he didn’t think twice about sending Cooper. “She doesn’t run the bases a lot because we courtesy run for her. But she’s a smart baserunner and quick enough. We’ve got to take that chance with her. They’ve got to make a great play if they’re going to get us out. We’ll gamble with that. If they get us out, Sarah Menna’s moving over to second base and we still get a runner in scoring position. We’ll

take the shot at home plate there, definitely,” he said. It was a back-and-forth earlyseason game that saw its share of miscues and missed opportunities. After a couple of scoreless innings, Bellefonte finally broke through in the third inning. With one out, Jessica McClenahan walked. After Alicia Allen struck out, Erica DeVinney reached on an error by Clearfield second baseman Lauren Butler. Cooper’s first hit of the day — a single to center — plated McClenahan with the game’s first run. After a passed ball moved DeVinney and Cooper up, Menna made the Lady Bison pay with two-run single to right field, giving Bellefonte a 3-0 lead. In the top of the fourth, Clearfield finally broke through against Bellefonte pitcher Stevi Confer.

Rachel Hoffman walked and Devyn Ireland followed with a single to left. Lucy Kovalick’s RBI double to right, cut the Bellefonte lead to 3-1. RBI ground outs by Victoria Ireland and Mikayla Ebeling evened the game up at 3-3. “We scored three, they scored three … you’ve got to give a lot of credit to Clearfield. They didn’t go away. They did a nice job of hanging in the game and we did a nice job responding to those punches,” Kohlhepp said. Bellefonte re-took the lead in the bottom of the sixth. With one out, Menna reached on an error. She moved to second on a passed ball and went to third on an illegal pitch by Clearfield hurler Rachel Hoffman. With runners at the corners, Elizabeth Linn’s sacrifice fly to left gave the Lady Raiders a 4-3 edge. However, the lead didn’t last

long. Clearfield got it back in the top of the seventh. Ebeling led off with an infield hit and stole second. After a pop out, Butler singled to right, scoring Ebeling. Just like that, it was 4-4. In the top of the eighth, Confer worked out of a bases-loaded jam to set up the dramatic finale. “She did a great job,” Kohlhepp. “The pitch that they hit the hardest (Butler) was probably my fault for having her throw that pitch. Clearfield’s hitters are pretty diverse. I thought Stevi was phenomenal.” While the extra-inning wins certainly build character, Kohlhepp is hoping for some easier victories as the temperatures heat up. “I’d like to have some five-run and six-run games so I can breathe easier,” he said with a laugh. “I like our battle mentality. It was a back and forth game. It was a real thriller.”


PAGE 20

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

Flying High Bald Eagle Area soars past Philipsburg-Osceola, 14-1 By PAT ROTHDEUTSCH sports@centrecountygazette.com

WINGATE — The 2013 high school baseball season may have gotten off to a late start, but that doesn’t seem to bother the Bald Eagle Area Eagles. Entertaining local rival Philipsburg-Osceola on Friday afternoon, BEA turned in another all-around solid performance as they trounced the Mounties 14-1 in five innings and ran their record in the young season to 3-0. After spotting P-O a first inning run, the Eagles responded by scoring 13 times in the first three innings — five in the first, three in the second, and then another five in the third. They knocked out a total of 13 hits in the game, included six extra-base hits, and got three hits from Bryce Greene, and two each from Logan Reese, Ryan Dyke and Cole Long. Ben Verbitskey led the Eagles with three RBIs, and Greene, Reese, Dyke and Long chipped in with two each. Meanwhile, BEA pitcher Dylan Wormer, after giving up that first-inning run, shut down the Mountie offense and allowed only one hit from the second inning on. Of the 15 outs Wormer recorded, 12 were by strikeout. “The first couple of games, we’ve had positive at bats, good at bats,� BEA coach Jim Gardner said. “We’ve had good discipline at the plate, but the power hitting wasn’t there. I have a lot of confidence in this group as hitters, and today we saw what they are capable of. “We always want to be aggressive on that first good fastball, and I think that’s what we did. We didn’t help their pitchers by swinging at junk, and that’s showing good discipline. It worked real well for us today.� P-O got on the board first with a run after a one-out hit by Taylor Golemboski, an error, and an RBI single by Matt Carpin. Wormer then settled down and squelched the po-

tential rally by striking out Caleb Pepperday and Travis Arnold to end the inning. BEA then immediately took control of the game in the bottom of the first. After Bryan Greene walked to open the inning, the Eagles lashed out four doubles and a single and posted five runs before P-O was able to record the second out. Bryce Greene, Reese, Long and Verbitskey all doubled and Dyke singled as BEA batted around and took an early 5-1 lead. It was more of the same in the second inning. After Wormer struck out the side in the top of the inning, BEA scored another three runs with the big hit a two-run double into the game in left-center field by Dyke that ran the score up to 8-1. “I thought today was a great day to play baseball, actually,� Bryce Greene said. “Good breeze, and that showed. We had a lot of doubles, and the ball was carrying great for us. “The last game, we weren’t hitting the ball so well, but this game, right from the start, we were getting right on it.� The ball kept carrying for the Eagles into the third inning as they posted another five runs to essentially put the game out of reach. Bryce Greene, Reese, Long and Verbitskey all had RBIs in the inning and the Eagles upped the score to 13-1. BEA then added another run in the fourth, and with Wormer not giving up another hit in the last two innings, the game ended after the top of the fifth with the final tally of 14-1. “I attacked the zone with fastballs,� Wormer said, “and I didn’t have to use to much off-speed today. Coming out today, it was a great day to play. Warming up, I felt pretty good, throwing pretty hard and hitting my spots. “They (P-O) chased a lot of up-in-the-zone fastballs I threw today, and they really helped me out when I wasn’t doing too good. When I was throwing it, they didn’t swing too much, and when they did, they usually missed.�

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The win moves BEA to 3-0 for the season with DuBois, Penns Valley and Williamsport coming up in quick succession. P-O falls to 0-2 and next travels to Huntingdon and is then home against Central. “We know we have a lot of potential on this team,� Wormer said. “We’ve been together since little league, allstar teams, teener league, state championships and all of that. We have our goals set pretty high this season, and we definitely expect a lot.�

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

PAGE 21

State High squad hopes to avoid another ‘transition’ year By SAMI HULINGS shulings@centrecountygazette.com

STATE COLLEGE — A closer look at the 2013 State College Area High School softball team: Coach — Rick Hall, eighth season. 2012 record — 7-11. “It was a transition year for us. I only started one senior. We have a lot of kids back that were still young,” Hall said. Returning letter winners — Jess Henderson, Hope Guthhoff, Allie Baney, Michaella Francis, Megan Robert, Michaela Rittenhouse, Corey Marfitt, Lexi Matevi, Sharaya Simco, Sarah Flick, Hannah Sefter Key losses — Gretchen Hallberg and Hannah Mazzochi.

Strengths — Hall believes pitching is the team’s biggest strength. “We are deeper into pitching than we’ve ever been in the eight years I’ve been here,” he said. “Right now I’d feel comfortable throwing three pitchers. Our infield play should be strong.” Concerns — Though he knows his team has skill, Hall said the players must get more consistent with their hitting. “It’s our weakness. (We need consistent) hitting with runners in scoring position.” Losing Hallberg and Mazzochi has Hall hoping others will step up to the plate. “We lost two key seniors last year. Their statistics may not have shown it, but their leadership, we need people to pick that up. They were very vital in their leadership last year,” he said.

THE STATE COLLEGE Area High School softball team returns 13 letter winners for the 2013 season. Front row, from left: Sharaya Simco, Allie Baney, Laura Harris, Hope Guthoff, Trudy Bowman and Sarah Flick. Back row, Corey Marfitt, Alexa Mattivi, Jess Henderson, Michaela Rittenhouse, Megan Robert, Michaella Francis and Hannah Sefter.

Outlook — Entering a new league doesn’t scare Hall and the Lady Little Lions. “We’re going into a new league with that Mid-Penn conference. We need to be competitive in that league, be competitive in every game. Our goal in our program since I’ve been here, it’s never been about winloss records. It’s always been about trying to get this team ready for district play,” Hall said. “Last year was the first time we hadn’t won the district title for five years in a row. So that system has worked. Our goal is to

always be playing our best and win a district title at the end of the year.” Early season — Hall is looking forward to seeing what his team has to offer, as the players become more consistent. “I think there’s potential here to be good. I’m looking forward to seeing if we can get consistent play, game in and game out, as well as practice every day,” he said. Circle these dates — vs. Cumberland Valley (April 19); vs. Chambersburg and Central Dauphin (TBA).

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PAGE 22

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

Bellefonte hardballers look for improvement By JOHN DIXON sports@centrecountygazette.com

BELLEFONTE — A closer look at the Bellefonte Area High School baseball team: Coach — Jeremy Rellinger, second season. Assistants — Jack Schuster and Jon Clark. 2012 record — 6-13. Key losses — Kevin Tate, Tyler Sunday, and Skylor Wian. Key returnees — Doylan Deitrich, Jordan Fye, Tanner Light, Mike Mann, Ryan McCloskey, Dan Roan, Brandon Shuey, Taylor Smith, Seth Weaver and Ethan White. Key newcomers — Taylor Butts, Tanner Day, Phil Fenstermacker, Noah Perryman, Andrew Stover and Josh Weaver. Strengths — Pitching depth and defensive depth. Concerns — According to Rellinger, the one area of concern is hitting. “Our hitting was a challenge last year so it

is a concern until proven otherwise,” he said. Outlook — Rellinger is hopeful that his squad can improve on the sub-.500 record of 2012. “Combining several returning players with skilled newcomers, we has the potential to bounce back this year,” Rellinger explained. Early Season — Experience should help in the early going, according to Rellinger. “With us returning several players who gained valuable experience last year is a plus,” Rellinger said. “The players have exhibited a higher level of confidence coming into this season and our efforts have been towards keeping them focused on getting better each day. If we can achieve our daily goals at practice we will be able to compete at a higher level. But we still have a lot to prove.” Circle these dates — vs. Huntingdon (April 11); at Bald Eagle Area (April 16); vs. Penns Valley (April 18); at Penns Valley (April 22); at Philipsburg-Osceola (April 25);

THE BELLEFONTE AREA High School baseball team returns 12 letter winners for the 2013 season. Front row, from left, Brandon Shuey, Mike Mann, Ryan McCloskey, Seth Weaver and Taylor Smith. Back row, Doylan Deitrich, Ethan White, Dan Roan and Jordan Fye. Missing from photo: Tanner Light. JOHN DIXON/For The Gazette

State High girls’ track and field team is well-rounded By SAMI HULINGS shulings@centrecountygazette.com

STATE COLLEGE — A closer look at the 2013 State College Area High School girls’ track and field team: Coach — Jennifer Evans, eighth season. 2012 record — 6-0. Returning letter winners — Jenna Altomare, Eve Beaury, Lauren Bonness, Chandley Book, Hannah Catalano, Emma Cousins, Victoria Crawford, Robin Derr, Emma Domico, Mary-Frances Edwards, Megan Fry, Jael Goldfine, Hannah Grubb, Christine Irwin, Bridget King, Madison Krieger, Kim Lightner, Maddie Marshall, Kate Nese, Erin Nelson, Courtney Poorman, Emily Randolph, Najla Robinson, Victoria Scutti, Alyssa Valent, Niara Valentine, Maria Verica, Megan Vonada and Sarah Wylie. Key losses — Nora Adams, Anne Balogh, Teresa Donnellan, Halie Ellis, Anna Gilpatrick, Carolyn Hay, Elaine Hinrichs, Miranda Holmes, Molly Love, Marie Matthews, Kathryn McNaughton, Sam Sampsell, Eva Swanson, Gina

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Torretti, Rebecca Whitney, Anna Wing and Ginger Woolridge. Strengths — The balance between experience and new talent is State High’s greatest strength. “We are lucky to have veteran experience and fresh young talent in each area,” Evans said. Concerns — Not many. According to Evans, she is looking forward to the Mid-Penn League and its increased competition. Outlook — “I am very excited to see how our team does this season. These young women have had excellent mentors and continue to excel to compete at a level that makes us a contender in many of the events at the state meet in May,” Evans said. Early season — Evans said the team takes training one week at a time in order to reach its goals. “We have been training as best we can through some disagreeable conditions early this spring to be ready for our new league schedule,” she said. Circle these dates — Shippensburg Invitational (April 20), vs. Mifflin County and Altoona (April 23); at West Central Coaches Altoona Mansion Park (May 3); Mid Penn Championships (May 11); District 6 Championships (May 16); PIAA Championships (May 24-25).

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THE STATE COLLEGE Area High School girls’ track and field team returns a host of letter winners for the 2013 season. Front row (seniors), from left, Kimberly Lightner, Samantha Vaughan, Lauren Bonness and Megan Vonada. Second row (juniors), Victoria Scutti, Robin Derr, Emma Cousins, Kate Nese, Chandley Book, Niara Valentine, Emily Randolph and Sarah Wylie. Third row (sophomores), Bridget King, Maddie Krieger, Maria Verica, Najla Robinson, Courtney Poorman and Emma Domico.

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APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

PAGE 23

Bellefonte boys’ track and field squad has experience By JOHN DIXON sports@centrecountygazette.com

BELLEFONTE — A closer look at the 2013 Bellefonte High School boys’ track and field squad: Coach — Seth Miller, fifth season. Assistant coaches — Bob Chandler, Randy Kochik, Dave Schaub, Kim Gasper, Matt Sterndale, Hannah Bressi, Neil Kelley and Chris Cipro. 2012 record — 3-5-1 Mountain League, 3-8-1 overall. Returning letter winners — Nick Feather, Brett Finley, Sean Gipson, Mitchell Grasser, Christian Hopple, Andrew O’Donnell, Garrett Pensak, Matt Querns, Mitchell Smith, Matt Swartz and Michael Trowbridge. Key losses — Quinn Eicher, Tanner Fishburn and Sean Hough. Strengths — Middle distance, distance and throwing. Concerns — Pole vault and

sprints. The Red Radiers are young in both events, according to Miller. Outlook — Miller believes his squad will be more than ready to compete for a league title. “We will compete for the Mountain League championship” Miller said. “And we will certainly make an effort to make a statement at the District 6 championships and to qualify multiple athletes for states.” Early season — Like most spring sports teams in Centre County, the weather has slowed the Red Raiders down. “Progress has been good although I think we are behind where we need to be,” stated Miller. “Weather has not been cooperative so I am looking for great improvement when the weather gets better.” Circle These Dates — at Lock Haven Invite (April 19); at Tyrone (April 25); at West Central Coaches Meet (May 3); at District 6 Championships (May 16).

THE BELLEFONTE AREA High School boys’ track and field squad returns 11 letter winners for the 2013 season. Front row, from left, Andrew O’Donnell, Mitchell Grasser and Garrett Pensak. Back row, Brett Finley, Matt Querns and Matt Swartz. Missing from photo: Sean Gipson, Christian Hopple, Nick Feather, Mitchell Smith and Michael Trowbridge.

JOHN DIXON/For The Gazette

THE CENTRE COUNTY

GAZETTE Coming up in next week’s Gazette: Preview of Blue White Weekend

April 25: Preview of area golf courses

May 2: What to do with your children this summer

May 9: Mother’s day

JOIN US Saturday, April 27, 2013

If you would like to advertise in one of the special sections, contact the Gazette at (814) 238-5051 or email sales@ centrecountygazette .com

1:00 - 4:00 PM Bellefonte Family YMCA Contact: 814-355-5551 ymcaofcentrecounty.org


PAGE 24

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT Bellefonte set to take ‘South Pacific’ to the stage By ANNE WALKER For The Gazette

BELLEFONTE — Expect tropical breezes, sand and surf this weekend at Bellefonte Area High School when the Theater and Fine Arts Department presents the Rogers and Hammerstein classic “South Pacific.” The performance, under the direction of Luke Skerpon, will open at 7 p.m. each evening, April 11 through 13, with an additional 2 p.m. matinee on April 13. Adult tickets are $9, student tickets are $7 and children are $5. The show takes place on an island during World War II and centers on two romances. A naive woman from the American heartland, nurse Nellie Forbush, played by junior Jessica Brown, falls in love with French expatriate Emile, played by senior Sean Gipson. Emile, a widower, has two mixed-race children from his previous marriage. Then Lt. Joe Cable, played by senior Sean Connelly, becomes attracted to a Tonkinese girl, Liat, played by junior Cat Rokavec. Conflicts arise for both couples

If you go What: “South Pacific” Where: Bellefonte Area High School auditorium When: 7 p.m. April 11 through 13; 2 p.m. matinee on April 13 Tickets: $9 adults; $7 students; $5 children More information: Visit the school’s website, www.basd.net

Submitted photo

STUDENTS AT Bellefonte Area High School will perform “South Pacific” this weekend. The play runs through April 13. when racist undertones become apparent. The action, dialogue and music develop from the themes of finding true love and overcoming bigotry and prejudices. Popular standards from the show include “Bali Ha’i,” “Some Enchanted Evening,” “I’m Gonna Wash that Man Right Outa my Hair” and “Happy Talk.” But

Bernstein’s ‘Mass’ a worthy collaboration By HARRY ZIMBLER For The Gazette

UNIVERSITY PARK — In honor of the 50th anniversary of Penn State’s College of Arts and Architecture, an unprecedented collaboration was forged to produce Leonard Bernstein’s “Mass.” The production included hundreds of musicians, actors, singers and dancers draws from the Penn State Schools of Music and Theatre and the Center for the Performing Arts. The pity is that the show was only performed twice and most certainly deserved a longer run. Perhaps most significantly, the production of “Mass” brought together town and gown in a way that will be hard — if not impossible — to replicate. A small children’s choir of talented local singers was prepared by Richard Biever, artistic director of the State Theatre as well as co-artistic director of Singing Onstage. “I have known about Bernstein’s ‘Mass’ since I was a kid,” he said. “I always wanted to be a part of it in some way. Rehearsing the children’s choir was the most logical way. To make a contribution to this piece was a thrilling experience.” As a music student at Indiana University, Bloomington, Biever just missed the opportunity to be involved with that school’s production of “Mass.” “I just missed it,” he said. “It was performed the year after I graduated. Bernstein came to see it.” In Biever’s estimation, the production of “ Mass” also serves as a measure of the progress that has been made by the College of Arts and Architecture. “I don’t think this could have been done here 15 years ago,” he said, referring to the enormous musical and theatrical demands of the piece. The success of this production rested largely on the ability of the various artists to collaborate, cooperate and coordinate. Those tasks were overseen by a trio of “producers,” including Travis DeCastro, representing the School of Theatre, Lea Asbell-Swanger, representing the Center for

PATRICK MANSELL/For The Gazette

PLENTY OF PENN STATE students were involved in the large production of Leonard Bernstein’s “Mass,” which helped celebrate the 50th anniversary of Penn State’s College of Arts and Architecture. the Performing Arts, and Russell Bloom representing the School of Music. The artistic team is to be congratulated for its ability to coax excellent performances from its Penn State student performers. Director Ted Christopher, along with Matthew Toronto, provided a fluid staging that carried tremendous power and emotion. Choreographer Spence Ford’s contributions were compelling and dynamic, and always visually delightful. The Town and Gown Choir and the Penn State Concert Choir’s were impeccably prepared by Christopher Kiver. The Penn State Symphonic Orchestra was absolutely brilliant, a first rate group that was prepared and conducted by Gerardo Edelstein. Also making important contributions were Music Director Beverly Patton and Anthony Leach, director of Essence of Joy. The Celebrant, the central character in this dramatic musical piece was played to stunning perfection by Jim Hogan. He captured the inner turmoil of the character as he searched for the true meaning of faith. Congratulations to the College of Arts and Architecture on the occasion of its 50th year. Judging by the excellence of “Mass,” its future is even more promising than its past was fulfilling.

the powerful “You’ve Got to Be Carefully Taught” directly addresses the racial prejudice issue. Considered controversial when the musical opened in 1949, the song led to a ban on the show in certain parts of the United States. South Pacific has endured for more

than 60 years, with each generation of performers breathing new life into the classic show. And as the Bellefonte students bring their fresh approaches to the songs, characters and plot, the enduring themes of true love, tolerance and acceptance will once again transport viewers to the tropical island paradise of the past.

Boombox concert planned By BRITTANY SVOBODA correspondent@centrecountygazette.com

STATE COLLEGE — As the popularity of electronic music in America rises, a Philadelphia-based music production company is bringing the trendy genre to Centre County. Art of Electronica (AOE) is hosting Boombox, a concert event that will begin at 1 p.m. on April 13 at Tussey Mountain. The concert will take place on two separate stages at the mountain. Artists and bands featured include Markus Schulz, DATSIK, Crizzly, Lazy Rich, Torro Torro, Brass Knuckles, Grandtheft, At Dawn We Rage, Proper Motion, Ground Up, moosh & twist, Dubsef, Twin Syndrome, The Perkolators, and Rubix Cubed among others. Other features of the event include access to Tussey Mountain’s go karts, skate

If you go What: Boombox, an all-day concert Where: Tussey Mountain When: 1 p.m., April 13 More information: tusseymountain.com park and mini-golf course. Although this is the first year AOE has produced the concert, the company said it plans to make it a recurring annual event. AOE is an event production, entertainment and marketing business that focuses on the electronic music genre. Electronic music uses electronic musical instruments and technology. For more information about AOE or to purchase tickets to Boombox, visit http:// www.aoe.tv.

Winners shine at this year’s ‘Happy Valley’s Got Talent’ From Gazette staff reports STATE COLLEGE — Local performers had the chance to shine on stage this past weekend at the third annual “Happy Valley’s Got Talent” competition, held on April 6. Benefitting the Tides program, a local grief support organization for children and families who have lost loved ones, Happy Valley’s Got Talent is patterned after the nationally televised show “American’s Got Talent.” The show was composed of four age divisions, “Future Fame” for ages 12 to 15, “Rising Stars” ages 16 to 20, “Prime Time” for 21- to 39-year-olds and “Local Legends” for performers 40 and older. Three finalists selected from each age division competed in the finals. First, second and third places in each category were awarded with cash prizes of $200, $100 and $50, respectively. Winners from the Future Fame division include first place, Rowan Sheridan, vocal, State College; second place, Levi Jones, acoustic guitar and vocal, Morrisdale and third place Kristine Lai and Julia Ma,

dance, State College. Rising Stars division winners are first place, Kaylee Corl, acoustic guitar, vocal, Rebersburg; second place, Tiffany Breon, vocal, Centre Hall and third place Benjamin Leskovansky and Gage Smocar, acoustic guitar and vocals, Bellefonte. Winners in the Prime Time division include first place, Curtis Ishler and Matt Greer, vocals and guitar, Bellefonte; second place Hurlie Yang and Ammi Lopez, flutes, University Park and Justin Synclair Jackson with Daniel Wells and Andrew Campbell, vocals, State College. Local Legends division winners are first place, Kim Filko and Shea Winton, dance, State College; second place, Barry Goldstein and Sally Best, acoustic guitar and vocals, State College and third place, Gina Ricci, vocals, and Chris Lee, piano, Boalsburg. For more information about Tides, please visit www.tidesprogram.org. For additional information about Happy Valley’s Got Talent, please visit the talent show’s Facebook page.


APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

WHAT’S HAPPENING To be included in What’s Happening, submit your events by Wednesday one week prior to publication to community@centrecountygazette.com or mail information to The Centre County Gazette, attn: What’s Happening, 403 S. Allen St., State College, PA 16801.

ONGOING Historical Museum and PA Room — Learn about the local history and genealogy with expert researchers at the Historical Museum and PA Room, 203 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. The hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, April 20. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Exhibit — “Far and Near Horizons: World Tour of Contemporary Landscape Artists” is a collection of landscape works by artists from around the world will be on display through Sunday, April 28 at the Green Drake Gallery and Arts Center, 101B W. Main St., Millheim. Gallery hours are 5-8 p.m. Thursday, 1-8 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday and noon to 3 p.m. Sunday. Call (814) 249-2486 or visit www.greendrakeart.com. Mulch Sale — The Bellefonte Area High School Class of 2015 Parent Group is holding its second annual Mulch Sale. The mulch is double-shredded from Nature’s Cover for $6.50 in 3 cubic feet bags or $32 for each yard. Orders can be picked up from 9 a.m. to noon April 13 at Nature’s Cover, 3093 Benner Pike, Bellefonte. For information and orders visit www.annualmulchsale.wix.com/bahs or email annualmulchsale@gmail.com. Donation Collection — Centre County Young Patrons of Husbandry (part of Centre County Grange) is collecting gently used large flower planters for a community service project to place the flower planters filled with flowers on the fairgrounds during the 2013 Fair in August. To donate, call (814) 355-7734, (814) 422-8365 or (814) 359-2442.

THURSDAY, APRIL 11 Storytime — Preschoolers can enjoy stories and songs at the Thursday Storytime from 10:30-10:50 a.m. at Discovery Space, 112 W. Foster Ave., Suite 1, State College. Story times are free with paid admission. Call (814) 234-0200 or email info@my discoveryspace.org. Science Adventures — Preschoolers ages 3-5 can work on science-themed activities with Science Adventures: Chemical Frenzy from 11-11:30 a.m. at Discovery Space, 112 W. Foster Ave., Suite 1, State College. Activities are free with paid admission. Call (814) 234-0200 or email info@mydiscoveryspace. org. Visit the website at mydiscoveryspace. org. Lunch Concert — The Penn State School of Music will present Bach’s Lunch: Flute Studio at 12:10 p.m. in Eisenhower Chapel, Pasquerilla Spiritual Center, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Research UnPlugged — The Office of the Vice President for Research and the Office of University Relations, in partnership with Schlow Centre Region Library will hold the Research UnPlugged for Spring 2013 featuring “Rising Seas, Warming Planet: Lessons from Antarctica” presented by Richard Alley, geosciences from 12:15-1:15p.m. at Schlow Centre Region Library, 211 S. Allen St., State College. Visit www.rps.psu.edu. Hooks and Needles — Bring your projects to share ideas and tips with others who knit from 1-2:30 p.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Apps, Apps — Review of some of the hot, trendy apps now, and find some useful games, productivity apps, and more from 12 p.m. and 5-6 p.m. at Centre Hall Branch Library, 109 W. Beryl St., Centre Hall. Call (814) 364-2580 or visit www.centrecountylibrary. org. Drop in Gadget — The Centre County Library and Historical Museum will host a Drop in Gadget crash course. The course, a one-on-one help for your e-readers, smartphones, tablets, digital cameras and other gadgets will be available from 2-3 p.m. and 6-7 p.m. at Centre Hall Branch Library, 109 W. Beryl St., Centre Hall. Call (814) 364-2580 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Preschool Storytime — Stories and crafts for preschool will be held from 2-3 p.m. at Holt Memorial Library, 17 N. Front St., Philipsburg. The theme is “in like a lion”. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 342-1987 or visit www. centrecountylibrary.org. Lego Club — Be creative with Lego blocks from 3:30-4:30 p.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Three sized brick will

be available. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Support Group — The Diabetes Support Group will meet from 6-7 p.m. in Conference Rooms 1 and 2, Entrance E, Mount Nittany Medical Center, 1800 E. Park Ave., State College. Email Amy Leffard at aleffard@ mountnittany.org or call (814) 231-7095. It’s Elementary — Activities and presentations designed for children in kindergarten through sixth grade will be held from 6-7 p.m. at Holt Memorial Library, 17 N. Front St., Philipsburg. Theme is like decorate your own mini-frisbee to celebrate the spring weather. Call (814) 342-1987 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Meeting — The Aaronsburg Civic Club will meet at 6:30 pm in the Civic Club meeting room. New members are welcome. “The Wiz” — The State High Thespians will perform “The Wiz,” the R&B musical based on the novel, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” by L. Frank Baum at 7 p.m. at the State College Area High School North Auditorium, 653 Westerly Parkway, State College. Tickets can be purchased at the box office. Reservations may be made by calling the box office at (814) 231-4188. Tickets will also be available for purchased at the door one hour prior to each show and at intermission. Meeting — The Centre County 4-H Dairy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Grange Fair Administration Building in Centre Hall. The meeting is open to children ages 8-18 as of January 1. Call (814) 349-5013. Student Concert — The Penn State School of Music will present Centre Dimensions Jazz Ensemble student concert at 8 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Tickets are available at the Eisenhower Ticket Center by calling (814) 863-0255 or 1-800-ARTS-TIX or online at www.cpa.psu.edu.

FRIDAY, APRIL 12 Masterclass — The Penn State School of Music will present a guest artist masterclass with Mihai Tetel, cello at 3:30 p.m. at Eisenhower Chapel, Pasquerilla Spiritual Center, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a graduate recital with Maria Arrua, violin at 5 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Dinner Dance — Town & Gown Dinner Dance will be held at the Mountain View Country Club, 100 Elks Club Rd., Boalsburg. Live music will be performed. Cash bar will be available at 6 p.m., Valentine buffet dinner at 6:30 p.m. and ballroom dancing will be held from 7:30-10:30 p.m. Email Joe Herrle for reservations and information at joe herrle@comcast.net or call (814) 880-0723. Film Festival — The Sierra Club Moshannon Group presents the Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour at 7 p.m. at the State Theatre, 130 W. College Ave., State College. For tickets, call the theatre box office at (814) 272-0606 or purchase online at www.State Tickets.org. “The Wiz” — The State High Thespians will perform “The Wiz,” the R&B musical based on the novel, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” by L. Frank Baum at 7 p.m. at the State College Area High School North Auditorium, 653 Westerly Parkway, State College. Tickets can be purchased at the box office. Reservations may be made by calling the box office at (814) 231-4188. Tickets will also be available for purchased at the door one hour prior to each show and at intermission. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a saxophone studio recital at 8 p.m. at Room 110, Music Building I, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu. edu.

SATURDAY, APRIL 13 Breakfast — A fishermen’s breakfast will be served from 6:30-11:30 a.m. at St Paul Lutheran Church, 277 W. Pine Grove Road, Pine Grove Mills. Donations benefit Lutheran Disaster Response (Hurricane Sandy). Call (814) 237-3687 or (814) 404-8084. Audition — The State College Spike National Anthem auditions will be held at 10 a.m. at The State Theatre, 130 W. College Ave., State College. Call (814) 272-0606. Open House — The Environmental Center Open House will be held from 10 a.m. to noon at Bald Eagle State Park, 149 Main Park Rd., Howard. Stop in and look around at various mounts and educational displays. A park volunteer will be on hand to talk, share general information about Bald Eagle State Park and answer questions about Pennsylvania’s natural environment

What’s Happening, Page 26

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T N E M IN A T R E %NT 3CHEDULE

,IVE

Thursday, April 11 through Wednesday, April 17, 2013 AMERICAN ALE HOUSE, 821 CRICKLEWOOD DRIVE, STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-9701 Thursday, April 11 Domenick Swentosky, 8 to 11 p.m. Friday, April 12 Tommy Wareham, 6 to 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. to midnight Sunday, April 14 Ted and Molly, 8 to 10 p.m. Wednesday, April 17 Scott Mangene, 8 to 10:30 p.m. THE ARENA BAR & GRILL, 1521 MARTIN ST., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-8833 Friday, April 12 Gone Crazy Saturday, April 13 Big Daddy Bangers THE AUTOPORT, 1405 S. ATHERTON ST., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-7666 Thursday, April 11 Kate and Natalie, 9 p.m. Friday, April 12 Ken Volz, 9 p.m. Saturday, April 13 Chris Good, 9 p.m. BAR BLEU, 112 S. GARNER ST., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-0374 Friday, April 12 Lowjack, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, April 13 Ted McCloskey & The Hi Fis, 10:30 p.m. BELLA SICILIA, 2782 EARLYSTOWN ROAD, CENTRE HALL (814) 364-2176 Saturday, April 13 Live Acoustic Music by John and Chad BOXER’S CAFE, 410 PENN ST., HUNTINGDON (814) 643-5013 Saturday, April 13 Organ Trio West, 10 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. THE BREWERY, 233 E. BEAVER AVE., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-2892 Sunday, April 14 Karaoke, 9:30 p.m. ELK CREEK CAFÉ AND ALEWORKS, 100 W. MAIN ST., MILLHEIM (814) 349-8850 Thursday, April 11 Richard Sleigh and Friends, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 13 Marah, 8 p.m. THE GINGERBREAD MAN, 130 HEISTER ST., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-0361 Thursday, April 11 DJ Cup Cake, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday, April 12 DJ Boner, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Saturday, April 13 DJ Cup Cake, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. GOVERNORS PUB, 211 W. HIGH ST., BELLEFONTE Thursday, April 11 JT Blues, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 10 Bisquit Jam, 6:30 p.m. INFERNO BRICK OVEN & BAR, 340 E. COLLEGE AVE., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-5718 Thursday, April 11 DJ Manik Mike, 10 p.m. Friday, April 12 DJ Fuego, 10 p.m. Saturday, April 13 DJ Ca$hous, 10 p.m. KILDARE’S IRISH PUB, 538 E. COLLEGE AVE., STATE COLLEGE (814) 272-0038 Thursday, April 11 Live Acoustic Friday, April 12 TBA Saturday, April 13 TBA OTTO’S PUB & BREWERY, 2286 N. ATHERTON ST., STATE COLLEGE (814) 867-OTTO Thursday, April 11 Scott Mangene, 8 to 10 p.m. Saturday, April 13 Dreams and Bones, 9 p.m. THE PHYRST, 111 E. BEAVER AVE., STATE COLLEGE Thursday, April 11 Jason & Dan, 8 p.m., Maxwell Strait, 10:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday, April 12 Dom & the Fig, 8 to 10 p.m. Ted and the Hi-Fi’s, 10:30 pm to 2 a.m. Wednesday, April 17 The Nightcrawlers, 10:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. THE RATHSKELLER, 108 S. PUGH ST., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-3858 Thursday, April 11 Team trivia, 7 p.m. Friday, April 12 Mr. Hand, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, April 13 TBA THE SALOON, 101 HEISTER ST., STATE COLLEGE, (814) 234-0845 Thursday, April 11 My Hero Zero, 10:30 p.m. Friday, April 12 John and Chad, 8 to 10 p.m. Velveeta, 10:30 p.m. Saturday, April 13 Mr. Hand, 7 p.m. Sunday, April 14 Lowjack, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 16 Shake Shake Shake, 10:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 17 Hotdog Cart, 10:30 p.m. Z BAR AND THE DELI RESTAURANT, 113 HIESTER ST., STATE COLLEGE (814) 237-5710 Sunday, April 14 Jazz Brunch with Jay Vonada, noon to 2 p.m. — Compiled by Marjorie S. Miller Schedules subject to change. Call the venue for details. The Centre County Gazette is committed to providing readers with a complete list of upcoming live entertainment in Centre County. If your establishment provides live entertainment and would like to have it listed free in The Gazette, simply email listings to mmiller@centrecountygazette.com.


PAGE 26 What’s Happening, from page 25 Safety Drills — The 3rd Pennsylvania Volunteers Battery B will hold a recruitment drive and conduct safety training drills from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Pennsylvania Military Museum, 51 Boal Ave., Boalsburg. Visit www.pamilmuseum.org or call (814) 4666262. Family Storytime — Family storytime will be held from 10:30-11 a.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 3551516 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a senior recital with Sean Durkin, trombone at 11:30 a.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a graduate recital with Louis Setzer, trombone at 1:30 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present an undergraduate recital with Thomas Outlen, saxophone at 2 p.m. at Room 128, Music Building II, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Fossil Hunting — Fossil Hunting will be held from 2-3 p.m. at Pavilion No. 4, Bald Eagle State Park, 149 Main Park Rd., Howard. Hike along F.J. Sayers Lake and try to find fossils in the dried lake bed. Call (814) 6252775 or email BaldEagleEE@pa.gov. Children’s Festival — Global Connections and the Penn State Office of Global Programs are sponsoring an international children’s festival from 2-6 p.m. at the State College High School South Building, 650 Westerly Parkway, State College. Enjoy performances, arts and crafts, silent auction, food competition and more from countries around the world. Call (814) 863-3927 or globalconnections@ip.psu.edu. Pork Loin Dinner — A pork loin dinner will be served from 4:30-7 p.m. at the New Hope Lutheran Church, 119 Cobblestone Court, Spring Mills. Eat in or take-out will be available. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a graduate recital with Jarren Angud, percussion at 5 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a junior recital with Justin Dorsey, double bass at 5 p.m. in Room 128, Music Building II, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Mom Prom — Mom Prom 2013 will be held to benefit Tara’s Angels, the American Cancer Society Relay for Life team. This is a ladies only evening of dinner, dancing, raffles and fun to be held from 6-11 p.m. at Damon’s Grill, 1031 E. College Ave., State College. Tickets are $25 and must be purchased in advance from Tara Ripka by email at tararipka@yahoo.com or call (814)3830067. Film Festival — The Sierra Club Moshannon Group presents the Banff Mountain Film Festival World Tour at 7 p.m. at the State Theatre, 130 W. College Ave., State College. Call the theatre box office at (814) 272-0606 or purchase online at www.StateTickets.org. “The Wiz” — The State High Thespians will perform “The Wiz,” the R&B musical based on the novel, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” by L. Frank Baum at 7 p.m. at the State College Area High School North Auditorium, 653 Westerly Parkway, State College. Tickets can be purchased at the box office. Reservations may be made by calling the box office at (814) 231-4188. Tickets will also be available for purchased at the door one hour prior to each show and at intermission. Acoustic Brew — Acoustic Brew Concert series will feature Tim Eriksen and the Trio de Pumpkintown at 7:30 p.m. at the Center for Well Being, 123 Mount Nittany Road, Lemont. Tickets are available at http:// acousticbrew.org or at Nature’s Pantry, 2331 Commercial Blvd., State College and Webster’s Bookstore Café, 133 E. Beaver Ave., State College. Call Jenna Spinelle at (570) 617-5667. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a double bass recital with Figments of Past and Present, Kyle Kresge at 8 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu.

SUNDAY, APRIL 14 Safety Drills — The 3rd Pennsylvania Volunteers Battery B will hold a recruitment drive and conduct safety training drills from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Pennsylvania Mili-

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE tary Museum, 51 Boal Ave., Boalsburg. Visit www.pamilmuseum.org or call (814) 4666262. Bingo — A multi-vendor bingo with cash and carry items to benefits Relay for Life will be held at 2 p.m. with doors opening at 12:30 p.m. at the Milesburg Community Center, 101 Mill St., Milesburg. Call Kathy at (814) 357-5852. Greats at The State — Greats at The State Film Series will feature “The Wizard of Oz” at 2 p.m. at The State Theatre, 130 W. College Ave., State College. Call the box office at (814) 466-7141, or the State Theatre’s box office at (814) 272-0606. “The Wiz” — The State High Thespians will perform “The Wiz,” the R&B musical based on the novel, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” by L. Frank Baum at 2 p.m. at the State College Area High School North Auditorium, 653 Westerly Parkway, State College. Tickets can be purchased at the box office. Reservations may be made by calling the box office at (814) 231-4188. Tickets will also be available for purchased at the door one hour prior to each show and at intermission. Celebration — Krislund Camp and Conference Center will celebrate the completion of a new lodge name Resurrection Lodge on at 2 p.m. with dedication scheduled for 3 p.m. on Route 445 between Lamar and Madisonburg. Call Tammy Colwell at (814) 422-8878. Support Group — The Ostomy Support Group of the Central Counties is for people who have or will have intestinal or urinary diversions, as well as for their family members and friends will meet from 2-3 p.m. in Conference Rooms, Entrance E, Mount Nittany Medical Center, 1800 E. Park Ave., State College. Call Judy Faux at (814) 234-6195. Student Concert — Penn State School of Music will present Women’s Chorale student concert at 2 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Tickets are available at the Eisenhower Ticket Center by calling (814) 863-0255 or 1-800-ARTSTIX or online at www.cpa.psu.edu. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present an undergraduate recital with Audrey Conklin and Ali Long, clarinet at 2:30 p.m. at the University Baptist and Brethren, 411 S. Burrowes St., State College. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Student Concert — Penn State School of Music will present Oriana Singers student concert at 4 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Tickets are available at the Eisenhower Ticket Center by calling (814) 863-0255 or 1-800-ARTSTIX or online at www.cpa.psu.edu. Recital — The Penn State School of Music will present a graduate recital with Eli Brauner, trombone at 4:30 p.m. in Room 128, Music Building II, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Dance — Central Pennsylvania Ballroom Dancers Association will hold a Spring is Here dance at Christ Community Church, 200 Ellis Place, State College. Live music will be performed by Zupe. Hustle lesson will begin at 4:30 p.m.; buffet dinner will be served at 5:45 p.m. with dancing from 6-9 p.m. Call Peggy Campbell at (814) 237-3008 or email at peggy_campbell@comcast. net.Visit http://cpbda.com. Concert — The Penn State School of Music will present a Graduate Wind Quintet at 5:30 p.m. in Room 122, Music Building II, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu. Student Concert — Penn State School of Music will present University Choir student concert at 6 p.m. at Esber Recital Hall, Music Building I, University Park. Tickets are available at the Eisenhower Ticket Center by calling (814) 863-0255 or 1-800-ARTSTIX or online at www.cpa.psu.edu. Concert — The Penn State School of Music will present a DMA Chamber recital with Chanyang Bae, piano at 8 p.m. in Room 122, Music Building II, University Park. Admission is free. Call (814) 863-0255 or visit www.music.psu.edu.

MONDAY, APRIL 15 Mission Central HUB — Bellefonte Area Mission Central HUB open at from 911 a.m. at the Trinity United Methodist Church, 128 W. Howard St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 355-9425. Preschool Storytime — Stories paired with songs, rhyme, puppet play, crafts or activities that are theme focused from 10:30-11 a.m. at East Penns Valley Area Branch Library, 225 E. Main St., Millheim. The theme is PA One Book Storytime and Touch-a-Truck Event. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 3495328 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Preschool Storytime — Picture book stories, puppet play and crafts for children

will be available from 10:30-11 a.m. at Centre Hall Branch Library, 109 W. Beryl St., Centre Hall. The theme is library week. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 364-2580 or visit www. centrecountylibrary.org. Toddler Storytime — Books, music and literacy enriching activities designed for children ages 18-36 months will be held from at 10:30-11:15 a.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centre countylibrary.org. Line Dancing — The Centre Region Parks and Recreation will have line dancing at 10:50 a.m. at the Centre Region Senior Center, 131 S. Fraser St. No. 1, State College. No experience necessary or partners needed. Call (814) 231-3076. Kneedlers — Sue will teach knitting from 1-2:30 p.m. at East Penns Valley Area Branch Library, 225 E. Main St., Millheim. Get help with any needlecraft project you are working on. All skill levels are welcome. Call (814) 349-5328 or visit www.centre countylibrary.org.

TUESDAY, APRIL 16 Seniors Hiking Group — Enjoy a moderate hike in the great outdoors at 9 a.m. at various locations in and around State College. The hikes are free except for car pool donations. To register call (814) 231-3076 or visit www.crpr.org. Coffee Time — Bring a friend and savor that second cup of coffee and conversation from 9:30-11 a.m. in the Fellowship Hall, Howard United Methodist Church, West Main Street, Howard. Mother Goose On the Loose — Children ages 3 and younger and an adult can participate in a musical rhyming adventure through the world of Mother Goose from 10:30-11:30 a.m. at Holt Memorial Library, 17 N. Front St., Philipsburg. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 342-1987 or visit www.centre countylibrary.org. Ham Pot Pie Dinner — Ham potpie with applesauce, roll and butter will be served from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the American Legion Post 33, 121 E. Howard St., Bellefonte. Takeout meals cost $5.75; members’ meals cost $5.50. Phone ahead to reserve and place your order (814) 3552212 for pick up by 6 p.m. The fundraiser supports the American Legion and community programs. Preschool Storytime — Stories and crafts for children ages 3-6 are available from 1:30-2:15 p.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. The theme is babies. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Lego/Duplo Club — Be creative with Duplo blocks from 3:30-4 p.m. at East Penns Valley Area Branch Library, 225 E. Main St., Millheim. Children are encouraged to write a story or description of their projects. Call (814) 349-5328 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Yoga Class — A gentle yoga class will be held from 5-6 p.m. at the Howard United Methodist Church Fellowship Hall, 144 W. Main St., Howard. The class is designed to have all flows on the floor. Gain flexibility and strength and leave feeling calm, open and rejuvenated. Call Kathie at (814) 6252852 or email at kathieb1@comcast.net. Documentary — Mount Nittany Health will present “The Weight of a Nation,” the third of a four-part documentary about obesity in America at 6:30 p.m. at the State Theatre, 130 W. College Ave., State College. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion. Light refreshments will be served. Admission is free. Call (814) 2720606 or visit www.StateTickets.org. Potluck — The Friends & Farmers Cooperative will hold a potluck to celebrate their incorporation from 6-8:30 p.m. at the Borough Municipal Building, Room 201. RSVP at http://tinyurl.com/FFpotluck. Meeting — The Bellefonte Garden Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church, 203 N. Spring St., Bellefonte. Master Gardener Dixie Witt will show how to correctly divide perennials and how to move flowers and plants to another location. This talk will be the precursor to the plant exchange in May. Meeting — The East Penns Valley Women’s Club’s will meet for a tour from 6:30-7 p.m. at the Penns Valley Area Historical Museum, 244 W. Aaron Square,

APRIL 11-17, 2013 Aaronsburg. A business meeting following at St. John’s Lutheran Church, 101 Mill St., Millheim. Yoga Class — A basics level yoga class will be held from 6:30-8 p.m. at the Howard United Methodist Church Fellowship Hall, 144 W. Main St., Howard. The class is intended for those who may have had some prior yoga experience. Gain flexibility and strength and leave feeling calm, open and rejuvenated. Call Kathie at (814) 625-2852 or email at kathieb1@comcast.net. Line Dancing — The Centre Region Parks and Recreation will have line dancing at 7 p.m. at the Mt. Nittany Residence, 301 Rolling Ridge Drive, State College. No experience necessary or partners needed. Call (814) 231-3076. Model Railroad Club — Nittany Valley Model Railroad Club meets at 7 p.m. Old Gregg School, room 1A, 106 School St., Spring Mills. Call Fred at (814) 422-7667. Orchestra — Toronto’s Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra with Jeanne Lamon, music director will perform “House of Dreams” at 7:30 p.m. at Schwab Auditorium, University Park. “Artistic Viewpoints,” an informal moderated discussion featuring double bass player Alison Mackay, is offered in Schwab Auditorium one hour before the performance and is free for ticket holders. Class — “A Joint Venture” is a class on hip and knee replacements that meets from 7-8 p.m. in Conference Room 1, 2 or 3, Entrance A, Mount Nittany Medical Center, 1800 E. Park Ave., State College. Email Val Coakley at vcoakley@mountnittany.org or call (814) 278-4810.

WEDENSDAY, APRIL 17 Book Babies Storytime — Books, music and language building activities to stimulate a child’s brain growth will be held from at 9:30-10 a.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Preschool Storytime — Stories and crafts for children ages 3-6 are available from 10:30-11:15 a.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centre countylibrary.org. Preschool Storytime — Stories and crafts for preschool will be held from 10:30-11:30 a.m. at Holt Memorial Library, 17 N. Front St., Philipsburg. The theme is our precious planet. Storytime programs meet Pennsylvania learning standards for early childhood education. Call (814) 3421987 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. Line Dancing — The Centre Region Parks and Recreation will have line dancing at 10:50 a.m. at the Centre Region Senior Center, 131 S. Fraser St., No. 1, State College. No experience necessary or partners needed. Call (814) 231-3076. Science Adventures — Preschoolers ages 3-5 can work on science-themed activities with Science Adventures: Chemical Frenzy from 2-2:30 p.m. at Discovery Space, 112 W. Foster Ave., Suite 1, State College. Activities are free with paid admission. Call (814) 234-0200 or email info@ mydiscoveryspace.org. Visit the website at mydiscoveryspace.org. Mission Central HUB — Bellefonte Area Mission Central HUB open at from 13 p.m. at the Trinity United Methodist Church, 128 W. Howard St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 355-9425. Seminar — Jane Taylor, director of Aging in Place Centre County will talk at a seminar for senior homeowners “Resources Available to Retirees” from 2-3:30 p.m. at Schlow Centre Region Library, 211 S. Allen St., State College. Call (814) 8808813. Fizz Bang Eureka — After-school educational science experiment and activities are available from 3-3:30 p.m. at Centre Hall Branch Library, 109 W. Beryl St., Centre Hall. The theme is the senses. Call (814) 364-2580 or visit www.centrecounty library.org. Zumba — New Hope United Methodist Church will sponsor a free Zumba class at 6 p.m. at Marion Walker Elementary School, 100 School Drive, Bellefonte. Call Amanda at (814) 321-4528. Adult Book Discussion — Members of the group will read and discuss a selected book from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at Centre County Library and Historical Museum, 200 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 355-1516 or visit www.centrecountylibrary.org. — Compiled by Gazette staff


APRIL 11-17, 2013

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

PAGE 27

GROUP MEETINGS The Gazette will publish the regular meeting dates and times for all Centre County social and service groups, organizations, clubs, etc. that have membership open to the public. To be included in the weekly listing send information by Wednesday one week prior to publication to community@centrecountygazette.com or mail to: The Centre County Gazette, attn: Group Meetings, 403 S. Allen St., State College, PA 16801. Adult Bible Study and Kids Program offering practical help from the Bible and a fun and productive time for kids will meet 7 p.m. Wednesdays Nittany Baptist Church, 430 Mountain Back Road, Spring Mills. Call (814) 360-1601 or visit nittanybaptist.org. Adult Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse — Men’s Support Group sponsored by The Centre County Women’s Resource Center from 5:30-7 p.m. Tuesdays. Call (814) 2375220 ext. 247, email edteam@ccwrc.org or visit ccwrc.org. Adult Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse — Women’s Support Group sponsored by The Centre County Women’s Resource Center from 5:30-7 p.m. Wednesdays. Call (814) 237-5220 ext. 247, email edteam@ccwrc.org or visit ccwrc.org. ALIVE Teen Club meets at 6 p.m. Sundays at First Baptist Church, 539 Jacksonville Road, Bellefonte. Call (814) 3555678 or visit fbcbellefonte.org. Alzheimer’s/Dementia Support Groups First Friday of every month at 1 p.m. and second Tuesday of every month at 6:30 p.m., Mount Nittany Dining Room at The Inn at Brookline, 1930 Cliffside Drive, State College. Call or email Anne at (814) 234-3141 / teadmin@brooklinevillage.com or Janie at (814) 235-2000 / iwpcommrel@brooklinevillage.com for more information. AWANA Club is at 6 p.m. every Sunday at the First Baptist Church, 539 Jacksonville Road, Bellefonte. Activities and Bible lessons will be held for children ages 3 through sixth grade. Materials provided. Call (814) 355-5678 or visit fbcbellefonte.org. Bald Eagle Grange No. 151 meets at 7 p.m. the first Tuesday of every month at the Grange Hall in Runville. Bald Eagle Watershed Association meets at 7 p.m. the fourth Wednesday at the Milesburg Borough Building, 416 Front St., Milesburg. Visit baldeaglewatershed.com. The Bald Eagle Area Class of 1959 meets at 6 p.m. the first Wednesday of each month for dinner. Location changes each month. Call Joyce at (814) 383-4337 or email ljt2342@embarqmail.com. Bald Eagle Area Class Of 1960 meets for lunch at 11:30 a.m. the third Thursday of every month at The Bestway Restaurant, 1023 N. Eagle Valley Road, Howard. Call Barb (814) 466-6027. Bald Eagle Area Class of 1964 meets for breakfast 9 a.m. the fourth Saturday of the month at the Bestway Restaurant, state Route 150, I-80 exit 158, Milesburg. Dinner will be at 5:30 p.m. on the third Friday of the month at the Bellefonte Moose, 125 N. Spring St., Bellefonte. Call Sue (814) 625-2132 or bea.1964@ yahoo.com. Bald Eagle Area Class of 1965 meets for dinner at 5:30 p.m. the last Friday of each month, Bellefonte Moose, 125 N. Spring St., Bellefonte. Call Bob (814) 383-2151. Bellefonte High School Class of 1956 meets for dinner at 5:30 p.m. the second Friday of each month, Bellefonte Elks, 120 W. High St., Bellefonte. Call Kay at (814) 359-2738. Bellefonte High School Class 1967 meets for breakfast at 8:30 a.m. the first Saturday of each month, Sunset West, 521 E. College Ave., Pleasant Gap. The location is subject to change. Call Vic (814) 360-1948. Bellefonte Elks Lodge meets 7 p.m. the second and fourth Mondays of each month, Bellefonte Elks, 120 W. High St., Bellefonte. Bellefonte Encampment No. 72 and Ridgeley Canton No. 8 meets 7 p.m. the second Wednesday of each month, Windmere Hall, 454 Rolling Ridge Drive, State College. Bellefonte Historical Railroad Society meets at 7 p.m. the first Monday of each month, Train Station, Talleyrand Park, Bellefonte. Call (814) 355-1053 or bellefontetrain.org. Bellefonte Kiwanis Club meets at noon Tuesdays at the Moose Club, 125 N. Spring St., Bellefonte. Call Richard King, (814) 355-9606 or email kings430elinn@yahoo.com. Bellefonte Sunrise Rotary Club meets 7:30 a.m. Fridays, Diamond Deli, 103 N. Allegheny St., Bellefonte. Call Mary Jane Fisher (814) 355-5905. Bellefonte Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1600 meets 8 p.m. the second Thursday of every month, Post Home, Spring Street, Bellefonte. Bellefonte Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1600 Ladies Auxiliary meets 7 p.m. the second Wednesday of every month, Post Home, Spring Street, Bellefonte. Better Breathers Support Group meets 3:30 p.m. the third Thursday every month, HealthSouth Nittany Valley Rehabilitation Hospital, 550 E. College Ave., Pleasant Gap. Call (814) 359-3421. Business Networking International meets 7 a.m. Thursdays, Celebration Hall, 2280 Commercial Blvd., State College. Members share ideas, contacts and business referrals. Fee is $10 for room and breakfast. Call Kelly Swisher (814) 2801656. Boy Scouts of America BSA Troop 66 meets at 7-8 p.m. every Tuesday at Pleasant Gap United Methodist Church, 179 S. Main St., Pleasant Gap. Email Scoutmaster Bill Weaver at standinten@ aol.com. Brain Injury Support Group meets 7 p.m. the second Tuesday of every month, HealthSouth Nittany Valley Rehabilitation Hospital, 550 E. College Ave., Pleasant Gap. Call (814) 359-3421. Breast Cancer Support Group meets 5:30-7 p.m. the first Monday of every month in the ground floor conference rooms, Mount Nittany Medical Center, 1800 E. Park Ave., State College. If the first Monday of the month is a holiday, the meeting will be held on the second Monday of the month. Call Cheri (814) 231-7005. Catholic Daughters of the Americas social begins at 6:30 p.m. and meets at 7 p.m. first Thursday of every month at St.

John’s Catholic School auditorium, 134 E. Bishop St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 355-7730 or email jmoest@yahoo.com. Central Pennsylvania Holistic Wellness Group will meet to share and learn about many methods and techniques to support a holistic, homeopathic and spiritual life style from 6:30-8 p.m. the second Wednesday of each month at the Inspired Holistic Wellness, 107 S. Spring St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 883-0957 or visit meetup.com/Central-PA-HolisticWellness-Group/. The Centre County Down Syndrome Society meets from 7 to 9 p.m. on the second Thursday of the month in the offices at 111 Sowers St., Suite 504 in State College. Email ccdssociety@gmail.com or visit centrecountydown syndrome.org. Centre County Greens meets at 7:15 p.m. the first Monday of every month at Webster’s Bookstore & Café, 133 E. Beaver Ave., State College. Centre County Real Estate Investment Club meets 7-9 p.m. the third Thursday of every month at RE/MAX Centre Realty, 1375 Martin St., State College. Call (814) 280-5839 or email len@decarmine.com. Visit centrecountyreiclub.org. Centre Hall Lions Club meets 6:30 p.m. the second Tuesday of the month and at 7 p.m. the fourth Tuesday of the month, Centre Hall Lions Club Building, 153 E. Church St., Centre Hall. Centre Line Riders — ABATE of Pennsylvania, Chapter 18 meet at noon the third Saturday of each month at the Centre Hall American Legion, 2928 Penns Valley Pike, Centre Hall. Centre Pieces Quilt Guild will meet from 7-9 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month (March through December) at the Mount Nittany Middle School Cafeteria, 656 Brandywine Drive, State College. Visit the web site at www.centrepiecesguild.org or call (814) 237-6009. Centre Region Model Investment Club meets at 6:30 p.m. on the second Monday of the month, Mazza Room, South Hills Business School, 480 Waupelani Drive, State College. Call (814) 234-8775 or email cr20mic@aol.com. The Compassionate Friends Group meets from 7 p.m. the second Monday of each month at Bellefonte Middle School, TCF is a national non-profit support organization offering understanding, friendship, and hope to families following the death of a child of any age, from any cause. Contact Peg at (814) 355-9829 or Amanda at (814) 321-4528. Circle of Hope, a support group for special-needs children and families, will meet at 6 p.m. on April 23 at Halfmoon Christian Fellowship Church, 1776 Halfmoon Valley Road, Port Matilda. Call Angie (814) 386-1826 or alavanish@live. com. FHA Center for Weight Management and Nutrition will host a bariatric surgery support group from 6-7 p.m. the third Thursday or each month in Classroom 4, Lewistown Hospital, 400 Highland Ave., Lewistown. Sessions are moderated by Virginia M. Wray, DO, CNSP. Call (717) 242-7099 or visit myfamilyhealthassociates.com. Girls of Bald Eagle Area High School Class of 1961 will meet at 11:30 a.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Mt. Valley Diner, 850 S. Eagle Valley Road, Wingate. Call (814) 355-3686. Halfmoon Garden Club meets at 1 p.m. the first Thursday of the month. Membership is open to Halfmoon Township residents. Call Alice McGregor (814) 692-7396, almcgregor@comcast.net or Susan Kennedy (814) 692-5556, susank81@gmail.com. Halfmoon Grange No. 290 meets 7:30 p.m. the first Monday of every month at the Grange Hall in Centennia. Call Diane (814) 692-4580. Hearing Loss Association of America meets 7 p.m. the second Monday of each month, Foxdale, 500 E. Marylyn Ave., State College. Learn the latest technology available for hearing loss. I.O.O.F. Centre Lodge #153 meets 7:30 p.m. the first and third Thursday of each month, I.O.O.F. Lodge Hall 756 N. Main St., Pleasant Gap. Junior Rockhounds meets 5 p.m. the third Wednesdays of each month, Room 121, Earth and Engineering Sciences Building, University Park. Call (814) 867-6263 or visit nittanymineral.org. Keystone Guild of the Watchmakers Association of Pa. meets 1 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month, Bull Pen Restaurant, Washington Avenue at First Street, Tyrone. Call George at (814) 238-1668. Ladies Grief Support Group meets 2 p.m. every second and fourth Tuesday at Living Faith Church, 113 Sunset Acres, Milesburg. Call Hazel at (814) 387-4952. Marion Grange 223 meets at 7 p.m. the second Thursday of every month at the Jacksonville Grange Hall. For more information, call Brenda at (814) 383-2796. The Milesburg Lions Club meets 7 p.m. first and third Tuesday every month, Milesburg Center across from UniMart. MOPS, Mothers of Preschoolers, sponsored by New Hope Church is designed to nurture every mother with children from pregnancy through kindergarten meets the first and third Thursdays of each month at The State College Evangelical Free Church, 1243 Blue Course Drive, State College. Childcare is provided for each monthly meeting. Visit statecollegemops. Multiple Sclerosis Support Group meets 6 p.m. every third Tuesday, HealthSouth Nittany Valley Rehabilitation Hospital, Outpatient Entrance, 550 E. College Ave., Pleasant Gap. The support group is affiliated with the National MS Society. Call (814) 359-3421. National Alliance on Mental Illness meets 7 p.m. every second Tuesday at South Hills School, State College. June is the last meeting of the summer. Meetings will resume in September. Call Dave (814) 238-1983. The Neuropathy Support Group of Central Pennsylvania will meet at 2 p.m. the fourth Sunday at the Mount Nittany Medical Center, Conference Room 3, 1800 E. Park Ave., State College. Call David Brown at (814) 531-1024. Nittany Knights Barbershop Chorus meets 7:15 p.m. every Monday, South Hills School, State College. Men who

like to sing are welcome. Visit nittanyknights.org, or call Bill (814) 355-3557. Nittany Valley Model Railroad Club meets at 7 p.m. Tuesdays at Old Gregg School, room 1A, 106 School St., Spring Mills. Call Fred at (814) 422-7667. Nittany Mineral Society will hold a social at 6:30 p.m. and meet at 7:30 p.m. the third Wednesdays, Room 116 Auditorium of the Earth and Engineering Sciences Building, University Park. Call (814) 867-6263 or visit nittanymineral.org. Nittany Valley Woodturners meet from 7-9 p.m. every first Thursday, the woodworking shop, State College Area High School, South Building, 650 Westerly Parkway, State College. Email Reg@MarketValueSolutions.com or visit NittanyValleyWoodturners.org. The Nittany Valley Writers Network meets for an earlyrisers breakfast at 7 a.m. every third Wednesday, The Waffle Shop, 1610 W. College Ave., State College. The Nittany Valley Writers Network meets from 7-8:30 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month at Schlow Centre Region Library, 211 S. Allen St., State College. Parent Support Group for Children with Eating Disorders meets from 7-8 p.m. the second Tuesday of every month in Conference Room 3, Mount Nittany Medical Center, 1800 E. Park Ave., State College. Call Kristie Kaufman (814) 466-7921. Penns Valley Grange No. 158 meets 7:30 p.m. the second Thursday of every month, Grange Hall, Railroad Street, Spring Mills. Pleasant Gap Rotary Club meets at 6 p.m. every Thursday at the Oaks, 220 Rachel Drive, Pleasant Gap. Reiki group will meet from 6:30-8:30 p.m. the first Wednesday of every month at Inspired Holistic Wellness, 107 S. Spring St., Bellefonte. Call (814) 883-0957, email beth@inspiredholisticwellness.com or visit www.inspiredholistic wellness.com. RSVP is appreciated. The Romans 12:2 Group meets from 7-8:30 p.m. Mondays at 204 W. High St., Bellefonte. The group is an addictions breakaway program sponsored by Lifegate Baptist Church is open to all who are suffering from any form of addiction as well as to family members that may be affected by the addict’s behavior. Call (814) 353-1942. Sacred Harp Singing meets from 7-8:30 a.m. the second and fourth Mondays at the University Mennonite Church, 1606 Norma St., State College. Visit StateCollege SacredHarp.com. The Snow Shoe Lions Club meets at 6:30 p.m. on the first and fourth Wednesday of every month, at the Moshannon Community Center, State Rte. 144, Snow Shoe. Soroptimist International of Centre County will meet at 6 p.m. the first Monday of the month at the Atherton Hotel, 125 S. Atherton St., State College. Call (814) 234-0658 or email hjlaw11@aol.com. State College Area High School Class of ’65 meets for brunch at 10:30 a.m. the second Wednesday of each month at Way’s Fruit Market, 2355 Halfmoon Valley Road, Port Matilda. State College Downtown Rotary Club meets at noon on Thursdays at Damon’s, 1031 E. College Ave., State College. State College Elks Lodge meets 7:30 p.m. the second and fourth Tuesday of each month at Mountain View Country Club, 100 Elks Club Road, Boalsburg. State College Lions Club meets at 6:15 p.m. the first and third Thursdays of the month at Damon’s, 1031 E. College Ave., State College. State College Rotary Club meets 5:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Nittany Lion Inn, Faculty Staff Lounge, 200 W. Park Ave., University Park. State College Sunrise Rotary Club meets 7:15 a.m. Wednesdays, Hotel State College, 106 S. Allen St., State College, above The Corner Room. State College Weavers Guild meets from 7:30-9 p.m. on the third Thursday of the month, September through May. Meetings are held in members’ homes. Refreshments are served at 7 p.m. For meeting location visit the website at statecollegeweaversguild.weebly.com or call (814) 234-7344. Support Group for Family & Friends of Childhood Sexual Abuse Survivors sponsored by The Centre County Women’s Resource Center from 5:30-7 p.m. Mondays. Call (814) 2375220 ext. 247, email edteam@ccwrc.org or visit ccwrc.org. Stroke Support Group meets 4 p.m. last Tuesday of every month, (except August and December) at HealthSouth Nittany Valley Rehabilitation Hospital, 550 E. College Ave., Pleasant Gap. Call (814) 359-3421. TRIAD, a public safety group for senior citizens, meets each second Thursday in various locations. Call Helen Evans, chair, (814) 237-8932. Trout Unlimited, a non-profit conservation organization, meets 7:30 p.m. every first Thursday, Comfort Suites Hotel, 132 Village Drive, State College. Walker Grange #2007 will meet the second Tuesday of every month at 7 p.m. at the Walker Township Building, 816 Nittany Valley Drive, Bellefonte. Weight Loss Challenge will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Park Forest Baptist Church, 3030 Carnegie Drive, State College. The class will also meet at 7 p.m. Thursdays at the Faith Baptist Church, 647 Valley Vista Drive, State College. Membership fee is $35. Call Darlene Foster at (814) 238-8739 or email at rdf55@verizon.net. WiNGs, the Women’s Network Group for women entrepreneurs, will have a social from 8-8:30 a.m. and meet from 8:30-10:30 a.m., the third Wednesday of every month at the Patton Township conference room, 100 Patton Plaza, State College. Email membership@wngs.org or call (814) 360-1063. Women’s Welcome Club of State College meets 7 p.m. the second Wednesday of every month, Oakwood Presbyterian Church, 1865 Waddle Road, State College. Visit us on the web womenswelcomeclub.org or email wwcmembership@ gmail.com. Young at Hearts Club meets for Red Pin bowling at 1 p.m. the first and third Wednesday of the month at the Millheim Lanes, Main Street, Millheim. A yearly $5 donation is requested to join the club. — Compiled by Gazette staff


PAGE 28

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

PUZZLES CLUES ACROSS 1. Supervises interstate commerce 4. Society ingenue 7. Old Austrian currency (abbr.) 10. Wife of Jacob 12. “Aba ____ Honeymoon” 13. Cologne 14. Christian reading platforms 16. 8th Jewish month 17. Arbitragers (inf.) 18. Goof 19. C5H12 21. Adult female chicken 22. Cooking vessel 24. Drake’s Golden ship 26. Mimicry 28. Language spoken in Nakhon Fun By The Numbers Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!

Sudoku #1

Sudoku #2

Phanom 30. Betel palm 32. Fulda River tributary 33. Diet sugars & starches 38. Goat and camel hair fabric 39. Used of posture 40. Native of Istanbul 41. Elk or moose genus 43. Gave a slight indication 45. Farewell expression 46. Japanese sash 49. Disturb greatly 53. Piles of combustibles 55. Suffragist Carrie Chapman 57. “Inside the Company” author 58. Counterweights 59. The total quantity 60. Daminozide 61. South American nation 62. Original

“SportsCenter” anchor Bob 63. Can cover 64. Aka River Leie CLUES DOWN 1. Sudden brilliant light 2. 35% Sierra Leone ethnic group 3. Pool side dressing room 4. 24 hours (old English) 5. Abba __, Israeli politician 6. Bret Maverick’s brother 7. Glenn Miller hit “Moonlight ___” 8. Truck operator compartment 9. Composer Walter ___ 11. Hall of Fame (abbr.) 12. Two painted panels 15. Surpassing all others 17. Liquorice-flavored liqueur

20. Exclamation of surprise 23. 100-year-old cookie 25. Disco Duck’s Rick 27. Budgie 29. Atomic #36 31. Yes vote 33. Embryonic membrane 34. Suddenly 35. More colorless 36. Count on 37. Receive willingly 40. Technetium 42. Oxalis 44. Physician’s moniker 47. Smelling of ale 48. Modern day Iskenderun 50. Afrikaans 51. Grapefruit and tangerine hybrid 52. Grasp the written word 54. Bark sharply 55. UC Berkeley 56. Brew PUZZLE #1 SOLUTION PUZZLE #2 SOLUTION

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BUSINESS

APRIL 11-17, 2013

PAGE 29

Partnership agrees to sale of Benner Commerce Park From Gazette staff reports

further pursue a variety of economic development initiatives for Centre County, while the Bellefonte State College I99 Partnership will direct the real estate management and development of the respective properties. “This partnership is truly a win-win-win for the community, the Bellefonte State College I99 Partnership, and the CBICC,� according to Vern Squier, president and CEO of the CBICC. “The CBICC and its subsidiary, the Centre County Industrial Development Corporation, have worked very diligently over nearly 10 years to bring the Benner Commerce Park to fruition. The park is now a major asset in the community’s economic development program. The CBICC embraces Bob, Heidi and Paul as clearly proven experts in the final facet of the park’s build out. Their skills will be critical in maximizing the park’s ultimate value to the community.� An important factor in this transaction

STATE COLLEGE — The Chamber of Business and Industry of Centre County (CBICC) and a new partnership dedicated to seeing the vision of the Benner Business Park come to fruition have entered into a collaborative agreement incorporating the sale of properties owned by the CBICC in and around Benner Commerce Park in Benner Township. The Bellefonte State College I99 Partnership consists of Heidi Nicholas, Paul Silvis and Bob Poole. The agreement will enable the CBICC to further execute its vision and ventures, while allowing the Bellefonte State College I99 Partnership to focus on the role of providing shovel ready building sites to companies creating new family sustaining jobs. This arrangement involving approximately 110 acres will enable the CBICC to

is the CBICC’s financial condition. As a result of the recession and the changing real estate market, the economic impact of developing these properties became a larger burden on the CBICC’s day-to-day operations. “The CBICC/CCIDC director(s) realized the best course of action was to entertain a change in ownership,� said Ted McDowell, chair at the CBICC. “This sale will allow the CBICC to fulfill its obligation to the YMCA of Centre County and devote further focus on its broader mission, which is to assist in growth opportunities for new businesses, to retain and expand existing companies, and to attract new business entities from outside the region and state to Centre County and the central Pennsylvania area. The CBICC is poised to execute this spectrum of critical economic development activities,� Squier went on to say. According to Bob Poole, president and CEO of Poole Anderson Construction and

S&A Homes, “Our partnership sees Benner Commerce Park as an opportunity to further the economic development mission started by the CBICC. We look forward to a close working relationship with the CBICC and the broad community to carry out the vision of the park. We think the build out of this property will result in economic benefits to Centre County, including but not limited to job growth and development.� Benner Commerce Park, located at the interchange of I-99 and State Route 150, is a mixed-use business park developed by the Centre County Industrial Development Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of the CBICC. The Chamber of Business and Industry of Centre County is a member and investor based organization devoted to improving the economic environment and quality of life in Centre County. For more information, visit www.cbicc. org.

Penn State SBDC helped CBICC to host annual event entrepreneurs, created jobs From Gazette staff reports

“They’ve really been with me every step of the way,� she said. “Going forward, they’re going to be really helpful as far as growing the business and giving me the tools to make it better.� In 2012, the Penn State SBDC helped 45 clients start new businesses and seven others purchase existing businesses in Centre and Mifflin counties, creating 196 jobs and keeping 104 more in the region. The center helped clients obtain $3 million in financing and increase sales by an estimated $8.3 million. The center consulted with 576 clients on issues such as cutting costs, establishing marketing strategies, and thriving in the current economic conditions. The SBDC also held 38 seminars with more than 600 attendees on topics like “The First Step of Starting a Business.� For more information on the services provided by the SBDC, visit http://sbdc.psu.edu/ online.

From Gazette staff reports STATE COLLEGE — When Jessica Young wanted to buy an optometry practice in State College, she turned to the Penn State Small Business Development Center for help. The 32-year-old Johnstown native had no business background or experience, so the SBDC helped her evaluate the business she wanted to buy, negotiate a sales price, and write a sales agreement. “They went over so many details that I wouldn’t have thought of on my own,� Young said. “They made it easier to understand and gave me a road map for what I wanted to do.� In January, Young took ownership of what is now State College Eye Care. She has a staff of two, and hopes to expand the practice in future. Young still meets regularly with the SBDC and stays in regular email contact about issues big and small.

STATE COLLEGE — The Chamber of Business and Industry of Centre County will hold its ninth annual Member Spotlight event from 5 to 7:30 p.m. on April 18 at Hoag’s Celebration Hall, 2280 Commercial Blvd., State College. The event is open to the public. Businesses from all over Centre County will demonstrate their products and services, and local restaurants, caterers, wineries and breweries will feature food and drink to sample. Exhibitors will also be offering door prizes. Attendees are encouraged to bring business cards to enter drawings, as well as for networking purposes. Registration to exhibit at the Member Spotlight is currently open. Exhibitor registration will close on April 12.

LOCAL MORTGAGE RATES 15 Year Fixed Rates

Points % Down

Honda Accord

30 Year Fixed

APR

Rates

Points % Down

The CBICC Member Spotlight provides an opportunity for the general public to find out about local businesses and vendors. The cost to enter is $5 and registration will be taken both in advance (through the CBICC website at www.cbicc.org) and at the door. The CBICC is encouraging local businesses to exhibit at this event and be “in the spotlight� in front of Centre County community members and business leaders. CBICC also encourages all those who live in Centre County to find out about local businesses that provide products and services in our area and worldwide. The event is featured on the CBICC website (www.cbicc.org) and can also be reached through the following link: http://web.cbicc.org/events/eventdetail.a spx?EventID=442

The family sedan, elevated.

APR

AmeriServ Bank

2.750%

0

N/A

2.887%

3.500%

0

N/A

3.577%

Fulton Bank

2.875%

-0.50

5

2.980%

3.500%

-0.125

5

3.560%

National Penn Bank

2.875%

0

10

3.104%

3.500%

0

10

3.713%

Northwest Savings Bank

2.750%

0

N/A

2.790%

3.500%

0

N/A

3.523%

Reliance Bank

2.625%

0

5

2.730%

3.500%

0

N/A

3.557%

SPE Federal Credit Union

2.750%

0

20

2.826%

3.500%

0

20

3.547%

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All Rates are subject to change. These are the rates as of 5 p.m., Monday, April 8, 2013. Rates do not include closing costs or out-of-pocket expenses. If your lending institution would like to have your rates published, please call The Gazette at (814) 238-5051 or email ads@centrecountygazette.com

Honda Fit

Home Buyers

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Sherry Schmader Mortgage Loan Officer Cell: 814-933-6493

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PAGE 30

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

BUSINESS DIRECTORY :ION 2OAD s "ELLEFONTE 0! s -INUTES FROM 3TATE #OLLEGE

814-355-3974 7E CARRY .542/ 5,42! (/,)34)# $/' &//$

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MILLHEIM BOROUGH

RECORDED MARCH 18-22, 2013 BELLEFONTE

Shawn E. and Molly E. Myers to Allen M. Miller, Box 161, $122,900.

Ham Store Inc. to Bellefonte Area Industrial Development Authority, 236 W. Lamb St., $435,000. Jane G. Hazel Estate, Robert J. Genua executor to Joe Jovinelly, $58,000.

Aaron J. Potter and Brenda L. Myers by Sheriff to Homesales Inc., 206 10th St., $5,086.55.

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Kent Rishel Construction Custom Building & Remodeling New Homes Finish Carpentry Siding & Spouting Additions Kitchen Concrete Work Decks & Porches Windows & Doors Brick & Form Stone

Cell 814-571-0717 Home 814-349-8724 kentrishel@pa.net Free Estimates

PATTON TOWNSHIP

PHILIPSBURG BOROUGH

Site Preparation —

Herman and Ida Fay and Timothy S. and Joanne Fay Breneman to Miles Township, 174 E. Main St., $1.

Christopher L. and Bobbi Jo Hill to Bobbi Jo Hill, 121 Peace Road, $1. Mary Hackett Estate, Glenn Hackett executor to Glenn A. Jr. and Kimberly Jo Hackett, 2597 Old Route 220, $1.

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BOGGS TOWNSHIP

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M. Jacobs and Samuel A. Jacobs, 2332 Erdley Church Road, $10,900.

Melissa A. and Darius T. Reed to Donald A. and Alison M. Franklin, 161 Fishburn Hill Road, $168,000.

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!

The following property transactions were compiled from information provided by the Centre County Recorder of Deeds, Joseph Davidson. The Gazette is not responsible for typographical errors. The published information is believed to be accurate; however, the Gazette neither warrants nor accepts any liability or responsibility for inaccurate information.

Kristin E. Caswell to Kristen E. Caswell and Paul R. Blakenhorn, 2008 Park Forest Ave., $1. Jill A. Leidy to Bryan and Lauren Brightbill, 178 Ghaner Drive, $189,900. Barbara D. Deak Estate, Robert J. Deak executor to Jeffrey R. Tarman, 1628 Woodledge Circle, $240,000.

WE SELL 2013 DOG LICENSES! 3ERVING #ENTRE #OUNTY FOR 9EARS s WWW LYONSKENNELS COM

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Pro Prom om Gown Gow Go own ns in the Boutique 50% Off Bou Off Bab by an nd Kids Cloth Ki hes 50% Offf 110 W 11 110 W.. H High iig igh g St SSt.. Belleefo Bellefonte, effoonte, PA PA 355 355-2238 5 -2223 2 8 Proceeds beneďŹ t our food bank & community. — Thank you

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BENNER TOWNSHIP

John H. and Mary-Anne Mahaffy to Shawn E. and Molly E. Myers, 308 S. Pennsylvania Ave., $124,000.

COLLEGE TOWNSHIP Theresa A. Wakefield to Joshua and Jessica O’Brien, 124 Creekside Drive, $165,000. Jean Slear to Jeffry L. Slear, James C. O’Connor and Sarah E. O’Connor, 124 Maple Lane, $1. David R. and Janice M. Belasco to Carol D. Yonan, 156 Independence Ave., $175,900. Lincoln Associates Joint Venture to Gregory T. and Meghan Flannery Hayes, 150 Harris Drive, $265,000. Stephen L. Engroff and Diane M. Ray to David W. and Marion T. Ulmer, 101 Kennedy St., $435,000.

FERGUSON TOWNSHIP G. David and Elizabeth G. Haushalter to Michael T. and Lynda M. Sullivan, 235 Ridge Ave., $196,500. Peter E. and Sharon Hammes Schiffer to David O. and Chelom Leavitt, 2625 Sleepy Hollow Drive, $600,000. Susan E. Heywood and Jan S. Ulbrecht to 409 Real Estate Holdings LLC, 1323 Sandpiper Drive, $120,500. Jennifer Anne Quick to Leonard F. and Denise M. Kowalski, 2379 Nantucket Circle, $154,600.

RUSH TOWNSHIP Black Moshannon Lodge LLC to Lonnie C. and Victoria E. Dawes, 82 Blackberry Lane, $165,000. Donald L. and Shirley J. Kelce to Donald L. and Judy L. Jr., 306 S. Front St., $1. Donald and Tina Marie Travis to Derick J. and Breanna M. Weitoish, 347 Ernestville Road, $130,000. Richard L. Mann to Donna M. and Richard L. Mann, 1389 State St., $1.

SNOW SHOE BOROUGH Richard B. and Kristin M. Taylor to Ray E. and Kay E. Hauser, 107 E. Park Ave., $14,000. Karen Patrice Bamat to David J. and Melissa J. Urbanick, 102 S. 8th St., $1.

SPRING TOWNSHIP Charles R. and Dolores M. Gheen to Travis and Jessica L. Gheen, 612 Walnut St., $182,500. David A. Pecht to Randall E. Haubert and Jill A. Leidy, 153 Kathryn Drive, $328,079. Nicholas J. and Amy K. Boccieri to Pierluigi Cappellini, $177,000. Eleanor J. Owens Estate, Lanny E. Owens executor to Charles W. and Nancy R. Mason, 4255 Brush Valley Road, $35,000.

STATE COLLEGE BOROUGH GREGG TOWNSHIP Nikolaus and Edith Kampen to Loren R. and Brenda A. Kampen and Anthony K. and Kimberly A. Kampen, 25 Durlach Hill Road, $1. Robert M. and Judy Marie Brown to Robert Max and Diane L. Brown and Robert M. Brown, 174 Reeder Road, $1.

HALFMOON TOWNSHIP

Felipe Q. and Carol Jean Abesamis to Daode Xu and Yuehua Gai, 1185 N. Foxpointe Drive, $150,000. Jeffrey M. McShane to Mohamed Magdy Taha, 532 E College Ave. 11 B Colony, $149,700. Richard P. McNitt to Richard P. McNitt and Roslyn Fireman Contis, 500 E. Prospect Ave, $1. Briarwood Apartment Associates LLC to Briarwood Apartment Associates LLC, 679-A Waupelani Drive, $10. Richard W. and Ann M. Jones to Debra P. and Jose Antonio Guerrero, 505 Outer Drive, $82,000.

David M. and Josette E. Kelly to Gary L. Eckrote, 75 Randall Road, $168,000. Leann and Robert D. Houser Jr. by Sheriff to Central Penn Capital Management LLC, 100 S. Seventh St., $190,000.

UNIONVILLE BOROUGH

HARRIS TOWNSHIP

Susan N. Woodring by Sheriff to Altoona First Savings Bank, 203 N. Logan Blvd., $12,562.89.

CDG Land Acquisition LP to Lisa C. Kraytz, $184,000. Michael and Leslie Gibson to Jeremiah P. and Caitlin J. Turpin, 203 Kimport Ave., $148,000. Jeffrey R. Tarman to Dustin D. and Deanne W. Klinger, 1140 Kathryn St., $293,000. Linda M. Becker to Edward M. Kopanski, 922 Kent Drive, $204,000.

WALKER TOWNSHIP Violet R. Breon to Leonard A. and Michele R. Sweeley, 5979 Jacksonville Road, $14,000. Zion Associates to Mary K. George, 610 Mountain Stone Road, $139,900.

WORTH TOWNSHIP

Call (814) 238-5051

HUSTON TOWNSHIP

sales@centrecountygazette.com

LIBERTY TOWNSHIP

Stone Ridge Mountain Group LLC to Feng and Hao Qui, 4683 Dickinson Way, $469,000.

First National Bank of PA to Daniel W. Dolan, 1035 Beaver Road, $40,000. Jean Slear and Kerry A, O’Connor to Jeffry L. Slear, James C. O’Connor and Sarah E. O’Connor, 124 Maple Lane, $1. — Compiled by Gazette staff

Whitetail Mountain Forest to Michael C. and Christine

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THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

Phone 814-238-5051 classifieds@centrecountygazette.com

FREE

REAL ESTATE PACKAGE

! " # $ % & # "

LIONSGATE Top floor deluxe 1 bedroom all hardwood flooring apt available ASAP. Large living room and tons of closet/storage space. Kitchen includes refrigerator and dishwasher. Conveniently located 1.5 miles from campus, across the street from a 24 hour Weis and also has a bus stop right by the entrance. Rent includes heat, hot water, cooking gas, trash/sewage, parking, tennis/ basketball courts and basic cable! Dog and cat friendly. $850. If you would like more information you can visit www.lionsgateapts.com or feel free to email me with any questions. dreisbachts@gmail .com

LARGE 1 bdrm apt. Lease runs until August 13, 2013. Option to sign lease for 2014 in August if you choose. Located on Stratford Drive in State College. Quiet building with lots of free parking, CATA bus stop across the street. Dishwasher, garbage disposal, balcony, laundry facility on same floor, new air conditioner w/remote, built in desk, storage units in complex free for tenant use, electric heat. Rent includes water, parking, sewer, trash removal, lawn maint. and snow removal. Tenant pays electric, cable/internet, and phone (if you choose to have it). Security deposit is equal to one months rent - $749. If you are interested please contact THE APARTMENT STORE at 814-234-6860. You can also see photos of the apartments by visiting THE APARTMENT STORE in State College’s website. ADVERTISE in the Centre County Gazette Classifieds. Call 814238-5051.

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here. Become an Aviation Maintenance Tech. FAA approved training. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance. (888) 834-9715

PORT MATILDA/ STORMSTOWNOWN ROOM Two single-occupancy rooms available for rent $400 & $450 Utilities Included Available Now! Available in Spacious, Modern, Friendly House in Peaceful, Attractive Surroundings GREAT house with modern appliances, lots of space, fully-furnished common areas. You’ll have your own, unfurnished, carpeted room and share this large house with 3 other people. House also has back patio with barbecue grill, large yards in front and back, outdoor fire pit, and also ample parking. No pets, non-smoking. Just a mile to Way Fruit Farm Store, just 2 miles to a Brothers Pizza location, and just a few miles to a convenience store/gas station open til midnight. Modern washer/dryer/ oven/ microwave/dishwasher, and common-area cable; equipped TVs already in place. Feel free and encouraged to call and/or text and/or email to arrange a time/date to check out the place. EMAIL: AwesomeHouse37@ gmail.com PHONE: 571.214.6531 (talk and/or text)

2 # # ; 2 ' # ;

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GAZETTE

PAGE 31

THE CENTRE COUNTY

APRIL 11-17, 2013

OVER 37 MILLION JOB SEEKERS! = ''';!:> 9 ? ;# # @ < & <B B@;

Bright, open living area in this convenient condo in Amitie 2! This 2-bedroom, 1-bathroom end unit is ready for move-in. Great entry area that can be used as an office, efficient kitchen with updated dishwasher and range/oven overlooks the large living room. Balcony backs to the park, set up your grill and relax! New carpet throughout the living area, hallway and bedrooms and a new heating and A/C unit! Updated bathroom with new floor, sink, cabinetry and commode. Convenient to CATA bus, campus, high school, shopping. Nothing left to do but move in and enjoy! Everything included except electric and heat (gas). Lease available now through August 31, 2013. $1000. 814-280-2130

NEW Luxurious 3 bdrm: Blossom Hill duplex, Lewistown, 2.5 baths, deck, sunroom, basement, 1749 sq. ft. $154,400. (610) 398-6849 habiba14@ msn.com

SC by owner. 1126 Westerly Pkwy, 4bdrm, 3 bath, corner lot, near schools and pool. Spacious, mostly finished lower level with walk-out to patio. Call (814) 237-3646 for apt. $269,500.

Some ads featured on statecollege.com

PENNS VALLEY FARMETTE With 11.97 acres in Clean and Green with custom built log home. 4-5 bedroom, 4 baths. With many views from three decks overlooking your horse in the pasture, ponds and water features. Geo Thermal Heating and Cooling, Hardwood and ceramic floors throughout. Custom Crafted Amish Kitchen Cabinets Quality construction 2 car garage workshop with large attic space, Tack room, Dog Kennel, Attached 2 stall barn with hay storage, and 2 frost free water hydrants, 2 wood fenced paddocks, Fenced in pasture, 2 water features. $417,900. Call For Appointment to view 814 364 9433 Buyer Agents WelcomeNo Listing Agents

ATV SAFETY COURSE DC&R certified training for youth 8-16. Call (814) 919-2017 for more information.

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE FROM HOME!!

$

76

HANDYMAN SERVICES Licensed and insured. Low prices. Landscape work. Fall cleanup. Paint, electrical, carpentry, plumbing, flooring, cleanup.... indoor, outdoor. New product assembly. No job too small!! 814-360-6860

*Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV authorized. Call: 866-220-3984. www.Centura Online.com

SCOOTER RENTALS Don’t have a car? Hate the bus? Want more independence? We have the solution! Rent a scooter for a day or so, or for as long as you want. The longer you rent, the less it costs. Visit our website for more details www.campus skooters.com

GRAPHIC DESIGNER SEEKS WORK Flyers, resumes, brochures, letter heads, business cards, labels, ads, posters, tickets, newsletters, catalogs, books/jackets, logos, menus, programs, church bulletins, mail inserts, invitations. Fast, economical. (814) 237-2024

40 years electronic repair experience. I will pick up and return your unit for free. Quick turnaround. Low cost estimates. Specialize in broken power jacks, overheating, startup problems. Can fix any problem. Fully insured. 814-353-2976

WHO WANTS TO LEAVE HOME WHEN YOU’RE SICK??? -Now you don’t have to! In-home medical care provided by a Family Nurse Practitioner Non-emergent eval and management of common illnesses and minor injures 814-954-1674 idealhealthand wellness @gmail.com

COUNTRY 5 min. from town. This 3 bdrn home sits on 1/2 acre with open living room, dining room, and kitchen. Three car garage. Bellefonte area. Asking $250,000 firm. Ph. 814.222.3331.

WEDDING MUSIC Allegria Ensemble musicians for hire. Duo or trio combinations of flute, violin, oboe, cello, and piano perform for weddings and receptions. Experienced musicians with extensive repertoire create an elegant for special events with live music. 814-237-0979

INDOOR YARD AND CRAFT SALEApril 20th, 8am-2pm. Spring Clean your life and come Sell it with us! 10x10 space w table $20. Hunt Co. Fair Grounds. GREAT Shopping RAIN OR SHINE! Pre-register by calling Deb Keppler after 5pm @ (814) 643-6038. Benefits Huntington CO 4-H Horse program.

FREE TV old consol, works good. (814) 466-7567

COMPUTER REPAIR OUTSTANDING OPPORTUNITY!!! Just blocks from Penn State! Formerly Children’s Montessori School. Sprinklered, 3 car garage + 8 parking spaces lot. R3H zoning in Mixed Use Overlay District allows many options~ office, residential, daycare, school. $525,000 632 W Beaver Avenue State College PA 814-360-0433

HOUSES FOR SALE

Dirtbusters Professional Carpet Cleaners FAMILY OWNED FOR 22 YEARS (814) 696-1601 2013 Specials are as following: 1 room- $40 2 rooms of carpet cleaning- $59.90 2 room/steps/hall- $89.95 5area special- $139.95 Call for special/work guarantee (814) 696-1601

ELECTRONIC REPAIR 40 years electronic repair experience. I will fix your unit at your house or transport to my shop and return free Low cost estimates. I specialize in large screen TVs & flatscreen TVs. I fix all electronics. Fully insured.

814-353-2976

PIANO full keyboard, Story & Clark. Good cond. Moving/need to sell. Prev owned by church. Call & leave message. $600. (814) 359-4202

FISHING trip for sale. 1 week stay at Driftwood Lodge Lake Cabetogama, MN for 2013 or 2014. Modern cabin, accomodates 4 ppl. Value $1025. $550. (814) 357-8278

38 OLD and new testament Bible commentaries. $95 (814) 364-9372 DESCRIPTION brings results. Use adjectives in your classified ads.

Madison Handbags are stylish, unique, classic bags that are designed by YOU, the customer. Host a party to enjoy a night with the ladies and create a bag that screams YOU! Over 80 fabric options to choose from! www.madison handbags.net/scrater MUSTANG seat for Suzuki Intruder motorcycle. $175. (814) 355-2511 OIL FIRED boiler furnace. Utica boiler. Exc. condition. 9 years old. Will heat large home. 81% efficient. Well maintained. $665. (804) 314-1554 SCHWINN exercise bike, $70. 16ft aluminum ladder, $40. Weedeater/grass trimmer, $30. Craftsmen leaf blower, $30. Call (814) 364-9812

2003 FORD ESCAPE 4 wheel drive. Alpine speakers installed, Alpine head unit. Inspected until 12/13. Exterior/Interior: Very good condition Exterior: black w/ black rims. Roof rack, towing hitch, 204k+ miles. Oil changed: every 2,5003,000 miles. $4500. Text: (814) 574-1840 2011 MAZDA CX-7 All Wheel Drive Touring Edition SUV for sale by owner. Great shape still under factory warranty. Loaded with many amenities including heated leather seats. 33,369 miles. Kelly Blue Book value is $17,500 Also has 4 new tires- a $750 value. Wholesale trade-in value is $16,600 for the touring edition. We have just reduced this to $16,500! LESS THAN DEALER TRADE VALUE! Phone 814-571-9563, Ron.


PAGE 32

THE CENTRE COUNTY GAZETTE

APRIL 11-17, 2013

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