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Shroud replica coming to Shenandoah

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SHENANDOAH - A replica of the Shroud of Turin will be on display at St. Michael's Ukrainian-Greek Catholic Church in February, according to the pastor, Monsignor Myron Grabowsky.

"We feel that it is a blessing and a responsibility to have the shroud at St. Michael's, the first Ukrainian-Greek Catholic Church in America," Grabowsky said Tuesday.

This replica has been on tour throughout 2012 and it was on display at St. Nicholas Parish, a Ukrainian Catholic church at 415 Front St., Minersville, from March 21 to April 1, Christina Gray, the secretary at St. Michael's, said Wednesday.

Grabowsky is pastor of both St. Michael's in Shenandoah and St. Nicholas Church in Saint Clair. He said both churches are hosting the event but the replica will only be on display at St. Michael's.

The replica will be exhibited Feb. 24 to March 9, Grabowsky said.

To discuss the schedule of events regarding the display, St. Michael's is hosting a public meeting 9:30 a.m. Jan. 8 in the hall beneath the church at 114 S. Chestnut St., Shenandoah.

"We want to assure everyone knows about this opportunity to see this amazing recreation of the Shroud of Turin, and we would appreciate your help in making this happen," Grabowsky said.

Archbishop Stefan Soroka of the Ukrainian Archdiocese of Philadelphia had arranged for the replica to be on display in Minersville, and he also made the arrangements for the replica to be on display in Shenandoah, Gray said.

The Shroud of Turin is the famous linen which believers say Joseph of Arimathea used to wrap the body of the crucified Jesus Christ more than 1,970 years ago.

The actual shroud is a 14-foot long, 3 1/2-foot wide linen cloth bearing the front and back image of a scourged, crucified man, according to www.shroud.com, the website for the Shroud of Turin Education and Research Association, Florissant, Colo.

The shroud became the property of the Catholic Church in the late 1980s and has been kept in Turin, Italy, since 1578, according to shroud.com.

For more information, call the church at 570-462-0809 or visit the church's website at www.first-ukrainian.com.


Around the Region

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n Ashland: Members of the Ashland Area Rotary Club marked the holiday season during a recent meeting at the Mineshaft Cafe with President Frank Birster presiding. The Rotarians welcomed student of the month Matthew Gownley, a senior at North Schuylkill High School. The club's formal Christmas party was held Dec. 8 at the cafe, during which members enjoyed a family-style dinner of roast beef, chicken and broiled haddock. Participants played games, including "Pass-The-Gift." Rotarian Elaine Stone extended an invitation to the local Rotarians to gather at her home Thursday for refreshments and a social time. In an effort to increase attendance at regular meetings, the membership voted to change the meeting night to 5:30 p.m. Thursdays starting in January at the Mineshaft Café.

n Gordon: Gordon Senior Citizens President Ray Umlauf opened the group's Christmas party Dec. 19 with comments about the seniors' past year. The event included recognition of Edna Labie as Senior of the Year, a meal served by Subs and Stuff and a gift exchange. Labie, a long-standing member of the group, was recognized for "all her good work in the organization," according to a club press release. For the party, Chaplain Betty Miller offered a prayer. The seniors meet regularly, all are invited and new members are welcome.

n Mahanoy City: The Mahanoy City Visiting Nurse Association recently acknowledged the following memorials: For Wilbur Clark from Tom and Theresa Clark; for Isabell Echo from Your Rose Buddy, Lois Griffiths, Rose Fletcher, Marie DiBaggio, Betsy Lewis and Betty Nolter; for Betty Haitz from Betty Nolter and family; for Mildred Hreshko from Lois Griffiths; for Theodore Romanick from Betty Nolter; for John Schaar from Teresa Boyle; for Ronald Souchak from Bill and Judy Brayford, Rose Kern and family, Jim and Linda McLaren, Betty Frye, Blessed Teresa Golden Age, Anna Mary Babinsky, Leo and Kathy Luciani, John and Nancy Steibler, Retired State Police Association and Tom and Leslye Durilla. Lois M. Griffiths provided the information about the VNA.

n McAdoo: The choir and parishioners of the Church of All Saints, 21 N. Cleveland St., performed a special work titled "The King of Love," by Rodger Strader, on Christmas Eve. It will be performed again at 4 p.m. Jan. 6. Everyone is welcome to attend.

n Nuremberg: North Union Township has a seat vacant on the Twin County Joint Municipal Authority. Any township resident looking to serve on the board should call the municipal office at 570-384-3611.

n Pottsville: The Pottsville Free Public Library recently acknowledged the following memorial donations: for Sara Rile from Joe and Barbara Wollyung; for Roberta Sumoski from Peggy and Ralph Jaeger. The library also acknowledged the following honor donation: For the Carl and Ada Hahner Family from Dorothy Hahner Family.

n Pottsville: The Pottsville Free Public Library will offer a digital photography class at 6 p.m. Jan. 8. The two-hour course will explain how to file and protect your new photographs. Bring your camera with you and our instructor will try to answer any questions you may have about it. Some computer experience is necessary. Although this is a free class, due to limited space, registeration is required. Please stop in or call the library at 570-622-8880.

n Sheppton: The Sheppton-Oneida Fire Company recently collected new, unwrapped toys for children in New Jersey affected by Hurricane Sandy. Company members on Dec. 22 trekked to a New Jersey firehouse to distribute the toys to the children.

n Tamaqua: The Tamaqua Historical Society Museum, 118 W. Broad St., is open to the public from 7 to 9 p.m. every Tuesday. People are welcome to browse the museum's collection of local historical artifacts and other items. To tour the museum at other times, appointments must be arranged. Volunteers are always needed to help with society projects and events. For more information, call 610-597-6722 or 570-668-5722 or email to tamaq-uahistoricalsociety@verizon.net.

Fire company will use $80,000 to buy new gear

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Minersville Fire Rescue Company was recently awarded $80,750 in federal grants that it will use for a much-needed update to its equipment.

U.S. Sen. Bob Casey Jr., D-Pa., announced that the Federal Emergency Management Agency, under the Department of Homeland Security, awarded the grants Thursday for operations and safety.

The funds are through the Assistance to Firefighters Grant Program, which aims to strengthen the health and safety of the nation's first responders.

"Pennsylvania's first responders endure risk and sacrifice every day to keep their community safe," Casey said in a prepared statement. "This money will help provide Schuylkill County's first responders with the resources they need to ensure their safety and the safety of those they serve."

Fire Chief Eric Eichenberg said Thursday that Minersville Fire Rescue was formed three years ago by the consolidation of the former Independent Hose Company and Rescue Hook & Ladder Company and new equipment was badly needed.

"We're going to be using it for personal protective equipment," Eichenberg said.

Eichenberg said personnel have been wearing mismatched gear and, with the additional personnel they got in the last few years, there wasn't enough extra equipment.

All the gear the company has is more than 10 years old, which he said is its life expectancy.

The company bought gear from the Mechanicsville Hose Company that closed in 2010 after 107 years of service to the community.

"We have people wearing gear from different companies," Eichenberg said. "The idea was to go out and try to get new gear."

With the funding the company is receiving, it will be able to buy 35 sets of gear, including helmets, pants and coats that will have the latest technology.

Eichenberg said the equipment will have a Class II harness built in for rappelling that can be used in rescue or ladder operations for fall protection; coats will have an articulating drag rescue device, which engages both underarms and makes it easier to pull out a downed responder from almost any angle; and there will also be radio pockets for the portable radio equipment, so it doesn't fall out of the firefighters' pockets.

All the company will need to pay for the new equipment is $4,250, which was generated through fundraising efforts. The rest will be paid through the grants.

Had the company not received the grants, Eichenberg said that amount would just barely cover the cost of two sets of personal protective gear.

"That's how great this is for us to receive this grant," he said. "We're very grateful because if it wasn't for the FEMA grant, we'd be struggling to stay in business."

The company also received a grant two years ago and bought a 2012 PUC Pumper truck.

Minersville Fire Rescue has 40 active personnel and at a major event, can put more than 30 responders on the scene, Eichenberg said.

He also said that 98 percent of his personnel have minimum basic fire training for probationary and nonpermanent firefighters, while many are already certified Firefighter 1.

School kids get shots after contact with infected cat

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KLINGERSTOWN - Parents in the Tri-Valley School District recently took the precaution of having their children treated for rabies.

Earlier this month, a cat that had wandered onto the school grounds at Mahantongo Elementary School died and was subsequently found to have rabies. School officials learned that about 27 students had come in contact with the animal.

A special meeting was held Dec. 18 with representatives from the state Department of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

According to Superintendent Mark D. Snyder, sometime between Dec. 4 and 5, there was a gray, striped farm cat from an adjacent property that had been on school property in the area of the playground and several students had come in contact with the cat.

Dr. Amanda Beudoin, DVM, Ph.D, epidemic intelligence service officer for the CDC in Atlanta, serving a fellowship with the state Department of Health, assured parents that just because their children may have petted the cat, they would not be susceptible to contracting rabies.

"Even though a cat licks itself, a person would not contract rabies by just petting the animal," Beudoin said. "However, if that student had a cut or an open wound on their hand, then they should be treated with the rabies vaccines."

About 20 parents attended the meeting and most parents confirmed that they had their children treated as a precautionary measure. Rabies is a type of disease that becomes too late to treat when symptoms appear. The disease is usually fatal without treatment.

Mahantongo Elementary Nurse Paula Morgan was actually bitten by the cat and has been undergoing shots every few days since the incident.

"It was the cutest, friendliest cat," Morgan said. "I can certainly understand why the students would have approached it and been playing with it. It was very lovable. I was petting it and it bit me a little in a playful manner but it was enough to open the skin and so here I am getting the shots, too."

Morgan said she is so thankful that the owners of the cat actually penned it up when the school called to have the cat removed.

"Thank goodness they actually had the cat penned so it couldn't wander back to the school," Morgan said. "Imagine what the outcome could have been if they wouldn't have had the cat penned up. We possibly would have never known that it had rabies and that would have been detrimental to all the students and adults who were in contact with the animals. I'm just so grateful that they thought to do that and to contact the school immediately when the cat had died and was tested."

Some of the questions parents asked at the meeting included:

- Will the school's insurance cover the cost of these vaccines if our personal insurance won't?

According to Snyder, the parents are encouraged to fill out insurance forms with the district and he is working with the district's insurance to determine what will occur. According to one of the parents, the shots cost more than $7,000.

- Does the school have a policy in place concerning stray animals and how will this be avoided in the future?

"We are working on a policy right now," elementary Principal Gerald Anderson said. "If an animal comes on school property again, I don't care if the students know the name of the dog or cat, or know whose it is, the students will be brought indoors immediately and the animal will be removed.

Parents said they were concerned as some of them were being turned away from area hospital emergency rooms and some traveled as far as Danville and Lebanon because the local hospitals didn't have a large enough supply of the vaccine.

"Generally, hospitals will have enough vaccine on hand to treat a few cases," said Dr. Perianne Lurie, MD, MPH, FACPM, epidemologist, state Department of Health, Harrisburg office. "Since there was such a large number of cases coming at once, that's why they turned people away and asked them to go to other facilities."

Parents were told that if they still have concerns or need more information they should call the state Department of Health at 877-PA-HEALTH or visit the websites for the CDC at www.cdc.gov, the state Department of Health at www.health.state.pa.us or the state Department of Agriculture, www.agriculture.state.pa.us.

Deeds, Dec. 29, 2012

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Deeds

Blythe Township - Rosemary T. Yaworsky, Richelle M. Yaworsky and Michael Yaworsky II to Rachael Pauline Crochunis and Starlu Myrtle Gunn; 115 Furnace Road; $38,500.

Branch Township - Gloria J. Peyus, by attorney in fact June Betty Satterwhite, to Warren D. and Vicky A. Schach; 212 Old Llewellyn Road; $112,500.

East Union Township - John L. and Darlene C. Brown to John L. Brown; Lot 156ER, Eagle Rock; $1.

Shawn and Judy E. Booth to Eagle Rock Resort Co.; Lot 110WS, Eagle Rock; $4,364.07.

13 arrested in drug bust

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Thirteen alleged drug dealers were arrested throughout Schuylkill County on Friday.

Starting at 6 a.m. and lasting until early afternoon, detectives from the district attorney's office and its drug task force, along with the sheriff's office, Adult Probation Office and police from Schuylkill Haven, Orwigsburg, Port Carbon, Shenandoah, Ashland and West Mahanoy Township executed felony warrants.

According to a press release from the district attorney's office, those arrested were arraigned at the offices of either Magisterial District Judge Anthony J. Kilker, Shenandoah, or Magisterial District Judge David A. Plachko, Port Carbon. The 13 were committed to the Schuylkill County Prison.

According to the press release, the following people were arrested and arraigned:

- Matthew Bahrey, McAdoo, charged with delivery of heroin. Bail was set at $75,000.

- Alicia Carr, Ashland, charged with delivery of hydrocodone and acetaminophen propoxyphene. Bail was set at $15,000.

- Jennifer Clark, Shenandoah, charged with delivery of heroin. Bail was set at $35,000.

- Matthew Dewald, Pottsville, charged with two counts of delivery of methamphetamine. Bail was set at $100,000.

- Bryon Dufour, New Philadelphia, charged with two counts of delivery of marijuana. Bail was set at $50,000 for each case.

- Dallas Elsdon, Cressona, charged with delivery of oxycodone. Bail was set at $25,000.

- Francis Guida, Shenandoah, charged with delivery of heroin. Bail was set at $35,000.

- Raymond Jordan, Shenandoah, charged with delivery of vicodin and methamphetamine, two cases. Bail was set at $50,000.

- Zachary Kimmel, Orwigsburg, charged with delivery of marijuana. Bail was set at $25,000.

- Amber Murphy, Shenandoah, charged with delivery of heroin and cocaine, two cases. Bail was set at $60,000.

- Zachery Shaw, Auburn, charged with delivery of heroin. Bail was set at $75,000.

- Jacob Shuey, Ashland, charged with delivery of marijuana. Bail was set at $15,000.

- Tristin Weyman, Hegins, charged with delivery of Dilaudid. Bail was set at $10,000.

In the press release, District Attorney Karen Byrnes-Noon thanked the public for its help in drug investigations because many of them began with tips on suspected activity.

Anyone with information about drug activity can call the District Attorney's Drug Tip Line at 800-414-1406. For suspected drug activity in Pottsville, call 570-622-1234 mailbox 150.

Police log, Dec. 29, 2012

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Frackville driver

flips on icy road

GILBERTON - A 38-year-old Frackville man escaped injury when the 1998 Jeep Cherokee he was driving crashed on the Gold Star Highway at the southbound Gilberton ramp about 1:50 p.m. Thursday.

State police at Frackville said Michael Schott was driving south from the ramp entering Route 924, the Gold Star Highway, when he slid on a right curve in the slushy road. The man lost control, causing the front of his SUV to hit an embankment and then flip onto its passenger's side before coming to a stop.

Police said Schott will be cited for driving too fast for conditions and that Gilberton and Mahanoy Plane firefighters and Frackville EMS assisted at the scene.

2 from Ashland

injured in crash

LAVELLE - Two people were injured in a crash at the intersection of Sunbury and Deep Creek roads in Barry Township at 11:59 a.m. Sunday.

State police at Schuylkill Haven said Irene Wesner, 85, of Ashland, was driving a 2001 Toyota Corolla turning left from Deep Creek Road onto Sunbury Road, Route 901, when she pulled into the path of a 2011 Chevrolet Cruze that was being driven east on Route 901 by Andrea Bucher, 28, of Mount Carmel.

Wesner suffered moderate injuries while her passenger, Harold Wesner, 88, also of Ashland, suffered major injuries, police said, adding that Bucher was not hurt.

Police said both Wesners were taken to Geisinger-Shamokin Community Hospital for treatment and that Ashland and Shenandoah EMS and Ashland and Gordon firefighters assisted at the scene.

Irene Wesner will receive a citation as a result of the crash, police said.

Elizabethville

woman charged

LYKENS - A 25-year-old Elizabethville woman was charged with harassment by state police at Lykens after an incident at 558 Main St. in this Dauphin County community about 1 p.m. Dec. 18.

Police said the woman, who was not identified, will have to answer to the charge before Magisterial District Judge Rebecca Margerum, Elizabethville.

Police said the woman was engaged in a verbal argument with a 50-year-old Lykens man when she struck the man in the head with a box of cupcakes and then punched him before leaving the home.

Auburn man

charged in crash

STRAUSSTOWN - A 27-year-old Auburn man escaped injury when the 2009 Toyota Yaris he was driving crashed on Route 183, just south of Four Point Road in Upper Tulpehocken Township, Berks County, at 5:26 a.m. Thursday.

State police at Hamburg said Richard Watson was driving south on a left curve on the slushy highway in sleet and lost control. The man's vehicle crossed the center line of the road and went into the northbound lanes before exiting the highway and hitting a slight embankment.

The vehicle then overturned and struck rocks and a tree before coming to a stop, police said, adding that Watson will be cited for failure to drive on roadways laned for traffic as a result of the crash.

Shamokin man

charged in theft

TREMONT - A 30-year-old Shamokin man was arrested by state police at Schuylkill Haven and charged in connection with an incident at Tukes Tearoffs at 3 E. Main St. at 6:48 p.m. Dec. 21.

Police said that Andrew Cerklewski was arraigned Thursday on charges of theft and drug violations and released on $15,000 unsecured bail set by Magisterial District Judge Carol A. Pankake, Tremont.

According to police, Cerklewski removed an HP Envy laptop computer valued at $4,500 and $5,000 in cash from the business.

The man took the computer without permission and took it home where he planned to keep it. Cerklewski was seen on video surveillance and when confronted admitted to the thefts, police said.

While being taken into custody, police said, the man was found with a small amount of methadone that was not prescribed to him.

New Philly man

faces drug charge

NEW PHILADELPHIA - A 41-year-old New Philadelphia man was charged by borough police with DUI and failure to drive on roadways laned for traffic after an incident in the 100 block of Valley Street about 8:25 p.m. Nov. 1.

Police said they stopped a vehicle driven by Israel Quinones, 35 Main St., for a traffic violation and while approaching the vehicle, detected an ordor of marijuana inside.

Police said the man admitted smoking marijuana prior to driving the vehicle and was taken to Schuylkill Medical Center-South Jackson Street where a blood test determined he had levels of the illegal drug in his system.

Tamaqua man

to face charges

NEW PHILADELPHIA - A 43-year-old Tamaqua man was charged by New Philadelphia police with DUI and driving on the wrong side of the road after an incident in Valley Street about 7:15 p.m. Dec. 10.

Police said David P. Osceles, 43 Valley St., will have to answer to the charges before Magisterial District Judge David A. Plachko, Port Carbon.

Police said they stopped a vehicle driven by Osceles for a violation and detected an odor of alcohol on the man.

Osceles admitted consuming numerous drinks prior to driving and was then taken to Schuylkill Medical Center-South Jackson Street where a blood test determined he had an alcohol level of 0.284 percent.

Police investigate

threat incident

TOWER CITY - State police at Schuylkill Haven investigated a terroristic threats incident that occurred at 622 E. Grand Ave. about 9:15 a.m. Wednesday.

Police said a physical altercation began at the home when Kim Sweigard Sr., 57, pulled out a revolver and made significant threats toward the lives of Timothy Sweigard, 55, and Betty Sweigard, 82, both of Tower City, along with a 17-year-old boy.

Police said Kim Sweigard was taken into custody and arraigned by Magisterial District Judge Carol A. Pankake, Tremont, and that the investigation into the incident is continuing.

Orwigsburg couple

injured in crash

PORT CLINTON - A man and a woman from Orwigsburg suffered injuries in a two-vehicle accident in West Brunswick Township on Friday afternoon, according to state police at Schuylkill Haven.

Adam H. Faust, 82, and Anna J. Faust were taken by Auburn and Hamburg EMS units to Reading Hospital. Adam Faust was in fair condition as of 9 p.m. Friday, according to a hospital nursing supervisor, but she had no record of Anna Faust receiving treatment.

The crash occurred at 12:07 p.m., as Adam Faust was driving a 1998 Ford Explorer and was attempting to exit the parking lot of the 3C's Restaurant and drive north on Route 61, police said.

Faust pulled out in front of a southbound 2001 Mack tri-axle truck driven by Martin D. Stine, 59, of Schuylkill Haven, and the truck hit and pushed Faust's vehicle across the northbound lanes, police said.

Adam Faust will be charged with failing to yield to traffic when entering the road, police said.

Palmyra woman

charged in crash

MAHANOY CITY - A Palmyra woman suffered minor injuries when she drove off Interstate 81 in Ryan Township and struck a tree Friday afternoon, according to state police at Frackville.

Diane C. Watkins, 51, was taken by Humane Fire Department/Ryan Township Ambulance to Schuylkill Medical Center-South Jackson Street for treatment, police said.

The crash occurred at 3:11 p.m. when Watkins was driving a 2000 Jeep Cherokee south when she left the road, crossed the west shoulder and continued to travel for 134 feet before hitting the tree, police said.

She will be charged with careless driving, police said.

Attempted arson

is investigated

TAMAQUA - Borough police and a state police fire marshal are investigating an attempted arson in the borough.

Borough police said officers were dispatched to 157 Penn St. at 2 a.m. Wednesday and found a fire that was later extinguished by the fire department.

An investigation indicated that the fire was intentionally set, police said, noting that a nearby resident reported the fire.

Police said a witness reported seeing a "skinny" male run across her front porch before the fire.

Police said Trooper John Burns of the Frackville station and the borough fire department are also working on the investigation.

DUI charge filed

in traffic stop

MINERSVILLE - Borough police filed charges against a Pottsville man after an incident on the Pottsville-Minersville Highway at 11:45 p.m. Nov. 21.

Police said Jashe William Thompson, 22, of 627 Pierce St., was charged with DUI-controlled substance and driving under suspension and will have to answer to the charges before Magisterial District Judge David A. Plachko, Port Carbon.

Police said Thompson was stopped in a Sobriety Checkpoint and found to be under the influence of marijuana.

Checkpoint nets

charges for man

MINERSVILLE - Minersville police arrested a borough man after an incident at 10:03 p.m. Dec. 8 at Route 901 and the Seltzer Highway.

Police said Sean Thomas Cooper, 102 Lorraine St., was seen driving a vehicle with a faulty exhaust system and weaving in and out of the traffic lane. Officers followed Cooper, pulled him over and found him showing signs of being intoxicated.

After failing field sobriety tests, police said Cooper was taken to Schuylkill Medical Center-South Jackson Street, where a blood test determined that he had an alcohol level of 0.24 percent, three times the legal limit of 0.08 percent.

Cooper will be charged with DUI, DUI-highest rate, failure to drive on roadways laned for traffic and exhaust system violations, police said.

Mahanoy man

charged in stop

MINERSVILLE - A Mahanoy City man was charged by borough police after an incident on the Pottsville-Minersville Highway on Nov. 22.

Police said Corey M. Vanetten, 35, of 1107 E. Pine St., will have to appear before Magisterial District Judge David A. Plachko, Port Carbon, on charges of DUI, driving under DUI suspension and driving under suspension.

Police said the man was stopped in a Sobriety Checkpoint and determined to be under the influence and driving illegally. A blood test determined Vanetten had an alcohol level of 0.22 percent, police said.

Sensors accent city's new traffic lights

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The now-operational traffic signals at 12th and West Market streets are smarter than their predecessors thanks to an added feature.

"They're sensors which will give emergency vehicles the green light," Pottsville Councilman Michael P. Halcovage said Thursday.

They're called "traffic signal pre-emption transmitters," according to Sean Brown, safety press officer for the state Department of Transportation, District 5, Allentown.

"Emergency vehicles, in their light bars, there's like a little strobe in the middle. It flashes at a certain rate," Halcovage said Thursday.

"This allows the vehicle to communicate with the signal in order to preempt the signal's timing and change the emergency vehicle's direction of movement to green during an emergency. This gives the emergency vehicle the ability to get through a traffic light without having to go through a traffic light on red," Brown said Friday.

Thomas A. Palamar, city administrator, said this is the only intersection in the city with such devices. And PennDOT gave the city the option to have them installed.

"They were optional. We did not have to get them, but we thought it would be a good idea, especially at that intersection. And that was included in the bid from the beginning," Palamar said Friday.

The City of Pottsville was hoping to complete the installation of new traffic signals at 12th and West Market streets by the end of October.

A few unforeseen problems, like Hurricane Sandy, have caused delays.

Earlier this month, Palamar was hoping it would be complete before the end of the year. But recent snowy weather might delay completion until early January, he said Thursday.

The $306,851 project includes the installation of four new traffic poles with overhead signal lights, four pedestrian signals and curb cuts to accommodate wheelchair users.

The general contractor, Kuharchik Construction Inc., Exeter, has installed underground wiring, the bases for the new lights, the mast arms and the new lights.

"They're operational and they took the old lights down on Thursday. We used to call the old lights 'lollipop lamps' because the lights were in rows of red, yellow and green. All they have to do is a little bit of concrete work and that's it, as far as I know. If the weather holds up, they'll probably get to that next week," Dan Kelly, city superintendent of streets, said Friday.

The city is financing the project with $148,847 in federal Community Development Block Grant funds and $158,004 in state Automated Red Light Enforcement grant funds, Palamar said previously.


Births, Dec. 29, 2012

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Schuylkill Medical Center-South Jackson Street

To Robert and Hiroko Ota Kerns, Port Carbon, a son, Dec. 12.

To Victor Morris III and Tabitha Hoffecker, Minersville, a daughter, Dec. 13.

Veterinarian donates pet scanner to Orwigsburg police

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ORWIGSBURG - Returning a dog to its owner will be easier thanks to a microchip scanner recently donated to the Orwigsburg Borough Police Department.

Dr. Michele Mattera, owner of Brookside Animal Hospital, Orwigsburg, donated a scanner to the department Dec. 20.

"Without that, we might not be able to get the dog back," she said of the advantages of having a microchip implanted under the skin of an animal.

The scanner reads the microchip number. Every microchip has a different number. With a phone call, owners can then be found using the unique ID of the animal.

"It's a horrible, horrible feeling to lose a dog," Mattera said.

She donated "just in case they find dogs in the middle of the night," she said.

She lives in the borough and felt it was her duty to help out.

Borough Patrolman Brandon Bayer said the department will share the scanner with law enforcement authorities that need it.

"It's a good tool for everyone to have," he said of the scanner, which has yet to be used.

On Monday, Jackie Meyers, office manager at Brookside, said the scanner cost $318. About 1 1/2 years ago, Mattera also gave one to the Port Carbon police department to share with Pottsville.

"It's a great advantage. I wish more people took advantage of it," she said.

The department does not have a place to store animals if one is found. Bayer said if a lost animal is found in the evening, the department asks if the person who found it can keep it until the owner or the SPCA can take it.

Orwigsburg borough Manager Mike Lonergan said the scanner will be put to good use.

"It will help us tremendously. It is not an irregular occurrence that we have a lost dog. You can go two or three months without any, and then you have three in a week," he said Thursday.

Bayer said law enforcement personnel who need to use the scanner should call the borough police department at 570-366-3101 or 570-628-3792.

Winter whitens Schuylkill

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When he was a boy, Richard Laub, Pottsville, enjoyed the snow, especially when it was more than a foot deep.

"We used to play in it, and build igloos out of snow behind Renniger's Market at the house trailer park, up in the back there," Laub, 50, said Saturday morning in Saint Clair.

The snow that fell Saturday morning wasn't that deep. But for fans of the white stuff, it was a welcome sight, since last year's winter was warm and green.

"This is nice. Last year we didn't have much," Laub said.

"It's nice and fine, too. I could put up with weather like this. It's ideal," said Bob Harrison, 72, of Saint Clair.

In the winter of 2011-12, the average temperatures in Schuylkill County were higher than normal and snowfall was below-average. Since 2000, the average seasonal snowfall in Schuylkill County had been 43.2 inches. The winter with the most snow in that cluster was the winter of 2002-03, when there was 85.2 inches. The winter with the least snow in that cluster was the winter of 2001-02, when there was only 18 inches. The winter of 2011-12 was the second-least with 20.1, the National Weather Service said previously.

At the National Weather Service Cooperative Observer Program site in Mahanoy City, established in 2000, there was 2.5 inches of snow in November and, before Saturday's storm, there was 4.1 inches of snow in December, Craig Evanego, meteorologist at National Weather Service, State College, said Saturday afternoon.

"I think we're supposed to get three to four inches of snow," Laub said Saturday.

The storm system moving through the Northeast this weekend was expected to bring widespread snowfall to the region. Most areas can expect snowfall of 2 to 4 inches, according to the website for the National Weather Service at www.weather.gov.

"So prior to Saturday, we had about 6.6 inches of snow in Schuylkill County this year. Saturday's snowfall will probably add 4 inches to that," Evanego said.

Laub was staying with a friend at 206 Mill St., Saint Clair, when Ol' Man Winter covered the county with a blanket of snow more than 2 inches deep. At 8:30 a.m., Laub drew back the curtain, eager to see how Mother Nature had turned the world white. By 9 a.m., he was out on the sidewalk clearing a path with a shovel.

But the snow also caused vehicles to slip, slide and, in some cases, crash.

At 12:08 p.m., a tractor-trailer slid on Interstate 81 North in Pine Grove Township overturned and spilled its cargo, which included a chemical detergent, according to state police at Jonestown.

The driver, John D. Nauss, 29, of Bainbridge, Lancaster County, was driving a 2012 Freightliner Casadia north. While following a down-hill left-hand curve, Nauss lost control, crossed into the left lane then left the road and struck a tree near mile marker 103.1, police said.

Nauss was not injured. He will be charged with speeding, police said.

That section of Interstate 81 North was closed for more than seven hours, as responders, including Pine Grove Township firefighters, fire police from the Borough of Pine Grove and officials from the state Department of Transportation evaluated the scene, according to a supervisor from Schuylkill County Communications Center, Pottsville.

Fire police from Joliett were also on scene to detour traffic from Interstate 81 North at Exit 100, according to the communications supervisor.

A heavy-wreaker tow truck was on scene to remove the tractor-trailer. Responders cleaned the detergent from the highway Saturday and will return to the scene today to clean the remains on the berm, according to the communications supervisor.

At 12:30 p.m. on a hill near Minersville Area High School, a group of friends were tackling the snow covered hills with snow saucers. They included Kassidy Hoban, 17, Mercedes Chernosky, 13, and Gabrielle Hoban, 13, all of Minersville.

Harrison was out at 11:15 p.m., using a broom to clean off his sedan, getting ready to run some errands.

"In this, you have to drive slow and watch the other guy," Harrison said.

Harrison, a retired mailman who had worked at the U.S. Post Office in Pottsville, said his career kept him active and in shape.

"I was a city carrier in Pottsville. That exercise keeps a lot of carriers healthy. I guess all those days of working outside paid off," he said. So he had no trouble sweeping the snow off his car Saturday.

Bob Dittmar, Pottsville, spent Saturday morning with a plow and a snow blower. He co-owns Maroons Sports Bar & Grill in Pottsville with his wife, Karen. And he wanted to make sure the sidewalks and the parking lot were clear.

"Snow is pretty to look at, but it's a pain when you're in business," Dittmar said.

Today, there won't be any precipitation, but it will be cold, Evanego said.

While temperatures were in the low 30s Saturday, the high today will be in the upper 20s.

"So, maybe 28," Evanego said.

There's no snow in the forecast this week. The high temperature Monday will be 30 and the high Tuesday will be in the upper 20s, Evanego said.

Neighbors in the news, Dec. 30, 2012

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Chief honored

Stanley P. Brozana Jr., Orwigsburg chief of police, was honored by friends and co-workers who gathered at a surprise event Dec. 15 at Blue Mountain Elementary East.

Stan was hired by the Orwigsburg Borough Police Department on Sept. 14, 1977, and became chief of police by the latter part of 1978.

He was presented with plaques on behalf of the officers of the Orwigsburg police department and members of the Orwigsburg Borough Council.

Trees felled by Hegins Park stage

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HEGINS - Hegins Park visitors will notice a change to the aging main stage at the west end of the park in 2013.

Two trees - a hickory and a white oak - that were growing tightly near the sides of the stage were recently cut down due to their roots damaging the piers at the stage's base.

"We couldn't put the doors back on the stage," said John Stutzman, president of the Hegins Park Association, the organization that maintains the park site. "We're going to repair the foundation, straighten it out and make it level."

Stutzman said most of the remaining work will be completed in the spring, once the weather breaks.

Crews will need to dig out the roots, jack up the wooden stage building which dates back to 1933 and repair the base. The piers are made of cinder block and show the effect of decades worth of pressure from the tree roots. Some of the piers appear crooked and off-center. The wooden stage floor looks slightly higher in the middle and lower at each end, due to the roots pushing at the base.

A few weeks ago, the trees were felled and volunteers have been assisting with the cleanup of the remaining logs and stumps.

In addition to Stutzman, other volunteers who donate their time for park maintenance include Clair Zimmerman, Tom Radel, Bill Carl, Brad Carl, Marvin Geist and Tom Stutzman.

Hegins Park is used year-round by community organizations and by families hosting reunions. It is the site of the Schuylkill County Wine Festival, Hegins Valley Arts & Crafts Faire, Community Day, Independent Coal Miners Annual Picnic, Hegins Fire Company Carnival and the site for baseball and softball games, car shows, rabies clinics and other community festivities.

Gala honors 'recovery' heroes

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Denis Crespo-Fernandez, Philadelphia, said one of his life's greatest achievements has been learning to live without dependency on drugs and alcohol.

At a special event in Pottsville on Saturday saluting such recovery efforts, Crespo-Fernandez said for him the trick was learning to do what seemed impossible 11 years ago: "For me, it was learning to let it go."

"I didn't have a drug of choice. I was trying everything. That was many years ago. If you would have told me that this or that would get me high, I would have tried it. I ended up in prison," Crespo-Fernandez said.

Crespo-Fernandez, 44, has been clean 11 years and today, he's a certified peer specialist trainer for the Mental Health Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. He was one of four people honored at the first "It Is I" Award Gala. Sponsored by Global Development Foundation, Friedensburg, in a partnership with Recovery Edge Inc., based in Pottsville and Mahanoy City, the event was held at the fifth-floor ballroom at The Masonic Building, Pottsville.

"This is a celebration of the lives of four people who represent excellence in their efforts to support the limitless human potential in the lives of those they encounter and in their personal and professional lives," said Ed Perhonitch, the founder of Recovery Edge and its chief operations officer.

"Recovery Edge Peer Support and Forensic Peer Support is the only free-standing, consumer owned, developed, delivered and operated provider of forensic peer support in the State of Pennsylvania," Perhonitch said on the organization's website, www.recoveryedge.org.

Recovery Edge's staff includes 13 certified peer specialists.

Perhonitch also started up a website for the "It Is I" Award Gala at www.itisi.us.

"For anyone who has been through, or is currently going through, a difficult time in life, as well as the individuals who support and encourage those who are struggling, we want to inspire hope for tomorrow by creating limitless power for today. It is about coming together and finding the strength inside to persevere. We would like to offer to you an opportunity to stand up, find empowerment, shine and say "It Is I. It is I who represents the limitless power of human potential inside of myself, and all others," Perhonitch said.

Prior to starting up Recovery Edge, Perhonitch started Global Development Foundation at 1312 Long Run Road, Friedensburg. It's a contracting firm which offers services to homeowners and communities. Today, Perhonitch is its president of operation. Its website is at globaldevelopmentfoundation.info.

Perhonitch said he and Robert Porter, the co-founder of Global Development Foundation and its president of management and finance, picked the first recipients of the "It Is I" awards.

Four people were honored at the Saturday's Gala. They were:

- Crespo-Fernandez was given the first "Voyager of Existence" award.

- Lloyd G. Wertz, vice president for policy and program development at Family Training and Advocacy Center for Serious Mental Illness, Pottsville, was given a "Human Achievement Award." Wertz, 58, said he's been working in the mental health field for 34 years.

- Vivian Spiese, a county affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, Lancaster, was also given a "Human Achievement Award." NAMI is "the nation's largest grassroots mental health organization dedicated to building better lives for the millions of Americans affected by mental illness. NAMI advocates for access to services, treatment, supports and research and is steadfast in its commitment to raise awareness and build a community for hope for all of those in need," according to the NAMI website, www.nami.org.

- Shelley Bishop, Landisburg, president at Support the Journey Inc., was named an "Honorary Inductee." "Support the Journey provides products and services that help people understand, embrace and support the human potential for growth, discovery and recovery," according to Bishop's profile at linkedin.com.

Looking back on Holden's 20-year career

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Looking back on his 20-year congressional career, U.S. Rep. Tim Holden said Wednesday that he wants to be remembered for the work he did while others engaged in partisan arguments and political posturing.

"I always prided myself in staying out of the petty partisan bickering," Holden, D-17, said during an interview reflecting on his 10 terms in Washington. "People want you to work together."

Holden, 55, of Saint Clair, is looking at the end of that career, as he lost the April 24 Primary Election to Scranton lawyer Matt Cartwright, who went on to win the Nov. 6 General Election and will take office on Thursday.

First elected in 1992 as the congressman for the Sixth District, which included Berks, Schuylkill and part of Montgomery counties, he held that seat for 10 years before redistricting put Schuylkill County in the 17th District. In 2002, he topped Dauphin County Republican George W. Gekas in one of the closest and most expensive congressional campaigns in the country to win the 17th District, where he has served for the last 10 years.

"We had a good 20-year run," Holden said of a tenure that included many earth-shattering events.

Running for office came naturally to Holden, whose father and grandfather, Joseph "Socks" and John, served as a county commissioner and borough councilman, respectively.

"I was raised in a political family," he said. "Politics is sort of in my blood."

Holden was a probation officer when he won his first race, beating Daniel G. Grow to become sheriff. After seven years in that post, upon learning U.S. Rep. Gus Yatron was retiring, he decided to aim high.

"I thought it was a wonderful opportunity," Holden said.

Two Berks County Democrats, Warren Haggerty and John Reusing, split the vote, enabling Holden to win the nomination and setting up an all-Schuylkill General Election against John E. Jones III, a Pottsville lawyer who is now a U.S. district judge.

"It was a tough, hard-fought campaign," Holden said of his first congressional race, which he managed to win 105,890 to 95,447.

Arriving in Washington, Holden and other freshmen received advice from two Keystone state congressional veterans, Republican Joseph McDade and Democrat John Murtha, to do what was best for their constituents regardless of what party leaders might say.

" 'You're not Democrats, you're not Republicans, you're Pennsylvanians,' " Holden remembers being told. "This Congress could use some of that."

He also remembers a piece of advice from Murtha that served him well: "Keep you mouth shut, keep your ears open and make friends, and you'll do OK for your district."

"That's what I've tried to pride myself on," Holden said.

That work included joining the Agriculture and Transportation committees, where he was able to obtain millions of dollars for Schuylkill and other counties in his district.

Those projects included improvements to Route 61 and other local highways, support for the Schuylkill Transportation System, financial backing for business projects, grants for firefighters and law enforcement personnel, and additional money that helped people in the county and enabled him to count on their solid support.

He said he always was more interested on that than in political arguments.

"Common sense" is what Washington needs, he said. "The Democrats are just as guilty of it as the Republicans. We've got to find a way to work together."

After one term, however, Holden found himself in the minority, as Republicans took control of both the House and Senate in the 1994 election. Although Holden himself won re-election, he was surprised by the change.

"If they had polling, they were not showing it to us," he said of Democratic leaders.

That change set up a confrontation between President Clinton and new House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., a fight that led to a government shutdown when they could not agree on a budget.

"I knew they were two strong personalities," Holden said. "I never thought they'd take it to a government shutdown."

A funny thing then occurred, however: Clinton and Gingrich made peace and the country started a stretch of prosperity.

"They realized they had to live together. They compromised," Holden said. "That's what the American people want."

That cooperation ended abruptly in 1998 with Clinton's impeachment on perjury charges stemming from his extramarital affair with intern Monica Lewinsky.

"Gwen (Tim's wife) and I were on vacation. A total stranger told us," Holden said of Lewinsky.

He thinks Republicans went too far in trying to remove Clinton from office. The House impeached Clinton but the Senate refused to remove him from office.

"I think he was embarrassed enough by the exposure of it," he said.

In 2000, the gap between the parties grew even wider with the close and controversial presidential election, in which Republican George W. Bush, the governor of Texas, beat Vice President Al Gore after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered a halt in December to the recount directed by the Supreme Court of Florida. At that time, Holden was with Clinton in Belfast, Northern Ireland, when the president took a telephone call.

" 'I just hung up with Al. He's going to concede,' " was what Clinton told him and the other Democrats on the trip, Holden recalled.

Bush became president, Holden was still in the minority in the House - and then came Sept. 11, 2001.

"I was in the House gym. I was working out on the elliptical machine," Holden remembered of that awful day. "Everything just stopped. The Capitol police came into the gym shouting, 'Get out of here, get out of here.' "

Two days later, Holden and the rest of Congress rode a special train to Ground Zero, a trip that he said produced disbelief among everyone.

"You think of the people jumping out," he recalled. "It's hard for us to understand that there are people who hate us so much."

The 9/11 attacks, in which approximately 3,000 people died at the World Trade Center in New York City, the Pentagon and on an airplane that crashed in Shanksville, Somerset County, led to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

"The effort directed against the Taliban was just and proper," Holden said of the war against the Afghan regime that harbored Osama bin Laden. "I voted for the war in Iraq."

The next year, Holden faced his hardest election until 2012, when redistricting resulted in him running against Gekas in one of four contests nationwide that pitted incumbents against each other.

"I honestly didn't think I was going to run," until a poll showed him running even with Gekas, a 10-term incumbent, Holden said. "I thought, 'Well, I'm going to take a shot at this.' "

In a Republican district, Holden kept it close all the way.

"That's the only election in my career when I went into Election Day not knowing whether I was going to win or lose," he said.

In a major upset, Holden won, ending Gekas' career and putting him in a majority Republican district.

"I figured after that I'd have to work my tail off in Dauphin and Lebanon," Holden said. "I knew they'd be coming after me the next time."

Holden said he always prided himself on working for the Sixth District, and he continued to do so in the 17th.

He obtained approximately $74.5 million for Fort Indiantown Gap in Lebanon County and $33.65 million to help establish a cancer institute at Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center in Dauphin County. Combined with solid support from Schuylkill County and one of the most conservative voting records of any Northeastern Democrat, those enabled him to keep his job, winning re-election easily in 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008 and 2010.

"I only lost Dauphin County once," he said. Dauphin County's state representatives had pretty safe seats, which made them reluctant to run against him, according to Holden.

Holden again found himself in the majority after the 2006 election but went back to the minority after the 2010 election. He foresaw both, saying they stemmed from the same essential cause and represented what he has tried to fight against his entire career.

"When one party has absolute control and they listen to the extreme faction of the party, that locks out the other party," he said. "They have a tendency to go to the extreme. People ... want you to govern."

Then came 2012, and another redistricting that moved the 17th northeast and made it more Democratic, but also gave him 80 percent new territory. Holden said his Republican colleagues told him that Scranton had to be moved out of the 11th District, and kept out of the 10th, to help freshmen Lou Barletta and Tom Marino keep their jobs, so it would have to be put in the new 17th.

"Once Harrisburg or Reading were not in this district, I knew I had a problem. I was prepared not to run," but Democratic leaders in Lackawanna and Luzerne counties said they would not run for the seat, he said. "When Matt decided to run, I knew he was credible."

Money from liberal political action committees helped undermine him among the voters who did not know him, and Cartwright won by a fairly large margin, according to Holden.

Holden foresees trouble in Washington over the "fiscal cliff," the looming financial crisis over renewal of the tax cuts passed under President George W. Bush.

"I think we're going over the cliff," he said. "Everybody's taxes will go up. It will be a financial disaster."

He also is leery about the future around the globe, especially the Middle East.

"It's still a very dangerous world," Holden said. "There are a lot of people who don't like us."

Holden said he is not sure what the future holds for him, but he knows it does not include politics.

"I have no intention of running for office," he said. "I have a lot of irons in the fire. I've talked to several firms. I have no definite plans now. I'm going to find something to do."

However, he is grateful for having had the chance to serve the people of the Sixth and 17th districts, and especially the folks from Schuylkill County.

"It's been an honor and privilege to represent them for 20 years in Congress and seven as sheriff," he said. "Schuylkill County overwhelmingly backed me and I'll never forget that."


Everyone deserves a place to call home

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When my mother was the reading teacher for the fifth and sixth grades at D.H.H. Lengel Middle School, every year at Christmas she read her class "The Best Christmas Pageant Ever" by Barbara Robinson. This 1971 novel for young readers tells the Christmas story from a different angle, about the worst kids in town who get involved in a Christmas pageant when they hear the rumor that chocolate cake is served on a regular basis at the local church.

Those children, the Herdmans - and they are quite a herd - live over a garage on the wrong side of the tracks. At school, they steal from their classmates' lunchboxes and at home they try to crush each other beneath the automatic garage door or sic the ferocious family cat on any social worker who comes to call. Their dad left home one evening, never to return. Their mom works two shifts in a factory, surely out of need, but mostly to get away from the kids. Needless to say, the Herdman children, two girls and four boys, had never been to church before they heard about the chocolate cake.

At the first rehearsal for the Christmas pageant - the story of the Nativity - they bully themselves into all the main roles, Mary, Joseph, the wise men and the angel of the Lord. There's just one problem: they are the only ones who don't know the story and, hearing it for the first time, hearing how on a cold winter's night a pregnant woman and her husband were turned away from the inn, the Herdmans are up in arms.

Where were the social workers? Why was no doctor around? And how could anyone leave that poor couple in a stable, with, as the carol goes, "no crib for a bed" for their baby, nothing but a dirty trough filled with straw? What kind of people could do such a thing to a couple of refugees, cold, hungry and with no place to go?

Bethlehem, a mountain city, is a cold place in winter, but not nearly as cold as Paris has been this December. Winters are generally mild here, compared to Pennsylvania, and snow, since my arrival in the city in 1991, has been rare.

December 2012, however, has been different. Snow, intense cold and freezing rain have become our daily lot and fashion-conscious Parisians have taken to wearing hats or caps, pulled low on the forehead, putting at risk (for men and women both) stylish coiffures.

For the city's contingent of more than 5,000 SDFs - a French acronym referring to the homeless, sans domicile fixe (without a permanent home) - the cold and snow have added yet another layer of difficulty to their daily struggle to survive. Between the time those lucky enough to have a bed for the night are turned out of shelters early in the morning until they line up to get into a shelter the next night, they have a long day in front of them.

In warm weather, they can take refuge in city parks. In cold, they head underground, into the metro. There, they tend to melt into the woodwork, or, more accurately, into the white tiles which cover the walls of the corridors and stations of the Parisian subway system. As for us commuters, unless one gets in our way, we hardly notice them, so used have we become to the presence of the homeless in our midst.

On crowded subway platforms, we turn our backs on them. Craning our necks, on the lookout for the next train, we stand poised to elbow our way inside. Once the train pulls in and the automatic doors slide open, we surge inside, leaving the homeless behind. We're heading home, they're left to sit on the incredibly uncomfortable seats provided by the transportation authority ever since benches were done away with, in order to prevent the homeless from lying down. Since the cold has set in, they've set up camp. Wrapped in blankets, they picnic on the platform, washing their meals down with cheap beer or wine, staying until closing time (the Parisian metro closes for about five hours each night).

Inside the train, we commuters travel with beggars. They're not as easy to ignore as the homeless, who sit and stare but rarely speak. Beggars, on the contrary, speak out. They make speeches, describing the difficulties of their life, how hard it is to keep clean or find a bed for the night. Some go on and on. Gypsies, for example, go from car to car, all the while shaking a paper cup from Starbuck's or McDonald's, repeating "monsieur-dame, s'il vous plait, aidez-moi" - please help me, help my baby. And that's the worst of it-these beggars, mostly women, usually balance a baby on one hip and are often pregnant with another. For weeks, every Tuesday, at the same hour, I cross such a woman, wondering if she may soon give birth before my very eyes.

On another occasion, a woman, a Rom, as gypsies prefer to be called, sang in a keening voice, while her little son worked his way through the crowd, holding a dirty paper cup. Nobody was giving so I reached in my pocket, found a 50-centime coin and dropped it in. The boy said "merci" and gave me a beautiful, genuine smile. I'd just given him a little more than 50 cents. Did I really deserve so much in return?

Since 1997, the homeless in France have a special number to call, 115, when they need a place to sleep or urgent care, except that, these days, no one's picking up the phone. Too many requests, too much need, no room at the inn, which, in this case means a shelter where the homeless are offered disposable sheets and a "kit proprete," containing what it takes to keep clean. What's even more disturbing, more young people than ever are making the call. Homeless, without work, often alienated from their families, many would join their voices to that of one homeless young man who recently said on the evening news, all he's asking for is electricity, running water and a place to lay his head.

I guess there has never been enough room at the inn, not in Jesus' day nor our own. Then as now, a too large majority has ignored the homeless, the way we commuters do in the metro today. Should we offer them our garages or tool sheds, contemporary versions of the stable of long ago, or the extra room in our apartment or home? Like the Herdmans, should we all be up in arms because so many men, women and children sleep out in the cold? Wouldn't 2013 truly be a better year if all of us had a place to call home?

You can watch the 1982 made-for-TV movie of "The Best Christmas Pageant Ever" with Loretta Switt at www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4KSXrz28uE.

(Honicker can be reached at honicker.republican herald@gmail.com)

Around the Region

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n Coaldale: The local Cub Scouts pack will meet from 6 to 7 p.m. today at the Knights of Columbus quarters, 200 E. Miner St. The troop is accepting new members. For more information, call Regina at 570-645-9234.

n Coaldale: Take Off Pounds Sensibly will meet from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the education room at St. Luke's Hospital-Miners Campus, 360 W. Ruddle St. TOPS meets weekly at the hospital. Sessions include a short business meeting and program. TOPS is a nonprofit, weight-loss support group for men and women of all ages. For more information, attend a meeting (6 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays) or contact Kathy Ruff at 570-645-3059 or via email at katrina@ptd.net. Information is also available on the Web at TOPS.org.

n Jim Thorpe: The Sunday School of St. John's Lutheran Church held its Olde Tyme Christmas celebration Dec. 23 with the Sunday School children giving recitations and singing songs. Each participating family brough an item for the covered dish meal that followed. Participants also gathered at a birthday cake for Jesus. The evening ended with a Christmas pageant by the children and words from the Rev. Peter Muhr, pastor.

n Lansford: Ruth Ann Feane, Norma Lee Burke and Grace Moser will comprise the hospitality committee for January and February for the Panther Valley Golden Agers. The group opened a December meeting with the Pledge of Allegiance and the singing of "God Bless America." The next meeting will be held at 1 p.m. Jan. 14 at St. John's Slovak Lutheran Church. New officers will be installed. Bingo games will be played if enough members are interested.

n McAdoo: The McAdoo Fire Company will sponsor bingo games from 5 to 9:30 p.m. Thursday at Strand Hall, 110 W. Blaine St. The early bird will begin at 5:30 p.m. and regular games will begin at 6 p.m. Refreshments will be avialable. Everyone is welcome.

n Tamaqua: The Schuylkill County and Tamaqua borough per capita and occupation tax exemption forms for 2013 are available for borough residents at Tamaqua Borough Hall, 320 E. Broad St., from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Forms also are available at tax collector Alan Kerr's office, the Tamaqua Area School District's administration building, the Tamaqua ABC High Rise, Majestic House Apartment Complex, the Tamaqua Public Library and the Tamaqua Post Office. Residents must complete the form each year to qualify for the tax exemption. Forms must be submitted by Jan. 25.

n Tamaqua: Seventy-six members of the Tamaqua Senior Citizens group heard a variety of reports during a Dec. 13 meeting at the Tamaqua Community Center. Vice President Nancy Gerber conducted the business session and provided her report. Jacquie Parick provided the invocation, titled "Searching For The Best Gift." Secretary Joan Anne Garber and Treasurer Antoinette Triano give their reports. The meeting concluded with playing of social games and cards. It was noted that the center, which is accessible to the handicapped, will change ownership in January and the seniors will need a new site for their meetings. Anyone 55 or older is welcome to join the group.

n Tamaqua: The marketing committee of the Tamaqua Chamber of Commerce will meet at 5:15 p.m. Wednesday in the chamber conference room, 114 W. Broad St., downtown Tamaqua. It will be the group's regular monthly session. The chamber's board of directors will meet at 8 a.m. Thursday in the conference room.

n Tamaqua: Kids crafting classes will be held from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Tamaqua Community Arts Center, 125 Pine St., for youngsters in kindergarten through third grade. The classes are ongoing on Thursday evenings. A craft will be completed at each class for the youngsters to take home. The parents of each child are asked to give $2 with all proceeds being turned back to the center. Registration is not required.

Criminal Court, Dec. 30, 2012

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In recent county court action, President Judge William E. Baldwin accepted guilty pleas from, and, pursuant to agreements between prosecutors and defendants, imposed the indicated sentences on, these people:

Heather N. Scipioni, 36, of Myerstown; retail theft; $200 fine and $40 restitution. Prosecutors dropped a charge of theft.

Robert Stackhouse, 30, of Tamaqua; bad checks; 12 months probation, $50 CJEA payment and $650 restitution.

Gurney R. Wolff Jr., 34, of Tremont; DUI and disregarding traffic lane; 72 hours to six months in prison, $1,025 in fines, $100 SAEF payment, $50 CJEA payment, $60 restitution to Schuylkill Medical Center-South Jackson Street and 20 hours community service. Prosecutors dropped a charge of careless driving.

Harry J. Zaprazny, 43, of New Ringgold; possession of a small amount of marijuana; 30 days probation, $100 SAEF payment and $50 CJEA payment.

In other recent county court action, Judge Charles M. Miller accepted guilty pleas from, and, pursuant to agreements between prosecutors and defendants, imposed the indicated sentences on, these people:

Peter P. Bieniek, 43, of Tamaqua; DUI; 30 days in prison, four years and 11 months in the intermediate punishment program, $1,500 fine, $300 SAEF payment and $50 payment to the Criminal Justice Enhancement Account. Prosecutors withdrew charges of failure to have required regulation bumper and disregarding traffic lane.

Jaxson Detweiler, 19, of Schuylkill Haven; possession of a controlled substance; 12 months probation, $200 fine, $100 SAEF payment, $50 CJEA payment, $113 restitution to the state police crime laboratory in Bethlehem and 10 hours community service.

Samantha J. Digilio, 20, of Summit Hill; improper furnishing of drug-free urine; 12 months probation consecutive to current sentence, $50 CJEA payment and 20 hours community service.

Jennifer Lee Dipietro, 29, of Tamaqua; theft; time served to 12 months in prison with immediate parole, $50 CJEA payment, $3,300 restitution, 10 hours community service and submission of a DNA sample to law enforcement authorities.

Erika J. Ebling, 52, of Pottsville; possession of a controlled substance; time served to 12 months in prison with immediate parole, $100 SAEF payment, $50 CJEA payment and $113 restitution to the state police crime laboratory in Bethlehem. Prosecutors withdrew charges of delivery of a controlled substance and possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance.

Joseph J. Fogarty, 44, of Lost Creek; possessing instruments of crime; time served to 23 months in prison with immediate parole and $50 CJEA payment.

Richard L. Griffiths Jr., 49, of Minersville; delivery of a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia; six to 23 months in prison, $250 fine, $100 SAEF payment, $100 in CJEA payments, $113 restitution to the state police crime laboratory in Bethlehem and submission of a DNA sample to law enforcement authorities, with sentence effective at 9 a.m. Jan. 2. Prosecutors withdrew a charge of possession of a controlled substance.

Amy Heffner, 39, of Pottsville; receiving stolen property; 23 months probation, $50 CJEA payment, 10 hours community service and submission of a DNA sample to law enforcement authorities.

Stephen W. Jaskierski, 49, of Frackville; DUI; 72 hours to six months in prison, $1,000 fine, $300 SAEF payment and $50 CJEA payment. Prosecutors withdrew a charge of speeding.

Denise M. Krammes, 49, of Pottsville; two counts each of delivery of a controlled substance, possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance and possession of a controlled substance; two to 23 months in prison, $400 in fines, $100 SAEF payment, $50 CJEA payment, $226 restitution to the state police crime laboratory in Bethlehem and submission of a DNA sample to law enforcement authorities, with sentence effective at 9 a.m. Jan. 7.

All defendants who were sentenced must pay costs as a part of their sentences.

Police log, Dec. 30, 2012

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Woman faces

theft charges

MINERSVILLE - Borough police filed charges against a Pottsville woman after an incident at the Fuel Up Convenience Store at 7:57 p.m. Nov. 28.

Police said Cinthia Marie Shaffer, 27, of 16 Park St., removed an ATM card belonging to another female and fraudulently withdrew $202.50 from her account.

Shaffer will have to answer before Magisterial District Judge David A. Plachko, Port Carbon, on charges of theft, receiving stolen property and access device fraud.

Boy charged in

incident at school

TOWER CITY - A 17-year-old Williamstown boy was charged with possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance by state police at Lykens after an incident at 8 a.m. Dec. 21 at Williams Valley High School in Williams Township, Dauphin County.

Police said Dauphin County juvenile probation officers went to the school to arrest the boy on charges involving a stolen gun in July, and while taking him into custody found him with 28 prescription pills in a plastic bag.

The boy was committed to a juvenile detention center to await court action, police said.

3 escape injury

in collision

SELTZER - Three people escaped injury in a two-vehicle crash that occurred on Seltzer Road, just east of Gallo Street in Norwegian Township, at 8:17 p.m. Monday, police said.

State police at Schuylkill Haven said Donald P. Troutman Jr., 44, of Minersville, was driving a 2008 GMC Yukon trying to turn from Seltzer Road into an alley where Raymond Green Jr., 74, of Hegins, was legally stopped in his 2010 Hyundai Santa Fe.

In making the turn, police said Troutman struck the driver's side of Green's SUV and then fled the scene south toward Arlene Street in Minersville.

Troutman, who police said will be cited as a result of the crash, along with Green and his passenger, Patricia Green, 65, also of Hegins, all escaped injury.

Tremont man

injured in crash

TOWER CITY - A Tremont man suffered moderate injuries and was flown to Geisinger Medical Center, Danville, after he was ejected from his 2004 Saturn Ion in a crash on Route 209 at Keystone Road in Porter Township at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, police said.

State police at Schuylkill Haven said Erik Ossman, 23, was driving south on Route 209 and came around a left curve when his vehicle began to spin and went into the northbound lane. The vehicle went off of the road and down an embankment, where it rolled over and struck a tree with the passenger's side, police said.

After hitting the tree, police said the vehicle spun 180 degrees and came to a stop facing south in a small wooded area off of the road.

Woman charged

in store theft

TAMAQUA - A borough woman was cited for allegedly taking items from a borough business, police said.

Borough police said Lacy Pajakinas, 22, took items valued at $12 from the Family Dollar store, 137 N. Railroad St., at 1 p.m. Dec. 21. Police said the woman was caught with the unknown items, and a citation was filed for retail theft.

Christmas gifts

taken from porch

TAMAQUA - Someone stole Christmas gifts from the back porch of a home Monday, police said.

Borough police said Jesse Lincovich reported that between 3 and 4 p.m. he put two black garbage bags and two blue Rubbermaid containers with presents on the back porch of 235 Spruce St. The bags and containers were subsequently taken, police said.

Glass door

reported broken

TAMAQUA - A glass door to a business' storage area was broken earlier this week, police said.

Borough police said the incident occurred overnight Sunday at M and I Deli, 535 N. Railroad St. According to police, a man named Irvin Knorr, whose relation to the business is unknown, said the glass on the door was shattered. There was no entry to the storage area, police said.

Window, siding

damaged

TAMAQUA - Siding and a window of a business were damaged this week, police said.

Borough police said Carolyn Padora, address unknown, reported the incident at 209 N. Railroad St. occurred between 11 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday, police said.

Deeds, Dec. 30, 2012

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Deeds

Frackville - Joseph G. Groody, sheriff of Schuylkill County, to Watermelon Realty LLC and Commonwealth Commerce LLC; 38 N. Railroad Ave.; $30,916.

North Manheim Township - Florence Rauch and Barbarann M. Bensinger, co-executrices of the Estate of Evelyn M. Purcell, to Michelle A. Schulze; 8 Sajer Road, Seiders Hill; $180,000.

North Union Township - Felecito A. Granada and Mar and Merly Barlaan to Eagle Rock Resort Co.; 2 percent interest in Lot 180EA, Eagle Rock; $10.

Ephraim II and Universe Adelino to Eagle Rock Resort Co.; 2 percent interest in Lot 180EA, Eagle Rock; $5,376.39.

Norwegian Township - Michael W. Barto to Dorothy Lazovi; property on Willow Street; $23,000.

Pine Grove Township - Jennifer Engleman to Edward and Maureen Spidel; 245 Suedberg Road; $1.

Federal National Mortgage Association to Jeffrey Spittler; 60 Rock Road; $55,000.

Jeffrey Spittler to Rachelle E. Jones; 60 Rock Road; $1.

Pottsville - Kate Lynn Blatt to Timothy P. Brennan; 0.094-acre property on Route 61; $3,500.

Schuylkill Haven - Russell H. Schaeffer to Rebecca L. Deatrich; 406 N. Third St.; $100,000.

Schuylkill Township - Natalie A. Stremick to Natalie A. Stremick; 134 School St., MaryD; $1.

Shenandoah - Joseph M. and Jean Sherako to Flat Rock Realty LLC; two properties; $40,000.

Brandon Onisick to Joseph and Jennifer Gersch; 226 W. Mount Vernon St.; $11,000.

South Manheim Township - Joseph G. Groody, sheriff of Schuylkill County, to Deutsche Bank National Trust Co.; 2256 Wynonah Drive, Lake Wynonah; $1,121.34.

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