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Friday, February 10, 2012
PLAINS TWP. – Wilkes-Barre Township Fire Chief John Paul Yuknavich must randomly submit to drug and alcohol testing as part of his one-year probation sentence imposed Wednesday after pleading guilty to assaulting a man.
LOS ANGELES — Investigators said Wednesday they have found 200 additional photos they believe were taken by a former teacher who is accused of committing lewd acts on 23 children over a five-year period.
At least four Balkan nations suspended shipping on the Danube River because of severe frost and the vast amount of ice blocking the heavily traveled waterway.
Patrick M. Farrell, 52, of California, Maryland, and formerly of Wilkes-Barre, passed away suddenly on Monday, February 6, 2012, at St. Mary’s Hospital in Leonardtown, Md.
Pennsylvania moved a step closer to imposing a fee on drilling for gas in the Marcellus Shale on Tuesday when the state Senate voted in favor of establishing local impact fees on drilling. But state senators from both parties representing Luzerne County indicated Tuesday the measure may be a step in the wrong direction.
A Shickshinny man was arrested Tuesday on charges he slashed a man’s throat at a scrap yard more than a year ago. Berwick police and the state Office of Attorney General’s office charged Kim Neil Roquet Jr., 39, of Indian Cave Road, with criminal attempt to commit murder, aggravated assault and robbery.
Students at Shippensburg University in central Pennsylvania can get the “morning-after” pill by sliding $25 into a vending machine installed at the request of the student government.
DAYTON, Ohio — A political firestorm over abortion and birth control spread suddenly to multiple fronts on Tuesday. A high-ranking official resigned from the Komen breast-cancer charity after its backtracking treaty with Planned Parenthood, and Republican presidential candidates blistered the Obama administration for a recent ruling on Catholic hospitals and contraception.
HARRISBURG — Prosecutors asked Tuesday to have Jerry Sandusky kept indoors as part of his bail conditions, citing complaints that the former Penn State football assistant was seen outside and watching children in a schoolyard from the back porch of his home, where he remains under house arrest while awaiting trial on child molestation charges.
BEIRUT — Days after blocking a U.S.-backed peace plan at the U.N., senior Russian officials pushed for reforms Tuesday during an emergency meeting with Syrian President Bashar Assad, promoting a settlement to end the uprising without removing him from power.
Priests who rape and molest children lie when confronted with an accusation but victims usually tell the truth, psychologists told Catholic bishops at a symposium Tuesday, advising them to listen first to the victims.
WASHINGTON — A resurgent Rick Santorum won Minnesota’s Republican caucuses with ease Tuesday night, relegating front-runner Mitt Romney to a distant third-place finish that raised fresh questions about his ability to attract ardent conservatives at the core of the GOP political base.
OLYMPIA, Wash. — Authorities have been investigating the disappearance of Susan Powell as a murder for at least several months, while they publicly left open the possibility that the Utah mother might be found alive.
WILKES-BARRE TWP. – The township volunteer fire department has until the end of the month to release its financial records and any donations received from 2006, according to a ruling by the state Office of Open Records.
BEIRUT — The U.S. closed its Syrian embassy Monday and Britain recalled its ambassador to Damascus in a dramatic escalation of Western pressure on President Bashar Assad to give up power, just days after diplomatic efforts at the United Nations to end the crisis collapsed.
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. — Sensing a possible threat, Mitt Romney criticized Rick Santorum’s time in the Senate as “not effective” because of his past support for spending on pork-barrel projects as he worked to fend off an unexpected challenge in the next states to vote.
Pennsylvania’s booming natural gas industry would pay an estimated $190 million in fees in the first year, money spread across drilling communities and to state infrastructure and environmental programs, under legislation that sped toward votes in the state Legislature Monday.
New York Giants fullback Henry Hynoski and Chris Snee weren’t the only people connected to Northeastern Pennsylvania to have big days on Super Bowl Sunday.
A documentary featuring the revitalization of Williamsport through a budding art scene will debut tonight at 7 on WVIA-TV, channel 44. Written, produced and directed by Dallas native Lorena Beniquez, “Williamsport Art Attack” centers on the 10th anniversary of Williamsport’s First Friday, a monthly community event that celebrates local art and music.
SWOYERSVILLE – No one would mistake Scott Simko for New York Giants defensive end Justin Tuck. Nor would they mistake whom he was rooting for in Sunday’s Super Bowl XLVI.
JERUSALEM — For the first time in nearly two decades of escalating tensions over Iran’s nuclear program, world leaders are genuinely concerned that an Israeli military attack on the Islamic Republic could be imminent — an action that many fear might trigger a wider war, terrorism and global economic havoc.
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — Bosnia used helicopters on Sunday to evacuate the sick and deliver food to thousands of people left stranded by its heaviest snowfall ever, while Pope Benedict XVI donned an overcoat to bless the few pilgrims who braved Rome’s unusually cold weather to visit St. Peter’s Square.
Now it’s on to Colorado, Minnesota and Maine. With back-to-back victories fueling him, Republican presidential front-runner Mitt Romney is looking toward the next states that hold GOP nominating contests as main rival Newt Gingrich brushes aside any talk of abandoning his White House bid — all but ensuring the battle will stretch into the spring if not beyond.
PHILADELPHIA — Past the glass case containing sketches for his novel “Oliver Twist,” beyond the handwritten letter to his publisher about Little Nell, and away from the first published installments of “Hard Times” sits Charles Dickens’ pet bird.
When US News & World Report debuted its list of “America’s Best Colleges” nearly 30 years ago, the magazine hoped its college rankings would be a game-changer for students and families. But arguably, they’ve had a much bigger effect on colleges themselves.
GRAHAM, Wash. — Days after a judge ruled against him in a child custody hearing, a father and his two young sons were killed Sunday when police said he intentionally blew up a house with all three inside — a tragic ending to a bizarre case that began more than two years ago when the man’s wife went mysteriously missing in Utah.
SUGARLOAF TWP. – State police are investigating a robbery Sunday afternoon at Joe’s Choice Convenient Mart on state Route 93.
GOLD BEACH, Ore. — Three mushroom pickers lost six nights in the rugged forest of southwest Oregon used their dead cellphone and a sheath knife to flash a signal at the helicopter pilot who found them.
Entering the Luzerne County courtroom on Friday, Lisa Sands was hoping the judge would keep the scheduled date of Hugo Selenski’s capital murder trial. When she walked out, her quest for closure was delayed for the seventh time...
HARRISBURG — A final framework is at hand on sweeping legislation to impose an impact fee and update safety regulations on Pennsylvania’s booming natural gas industry, top Republican state lawmakers say.
PLAINS TWP. – A fast-moving fire Saturday afternoon destroyed a house on Henry Street, and two firefighters battling the blaze were hospitalized.
MOSCOW — Several thousand protesters took to the streets in Russia Saturday demanding free and fair elections, a month before presidential polls are due, while a counter rally expressed support for candidate Vladimir Putin.
BEIRUT — Russia and China vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution aimed at ending Syria’s bloodshed, despite international outrage Saturday over a devastating bombardment of the city of Homs by President Bashar Assad’s forces. Activists said more than 200 were killed in the bloodiest episode of the nearly 11-month uprising.
Dozens of U.S. Park Police officers in riot gear and on horseback converged before dawn Saturday on one of the nation’s last remaining Occupy sites, with police clearing away tents they said were banned under park rules.
HARRISBURG — With the state government projecting its fourth straight deficit next year, the budget plan that Gov. Tom Corbett will roll out Tuesday is expected to bring somber news to many who rely on state aid.
NEW YORK — When Dorothy Twinney first saw a Race for the Cure walk for breast cancer — “a sea of pink” traveling through her hometown of Plymouth, Mich. — she was so moved she sat in her car and wept.
For the first time, 21st-century audiences are able to hear the voice of Otto von Bismarck, one of the 19th century’s most important figures.
Facebook’s billionaire CEO Mark Zuckerberg calls himself a “hacker.” For most people, that word means something malicious — shady criminals who listen in on private voicemails, or anonymous villains who cripple websites and break into email accounts.
WASHINGTON — An outbreak of bacterial infections on the East Coast illustrates the popularity of raw, unpasteurized milk despite strong warnings from public health officials about the potential danger.
A powerful winter storm swept across Colorado on Friday, forcing the cancellation of nearly 600 flights at Denver airport, closing parts of Interstate 70 and sparking a run on grocery stores before the worst weather descended.
PHOENIXVILLE — Four Republican candidates vying for the nomination to challenge Democrat Bob Casey’s re-election bid to the U.S. Senate barely disagreed with each other at a suburban Philadelphia forum, although some sparks flew as they worked to distinguish themselves from each other with less than three months until the primary election.
DALLAS – On Monday, students at Dallas Senior High School will be required for the first time to pass through a metal detector to enter the school.
FAIRVIEW TWP. – While walking his dog last month, Dan Madry thought the wind and rain would be their only company on a visit to the spot where his son was killed in a car crash.