3rd May 2008

Loyalty Day winners

This year’s Loyalty Day topic was “How Can I Honor America’s Veterans”. Tyrone VFW Post Loyalty Day chairman Charles Boyd and Tyrone VFW Auxiliary president Alice Ewing visited Tyrone Area High School recently to present awards to Nathan Kruis, who placed first for his essay and Evan Brush, who was awarded second place. Kruis will compete today with the rest of the District 22 post winners at the Martinsburg VFW. Pictured, from left is: Alice Ewing; English teacher, Steve Everhart; Evan Brush; Nathan Kruis and Charles Boyd. (The Daily Herald/Amanda Golden)

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3rd May 2008

Getting to Know: Roberta Woomer, 2008 Northern Blair Relay for Life Ambassador

This year’s Northern Blair Relay for Life Event will be held in Bellwood on June 20 – 21. Local educator Roberta Woomer has a remarkable tale of survivorship and has been selected as Ambassador of this special weekend.
Its website, www.relayforlife.org, defines the purpose as: “Relay For Life, the American Cancer Society’s signature event, is a fun-filled overnight experience designed to bring together those who have been touched by cancer. At Relay, people from within the community gather to celebrate survivors, remember those lost to cancer, and to fight back against this disease. Relay participants help raise money and awareness to support the American Cancer Society in its lifesaving mission to eliminate cancer as a major health issue. During Relay For Life events, teams of people gather at schools, fairgrounds, or parks and take turns walking or running laps. The events are held overnight to represent the fact that cancer never sleeps. Through the survivors’ lap and the luminaries’ ceremony, we honor the people who have faced cancer first hand, and we remember those who have been lost to this disease.”
DH: What does being Northern Blair Relay for Life Ambassador 2008 mean to you?
RW: Representing Northern Blair as the Relay for Life Ambassador 2008 is an honor and a source of pride. I have seen firsthand the successes possible today with treatment and care. One has to experience Relay for Life to realize the worth of the event. It genuinely depicts the sense of unity and pride among the participants. Don’t miss a chance of a lifetime to experience the ray of hope and see that there is light at the end of the tunnel. If you need something to get strength from somewhere, spend the weekend at Relay for Life!
DH: You are a Tyrone Middle School Teacher. What grade and subject do you teach? How long have you been a teacher?
RW: I have taught for 32+ years. Currently, I am a Learning Support teacher for 5th grade children attending Tyrone Area Middle School. Hopefully, I have touched the lives of many young children while guiding them to become an independent, positive, and productive life-long learner.
DH: Do you live in Tyrone? Tell me about yourself and your family.
RW: Dale and I have raised three loving children in Bald Eagle and are now blessed with three beautiful grandchildren.
Mary Jo, age 32, graduated with a Master’s degree in Physical Therapy from St. Francis University. She works at the University Orthopedics in State College. She married Denny McClellan and they have a lively daughter, Hannah Grace.
Andrew, age 30, graduated from Lock Haven University with a Regular Education/Special Education degree. He is a Special Education Teacher in the Altoona Area School District. He married Shana Tennis and they have two children, “Nonstop” Carter and “Bubbly” Alayna.
Christopher, age 24, graduated from Pennsylvania School of Technology in Williamsport with a degree in heavy equipment.
DH: You are a cancer survivor. Please tell me about your personal story and your battle with this disease.
RW: In early 1991, I was exceptionally tired, but attributed it to a committed work ethic and motherhood. Thinking I may have diabetes, which is prevalent in my family, I saw a specialist only to find something much worse. He recommended I make an appointment with Dr. Steven Piver, a renowned doctor, of the Roswell Cancer Clinic in Buffalo, NY.
On February 13, 1991, my family, forming a caravan of five cars, made the trip to Buffalo where I learned how serious my condition was. I was given a choice. I could forgo treatment having approximately five days to live, undergo surgery, which the doctors gave me a 3 percent chance of survival, and participate in aggressive treatment for advanced cervical cancer. It was not long to opt for surgery because I was young, possessed a deep-rooted Catholic faith, and more than anything I wanted to live to raise our three young children.
On February 14, 1991, doctors removed as much of the cancer as they could. I vividly remember the doctors telling me after the surgery, “You are not supposed to be here. We are very good at what we do here, but the Lord had a great hand in this and He definitely has a plan for you.”
Because of the seriousness of my cancer, the treatments to kill the remainder of the cancer cells started within days, even before I had a chance to heal from the major operation. The treatments included two radium implants. During those treatments, I had to lie still on my back for three LONG days in isolation with any movement on my part would cause excruciating pain. The radium implant was so powerful that doctors had to give me a two-week break between the treatments. I recall when deciding to go back for the second treatment was among one of the toughest decisions I had to make as part of my recovery.
But it took more than just the radium implants. I would have daily radiation treatments through the end of May that would keep me in Buffalo. I lived at Hope Lodge, an American Cancer Society residential facility near the facility. The chemotherapy treatments left me vomiting and with diarrhea to the point that my weight went from 225 to 112 pounds. A couple of times I had to be hospitalized for dehydration. The only thing I could eat was baby food.
During those months of treatment, support from family, community, and colleagues kept me going. The cards were important because they represented an action someone took. And that’s the tragedy of the whole thing. In the beginning, I didn’t take any action in my everyday life of taking care of myself. I think that’s the irony of it. If I would have taken action [getting regular checkups], I would have had continued good health because this type of cancer, diagnosed at an early stage, is typically uncalled for. My close brush with death has caused me to slow and appreciate what’s really important in life!
DH: What do the Relay for Life walks and events mean to you?
RW: At the Tyrone Schools, Linda Strong and Ann Yaniello always took an active part each year in Relay. Their unselfishness, commitment, and excellent example were contagious and in 2000 is when I initially became involved in Relay. I have seen some of the heartaches, and, of course, my hope is for cancer research to thrive and every individual with this disease will benefit. I hold dear to the fact that “Everyone is there for everyone!” The survivors’ lap when cancer patients walk while the teams cheer, and the luminary ceremony honoring those who won and lost their battle with cancer mean the most to me.
For more information, contact Tammy Henshey, Online Chair, Relay for Life of Northern Blair, at thenshey@verizon.net.

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3rd May 2008

Shaffer, Hoover control Blue Devils’ bats, Golden Eagles take two on the diamond


Stroking the ball Tyrone pitcher John Shaffer rips a base hit during Game One of the Eagles/Bellwood-Antis doubleheader. Shaffer drove in a run in each game and pitched a complete-game win in Game One. (The Daily Herald/Bob Miller)
It’s hard to tell if Tyrone manager Dustin Schoening had any reservations when the Golden Eagles started Game 2 of their double-header against Bellwood-Antis yesterday on Stadium Drive.
The Eagles had just taken the first game of the series 5-4 behind the strongest pitching performance to date by junior Johnny Shaffer – a 7-inning gem that saw him strike out 9 batters.
And now Tyrone’s first-year manager had a decision to make. Under PIAA regulation, Shaffer had two more innings he could conceivably pitch, and by all accounts he was feeling fine. But would any manager start the same pitcher in both ends of a double-header?
To put the decision into perspective, the last time a major league pitcher started and won both ends of a double-header was 1926.
Schoening made the call, and in doing so set the tone for the second game. Shaffer came through with two strong innings of work, allowing one run and one hit, leaving with his team tied 1-1.
After the Eagles were forced to come from behind two times, Tyrone scored three runs in the bottom of the sixth inning and held on for an 8-5 victory and a sweep of the twin bill. It was the fourth win in a row for the streaking Eagles, who improved to 6-9, and kept alive their hopes of playing in the District 6-AA tournament.
“He really helped us out,” said Schoening. “Playing five games in four days, he really gave us a lift.
“We have a goal set of making the playoffs, so we have to keep pushing. We need to win the games that we should win and ride this wave of confidence.”
The Eagles certainly looked like a team playing with confidence in the late stages of both games, winning twice in their final at-bat.
In Game 1, it was sophomore Eric Desch who came through with the big hit, a two-strike RBI single off B-A starter Nate Plummer. In Game 2, the Eagles patiently waited out reliever Nate Gray, drawing five walks in the bottom of the sixth to go ahead without ever recording a base hit.
Meanwhile, the Blue Devils went down quietly in each of their final at-bats, underscoring the problems B-A and manager Steve Conlon have dealt with most of the season – lack of offense. In Game 2, Bellwood sent the top of its line up to the plate in the last inning and got runners aboard only by way of a fielder’s choice and an error by Desch.
“We played well up to a point and then we couldn’t put seven innings together in either game,” said Bellwood-Antis coach Steve Conlon.
In Game 1, the Devils’ 9, 1 and 2 hitters were retired in order in the last inning.
It was a particularly tough way to lose Game 1, where Plummer went pitch-for-pitch with Shaffer in one of his best outings. He went the distance and surrendered only three earned runs while fanning eight.
“You have to give Bellwood a lot of credit,” Schoening said. “Both games were very competitive and they wanted to win.”
B-A led 2-0 through three innings in Game 1 thanks to heady base running and timely hitting. In the first, freshman Garrett Lender singled, stole second, and swiped third after Shaffer received a throw back from catcher Brock Anders but turned his back on the runner. When Shaffer tried to throw out Lender at third, his throw went wild and Lender scored.
“Nate Plummer threw a really good game in the first game, and we just couldn’t make the plays for him,” commented Conlon. “Then in the second game, we scored some runs, but we just couldn’t throw strikes.”
An inning later, Adam Kovac doubled and scored when Plummer singled to right.
Tyrone tied it in the fourth with RBI singles from Doug Rudy and Anders, and went ahead 3-2 in the fifth when Shaffer singled to the hole at short, scoring Aaron Cunningham.
The Eagles made it 4-2 in the sixth when Cunningham doubled to plate Evan Brush, running for Anders, but B-A came back with two in the bottom of the frame to tie it. Catcher Jake Manning singled to lead off the inning and scored on a Justin Miller ground out, and later Jimmy Watters scored from third on a passed ball.
That set the stage in the seventh for Desch, who fell behind 0-2 and battled back to 2-2 before serving an outside pitch to right, scoring Rudy from third.
“Even with two strikes, I knew he would come through,” said Schoening. “We had some big hits with two outs. That’s a good feeling.”
Lender sent B-A to an early lead again in Game 2, singling with one away before advancing to third on a Manning single and scoring on a passed ball.
But the lead was short-lived, as Cunningham drew a walk off starter Ian Pankoke to start the bottom of the first, stole second, and came around to score on a single to right by Shaffer.
Randy Hoover relieved Shaffer in the third and surrendered two quick runs before settling in to limit B-A to just one hit over the last four innings. Pankoke singled to start the inning, and Gray followed with a line shot to third that was fielded by Shaffer. His throw to second went into the outfield, when right fielder Matt Brooks overran the play. Pankoke scored and Gray ended up on third, and he scored later on a ground out by Manning, making it 3-2.
Tyrone went ahead 4-3 with three runs in the fourth, including RBI singles from Hoover and Mike Moore, but the Devils regained the lead 5-4 with two runs in the fifth.
Donnie Hunter’s RBI single in the bottom of the fifth pulled the Golden Eagles even at 5-5, setting up Tyrone’s three-run sixth. Hoover started the inning by drawing a walk, and Gray retired the next two batters before struggling with his control. With two down, he walked Shaffer intentionally and delivered a five-pitch walk to Brooks to load the bases.
Rudy followed, and Gray went to 3-0 on the sophomore shortstop before hitting him with pitch No. 4, plating Hoover and putting Tyrone ahead 6-5.
Anders followed with another walk making it 7-5, prompting Conlon to lift Gray in favor of Mike Albright, who walked Donnie Hunter to score Brooks.
“We’re very confident right now,” Schoening said. “We’re doing an excellent job running the bases and bunting, and we’re coming through with clutch hitting.”
The Eagles will need confidence to complete a run into the playoffs, and they’ll be tested again Monday at home against Central.
B-A’s next game is Tuesday against Moshannon Valley at Bellwood.
GAME 1
Tyrone 5 Bellwood-Antis 4
TYRONE – Cunningham, cf, 2-1-1; Moore, 2b, 4-0-1; Shaffer, p, 4-1-2; Brooks, 3b, 4-0-0; Rudy, ss, 4-2-2; Taylor, dh, 2-0-0; Desch, 1b, 2-0-1; Hunter, lf, 3-0-0; Anders, c, 4-0-1; Brush, cr, 0-1-0; Hoover, 3b, 1-0-0. TOTALS: 30-5-8.
BELLWOOD-ANTIS – Gray, ss, 3-0-2; Lender, lf, 4-1-1; Manning, c, 3-1-1; Mock, 2b, 3-0-0; Watters, rf, 3-1-1; Miller, 1b, 3-0-0; Kovac, dh, 2-1-1; Dionis, cf, 0-0-0; Plummer, p, 3-0-1; Albright, 3b, 3-0-1. TOTALS: 27-4-8.
TYRONE 000 211 1 – 5-8-1
BELLWOOD-ANTIS 110 002 0 – 4-8-2
E: Shaffer, Albright 2
2B: Gray, Mock, Cunningham
RBI: Shaffer, Rudy, Desch, Anders, Miller, Plummer
SO: Shaffer 9, Plummer 8.
BB: Shaffer 2, Plummer 2.
WP: Shaffer LP: Plummer
GAME 2
Tyrone 8 Bellwood-Antis 5
BELLWOOD-ANTIS – Gray, ss-p, 3-2-0; Lender, lf, 3-2-1; Manning, c, 4-0-1; Mock, 3b-ss, 3-0-1; Watters, rf, 3-0-0; Miller, 1b, 2-0-0; Kovac, dh, 3-0-0; Dionis, cf, 0-0-0; Plummer, 2b, 3-0-0; Pankoke, p, 2-1-1; Albright, p-3b, 27-5-4.
TYRONE – Cunningham, cf, 1-2-0; Moore, 2b, 4-0-1; Shaffer, p-3b, 3-1-1; Brooks, rf, 2-2-1; Rudy, ss, 3-0-0; Anders, c, 3-0-1; Brush, cr, 0-0-0; Hunter, lf, 2-1-2; Desch, 1b, 4-0-1; Hoover, 3b-p, 2-2-1. TOTALS: 24-8-8.
BELLWOOD-ANTIS 102 020 0 – 5-4-2
TYRONE 100 313 X – 8-8-4
E: Mock, Dionis, Shaffer 2, Brooks, Desch
2B: Anders
RBI: Shaffer, Rudy, Anders, Moore, Hunter, Hoover, Manning
SO: Pankoke 4, Gray 1, Shaffer 1, Hoover 2.
BB: Pankoke 4, Gray 5, Albright 1, Hoover 3.
WP: Hoover LP: Gray

Base hit B-A freshman Garrett Lender singles through the Tyrone infield during the Blue Devils doubleheader with the Golden Eagles. Behind the plate is Tyrone catcher Brock Anders. (The Daily Herald/Stacey Manning

Special delivery The Eagles’ Randy Hoover throws to home plate during the second game of the Tyrone/B-A doubleheader. Hoover picked up the second game win with four plus innings of relief. (The Daily Herald/Stacey Manning)

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