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Penn State President Rodney Erickson thanks community, gets food science building named after him

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He also became the third person to receive the Penn State Medal and was granted emeritus status.

The man who took over at the helm of Penn State the week after Jerry Sandusky was charged with child molestation thanked the university community today, a day before he will preside over the university’s commencement and then retire.

President Rodney Erickson said in the email that he was humbled to be one of 17 people to have held the post.

“Serving Penn State has been the greatest honor and privilege of my professional life,” he said.

Erickson has been at Penn State for 37 years and was provost in late 2011, when the trustees forced out then-President Graham Spanier following the arrests of Sandusky and two top administrators.

He helped manage the crisis and accepted a set of penalties from the NCAA that included a $60 million fine and a multi-year bowl ban, a decision that avoided a complete suspension of the football program but drew criticism from some alumni and fans.

Today, the board of trustees named the school’s food science building after Erickson and increased his retirement bonus from $100,000 to $150,000. He also became the third person to receive the Penn State Medal and was granted emeritus status.

Erickson and his wife announced last month they were donating $1 million to the university to support its arboretum and to foster early career faculty.

Erickson will be succeeded as president by Eric Barron, who most recently served as Florida State’s president. Barron takes the reins Monday.

Spanier and the other two now-retired administrators, former athletic director Tim Curley and former vice president Gary Schultz, await trial for an alleged criminal cover-up of complaints about Sandusky.

Sandusky, who spent decades on the Penn State football coaching staff under the late Joe Paterno, was convicted two years ago of 45 counts of child sexual abuse and is serving 30 to 60 years in a state prison.



Last Fling Pumpkin Sling relocating to Pocono Raceway after being kicked off Warren County farm

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The sling, which drew thousands to Millbrook Farm in Harmony Township, was found last year to be too intense for the protected land on the farm.

The name of the event didn’t turn out to be as prophetic as fans may have thought late last year.

The Last Fling Pumpkin Sling, a two-day spectacle in which teams used homemade machines to catapult pumpkins across an open field on a farm in Warren County, was in jeopardy of ceasing to exist after county officials in October declared some of the activities associated with the sling aren’t allowed on preserved farmland.

The event that for several years had drawn thousands of spectators every fall to Millbrook Farm in Harmony Township was suddenly without a venue.

But organizers have found a new place to do their slinging on the Pennsylvania side of the Delaware River. This October, Pocono Raceway in Monroe County will host the sling, event organizer Giulia Iannitelli said Friday.

She said she hopes the raceway will become a permanent site for the sling, which is scheduled this year for Oct. 19-20. She also said she hopes the high-profile location will help the sling eclipse the mark of 5,000 spectators each day.

"It's really kind of bittersweet," Iannitelli said of the move. "I would've loved to stay in Warren County, but it's kind of remote. … (Pocono Raceway's) wonderful and a lot of infrastructure is already there. It's almost like the place was built for us. It's pretty amazing walking through there."

The sling will be held in the raceway's outfield, and there will be an area for camping and RVs. Other programming and vendor services are sill being worked out. Iannitelli said admission prices also haven't been finalized, but she expects the sling to offer a two-day pass for the first time this year.

She said the raceway sent its letter of commitment to host the event on Tuesday. She’s optimistic, judging by the interest raceway officials showed, that the partnership will continue in future years.

Efforts to reach raceway officials on Friday were unsuccessful. A spokesman did not immediately return a phone message seeking comment.

Warren County's decision to shut down the sling disappointed many associated with the event, including Millbrook Farm owner Rob Schanzlin. He previously said he didn't think the sling broke any rules.

"We’re slinging pumpkins in the air," he previously said. "I thought it was a good thing for the area."

The county checked into the sling at the request of the New Jersey State Agricultural Development Committee, which learned about it after a staffer saw an ad. The county found the sling -- particularly the large number of spectators and parking -- were too intense and in violation of deed restrictions.

Iannitelli also found the county's decision disappointing and said she was stressed in the aftermath as she searched for a new location. She said the sling is more than people catapulting pumpkins for amusement; it can have an impact on youth.

"If you have the kids work together on a machine like this, it could really change their lives," she said. "I didn’t want the event to die because of what it means to the kids."

Have you seen these men? Fugitives of the week

Hot-air balloon goes up in flames in Va.; one body found, hunt on for two others

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The three were in a balloon Friday night that witnesses said crashed amid screams for help.

The body of one occupant of a hot-air balloon that caught fire and crashed has been recovered and police searched today for two others feared dead, Virginia State Police said.

The three were in a balloon Friday night that witnesses said crashed amid screams for help.

The body was found in a heavily wooded area shortly before midnight, state police spokeswoman Corinne Geller said today. The balloon and gondola carrying the pilot and two passengers have not been found, she said.

Because of the time elapsed since the crash about 8 p.m. Friday, the search for two other occupants has shifted from a rescue operation to a mission to recover the remains, Geller said. More searchers were called in today.

Police received eyewitness reports that two occupants either fell or jumped from the burning balloon after it struck a power line.

Carrie Hager-Bradley said she saw the balloon in flames on her way home from the grocery store and heard people yelling, according to WWBT-TV.

"They were just screaming for anybody to help them," the station quoted her as saying. "'Help me, help me, sweet Jesus, help. I'm going to die. Oh my God, I'm going to die,'" Hager-Bradley said she heard one person screaming.

The crash occurred near the Meadow Event Park in rural Caroline County, where the Mid-Atlantic Balloon Festival was being held. The area is about 25 miles north of Richmond.

The festival was scheduled to begin officially today but was holding a special kickoff event Friday for about 740 people. Organizers canceled the rest of the festival.

Twenty balloonists from the Mid-Atlantic region were to participate in the weekend festival, said Greg Hicks, a spokesman for the venue, which also is the site of the State Fair of Virginia.

"It's just shocking situation for everyone," said Greg Hicks, a spokesman for Meadow Event Park.

Some hot-air balloons landed safely in Debra Ferguson's yard, The Free Lance-Star of Fredericksburg reported.

She said one of the men in the balloons pointed up at another still in the air and said he thought it might be in trouble.

"As soon as we looked up, the thing blew up right there," Ferguson told the newspaper. "All I heard was, 'Oh my God, Oh my God,' and all you saw was the top of the balloon still flying, but all of the basket was gone. All of the flames just disappeared. ... It was like a match — poof — and then it was gone."

Caroline County resident Paula Dustin said she and her family and a friend were watching the balloons inflate and take off when they saw one in the distance that appeared to be in distress.

"We saw a glow, and you could tell the bottom of the balloon was in flames," Dustin was quoted by the newspaper as saying.


Garden State Plaza evacuated on report of shots fired

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A witness said car tires exploded outside the Paramus, N.J., mall, the scene of a deadly shooting last year.

New Jersey State Police say a mall in Paramus, N.J., has been evacuated after someone reported that shots had been fired, while a witness says the evacuation began after tires exploded on a car on fire outside.

Police say there are no confirmed reports of shots having been fired in the Garden State Plaza mall. State Police and other agencies are at the scene investigating.

Twenty-six-year-old Brittany Berdy, of Wyckoff, N.J., says she was eating dinner at a restaurant at the mall when she went outside and saw the tires explode on a car. She says the tire explosion sounded like gunshots.

In November, a 20-year-old Teaneck man fired shots inside the mall, terrifying shoppers and employees before killing himself.


Lehigh Valley police departments praise armored vehicle as Warren County debates purchase

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The Lehigh Valley shares a Lenco BearCat for tactical responses and hopes to get a second with federal grants before the end of the year because of the high demand for the vehicle.

As Warren County debates the purchase of an armored vehicle for police raids and tactical responses, police departments on the other side of the Delaware River describe the equipment as an invaluable tool with hopes of adding a second in the Lehigh Valley before the year's end.

Allentown, Lehigh County, Bethlehem and Easton share a Lenco BearCat, purchased through grants by the Northeast Pennsylvania Regional Counter Terrorism Task Force about five years ago. The eight-county task force bought three of the armored vehicles to share among the members, but Allentown interim Assistant Chief Glenn Dorney said the Lehigh Valley is by far the busiest of the areas splitting time on the equipment.

"I can't speak highly enough of this resource," said Dorney, who serves as the commander of Allentown's Emergency Response Team.

Housed in Bethlehem, the vehicle accompanies departments on high-risk raids and is part of the units dispatched with the emergency response team during incidents involving active shooters, standoffs or hostage situations. The vehicle allows closer access and a faster, safer response, according to Dorney.

When departments have a chance to show off equipment to the public, Bethlehem police Deputy Chief Todd Repsher said, the BearCat is something of an attraction-- especially to kids.

"It's our firetruck, for lack of a better term," he said.

Though it may captivate youngsters, the vehicle's real strength lies in how it evokes the exact opposite feelings from suspects who see it rolling up to their homes.

"A lot of it is just the intimidation factor as well," Dorney said. "Sometimes, when we pull up with that, people just give up."

'Looking a gift horse in the mouth'

Warren County freeholders have held off on plans to purchase a $213,000 Lenco BearCat with federal grant money in late April, citing unanswered questions and limited public support. The vehicle would be shared among Warren, Hunterdon and Sussex counties.

Warren County Prosecutor Richard Burke said he disagreed with the freeholders' delay and lack of interest.

Washington Township police Chief Jim McDonald said he feels the county is giving up the opportunity to acquire a valuable tool. There are no hidden costs, he said, as the vehicle would be purchased with federal grant money. The county's Police Chiefs Association, of which he is president, has also volunteered to pay for various administrative fees, including the title and registration of the vehicle.

"I think right now people are looking a gift horse in the mouth and thinking it's going to bite them," he said.  "But that's not always the case." 

McDonald said a similar vehicle, which his department accepted from Bergen County last year, has been dispatched three times. He likened it to a bulletproof vest on wheels and said it's meant to protect first responders.    

"I don't know if people have the perception it will be coming through the wall but the main purpose is to get guys in close enough to handle the situation," he said. "It's much easier to do up close than it is to do from a distance." 

McDonald said he hoped the BearCat, if purchased, would never be used in an emergency situation. But it's better to be proactive, he said.

 "Everything we've done has been in response to what the criminal element already has," he said. "We've been trying to keep up with the Joneses since I've been in law enforcement. This is just another tool in the tool box to assist police."

Protection for first responders

Before the Lehigh Valley BearCat appeared on the scene, Allentown had the Lehigh Valley's sole armored vehicle: a retrofitted U.S. Air Force Peacekeeper from the early 1960s. Dependability, Dorney said, was not the vehicle's strongest asset.

"Let's just say it's been towed from scenes before," said Dorney.

The BearCat, he said, was "really a game-changer."

Easton police Capt. Scott Casterline said the city, which has taken an aggressive stance with drug raids since 2012, has found the vehicle to be a tremendous advantage. Casterline said the department uses the BearCat only during high-risk raids, but that amounts to between 10 to 20 times a year.

The protection of first responders is the vehicle's ultimate purpose, he said.

"With the recent publicity that vehicles such as this have received I feel that people have overlooked that these vehicles are designed for cover and rescue and are not 'tanks' as some have tried to portray it," Casterline said. "There are no weapons mounted on this vehicle and it is not in any way an 'assault' vehicle."

Especially during incidents where a suspect is armed and barricaded, the BearCat can allow authorities to get closer without getting hurt, Repsher said.

"Listen, if someone's firing rounds, it's a heck of a lot more comfortable if you're sitting in the BearCat," Repsher said. "We're fortunate to be able to get tools like this for our ERT."

Lehigh Valley eyes second BearCat

As the Lehigh Valley ups the ante with raids, however, demand for the vehicle has grown among the departments. Repsher said raid times, manpower and other logistics are sometimes adjusted if the vehicle is being used or already scheduled to go out.

Dorney said this has become an increasingly common issue. Allentown used the BearCat about 50 times last year and has already pulled it out for about 20 calls this year, he said.

That's why Dorney said he's priced out a new BearCat at about $300,000 in the hopes that federal grants with the Northeast Pennsylvania Regional Counter Terrorism Task Force will cover the cost.

Dorney said it takes about four months for Lenco to construct the custom-ordered vehicles. "By the end of the year, we hope you'll be seeing a brand new one," he said.

Reporter Matthew Bultman contributed to this report.


Pope Francis gets old school on the devil

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Vatican officials talk about a resurgence of mystical rites in the church, including exorcisms, and Francis' sermons rekindle the image of the devil as a supernatural entity.

A darling of liberal Catholics and an advocate of inclusion and forgiveness, Pope Francis is hardly known for fire and brimstone.

Yet, in his words and deeds, the new pope is locked in an epic battle with the oldest enemy of God and creation:

The devil.

POPE_FRANCISView full sizePope Francis.

After little more than a year atop the Throne of St. Peter, Francis’ teachings on Satan are already regarded as the most old school of any pope since at least Paul VI, whose papacy in the 1960s and 1970s fully embraced the notion of hellish forces plotting to deliver mankind unto damnation.

Largely under the radar, theologians and Vatican insiders say, Francis has not only dwelled far more on Satan in sermons and speeches than his recent predecessors have, but has also sought to rekindle the devil’s image as a supernatural entity with the forces of evil at his beck and call.

Last year, for instance, Francis laid hands on a man in a wheelchair who claimed to be possessed by demons in what many saw as an impromptu act of cleansing. A few months later, he praised a group long viewed by some as the crazy uncles of the Roman Catholic church - the International Association of Exorcists - for “helping people who suffer and are in need of liberation.”

“But Father, how old-fashioned you are to speak about the devil in the 21st century,” Francis, quoting those who have noted his frequent mentions of the devil, said last month while presiding over Mass at the Vatican’s chapel in St. Martha’s House. He warned those gathered on that chilly morning to be vigilant and not be fooled by the hidden face of Satan in the modern world: “Look out, because the devil is present.”

Since its foundation, the church has taught the existence of the devil. But in recent decades, progressive priests and bishops, particularly in the United States and Western Europe, have tended to couch Satan in more allegorical terms. Evil became less the wicked plan of the master of hell than the nasty byproduct of humanity’s free will. Even Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, a lofty German theologian, often painted evil with a broad brush.

Enter the plain-talking first pope from Latin America, where mystical views of Satan still hold sway in broad areas of the region. During his time as cardinal of Buenos Aires before rising to the papacy, Francis was known for stark warnings against “the tempter” and “the father of lies.” Now, his focus on the devil is raising eyebrows even within the normally unquestioning walls of Vatican City.

“Pope Francis never stops talking about the devil; it’s constant,” said one senior bishop in Vatican City who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak freely. “Had Pope Benedict done this, the media would have clobbered him.”

Yet, as with so many of his actions, Francis may simply be correctly reading the winds of the Catholic church.

'Opening the door to superstition'

Although difficult to measure, Vatican officials talk about a resurgence of mystical rites in the church, including exorcisms - or the alleged act of evicting demons from a living host. Cardinals in Milan, Turin and Madrid, for instance, recently moved to expand the number of exorcists in their dioceses to cope with what they have categorized as surging demand.

But by focusing on old-school interpretations of the devil, some progressive theologians complain that the pope is undermining his reputation as a leader who in so many other ways appears to be more in step with modern society than his predecessor.

“He is opening the door to superstition,” said Vito Mancuso, a Catholic theologian and writer.

Among the things lurking behind that door is the alleged gateway to hell guarded by the small cluster of officially anointed exorcists of the Roman Catholic church.

By most accounts, the ranks of official exorcists number between 500 and 600 in a global church of more than 1 billion Catholics, with the vast majority operating in Latin America and Eastern Europe. This week, at the ninth and largest Vatican-sanctioned convention on exorcism, attendees gushed about the fresh recognition being afforded the field.

Almost 200 delegates from more than two dozen nations - most of them priests and nuns - talked about how Satanic cults are spreading like wildfire in the age of the Internet.

The new pope, exorcists say, has become their champion in the face of modern skeptics, many of them within the Catholic faith. Officially, those claiming to be possessed must first undergo psychiatric evaluations. But exorcists say that liberal Catholic bishops have often rejected their services even after such due diligence.

“The sad truth is that there are many bishops and priests in our church who do not really believe in the devil,” said the Rev. Gabriele Amorth, the 89-year-old priest who is perhaps the closest thing the church has to a Hollywood-style exorcist. “I believe Pope Francis is speaking to them. Because when you don’t believe, the devil wins.”

During the conference, the Rev. Cesar Truqui, an exorcist now based in Switzerland, recounted one experience he had aboard a Swissair flight. “Two lesbians,” he said, had sat behind him on the plane. Soon afterward, he said, he felt Satan’s presence. As he silently sought to repel the evil spirit through prayer, one of the women, he said, began growling demonically and threw chocolates at his head.

Asked how he knew the woman was possessed, he said that “once you hear a Satanic growl, you never forget it. It’s like smelling Margherita pizza for the first time. It’s something you never forget.”

From his small room in a south Rome rectory fitted with a hospital bed, Amorth praised Francis for so fully embracing the Biblical notion of the devil as the personified overlord of hell.

Unlike in the movies, he said, the process of driving demons out typically takes multiple sessions over many years.

'It's OK to believe'

At a rare glimpse of an official exorcism last week, in a white-tiled room outfitted with images of Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary, Amorth wrapped his purple sash around a Neapolitan housewife in her 40s who said she was afflicted by multiple demons. He then began chanting in Latin, commanding the devils inside her to reveal themselves.

“Tell me your name!” he demanded.

“No, no,” hissed the woman, shaking her head and speaking in an altered voice as her eyes rolled to the back of her head. “I will not!”

“Tell me your name!” he kept repeating, until finally she spat out, “Asmodeus,” the name of an ancient demon and hellish spokesman.

“How many are you?” he yelled, repeating the question as she grunted and shook her head violently.

Finally, she defiantly said, “We are five!”

After his bout with the demons, the diminutive Amorth simply shrugged.

“That,” he said, “was a light one.”

Following the session, the woman and her husband, who gave their names only as Antonella and Michele, said they had been going through a living hell for years. They had begged bishops to authorize an exorcism when Antonella began having uncontrollable fits after receiving Holy Communion and became violent around religious prayers. But they were repeatedly denied.

It was only after they were referred to Amorth and began sessions four years ago, Antonella said, that her condition finally began to improve.

“The devil exists, and thanks to this treatment, I have gotten back my faith,” she said. “I think Pope Francis is telling us it’s OK to believe.”

Local police see increased calls as summer months approach

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With the calendar rolling into summer and temperatures heating up, police in Pennsylvania and New Jersey said its not unusual to see an uptick in some crimes this time of year.

Over a nine-day span last month in Phillipsburg, two cars were stolen and four more burglarized.

The crimes, which were spread throughout town, were part of more than a dozen reported thefts or break-ins during the month.

With the calendar rolling into summer and temperatures rising, police in Pennsylvania and New Jersey said it's not unusual to see an uptick in nuisance crimes this time of year.

"It's not uncommon for people to leave their vehicles unlocked and it's not uncommon to have an increase in car burglaries," said Phillipsburg police Chief James Faulborn. "Generally there is more activity and people being out more because of the warmer weather."

Various studies have, with mixed results, attempted to connect increased crime rates and violence with warmer temperatures.

In the Lehigh Valley and northwest New Jersey, police said increasing rates of violent or serious crimes aren't an issue. But general call volume, typically related to nuisance issues or minor offenses, undoubtedly increase.

"With more people out enjoying the weather we see a large increase in calls for service," said Mansfield Township police Chief Michael Reilly.

Wilson Borough police Chief Steven Parkansky said thefts, criminal mischief and disorderly conduct are the hallmarks of summertime.

Parkansky said people are really looking for "crimes of opportunity."

"As far as serious crime, I don't think there is really a cycle to that -- at least not here," the chief said.

Easton police Capt. Scott Casterline echoed Parkansky. With kids out of school, windows open and longer daylight hours, Casterline said there may be an uptick in volume, but said it's mainly related to nuisance issues more so than serious crime.

Many crimes, he said, are alcohol- or drug-related or motivated by such substances.

"Addiction does not follow any seasonal patterns," he said.

The same goes for domestic incidents, Parkansky said.

"Nice or not nice, snow or no snow, it doesn't really matter," the chief said of the prevalence of such crimes.

Hackettstown police statistics appear to support the police chiefs' observations.

In the past two years during the months of December, January and February, there were seven reported burglaries in the town. Police also received 39 theft reports. In June, July and August of those same years, police reported a combined 13 burglaries and 78 thefts.

While serious offenses remained fairly steady, other misdemeanor-type offenses, including disorderly conduct and criminal mischief, also rose slightly in the summer.

Hackettstown police Sgt. Darren Tynan said quality of life calls -- noise complaints, property damage, curfew violations -- were responsible for much of the department's increase in calls.

"It seems everybody in the winter is cooped up in their house and doesn't get out as much as the summer," he said. "When people get out, we see an increase in call volume."

On May 1, Phillipsburg police charged Jason Meyer, a career criminal who has spent much of the last decade in New Jersey State prisons, in one of the April thefts. A 21-year-old Allentown man, Eric Carter, was arrested Thursday and charged for his alleged role in the same burglary.

Faulborn said investigations are ongoing into the other thefts but declined to say whether Meyers was a suspect.

Washington Township, N.J., police Chief James McDonald said while authorities know there will be a summertime increase in calls, there isn't much that can be done to prepare for or prevent crime.

"It's been that way historically," he said. "I don't know a whole lot you can do to deter that."

Parkansky said police patrols don't change drastically during the warmer months, but he said opportunities for officers to interact with the community do increase.

"In that way, it's good. I think presence is important," he said. "The more opportunities the officers have to engage the public, the better."

Express-Times reporter Sarah Wojcik contributed to this report.



Advocates in northwest New Jersey, Easton work to stop slide in kids' reading skills during summer

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First Book - Hunterdon County will give away 600 new books to kids, and ProJeCt of Easton in Northampton County hosts a six-week long reading camp each summer.

Literacy advocates in northwest New Jersey and Easton, who want to reduce a slide in reading skills, are doing their best to make sure kids from lower-income families have books on their shelves this summer.

First Book - Hunterdon County will give away 600 new books to kids and Warren County has its own First Book advisory board. ProJeCt of Easton in Northampton County hosts a six-week camp each summer to help Easton Area School District students keep their reading skills sharp.

Kathy Guzman, fundraising chairwoman for First Book - Hunterdon County, said the organization only takes monetary donations because educators who work with the children choose books tailored for them based on their reading level. The educators can purchase the books at a discount through a marketplace, where the average book costs about $2.50, Guzman said.

Guzman notes that it's not that parents don't want to buy books. It's just that it's expensive to live in Hunterdon County.

"By the time you meet your family's needs, books are a luxury," Guzman said.

Children in low-income households tend to not own books, but children who do own books perform better in school across the board, she said. By owning the books, they get to read the same ones again and again and that repetition is part of how they learn to read, Guzman said.

Organizers try to send six books home with each child for the summer. They serve children starting at age 1 through fourth grade. Guzman estimates they only reach about 25 to 30 percent of children in need and said they’d like to grow the group.

Borders previously provided most of the funding for First Book - Hunterdon County, but organizers have been asking for more community support since the stores closed, Guzman said.

ProJeCt of Easton also gives books to students as part of its summer program, said Gerry Gotham, teaching and learning coordinator at the nonprofit’s Fowler Literacy Center. Students from the Easton Area School District are invited to participate in the summer program in June based on their reading level and family's income, she said.

Teachers and paraprofessionals continue to work with students on the district's reading lessons, Gotham said. Depending on a student’s reading level, the program may help he or she from sliding backward or get ahead for the start of the next school year.

"We more or less carry over their curriculum into the summer," Gotham said. "We see a lot of learning gains."

Parents participate in a breakfast and two family fun nights to learn how to talk with teachers about their child's reading level and what they can do to help, she said. About 150 to 175 children are involved each year, according to Gotham.

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Visit firstbook.org or email hunterdoncounty_nj@firstbook.org or warrencounty_nj@firstbook.org for information about the First Book program.

Visit projecteaston.org or call 610-258-4361 for information about its programs.

Gift of Life program helps loved ones live on through organ donation

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Adolfo and Debbie Flores of Forks Township agreed to donate their 20-year-old son's organs after he died following a car crash in 2011.

In 2011, Adolfo and Debbie Flores received the worst news parents can get.

The Forks Township couple learned their 20-year-old son, Austin, had been in a terrible car crash, leaving him in a coma. Fourteen days later, he was gone.

That's when Gift of Life contacted the parents about donating Austin's organs. Medical procedures for other people were the last thing on their minds, but they agreed to donate the organs after considering their son could live on through others.

Two different women were able to see after eye transplants from Austin.

"Even when someone is gone, you can help someone else," Debbie Flores said. "Even in the midst of tragedy, in the storm, you can help save someone else's life, so they can shine. Please pass it on. It's a gift to pass it on."

Eighteen people die each day in the United States while waiting for an organ transplant, according to the Gift of Life website.

Dr. Peter Thomas, the director of the trauma at St. Luke's University Hospital in Fountain Hill, said that in Pennsylvania alone there are 8,400 people awaiting organ donations. People who need transplants are placed on the list according to the severity of their illness.

It's easy to register as an organ donor when you apply for a driver's license in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, but many people opt out. Some choose not to donate for cultural or religious reasons but many don't understand the process or the urgent need for organ donors, according to Gift of Life.

Registering can mean the difference between a life saved and a life lost. If someone dies quickly and unexpectedly, their organs must be transferred within a few hours, and there's little time to notify the family and ask for permission, Thomas said.

"If someone is clearly non-survivable, they can contact the family early," Thomas said. "But if the patient was in fair condition but then decompensates for whatever reason, they must react quickly."

Gift of Life will check with the motor-vehicle agency to see if a potential candidate is registered as a donor. If they aren't, the agency will contact the family and discuss options for donation.

Bone tissue and blood vessels can be donated along with organs, Thomas said. One organ donor can save as many as eight lives and improve many more through eye and tissue donation.

Debbie Flores agrees it's important to register as an organ donor, adding it gave her some consolation that her son helped others.

"There was a huge satisfaction. Austin lived life to the fullest," Flores said. "For someone else now to be able to see because of him is amazing because the gift of sight is awesome."

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ON THE WEB

Find out more about Gift of Life at donors1.org.

In Pennsylvania, residents can log directly onto the Department of Transportation web site at donatelife-pa.org to sign up as a donor.

New Jersey residents can sign up as an organ donor when they renew their driver's licenses. More information may be obtained on the Donate Life New Jersey Web site, donatelifenj.org.


Blasting could stop Route 33 traffic in Palmer Township, PennDOT says

Superior Court to hear Louis Freeh's appeal of ruling that put former PSU president's lawsuit on hold

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A judicial panel that includes Judge Jack Panella, of Palmer Township, is scheduled to hear the appeal next week in Philadelphia.

A Pennsylvania appellate court next week is scheduled to hear arguments related to former Penn State president Graham Spanier's civil lawsuit against former FBI director Louis Freeh.

Freeh is appealing to state Superior Court to overturn a Centre County Court ruling that put on hold Spanier's defamation lawsuit against Freeh until the case involving criminal charges against Spanier is resolved.

Spanier and Penn State administrators Tim Curley and Gary Schultz are charged with multiple counts, including perjury, in the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse case.

Freeh led Penn State's investigation of its handling of the case. Freeh concluded Spanier and the others were part of a conspiracy to conceal abuse allegations against Sandusky, the football team's longtime defensive coordinator who was convicted of multiple counts of child sexual abuse. Sandusky was sentenced to 30 to 60 years in a Pennsylvania state prison.

A Superior Court panel that includes Judge Jack Panella, of Palmer Township, is scheduled to hear Freeh's appeal May 21 in Philadelphia.

Centre County Judge Jonathan D. Grine granted a stay sought by Spanier in February to put the civil lawsuit on hold pending the criminal case.


Arrest warrant issued for New York woman accused of using stolen credit card to buy iPads in Greenwich Township

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The two Apple iPads are valued at $1,176.98.

A New York woman used credit card information stolen from a Lehigh County man to buy more than $1,100 worth of electronics at a Greenwich Township store, court records say.

An arrest warrant was issued this weekend for Jekera Phillips, of Buffalo, on charges of fraudulent use of a credit card and theft.

According to court records, Phillips om March 13 bought two Apple iPads, valued at $1,176.98, from the township Best Buy. The credit card information Phillips used to buy the devices had been flagged for an unknown reason, court records say.

Greenwich Township police responded to the store after reports of a possible credit card fraud but Phillips was released because of a lack of information available from the bank, court papers say.

The bank later confirmed that the credit card information had previously been stolen from Fred Mackes, of Upper Saucon Township, court and public records indicate.

A New Jersey Superior Court judge on Saturday signed the warrant for Phillips' arrest and set bail at $7,500, records say.


Interstate 78 crash victims remain unidentified due to fire damage, police say

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Three people were killed in a fiery seven-vehicle crash after a tractor-trailer driver was unable to break for slowed traffic in time, police say.

UPDATE: Catasauqua man among survivors in triple fatal crash that closed Interstate 78

The three people killed in a fiery seven-vehicle crash on Interstate 78 in Berks  County this afternoon have not yet been identified because their bodies have been so badly damaged by the fire.

"My understanding is the vehicles the victims were in were burned really badly, so it makes it all the worse in trying to identify the people involved," said state Trooper David Beohm.

The crash occurred on the eastbound side of the highway in Greenwich Township after a tractor-trailer failed to notice traffic had slowed until it was too late for him to brake in time, according to Beohm, a state police public information officer.

The tractor-trailer rear-ended a stopped vehicle that became engulfed in flames along with three other vehicles, Beohm said.

Three people from two different vehicles were killed as a result of the crash, he said. It occurred at 1:12 p.m about three miles west of the Lehigh County border.

Westbound I-78 reopened about 5:30 p.m. following the crash, which occurred at the 41.4 mile marker, Beohm said. The eastbound lanes remained closed to traffic.

The driver of the tractor-trailer, who was not identified, was taken to an area hospital after complaining of chest pains, and will be given a blood test as required by state law, Beohm said.

Pennsylvania State Police are still investigating, and Beohm could not comment on whether charges will be filed against the tractor-trailer driver.

"That'll take some time to sort out if it's just a summary offense or more serious charges," he said. "It's hard to say."

Police cleared a portion of the traffic backlog in the eastbound lane by diverting cars going the other direction in the lane to the nearest exit, once it was assured that no more vehicles were coming down that stretch of the highway, Beohm said.

Contact Allentown reporter Colin McEvoy at 484-894-2549 or cmcevoy@express-times.com.

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Auditor general's report calls for charter school law overhaul

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"Taxpayers have had enough," Pennsylvania Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said today.

Calling Pennsylvania's existing charter school law a mess, Auditor General Eugene DePasquale today issued a blueprint for reforming the system.

The report comes after DePasquale hosted five public hearings across the state, including in Easton. While it's not binding, DePasquale has sent the report far and wide in hopes of spurring an overhaul of the 1997 law, which he says is not serving anyone well.

"Taxpayers have had enough," he said.

Pennsylvania has more than 84,000 students enrolled in more than 160 bricks-and-mortar charter schools and 35,000 students enrolled in 16 cyber charter schools.

The report calls for improved accountability, effectiveness and transparency by creating an independent statewide charter school oversight board to eliminate the confusion charter schools and school districts now routinely grapple with. The board would eliminate the existing appeals board and Charter School Office under the Pennsylvania Department of Education.


Read the report here.

Bethlehem Area School District Superintendent Joseph Roy, who testified during the hearings, said he thinks the report offers practical solutions and found the idea of an oversight board intriguing.

"My initial reaction is it looks pretty practical and has doable suggestions," Roy said.

Pennsylvania Coalition of Public Charter Schools Executive Director Robert Fayfich praised the report, saying it fairly reflects the testimony presented during hearings and proposes workable solutions.

"(The proposals) have the potential to change the dynamic from conflict to cooperation between districts and charter schools," Fayfich said.

Aging law called failing

Charters and districts report the 1997 law is filled with confusing provisions, DePasquale said. The state currently offers little, if any guidance, and when it does it is unpredictable and inconsistent.

Outside of the appeals process, the law is largely silent on the role of the state in charter school oversight. It is left up to chartering schools districts, often creating an adversarial relationship that conflicts with the original intent of the law, DePasquale said.

Charter schools were supposed to be freed from some constraints of traditional public schools so they could innovate and test out reforms, he said. The most successful ideas were meant to make their way into public schools, which hasn't happened, DePasquale said.

This new oversight board would act as a prompt resource to solve charter-related issues for districts and schools. It also would enforce laws surrounding things like lease reimbursement, which DePasquale says has been the most common issue in his charter school audits, as well as ethics requirements.

The charter schools coalition is also intrigued by the oversight board, noting the details of it must be worked out.

"It’s encouraging that the report recognizes the enormous inconsistency across Pennsylvania in the resources devoted to charter school authorization and oversight," said Fayfich, from the statewide charter school coalition.

New appeal process seen

The oversight board could train districts on best practices in authorizing charter schools and replace the current appeal process, which often involves years of costly appeals and court proceedings.

He urged the state to re-institute its charter school tuition reimbursement for districts. This reimbursement was cut from the 2011-12 state budget, exacerbating districts' tight school budgets. The report suggests cyber charter schools be funded directly from the state and not from local districts.

Charter schools issue annual reports to districts that DePasquale says few people read. The report proposes having charter schools present that report annually in a public meeting with the authorizing school district.

School districts often feel they have no way to address issues with charter schools under the current law, the report finds. But then every five years they have a ton of power over charter schools, DePasquale said.

Only the Philadelphia School District can currently offer charters falling below standards a one-year renewal with specific conditions attached, the report states. That power should be extended and district should be able to reauthorize successful charters for seven years, instead of five years. 

The charter school coalition likes that the report focuses on identifying and expanding high-quality charter schools.












New Jersey Senate approves limit on ammunition magazines

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Republican Sen. Michael Doherty voted against the bill, arguing it harms only law-abiding citizens.

A bill to further restrict the capacity of ammunition magazines in New Jersey is one step from reaching Gov. Chris Christie's desk.

The state Senate today voted 22-17 along party lines to pass the bill — A2006 — that would allow only ammunition magazines that can hold up to 10 rounds, down from 15 rounds.

Warren County lawmakers have opposed the measure, drawn up in the wake of the Dec. 14, 2012, shooting at a Newtown, Connecticut, elementary school in which 20 children and six adults were killed.

"Today we're taking another step to fulfill a promise that many of us here made to the parents of the children of Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut who suffered losses that are beyond comprehension," said state Sen. Loretta Weinberg, D-Bergen, the bill's sponsor. "As legislators we vowed to do our part because we were so shocked and heartbroken by this violent tragedy."

Weinberg noted that under the federal assault weapons ban that began in 1994 and lapsed in 2004, magazines that could hold more than 10 rounds had been banned nationwide. 

This bill, and a companion measure on transporting firearms, both passed the Assembly in March, but the Senate changed them slightly. As a result, the lower house must pass them once more before they reach Christie for his signature.

Doherty critical of bill

Sen. Michael Doherty, a Republican whose 23rd District includes portions of Warren and Hunterdon counties, was among the lawmakers who voted no.

"Really, it's just going to punish law-abiding citizens that are already obeying the law," he said.

Sen. Steve Oroho, a Republican whose 24th District covers the rest of Warren County, also voted against the bill, as did all Republican senators, said Brad Schnure, spokesman for the New Jersey Republican Senators Office.

Assembly members in the 23rd District and 24th districts previously voted against the measure.

Anyone who already owns a gun with a magazine with a capacity of more than 10 rounds would be breaking the law the moment Christie were to sign the bill into law, Doherty said, adding that he urges Christie to veto the bill. The measure would also criminalize, for instance, any antiques or family heirlooms that have fixed magazines of more than 10 rounds, he said.

Doherty asked how many of the legislators who approved the bill ever handled a gun or changed a magazine, which takes only seconds. Criminals can also tape magazines together for quick reloading, so it's frivolous to think this type of legislation will help curb gun violence, he said.

"And the last thing they will do is say, 'I better not take my 15-round magazine, I better only take my 10-round magazine,'" he said.

Doherty cited a January 2013 burglary in Georgia in which a mother of two shot the intruder five times with a .38-caliber handgun. The intruder, who was later arrested, managed to get out of the house, but Doherty reasoned any homeowner could have been harmed in that situation had more than one person broken into the home.

"This is affecting law-abiding citizens, who want to protect their families or businesses," he said, calling the bill approved feel-good legislation that caters to special interest groups.

Areas of the country with the strictest gun laws see higher levels of gun violence because criminals know the public is less prepared to defend itself, Doherty said.

The Senate also passed a companion bill — A2777 — by a vote of 21-17 that would define specific instances in which drivers are allowed to make "deviations as are reasonably necessary" when transporting firearms.

Christie's review

Christie has not said whether he'll sign the magazine limit, but when asked about it at a recent town hall meeting, he noted that he's vetoed more bills than any governor in modern history.

"If and when a final version of legislation reaches his desk, it will be carefully reviewed in the 45-days period he has prior to taking any action," Christie spokesman Kevin Roberts said.

Under the ammunition magazine bill, gun owners would have 180 days to "transfer, render inoperable or voluntarily surrender" 15-round magazines. Retired law enforcement officers would be exempt, as are .22-caliber tubular magazines.

Sen. Paul Sarlo, D-Bergen,, who voted for the bill, said he's concerned that it would inadvertently ban some guns with fixed cartridges, often antiques.

"I would have preferred to be voting on a piece of legislation today that would have exempted all pieces that have fixed cartridges," Sarlo said.

The Assembly's next voting session is scheduled for May 22.

The Star-Ledger and New Jersey Editor Edward Sieger contributed to this report.


Judge erred in resentencing Qu'eed Batts to life in prison, defense argues

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Judge Michael Koury ruled Qu'eed Batts deserves life in prison for a murder he committed at age 14 despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that such punishment can only rarely be issued.

The night before reaffirming Qu'eed Batts' lifetime sentence for the 2006 murder of a 16-year-old Easton boy, Northampton County Judge Michael Koury said he drove to the crime scene and imagined the shooting.

But the after-hours visit is just one of the bevy of errors defense attorney Phil Lauer said Koury committed before ruling Batts must spend the rest of his life in prison for a crime he committed at age 14.

In an anticipated move, Lauer is claiming Batts' new sentence is illegal and unconstitutional. He is requesting Koury hold another sentencing hearing and pass down a sentence of no more than 20 to 40 years in prison.

The precedent-setting sentencing came after years of appeals and a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2012 that found juveniles cannot automatically be sentenced to life without parole. While the Pennsylvania Legislature has since limited murder sentences to a minimum of 25 or 35 years, the law did not apply retroactively to Batts, a Phillipsburg High School student, and the other juveniles in the state already convicted of first-degree murder.

After a seven-hour hearing earlier this month, Koury found the callous and calculated execution-style murder of Clarence "C.J." Edwards warranted the harshest penalty he could pass down. In a thorough hour-and-a-half hearing where Koury explained his legal rationale, the judge found Batts committed a cold-blooded murder in order to gain rank in the Brims, a subset of the Bloods street gang operating in Easton.

In a court document filed late this afternoon, Lauer argued Koury was obligated under state law to hand down a minimum sentence that would allow Batts to eventually be paroled. And, while the Supreme Court's decision in 2012 did not outright forbid life-without-parole sentences for juveniles, Lauer claimed a 1989 case before the high court did.

"Even when the United States Supreme Court was permitting the imposition of the death penalty upon juveniles, the 8th Amendment barred imposition of the penalty for one 15 years old or younger," Lauer claimed.

Lauer also claimed Koury reached his decision based on misleading evidence. While First Assistant District Attorney Terry Houck cited Batts emotionless taped confession to show the cold-blooded nature of the crime, witnesses during the trial said Batts was ordered to commit the murder by Vernon Bradley, Brim's local leader. Bradley likely would have killed Batts if he did not carry out the execution, they said, and Lauer argued the judge failed to consider the evidence when passing down his sentence.

The visit to the crime scene also showed Koury considered evidence that was not introduced during the hearing, Lauer said. By visiting the scene of the murder, Koury made clear he was weighing the nature of the crime more than Batts' potential for rehabilitation and chaotic upbringing, Lauer argued.

Koury also erred by allowing surprise evidence into the record, Lauer argued. Prosecutors presented evidence showing Batts has continued his gang ties while in prison, but the defense hadn't learned of it until the day of the hearing. Instead of continuing the hearing or barring the new evidence as Lauer requested, Koury granted the defense a two-hour window to review the evidence.

While Koury later said the new evidence did not weigh heavily into his decision to reaffirm Batt's life sentence, Lauer said the information prejudiced his client all the same.

"To properly evaluate and rebut such testimony, defense counsel would need to have gone to the state prison, viewed the video documentation in its entirety, spoken to witnesses depicted in the video as to their involvement with the Bloods gang, and hired new expert witnesses," he said.

Houck said Lauer's arguments have not changed in the past few years and some of the matters have long since been heard and dismissed by the courts. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court already denied Lauer's argument that Batts should be sentenced to a 20- to 40-year term.

"There's nothing new here than what they've already alleged. It's the same stuff rehashed over and over again," he said. "It's time to move on."

Fatal Interstate 78 crash leaves some motorists trapped for hours

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Some drivers were stuck for up to six hours in the closed eastbound lane of Interstate 78 following the fiery seven-vehicle crash that claimed three lives.

UPDATE: Catasauqua man among survivors in triple fatal crash that closed Interstate 78

Some motorists were trapped on Interstate 78 for more than six hours today due to the fiery seven-vehicle crash in Berks County that left three people dead.

Colby Collier, a Chatham, N.J. resident, said his 20-year-old daughter was stuck in traffic from 2:30 p.m. until 8:30 p.m., about three miles from the Greenwich Township crash.

Collier expressed concern authorities were not doing enough to get those drivers off the road, particularly those who have health issues who had been sitting in the hot temperatures for long periods of time.

"There are people like my daughter who have been stuck for many, many hours," he said. "I understand that traffic incidents happen, but for such a long period without water, without bathrooms, without communication, it seems to me they are being negligent to the people stuck on the road."

The Pennsylvania State Police were not immediately available again this evening, but said earlier in the day they were making efforts to clear portions of the backlog by diverting cars in the other direction in the lane to nearby exits.

The crash occurred at 1:12 p.m. about three miles west of the Lehigh County border, after a tractor-trailer rear-ended a stopped vehicle, which became engulfed in flames along with three other vehicles.

Three people from two different vehicles were killed, but could not be identified right away due to damage from the fire, state Trooper David Beohm said. The driver of the tractor-trailer was taken to an area hospital due to chest pains.

Collier said his daughter did not get off of Interstate 78 until about 8:30 p.m., when she was diverted to one of the exits.

Bob Michel, a Port Washington, N.Y. resident, became stuck in traffic about six miles from the crash and moved only about one mile in two-and-a-half hours.

Michel said vehicles were moving so slowly that people were exiting their vehicles on the highway and walking around the highway freely.

"There's a guy walking past us on the shoulder right now," Michel said, speaking via phone from his vehicle. "He just passed us. He's moving faster than we are."

The westbound lane had also been closed for several hours after the crash to allow for fire vehicles to respond to the scene, state police said, but it reopened about 5:30 p.m.

The driver of the tractor-trailer, who was not identified, will be given a blood test as required by state law. Beohm said it has not yet been determined if any charges will be pressed in response to the crash.

Contact Allentown reporter Colin McEvoy at 484-894-2549 or cmcevoy@express-times.com.

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Pennsylvania lags behind New Jersey in pre-K availability, new report shows

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In the Keystone State, about one out of 10 4-year-olds is enrolled in a publicly funded program; in the Garden State, about one out of four is enrolled.

Want your child to go to a state-funded pre-K program? Choose your home state wisely.

A new report released this morning finds wide disparities in the number of spots available for publicly funded preschool programs. A whopping 94 percent of 4-year-olds attended such a program in the District of Columbia and more than 7 out of 10 did in Florida, Oklahoma and Vermont. Ten states had no such program.

Both Pennsylvania and New Jersey offer the programs, but there’s a disparity between the two states on enrollment percentages. In the Keystone State, about one out of 10 4-year-olds is enrolled in a publicly funded program; in the Garden State, about one out of four is enrolled.

In fact, even as lawmakers from both parties have embraced the idea of expanding early childhood programs, the number of children enrolled in state preschool programs saw a modest decline of about 9,200 children in the 2012-2013 school year — the first such reduction since 2002, when researchers at Rutgers University started tracking pre-K trends.

The report is from the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers in collaboration with the Education Department’s National Center for Education Statistics.

Given announcements of support by politicians for preschool, Steven Barnett, the director of the institute at Rutgers, said he expected more growth to be reflected in the findings, and yet, “the numbers aren’t there.”

“We were very surprised,” Barnett said.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the data is a “reminder of how much work we still have to do to ensure that every child gets a running start.”

President Barack Obama has advocated for universal preschool for America’s 4-year-olds. He’s found Democratic allies in the effort on Capitol Hill, but Republicans such as Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., the chair of the House education committee, have said improving existing federally funded early childhood programs should be the priority.

Supporters say preschool programs help level the playing field for young children who enter kindergarten well behind their peers and never catch up, and members of the business community are among those advocates for preschool expansion. But the quality of such programs vary.

No states require preschoolers to attend school. Some states seek to universally offer it. Others base eligibility on family income. Under some setups, a community-based program receives public dollars. Other programs are within elementary schools.


Frozen food industry launches ad campaign to counter slipping sales

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The push comes as frozen food sales have been hurt by a move toward foods people feel are fresh or natural.

Frozen food makers plan to launch their first national TV ad in defense of their products today as the category fights to boost slipping sales.

The ad will include the tag line “Frozen: How Fresh Stays Fresh” and is intended to address negative misconceptions people have about frozen foods.

It’s part of a marketing campaign being funded by the American Frozen Food Institute, an industry group that represents companies including Nestle, which makes Hot Pockets and Lean Cuisine, and ConAgra, which makes Healthy Choice and Marie Callender’s.

The push comes as frozen food sales have been hurt by a move toward foods people feel are fresh or natural. Although frozen vegetables are often touted as being just as wholesome as their fresh counterparts, frozen meals and snacks are widely seen as being full of sodium and preservatives, or lacking in the taste department.

Between 2009 and last year, U.S. sales of frozen meals are down 3 percent at $8.92 billion, according to Euromonitor International. And this year, the market researcher is forecasting a decline of an additional 2 percent.

The Associated Press reported on the American Frozen Food Institute’s plans for the campaign last month.

In a phone interview on Monday, Kraig Naasz, president of the American Frozen Food Institute, disclosed that the group plans to invest as much as $90 million in the campaign over three years.

“This is a long-term strategy. The primary purpose is to enter into a dialogue with consumers,” he said.

In the 30-second commercial set to run on cable and network TV today, a voiceover states that “freezing is nature’s pause button.” It also asks viewers to take “fresh look at frozen,” as images of appealing foods that were apparently once frozen are shown.

The campaign is also tapping registered dietitian and author Keri Glassman as a representative to talk about the benefits of frozen foods in public appearances, including on “The View.” The push is being funded by companies including General Mills, H.J. Heinz, Jasper Wyman & Son, Kellogg, Lakeside Foods, the Schwan Food Co. and Seneca Foods.

In the meantime, frozen food makers have also been revamping their product lineups to better suit eating trends.

ConAgra, for instance, simplified the recipes for its Healthy Choice line and Nestle’s Lean Cuisine also introduced an “Honestly Good” line that is touts its natural ingredients.

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