OUR 10TH YEAR OF SERVICE
TO THE CITY OF BETHLEHEM, BETHLEHEM AND HANOVER TOWNSHIPS AND THE BOROUGHS OF FOUNTAIN HILL, FREEMANSBURG AND HELLERTOWN

Phone: 610-625-2121 FAX: 610-625-2126 gtaylor@tnonline.com

Tuesday, April 30, 2019


May 1, 2019

COVER STORY

Church arson suspect arrested

Police arrested a man allegedly responsible for two fires at a Pembroke Road church last week. Forty-three-year-old Wilmer J. Ortiz Torres of West Chew Street in Allentown, arrested Friday, is a former member of the Iglesia Pentecostal de Bethlehem (Pentecostal Church of Bethlehem) and faces charges of trespassing, burglary and arson. Photo: Pastor Carmen L. Cruz says the church is fully paid off and they do have insurance. She expects the rebuilding process could take two to three months, but additional help has been arranged by parishioners using a fundraising site, gofundme.com/iglesia-pentecostal-de-bethlehem.

By Nate Jastrzemski

 

COMMUNITY

‘Walk a mile in her shoes’

Penn State Lehigh Valley’s Walk a Mile in Her Shoes event kicked off on April 16. This was the fifth annual walk hosted by the campus’s RISE club, a national organization with the mission to “rise up against sexual violence, abuse, trafficking, and exploitation in the community, through awareness prevention, action and aftercare.” Photo: The organziation’s iconic red heels were worn by all who participated in the Walk a Mile event.

By Alli Poczak

 

NORTHAMPTON COUNTY

Judge Zito stepping down

It’s hard to think of anyone more closely connected to Northampton County government than Leonard Zito has been since he first began practicing law in 1971. As a lawyer in Bangor, his hard-hitting style attracted attention from both the public and other lawyers. For many years, he was the man to see if you were from the Slate Belt and had a problem. He’s been chief public defender, county council’s solicitor and was both appointed and then overwhelmingly elected as judge. On the bench, he quickly reorganized criminal court and developed a reputation as the hardest-working judge in the Lehigh Valley. But if you talk to him, he still considers himself an “outlier” from Roseto. “We came from nothing,” he said, but is very proud of the “fierce independence” of the Slate Belt, and Roseto, in particular. Photo: Judge Leonard Zito in the “boiler room” with secretary Anne Goetz.

By Bernie O’Hare

 

CLASSROOM

Charter Arts students make
Fukashima documentary

Forty years ago, on March 28, 1979, there was a partial meltdown of the Unit 2 core at the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor on the Susquehanna River south of Harrisburg.  Advances in scientific assessments over the four decades have confirmed that 50 percent of the core had been destroyed, and ionized radiation was released as steam into the atmosphere. The “but” in this, however, is that experts from the federal government and the nuclear industry have remained steadfast in their assessment that the exposure levels of 100 millirems of radiation from TMI were far below the average annual rate of 620 millirems of radiation that most people are exposed to from x-rays, medical treatments and flying in commercial airplanes. Photo: 2018 Charter Arts graduate David Jerry demonstrates some of the technical methods used by his fellow students to produce “The Fukushima Legacy.” The students worked under the direction of broadcast production teacher Damian Righi, seen here with Jerry.

By Carole Gorney

 

SPORTS

BC closes in on play-off berth

While Liberty may be on cruise control heading into the final two weeks of the baseball regular season, Bethlehem Catholic will be fighting for every last drop with four games left on the calendar. The Golden Hawks (8-7) squeezed out a 5-4 win over Dieruff on Saturday afternoon, scoring a bottom of the seventh inning victory off a Nate Petke RBI double to push them a game over the .500 mark. The win also increased their chances of solidifying themselves as a District 11 4A playoff qualifier and kept them sneaking around the eighth and final playoff spot in the East Penn Conference standings.

By Peter
Car

 

FOCUS

Polka rocks on

The Alex Meixner Band performs a celebration of the “Roots of the Lehigh Valley,” 7:30 p.m. May 7, Rodale Community Room, Miller Symphony Hall, Allentown. The multi-talented Meixner, a Lehigh Valley native, literally learned music at his father’s knee.  He represents the fourth generation of the Meixner family in the music business. Starting piano at age three, he made his stage debut in his father’s band at age six playing the accordion. There followed multiple gigs on multiple instruments: drums, bass, keyboards, piano, accordion and trumpet.  Then he was off to Ithaca College.

By George Van Doren

 

OTHER STORIES

Bethlehem: Candidate address local issues in NAACP forum

Bethlehem: New members join HARB

Lehigh County: Former coroner Grimm honored

 

WEEKLY FEATURES

Around town community calendar

Police logs

Area obituaries

Center for Animal Health and Welfare

Volunteers

Student profiles

High school news reports

 

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