GALLITZIN — A crash involving a car and a truck Saturday afternoon in Blair County killed two people and shut Route 22 westbound for hours, state police said.
Police said an eastbound tractor-trailer driven by Gregory Duane Nagy of Ruffs Dale, Westmoreland County, crossed the median and struck a westbound car driven by Gary J. Smith of New Bethlehem, Clarion County, head on.
Smith and a passenger, Tracey Y. Smith, were killed.
A second passenger, an 8-year-old boy, was taken to Children’s Hospital in Pittsburgh for treatment.
The crash ocurred about 3:50 p.m. a mile east of the Portage exit in Allegheny Township.
The highway reopened about 9:30 p.m., police said.
Railroad crossing closing for repairs
LISTIE – The CSX railroad crossing on Route 1003 in Listie in Somerset County will be closed from Monday through Friday so that repairs can be made.
Traffic should use the marked detour or other alternate routes around the work zone, and some delays can be expected.
The work is being done by AMSCO Service Inc. of Pittsburgh.
Blood drive scheduled for Beth Sholom
Julie Mercik, a student at Westmont Hilltop High School, has scheduled a blood drive with the Greater Alleghenies Region of the Red Cross as her senior project.
The drive will be held from 1 to 7 p.m. Tuesday at Beth Shalom Congregation, 700 Indiana St., Westmont.
Driver hurt in Somerset wreck
SOMERSET – A Berlin man fell asleep while driving along state route 281 in Somerset Township and struck a utility pole, state police said.
Kyle Courtney, the driver, had only minor injuries from the late Thursday crash, troopers said.
Bicycle found in Indiana
INDIANA – State police at the Indiana barracks found a
21-speed bicycle on Center Street in White Township, troopers said. The owner may call the barracks, (724) 357-1960 to identify and claim the bicycle.
Fire association improving Web site
The Cambria County Volunteer Firemen’s Association is making improvements to its new Web site – cambriavolfireassn.webs. com.
The goal of the Web site is to provide fire departments, emergency responders and fire company auxiliaries with information such as training, legislative matters and meeting notices.
Music festival volunteers needed
Volunteers are being sought for the AmeriServ Flood City Music Festival to be held Aug. 21-23 at Festival Park in downtown Johnstown.
Individuals can volunteer before, during and after the festival. Everyone who helps will receive a free AmeriServ Flood City Music Festival T-shirt and schedule-on-a-string, and will not be asked for a donation at the gate on the day(s) they volunteer.
For more info about volunteering, contact Gwen Hartnett at ghartnett@jaha.org or at JAHA offices at 539-1889.
Groups can work with master concessionaire, Mom’s Food Service, to staff food booths in exchange for a portion of the booth’s proceeds. For more information about this opportunity, contact Shelley Johansson at JAHA, 539-1889, ext. 308 or
sjohansson@jaha.org.
Forest Hills plans middle school orientation
SIDMAN – Forest Hills Middle School will conduct an orientation program for new pupils at 9 a.m. Aug. 20 in the middle school auditorium, 1427 Frankstown Road.
The program is designed to familiarize students with the school’s rules, regulations, policies, programs, facilities and services.
All seventh-grade pupils and transfer pupils are encouraged to attend.
Papers: Woman bragged about sex with QB
RENO, Nev. – The woman suing quarterback Ben Roethlisberger for alleged sexual assault has been accused of bragging about having consensual sex with him.
According to court documents filed late Friday, Angela Antonetti said the woman who made the rape claim “did not appear to be upset, stressed-out or nervous” about her time with the Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback during a 2008 celebrity golf tournament at Lake Tahoe.
Antonetti said her Harrah’s hotel-casino co-worker “appeared happy and boastful,” and later said she thought she might be pregnant from the encounter. Antonetti made the remarks in a sworn statement attached to a motion to move the case from Reno to Minden, Nev.
“Rather than indicating that she was afraid or apprehensive about this, (the woman) expressed to me that she was hoping for a ‘little Roethlisberger,” said Antonetti, who worked with the accuser at Harrah’s between 2006 and 2009.
Driver sentenced in collision with train
ALIQUIPPA – A western Pennsylvania man has been sentenced to five to 10 years in state prison for a collision with a train that killed a passenger in his truck.
Beaver County Judge John Dohanich convicted 38-year-old Jayson Hatton last month of vehicular homicide, involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, drunken driving and other offenses.
Authorities said Hatton swerved around a closed rail crossing gate in Monaca as a train approached in April 2008. The pickup was destroyed in the collision, seriously injuring Hatton and killing 29-year-old Jesse Kownacki of Baden.
Witnesses testified during the nonjury trial that Hatton was the driver, although a defense attorney tried to cast doubt on that. Police said Hatton had a blood-alcohol level of more than 0.15 percent, well over the legal driving limit of 0.08 percent.
Local News
Briefs: Two killed in Route 22 crash
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COMMISSIONERS CORNER | Inside a budget: Numbers and lies
Tell someone what you want to prove, and a person can manipulate the numbers/statistics to prove it. So, why develop a budget?
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Man accused of 101 counts of assault
A man from Conemaugh Township, Somerset County, faces 101 counts of indecent assault after police accused him of molesting a young girl numerous times.
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Blogging with heart
I had a couple of interesting interviews over the past 24 hours. The first was with an ambitious Forest Hills High School junior who organized a Red Out across the district today in support of American Heart Association. Like many of those involved in Heart Association benefits, Spencer Ivock was inspired by his own family members' experience with heart disease.
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Supreme Court explains rulings on redistricting
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court on Friday explained its reasons for rejecting the state’s legislative redistricting plan last week, and a justice who disagreed with the ruling said this year’s races will have to be held under the existing, decade-old maps.
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In brief: Cresson man dies in pickup crash
A Cresson man who authorities believe lost consciousness while driving was killed late Friday afternoon when his pickup crashed on St. Joseph Street, about one mile north of Cresson.
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Boil-water notice issued in Upper Yoder Township
A boil-water notice has been issued for a portion of Upper Yoder Township as crews work to repair a leak along Route 271. -
No NDIC jobs to stay in city
After years of political clashes and fiscal uncertainty, these are the facts of the National Drug Intelligence Center’s final days:
• 87: The number of employees losing their jobs as NDIC operations wind down this year.
• 57: The number of staffers, aside from those 87, who will be offered jobs in Washington, D.C.
• Zero: The number of NDIC-related jobs that will remain in Johnstown. -
Forest Hills junior puts his heart into Red Out
Forest Hills junior Spencer Ivock is “redding out” the schools today for his senior project.
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Local pair accused of robbing home twice
A Johnstown couple has been charged with breaking into a Lower Yoder Township home twice in a four-month period – and then selling, for $103, some of the thousands of dollars in goods they alleged swiped.
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Steel firm considers coal mine near Que
Cambria Somerset Authority officials plan to meet this week with representatives of an Ohio-based steel company about a plan that could put a coal mine south of the Quemahoning Reservoir.
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COMMISSIONERS CORNER | Inside a budget: Numbers and lies






