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Archive for the ‘York’ Category

If you include internships and college experience, I’ve been in this business for only a few years. But I learned early on about the strange cocktail of emotions that floods your brain as you leave what you thought was going to be a less-than-average assignment with better-than-average-assignment pictures.

The first time I experienced this was in Atlanta. It was for a story about unemployment, and the reporter wrote in the assignment that I should just hang out with this unemployed man at his family’s home and see what happened. Expectations were low.

But it was the first time I was a fly-on-the-wall in someone else’s home at an important time in his/her life. It was the first time I spent substantial time with anyone in a “nothing’s really happening” setting. And it was the first time that — as I was driving out of the neighborhood and phoning the reporter that it had actually gone well and I’d made good pictures — I heard someone (the reporter) say, “Wow. Sounds like you made chicken salad out of chicken shit.”

It might seem callous to think of an assignment as “chicken shit.” But as any journalist knows, there are assignments that seem completely awesome on paper, and others that seem just ehh. The key is to have an open mind and make the best pictures you possibly can, no matter the circumstances. Still, when a recent assignment in a Gettysburg-area nursing home seemed very ehh on paper, I was surprised by the pictures I was able to make and humbled by the openness of a man despite his less-than-ideal situation.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Raymond Hernandez, 55, breaks down into tears after talking on Thursday, July 5, 2012, about how he misses his five dogs and several cats that were sent to the ASPCA after he was carjacked in Oct. 2011. Originally of York, Hernandez now lives in a Transitions Healthcare nursing home outside of Gettysburg after he was carjacked and shot in the back, resulting in paralysis from the waist down, in Oct. 2011. Hernandez, who had been waiting to pick up his housemate’s grandson from school, was initially suspected of being involved in a drug crime because he was sitting in his car in daylight. Hernandez has since been cleared of any charges and is also cleared for at-home care, but his York house is too small to accommodate his wheelchair.

A carjacking. Paralysis from the waist down. Drug charges that were later dropped. Transferal to a nursing home far from home. Separation from loved ones. The disposal of beloved pets. Illiteracy.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Back in his room, which he shares with another Transitions Healthcare nursing home resident, Raymond Hernandez, 55, offers bubble gum to his medical power of attorney, Genevieve Ray, on Thursday, July 5, 2012.

Reporter Emily did a fantastic job reporting and writing Raymond Hernandez’s story, which is so complicated and strange that, when I tried to describe it to my boyfriend, he incredulously said it sounded like something out of a movie. Emily and I returned the next week, when Raymond’s housemate and her grandson came to visit.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Gladys Alicea and her grandson Taurean Christie, 6, stand in Raymond Hernandez’s room in the Transitions Healthcare nursing home outside Gettysburg on Saturday, July 14, 2012. Alicea shared a York home with Hernandez, who was waiting to pick up Christie from school when he became the victim of a carjacking in Oct. 2011.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Taurean Christie, 6, sits on the lap of Raymond Hernandez, 55, as they watch TV together in Hernandez’s room in the Transitions Healthcare nursing home outside of Gettysburg on Saturday, July 14, 2012. Hernandez is in a wheelchair due to paralysis from the waist down after he was carjacked while waiting to pick up Christie from school in Oct. 2011.

And this is the photo that ran main on the front page of the Sunday paper:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. His attention momentarily broken from the television in Raymond Hernandez’s Transitions Healthcare nursing home room, Taurean Christie, 6, shares a moment with Hernandez, 55, who used to live with Christie and his grandmother Gladys Alicea in York. Hernandez had been waiting to pick up Christie from school in Oct. 2011 when he was carjacked and shot in the back.

Be sure to read Emily’s article for much more information about Hernandez’s story.

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Go to a York Revolution game, and get splashed at.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dan Moore of Windsor Township shakes an open water bottle over the young children he was chaperoning from End of the Rainbow Day Care during the sixth inning of the York Revolution’s game against the Bridgeport Bluefish on Wednesday, July 18, 2012, at Sovereign Bank Stadium. The Revs lost 8-4.

FWIW, I may have been sweating off my sunscreen during this game in the 102-degree heat index, but this was definitely not the most miserable baseball-shooting experience I’ve had. That distinction belongs to an American Legion game, during which I sweated off my sunscreen AND sweated through my shirt.

Regardless. I wouldn’t trade this job for anything.

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Mitt Romney’s bus rolled into town… without Mitt Romney.

I wasn’t really sure what to expect, besides a bus without Mitt Romney (hence my #RomneylessRomneybus hashtag).

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Debbie Mascaro of Bucks County holds the door open as her granddaughter Emily Augustine, 3, jumps out after touring a Romney Mobile HQ campaign bus outside of Brown’s Orchards and Farm Market on Wednesday, July 25, 2012. Mascaro and her husband Richard said they annually make the two-hour drive to Brown’s “for peaches.” Asked if they support Romney, Richard Mascaro answered, “Maybe?”

I also didn’t expect my fully-charged camera battery to die, but I still cranked out a video.

Check out Ed’s article for what exactly happens when a Romney-less Romney bus rolls into town!

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My younger brother claims that the Batman theme (“da da da da da da da” or however many “da”s there are) was his first sentence. I refute this because (“da” x [number of “da”s]) + “Batman” does not constitute a sentence.

(Also, my boyfriend says the theme song consists of “na”s. Since I rank higher on the geek index than he does, I think I’m right — but I could be wrong?)

Anyway, so the Batmobile the Tumbler made an appearance in York yesterday — all the way from Michigan…

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Jaycob Abate, 4 of York, poses for a picture in front of a full replica of Batman’s “Tumbler” vehicle from “The Dark Knight” on Thursday, July 19, 2012, at Frank Theatres in York Township.

…and built from scratch by a guy who makes movie props.

© 202 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Bob Dullam of Kalamazoo, Mich., squats inside the cockpit of the Batman “Tumbler” vehicle he built, before exiting the vehicle, outside Frank Theatres on Thursday, July 19, 2012. Dullam, who builds movie props for his living, worked on the Tumbler off-and-on for five years using raw materials worth more than $50,000.

Dullam said the vehicle is capable of hairpin turns, is built to go up to 150 miles per hour (he’s only done 75), can shoot flames 20 feet long and four feet wide and uses surveillance cameras in lieu of rearview mirrors. Oh yeah, and it drives as smoothly as a Lamborghini.

Suffice it to say… quite a few of the adults in the crowd were far more captivated than the young ones were.

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The celebration didn’t end with the Bulldogs’ infield pile-up after they clinched their first-ever state championship win.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York baseball players Brandon Kinneman, Kaden Hepler (with trophy) and Jerrin Toomey share a moment during the assembly held in honor of the team’s PIAA Class AAA state championship win on Thursday, July 12, 2012. West York Area Senior High School honored the baseball team’s win with a parade around the borough and an assembly in the gym.

Something I’ve observed and come to appreciate about West York athletics is its close ties to the community. I’ve only shot a few of the program’s different sports, but at the conclusion of every game — win or lose — the West York fans line up as close to the playing field as they can get, and the players and coaches come to them to give each fan a high-five or hug. This tradition can be really exciting to observe when they win, or really heart-wrenching to see when they lose, but either way,  it’s something I’ve never seen anywhere else, and I now look forward to it each time I shoot a West York game.

As befitting a team that won state and a community that stands proudly behind its team no matter what, West York threw its champions a small parade and hosted an assembly in the gym earlier this week. Check out the video I produced, which features some Wes Anderson-y editing in one section:

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Hot dogs gotta stay cool. So should you.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Max Clarke, 13, holds a misting hose to cool down six-year-old Rudy, a dog available for adoption through the York County SPCA, during First Friday on Friday, July 6, 2012. York County SPCA volunteers brought six dogs available for adoption to downtown York for First Friday on North Beaver Street on Friday, July 6, 2012.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Led inside Camera Center of York to cool down for a few minutes, 6-year-old Rudy eyes Nikon advertisements featuring Ashton Kutcher on Friday, July 6, 2012.

(Also, anyone who considers buying a Nikon camera just because creepy Ashton is swooping and sweeping creepily around in those commercials should probably sit down and rethink his/her life.)

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I’ve shot fireworks a few times, and most of them have been memorable. In 2007, my friend Greg and I once royally peeved our friend Kevin by each taking photos of fireworks over Eagle Nest Lake in New Mexico and comparing our individual frames… during the show. Two years later, I had perhaps had a bit to drink and tried to take fireworks photos… without a tripod. Worst fireworks photos, ever.

But, provided you’re sober and have a tripod, taking fireworks photos isn’t difficult at all.

Taking fireworks photos with a human element — that’s a different beast.

But, I did it.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Red Lion hosted its Fourth of July fireworks show around Horn Field and the high school on Tuesday, July 3, 2012.

And here’s another Fourth of July-y picture:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Chase Hart, 18 months of York, reacts as to sparklers held by his mother Melissa, left, and friend Ashley O’Brien outside Horn Field before Red Lion’s fireworks show on Tuesday, July 3, 2012.

If you want to laugh at the failures that are some of my SOOC (straight-out-of-camera) frames from last night — or if you want some tips about shooting fireworks photos — head on over to our staff photo blog!

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Summer means baseball, and in these parts, that means a) the York Revolution and b) local league ball.

I’d never shot at Stewartstown’s field before, nor had I ever seen a similar setup. The playing surface is maybe six feet below the ground on which the nearby community building stood, and the fence serving as the backstop extends all the way to the dugouts, whose roofs rise about three feet above ground level. So, after securing the home team manager’s permission, I camped out on their dugout roof while I covered the game.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Taken in the bottom of the seventh and final inning. That red thing on the dugout roof marks roughly where I sat.

With that vantage point and some gorgeous evening light, I got to make baseball pictures I’ve never made before.

For example, twin dirt clods:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Red Lion’s Eric McNeil gets home for a run as Stewartstown’s Adam Allshouse waits for the ball in the third inning on Thursday, June 28, 2012, at Stewartstown.

Evening light was insanely nice. And the game was moving at a pace where I felt like I could relax and make pictures, not just shoot-shoot-shoot.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Red Lion’s Austin Hinkle lets a ball past him in the fourth inning against Stewartstown on Thursday, June 28, 2012, at Stewartstown.

I’d never shot on a field with such nice, selective light on a pitcher:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News.

The sun soon faded beyond the horizon, and the light evened out on the playing field. Then I noticed that the pitchers — from both teams — had dug quite a hole into the pitching mound. Never saw that before, either:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News.

So, combined with the nice angle-of-light and the higher vantage points possible, I’m excited for the next time I shoot at Stewartstown.

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Go shoot some hoops. (The friar’s robe is optional — unless you happen to be a friar.)

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Friar Father Paul Dressler, visiting from Washington, D.C., takes a shot at a basketball hoop at the 21st annual St. Joseph Church Carnival on Thursday, June 14, 2012.

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Today was National Go Skateboarding Day, but with the heat index somewhere in the high 90s, it was too hot even to skate that much.

Unless you had an icy drink…

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Justin Updegrove, 18 of York Township, takes a swig of his Snapple iced tea drink as he and others skate down Vander Ave. toward Reid Menzer Memorial Skate Park on Thursday, June 21, 2012. Every June 21 is Go Skateboarding Day. Local skaters met at Exist Skateboard Shop in Spring Garden Township, skated to Reid Menzer Memorial Skate Park and then to downtown York City.

…or got to skate in the shade:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Shawn Eisenhart, 15 of Spring Garden Township, skates off the steps of the post office building on South George Street as Christian Hamberger, 17 of West York, rolls video on Thursday, June 21, 2012.

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Go crawl through a mud pit…

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dallastown Area High School sophomore Hannah Derricky emerges from the mud pit through which she and her teammates crawled in the dirtiest event in the school’s Down and Dirty fundraiser on Friday, May 25, 2012. Forty-eight teams, each comprised of five Dallastown Area High School students, competed in 10 obstacle courses to raise money for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation and Team Shad.

…After all, some students said it was actually refreshing.

Despite the pervasive smell of mulch and dank, that is.

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Earlier this month, a York Catholic science teacher had his last day of school in 44 years.

Sam Spiese — who graduated from York Catholic in 1964 and returned four years later to teach — is retiring after teaching generations of students in the same school he attended.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Catholic science teacher Sam Spiese reviews a graded final exam with junior Katie Deats on the last day of school on Friday, June 1, 2012.

As a former prep school student, I really enjoyed spending time with Spiese in his last few hours as a teacher. High school wasn’t that long ago for me, but being back in the halls of a private school populated with uniforms, antiquated desks and teacher-student relationships that are more akin to friendships really brought me back.

My editor chose this photo, among two others, to run:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Catholic science teacher Sam Spiese takes a moment in his empty homeroom classroom, which his homeroom students decorated in celebration of his upcoming retirement, on the last day of school on Friday, June 1, 2012.

…but I also like this one, which is similarly framed:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. York Catholic science teacher Sam Spiese collects textbooks from his junior homeroom class at the end of the last day of school on Friday, June 1, 2012. After 44 years of teaching and serving in various leadership roles, Sam Spiese is retiring from York Catholic. Spiese, who graduated from York Catholic in 1964, said, “I keep getting old; they (the students) stay the same age. That’s the problem.”

Which would you choose, and why?

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Yesterday, I went to State College not for Penn State (for once) but, rather, a local team making its first state championship baseball game appearance. West York, who had lost the district semifinal football game last fall to Lampeter-Strasburg, was facing them again — this time, for the state title in baseball.

Sure enough, the West York Bulldogs delivered their comeuppance in a 9-6 victory over the L-S Pioneers.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York’s Brock Gladfelter hoists the state championship trophy toward West York fans after defeating Lampeter-Strasburg to win the school’s first-ever state championship in baseball on Friday, June 15, 2012, at Penn State in State College.

As the only photographer sent to the game, I was responsible for two section fronts, a slideshow’s worth of photos, a video and, of course, a bit of social media as well. After some pre-trip brainstorming with editor Brad and fellow photographer Jason, I walked into the stadium three hours before West York and L-S took the field, and started working right away: I explored the stadium, found the team and didn’t stop until after the game was over.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York’s first baseman Brandon Kinneman kneels in prayer during batting practice at Medlar Field before playing the state championship game against Lampeter-Strasburg on Friday, June 15, 2012. Kinneman’s grandmother Maryland Slonaker passed away on Wednesday, June 13, and a post-victory huddle was held in the outfield in memory of Slonaker and others close to the West York team.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York pitcher Kaden Hepler stretches with a band before playing the state championship game against Lampeter-Strasburg on Friday, June 15, 2012.

The game itself wasn’t my best in terms of shooting for action. Unlike any other high school baseball game or even any Revs game, I was pretty limited in my mobility by the officials as well as by the geography of the dugouts. But, as reporter John assured me, state championship games are all about emotion — and I did get plenty of that.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York’s Brandon Kinneman celebrates in a dogpile among his fellow players and coaching staff after defeating Lampeter-Strasburg 9-6 for the school’s first-ever state championship.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. West York head baseball coach Roger Czerwinski leads the team and staff in a moment of silence in the outfield in memory of family members and close friends of the team who have passed recently, before greeting West York fans after defeating Lampeter-Strasburg to win the school’s first-ever state championship in baseball on Friday, June 15, 2012, at Penn State in State College.

For my video — thanks to Jason’s suggestion — I focused on the starting pitcher, Kaden Hepler, who ended up pitching 23 of 26 innings in West York’s state playoff games:

Check out a slideshow of more photos, too.

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After I was done chasing storms a few weeks ago, I rushed to Spring Grove to photograph its commencement ceremony. It was a high-energy but dignified affair, and the reporter pointed out to me a special friendship he had just discovered:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Spring Grove Area High School graduate Melanie Zavatchan leans over to move the tassel of her friend Carly Smith, to indicate Smith’s new status as a high school graduate, at the conclusion of the commencement ceremony on Friday, June 1, 2012. Smith suffered a traumatic brain injury when she was in the third grade, and Zavatchan has remained her friend and led fundraisers in support of her.

Be sure to read more about Carly and Melanie in Tim’s article.

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I love Star Wars. I grew up on Star Wars. I thought the Force was real: When I was six or seven, I tried to make the pantry door open as I sat and stared at it from the kitchen table five feet away. On multiple occasions.

That’s a true story.

(As a mature adult, I now know the Force isn’t real, but it’d be cool if it were. And I still love Star Wars.)

So I was thrilled to be assigned to photograph local Jedis. With little kids. And lightsabers. On May the Fourth, naturally.

Belated photos:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Capital City Jedi Knights member Aaron Chernak waits as fellow Jedi Maranda Lender retrieves her lightsaber from a car trunk at the York Emporium on Friday, May 4, 2012. Capital City Jedi Knights, a non-profit performance group based in the Harrisburg area, does charity work by choreographing lightsaber fights and drawing in crowds for events at which they entertain.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Capital City Jedi Knights members Aaron Chernak and Maranda Lender demonstrate some lightsaber tactics to a small crowd in the York Emporium on Saturday, May 4, 2012.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Laura Owens, 10 of Latimore Township in Adams County, mouths pleadingly to her father Sam, off-camera, after she found out during a Saturday, May 4, 2012, presentation at the York Emporium that the Capital City Jedi Knights and possibly Darth Vader were scheduled to make an appearance the next day at a comic book store.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Capital City Jedi Knights member Maranda Lender teaches some lightsaber techniques to Katarina Holmes, 8 of West Manchester Township, in the York Emporium parking lot on Saturday, May 4, 2012.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dressed as Princess Leia, Laura Owens, 10 of Latimore Township in Adams County, takes a break from lightsaber training to watch a nearby Sith lord duke it out with another youngster in the York Emporium parking lot on Saturday, May 4, 2012.

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I’m from Houston, which means I can recall quite a few major storms wreaking havoc on my psyche as well as causing actual damage. Summers mean tornadoes and hurricanes, and I dreaded battening down the hatches every time a potentially dangerous storm threatened to roll through our area. Actually, I’m pretty sure my bedroom window in my parents’ house still has dried-out residue from when we duct-taped all the windows prior to Hurricane Rita, which was supposed to be Houston’s version of Katrina (but wasn’t, fortunately).

In short, I’m personally not a big fan of big storms.

But none of that matters, now that I’m a photojournalist.

When tornado warnings cropped up and strong winds began hurtling through York County last Friday, my editor had me head toward the potentially affected areas. As he directed me, on the phone, to head from Red Lion through Winterstown and then toward Shrewsbury, he concluded with, “Above all, be careful and aware of your surroundings.”

He later (today) revealed that he had visions of my car getting lifted into the air — with me in it. At the time, I was more concerned by the amount of water on the road, how I could avoid hydroplaning and whether I’d make it to Spring Grove in time to cover their commencement ceremony for two newspapers.

As I made my way through the waterlogged roads of southern York County, I happened upon some tornado damage. Except, I didn’t know it was tornado damage.

Pieces of Styrofoam littered the road, so I followed the trail with my eyes and saw, just off the road, that a big metal roof was blown off a home and a large tree branch had been split from the trunk. I turned off the road to check out the damage, but there was no one anywhere. No emergency crews, no puzzled or distraught homeowner. There wasn’t a way for me to quickly ascertain whether that damage had just happened or occurred a while ago. I returned to the main road.

Then, emergency vehicles passed me going in the opposite direction. So I turned around and followed them… right back to the house I’d just checked out.

I didn’t find out until a week later (today), but turns out I’d encountered the only confirmed tornado damage in the county.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Winterstown firefighter Rick Dean helps collect the Styrofoam insulation that was scattered after the metal roof of Larry Miller’s North Hopewell Township trailer home was blown off and came to rest against a tree near his wood pile on Friday, June 1, 2012. The aluminum roof of Larry Miller’s trailer home in North Hopewell Township was blown off during the storm on Friday, June 1, 2012. Miller, 67, was not inside his home at the time, and said the roof that was blown off was constructed above an already-existing metal roof on his home.

So I made some pictures and talked to the homeowner (no injuries)…

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Styrofoam insulation and a broken tree branch litter the yard behind Larry Miller’s North Hopewell Township trailer home after a storm passed through on Friday, June 1, 2012.

…and then went on to Spring Grove to photograph graduation. Which, I suppose, will be my next blog post.

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I had only shot one track-and-field competition — and, since I was to focus only on the track events, I had never shot any field events — until I was assigned to make pictures of Jared Allison.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dallastown’s Jared Allison ties up his training shoes as Palmyra Springs senior Shawn Mayer watches Cumberland Valley senior Chase Gehr use the rings before they all began a pole-vaulting training session on Wednesday, April 25, 2012, at the indoor training facility VaultWorx in Camp Hill. Dallastown’s Jared Allison — one of the best pole vaulters in the state — trains at VaultWorx, which is an indoor facility in Camp Hill.

At the time that reporter John and I followed Jared during one of his pole-vaulting training sessions at an indoor facility, the high school senior had his eye on breaking the state record and capturing the gold at the state championships, which were about a month away.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dallastown’s Jared Allison works on his lift method during a training session at the indoor facility VaultWorx in Camp Hill on Wednesday, April 25, 2012.

I did my best in the indoor facility. The light situation was terrible. One end of the large, tall-ceilinged room was lit with blue-white fluorescents, the other end (where the landing pad was) was lit with dim orange lamps and finally, just beyond the landing pad, were windows that let in a good amount of sunlight. Not the ideal situation for decent white balance.

But I had fun. Pole-vaulting is such a fundamentally strange sport, as John alluded to in his profile of Jared, and I had never shot it before. So it was a challenge on multiple levels — lighting and exposure, the novelty of the sport — but it was fun.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Dallastown’s Jared Allison runs with the pole during a training session on Wednesday, April 25, 2012, at the indoor facility VaultWorx in Camp Hill.

Be sure to check out John’s full article, which includes more photos.

And as for the state championship? Jared didn’t get the gold or break the state record — but that’s okay.

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Before you fire up the grill and make today even hotter, go plant a flag. Or pause to think about those who have served and are serving.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. A flag planted at William D. Willard’s grave waves over his grave marker on Thursday, May 17, 2012, in the Mt. Rose Cemetery. Volunteers from the local B’nai Brith Youth Organization planted flags on veterans’ graves in the Mt. Rose Cemetery in Spring Garden Township on Thursday, in anticipation of Memorial Day.

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Last summer, I blogged a series of “It’s hot out there” photos. Since the heat’s not going away any time soon, I figure I’ll pick up where I left off.

So, all that said… go to a pool. It’s Memorial Day weekend, after all.

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Lincolnway Swimming Pool lifeguard Nathan Bahn, 18, scrubs the lime scale deposits off the barriers of a tower structure that children climb to access two of five slides at the pool, on Thursday, May 24, 2012. Like other outdoor pools in the area, Lincolnway Swimming Pool will be open starting on Memorial Day weekend — specifically, Saturday.

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I’ve only shot softball three times (including a doubleheader, so four games), and every time, Central York has won.

More significantly, each time I’ve covered their games, the Panthers have won by scoring a run in either the last inning in regulation or the last, pre-tiebreaker inning.

The first time:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Central York’s Courtney Hastings slides safely into home in the seventh inning against Spring Grove to score the game’s only run on Thursday, March 29, 2012. Central York defeated Spring Grove 1-0 in softball at home on Thursday, March 29, 2012.

The second:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Central York softball players gather at home plate to cheer on pitcher Taylor Rohrbaugh, far left, as she runs home after hitting a homerun in the ninth inning of the YAIAA softball championship game on Wednesday, May 16, 2012, at New Oxford Senior High School. Central York defeated Littlestown 4-2 in nine innings.

And the third — last night’s:

© 2012 by The York Daily Record/Sunday News. Central York’s Kelsey Wisner hugs Courtney Hastings after Hastings hit a walk-off double that allowed Central York to defeat Elizabethtown 1-0 in nine innings on Thursday, May 24, 2012, at Millersville University to advance to the PIAA District 3 softball semifinal.

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