College Basketball History To Be Made Tonight As Robert Morris Hosts Geneva.

Chris Shovlin, play by play host of Robert Morris Basketball.

(Moon Township)  For the first time ever, two local institutions of higher learning, who both have very rich traditions in basketball, will play each other on the hardwood.  The Geneva College Golden Tornadoes will travel to the brand new UPMC Events Center on the nearby campus of Robert Morris University in Moon Township for a non conference game later tonight.  WBVP, WMBA and 99.3 F.M. will carry the game broadcast anchored by veteran broadcaster and member of the Beaver County Sports Hall of Fame, Chris Shovlin.   The Robert Morris Colonials compete in NCAA division 1 and have made eight appearances in the NCAA national tournament, winning a couple of early round games through the years.  Geneva College competes in NCAA division 3,  and for their part, has a program with many accolades as well.  Most notably,  Geneva can lay claim to being the birthplace of college basketball, when they played their  first game against the New Brighton YMCA in April of 1893.

 

Tune in this evening as two local, storied college basketball teams, just 29 miles apart, with a great deal of history and tradition on either side, play each other for the first time .  Pregame  with Chris Shovlin and Jim Elias from the Robert Morris Colonials network on 1230 WBVP, 1460 WMBA and 99.3 F.M. is at 6:45 P.M.

 

Pennsylvania overhauls child sexual abuse laws

Pennsylvania overhauls child sexual abuse laws
By MARC LEVY and MARK SCOLFORO Associated Press
READING, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania overhauled its child sexual abuse laws Tuesday, more than a year after a grand jury report showed the cover-up of hundreds of cases of abuse in most of Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses over the last seven decades.
The central bill signed by Gov. Tom Wolf gives future victims of child sex abuse more time to file lawsuits and ends time limits for police to file criminal charges.
The grand jury report spurred several states to change their laws and other states to begin similar investigations.
Wolf said the new laws will help repair “faults in our justice system that prevent frightened, abused children from seeking justice when they grow into courageous adults.”
The legislative package was based on recommendations in last year’s report regarding six of eight dioceses in the state.
Wolf, a Democrat, signed bills to invalidate secrecy agreements that keep child sexual abuse victims from talking to investigators, and to increase penalties for people who are required to report suspected abuse but fail to do so.
Wolf signed the bills at Muhlenberg High School in Reading, the home district of Democratic state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a champion of the legislation who has spoken publicly about being raped as a 13-year-old by a Roman Catholic priest.
“We know our work is not done today, it’s going to continue,” Rozzi said.
The grand jury report prompted a lengthy battle in the Legislature that pitted victims and their advocates who sought the two-year window to file claims over past abuse against top Senate Republicans, who argued it would be unconstitutional and instead offered the slower alternative of amending the state constitution.
The multi-year amendment process has begun, but the bill must again pass both the House and Senate in the 2021-22 legislative session before voters will decide its fate.
Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, said the eliminated time limits meant prosecutors could file charges against only two priests after the report was issued. He said that if the new legislation had applied, some 100 priests could have been charged.
Wolf and Shapiro urged lawmakers to take up legislation to allow the two-year window for lawsuits rather than wait for the amendment process to play out.
“By waiting, we are robbing the very victims who made this day possible, we are robbing them of the only closure before them,” Shapiro said.
The main bill in the package ends any statute of limitations, in future cases, for criminal prosecution of major child sexual abuse crimes. Current law limits it to the victim’s 50th birthday.
Victims would have until they turn 55 to sue, compared to age 30 in current law. Young adults ages 18-23 would have until age 30 to sue, where existing law gives them just two years.
Police could file criminal charges up to 20 years after the crime when young adults 18-23 years old are the victims, as opposed to 12 years after the crime for victims over 17 in current law.
About two dozen states have changed their laws on statutes of limitations this year, according to Child USA, a Philadelphia-based think tank that advocates for child protection.
In New Jersey, lawmakers expanded the civil statute of limitations from two to seven years. The bill opened a two-year window, which starts Dec. 1, to victims who were previously barred by the statute of limitations. It also allows victims to seek damages from institutions.
New York raised the victim’s age for which prosecutors can seek a felony indictment from 23 to 28. The law also gave anyone a year starting in August to file child sex abuse lawsuits against individuals and institutions, and civil lawsuits going forward can be filed until the victim is 55, up from 23.
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Scolforo reported from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Mike Catalini in Trenton, New Jersey, and Marina Villeneuve in Albany, New York, contributed.

Christopher Columbus Statue Vandalized Again

A Christopher Columbus statue in Rhode Island has been vandalized for a second time in recent weeks. The statue’s pedestal was splashed overnight with what appeared to be red paint. The statue was also spashed with red paint back on October 14th, when the U-S holiday named for one of the first Europeans to reach the Americas was being celebrated. A sign that said “stop celebrating genocide” was leaned against the pedestal.

Florida School Finds Alternative For Frog Dissections

No frogs were harmed in the making of a Florida high school’s science class. J-W Mitchell High School in New Port Richey began using synthetic frogs for educational dissections last Wednesday. School officials say it’s the first school in the world to use the technology. The lives of real frogs are being spared at a cost of $150 per synthetic frog. They’re doing this with the help of funding from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. The fake frogs are made of water, fibers and salts…and can be re-used. The synthetic frog are also said to be safe because there are not potentially harmful chemicals.

Hopewell Commissioners Taking Action on Gun Range

(Photos of residents speaking out about the gun range and photos of the gun range at the VFW on Stone Quarry Road, all taken by Sandy Giordano)

The Hopewell Commissioners are taking action on the township’s gun range. Beaver County Radio News Correspondent Sandy Giordano was there. Click on ‘play’ to hear Sandy’s report…

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School District Can Keep ‘Redskins’ Name, But Logos Might Go

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — A Pennsylvania school district can continue to call its sports teams “Redskins,” but it must educate students about Native Americans to prevent stereotypes. The state Human Relations Commission on Monday issued its decision in a long-running dispute with the Neshaminy School District. The panel also said the district must remove any logos that “negatively stereotype Native Americans.” The district’s lawyer is reviewing the ruling.

Bill Cosby Vows No Remorse, Expects to Serve 10-year Maximum

COLLEGEVILLE, Pa. (AP) — Bill Cosby says he’s prepared to serve the 10-year maximum sentence for sexual assault rather than show remorse for a crime the comedian says he didn’t commit. Cosby is serving a three- to 10-year sentence in a state prison near Philadelphia after a jury last year convicted him of sexually assaulting a Temple University employee in 2004. The 82-year-old says the Pennsylvania parole board is “not going to hear me say that I have remorse.”

House Adopts Matzie Resolution to Keep Deadly Disease in Spotlight

Keeping the fight against pancreatic cancer foremost in the public’s mind is the aim of a resolution the House adopted unanimously today, according to the author, state Rep. Rob Matzie.Matzie said he introduced H.R. 566, designating November 2019 as “Pancreatic Cancer Awareness Month” in Pennsylvania, to keep the spotlight on a deadly disease for which successful treatment has proven elusive…

Matzie noted that the disease is a silent killer, often causing no symptoms in its earliest stages and only vague symptoms after that….

With early detection meaning the difference between life and death, Matzie urges everyone to see their physician if they experience jaundice, abdominal or back pain, weight loss, changes in stool, nausea, pancreatitis or recent-onset diabetes.

Pennsylvania Lawmakers, Judges Pulling Down Raises in 2020

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Pennsylvania state lawmakers, judges and top executive branch officials will collect another annual salary increase, with the governor passing $200,000 and rank-and-file lawmakers passing $90,000. Increases for 2020 will be 1.9%, a figure tied to a regional change in consumer inflation. The boost takes effect Dec. 1 for lawmakers and Jan. 1 for judicial and executive branch officials. Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Saylor is highest-paid, pulling down a $4,000 raise to just above $221,000.