The Daily Numbers - March 16

The Daily Numbers: 1.26 million dollars, how much Haverford Township paid for the Philadelphia Chewing Gum Corp. site in condemnation proceedings.


6 million dollars, how much the Delaware County Board of View has now ordered them to pay the family that owned the site.


1 to 2 years in prison for a Haverford man in another child porn case.


3 people charged with credit card fraud in Upper Darby.


3 meetings that are being held by Cardinal Justin Rigali with priests of the archdiocese. 1 of them was Tuesday in Newtown Square.


4,000 dollars, how much a Lehigh University student told police he was robbed of in a street mugging. Turns out he actually blew it gambling at a local casino.


15,000 dollar jackpot we will give away to a lucky reader on Thursday as the grand finale to our ‘Go For the Green’ contest.


2 killed when fire roared through a Philly apartment Tuesday.


13, age of young girl that the FBI claims a former prof at Rider University believed he was going to have a sexual liaison with, along with her mother. He now faces charges.


3-2 win for the Flyers over the Florida Panthers last night.


9 straight wins for the red-hot Washington Capitals, who remain just a point behind the Flyers.


3 to 4 weeks on shelf for Chris Pronger, who underwent successful surgery on his hand.


1 more Phil now on the shelf. Add Placido Polanco to Brad Lidge, Chase Utley and Domonic Brown. Polanco hyperextended the same elbow he had surgery on in the off-season.


4 days until spring.


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Call me a Phanatic: A look at the ups and downs of being a Philadelphia sports fan.Let the Madness begin. And let me save you some headaches. Kansas will win the NCAA men’s hoops tourney. You heard it here first.


 


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I Don’t Get It: A 3-year-old child is being treated for alcoholism in England. I don’t get it.


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Today’s Upper: Let’s hear it for the priests who apparently gave Cardinal Justin Rigali an earful during a meeting in Newtown Square yesterday. Good for them.


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Quote Box: “Yes, I think it raises questions.”


- Defense attorney Mike Malloy, on convictions in cases involving police officers who have now lost their certification.

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