He was quick to admit that he didn't understand the legal turns that made a spate of traffic citations against his fellow Amishmen into a religious rights case. But Sam Yoder barely paused Wednesday when asked what would happen if they lost the case. "Then, as close as I can say, we'd have to go, we'd have to leave here," he said as he walked to his horse and buggy in a borough parking lot. "Here" is Cambria County, where Yoder and members of his strict branch of Amishdom live and where police are citing them for refusing to place...