Citation
Charlotte sun herald

Material Information

Title:
Charlotte sun herald
Place of Publication:
Port Charlotte, FL
Publisher:
Suncoast Media Group- Phil Fernandez - Editor
Publication Date:

Subjects

Genre:
newspaper ( sobekcm )

Record Information

Rights Management:
Copyright Sun Coast Media Group. Permission granted to University of Florida to digitize and display this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Resource Identifier:
36852667 ( OCLC )

Downloads

This item is only available as the following downloads:


Full Text

PAGE 1

Beyond earthquakes, volcanoes and oil well explosions, geology can be a stone-dry subject. That’s why, when Lowell Gladish sat down to write a book about his experiences as a geologist, he spiced it up a little. “My stockbroker said, ‘Be sure to put some sex in it or it won’t sell.’ I kind of got a little heat over that from some friends,” Gladish said. OK, it’s not exactly “Fifty Shades of Grey.” Maybe “Two Tints of Tan.” All to keep the pages turning. When we spoke last week at his condo at the Deep Creek Golf Course, the soft-spoken, 83-year-old Midwesterner smiled about the racy romance and adventure in his novel, “It’s Not Easy,” which is set to a backdrop of oil exploration in the 1950s. His wife of 60 years, Marilyn, laughed too. Now. Lowell grew up in southern Indiana, got a geology degree at Indiana University, joined the Army and took a job as a seismologist in South Texas after he and Marilyn were married. There followed a number of moves as Lowell chased work across the country and, nally, the couple made the move back home to raise a family. Marilyn worked as an English teacher and librarian; Lowell eventually spent 31 years working in gas exploration and under ground storage for Citizens Gas Co., based in Indianapolis. After retirement, they moved here — her family already owned a home in Punta Gorda. Lowell shed and golfed a lot. Life was good. But two decades into the good life, the novelty of nothing pressing but sh hooks and golf balls wore thin. “Finally, I just kind of got bored with playing golf,” he said. Time for a new chapter. “I decided I’d try to do some writing,” he said. “I never had any reason to try and think I’d ever be a writer.” Lowell enjoyed it. He was good at it. Three years in, he had his novel, which naturally is based on what he knew best: geology. “The drilling part,” he said. But it’s also a good yarn. Straight ction. Like Page 271 (opened at random): “Tom said, looking straight into her eyes, ‘We will be able to do that on our honeymoon someday. And we will feel much better that we did control our emotions.’” A little sizzle with the rocks? “I told him he was going to have people come to him for different advice,” Marilyn said. Lowell continued writing. Next came, “A Few Fish Stories.” About sport shing only. “Just the sh,” said Marilyn. “I learned my lesson,” Lowell added. Marilyn also joined in, but her book took on a serious subject: Her years of struggle to overcome anxiety disorder. The book — yet to be published — is called, “Goodbye, Anxiety; Hello, World.” It is a how-to guide about conquering a debilitating psychological problem. “After my second baby was born I got pretty sick,” she said, and a psychiatrist suggested a form of group therapy. “Finally, one day I just decided, ‘I’m scared to death of this, I don’t know if I can get over it, but I’ve got to try.’ And with a combination of prayer and those recovery things they taught, I did,” she said. “She battled her way through it,” Lowell added. “Her book may help some people. I’m just trying to entertain with mine.” Life story to tell? Contact Stephen Baumann at 941-681-3003 or sbaumann@ sun-herald.com.Pages turned in couple’s life Despite disturbing predictions of “zombie foreclosures” lurking in the shadows, the number of new lings across the region dropped last month to levels not seen in a decade, ofcial records show. Zombie foreclosures — houses that have been abandoned even before the banks take possession — have been making headlines in recent months as housing experts worry a new wave of distressed properties may upset positive trending in the housing market. Across Florida, real estate experts estimate there are nearly 160,000 foreclosed properties that are not on the market and not available for purchase. That’s because many of the largest lenders have created “servicing companies” to remove the negative performing assets off their books. This deluge of foreclosed property is called “shadow inventory.” But on paper, the foreclosure market appears to be improving. According to the local clerk of courts in Charlotte and Sarasota counties, the number of new lis pendens led has dropped to 2005 levels. A lis pendens is a notice of legal action led with the clerk of courts that typically begins the foreclosure process. The action puts the borrower on notice that a lender may move ahead with foreclosure proceedings if the parties fail to reach an agreement. In Charlotte County, there were a total of 44 new lis pendens led in February, up slightly from the 39 led in New foreclosure filings dropBy BRENDA BARBOSASTAFF WRITERDROP | 4 MURDOCK — Pirate Harbor residents would like Charlotte County commissioners to allow them to drive golf carts around their subdivision. A public hearing on the issue for the Burnt Store Road area community is scheduled for 10 a.m. today at 18500 Murdock Circle. If approved, Pirate Harbor will join Mobile Gardens and Holiday Estates as “mainland” subdivisions in Charlotte County permitted to ride about their neighborhoods in carts. The county already allows residents on Knight and other bridge-less barrier islands to ride golf carts on their streets. In 2013, Mobile Gardens became the county’s rst mainland subdivision to see golf carts permitted for roads. Lemon Bay Isles residents have made a similar request, which will be considered on March 24. “It’s a matter of convenience,” Mary Jo Van Winkle said, explaining how Lemon Bay Isles residents would sooner ride a golf cart to their neighbors’ homes or to their community Community wants golf carts allowed on streetsBy STEVE REILLYSTAFF WRITERSTREETS | 4 PORT CHARLOTTE — Facing a nancial crossroads, the free clinic that treats hepatitis C patients is close to shutting its doors. The only operation of its kind in the state, the Charlotte County Hepatitis C Clinic treated 65 patients last year, with 55 now in remission. However, the clinic relies on government grants and subsidies for its survival, and this money has dried up. “Right now, we don’t have any funding. We’re dead in the water,” said Dr. Mark Asperilla, clinic medical director. The disease, however, continues to thrive. There were 274 new cases of hepatitis C reported last year in Charlotte County, a 24 percent increase from 2013, according to the Charlotte County Health Department. So far this year, there have been 45 new positives for the hepatitis C virus. The disease can be caused by drugs, toxins, alcohol abuse or hereditary conditions. About 15,000 Americans die every year from HCVrelated liver disease, according to the Centers for Disease Control. In addition, Hepatitis C Clinic finances ailingBy GARY ROBERTSSTAFF WRITERCLINIC | 4 SUN PHOTO BY BETSY WILLIAMSJohn Blanco explains the catering specials being oered at the Simple to Simply Elegant catering booth while Alexandra Feseo and Bridget Brown enjoy chocolate-covered strawberries Sunday at the Southwest Wedding and Event Expo at the Charlotte Harbor Event and Conference Center in Punta Gorda. See more photos on page 10.It’s all in the planning SteveBAUMANNCOLUMNISTLIFE STORIES Charlotte SunCLASSIFIED: Comics 9-12 | Dear Abby 12 | TV Listings 13 VOL. 123 NO. 69An Edition of the SunAMERICA’S BEST COMMUNITY DAILYTUESDAY MARCH 10, 2015www.sunnewspapers.net $1.00 Partly cloudy; isolated rain showers86 67 High Low Look inside for valuable couponsThis year’s savings to date ...S UN COUPON VALUE METER CHARLIE SAYS ...It feels like summer already!INDEX | 705252000258 Daily Edition $1.00 $44,931 ‘CLIMATE CHANGE’ BAN? RACIST FRAT VIDEO SURFACESNew reports suggest state environmental officials were told not to use the term “climate change” after Scott took office in 2011. The University of Oklahoma severs ties with a fraternity after a racist chant video surfaces and sparks protests.THE WIRE PAGE 1 THE WIRE PAGE 1 SPORTS: Lotto 2 THE WIRE: Nation 2 | World 5 | Business 6-7 | State 8 | Weather 8 Bar stools, $40In Today’s Classifieds! THE SUN: Obituaries 5 | Legals 6 | Crosswords 7 | Police Beat 7 | Viewpoint 8 | Opinion 9 AND WEEKLY HERALDCALL US AT 941-206-1000 , , `, A-0viii' IIII II 1111111

PAGE 2

Our Town Page 2 C www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 The SUN (USPS 743170) is published daily at Sun Coast Media Group, Inc., 23170 Harborview Road, Charlotte Harbor, FL 33980-2100. Periodicals postage paid at Punta Gorda, FL. Postmaster: Please send address changes to the SUN, 23170 Harborview Road, Charlotte Harbor, Florida 33980-2100. CONTACT US WITH YOUR NEWS: Email Charlotte Sun Editor Phil Fernandez at pfernandez@sun-herald.com, or call 941-206-1168; Email Assistant Charlotte Editor Marion Putman at mputman@sun-herald.com, or call 941-2061183; or email Deputy Charlotte Editor Garry Overbey at overbey@sun-herald.com, or call 941-206-1143. Fax to 941-629-2085. On Saturdays, contact Marion Putman, or the newsroom at 941-206-1100, On Sundays, contact Garry Overbey or call the newsroom. Circulation director Mark Yero, 941-206-1317. Consumer advocacy email dmorris@sun-herald.com, or call 941-206-1114. Obituaries call 941-206-1028, or email obituaries@sunletter.com. Religion/ church news or events mputman@sun-herald.com. Editorial letters email letters@sun-herald.com, or write: Letter to the Editor, c/o Charlotte Sun, 23170 Harborview Road, Charlotte Harbor, FL 33980. Puzzles 941-206-1128. Classified ads 866-463-1638. Subscriptions For missed papers, or to put your paper on hold, call 941-206-1300. Display advertising 941-206-1214 Chairman .................................. Derek Dunn-Rankin .....................941-206-1001 Publisher ................................... David Dunn-Rankin .....................941-206-1003 Executive Editor ........................ Chris Porter .................................941-206-1134 Advertising Director .................. Leslee Peth ..................................941-205-6400 Circulation Director ................... Mark Yero ....................................941-206-1300 Arcadian Editor ......................... Susan E. Hoffman ........................863-494-0300 Arcadian Publisher .................... Joe Gallimore ..............................863-494-0300 Charlotte Sun Editor .................. Phil Fernandez ............................941-206-1168 North Port Sun Publisher .......... Steve Sachkar ..............................941-429-3001 North Port Sun Editor ................ Lorraine Schneeberger ................941-429-3003 Englewood Sun Publisher ......... Carol Y. Moore .............................941-681-3031 Sarasota County Editor .............. Clinton Burton ............................941-681-3000 SUN NEWSPAPERSMember of the Audit Bureau of Circulation SUBSCRIPTIONS Home Delivery Rates: Newspaper designated market: City ZoneCarrier home delivered 7 days. Rates as follows plus 7% Florida Sales Tax: Monthly Bank/ Credit Card .........................$18.14 3 Months ............................$69.17 6 Months ..........................$124.47 1 Year ...............................$217.69Does not include Waterline and TV Times. Above rates do not include sales tax.Mail subscription rates: Rates as follows (advance payment required): 7 Days 3 Months 6 Months 1 Year $120.88 $216.81 $386.10 Sunday Only 3 Months 6 Months 1 Year $58.81 $110.56 $186.19 Single Copy rates Daily $1.00 Sunday $2.00 Unclaimed account balances under $10, inactive for 15 months, will be used to purchase newspapers for classroom use. Sun Newspapers CUSTOMER SERVICE POLICY Delivery should be expected prior to 6 a.m. Monday through Saturday and 6:30 a.m. Sunday. Customer Service hours: 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday Friday; Saturday and Sunday 7 a.m. to noon. To subscribe or to report any problems with your service, please call 941-206-1300 or toll-free at 877-818-6204. You may visit our office at: 23170 Harborview Road, Charlotte Harbor, FL 33980. GOVERNMENT TODAYBoard of CC, 9am., Regular Meeting Murdock Administration Center 18500 Murdock Circle Edgewater North, 10am., Waterway Unit Advisory Committee Meeting Public Works Conference Room, 7000 Florida St., Punta Gorda Board of CC, 2pm., Land Use Meeting Murdock Administration Center 18500 Murdock Circle Gardens of Gulf Cove, 3 pm., Street & Drainage Unit Advisory Committee Regular Meeting Gardens of Gulf Cove Club House, 6464 Coniston St, PC. EVENTS TODAYEasy Does It Club, offers AA & Alanon meetings daily from 7:30 am to 9 pm at 23312 Harper Ave,. PC. Call 941-629-0110. Charlotte Carvers, Wood Carving/Sculpture every Tuesday morning 8 to 12. Visit us. Learn something new! Woodcarving Deep Creek Elks 2763, Lunch With Diane 11-2:30, Dinner 5-8, Pizza, Burgers And More, Karaoke With Spot Light 6:30-9:30, Reservation, 941-249-8067. Wading Trips (Free), Seagrass Adventures 10am at Ponce deLeon Park. Preregister with Charlotte Harbor Env Ctr. 941-575-5435. Charlotte Bay-NSDAR, Last day to register for Free Genealogy Workshop on March13. Provided by Charlotte Bay Chapter NSDAR. Little Explorers, Pre-K craft, activity, & story. 10am @ Charlotte Harbor Env Ctr, 10941 Burnt Store Road. Preregister 941-575-5435. Amvets Lunch/Dinner, Patty’s Lunch Specials-Soup&Sandwich 11:30-2pm-5 days. Dinner special-Philly’s Steak or Wings. 429-5403 NP Amvets 312. Punta Gorda Elks, 11am-2pm Lunch; 6pm Investigation; 7pm Orientation @ 25538 Shore PG 637-2606. Christian Women Meet, 11:15 am-1 pm, Englewood Elks, 401 N Indiana/776. $11 lunch & program. Open to All, by Reservation. 474-7746. Foreign Film, “Young Goethe in Love” (Germany 2010), 1pm, FGCU, 117 Herald Court, PG. $5. 941-505-1765. Hip/Knee Disorders, 5-6pm, Bayfront Health Punta Gorda. Please call 941-637-2497 to register. Dr. Ronald Constine, M.D. Barbershop Rehearsal, Barbershop Chorus rehearsal every Tues. 6:30-9pm, Burnt Store Presbyterian Church, 11330 Burnt Store Rd, PG 625-1128. NAMI Charlotte, If you or anyone in your family is dealing with mental health issues, join us for our free monthly support groups. WEDNESDAY Easy Does It Club, offers AA & Alanon meetings daily from 7:30 am to 9 pm at 23312 Harper Ave,. PC. Call 941-629-0110. Woodcarving, and Woodburning every Wed. 8am to 12pm at the Cultural Center. Come and enjoy with us. Bev 764-6452. Project Linus, Crochet and knit blankets to give to kids in Charlotte County New Day Church 20212 Peachland 9-11am Nancy 627-4364. | COMMUNITY CALENDAR Open Cruise In, Tues. March10, 4 to 7p.m. Open Cruise In, Monty’s Rest. & Pizzeria, 2515 Tamiami Trail, PG. Open to any make or model vehicle including modified. BOGO dinner to show participants, no pre-reg nor to have been in the military. 941-626-4452. Irishman Cahal Dunne-Pianist & Vocalist, Englewood Event Center, 3069 S. McCall Road., Englewood, FL 34224 March10th Cahal Dunne-Irishman Vocalist/Pianist Irish Step Dancers Show Time : 7:30pm Tickets: $20 Tickets: 941-207-3324 or 941-625-4175 X 220 or www.charlotteplayers.org. Featured EventsPAID ADVERTISEMENTSThe Charlotte Symphony Orchestra once again brought a sold-out audience to its feet Sunday night with a stirring rendition of Johannes Brahms’ “Symphony No. 4 op 98, E minor.” The orchestra’s powerful performance, in four movements, took up the entire second half of the concert. The finale, with its crescendo finish, brought long, loud applause at the Charlotte Performing Arts Center in Punta Gorda. The applause continued at length as Maestro Raffaele Ponti himself applauded var ious sections of the orchestra featured in the performance. The evening’s five per formances were a study in contrasts, beginning and concluding with Brahms. It began with his sprightly, Ragtime-like “Hungarian Dances,” with a Gypsy music sound, but segued quickly into Claude Debussy’s “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun,” a lyrical symphonic poem for orchestra, featuring woodwinds and harp. That was followed by Gustav Mahler’s “Blumine (flower),” from his “Symphony No. 1,” another lyrical piece with a trumpet solo. Then it was quickly back to up-tempo with Johann Strauss Jr.’s overture to the operetta “Die Fledermaus,” a rollicking comedy evoking the gaiety and romance of a Viennese ball. In a post-concert inter view, patron Brian Presley marveled at the orchestra’s “increased sophistication and experience. They’re so cool. They’re not hesitant to take bold steps.” Ponti lauded the orchestra as well. Brahms’ “Symphony No. 4” Is “huge stuff, a big war horse. It was a great treat (to play) the magnitude, the sounds of Brahms. They’re achieving new heights as a symphony.” He said next season there will be more large orchestrations in the CSO repertoire, “because now we have an orchestra who can play them.” Charlotte Symphony pleases with BrahmsBy BILL JONESSUN CORRESPONDENT Keith Jensen, left, and Kevin Bellosa, playing violoncello. Elizabeth Kitts on the violin. Dickie Fleisher on the harp.SUN PHOTOS BY BILL JONES A sold-out audience at the Charlotte Performing Arts Center in Punta Gorda awaits the start of the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra’s Sunday night concert featuring Johannes Brahms. SP17638 SHOPLOCALTOD AY!SAV EGAS, SUPPORTOURLOCALLYOWNEDBUSINESSES Thomas Quigley, M.D. Board Certified Eye Physician & Surgeon2 5 2 9 T A M I A M I T R A I L P U N T A G O R D A 9 4 1 6 3 9 2 0 2 0 No Hidden Charges: It is our policy that the patient and or any other person responsible for payment or be reimburse by payment or any other service, examination or treatment which is performed as a result of reimburse within 72 hours of responding t o the advertisement for the free, discounted fee or reduced fee service, examination or treatment. Offer does not apply to Avantica managed insurance pl ans including Freedom, Optimum and some Universal. Code: CS00 adno=50479001 www.doctorquigley.com F R E E E Y E E X A M F O R N E W P A T I E N T S 330 NORTH BREVARD (NEXT TO FARM CREDIT), ARCADIA 863-993-2020 20600 VETERANS BLVD. PORT CHARLOTTE 941-766-7474 complete medical exam with one of our board certified eye doctors includes prescription for eyeglasses, and tests for cataracts, glaucoma and other eye diseases. O f f e r a p p l i e s t o n e w p a t i e n t s 5 9 y e a r s a n d o l d e r . Offer Does Not Apply To Freedom And Optimum Health Plan Participants. Coupon Expires 4/16/2015 --------------------------------------------------------cyyinn 57 y5n p ICSCSNJ 0, QO, QIND 0 Vlt oL D tPMI 14Q GORDDL Offer applies to mew patients 59 yearns and older.9161 4SO-2020IFOR NEW IPATIIIENT5--------------------------------------------------------!

PAGE 3

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net C Our Town Page 3 adno=50482486 Do You Hear, but not Understand?You May Have Hearing Loss....or Maybe it's just WAX....We Can Find Out!J w..Never lbEven this X-Large cotton swab is too small to put in your ear. Your ears are .mayactually self-cleaning! Using a cotton swab to clean your ear pushes waxdeeper into the ear canal and can create a blockage. Wax blockage isone of the most common causes of hearing loss, and we havean easy and painless way to check your ears. We'll use a miniatur-ized camera to do a complete inspection of your ear canal and ear drum tosee if there's a wax blockage problem. Please call today to make anappointment for your FREE Ear Canal Inspection!FREE Ear Canal Inspection andHearing Screening for 4 days Only!Tuesday Thru Frithiy March 10th 13thWhile You're Here, we Invite You to Demo theNEW Thrive" Wireless Hearing Instruments!Listen to your TV, Radio or Cell Phone through your Have improved speech understanding, especiallyhearing aids women's and children's voices.Adjust the volume without touching the aid Hear better in noisy places like a restaurant, orgroups of people.NewTechnology! Choose from 2 Take vantagethe _Ad of Trad-in Event!Call Today!CompleteProduct Lines Trade-In Value on Trade-In Value onONE Hearing Aid TWO Hearing AidsThriveTM : KinnectTM w50 Up To $1,200 Up To $2,400 BEST VALUE!Trade-in offer is subject to participation and quantity limitations. No other offers or discounts apply. Discount does not apply to prior sales.IHearing Centers of Charlotte Countywe and Southwest FloridaMoved!Port Charlotte Venice Punta Gorda3052 Harbor Blvd. Unit 1 2379 East Venice Ave. 2705 Tamiami Trail, Suite 211621-3642 ,41) 234-4267 (941 X21-35www.portcharlottehearingcenter.com www.venicehearingcenter.com www.puntagordahearing.comATheresa Stevens Ray Wenck Grant StevensHAS, BC-HIS HAS, BC-111S IMPHASi i.i,L ,JcLuiiu kIpaiiu1i ) iruuu L),1 )Lnierican owned and operated! 0`io Financing Available withApproved Credit. All Insurance & He;'.rinc Aid Benefit Plans Welcome. Humana and AARP Discounts Honored.G o o r o o v r o v o. 7This coupon entitles the bearer to a L This coupon entitles the bearer to a This coupon entitles the bearer to ai Com limentar 1 1 FREE PACK !' y 25% offI Hearing Screening i iOf BATTERIES & Clean and Check with your Hearing Screening on a pair of ThriveTM 50& Clean and Check Hearing InstrumentsVALID THROUGH: 3/13/15 1 VALID THROUGH: 3/13/15 VALID THROUGH: 3/13/15II. l i JOffers Cannot be combined with other discounts, offers or prior purchases. *Off Suggested Retail Price.

PAGE 4

Our Town Page 4 C www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 FROM PAGE ONE hepatitis C is the most common blood-borne infection, making it extremely contagious. The county’s older population and the fact the disease can take decades for symptoms to emerge have combined for Charlotte to have one of the highest hepatitis C incidence rates in the state. “It’s a dangerous disease,” said Dr. David Klein, who co-founded the clinic in 2012. “We want to annihilate the reservoir.” Improving patient health, returning them to a productive life and containing the spread of the disease are the critical goals of the clinic, which now has a waiting list of more than 100. “We have a waiting list and we’re out of funds,” Asperilla said. “If you don’t treat hepatitis C, they’re going to need a liver transplant.” The biggest obstacle in treating hepatitis C patients is expense, but the free clinic has effectively taken the $30,000 cost per patient out of the equation for those who qualify. The clinic operates on a minimal $20,000 annual budget, with 80 per cent of its operating cost going toward blood testing, lab work and diagnostics, he said. The medication, doctors and facility are provided free. In the past, the county funded the clinic $50,000, which lasted three years, Asperilla said. In addition, money from a federal grant has been exhausted. The Virginia B. Andes Volunteer Community Clinic in Port Charlotte is currently underwriting another federal grant proposal, asking for $2 million for a ve-year cycle. The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, authorized by the Affordable Care Act, launched this funding initiative to support clinical effectiveness in the diagnosis, treatment and management of hepatitis C. Asperilla is optimistic his clinic’s application will be reviewed favor ably when the results are announced in September. “Our chances are good because we are the only free clinic treating hepatitis C in the state,” he said. To keep the clinic open until then, Asperilla approached the County Commission to make a one-time $50,000 request. With Charlotte planning to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on infrastructure, Asperilla doesn’t think his request is too much to safeguard human health. Moreover, the county cut $100,000 from this year’s health department budget because the CCHD no longer provides primary health services. Asperilla would like to see some of that money diverted to his clinic. “We’re the safety net for Charlotte County,” he said. “We’re saving human lives.” County Commissioner Stephen R. Deutsch said he and the other commissioners are exploring possible options. “There’s no question the clinic has been a great asset to the county,” Deutsch said. “I would expect most of us would be sympathetic to providing a level of support.”Email: groberts@sun-herald.comCLINICFROM PAGE 1 center without having to drive their automobiles to visit friends or community events. Florida statutes prohibit driving golf carts on public streets; however, counties and other local jurisdictions can permit street golf carts if specic conditions are met, County Attorney Janette Knowlton said. The criteria looks at the speed limits and road widths within the subdivision, volume of trafc and the character of trafc traveling within a subdivision. Also, the subdivisions are expected to provide petitions showing the majority of residents want to be able to ride carts around their subdivision. County transportation engineer Venkat Vattikuti said factors the county staff consider include whether the majority of the roads are conned within the subdivision. Staff will consider whether accesses to the subdivisions are limited to one or two egresses. If approved, the subdivision — through its municipal service benet unit (MSBU) — will be expected to pay for trafc warning signs notifying motorists that golf carts are allowed on the streets. Vattikuti said those costs are minor. The ordinances themselves also dene limits on the use of golf carts. The proposed ordinance for Pirate Harbor states: Golf carts must be equipped with efcient brakes, reliable steering, safe tires, rear view mirrors, red “warning” reectors on the front and rear of the cart. Drivers must be 14 years or older. Drivers of carts are expected to obey trafc control devices. Carts can only be operated between the hours of sunrise and sunset. The Pirate Harbor ordinance mirrors the Mobile Gardens ordinance passed by commissioners in 2013. For subdivisions wanting use of golf carts in their neighborhoods, Vattikuti suggested residents should work through their associations, petition their residents and then contact the Public Works engineering division.Email: reilly@sun-herald.comSTREETSFROM PAGE 1 January; but down a whopping 79.5 percent from February 2014, according to the county clerk of courts. Charlotte’s lings last February totaled 79 for the month. And during the peak of the housing bubble in 2008, residential foreclosures averaged 410 per a month. “This past month, the number of new foreclosure cases continued the trend with a low total of lings which is great news for our local economy and real estate market,” said Roger Eaton, director of civil court ser vices for the Charlotte County Clerk of the Circuit Court. In Sarasota County, the clerk of courts reported a total of 105 new lis pendens led, down from 126 in January. Last February, Sarasota reported 182 new lings. Investors with cash in hand looking for sweet deals, appear to be mitigating what might otherwise be a blow to a much-improved housing market, real estate experts said. A ood of vacant, foreclosed properties, they note, bringS down home prices and communities.Email: bbarbosa@sun-herald.comDROPFROM PAGE 1 Eagles tribute band to playThe Cultural Center Theater is proud to present THE LONG RUN: A National Tribute to the Eagles. 7 p.m. Saturday, 2280 Aaron St., Port Charlotte. THE LONG RUN provides a spectacular performance and brings back great memories. You won’t hear an Eagles tribute band this great ’till Hell Freezes Over. The members of the band are exceptional musicians and have performed/ worked with: Herb Reed and the Platters; The Flamingos; The Shirelles; The Coasters; The Tokens; Trisha Yearwood; Gary U.S. Bonds; The Dixie Cups; Bobby Lewis; Epcot’s British Invasion; Roger McGuinn of the Byrds; Mike Pinera of Blues Image; John Stewart’s Legends in Concert; The Romantics; Julio Iglesias Jr.; Pattie Loveless; Louise Mandrell; Brian and Dennis Wilson; Eric Clapton; The Bee Gees; America; Peter Frampton; Eddie Money; Michael Bolton; Dion; and Meat Loaf. Tickets are $18 for Cultural Center members, $20 for non-members and $25 for all on the day of the performance. Purchases can be made online at www. theculturalcenter.com or at The Cultural Center Box Ofce. For more information call 941-6254175 x 221. Spring bazaar setJoin us for the 13th Annual Spring Bazaar 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. March 13 and 14, and from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. March 15 at The Cultural Center of Charlotte County, 2280 Aaron St., Port Charlotte. The show features a variety of local artisans and other vendors with an array of great handmade crafts and more. Our “World Famous” strawberry shortcake will be available both days, along with apple dumplings, fresh cookies, and other tasty baked treats. Prize drawings will be held each day as well. Additionally, there will be great deals in the Cultural Center Shops and Caf. On Friday a variety of farmer’s market-style vendors will be available on the front porch and grassy areas in front of the building on the Gertrude Street side. The Cultural Center of Charlotte County, a nonprot organization has been serving the community since 1961. Come visit the place that Friendship Built! For more information, please call 941-625-4175 or visit www. theculturalcenter.com. | COMMUNITY NEWS BRIEFS Call and Come In for a Complete Medical Exam with one of our Board Certified Foot & Ankle Doctors. FREE FOOT & ANKLE MEDICAL EXAM Monday, March 16 th through Friday, March 20 th The patient and any other person responsible for payment has a right to refuse to pay, cancel paymen t or be reimbursed for payment for any other service, examination, or treatment which was performed as a result of and within 72 hours of responding to the advertisement for the free, discounted fee, or reduced fee service, examination or treatment. Our Podiatric Physicians will be available to answer any questions you may have. Call Today 9 4 1 6 2 4 2 1 4 1 941-624-2141 18308 Murdock Circle Unit 102 Port Charlotte adno=50478833 www.anklefootfl.com S OORENA S ADRI , DPM D AVID M. K ANUCK , DPM Associates In Medicine & Surgery adno=50478332 Toll Free: (800) 582-1550 Phone: (941) 764-6635 www.francistaxservices.com Francis Tax Service Specializing in Income Tax Preparation, Accounting & Tax Problem Resolution Heather M. Francis, E.A. CTRS Member of ASTPS & NATP 12415 SW Sheri Avenue, Lake Suzy, Florida, 34269 Conveniently located 1.5 miles East of I 75 On Kings Hwy Small enough to know your name, Big Enough to Handle all your Tax and Accounting Needs! “ P r o t e c t Y o u r W e a l t h ” “Protect Your Wealth” adno=489952 941625-6534 21942 Edgewater Drive, Port Charlotte, Fl. 33952 www.buelowtaxservice.com LET US PUT OUR EXPERTISE TO WORK FOR YOU! Since 1972 2002-2014 13 Years in a Row WELCOME BACK CANADIAN SNOWBIRDS We’re Only A Phone Call Away! While you are here visiting warm and sunny Southwest Florida, did you know Buelow Tax Service can prepare your Canadian Income tax return? Whether you are only filing a Canadian tax return or whether you are filing a U.S. tax return and a Canadian tax return, our CPAs and tax professionals are here to help you maximize your tax and operational benefits. We Are Here To Help You: Prepare and File your Tax Return Find out about Tax Credits Track your Refund Request Direct Deposit View your T4s Review your Tax Information adno=50477850 BUELOWTAX SERVICEFooncled 1912late ry ,'\ccurac:y C `-gxrie1 L1dr%+y941-624-2141"Protect Your VVcalthMarch 22nd 3 p.m.L W7NORTH PORT PERFORMING ARTS CENTER6400 West Price BoulevardTT QUARTETBennett, clarinetd Weed, pianoMopsick, bassVigilante, drumsto to Bennyoodmanand Friends""...the closest ever" toGoodman's soundy.and style.Bucky Pizzarelli -Dick HymanT TICKETS NOW $25 Phone & In Person:NPPAC Box Office -426-8479 (M-F,1oa-1p)Online 24/7 www.artistseriesconcerts.orgGroups of 10 or more call 306-1202 (M-F, 10a 4p)poor PROUDLY PRESENTED BYHerald-Tribune.... .ur.......o

PAGE 5

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net C Our Town Page 5 CHARLOTTE Marion Lavon Snyder RudeMarion Lavon Snyder Rude, 89, of Port Charlotte, Fla., passed away from natural causes Saturday, March 7, 2015, at Fawcett Memorial Hospital. She was born March 7, 1926, in Elkhart, Ind., to Warren and Martha Snyder. Marion is survived by her sons, Robert Aldon Rude of Walkerton, Ind., Donald Ray Rude of Blue Ridge, Ga., Garry Dale Rude of Kingwood, Texas, and Randy Dean Rude of North Port, Fla.; 14 grandchildren; and 14 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Raymond Aldon Rude, March 15, 1996; and son, John Scott Rude, June 21, 1974. Arrangements are by McKee Funeral HomeCremation Centers of America, North Port.William G. Clouse Jr.William G. Clouse Jr., 68, of Port Charlotte, Fla., passed away Tuesday, March 3, 2015, at Tidewell Hospice in Port Charlotte. He was born Oct. 19, 1946, in Scranton, Pa., to William G. and Ruth (nee Veater) Clouse. Mr. Clouse worked as a supervisor at G. Pierce Wood before retirement. He was a veteran of the Vietnam War, serving in the U.S. Army and was of the Methodist faith. He is survived by his wife, Dianne Clouse of Port Charlotte; sister, Deborah Walters of Philadelphia, Pa.; and several great-nieces and great-nephews. A Memorial Service will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday, March 11, 2015, at Paul Schelm Funeral Home, 12687 SW County Road 769 (Kings Highway) in Lake Suzy, Fla. Please visit William’s tribute wall at www.schelmfh.com to share memories and to send condolences to the Clouse family. Preferred donations may be made in loving memory of William to the Animal Welfare League, 3519 Drance St., Port Charlotte, FL 33980, or a charity of your choice. Arrangements are by Paul Schelm Funeral Home in Lake Suzy. Phone 941-625-3535.Reba M. MerrillReba M. Merrill, 86, of Port Charlotte, Fla., passed away Friday, March 6, 2015, in Port Charlotte. Arrangements are by Roberson Funeral Homes & Crematory Port Charlotte Chapel.ENGLEWOOD Leota N. McGinnLeota N. “Lee” McGinn, 88, Rotonda West, Fla., formerly of Northbrook, Ill., died Thursday, March 5, 2015. She was born Aug. 4, 1926. Leota is survived by her children, Pat (Jim) Hartman, Arthur III, Kevin (Janet), Craig, Daniel (Kelley) Bryan, and Katy (Steve); grandchildren, Andy, Owen, Christopher, Terra, Emilee, Erin, Connor, Learon, Teague and Sarah; and great-grandson, Quentin. She was preceded in death by her husband, Arthur; and sisters, Eleanor and Arline. A Memorial gathering will be held from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday, March 14, 2015, at the Lemon Bay Funeral Home in Englewood. She will be missed dearly by family and many friends. You may express your condolences to the family at www. lemonbayfh.com.NORTH PORT Bonnie Lea NegriBonnie Lea Negri, 67, beloved wife of Peter Negri, died Friday, March 6, 2015, after a lengthy battle with cancer. She was born in Oneonta, N.Y., the daughter of Gerald and Wanda Roberts. Bonnie graduated from Oneonta H.S. and worked 15 years at Amphenol as a tester. She went back to school and obtained an associate degree in nursing from the State College of Morrisville, N.Y., and was a registered nurse for many years. Bonnie enjoyed raising and riding horses, did some barrel racing and showed at the Otsego County Fair. She played softball, did some canoe racing and enjoyed gardening, going to the beach, camping, boating and taking cruises. Bonnie was a huge NASCAR fan, loved her dogs and enjoyed the holidays especially Halloween and Christmas. She is survived by her husband of 32 years; sister, Christy (Charles) Yafe; son, William Murphy; daughters, Heather (James) Cupelli, Rebecca Negri, Sarah Negri; and grandchildren, Arianna and Jenna Cupelli. She was preceded in death by her parents; and brother, Gary Roberts. To send condolences please visit www. farleyfuneralhome.com. Arrangements are by Farley Funeral Home in North Port, Fla.DESOTONo deaths were reported in DeSoto Monday. | OBITUARIES OBITUARY POLICY Obituaries are accepted from funeral homes only. There’s no charge for publishing an abbreviated death notice. Full obituaries and repeat death notices will be subject to an advertising charge. Obituaries must be received by 2 p.m. for Tuesday through Saturday publication. For Sunday publication deadline is noon on Saturday. For Monday publication deadline is noon on Sunday. In Loving Memories must be received by 2 p.m. for Tuesday through Friday publication. For Saturday through Monday publication deadline is noon on Friday. The American ag accompanying an obituary indicates a veteran of the U.S. Armed Forces. Please send emails to obituaries@sunletter.com. For more Words of Comfort, go to www.wordsofcomfort.net SARASOTA COUNTY — Sarasota County Supervisor of Elections Kathy Dent says she has no interest in being elected again — to anything. “I don’t know what I’m going to be doing, but I know it’s not going to be in the political arena,” she said Monday of her decision not to run for ofce again after her term ends in 2016. “I have no plans for another political ofce. I have a passion for elections, not politics.” But politics couldn’t be avoided in her 15year tenure. Dent, a Republican, rst took ofce in 2000 as all eyes were on Florida and words like “hanging chad” entered the nation’s vernacular. In 2006, Dent came under re for a larger undervote count for the 13th Congressional District seat. After a recount and legal wrangling, Republican Vern Buchanan was declared the winner over Democrat Christine Jennings by just 369 votes. Although Dent was never ofcially accused of malfeasance, the issue resurfaced during her subsequent bids for ofce. “It’s the nature of the job,” she said. “I wasn’t political . . . other people tried to suck me into the politics.” Dent was accused of more wrongdoing during former Sarasota County commissioner Jon Thaxon’s bid for her seat in 2012 including trying to sway voters in one election and the lack of a recount in a 2010 Charter Review Board election. None of the accusations were ever substantiated and Dent won in a landslide. Republican Party of Sarasota County Chairman Joe Gruters said Dent always stood up to the scrutiny. “In no way did she ever get sucked into the political ght. She was able to rise above it all,” he said. “In 2006, with Buchanan and Jennings, the whole country was waiting to see what happened. Her work stood up.” Thaxton, who said he had no intentions of running for the seat again, had nothing but good things to say about Dent Monday. “It can be a tough life in public service, sometimes it seems like a thankless job,” he said. “She stepped up and did a good job. I’m grateful for her service.”More work to be doneDent will serve out the rest of her term, which will include the 2016 presidential race and contests today for the Holiday Park and Recreation District in North Port. Each election comes with its own challenges. Sometimes, it’s just a matter of avoiding the appearance of impropriety. Today, for example, required the manual resetting of clocks on the machines that tally absentee ballots to account for last weekend’s time change. “If we don’t, it will look like we closed the polls at 6 p.m.,” she said. Despite the occasional trials and tribulations, Dent said she’s enjoyed her time in ofce and is proud of the work that was done. “The biggest accomplishment is we have run fair and free elections for the last 14 years. I feel very proud of that,” she said. “I’m the glass-ishalf-full type. Sometimes we have to make lemonade out of the lemons we’re given.” Gruters said the party doesn’t have a designated candidate for Dent’s position, but expects someone from her staff to step up. Dent says she doesn’t know who might run, but she has some words of wisdom for whoever steps into her shoes. “I would tell them not to take themselves too seriously,” she said.Email: cburton@sun-herald.comDent: Done with politics By CLINTON BURTONSARASOTA COUNTY EDITOR DENTJazz Society offers scholarshipsEach year, the Charlotte County Jazz Society affords seniors in the county’s three high schools the opportunity to apply for a number of scholarships ranging in value from $500 to $1,500. Each applicant must audition, which will be held this year on March 28 at the Cultural Center of Charlotte County, 2280 Aaron St., Port Charlotte. The deadline for applications is Saturday. The senior student must attend college in the fall, and must major or minor in a music eld or continue to play for a college band. The Charlotte County Jazz Society Scholarship is named after Bud Wagner, a former music educator in Charlotte County; and Ken and Darletta Nieuman, benefactors to the society. Students who might be interested are directed to contact their respective career counselors, band directors or director of guidance; or they may contact the chairman of the Scholarship Committee, Ennis Bisbano, at 1589 Navigator Road, Punta Gorda, FL 33983 or 941623-0619. They also can visit the CCJS website at www.ccjazz.org.Sunset Celebrations offeredThe second Friday of each month from November through March, the Peace River Wildlife Center, 3400 Ponce de Leon Parkway (at the end of West Marion Avenue), Punta Gorda, will have a wine and cheese reception at its facility after the center’s normal hours. Admission is by donation. Come watch a beautiful sunset over Charlotte Harbor while listening to the PRWC’s resident birds’ serenade. Future Sunset Celebrations include: 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Friday. For more information, call 941-637-3830.Bluegrass show, Slo-jam on tapThe Cultural Center of Charlotte County, 2280 Aaron St., Port Charlotte, will play host to a Bluegrass show at 1 p.m. the second Saturday of each month, through April, in the center’s theater, put on by the Southwest Florida Bluegrass Association. The next date is Saturday. Featured bands this month are Blue Cypress, Dixie Bluegrass Express and Blue Echo. Admission to the show is $10, or $5 with membership. (Memberships are $15 per year for individuals older than 18). Tickets may be purchased in advance or at the door. In addition to the show, there also will be a Bluegrass Slo-jam session at 10:30 a.m. in the gazebo to the right of the theater entrance. The Slo-jams are limited to musicians playing bluegrass instruments (guitar, ddle, dobro, mandolin, ve-string banjo and acoustic bass). There is no charge to participate in the Slo-jam. For more information, call 941-625-4175, ext. 221; or visit www.thecultural center.com. More infor mation also is available at www.southwest oridabluegrass.org, or contact Herb Washburn at 941-661-9175 or wash burnherb@fastmail.fm.Kids pier fishing tournament setPunta Gorda’s Downtown Bait & Tackle Shop at Laishley Park Marina, 120 Laishley Court, will sponsor an inaugural Kids Catch and Release Pier Fishing Tournament for children ages 3 through 12 from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday at the marina. Children will have an opportunity to become marine resource stewards by learning about water and sh habitat conservation, practicing ethical angling skills, and observing cur rent shing regulations, while having a fun shing experience. Tournament partners include Team Punta Gorda and the Charlotte Harbor Environmental Center. There is no charge for participants. Children must bring their own poles, and must be accompanied by an adult. Downtown Bait & Tackle will supply the live shrimp. The tournament will be followed by free food and drink, prizes, and a silent auction and rafe for adults. Awards will be given for the most sh caught within specic age groups. Each participant will receive a souvenir bag with pamphlets provided by the Charlotte Harbor National Estuary Program and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Preregister at the Downtown Bait & Tackle Shop, or call 941-6214190. Register the morning of March 14 before 9:30 a.m. | COMMUNITY NEWS BRIEFS LOCAL/REGIONAL NEWS adno=50478907 O O n the golf course, the ball O field, the grocery store or around town... we’re your neighbors. The meaning of a good neighbor is not only someone who is close by it’s someone you can always count on to be there.C C harlotte County has been C our home since 1969. We are a family owned funeral home with deep roots in our community. It gives us great pride to serve you... our neighbors. We look forward to serving this community for many years to come.C C ome see why so many of your C friends and neighbors made the switch to Larry Taylor Funeral and Cremation Service. C a r i n g N e i g h b o r C a r i n g asonlya N e i g h b o r can...CaringNeighbor L arry 2002-2014 and Cremation Services TAYLOR FUNERAL 1515 Tamiami Trail Punta Gorda 833-0600 www.Ltaylorfuneral.com Old Fashioned Service at a Price You Can Afford yi4r p T /.I"y .aras

PAGE 6

Our Town Page 6 C www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 LOCAL/REGIONAL NEWS Road improvements continueThe Florida Department of Transportation’s District One contractor, Guymann Construction Inc., is expanding fourlane U.S. 41 to six lanes from Enterprise Drive to Salford Boulevard in north Port Charlotte. This 3.6-mile project also includes making roadway drainage improvements, installing water and sewer lines, adding bike lanes and sidewalks, and replacing signals at Enterprise Drive, Toledo Blade Boulevard and South Cranberry/Cornelius boulevards. Motorists should expect the inside lanes to be closed between Collingswood and Toledo Blade boulevards, Warrington Boulevard and Longley Drive, and Dahlgren Avenue and Salford Boulevard during nighttime/overnight hours from 8:30 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday through Friday. Drivers should be aware of construction vehicles and equipment entering and exiting the roadway. The $31 million project is expected to finish in the spring of 2017. For more infor mation, visit www. swflroads.com.Jammers registration beginsThe Punta Gorda Police Department now is accepting registrations for its summer youth basketball league, Jammers. The Jammers youth basketball program has become one of the premier leagues in Charlotte County. The league — which is totally free to children — provides young players with uniforms, trophies and other surprises throughout the summer. PGPD officers are coaching eight teams this year. The basketball league is open to kids ages 10 through 13, and is available to the first 72 kids who register. A new addition to the league this year is the Jazzy Jammers, a pompom dance squad that will perform as a halftime show during the Jammers’ season. Jazzy Jammers is open to young ladies, ages 6 through 13, who would rather dance and cheer than play basketball. The Jazzy Jammers program will accept the first 20 participants who register, and also is free. To register, go to www. puntagordapolice.com. For more information about either program, contact PGPD Lt. Joe King at 941-575-5525 or at jking@pgorda.us.Garden club to meetThe next regular meeting of the Port Charlotte Garden Club will be at 9:30 a.m. Thursday at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 2565 Tamiami Trail, Port Charlotte. The public is welcome. Guest speaker Jean Evoy will discuss “Moth Madness.” For more information, call Sandi at 941-235-1224. | COMMUNITY | NEWS BRIEFS IN TIIFCLASS I FI E I)YOU CAN ....../Find a Pet./Find a Car./Find a Job./Find Garage Sales./Find A New Employee./Sell Your Home./Sell Your UnwantedMerchandise./Advertise YourBusiness or ServiceClassified -it's the reliablesource for theright resultsGo find us onFacebook!

PAGE 7

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net C Our Town Page 7 Look for a third crossword in the Sun Classified section. LOCAL/REGIONAL NEWS PUNTA GORDA ISLES — It wasn’t a very highspeed chase Sunday after noon, but the associated criminal charge is the same. Police were dispatched to PGI just before 4 p.m. because a man reported his ex-girlfriend was trying to commit burglary. En route, an ofcer saw the suspect — Rebecca Jean Anderson, 48 — ride a bicycle across West Marion Avenue onto Crescent Drive, the Punta Gorda Police report states. Anderson allegedly failed to stop for the ofcer’s siren, air horn and verbal commands he was shouting out the window. The ofcer noted in his report that Anderson “began weaving her bicycle in her lane and looking back at me, waving her arms around. She also appeared frustrated while screaming profanities.” Eventually, the ofcer drove ahead of the suspect and cut her off. When he got out and threatened to use his Taser, the bicyclist surrendered. The policeman said there was a cup on the bike containing “a strong vodka fruit drink.” Anderson was arrested on one felony count of eeing to elude and one count of assault on an ofcer, for allegedly trying to bite the ofcer who was putting on her seatbelt in the police car. Anderson was released from the Charlotte County Jail later Sunday on $7,500 bond.Cops: Girl hurt in DUI crashPORT CHARLOTTE — A local man has been charged with felony child neglect for allegedly driving drunk and crashing his pickup, while his young daughter was with him. Authorities around 7:30 p.m. Sunday responded to Vernon Avenue and Lambert Street and found a Toyota SR5 rolled onto its passenger side, according to a Charlotte County Sheriff’s report. Paul Russell Duxbury, 46, who was just a mile and a half from his home on Ennis Terrace, reportedly told the responding deputy he was angry after an argument with his ance, and the accident happened because he had taken a turn too quickly. Duxbury’s 12-year-old daughter was in the truck at the time of the wreck, the report shows, and she was “very scared.” The man had a bloody face and arms, and the young girl had cuts on her arms and legs, authorities said. Medical personnel treated them at the crash site. Duxbury allegedly failed eld sobriety tests and was arrested. More than four hours after the crash, Duxbury took a breath test at the Charlotte County Jail to determine blood alcohol content. He blew a .119 and a .123, authorities said. Florida’s legal limit is .08. In addition to child neglect, Duxbury was charged with DUI, DUI with damage to property and person, and DUI with a passenger younger than 16 years old. He was being held Monday on $30,000 bond. There were eight DUI arrests in Charlotte County over the weekend. The Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office reported the following arrests: Jessica Monica Burney, 28, 22000 block of Hernando Ave., Port Charlotte. Charge: habitually driving with a revoked license. Bond: $5,000. Frank Lane Coon Jr., 20, 3400 block of Normandy Drive, Port Charlotte. Charges: driving without a license, possession of marijuana with intent to sell and possession of drug paraphernalia. Bond: $22,500. Crystal Ann Criss, 43, 6000 block of Quince St., Punta Gorda. Charge: battery. Bond: $2,000. Nicole Serrika Gerkin, 29, 21500 block of Kenyon Ave., Port Charlotte. Charge: driving with a suspended license — third or subsequent offense, and violation of probation (original charge: giving a worthless check). Bond: none. Lolita Cecilia Gonzalez, 37, 700 block of N. Lee Ave., Arcadia. Charges: possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. Bond: $3,000. Thomas Earl Love, 29, 6000 block of Padula St., Punta Gorda. Charges: possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia and violation of probation. Bond: none. Manuel de Jesus MejiaHernandez, 21, of Moore Haven. Charge: driving without a license. He reached a plea deal and was sentenced to three days in jail. Michael Gerald Michener, 43, of New Port Richey. Charge: driving with a suspended or revoked license. Bond: $5,000. Alexander Chadbournd Rice, 16, 2200 block of Terracina St., Venice. Charges: possession of marijuana with intent to sell, possession of a controlled substance without a prescription and possession of drug paraphernalia. He was released to a parent or guardian. James Sandridge, 80, 100 block of Albatross Road, Rotonda West. Charge: battery on a person 65years or older. Bond: $3,500. Kelly Ann Grunert, 29, 4700 block of Pan American Blvd., North Port. Charges: DUI with damage to property and/or person, leaving the scene of a crash with injuries and violation of probation. Bond: none. Ashley Mae-Marie Harper, 28, 2100 block of Tinker St., Port Charlotte. Charges: petty theft and violation of probation (original charge: petty theft). Bond: none. Katarina Dee Lecorps, 27, 22100 block of Bahama Lane, Punta Gorda. Charge: criminal mischief. Bond: $2,500. Dennis Richard Theriault, 46, of Waterford Drive, Englewood. Charge: DUI and possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana. Bond: $6,000. — Compiled by Adam KregerReport: Woman flees on bike | POLICE BEATThe information for Police Beat is gathered from police, sheriff’s office, Florida Highway Patrol, jail and fire records. Not every arrest leads to a conviction and guilt or innocence is determined by the court system.Pavement resurfacing scheduledBeginning the week of March 16 through March 31 (weather and equipment operations permitting), pavement resurfacing is scheduled on the following roadways: Burnt Store Meadows: North Ficus Tree, from Royal Poinciana to the cul-desac; Vinca Rosea — culde-sac to cul-de-sac; North Moss Rose, from Royal Poinciana to the cul-de-sac; and Yucca, from South Blue Sage to the cul-de-sac. Also included are various other city of Punta Gorda streets: Milus Street, from Marion to Ida avenues; West Grace Street, from U.S. 41 South to Berry Street; West Helen Street, from southbound U.S. 41 to West William Street; and Marion Avenue, from Breakers Court to west of the Bal Harbor intersection. Each road will be open to local traffic only. Detours and impacts to traffic are to be anticipated. While work is performed, residents and visitors are asked to allow a little extra time, added patience and safety in their travels within work areas. Motorists are encouraged to drive with extreme caution, and to be alert for workers within the right of way. Hours of operation will be between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. For more information on this project, contact Linda Sposito, project manager, at 941-575-5050.Bake sales benefit homeless coalitionTeam Charlotte Ruby, which is in the running for the 5th annual Derby benefiting the Homeless Coalition of Charlotte County, will hold bake sales 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday, at the Peachland and Punta Gorda offices of Charlotte State Bank & Trust. The Peachland office is located at 24163 Peachland Blvd., the Punta Gorda office at 2331 Tamiami Trail. Team Charlotte Ruby is primarily sponsored by the bank and Ruby Tuesday restaurant in Port Charlotte. Polly Johnson, who manages the bank’s Peachland office and is a Homeless Coalition director, is a member of the team. The coalition’s Kentucky Derby-themed fundraising campaign challenges supporters and volunteers to raise money through events and activities held throughout the county. The campaign raises vital operating funds to support the services and programs provided by the Charlotte County Homeless Coalition. For additional information on the bake sales, call the Peachland office at 941-627-0038 or the Punta Gorda office at 941-639-2511. For more on the Homeless Coalition, visit www. cchomelesscoalition. org.University women to meetThe Punta Gorda/Port Charlotte Branch of the American Association of University Women will meet from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday at the Charlotte Harbor Yacht Club, 4400 Lister St., Port Charlotte. The guest speaker will be Martha Bireda, founder and director of the Blanchard House Museum of African American History and Culture of Charlotte County. She will talk about women involved in espionage during the Civil War; and the Bailey Brothers, for whom the Punta Gorda Airport terminal is named. Membership is open to anyone holding an associate, bachelor or higher degree from a regionally accredited college or university, but the PG/PC branch also offers a Friends of AAUW membership for those who support the organization’s mission but do not have a degree. Anyone interested in learning more about AAUW should contact president Carolyn Brox at 941-505-1944. | COMMUNITY NEWS BRIEFS ABOUT-FACE by Billie TruittEdited by Stanley Newmanwww.stanxwords.comACROSS 63 Keep for later 10 Bone-dry 38 Woman's1 Garbanzo or 64 Itinerary 11 Perform a tune summer frocklima 65 Author unknown: 12 Overfill 39 So-so, as a film5 Police dept. Abbr. 14 Get one's reviewalerts 66 Venetian blind strength back 40 Comedian's9 Quarterback's strip 21 Baby goat jokethrow 67 Small quarrel 22 Once around 45 Capital of13 Intense the track 44 Acrossdevotion DOWN 26 Cube rolled in 46 Pie mode15 Big family 1 Cop's ID a casino 47 Gave lunch to16 Diva's solo 2 Wrong move 27 Easy run 49 Tropical jam fruit17 Took the car 3 Sun-dried brick 28 Frog's relative 50 Beginning18 Big brass horn 4 _ Scotia, 29 Boundary 51 Intensify,19 Half a quart Canada 30 Swamp stalk informally20 Renege 5 Heed, as 31 Advise 52 River mouth23 Before, in advice strongly 53 So farpoetry 6 Drop (down), 32 Advertising sign 54 "Bye-bye!"24 Pig's sound as cash gas 55 "Once a25 Golf-score 7 "Ali and the 33 Prime-time time . . standard Forty Thieves" family viewing 56 Overhaul26 Netflix delivery 8 More lively rating 57 Spoken aloud27 Racetrack 9 Daily 34 Patch up 58 Stock-marketinformant publications 35 French friend debuts, for short31 Loosen, aslaces 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 11234 Foal's mother 13 14 15 1636 Poetic tribute37 Loan for 17 18 19home-owningseniors 20 z1 2241 Republicans, 23 24 25for short42 Military group 26 27 28 29 3043 Walked through 31 32 33 34 135 36water44 Part of 37 38 39 40Great Britain47 Heavy mist 41 42 a348 Ancient 44 45 46 4749 Hits the road51 Tooth docs ' org. 48 49 50 51 52 5354 Order-fillingintervals 54 55 56 57 5859 Imitated ss 60 6160 Chapters ofhistory 62 63 6461 Try for a job 65 66 6762 CommotionCREATORS SYNDICATE ID2015 STANLEY NEWMAN STANXWORDS*AOL.COM 3/10/15..............................................Answer to previous puzzleMAP STASH O G L EIC_AVE A R DO R FROMALOT L I ON'S F EATC O M E R ' S E A B O D E DAR NS _OF T O N BA E H I TPU LSE O M IT R O D ER T_EAjFJE B E T R I NADDS AF I N M N O TYOGA MAT SPASM SL I A R L A_T NIM A I Ds B EG I N N E R SEURNS T O T:A L R I ES I G H O R B I T RAP THASH TEENS SSE3/10/15Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword PuzzleEdited by Rich Norris and Joyce LewisACROSS 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 131 Cavern effect5 Cornfield call 14 15 168 "Frozen" studio 17 a 1914 Amorphousmass 20 21 2215 "Say again?"16 Mercedes-Benz 23 24 25 26 127 126sedan line17 Disapproving 29 31 32ces from338bleacher "birds" 333_3018 Prefix with meter 40 41 4219 "I do" setting20 *Omental 3 45 46flower withclustered blooms 47 48 4923 Wall St. index24 Steeped brew 50 51 52 53 54 55 5625 Badlands bovine 57 56 59 6029 "Green Eggs andHam" guy 161 162 163 64 6531 Marshmallow-filled snack 66 67 6833 "I do"36 *Blab about 69 70 71one's romanticlife By John Lampkin 3/10/1539 Brainchild 70 1930s N.L. home Monday's Puzzle Solved41 "Dancing With run king Melthe Stars" move 71 avis K N I T S B U S C H J E W42 Law school ROC HE I G L 0 0 AXEnewbie DOWN E 43 'Luxury car until 1 Flows back CAL I PER C O M P A S Sthe 1930s 2 Kids' party46 Like deadpan performer LOA R E N E Ehumor 3 Twaddle S L I P _plIJVIIIOjp E47 Bringing up the 4 Think constantly SAL N S E C T U T Urear about something E L E C T G I N C S T A R48 Tail movement 5 Food on the trail A v E R Allllllllllllllll P O O H I S 050 "Speak up!" 6 Review of books?51 Had a meal 7 Unbroken M A K E S T H E G B A D E54 Comment from 8 Tenth: Pref. PORES I I IFido 9 Crane who fled S W E E P E A U IN N A M E D57 *Former PBS the Headless I R K S A V I N G S B A N Kscience show Horseman ZEE U TIE I I i A L L I Nwith a fruit in its 10 Hit very hard END PYREX WO0 D Ytitle logo 11 Snooze61 African desert 12 Peoria-to02015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 3110/1564 Beat it Cincinnati dir. 33 "Goodness me!" 49 Burrowing65 Body support for 13 French 34 Twin Cities rodentthe end of 57designer's initials suburb 52 Sculpted figureAcross, in a 21 Shipbuilding 35 Like a run-down 53 Put into lawSwiss folk tale wood motel 55 "The Marriage ofsuggested by the 22 Hedy of 37 Go after, as a Figaro," e.g.ends of the Hollywood mosquito 56 Knackanswers to 26 Use up cash 38 Elton John's title 58 Rolls of moneystarred clues 27 Persian Gulf ship 40 Linked while 59 Agitated state66 Online form entry 28 Nice _: prude walking, as 60 Funny Dame67 _-fi 30 Teeny parasites friends 61 Big , California68 Ireland, in poetry 32 At the minimum 44 Circle of friends 62 Hearth remains69 Sonnet features setting 45 H20, to a toddler 63 "Yo!"

PAGE 8

Our Town Page 8 C www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 Report exposes abuse by policeEditor: Well, it looks like the chickens have come home to roost where the Ferguson Police Department is concerned. The DOJ released its ndings and they found a police department not only targeting minorities, but literally using them as an ATM machine. Not a big surprise to me, I wrote an op-ed quite a while ago talking about the incredibly high arrests and ticketing in relation to the population. It was pretty obvious if anyone bothered to look at it. There will be those in this community who will criticize the Justice Department, but they will be wrong. When the police work in concert with the judges and lawyers to use the police as a revenue source it forms a breakdown in trust. Ferguson is the worst example of bad policing in a country that sees more and more bad policing every single day. This stuff is not in hiding any more, cellphones and hand-held video are bringing new light to a lot of age-old complaints. Robert Covert Port CharlotteTurning country over to religious minorityEditor: You may have read about New York City adding two Muslim holidays to the school system calendar. And, you might have given a eeting thought to “there goes de Blasio again,” but you set it aside as not an issue that concerns us — yet. I looked up the NYC Public School’s 2014-2015 calendar. In September, there are two days off for Rosh Hashanah. The late December-early January break that has always been called a Christmas break is now “winter break.” There are absolutely no days off identied as religious except Rosh Hashanah. But, going forward, NYC schools will observe two Jewish holidays and two Muslim holidays. That is it. No Buddhist or Tao holidays, in spite of a large Asian population. No Greek Orthodox holidays. No Baha’i holidays. No Native American holidays. Folks, if you can’t see that we are turning our country over to the Muslims, then we are surely lost.Carolyn M. Brown EnglewoodTroubled by government secretsEditor: The secrecy of government on all levels troubles me. Locally, if you want details on a subject or action, much of it is available — at a price (and a steep one at that). Sure we have a Sunshine Law that requires meetings to be open to the public. But if you want to speak, you can have three minutes. And if you want things like copies of email communications, transcripts, or agreements and contracts, the cost is prohibitive. Before an issue or proposal even reaches the view of the public, staff has been working on it and fashioning recommendations. Those actions are not conducted in public forums. Every proposal should include two pieces of infor mation, whose idea was this? Where did it get its start? In a culture where most answers can be gleaned by following the money, that information should be basic public knowledge. For example, the IMPAC building. Whose idea was it to purchase it? And let’s see the documentation. That seems pretty simple to me. And it certainly seems like the public has a right to know, without paying thousands of dollars. Jean Arcamone EnglewoodTesting worked well in the 1950sEditor: In the past weeks, Florida’s school testing has been front and center. From town halls, to editorials, to guest columns by the superintendent people have expressed many opinions. I come down on the side of far too many tests and for simpler tests. I graduated from a high school in 1953 in a class of 43. During our high school years we had two different types of tests: those written by the teacher and one standard test required by the state. We had pop quizzes, which were given without notice. We had tests at the end of a chapter and if the chapters were grouped by units tests were announced at those points. We had an exam on each subject at the end of the semester. All tests were written by the teacher. Questions could be true/false, ll-in-the-blank or multiple choice and/or essay. Except for a pop quiz, most questions were essay type and correct spelling, punctuation and grammar were graded along with the correct answer. Sometime in the late spring, we took the California Achievement Test. This was not announced in advance and all grades took the test at the same time. This was an all-day affair. Well, after 62 years, how did this system fare for us? Half the boys graduated from college, one went on to a Ph.D. and two for a master’s. About a third of the girls graduated from college, two with master’s. There is much more positive achievement, but that is all 250 words allows.Peter Durham Punta GordaSpirit of openness ignored by boardEditor: While sitting in the Charlotte County Commission’s Feb. 24 meeting, I heard Public Hearing #2 was canceled, and apparently, a brand new public hearing #3 was added at the last minute. Later, I checked online and found out it was added the day before. This was not included on the agenda that was presented to me at the meeting location. The public counts on this agenda being correct and true. There was barely even an explanation of this new public hearing regarding MSBUs, added less than 24 hours in advance, but not printed for us. It even seemed rushed by commissioners. Isn’t there supposed to be some kind of notice for public hearings? Even though the Sunshine Law does not prohibit a board from adding topics to the agenda of a regularly noticed meeting, the Attorney General’s Ofce has advised boards to postpone formal action on any added items that are controversial. It may not be mandated that a public hearing be noticed, but the real question is why would the county commissioners do this, knowing how controversial MSBUs are and how much they affect the taxpayers? What wool have they pulled over our eyes this time? Charlotte County is, by far, the highest MSBU-taxed county in the state. The people of Charlotte County want to know what is going on with MSBUs. No public hearing or for that matter, anything else, should be handled the way this was done, most certainly not something dealing with MSBUs.Dave Kesselring Port CharlotteMore lies from administrationEditor: When this hapless administration in Washington sits back and criticizes Prime Minister Netanyahu’s speech, they should think back to Sept. 11, 2001, and the fact that both of the planes went into the north and south towers of the World Trade Center, killing 2,996 people and causing $10 billion of infrastructure damage. But what went under every one’s radar was the fact that both planes ew down the Hudson River right past both of Con Edison’s Indian Point nuclear reactors. If both of those planes had own into those reactors the result would be light years worse than Chernobyl and for sure Rockland and Westchester counties in New York would more than likely be uninhabitable as we speak. So to my hapless friends in Washington, you had better do a retake on Mr. Netanyahu’s speech and stop following this administration’s every step. We are being lied to about more than just the Affordable Care Act.Richard Ibsen Punta GordaEncourage sciences in our schoolsEditor: Society is losing young scientists because of lacking government funding. We, as a society, are losing them in middle schools and high schools where science is being treated as being more challenging for teachers and where students are often offered an easier path toward graduation via other subjects. Those students who are inclined to join in and attack difcult math and science courses head-on are becoming more of an exception and are considered nerdy and uncool, like myself, by many. This now has penetrated all sections of our economy long term.Georey T. Wand Port CharlotteSimple advice: Don’t get shingles!Editor: It is now 3:45 on a Thursday morning and I have been awake since 1:30 a.m. Why? Shingles pain! Shingles is the most painful experience of my 74 years of life. I do not exaggerate! My shingles rash is on my front right side to my middle back. If you have never had this most painful disease but had chicken pox, the shingles virus is within your body and may become active at any time. Folks, you do not want this most uncomfortable, painful disease, I kid you not. I urge you to get the antishingles shot ASAP. I wish that I had. There is no cure, but pain can be eased with certain prescription medications. That helped, but the pain is still, at times, unbearable. I even tried natural recommendations without any relief. My advice is simple, “Don’t get the shingles.”Lawrence A. Mould Port Charlotte OUR VIEW LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Letters are welcome on virtually any subject, but we do have some rules. Please keep them to less than 250 words. Letters will be edited to length as well as for grammar and spelling. All letters must be signed with full name — not initials. An address and telephone number must be included. The phone number and address are not for publication, but must be provided. Due to the number of letters received, we are able to run only one letter per person per month. The Letters to the Editor section is designed as a public forum for community discourse, and the opinions and statements made in letters are solely those of the individual writers. The newspaper takes no responsibility for the content of these letters. Please send or bring correspondence to the Sun, Letters to the Editor, 23170 Harborview Road, Charlotte Harbor, FL 33980, or fax to 941-629-2085. Readers with access to the Internet may email Letters to the Editor at letters@sun-herald.com. HOW TO SUBMIT A LETTER TO THE EDITOREmail letters to letters@sun-herald.comChairman — Derek Dunn-Rankin Publisher — David Dunn-Rankin Executive Editor — Chris Porter Editorial page editor — Brian Gleason Editorial writer — Stephen Baumann Editor — John Hackworth V IEWPOINT Crowds grow on DearbornThursday mornings in June, you’d be lucky to nd a half-dozen cars traveling down Dearborn Street at any given moment. January, February and March is another matter altogether. Our snowbirds are here, the housing and hotels developments are full and people are out enjoying the benets of Southwest Florida, even on an overcast day. (It sure beats ) One undeniable attraction for residents and visitors is the Englewood Farmer’s Market, which operates 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursdays. An estimated 6,000-7,000 people have turned out during the past few weeks. Sarasota County’s new parking lot on Green Street is packed. Other parking spaces are taken. A large lot on private property down the block at the corner of West Dearborn Street and South McCall Road now lls with cars too. Apparently, visitors have no problem strolling a few blocks down-street to enjoy the diverse offerings of an outdoor market. The market is actually two organizations linked by proximity. On the south side of Dearborn in the county-owned Pioneer Park is the original, nonprot Englewood Farmer’s Market. Across the street in a large private lot is the Dearborn Farmers Market, organized by the property owner. They look the same and act the same. Vendors may not welcome the competition — one side of the street to the other — but it’s really a bonus for all, creating an outdoor mega-mall of food, crafts and locally produced goods. It certainly helps draw the crowds. This time of year — Thursdays especially — its easy to imagine the old Englewood village becoming the thriving shopping and restaurant attraction envisioned when a community redevelopment agency was established in 1999 and main street rejuvenation commenced. Yes, it’s taken awhile. And it’s taken something like the Farmer’s Market — a nonprot spawned by volunteers — to bring the big crowds on a regular basis. But it’s happening.CCU audit finds many areas for improvementCharlotte County Utilities has long been a source of aggravation for county ofcials and residents, dating back to its creation with the botched 1991 acquisition of General Development Utilities from the bankrupt developer of Port Charlotte. More recently, CCU has been at the center of a series of lawsuits over the acquisition of a Rotonda utility that have cost the county millions of dollars in damages. In September, the Charlotte County Commission hired management consultant KPMG for $250,000 to perform an organizational and operational audit of the utility. The auditors looked at dayto-day procedures, infrastructure, productivity, internal controls, scal sustainability, employee retention and customer satisfaction. Today KPMG representatives will make 42 recommendations for improving CCU operations and management, including 12 it char acterizes as having “high potential impact to CCU future operations and success.” It identied areas of high risk in three categories, includ ing customer service and billing and capital project governance. The latter was deemed a higher risk in areas of operational efciency, scal sustainability and infrastructure. Forty-two recommendations seem to suggest widespread operational problems at CCU, but we’ll know more details when KPMG makes its presentation today. At the very least, the report afrms the commission’s decision to commission the audit. We look forward to seeing the county incor porate recommendations aimed at improving service and sustainability. The changes will make CCU both work better for customers and be a better place to work. 2o5 -ineolaI DdN'T %aNT To LoK e%wIj.. ki k%bWo. coCaTeRToW A60 ? KI? youR CAMPd1GNCotoN NDeR

PAGE 9

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net C Our Town Page 9 On Jan. 26, Flor ida Education Commissioner Pam Stewart sent a letter to Sen. Don Gaetz in response to several questions he asked of her during a legislative committee hearing ear lier in January. I believe the commissioner’s information in this letter is informative for our parents and community members. So, I’m going to present much of the letter, then I’ll add some comments at the end. Dear President Gaetz: This response ad dresses the questions pertaining to “opt out.” Your questions are italicized with my responses beneath them. 1) Under what circumstances is it lawful for students to be exempted from either statewide, standardized assessments or state-required local assessments? Under what circumstances is it lawful for students to be exempted from district-mandated, district-selected assessments? Section 1008.22(3), F.S., states, “Participation in the assessment program is mandatory for all school districts and all students attending public schools.” Section 1008.212, F.S., provides for an extraordinary exemption for a student “for whom the individual education plan team determines is prevented by a circumstance or condition from physically demonstrating the mastery of skills that have been acquired and are measured by the statewide, standardized assessment, a statewide standardized end-ofcourse assessment, or an alternate assessment.” This decision must include the parent and must be submitted to the district superintendent not later than 60 days before the current year’s assessment administration. Specic documentation must be provided to the district superintendent as listed in the law. The district superintendent then submits this evidence to the commissioner of education, who shall grant or deny the exemption. A child with a medical complexity may be exempt if the child’s health concerns meet the denition of medical complexity in the section. Exemptions from local assessments, including state-required local assessments and district mandated, district-selected assessments, are, like all decisions related to these assessments, a local school board responsibility. 2) What differences exist in lawful exemptions between those exemptions pertaining to statewide, standardized assessments, state-required local assessments, and any exemptions from district-selected assessments which are not in response to state mandates? There is no state or legislative policy that guides local exemptions from local assessments. 3) What pupil progression or other consequences, if any, will apply to students if they or their parents “opt out” of statewide, standardized assessments or local assessments? For example, could choosing not to participate in required assessments impact a student’s promotion to the next grade level, affect the student’s ability to earn or impact the student’s grade point average? If so, how would those consequences compare between students that “opt out” and their colleagues that participate in the assessments? If students were to opt out, students and parents would not know whether students have mastered the subject content in their courses. If the assessment is the Grade 10 English language arts assessment or Algebra I assessment, the student would need to earn a passing score on the SAT, ACT or PERT, as appropriate, to graduate from high school. In addition, there are several risks for a student who does not participate in other required assessments. Regarding the statewide end-of-course assessments (biology, U.S. history, algebra I, geometry, algebra II, and civics), results from these assessments constitute 30 percent of a student’s course grade. Failing to take the assessment will lower the student’s course grade, negatively impacting the student’s grade point average, which also affects: high school graduation and receipt of a standard diploma; local student progression to the next grade level; athletic and other extracurricular eligibility; scholarship eligibility, including Bright Futures; university and military admissions eligibility; and class ranking. How assessments factor into student outcomes such as pupil progression or course grades is a local decision. Clearly, there are potential remedial course implications for students who opt out of state or local assessments. Through the information we are collecting for the test investigation, districts have indicated that they have local policies that could affect students in one or more ways listed here. 4) What professional practices or other consequences, if any, may apply to educators if they encourage, allow, or fail to report “opt out” practices or instances? What obligations do educators have to inform their district and the department of “opt out” practices or instances about which they are aware? Each situation would have to be reviewed based upon the actions or non-actions of the certied educator and how those actions impact the student, the public, and/or the profession. I do believe the laws, rules and precedents established by prior legal decisions and/or orders establish a foundation to support that certain willful opt-out behaviors may warrant disciplinary action against an educator’s certicate. As for obligations to report, the department would consider an educator’s refusal to administer statutorily required assessments as a potential violation of established standards of conduct that should be reported to the department. 5) What funding consequences, if any, will apply to schools or districts if they encourage, allow, or fail to report “opt out” practices or instances? What obligations do schools and districts have to inform the department of “opt out” practices or instances about which they are aware? To what extent does the department consider allowing or failing to report “opt out” practices or instances to be a test integrity or security issue? The state Board of Education may legally take the following actions: Withhold state funds. Declare the district ineligible for competitive grants. Require reporting until the district complies. Report to the legislature that the district is unwilling to comply with the law. The district’s for feiture of eligibility for various federal grants based on accountability. As constitutional ofcers, school board members and elected district superintendents may face suspension by the governor and removal by the Senate. A school in a district that opts out of testing also faces: not receiving a school grade; loss of school recognition funds and disciplinary charges for certied instructional personnel. If students were to be present during the test but choose not to participate, this would not pose a risk to test security as long as these students do not interfere with the rights of other students who are testing. Regarding the question of test integrity, opting out may have an impact on the ability to inter pret the test results in a meaningful way. This would affect not only same-year comparisons, but also year-to-year comparisons as well. 6) What written, formal guidance is the department providing of all consequences associated with assessment “opt out” or non-participation practices or instances? State law requires students to participate in the state assessment system; therefore, there is no opt-out clause or process for students to opt out or for parents to opt out their children. The department, when asked questions by parents, district ofcials, and other constituents related to opting out, has cited section 1008.22(3), F.S., which states, “Participation in the assessment program is mandatory for all school districts and all students attending public schools ” Florida’s statewide assessment system supports instruction and student learning of the Florida Standards. It helps Florida determine whether the goals of the education system are being met through student, school and district accountability systems. Assessments help Floridians deter mine whether we have equipped our students with the knowledge and skills they need to be ready for careers and college-level coursewor k. Pam Stewart In conclusion, my encouragement to any parent considering opting out is to put your rst efforts into changing the current laws prior to making the nal decision. I encourage you to contact our local legislative team and several key legislators and encourage them to change the existing laws regarding high-stakes testing, progress monitoring testing and nal exams to be used for teacher performance pay. It is my belief that we do not need to test our students every year in language arts and math in grades 3 through 10. None of the world-class school systems assess their students every year with a high-stakes test. Douglas Whittaker is the superintendent of schools for Charlotte County. Pam Stewart is the state commissioner of education. To read the full text of Pam Stewart’s letter, go to www. yourcharlotteschools.net, click on For Media, Effects of District Opting Out of Statewide, and look for Opt Out Info Links.State law, policy and testing ‘opt-out’ questions Douglas Whittaker VIEWPOINT SAVE LIVES. GIVE BLOOD . Looking for a Friend? Find him in the Classifieds R e a d R e a d Read W a t e r L i n e W a t e r L i n e Wa t erLine E v e r y E v e r y Every T h u r s d a y T h u r s d a y Thursday o n l y i n o n l y i n onl y in t h e t h e the G e t G e t Get H o o k e d ! H o o k e d ! Hooked! adno=50471075 adno=50477838 Monday Friday 10 a.m. 6 p.m.; Saturday 10:30 4 p.m. W ESTCHESTER G OLD & D IAMONDS 4200-F TAMIAMI TRAIL, PORT CHARLOTTE (BEHIND ABC LIQUORS) 625-0666 B U Y I N G BUYINGG O L D , S I L V E R , GOLD, SILVER, D I A M O N D S DIAMONDS & C O I N S . & COINS. NASIR KHALIDI, M.D. NEUROLOGY ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY LECTROMYOGRAPHY Headache/Sleep Problems Pain Diagnosis Face/Neck/Arm/Leg Numbness or Tingling Arms and Legs Loss of Memory or Concentration Most Insurances Accepted Harbor Professional Centre 3420 TAMIAMI TRAIL SUITE 3 PORT CHARLOTTE, FLORIDA 941-629-2111 Please visit us at www.khalidi.net adno=50481095 Now there’s no excuse for you and your family not tobenefit from the advantages of a Revocable Living Trust. Especially if you own your own home or condo. “The hiring of a lawyer is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advertisement. Before you decide, ask me to send you free written information about my qualification and experience.” Affordable Living Trusts Mr. Schwartz’s qualifications Include: Graduate of Univ. of Florida College of Law w/honors. Graduated Cum Laude from Florida State University. National Speaker on Estate & Tax Planning Single Person $ 295 Married Couple $ 395 Robert D. Schwartz Attorney At Law Certified Public Accountant Toll Free 1-866-34TRUST(348-7878) Plus Additional Incidental Cost 18245 Paulson Dr. Suite 107 Port Charlotte, FL 33954 5654 Marquesas Cir. Sarasota, FL 34233 Available by appointment adno=50477477 IL'2 1 ............................................................. ((11) I AMOHII) SCOUHSOJvyL ,' ' . P. , Vy,SUNI-S ItNEWSPAPERSC-IvMIN 7rrJ VU Charlotte Sunrrral{Da ul=mss?tom; oIFNIRmdEVWF. 1 ' 06,1 . I'1 1 r.on & fit l I , ,Yl ' '00 Don't forget to take us with you! S1J1/'T TNVRead the SUN-online for orrlv $3s.L. NEWSPAPERSAmerica's Rf_ ti T (aimmlinin RuvSU INE\VSPAPELRS To sign up 941.206.1300 or 877.818.6204 -C..notb. I.-don ,Phwss,tp.Mx.tabklsorklndies.

PAGE 10

Our Town Page 10 C www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 LOCAL/REGIONAL NEWS Future brides and grooms gather at wedding expo Left: Seventeen-yearold Mariah Vega walks the runway during the annual wedding fashion show. Hand on hip, 3-year-old Zaley Skinner gives a little wave to the audience as she completes her walk on the runway. Left: Sixteen-year-old Shawn Wasyluk models one of the many men’s formalwear outts from Charlotte Bridal. Above: Flowers from the North Port Natural Florist caught the attention of engaged couple Katelynn Pierre and William Rolfson. Cheryl Van Ande, Rene Keller-Green, Darlene Celentano and Monica Gregory sample appetizers. Below: Matthew Morningstar and Christine Lamoreaux admire the wedding gowns on display from Charlotte Bridal. Left: Hair and makeup for the fashion show was done by Amanda Sauceman, Tyler Thompson, Christina Dominey and Karla Rogers from Turning Heads in Charlotte Harbor. Above: Volunteer models pose prior to the start of the annual Wedding Expo at the Charlotte Harbor Event and Conference Center on Sunday. Above: Charlotte Bridal fashion models. Above: Bride-to-be Mariah Phillips toasts her upcoming October wedding with Wade Beasley from Star Limo, who was giving away glasses of champagne to those over 21.SUN PHOTOS BY BETSY WILLIAMSLeft: Shayna Halladay and Patrick Hackney attended the Southwest Wedding and Event Expo held Sunday at the Charlotte Harbor Event and Conference Center in Punta Gorda. adno=50374384 www.yoursun.com Directory Carriers or Call Richard today at 941-206-1310 Route work pays for ourfamily activities.qj '111Earn up to $300 per week, part time.Work approximately two to three hours per day (slightlylonger on Sundays) as a home delivery distributor duringthe morning hours of 2:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m.Charlotte SuniAn Fdition of The Sun

PAGE 11

www.sunnewspapers.net TUESDAY MARCH 10, 2015 T he Wire INSIDE The Dow Jones industrial average gained 138.94 points, or 0.8 percent, to 17,995.72. — Page 6 — US stock indexes climb The Irish Setter died Friday after returning to his home in Belgium from the Crufts show in Birmingham, England. — Page 2 —Showdog killed by poisoned meat STATE NATIONAL WORLD BUSINESS WEATHER 1. Chad, Niger troops attack Boko Haram This is the largest international push to defeat Nigeria’s Islamic extremists. See page 1.2. U. Oklahoma severs ties with frat over racist video The video shows several Sigma Alpha Epsilon members partici pating in a chant that includes a racial slur and references lynching. See page 1.3. Credit agencies approve changes The major revamp sought by consumer advocates will make it easier to challenge credit reports. See page 1.4. Dozens hurt as train slams into tractor-trailer in N.C. It’s the latest of a number of recent crashes at railroad crossings in the U.S. See page 2.5. FPL files to reduce customer rates If approved by the PSC, a typical 1,000-kilowatt-hour bill would decrease by $3 a month. See page 8.6. ‘It’s uh climate you-know-what.’ State environmental officials have been directed not to use the words “climate change” in their communications. See page 1.7. Toddler improving after 14 hours inverted in car in river Rescuers heard a woman’s voice asking softly for help. They found a 25-year-old woman dead in the front seat. See page 2. 8. 100 start trek to Montgomery, Ala. The group is retracing the historic steps taken by Selma demonstra tors 50 years ago. See page 2.9. Co-creator of ‘The Simpsons’ dies at 59 Sam Simon, who had cancer, left the TV show after its fourth season, then channeled much of his personal fortune into social causes. See page 2.10. Two US tourists face charges for damaging Colosseum The two women in their 20s allegedly carved their names into the historic Roman structure. See page 2.10 things to knowWASHINGTON — Maybe if nobody says it, it won’t happen. That appears to be the policy of Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s administration, according to a report from the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting that suggests state environmental officials were directed not to use the term “climate change” after the Republican took office in 2011. “We were told not to use the terms ‘climate change,’ ‘global warming’ or ‘sustainability,’” said Christopher Byrd, an attorney for the Department of Environmental Protection from 2008 to 2013. “That message was communicated to me and my colleagues by our superiors in the Office of General Counsel.” Kristina Trotta, another former employee of the DEP, told the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting that she and her colleagues were told not to use the terms “climate change” or “global warming,” or, more broadly, “we were told that we were not allowed to discuss anything that was not a true fact.” The DEP’s press secretary told FCIR that the department “does not have a policy on this,” and Climate-change muzzle?By ALEXANDRA JAFFECNN WRITERFlorida officials directed to not use words ‘climate change’ CLIMATE | 4 AP PHOTOA woman walks along a wet sidewalk lined with melting snow in Boston, Monday. Ding, dong, the drift is dead. Well, not quite yet, but spring is just around the corner — and all those towering snowbanks already are starting to shrink. For winter-weary New Englanders, The Big Melt can’t come soon enough. See the story on page 2.Warmer weather in Northeast NORMAN, Okla. — The president of the University of Oklahoma severed the school’s ties with a national fraternity on Monday and ordered that its on-campus house be shuttered after several members took part in a racist chant caught on video. President David Boren said he was sickened and couldn’t eat or sleep after learning about the video Sunday afternoon. The video, which was posted online, shows several people on a bus participating in a chant that included a racial slur, referenced lynching and indicated black students would never be admitted to OU’s chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The Oklahoma football team decided to protest rather than practice on Monday. At the team’s indoor practice facility, coach Bob Stoops led the way as players, joined by athletic director Joe Castiglione, walked arm-inarm, wearing black. Boren attended a predawn rally organized by students and lambasted those fraternity members as “disgraceful” and called their behavior “reprehensible.” He said the university was looking into a range of punishment, including expulsion. “This is not who we are,” Boren said at a midday news conference. “I’d be glad if they left. I might even pay the bus fare for them.” National leaders of Sigma Fraternity’s racist chant sparks outrageBy SEAN MURPHYASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER AP PHOTOStudents at the University of Oklahoma protest racist comments made by a fraternity on Monday in Norman, Okla. RACIST | 4 N’DJAMENA, Chad — Soldiers from Chad and Niger launched the largest international push to defeat Nigeria’s Islamic extremists whose war has spilled over into neighbor ing countries, ofcials and witnesses said Monday. Chad’s president has warned that the leader of Boko Haram must surrender or be killed. At least 200 vehicles full Chad and Niger troops attack Nigeria’s Boko Haram By KRISTA LARSONASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERBOKO | 4 AP PHOTOChadian troops participate in the closing ceremony of operation Flintlock in an army base in N’djamena, Chad, Monday. NEW YORK — The three largest creditreporting agencies will change the way they handle records in a major revamp long sought by consumer advocates. People who contest items in their credit reports will receive additional information concerning those disputes, including instructions on what they can do if they don’t like the answer they get. In a bid to increase accuracy, medical debts won’t be reported until after a 180-day waiting period to allow time for insurance payments to be applied. The agencies agreed to remove from credit reports previously reported Credit agencies OK changesBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESSCREDIT | 4 t140000-------------of or-xb f yr .,-1 T

PAGE 12

Page 2 WIRE www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 NATIONAL NEWS | NATIONWhite House: Obama traded email with private Clinton accountWASHINGTON (AP) — The White House says President Barack Obama traded emails with Hillary Rodham Clinton while she was secretary of state and knew that she used a nongovernment email account. Obama had been asked previously how he learned Clinton had used a nongovernment email system for ofcial business, and told CBS News that it was through recent news reports. But White House spokesman Josh Earnest says Obama was refer ring in that interview to the details of Clinton’s home-based email setup and the fact that she was using private email exclusively. He wasn’t referring to the existence of her private account, Earnest said Monday. He said Obama and Clinton did exchange emails but not a large number. Earnest says any emails between the two would have been preserved according to the Presidential Records Act.Woman convicted of murder in buttocks injectionPHILADELPHIA (AP) — A former madam who bragged of doing black-market “body sculpting” on thousands of women was convicted Monday of murder in the death of a dancer whose heart stopped hours after silicone injected into her buttocks moved to her lungs. Padge-Victoria Windslowe’s colorful testimony during her Philadelphia trial included claims that she was “the Michelangelo of buttocks injections” and that model Amber Rose was “a walking billboard” for her work. Yet Windslowe had no medical training, other than tips she said she picked up from overseas doctors who performed her sex change operation and a physician-client of her escort service who became her lover.100 set out to retrace march to Montgomery, Ala. SELMA, Ala. — A group of about 100 people set out Monday to retrace the historic steps taken 50 years ago, when demonstrators pushing for equal voting rights marched from Selma, Ala., to the state Capitol in Montgomery. Back then, it was their third attempt to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma. During their rst try, they were beaten by state and local police on March 7, 1965, in what would become known as “Bloody Sunday.” On the second attempt, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. turned the march around on the bridge. The third time, the demonstrators made the 54-mile trek to Montgomery, stopping each day after about 10 miles.’Simpsons’ co-creator Sam Simon dies at 59(AP) — Sam Simon, a co-creator of “The Simpsons” and animalrights advocate who made a midlife career shift into philanthropy and channeled much of his personal fortune into social causes, has died. Simon died Sunday at his home in Pacic Palisades, Calif., his agent, Andy Patman said. He was 59. He was diagnosed with advanced colon cancer in 2011. After stints writing for “Taxi,” “Cheers” and “The Tracey Ullman Show,” Simon helped launch “The Simpsons.” During his writing and producing career, he collected nine prime-time Emmy awards. He left “The Simpsons” after its fourth season under a deal that rewarded him with ongoing royalties from the show.Officials: 40 injured in truck-train collisionRALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — An Amtrak train collided with a tractor-trailer that an eyewitness said was stuck on the tracks while trying to make a difcult right-hand turn Monday. At least one of the train’s cars toppled and 40 people were injured. Ofcials with the N.C. Department of Transportation said 25 people were taken to Halifax Regional Medical Center by bus and 15 by ambulance following the crash, which police said happened about noon in the town of Halifax. None of the injuries appeared to be life-threatening, ofcials said.Fire destroys New Jersey’s historic Sergeantsville InnDELAWARE TOWNSHIP, N.J. (AP) — Fire has destroyed a historic New Jersey inn that once hosted George Washington. Fireghters found smoke coming from The Sergeantsville Inn in Delaware Township early Monday. But ames eventually tore through the roof of the two-story stone structure that is more than 300 years old. Mayor Roger Locandro tells WCAU-TV in Philadelphia the inn is the center of the town. Locandro says it is the place where people celebrate their birthdays or anniversaries. There is no word on a cause.Wisconsin governor signs right-to-work billBROWN DEER, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker on Monday signed into law a measure that prohibits requiring a worker to pay union dues, striking another blow against organized labor four years after the state effectively ended collective bargaining for public-sector employees. Walker, a likely presidential candidate fresh off a weekend visit to Iowa, signed the rightto-work bill affecting private-sector workers at an invitation-only cer emony at Badger Meter north of Milwaukee. The company’s president was one of the few business owners who publicly supported the measure, which rocketed through the Legislature in less than two weeks.Man killed by pit bull while trying to save ownerWHEELING, W.Va. (AP) — Police in West Virginia say a pit bull attacked and killed a man who was trying to help the dog’s ill owner. The incident occurred Sunday night at a home in East Wheeling. Lt. Phil Redford says police believe the dog’s owner suffered a heart attack. The other man was attacked by the dog as he tried to resuscitate the owner. A police department news release says both people were pronounced dead at a local hospital. SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — As four Utah police ofcers approached an overturned car discovered below a bridge in an icy river, they heard a woman’s voice asking softly for help. When the foursome ipped over the midsized car, they discovered a 25-year-old woman dead in the front seat. The only other passenger: an 18-month old baby girl in a back car seat, unconscious but alive. A reghter jumped into the river and cut the straps, freeing the blond baby girl who was wearing only a annel onesie and no hat or gloves. Ofcers formed a line in the river and handed the cold girl to one another until she was on the shoreline and in emer gency workers’ arms. They rushed her to an ambulance and performed CPR, Spanish Fork Police Ofcer Tyler Beddoes said Monday, two days after the crash. Lily Groesbeck is in stable condition and improving, according to hospital ofcials. Beddoes, who spoke with the family, said the baby is opening her eyes and doing well. Nobody knows exactly how the infant survived hanging upside down for nearly 14 hours in her car seat with no food or water. As she dangled, icy water rushed just below her head through broken car windows as the vehicle sat perched on the bank and rocks. The temperatures were near freezing throughout the night and through the morning. “It’s heartbreaking. Was she crying most the night?” said Beddoes, a 30-year-old father of two. “It’s a miracle She was needed for sure elsewhere.” And that voice? Beddoes said he and the three ofcers talked later and concurred they all heard the same thing. They can’t explain it, but have no doubt they heard it. “That’s the part that really sends me for a whirl,” Beddoes said. “I’m not really religious, but that’s what you think of.” Police believe the accident occurred when the baby’s mother, 25-year-old Lynn Groesbeck, struck a cement barrier on a bridge and careened into the river late Friday in Spanish Fork, about 50 miles south of Salt Lake City. She was driving to her home in Springville after visiting her parents in Salem, Spanish Fork police Lt. Matt Johnson said. Investigators don’t know what caused the crash, he said. There were no skid marks or signs of mechanical failures in the car. Police don’t suspect drugs or alcohol as a factor but are awaiting toxicology test results. Maybe Lynn Groesbeck was tired or distracted, Johnson said, adding authorities weren’t ruling anything out. Lynn Groesbeck was enrolled at Provo College with a goal of becoming a medical assistant, her sister Jill Sanderson told the Deseret News. Even though the road that goes over the bridge gets plenty of trafc, no one saw the wreck because the cement barrier obstructed the view of below, Johnson said. If the sherman didn’t choose that river that morning, it could have been several more hours, he said. Sanderson wasn’t available for comment Monday but she told the Deseret News newspaper and KSL-TV of Salt Lake City on Sunday that Lily is doing remarkably well considering what happened. Beddoes said the family has thanked him and the other ofcers for helping to save little Lily. As he recalls the events of those chaotic moments, on a frigid but sunny day, Beddoes still can’t believe the girl survived — and still can’t make sense of that undeniable voice coming from the car.Toddler improving after 14 hours in upside-down car in river AP PHOTOIn this Saturday photo, ocials respond to a report of a car in the Spanish Fork River near the Main Street and the Arrow head Trail Road junction in Spanish Fork, Utah. BOSTON (AP) — New England is going from the Big Snow to the Big Melt. After winter storms dumped nearly 9 feet of snow over the course of a month, many parts of the region will see milder weather this week and some much-needed snow melting. Temperatures in Boston on Monday returned to seasonal averages in the low to mid 40s and are expected to stay that way over the next two weeks, although temperatures will drop most nights. Some days may even approach 50 degrees. For Boston area residents, it’s a welcome change after February’s frigid temperatures, relentless snows and nightmare commutes. “Goodbye snow! That was just the worst year, ever,” said Wenore Dubuisson, of Malden. “It was so bad. My God, I don’t even want to think about it anymore.” Jean Borgard said Monday was the rst day in a long time that he commuted from his home in Randolph to Boston without the usual extra layer of winter clothes. “It’s taken a long time to get to this point,” he said, wearing just a black eece and without his normal thermals, hooded sweatshirt, hat and gloves. “I think we were all hoping it would happen sooner than later.” But forecasters are cautioning winter weary New Englanders that they’re not out of the woods yet: the St. Patrick’s Day weekend may bring a wintry mix that could put Boston over the all-time winter snowfall record. The city is about 2 inches shy of the 107.6 record set during the 1995-96 season. “We’ve come this far, we might as well go for the gold,” joked Jamie Coleman, of Scituate. “As long as it doesn’t become disruptive. It’s been a long slog.” Forecasters also say this week’s warming temperatures likely won’t make a big dent on towering snowbanks. Bill Simpson, at the National Weather Service ofce in Taunton, says snowbanks may appear to have shrunk since the snows slowed at the end of February, but they’ve actually become denser and more compact with time. That means they’ll take more time to melt. “It’s not going to be as signicant as people think,” he said. “It’ll melt, but not a good chunk. We’ll lose maybe 10 percent of it. We’ve got a long way to go.”Mild weather brings relief to New England adno=50479022 0 0 1 q oil sDrug Name Qty (pills) Price* Drug Name Qty (pills) Price*Viagra 100mg 16 94.99 Azilect 1 mg 100 254.99Viagra 50mg 16 74.99 Ranexa 500mg 100 84.99Cialis 20mg 16 94.99 Aciphex 20mg 100 69.99Cialis 5mg 90 124.99 Evista 60mg 100 132.99Levitra 20mg 30 104.99 Flovent 125mcg 360 109.99Spiriva 18mcg 90 164.99 Niaspan 500mg 84 79.99Celebrex 200mg 100 99.99 Boniva 150mg 3 47.99Advair 250/50mcg 180 179.99 Xifaxan 200mg 100 134.99Zetia 10mg 100 104.99 Multaq 400mg 180 564.99Crestor 20mg 100 149.99 Flomax 0.4mg 90 44.99Combivent 18/103mcg 600 114.99 Ranexa ER 1000mg 100 109.99Symbicort 160/4.5ug 360 189.99 Bystolic 5mg 84 89.99Cymbalta 60mg 90 152.99 Benicar 40mg 90 109.99Namenda 10mg 84 92.99 Lipitor 20mg 84 28.99Nexium 40mg 90 104.99 Actos 30mg 100 33.99Diovan 160mg 100 110.99 Vytorin 10/40mg 90 129.99Aggrenox 200/25mg 180 104.99 Nasonex 50mcg 400 89.99Entocort 3mg 100 104.99 Aricept 10mg 84 30.99Propecia 1 mg 100 67.99 Rapaflo 8mg 90 199.99Januvia 100mg 90 204.99 Geodon 40mg 100 109.99Quinine 300mg 84 59.99Ventolin 100mcg 600 59.99 Total Care Mart.,'.YrPentasa SR 500mg 100 104.99 3avlrtge made easyAvodart 0.5mg 100 149.99 Over 1500 MedicationsPradaxa 150mg 180 454.99 AvailableVagifem 10mcg 24 93.99 Price Match GuaranteeXarelto 20mg 84 436.99 Call for Free Price QuoteAsacol 800mg 300 221.99 Prescriptions RequiredTricor 145mg 90 114.99 CIPA CertifiedColchicine 0.6mg 100 84.99Abilify 5mg 100 134.99 Toll Free PhoneSingulair 10mg 84 33.99 1 -800-267-2688Plavix 75mg 90 26.99Premarin 0.625mg 84 70.99 Toll Free FaxPristiq 50mg 100 129.99 1-800-563-3822Janumet 50/1000mg 84 179.99 All pricing in U.S. dollars and subject to change without notice. We accept Visa, MasterCard, Amex,Personal Check or Money Order. *Prices shown are for the equivalent generic drug if available.MANITOBA, or Call Now! 1-800-267-2688Mailing Address: ORDER PROCESSING CENTER, PO BOX 121 STN LWINNIPEG CANADA CODE:

PAGE 13

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net WIRE Page 3 adno=50429673 S I3.SIJ J. oOW Arr rA L189/MO 4W -2_)*614 mile range based on 44 mpg highway EPA estimates for 2015 Passat 2.OL Clean Diesel with 6 speed manual transmission and a 18.5 gallon gas/fuel tank. Range fora 2015 Passat 2.OL Clean Diesel with 6speed automatic transmission and an 18.5 gallon gas/fuel tank is 777 miles based on 42mpg highway EPA estimates. Your mileage will vary and depend on several factors including your driving habits and vehiclecondition. Jetta S Automatic $99 per month, Passat S Automatic $139 per month, Tiguan S Automatic $169 per month, Golf S 4 dr. Automatic$189 per month and the Passat TDI Manual $236 per month are 38 month leases, 10K per year, $1,999 due at signing. Plus tax, title , license,r r dealer fees, plus $625 acquisition fee. See dealer for more details.lW' PortCharlotteVW.comportcharllottevw.com1252 Tamiami Trail 1-877-217-0544US 41, Just North of Town Center Port Charlotte, FL 33953Sales Mon-Sat 8:30 am to 8:00 pm Sales open every Sunday 11:00 am to 5:00 pmSERVICE: Mon thru Fri 7:00 am to 8:00 pm Sat 7:00 am to 4:00 pm Service Closed on Sundays

PAGE 14

Page 4 WIRE www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 FROM PAGE ONE ALMANAC Today is Tuesday, March 10, the 69th day of 2015. There are 296 days left in the year. Today in history On March 10, 1985, Konstantin U. Chernenko, who was the Soviet Union’s leader for 13 months, died at age 73; he was succeeded by Mikhail Gorbachev. On this dateIn 1785, Thomas Jefferson was appointed America’s minister to France, succeeding Benjamin Franklin. In 1864, President Abraham Lincoln assigned Ulysses S. Grant, who had just received his commission as lieutenantgeneral, to the command of the Armies of the United States. In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell’s assistant, Thomas Watson, heard Bell say over his experimental telephone: “Mr. Watson — come here — I want to see you.” In 1880, the Salvation Army arrived in the United States from England. In 1933, a magnitude-6.4 earthquake centered off Long Beach, Calif., resulted in 120 deaths. In 1949, Nazi wartime broadcaster Mildred E. Gillars, also known as “Axis Sally,” was convicted in Washington, D.C., of treason. (She served 12 years in prison.) In 1959, the Tennessee Williams play “Sweet Bird of Youth,” starring Paul Newman and Geraldine Page, opened at Broadway’s Martin Beck Theatre. In 1969, James Earl Ray pleaded guilty in Memphis, Tenn., to assassinating civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. (Ray later repudiated that plea, maintaining his innocence until his death.) In 1973, the Pink Floyd album “The Dark Side of the Moon” was first released in the U.S. by Capitol Records (the British release came nearly two weeks later). In 1980, “Scarsdale Diet” author Dr. Herman Tarnower was shot to death at his home in Purchase, N.Y. Today’s birthdays Bluegrass/country singermusician Norman Blake is 77. Actor Chuck Norris is 75. Singer Dean Torrence (Jan and Dean) is 75. Actor Richard Gant is 71. TV personality/businesswoman Barbara Corcoran (TV: “Shark Tank”) is 66. Pop/jazz singer Jeanie Bryson is 57. Actress Sharon Stone is 57. Movie producer Scott Gardenhour is 54. Britain’s Prince Edward is 51. Actor Jon Hamm is 44. Olympic gold medal gymnast Shannon Miller is 38. Country singer Carrie Underwood is 32. Actress Olivia Wilde is 31. EUCLID, Ohio (AP) — An 85-year-old man says his suburban Cleveland home has been pelted with eggs several times a week for a year, and police haven’t been able to crack the unusual case despite stakeouts, questioning neighbors, installing a surveillance camera and even testing eggshells as evidence. The homeowner and Euclid police suspect the eggs are launched a block or two away, the Northeast Ohio Media Group reported. Albert Clemens Sr. said whoever is responsible has “phenomenal” accuracy, launching five or six at a time and often hitting the front door of the green, two-story home that he and his late wife bought nearly six decades ago. The afterdark attacks sometimes sound like gunshots as eggs splatter on the aluminum siding, creating a residue that strips the paint, he said.ODD NEWS Ohio home pelted by eggs for a year; police can’t crack case medical collections that have been or are being paid by insurance companies. Equifax, Experian and TransUnion are also honing their focus to better handle disputes with consumers and to help victims of identity theft and fraud. The three credit reporting agencies will jettison reports on debts that didn’t arise from a contract or agreement with the consumer, such as tickets or nes. Data collected by the agencies on hundreds of millions of people are used to create “credit scores” which can determine who gets a loan and how much interest is paid on that loan. The changes are intended to provide people with more transparency and more simple navigation when dealing with the bureaus that hold their credit reports. The announcement Monday arrived after months of negotiations between Equifax, Experian, TransUnion and New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. A working group will be formed under the agreement to regularly review consistency and to ensure that collected data is applied to consumers uniformly. The changes will begin to be implemented over the next several months. Discussions with other attorneys general are ongoing and there remains the possibility for more agreements ahead.CREDITFROM PAGE 1 of soldiers were spotted by residents crossing from Niger into Nigeria. Loud detonations were soon heard, signaling heavy combat with Boko Haram, said Adam Boukarna, a resident of the border town of Bosso, Niger. The push marks a sharp escalation by African nations against Boko Haram nearly six years after the group began its insurrection. At an African Union summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Jan. 31, African leaders agreed to send 7,500 troops to ght Boko Haram. Later neighboring countries agreed to increase the force to 8,750. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has said he supports the AU’s move. The new offensive includes troops from Niger for the rst time, in addition to Chadian forces that were already carrying out missions in Nigeria, Chadian Brig. Gen. Zakaria Ngobongue said Monday. He described extremism as a “cancer” in the region that could not be defeated by any one country alone. “They are bandits and criminals who have nothing to do with religion,” Ngobongue said, speaking to reporters after the closing ceremony for Flintlock, an annual training exercise in counter-insurgency tactics involving some 20 countries. U.S. Army Gen. David M. Rodriguez, commander of the U.S. Africa Command which sponsored the exercise, noted here on Monday that the Islamic insurgents have been operating not very far from this dusty capital: The group has carried out attacks this year as close as about 90 miles away. N’Djamena is about 18 miles from the Nigerian border. “We nd this year’s exercise both unique and relevant because as you know ... we are not far from the immediate threat of Boko Haram,” the American general, who had earlier commanded U.S. military forces in Afghanistan, told reporters. Nigeria and its allies will defeat Boko Haram, said Mike Omeri, the Nigerian government spokesman on the insurgency. Boko Haram’s announcement over the weekend that it is afliated to the Islamic State extremist group “is an act of desperation and comes at a time when Boko Haram is suffering heavy losses at the hands of the Nigerian Armed Forces and its regional partners,” said Omeri. “The fact of the matter is that Nigeria and its neighbors are rooting Boko Haram out of its strongholds and degrading its combat abilities.” The new offensive comes just weeks before Nigerians hold elections many fear will be marred by violence, including from Boko Haram. The March 28 election was already postponed from Feb. 14 to enable security forces to gain control of a wide swath of northeast Nigeria where Boko Haram has roamed fairly freely, killing and kidnapping civilians with Nigeria’s once-strong military becoming unable to respond. Boko Haram’s leader has threatened to violently disrupt the vote and militants have warned those in the northeast not to take part.BOKOFROM PAGE 1 Alpha Epsilon said late Sunday that its investigation conrmed members took part in the chant and announced it would close the local chapter. The national group said it was “embarrassed” by the “unacceptable and racist” behavior. Boren said members have until midnight Tuesday to remove their belongings from the fraternity house. He said the fraternity was “not totally forthcoming,” and he was still trying to nd out who was on the bus so the school could consider disciplinary actions. He said the university’s legal staff is exploring whether the students who initiated and encouraged the chant may have violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits racial discrimination. “We are also going to look at any individual perpetrators, particularly those that we think took a lead in this kind of activity,” Boren said. White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said the efforts by the university and the national fraternity to repudiate the racist comments were “an appropriate step.” It’s unclear who recorded the video, when it was recorded and who initially posted it online. Boren suggested it was likely taken by another student who didn’t agree with what was being chanted. OU Unheard, a black student group on campus, posted a link to the video after someone anonymously called it to the group’s attention Sunday afternoon, communications director Alexis Hall said Monday. “We immediately needed to share that with the OU student body,” said Hall, a junior. “For students to say they’re going to lynch an entire group of people. ... It’s disgusting.” The video appears to have been taken on a charter bus, with at least one of the chanting young men wearing a tuxedo. Telephone and email messages left Monday with several current members of the fraternity seeking comment on the video were not returned. Other members declined to comment. “I was shocked they were just doing it openly on the bus, like they were proud of it,” said Jared Scarborough, a junior in construction science. “From the chant you could tell they had done it before. It wasn’t a rst-time thing. And it was everybody. And the st-pumping.” North Mesquite High School football star Jean Delance, a top offensive lineman prospect, told a Texas radio station he withdrew his commitment to OU after he learned about the video. He said he spoke Sunday night with coach Bob Stoops, but wasn’t told about the incident. “I’m very disappointed in the coaches not letting me know. ‘Hey Jean, this is going on. Be aware. I don’t want you to be shocked tomorrow when you wake up,’” Delance told Dallas/Fort Worth station KRLD. “But that was just heart-breaking right there.”RACISTFROM PAGE 1 AP PHOTOStudents move their furniture out of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house at the University of Oklahoma on Monday. Scott’s press secretary also said there was no policy on the terms. But Byrd said the protocol, official or not, seemed to begin when Scott appointed Herschel Vinyard Jr., to head up the department. Scott has previously dodged questions on climate change, telling the Miami Herald last year that he is “not a scientist” when asked if he believes in manmade climate change. That stance, and the apparent unofficial policy of Florida environmental officials, is still more conservative than the position espoused by the GOP as a whole. Republican Senators recently voted in favor of an amendment drafted by a Democrat that affirmed that “climate change is real and not a hoax,” which they said was meant to acknowledge that climate change happens — but that there’s no evidence humans contribute to it. While climate skeptics point to the fact that the Earth has gone through cyclical shifts in the climate for millennia, the vast majority of national and global scientific associations broadly agree that humans are contributing to the Earth’s warming and the uptick in extreme weather conditions and events.CLIMATEFROM PAGE 1 LONDON (AP) — They came from every parish of London, and from all walks of life, and ended up in a burial ground called Bedlam. Now scientists hope their centuries-old skeletons can reveal new information about how long-ago Londoners lived — and about the bubonic plague that often killed them. Archaeologists announced Monday that they have begun excavating the bones of some 3,000 people interred in the 16th and 17th centuries, who now lie in the path of the Crossrail transit line. They will be pored over by scientists before being reburied elsewhere. One recent workday, just yards from teeming Liverpool Street railway station, researchers in orange overalls scraped, sifted and gently removed skeletons embedded in the dark earth. In one corner of the site, the skeleton of an adult lay beside the fragile remains of a baby, the wooden outline of its cofn still visible. Most were less intact, a jumble of bones and skulls. “Part of the skill of it is actually working out which bones go with which,” said Alison Telfer, a project ofcer with Museum of London Archaeology, which is overseeing the dig. Due to open in 2018, the 118-kilometer (73-mile) trans-London Crossrail line is Britain’s biggest construction project, and its largest archaeological dig for decades. The central 21-kilometer (13-mile) section runs underground, which has meant tunneling beneath some of the oldest and most densely populated parts of the city. For Londoners, that has brought years of noise and disruption, but for archaeologists it’s like Christmas. Almost every shovelful of earth has uncovered a piece of history, or prehistory: bison and mammoth bones; Roman horseshoes; medieval ice skates; the remains of a moated Tudor manor house. Chief archaeologist Jay Carver says the Bedlam dig could be the most revealing yet. “It’s going to be ar chaeologically the most important sample we have of the population of London from the 16th and 17th centuries,” Carver said. Bedlam cemetery opened in 1569 to take the overspill as the city’s churchyard burial grounds lled up. It is the nal resting place of prosperous citizens and paupers, religious dissenters including the 17th century revolutionary Robert Lockyer and patients from Bedlam Hospital, the world’s rst asylum for the mentally ill. The hospital’s name, a corruption of Bethlehem, became a synonym for chaos. Tests on the bones by osteologists may reveal where these Londoners came from, what they ate and what ailed them — which in many cases was the plague. There were four outbreaks of the deadly disease over the two centuries the cemetery was in use, including the “Great Plague” that killed 100,000 people in 1665.London rail work unearths skeletons from Bedlam AP PHOTOSkeletons of an adult and baby lie next to each other on the archaeological excavation site at the 16th and 17th century Bedlam burial ground, uncovered by work on the new Crossrail train line next to Liverpool Street station in London, Friday. The excavation team estimates there to be 3,000 human skeletons at the site. SOV w' X111111111%. 7 0

PAGE 15

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net WIRE Page 5 WORLD NEWS | WORLD2 US tourists face charges for damaging ColosseumROME (AP) — Two American tourists face charges for carving their names into the Colosseum, the latest act of vandalism sustained by the ancient monument at the hands of tourists, police said Monday. The tourists from California, aged 21 and 25, were cited Saturday for carving their rst names eight centimeters (three inches) high into an upper level of the Colosseum, said Carabinieri Capt. Lorenzo Iacobone. The two were freed on their own recognizance but will face charges for aggravated damage to a monument. Their names or hometowns were not released by police. Iacobone said the young women apologized for the vandalism, but he said such acts “are extremely serious. No one considers the damage they are creating.”Hungary planning to send troops to Iraq to join IS fightBUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Hungary’s prime minister says his government will ask parliament to authorize sending Hungarian troops to join its western allies in the ght against the Islamic State extremist group in Iraq. Viktor Orban told a meeting of Hungarian diplomats on Monday that taking part in military activities organized by Hungary’s Western coalition partners would bring prestige and recognition to the country’s foreign policy.Report: Iran to allow access to disputed siteTEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iranian state television is reporting that ofcials are again willing to give international nuclear inspectors access to a site where purported experiments on high explosives may have taken place. The site in question is Marivan, some 300 miles west of Tehran near Iran’s border with Iraq. Iran has said since 2012 that experts from the U.N’s International Atomic Energy Agency are free to visit Marivan. The agency originally suspected Marivan could have hosted high-explosive experiments that could be used to set off a nuclear charge. Iran has called the allegation baseless. State television said Monday that Behrouz Kamalvandi, spokesman of Iran’s nuclear department, made the offer. Solar-power plane airborne on historic tripABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — With its wings stretched wide to catch the sun’s energy, a Swiss-made solar-powered aircraft took off from Abu Dhabi just after daybreak Monday in a historic rst attempt to y around the world without a drop of fossil fuel. Solar Impulse founder Andr Borschberg was at the controls of the single-seat aircraft when it lumbered into the air at the Al Bateen Executive Airport. Borschberg will trade off piloting with Solar Impulse co-founder Bertrand Piccard during layovers on a 21,700-mile journey. Some legs of the trip, such as over the Pacic and Atlantic oceans, will mean ve days and ve nights of ying solo. Both pilots have been training hard for this journey, which will span 25 ight days over ve months before this Spruce Goose of renewable energy returns to Abu Dhabi in late July or August.5 killed in stabbing spree in rural western JapanOSAKA, Japan (AP) — Five people were killed in their homes Monday in a stabbing spree in rural Japan, police said, in a rare case of major violence in the country. A 40-year-old neighbor of the victims was arrested in connection with the attacks, said Keizo Okumoto, deputy police chief in Sumoto, a small city on an island in western Japan where the spree occurred. Okumoto identied the suspect as Tatsuhiko Hirano, an unemployed man. The motive was unclear, and police have yet to nd the weapon used in the attacks. A man and a woman were found dead in one house, and another man and two women from a nearby house died after being taken to a hospital, Okumoto said. The victims ranged in age from 60 to 80 years old, according to media reports. Violent crime is relatively rare in Japan, and even more so in most small towns. Sumoto, a city of 44,000 people on Awaji island, is known for its oranges, onions and Awaji beef. LONDON (AP) — Tasty cubes of beef would tempt any dog, let alone one sitting patiently on the stand during public viewing at Crufts, Britain’s premier dog show. But instead of a treat, one owner says a deadly surprise was sewn into the meat: slug killer. Jagger, a 3-year-old Irish Setter, collapsed and died after leaving the show with a bellyful of poisoned beef, leaving his owners distraught and triggering a canine whodunit worthy of Agatha Christie. The dog, also known as Thendara Satisfaction, died Friday shortly after returning to his home in Belgium from the Crufts show in Birmingham, England. A post-mortem examination found the poisoned slug killer cubes in his stomach, according to Jeremy Bott, one of Jagger’s co-owners. The only time Jagger was unattended and could have been poisoned was when he was on the stand for public viewing, his owners said — but they refused to believe that another competitor could have done such a thing. “We can’t and we won’t think that this was the act of another exhibitor. If we thought this, we couldn’t go on, and the last 30 years would be a complete waste,” Dee Milligan Bott said on her Facebook page. “So I ask all of you to unite in nding the perpetrator who did this.” But that still leaves the question: Who would kill a dog show contestant and why? Jeremy Bott thinks it was a case of mistaken identity. He said he believes the poisoner is someone who bears a grudge against dogs in general or the Crufts show in particular, but not Jagger himself. In an article published in “Dog World,” Milligan Bott suggested the real target of the attack could have been another dog she owns, Thendara Pot Noodle. That dog won the “Best of Breed” title at Crufts, while Jagger nished second in a preliminary competition. Police in Belgium and Britain are aware of the incident, but authorities said they have not been asked to investigate. The Kennel Club, which organizes Crufts, said it is awaiting a toxicology report on Jagger’s stomach contents before deciding what action to take. Milligan Bott told reporters outside her home that Jagger’s death shouldn’t overshadow “the positive sides of Crufts.” “I certainly don’t want our dog shows — the places we work so hard to get to — to become a ground of nger-pointing and suspicion,” she said. The Kennel Club issued a second statement Monday after reports that another dog had fallen ill after Crufts. “The facts surrounding Jagger’s sad death are still being established, and we must stress that any other unsubstantiated rumors about dogs being poisoned are just that,” the club said. Showdog killed by poisoned meat AP PHOTOIrish Setter Thendara Satisfaction, known as Jagger stands in this undated image, made available from Oakdene.Be on Monday. (AP) — Iraqi troops and Shiite militias forged ahead with their offensive to retake Saddam Hussein’s hometown of Tikrit from Islamic State militants. The operation, which is taking place with out U.S. assistance, has clawed back a few villages and towns since it began last week, most notably Dawr, south of Tikrit. Directing the offensive is Iranian Gen. Ghasem Soleimani, commander of the powerful Revolutionary Guard’s Quds Force. The overt Iranian role and the prominence of Shiite militias in the campaign have raised fears of possible sectarian cleansing should Tikrit, an overwhelmingly Sunni city, fall. On Monday, Iraqi Defense Minister Khalid al-Obeidi said Iraq is balancing the assistance it receives from the U.S. and Iran. He said Tehran is primarily helping with the Shiite militias, but that Baghdad welcomes “help from any country.” Kurdish peshmerga forces meanwhile said they cleared a 40-squaremile area south and west of the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, securing a section of the main road that leads to the militantheld city of Mosul. The two-pronged ground offensive was supported by coalition airstrikes, the Kurdish Regional Security Council said Monday.Iraqi troops, militias press Tikrit attack CLEARANCE FOR HER6O% TO 65% OFFOrig.* $69-$340, now 24.15-$136.SELECT SUITS, SUIT SEPARATES, SKIRTSUITS, MORE. MISSES & PETITES. WOMEN'S PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER. CLEARANCE FINE JEWELRY6O% OFFWHEN YOU TAKE AN EXTRA 20% OFFOrig.* $300-$8000, final cost $120-$3200.SELECT DIAMONDS, 14K GOLD, SAPPHIRES,MORE. CLEARANCE HANDBAGS4O% TO 75% OFFWHEN YOU TAKE AN EXTRA 20% OFFOrig.* $20-$298,final cost 4.80-178.80.GREATSELECTIONS. CLEARANCE SHOES & BOOTS75% OFFWHEN YOU TAKE AN EXTRA 30% OFFOrig.* $39-$298, final cost 9.75-74.50. SELECTIONS FOR HER FROM OUR CLEARANCE RACKS. CLEARANCE FOR HIM & HER6O%-85% OFFWHEN YOU TAKE AN EXTRA 30% OFFFOR HIM: Young men's sportswear & collections & men's sportswear & designer collections. Orig.* $12-$115, final cost 3.48-13.97. FOR HER: Select sportswear, activewear & Impulse contemporary apparel. For juniors & misses. Orig.* $12-$199, final cost $3-104.65. Selections available for petites & women; women's prices slightly higher.Finejewelryisavailableonlyinstoresthatcarryfinejewelry. REG.&ORIG.PRICESAREOFFERINGPRICES&SAVINGSMAYNOTBEBASEDONACTUALSALES.SOMEORIG.PRICESNOT INEFFECTDURINGTHEPAST90DAYS.EXTRASAVINGS&SALEPRICESINEFFECT3/10-3/12/2015.*Intermediatepricereductionsmayhavebeentaken.Jewelryp hotosmaybeenlarged orenhancedtoshowdetail.Finejewelryatselectstores;logontomacys.comforlocations.Almostallgemstoneshavebeentreatedtoenhancetheirbeauty&requirespecialcare,logon tomacys.com/gemstonesoraskyoursalesprofessional.Extrasavingstakenoffalready-reducedprices;"finalcost"pricesreflectextrasavings. Advertisedmerchandisemaynotbecarriedat yourlocalMacy’s&selectionmayvarybystore.Clearance&closeoutitemsareavailablewhilesupplieslast.Prices&merchandisemaydifferatmacys .com.Luggagecarrymfrs’warranties; to seeamfr’swarrantyatnochargebeforepurchasing,visitastoreorwriteto: Macy’sWarrantyDept.,POBox1026MarylandHeights,MO63043,attn:ConsumerWarranties.N5020645 OPENAMACY’SACCOUNTFOREXTRA20%SAVINGSTHE FIRST 2 DAYS, UP TO $100, WITH MORE REWARDS TO COME.Macy’s credit card is available subject to credit approval; new account savings valid the day your account is opened and the next day; excludes services, selected lice nsed departments, gift cards, restaurants, gourmet food & wine. The new account savings are limited to a total of $100; application must qualify for immediate approval to receive extra savings; employees not eligible. WOW! PASSEXTRA SAVINGS ON SELECT SALE & CLEARANCEAPPAREL!(EXCEPT SPECIALS & SUPER BUYS)EXTRA25%OFFSELECT SALE & CLEARANCE APPAREL FOR HIM, HER & KIDS PLUS SHOES, COATS, SUITS, DRESSES, INTIMATES, SWIM FOR HER; MEN’S SUIT SEPARATES & SPORTCOATSEXTRA 15%OFF SELECT SALE & CLEARANCE FINE & FASHION JEWELRY, WATCHES & HOME ITEMSMACYS.COM PROMO CODE: SALE EXCLUSIONS MAY DIFFER ON MACYS.COMAlso excludes: Everyday Values (EDV), Doorbusters, Deals of the Day, furniture, mattresses, floor coverings, rugs, electrics/electronics, cosmetics/fragrances, athletic appare l, shoes & accessories, Dallas Cowboys merchandise, gift cards, jewelry trunk shows, New Era, Nike on Field, previous purchases, special orders, sele cted licensed depts., special purchases, services. Exclusions may differ at macys.com. Cannot be combined with any savings pass/coupon, extra discount or credit offer except opening a new Macy’s account. EXTRA SAVINGS % APPLIED TO REDUCED PRICES. TEXT “CPN” TO 62297 TO GET COUPONS, SALES ALERTS & MORE!Max 3 msgs/wk. Msg & data rates may apply.By texting CPN from my mobile number, I agree to receive marketing text messages gene rated by an automated dialer from Macy’s to this number. I understand that consent is not required to make a purchase. Text STOP to 62297 to cancel. Text HELP to 62297 for help. Terms & conditions at macys.com/mobilehelp Privacy policy at macys.com/privacypolicy VALID 3/10-3/12/2015 40% OFFDRESS SHIRTS & TIESReg. 49.50-59.50, sale 29.70-35.70. From our Alfani & Club Room; Geoffrey Beene & Kenneth Cole Reaction. 1750027.CLEARANCE50% TO 80% OFFWHEN YOU TAKE AN EXTRA 40% OFFOrig.* 7.50-$99, final cost 1.80-44.55. Intimates & sleepwear.50% OFFBLAZERS & DRESS PANTSReg. $95-$295, sale 47.50-147.50. From famous designers. 449189.40% OFFCARTERS & FIRST IMPRESSIONSReg. $12-48.50, sale 7.20-29.10. Sets, dresses & more. Infants' 3-24 mos.40% OFFSPORTSHIRTS & POLOSReg. $45-59.50, sale $27-35.70. Only at Macy's. Selections from Greg Norman for Tasso Elba, Tasso Elba & Alfani. 1871191.CLEARANCE75% OFFSPORTSWEAR SELECTIONSOrig.* 39.50-69.50, now 9.87-17.38. From our JM Collection & Style & Co. Misses & petites. Women's prices slightly higher.CLEARANCE45%-65% OFFWHEN YOU TAKE AN EXTRA 30% OFFOrig.* 1.99-$1000, final cost .69-524.99. Home selections: housewares, bed & bath, tabletop, luggage & more.CLEARANCE65% OFFFASHION JEWELRYOrig.* $20-$200, now $7-$70. From our Charter Club, Style & Co., more. 50% OFFSELECT PILLOWSReg. $40-$260, sale 19.99-129.99. From TommyHilfiger, Calvin Klein,our Charter Club, more. 139810.CLOSEOUT60% OFFLUGGAGE SELECTIONSOrig.* $60-$660, closeout 23.99-263.99. From Samsonite, Delsey & more. FREE SHIPPING + FREE RETURNS AT MACYS.COM!FREE SHIPPING WITH $99 PURCHASE. FREE RETURNS BY MAIL OR INSTORE. U.S. ONLY. EXCLUSIONS APPLY; SEE MACYS.COM FOR DETAILS.PLUS, TAKE AN EXTRA 25% OR 15% OFFwith your Macy's card or savings pass. Exclusions apply, see pass. 3-DAY SALE! TUES, MARCH 1OTHURS, MARCH 12 4O%-85% OFF adno=50479030 1,1 `rv. Athe magic ofmocysm

PAGE 16

Page 6 WIRE www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 BUSINESS NEWS S mCpGrAm46.43+.13+4.2 Y acktmanSvcd24.64+.09+0.6 Y kmFcsSvcd25.42+.07+0.5 M aFtStrI11.21...+3.2 G lbSCAm27.83-.04+0.9 rf B alancedb19.03+.030.0 E qGrowb20.95-.03+0.5 R etIncb8.86+.01-0.5 rnt S mCapGrBm7.06+.02+4.9 rrbf H lthSciDb35.66+.10+7.9 r D ynBald14.27+.06+1.6 D ynDivd3.98+.01+3.4 G rowthb34.96+.12+3.2 I ncomeb46.83+.20+1.0 n L gCpVlIs29.39+.11+1.5 t C apValIv9.31+.05+1.6 E qIncInv8.70+.01-0.7 H iYldMu9.41...-0.5 I nTTxFBInv11.40-.01-0.8 I nvGrInv29.71+.10+3.0 U ltraInv36.41+.16+3.3 t A MCAPAm28.75+.04+2.9 A mBalAm25.09+.09+1.1 B ondAm12.82+.02-0.6 C apIncBuAm59.93+.08-0.5 C apWldBdAm19.57...-1.5 C pWldGrIAm47.32+.04+1.5 E urPacGrAm49.19-.22+3.1 F nInvAm53.47+.15+2.5 G lbBalAm30.28...-0.5 G rthAmAm44.24+.05+3.3 H iIncAm10.92-.02+1.0 I ncAmerAm21.81+.05+0.3 I ntBdAmAm 13.51+.01-0.4 I nvCoAmAm37.38+.04+1.1 M utualAm37.09+.13+0.6 N ewEconAm38.12-.06+3.2 N ewPerspAm37.72+.03+3.4 N wWrldAm54.67-.30+1.1 S mCpWldAm47.03-.10+3.3 T axEBdAmAm13.06...-0.8 W AMutInvAm41.35+.20+1.4 I ntld31.09...+2.7 I ntlVald35.38-.08+1.8 M dCpVal24.88+.06-0.5 C oreSelNd22.66+.06+0.5 n A ssetb64.84+.14+3.1 G rowthb74.14+.55+2.0 P artnersb36.92+.18+0.7 F ocusd18.41+.08+4.4 rn E ngy&ResAm12.50-.11-6.0 E qDivAm24.85+.11+1.3 E qDivI24.91+.11+1.3 G lobAlcAm20.18+.01+1.2 G lobAlcCm18.53+.01+1.1 G lobAlcI20.29+.01+1.2 H iYldBdIs7.96-.02+0.6 H iYldSvcb7.97-.02+0.7 M gdVolInvAm14.97-.04+3.0 r AstMgr5017.37+.03+1.2 Bal 23.21+.05+1.8 BalK23.21+.05+1.8 BlChGrow72.28+.22+4.9 BlChGrowK72.36+.23+4.9 Canadad49.67-.16-1.1 CapApr37.59+.09+3.5 CapIncd9.94-.01+1.4 Contra101.16+.34+4.0 ContraK101.10+.34+4.0 DivGrow34.04+.14+2.5 DivrIntld36.33-.09+4.0 DivrIntlKd36.27-.09+4.0 EmergAsiad33.31-.07+0.4 EmgMktd24.67-.260.0 EqInc59.68+.17+1.5 FF201512.84+.02+1.3 FF203513.63+.02+2.4 FF20409.60+.01+2.3 Fidelity44.60+. 18+4.0 FltRtHiInd9.75...+1.2 FocStk19.58+.12+4.4 FourInOne37.96+.09+1.7 FrdmK201513.86+.03+1.3 FrdmK202014.54+.03+1.5 FrdmK202515.20+.03+1.8 FrdmK203015.57+.03+2.2 FrdmK203516.05+.03+2.4 FrdmK204016.09+.03+2.4 FrdmK204516.51+.03+2.4 Free202015.67+.02+1.4 Free202513.44+.02+1.7 Free203016.55+.02+2.2 GNMA11.64+.02-0.1 GrowCo139.01+.34+5.1 GrowInc30.70+.10+2.6 GrthCmpK138.86+.34+5.1 Indepndnc40.76+.08+5.8 IntRelEstd10.4 9-.100.0 IntlDiscd39.91-.09+3.7 InvGrdBd7.92+.01-0.5 JapanSmCod12.96-.02+2.9 LatinAmd21.27-.47-8.1 LevCoStd46.88+.14+3.0 LowPrStkKd51.09+.14+2.3 LowPriStkd51.13+.14+2.3 Magellan95.68+.36+3.6 MeCpSto16.71+.07+2.6 MidCapd39.53+.15+2.0 MuniIncd13.48...-1.0 NYMuIncd13.50-.01-1.0 NewMille39.19+.08+2.0 Nordicd43.93-.22+2.3 OTC84.57+.16+5.0 Overseasd40.67+.01+3.8 Puritan22.04+.06+2.3 PuritanK22.03+.06+2.3 SASEqF14.53+.06+2 .8 SEMF16.75-.09-0.9 SInvGrBdF11.45+.02-0.6 STMIdxFd60.94+.23+2.0 SesInmGrdBd11.44+.02-0.7 ShTmBond8.59+.01+0.1 SmCapDiscd30.43+.22+1.9 StratInc10.73-.010.0 TaxFrBd11.66...-1.0 TotalBd10.71+.01-0.3 USBdIdx11.72+.02-0.7 USBdIdxInv11.72+.02-0.7 Value115.21+.21+1.3 ValueDis25.00+.13+2.0rnEqGrowBm85.18+.11+4.3 IntlCapABm13.84-.04+2.4 LmtdTermBondAm11.47+.010.0 LmtdTermBondBm11.45+.01-0.1 LrgCapAm28.91+.09 +3.3 LrgCapBm27.01+.09+3.2 NewInsAm27.26+.08+3.6 NewInsI27.76+.08+3.6rrBiotechd256.35-.11+12.4 Electrond89.53+.07+4.4 InstTStPl47.61+.18+1.9 IntlGr22.44-.05+2.8 IntlGrAdm71.34-.15+2.8 IntlStkIdxAdm26.87-.04+1.6 IntlStkIdxI107.44-.19+1.6 IntlStkIdxIPls107.47-.18+1.6 IntlVal35.04-.04+2.7 LTGradeAd10.69+.08-2.2 LgCpIdxInv38.72+.15+1.8 LifeCon18.66+.03+0.4 LifeGro29.35+.06+1.3 LifeMod24.46+.06+0.9 MdGrIxInv41.63+.16+4.1 MidCapIdxIP171.48+.46+2.4 MidCpAdml157.39+.42+2.4 MidCpIst34.77+.10+2.4 MorgAdml82.09+.28+4.0 MuHYAdml11.24...-0.9 M uIntAdml14.18...-0.9 MuLTAdml11.67...-0.9 MuLtdAdml11.01...-0.7 MuShtAdml15.83...-0.1 Prmcp105.71+.35+2.6 PrmcpAdml109.53+.36+2.6 PrmcpCorI22.07+.07+2.4 REITIdxAd114.87+.98-4.2 REITIdxInst17.78+.15-4.2 STBondAdm10.49+.01-0.1 STCor10.68+.01+0.1 STGradeAd10.68+.01+0.1 STIGradeI10.68+.01+0.1 STsryAdml10.68...-0.1 SelValu28.58+.03+0.1 SmCapIdxIP165.35+.55+2.1 SmCpGrIdxAdm46.14+.16+2.9 SmCpIdAdm57.28+.19+2.0 SmCpIdIst57 .28+.19+2.1 SmCpValIdxAdm45.89+.14+1.4 SmVlIdIst25.65+.08+1.4 Star 25.09+.06+1.4 StratgcEq33.18+.17+1.6 TgtRe201026.62+.05+0.3 TgtRe201515.50+.03+0.6 TgtRe202028.90+.06+0.9 TgtRe203029.57+.07+1.2 TgtRe203518.18+.04+1.4 TgtRe204030.37+.07+1.6 TgtRe204519.03+.04+1.5 TgtRe205030.22+.06+1.6 TgtRetInc13.04+.02+0.2 Tgtet202516.81+.04+1.1 TlIntlBdIdxAdm21.43+.04-0.1 TlIntlBdIdxInst32.15+.06-0.1 TlIntlBdIdxInv10.72+.02-0.1 TotBdAdml10.86+.02-0.7 TotBdInst10.86+.02-0.7 TotBdMkInv10.86+.02-0.7 TotIntl16.06-.03+1.6 TotStIAdm52.50+.20+1.9 TotStIIns52.51+.20+1.9 TotStIdx52.47+.20+1.9 TxMCapAdm105.99+.41+2.2 ValIdxAdm32.85+.14+0.6 ValIdxIns32.85+.14+0.6 WellsI25.60+.08-0.4 WellsIAdm62.01+.19-0.4 Welltn39.45+.13+0.7 WelltnAdm68.15+.24+0.8 WndsIIAdm66.43+.25+1.0 Wndsr21.80+.05+2.3 WndsrAdml73.53+.16+2.3 WndsrII37.43+.14+1.0nSpecValAm22.29+.06+1.5tEmgMktsIs10.09-.16-1.4LgCpVald9.73+.03+1.5rrnDiscovInv32.60+.11+4.3 GrowInv47.70+.17+3.7 Outk2010Adm13.16+.01-0.5 IntlEd18.29...+2.6SmCapVal25.52+.14+1.0rnInFEqSeS20.72-.07+2.1tValued56.74...-0.6nnBond11.50...+0.2 LargeCap53.34+.14+1.0ntIncBldCm21.27-.030.0 IntlI 29.09-.11+2.7IncomeAm9.26+.01-0.5 MidCapGrAm20.28+.08+5.2ntrrGoldm29.48-.97-14.1AssAllGrCm15.44+.03+2.3 AstAlModCm12.55+.01+1.0tSmCapGr18.28+.08+4.3nGlobVald26.75-.04+1.4rnrfnGld&Precm5.09-.19-12.1 GlobResm6.06...-5.0CorstnMod15.25+.02+0.5 GNMA10.01+.01-0.1 GrowInc21.57+.07+2.0 HYOppd8.50...+0.7 PrcMtlMin11.12-.40-16.2 SciTech21.80+.04+5.2 TaxELgTm13.71-.01-0.8 TgtRt204013.08...+0.6 TgtRt205013.01...+0.7 WorldGro28.15+.08+2.3WinInvm16.83-.17-1.6rtPremGrob34.41+.15+1.8t500Adml192.55+.77+1.8 500Inv192.51+.78+1.8 BalIdxAdm30.03+.10+0.9 BalIdxIns30.03+.09+0.8 BdMktInstPls10.86+.02-0.7 CAITAdml11.74-.01-0.9 CapOp54.70+.08+3.9 CapOpAdml126.29+.17+3.8 Convrt13.17+.03+3.0 DevMktIdxAdm12.77...+2.7 DevMktIdxInstl12.78-.01+2.7 DivGr23.30+.10+1.2 EmMktIAdm33.42-.22-1.5 EnergyAdm98.16-.81-4.6 EqInc31.18+.12+0.5 EqIncAdml65.35+.23+0.5 ExplAdml90.23+.39+4.2 ExtdIdAdm68.78+.22+2.5 ExtdIdIst68.78+.22+2.5 ExtdMktIdxIP169.73+.54+2.5 FAWeUSIns95.42-.16+1.6 FAWeUSInv19.10-.0 3+1.6 GNMA10.79+.01-0.4 GNMAAdml10.79+.01-0.3 GlbEq24.80...+2.2 GroInc42.37+.17+1.7 GrthIdAdm55.74+.19+3.3 GrthIstId55.74+.19+3.3 HYCorAdml6.03-.01+0.4 HltCrAdml95.89+.32+5.4 HlthCare227.30+.74+5.4 ITBondAdm11.48+.03-0.9 ITGradeAd9.87+.02-0.4 InfPrtAdm25.78-.04-1.6 InfPrtI10.50-.02-1.7 InflaPro13.13-.02-1.6 InstIdxI191.32+.77+1.8 InstPlus191.33+.77+1.8 GrIncd18.22-.09+0.1MeridnGrd36.80+.02+2.9nnrTotRetBdI10.90+.01-0.7 TotRtBdb10.90+.01-0.8 TtlRtnBdPl10.28+.02-0.6tMagicm23.47+.14+3.8 Midasm.96-.02-11.1LSInvBdY11.68-.01-0.9Growthm47.46+.05+2.8tSmCpGrInv30.59+.26+5.6nrNichol71.08+.31+3.2nfnGrowth17.24+.08+3.3nHYFixIncd7.14-.01+1.3 StkIdx25.63+.10+1.8tHiYldMunI17.18-.02-0.6 NYMuniBdI11.09...-0.7nBlkOakEmr4.59+.01+6.0 HlthSinces21.53+.11+2.5 PinOakEq49.61+.18+2.3 RedOakTec17.09+.07+2.9EqIncI32.36+.09+1.3 GlobalI29.63-.11+3.5 IntlI 24.61-.13+4.2 OakmarkI66.99+.16+1.6 SelectI40.72-.08+0.6rtGlbOppo7.81...+1.8 GlbSmMdCp16.59...+1.7 LgCpStr13.32...+2.4DevMktAm34.97-.33-1.1 DevMktY34.53-.33-1.1 GlobAm80.73+.04+5.5 IntlGrY36.57-.12+2.7 MainStrAm48.98+.20+3.2 SrFltRatAm8.17...+1.2 StrIncAm4.10...+0.6OsterStrInc11.57+.01+0.8fAllAssetI11.62...-1.0 AllAuthIn9.14...-1.2 ComRlRStI4.37...-2.0 EMktCurI9.01...-1.0 EmgLclBdI7.91...-4.7 ForBdInstl10.90...0.0 HiYldIs9.28...+0.5 IncomeP12.39...+0.9 IncomeAm12.39...+0.9 IncomeDb12.39...+0.9 IncomeInl12.39...+0.9 LowDrIs10.10...+0.4 RealRet10.97...-1.4 ShtTermIs9.81...+0.6 TotRetAm10.74+ .01-0.5 TotRetAdmb10.74+.01-0.5 TotRetIs10.74+.01-0.4 TotRetrnDb10.74+.01-0.5 TotlRetnP10.74+.01-0.4 UnconstrBdIns11.26...+0.6fAggGr34.71-.04+6.1 Growth26.77+.01+3.3tCoreEqInv40.65+.16+1.8nrBalb23.76...+0.6 EnergyInvb31.19-.32-6.6 EqIncomeAm10.39+.03+1.1 EuroGrAm35.88-.02+2.0 GlbGrBm27.04-.04+1.8 GrwthAllAm14.03+.02+0.4 PacGrowBm22.84-.10+2.4 SmCapEqAm15.54+.11+2.8 TechInvb39.03+.09+6.5 USMortAm12.49+.01-0.2fWorldwideId17.70-.03+0.5fAssetSTrBm24.88+.03+1.8 AssetStrAm26.03+.04+1.8 AssetStrCm25.03+.03+1.8 AsstStrgI26.29+.04+1.9nCoreBdUlt11.76+.02-0.7 CoreBondSelect11.75+.02-0.6 HighYldSel7.70-.01+0.7 LgCapGrSelect36.62+.14+5.1 MidCpValI37.85+.14+1.7 ShDurBndSel10.87...0.0 USLCpCrPS30.15+.12+3.1tBalCm30.87+.10+1.6 ContranT22.20+.10+2.2 EnteprsT91.37+.28+4.3 FlexBdSb10.58+.02-0.6 GlbLfScT58.39+.25+7.8 GlbValT14.07+.02+0.2 HiYldT8.64-.01+0.8 JanusT39.58+.11+4.8 OverseasT31.30-.21-1.5 PerkinsMCVL20.09+.080.0 PerkinsMCVT19.85+.07-0.1 PerkinsSCVL22.40+.12+1.7 ResearchT45.87+.16+4.1 ShTmBdT3.04...+0.1 USCrT20.90+.12+ 2.6 VentureT67.22+.18+4.5nnDisValMdCpI20.62+.09+2.1 DiscValI18.99+.08+1.9 LifBa1b15.78+.01+1.4 LifGr1b16.68+.01+1.9bEmgMkEqInstd16.77-.21-3.1nCBAggressGrthAm212.36+.68+3.9CBAggressGrthI230.35+.74+3.9 WACorePlusBdI11.67+.01-0.7WAManagedMuniAm16.87...-0.8nMasIntlIntl18.33-.11+4.5nrLongPart31.09-.18-1.2nnrBdInstl14.58-.02-0.5 BdRb14.51-.02-0.6nAffiliatAm16.32+.08+0.5 ShDurIncAm4.46...+0.5 ShDurIncCm4.48...+0.3 ShDurIncFb4.45...+0.3IntlValAm34.90-.05+2.8 IsIntlEq22.13-.02+3.4 MAInvBm28.55+.16+2.8 ValueAm35.30+.17+1.6 ValueI35.49+.17+1.6HiYldCorAm5.82...+1.2 Mktfield16.07...+0.2nGrthInv117.06+.80+2.1PBConTrmS13.46+.01+0.5 PBMaxTrmS19.05-.01+1.3n21stCentb22.51+.08+3.8 FlexCapb17.91+.06+2.8 Energyd44.24-.30-3.7 Goldd15.99-.53-14.8 HealtCard238.39+1.23+7.4 Leisured138.49+.47+4.1 Materialsd79.68+.24+1.0 MedDelivd86.92+.33+4.8 MedEqSysd41.80+.20+5.4 NatGasd30.62-.52-6.3 NatResd30.31-.24-4.1 Pharmd23.05+.17+5.8 Wirelessd9.40+.01+2.7r500IdxAdvtg73.87+.30+1.8 500IdxAdvtgInst73.88+.30+1.8 500IdxInstl73.87+.29+1.8 500IdxInv73.86+.30+1.8 ExtMktIdAgd56.98+.18+2.5 IntlIdxAdgd38.93-.05+2.5 TotMktI dAgd60.94+.24+2.0rSeriesGrowthCoF12.66+.04+5.1rGlbAm53.43-.08+0.5fnGlobalAm7.75+.01+3.9 TotalRetAm19.60+.05+0.9e-Comm8.90+.01+5.7FedTFAm12.48...-1.0rCATFAm7.52...-0.9 EqInAm23.09+.06+0.8 FLTFAm11.31+.01-1.1 GrOppAm33.31+.08+5.9 GrowthAm77.32+.29+2.7 IncomeCm2.42...-0.5 IncomeAm2.39...-0.4 IncomeAdv2.38+.010.0 RisDvAm51.99+.32+1.4 TotalRe tAm10.11+.02-0.1ttrDiscovZ34.38+.03+2.1 DiscovAm33.83+.03+2.1 SharesZ30.36+.08+2.0rnGlBondCm12.43-.03-0.7 GlBondAm12.40-.03-0.6 GlBondAdv12.36-.03-0.6 GrowthAm24.01-.05+1.1S&SUSEq55.20+.27+2.6IntItVlIV23.07+.01+2.4 USEqAllcVI16.30+.06+1.7rrAssetAAAm65.75+.13+1.5 EqIncomeAAAm29.21+.06+1.1 Valuem18.51+.06+2.0rSmCapEqAd26.61+.19+3.2nrMidCpVaIs41.84+.03+1.2 ShDuGovAm10.11+.01+0.1nCapApInst62.10+.18+4.4 IntlInstl67.41-.06+2.6nCapAprAm38.37+.06+4.0 CpApHLSIA56.56+.09+3.6 SmallCoBm17.01+.05+4.0rValuePlusm30.43+.08-1.6CornerGrInv19.74+.06+1.5nRetailm38.81-.08+2.1fComstockAm25.60+.05+1.3 DivIncInvb20.93+.07-1.1 EnergyAm31.32-.32-6.6 Portfolio39.50+.08-2.9rLCGrIInst13.04+.03+4.5 SAMConGrAm18.46+.04+1.5trfBlendAm21.62+.07+2.8 IntlEqtyCm6.74-.02+0.3tCpSpctrmY39.10+.06+2.2 GlbUtilBm12.10-.05-3.5 IntlNewBm17.31-.07+2.9 SmCpValAm15.21+.05+1.0nrBlueChipb60.34+.22+3.6nValueSvcm11.89+.07+2.3ElectrInv84.72+.05+8.4 HlthCrAdvb32.15+.15+6.1 Nsdq100Iv25.84+.08+4.71000Invd53.37+.20+1.9 S&P500Seld32.60+.13+1.8rCmnStkAm43.00+.23+1.9tnSequoia255.19+2.64+7.3Growth74.93...-0.8nSmCapVald75.21+.61+1.9nBalanced23.46+.04+1.6 BlChpGr71.47+.16+4.6 CapApprec26.86+.09+1.7 CorpInc9.76+.03-0.5 EmMktStkd32.88-.38-0.4 EqIndexd56.23+.23+1.8 EqtyInc32.66+.08+0.1 FinSer22.50+.08+2.7 GNMA9.59+.01-0.3 GlbTech13.02-.01+3.5 GrowStk55.15+.09+4.7 HealthSci76.44+.27+8.8 HiYieldd6.88-. 01+1.2 InsLgCpGr29.03+.05+4.7 IntlEqIdxd12.91-.01+2.5 IntlGrIncd14.28-.01+2.2 IntlStkd16.47-.08+2.9 MediaTele67.76-.15+3.3 MidCapVa29.45+.02+0.3 MidCpGr78.99+.14+3.4 NJTaxFBd12.10...-0.8 NewAmGro44.56+.09+4.3 NewAsiad16.89-.13+0.8 NewHoriz45.52+.10+2.9 NewIncome9.59+.01-0.6 OrseaStkd9.90...+3.1 R201514.70+.01+0.9 R202516.07+.01+1.5 R203517.12+.01+1.9 Reald27.20+.28-3.1 Rtmt202021.12+.01+1.2 Rtmt203023.61+.02+1.7 Rtmt 204024.62+.01+2.1 Rtmt204516.47+.01+2.1 SciTech39.00-.03+3.4 ShTmBond4.75...-0.1 SmCpStk44.97+.22+1.9 SmCpVald46.10+.230.0 SpecGrow24.20+.01+2.3 SpecInc12.66...-0.5 SumMuInc11.92...-0.9 TaxEfMultd22.55+.06+4.4 TaxFShInt5.63...-0.8 Value34.80+.10+1.7TotRetBdI10.30+.02-0.4fBdIdxInst10.91+.03-0.7 EqIx15.78+.06+1.9 StIncInvAm10.20-.01+0.3 StrIncIns10.20-.01+0.4tBruce508.44-.33-2.0Focus41.31+.14+5.0tIntlVlInsd15.28-.03+1.4rClipper101.36+.25+1.5nRealty77.43+.77-3.9nrtAcornIntZ42.97-.19+1.5 AcornZ32.83+.10+2.3 IntlVlBm13.65+.04+2.9 Mar21CBm19.43+.08+3.8 MarGrIAm24.48+.02+2.8‘1YrFixInIx10.31...0.0 2YrGlbFII9.91...0.0 5YrGlbFII10.98+.02-0.2 EmMkCrEqI19.04-.17-1.0 EmMktValI25.44-.18-1. 5 IntCorEqIx12.14-.01+2.3 IntSmCapI19.45+.01+3.2 IntlSCoI17.57+.01+2.4 IntlValuI18.37...+2.2 RelEstScIx32.80...-4.3 TAUSCrE2Ix14.44...+1.8 USCorEq1Ix18.19...+1.9 USCorEq2Ix17.72+.01+1.7 USLgCox16.38...+1.8 USLgValIx33.99-.07+1.1 USSmValIx34.89+.15+0.9 USSmallIx31.54+.11+2.3 USTgtValInstx22.48+.03+1.5‘NYVentAm37.74+.09+2.1‘rfAmerGovtAm8.54+.01-0.7‘tCoreEqAm24.88+.11+3.7 CoreEqS25.11+.11+3.7 GNMAS14.43+.02+0.1‘nnBal102.93+.29+1.2 GlbStock12.01-.01+1.9 Income13.85+.01-0.2 IntlStk43.39-.09+2.1 Stock181.24+.66+1.8‘ntrTotRetBdNb10.95...-0.4‘tAppreciaInv54.25+.19+1.0 MidCapIdx38.69+.15+1.7 MuniBd11.77...-1.0 NYTaxEBd14.89...-1.0 ShTrmIncD10.53+.01+0.1 SmCoVal30.91+.07+3.6nDivBldrAm14.54+.06+1.4 FltgRtI9.00...+1.2 TMSmCaBm21.64+.13+3.7fCommStk27.86+.14+2.2 LgCap21.58+.08+1.5Capitald38.24-.12-1.8 Cresd33.99+.01+1.1 NewIncd10.16+.01+0.1nrtFairhomed34.90-.08+5.2HiIncBdAm7.68-.01+0.8 IntSmMCoAm38.21-.04+5.3 KaufmanAm6.14+.01+5.5 MDTMdCpGrStBm35.44+.14+3.1 StrValI5.82+.01-2.2 ’ “ ”•– CLOSE —‘— f– f“–““‘f ”•– CLOSE —‘— f– f“–““‘f nf AVHI12.9319.44 ”” +1.0+7.4-20.0dd... rrrn ALGT104.52190.29 •’” +2.7+27.2+74.0301.00a ARCB30.1447.52 ’”” +1.3-12.5+9.8230.24 n BAC14.3718.21 ” -0.3-9.6-5.6460.20 rn CCL33.1147.44 ’’” +1.3-0.8+15.8291.00 n CHS14.3918.98 ” +0.5+8.5+7.80.31f r CBRL92.84152.87 ”•• +1.8+6.7+53.2244.00 ‘ DIS76.31106.64 ”•’’ +1.4+11.8+26.0231.15f nnr ETN57.1179.98 ” +0.5+0.8-6.8182.20f nt FBHS36.5448.17 ’” +0.8+0.1-3.3250.56f nr FRO1.185.05 •’• -0.8-1.6-43.0dd... n HRS60.7879.32 ”• -0.2+4.5+3.5151.88 PFF38.3240.17 -0.2+0.4+9.6q2.36e – nt KSU95.41126.49 • -0.1-6.9+17.8251.32f n LEN35.7451.51 ’• +0.2+8.7+13.7170.16 rn MNI1.867.39 +0.5-40.1-65.11... NEE90.33112.64 • +0.2-6.9+12.0173.08f ‘n ODP3.849.77 ...+8.5+100.9dd... f PGTI7.3412.32 -0.3+14.1-7.832... n PNRA142.41 193.18 ”’• -0.3-9.0-12.724... r PBA29.8848.89 ’” -1.6-13.1-6.9301.74 nnrf POM19.5527.92 • -0.3-0.2+41.2241.08 nn PNX38.0770.92 ”•• +1.3-16.8+6.9 ... nr RJF47.4959.48 ”” -0.1+2.5+11.2170.72f rrrt RS50.6375.38 ” +1.5-4.3-16.5131.60f R76.0995.82 •” +0.6-0.9+19.9221.48 nn JOE15.7626.64 •’ +4.7-6.3-12.64... rrtr SBH24.0934.04 • -0.5+8.4+16.322... nn SPG157.08206.31 ’’’ -0.1-0.9+20.9405.60f SMRT7.8312.86 •• +2.4+23.8+28.5260.30a tt STI33.9743.06 ’• +0.4+0.5+9.8130.80 tnn SGC7.3019.49 ’” -0.5+25.6+127.6230.30 TE16.2022.02 +0.9-7.5+19.3330.90f ‘ TECD52.2271.31 ”’” +0.2-9.1-0.210... n WEN7.6111.50 +0.8+21.0+17.4340.22 nrtr INT35.01 55.56 ”’•• -0.4+15.8+23.0170.24f Dear Mr. Berko: About ve years ago, you recommended Bank of America when it was trading between $6 and $8 a share. I came very close to buying 200 shares for my individual retirement account but chickened out because I was concerned it would declare bankruptcy. I am thinking of buying 150 shares today. — MC, Oklahoma City Dear MC: Don’t buy it! I have never, ever recommended Bank of America (BAC-$16.12) stock. That’s because I don’t trust its legal representation, its business model, its accounting or its management. And I certainly don’t trust the 15 people with sinecures on BAC’s vaporous board of directors, each of whom receives a $25,000 monthly check from BAC, lavish per diem pay and a generous bounty from numerous other corporate boards. I did recommend Bank of America’s 7.25 percent noncumulative perpetual convertible preferred stock (BAC.PRL-$1,173) on several occasions in 2009 and 2010, when it traded between the high $600s and the low $700s. I recommended this convertible preferred because I believed that BAC was too big to fail, I thought management was too connected to go to prison and the current yield was in excess of 10 percent. I reckoned readers would enjoy a 10 percent yield while waiting for a capital gains opportunity. Visit Google and type in “Bank of America fraud,” and then read. Next, type in “Bank of America nes and penalties.” You’ll quail at the innumerous details about BAC’s allegedly intentional illegal activities, all of which were said to be approved by management, the executive committee and the board of directors. Those accusations include email fraud, foreclosure fraud, consumer loan fraud, debit and credit card fraud, defective mortgage fraud, currency and commodity manipulation, money laundering, fraudulently overstating its capital ratio, defrauding Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and colluding to rig international benchmark levels used by fund managers. To settle, BAC paid billions in nes and legal fees. Still, management and the board, look down their chins (not their noses) at investors and regulators. BAC’s biggest ne, $16.65 billion, was for selling shoddy mortgages and intentionally misrepresenting their quality. This bank shouldn’t be called Bank of America. That gives America a bad name; rather, BAC should be renamed Bank of the Maa. I’d never recommend a bank that’s run by a crew of crooks who knowingly bilked middle-class Americans out of billions of dollars. This mortgage fraud by BAC, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, UBS, etc., is the primary reason the market crashed in 2008. And in the after math, not a single member of BAC’s management, which engineered this fraud, its executive committee, which encouraged it, or its board of directors, which approved it, paid a ne or spent an hour in jail. It’s good to have well-paid friends in Congress. The ongoing problem with public companies is that mutual funds, pension plans and institutions expect management to grow revenues, earnings and dividends every year because those metrics increase the prices of stocks. If a company fails to do so, its overcompensated CEO will be out of his or her job. BAC’s banksters are expected to provide shareholders with annual gains regardless of the intense competition from their competitors. That’s tough to do, especially when your competition is equally degenerate and the economy can’t generate enough activity to improve revenues, earnings and dividends. So last decade, banks had two alternatives. They could cheat their clients, or they could employ cunning legal counsel to advise how to fudge numbers, skirt rules and misrepresent services. These schemes created cumulative losses of hundreds of billions of dollars, and millions of middle-class Americans were jolted into penury. Many lawyers have become legal terrorists in American society; not a single soul employed by those banks spent a nickel on legal fees. However, Bernie Madoff and his covey of cohorts, who stole tens of billions from wealthy Americans, now reside in some of our best federal hotels. The lesson: Steal from the wealthy and pay the price if you get caught, but it’s OK to step on middle-class Americans because they can’t afford representation. Email Malcolm Berko at mjberko@yahoo.com.Bank of the Mafia Malcolm Berko NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market’s bull run turned six on Monday. The anniversary was marked with modest gains. Stocks were rebounding from a big sell-off on Friday when the market slumped after an unexpectedly strong jobs report. The healthy hiring picture bolstered speculation that the Fed will raise its interest rates sooner than had previously been expected. On Monday, General Motors was among the biggest gainers after announcing a $5 billion stock buyback plan. Deal news also gave the market a boost. Macerich, a real estate investment trust, jumped after bigger rival Simon Property made a hostile bid for the company. Stocks are becoming more volatile as investors try to assess when the Federal Reserve will start to raise interest rates and the impact that will have on the economy. The Fed has kept its benchmark lending rate close to zero for six years, underpinning the run in stocks that stretches back to March, 2009. “Every time the market settles in on what the Fed will do, it gets spooked,” said Jim Dunigan, chief investment ofcer at PNC Asset Management. “Today, that anxiety subsided a bit.” The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 8.17 points, or 0.4 percent, to 2,079.43. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 138.94 points, or 0.8 percent, to 17,995.72. The Nasdaq composite climbed 15.07 points, or 0.3 percent, to 4,942.44.US stock indexes climb | NEWS BRIEFSCBO: Slowing costs reduce price of ObamacareWASHINGTON (AP) — Slowing health care costs are driving down the price tag of President Barack Obama’s health overhaul, just as the Supreme Court is weighing whether to strike a key part of the law. Estimates released Monday reduce the projected cost to taxpay ers by $142 billion over the next decade. That’s an 11 percent drop from previous estimates. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Ofce cited two reasons for the decline: Health insurance premiums are rising slower than projected, and new data show there were fewer people without health insurance before the law. Fewer people without insurance means slightly fewer people will need to take advantage of the law to gain coverage, CBO said. Still, over the next decade, the budget ofce said 24 million to 25 million people a year will get coverage because of the law.Sony Mobile cuts 1,000 jobs at unit in SwedenSTOCKHOLM (AP) — Sony says it will cut 1,000 jobs at a mobile phone unit in Lund, Sweden. Sony Mobile Communications spokeswoman Kajsa Petersson said Monday the move is part of staff cuts announced last month when Sony said it would lay off 2,100 employees from its mobile division globally. Petersson said 800 jobs have already been cut in China in addition to the layoffs at the research and development unit in Lund, which has 2,200 employees. She said it wasn’t clear where the remaining 300 job cuts would happen. Sony retained the unit in Lund after a joint mobile phone venture with Swedish wireless equipment maker Ericsson was terminated in 2012.GM plans $5B stock buyback, averts showdown with hedge fundsDETROIT (AP) — General Motors agreed to buy back $5 billion in stock by the end of next year as part of a plan to return more cash to shareholders. In return, an activist shareholder decided to drop a potentially divisive bid for a seat on the company’s board. The move, announced Monday, is part of a deal with Harry Wilson, a for mer member of the government task force that restructured GM coming out of its 2009 bankruptcy. Wilson, who represents four hedge funds which own about 2 percent of the company, had previously accused GM of hoarding cash to the detriment of shareholders and had sought an $8 billion buyback and a board seat. r,0 0

PAGE 17

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net WIRE Page 7 rrfn ntnb bbt bt btn rnbn trn rb nf ntt r nnb ntn fnt bb ...DrGMnBllrs16.50-3.09 ...DxGldBull9.14-1.18 n .95eDirGMBear14.46+1.96 nn ...DirDGldBr21.04+2.01 bnn tfrtnnn ff fn rbb rbtbnnt trfftbn rrfnt nrtt r‘btn n b‘’ftnn “rbb n“”tn bbn nn .20rE-House6.09-.46 btn nt •’b bffbb nrn nbn t•rtbn rt –tntn nr fb nn–tb • tnbt b n frbn n’fnb “btn n rt nn—b tfb n t–––tt bnfnb nb bbnn ““f f‘nn ffrtn bfn –n ftn rnb b’tnn ’’ft br•b •‘t ’“nnnt •n rrbtb bbn fnb n’btn nnftb ‘ bnb ’fn b‘bntn ‘‘tbn b fr—rn ftn frn fn f•tb ...500.com12.83-1.67 rffnb rbb nnrr–rnt nr•nn b ’••t fnn rbn rbn n “‘n n n•tbn n”bn rbb 2.18fGam&Lsrn36.43+4.06 t’nbn ntn bb nn bt t “’bnn •fnb n•rrfb fft fb r‘b nn r’ r‘n nb rbn rfn rf• r–‘fnt nr–b nr’n nrbtn rr“tb rrtbnt rrbnn rrb ...GoPron37.95-2.18 tb n“tn n’‘“n trbn t“tbb .32GreenPlns29.41+3.83 n‘b r’rbtn t’•nn n bt “nn nt ffn bn nfffnn rftb rbtn frtt bb nnfbb n nbtbb b‘b n•bt f’‘n f‘bn f‘ f‘nnn —ntn nnffbntb “tnb r’tt rn b‘b rrtn r’n – rn nbrnb r—“‘tnn nnrb rf’bbt trf’“nbb nrfrfn “bbb nbt fnn f‘ntn ntt nf •t fn nn –fb n ‘r ‘—nbb n‘•” ‘tn ‘’bn ‘r tn ‘nnt ‘bbt n‘‘–b btr“nnntb ‘•ft t‘rt ‘n tn ‘tnt ‘bn b‘rb ‘”“tnt ‘fbbn rn r’nb tttt •bt nrfff bn rbt bnn nnnb bfb tbb ’“t ’t n•nbbb btn n“’n ’n ffbn tt fnb nnfrnn n’fn fftt ”nt rtn ”’‘t n“•r‘n rfb f“nb f’ btn nr‘nn nr‘fttn n’t tnb ntb r‘ ’tb trn rn • bn r’n nbnn n•rnnt • rffnt n’ rfb f’nb brbnbb n nn–ftn n–rt –r’t n–“’nn –ftnb –r“n n–fbtn n–bbn –“n –t –bn –b –“‘b –tb t–n –rnn tn–“r’b –btn –b –nt –rn –r nn–r‘•ttbn –rb t–rfbb ...LumberLiq27.95-5.37 t–rntbn n–rfbnn n•bn •tnt •’tn nn•n b•”fn n•bt •tbnt ••ffntb •t 2.60Macerich92.76+6.04 •f b•n •f n•rrnbnn • •b •‘n nn•‘“ttbb ...MVJrGold22.18-1.25 •rbtb • •ftnn n•“•tn n•f ••tb •nn •ft •n •bnb n•rb •n n•ftbb t•ffrb nn•rtbnb •f •“r’ ...MediCo27.16-1.62 •btn •rt n•b b• •‘b •rn n•– •rf •r •rfrt •rfn •fnbtt bb•f t•rnb b•rtnt •rb n•r—n n•rrft •rrb n•rb nn•rftn •rrb •bn •rbn bbb b “tb rf n fnb bnt n‘btb rt ‘n rt ’’ t r tnffftt n•n n nn n•bn n• f’ ntt nrn tb ’’rnb fft 1.50NobleCorp14.36-.83 brnb r’bn rnnn rrntn “n bt‘t nr‘r’b nnnb ff‘ f rfnb brftbtt rbtn rrrtn trbt tbn •’’ tn bt•t b•bbn “n t““bnn bt“rtn “•btn “n “tn “n tn nn“ n •n nnbn ff“n “bnn f t ’tn ’n b’n nnn “n tn r tt r“ft ’r‘t t r‘bnb bn rr ‘rn f‘rf‘’ttt bb n“t n“–rbn “’nb t“tn n“•fb “nbn ““t t““–r’b “n “rbnn “rbb “tnn n“ “n “nn “ n“”b “‘t n“n b“n “nnn “‘t “n “ “f ““t “b “ftn “ “r’”n “’rt n“’rrnb “’frtn ““ n“rn b“tn .85ePetrbrsA5.68-.35 .46ePetrobras5.59-.37 “—nn “‘tbt nn“‘’•rnn n“‘’ftn nn“‘’fbtt “‘rrfbbb “n t“nnb ...PinnclEnt31.61+4.19 “fn n“rt b“ bn“f“bt ““r‘tn b“b “rftn “rf‘bn “”n “‘fnbb “n “f’t “nnb “bnnn “nbb “rff “r–rfn “r”“nb n“”“ntntn “”b “”n b“rnt “r”‘“ “”‘bt “r”‘–ntn “‘b “”‘“b nn“rf’’n “n “tt n“btt “’ “••bn n“fnt ‘rrnbt trbbn f •bt ...RTIIntlM38.00+10.72 nn–t f fnt nnrbn ‘rn brtn b nt nrftb n ’ nf’ ’’bn n bnt b nn nrn nrrtnn rfbbb nnr’nnt rfbtn rr’b .40Rowan18.81-1.04 nrnn nbt br‘nn br‘ b’tt n –•’tn n•btbn ’btnn ’rtb “nnn b’rbn ’–‘ttn ’“nt b’t n bnn rbbb frt “‘b bt nfnt nnt r’nb ...BitautoH55.36-11.64 f’ ...BlackBerry9.86-.81 t‘n frn nr rrnn rfnn rb rnbnb rfbt rfrnn rn nn 1.00BreitBurn6.98-.52 nn t • brbt rrn n t b rt n–f nnnb •n btn tb r“‘b tt n‘nnn nfbn nrbt t•ftt nnb ’b nrnt nfbnb ’n b’b n“b rn ’’tt fb tfft r n’bt ’–tbnb ’f•bnn ’f‘bn b‘bttb frnnn •nn nbbt nnttt b’‘bnn —rbt n’nb nnn f tn ’b nrfbn tt“nbn b –t rnn n’‘’ t‘n ‘bb .35ChesEng14.24-.93 ‘rntn ‘t ‘rfbtnt ‘n ‘‘btn r’ nn bb fn frt nr’t ft ...CliffsNRs5.79-.48 trrnttbn ...CloudPeak6.78-.51 rt rrt r rbb r—ft br‘bnb nr‘“n r“tt rrn nnrfnbn nrt tb ’fbb rff nr‘ nnrn nrt trrr“‘tb rfrt rfrrntn nrn rff rr’ ...CorMedix8.78+.53 rn rbb nr’“tn rfrn nr ...CSVInvNG7.47+.96 –f –tbn ‘nnb fn rfn rrnn fnt ’ttn ’ n nfbt r‘ r tr’n b“nn rrn bbbn n ‘ntb n b fn nr’tn –n n–f nn r‘tnt t• n”’rn tr– nn nnb f bnb ...AcelRx5.51-3.23 ‘rnb ftn f— nn •tn .22eAdvSemi7.78+.39 frb rtn rr ‘n nnn nb rbn f nft frnn –btn .12Alcoa13.70-.78 rt b b‘tt ntt nn nfft rbnn n nnbn f’nbn nftt ’‘fnn ’rbn ’•–“ n n •r–tn nfbtn ’n ’–tnnt n’•bt nn “b n’nn n’ ’“tn ft rtn ftn fbb ’f nn t n n’‘rfbbnb nrnbbt rt nbb nn rfn n‘bt ...AntheraPh5.21-.91 r‘ nn’‘b n’rrbb ’’fb n’•nt n fn nr•nn ‘rnbn ‘t “‘n f’bn “nnn ftn rft rnn rb n f‘nt nfbn n •n nr tr “‘‘n n fntnb f rtnnn t’b n “fbn “’bnt n““–nnb 1 0.76eBPPru59.86-3.34 bn n r’bn “n .50eBcoBradpf11.04-.61 brbnn •bn nrbn n•rnbnb •tbt brn rbn nnb bn “bb bbb fr nnn ...BasicEnSv7.19-.47 nbbnt —n n ‘bb fbb tft .76fBigLots50.96+2.44 r’bb rftn r D ivNameLastChg DOW bttb+138.94NASDAQ t+15.07S&P500 nbt+8.1730-YRT-BONDS n-.04CRUDEOIL nnn+.39GOLD n+2.306-MOT-BILLS nt... EURO n... tb 1,840 1,920 2,000 2,080 2,160 S M ONDJF 2,040 2,080 2,120 Close:2,079.43 Change:8.17(0.4%) 10DAYS 4,200 4,500 4,800 5,100 S M ONDJF 4,880 4,960 5,040 ttClose:4,942.44 Change:15.07(0.3%) 10DAYS ‘f –rf rbn “frb t b NYSENASD nnbbttbtnbntb ftnbtntnbn ” bbttbbnnnnb r’nnntnnn tnbtntnbn “nn ntnbnbtbntnn “nn ttttnb f‘nnnttbttntbn ffnnnbtnbnnbHIGHLOWCLOSECHG.%CHG.WKMOQTRYTD t n tbt F romtheNewYorkStockExchange a ndtheNasdaq. bTheyieldonthe 10-year Treasuryfellto 2.19percent Monday.Yields affectrateson mortgagesand otherconsumer loans.NET1YR TREASURIESYESTPVSCHGAGO PRIME RATE FED FUNDS r‘nnnn r‘ntnntn nnn rbnnbnnb rbnnn nrtnnbt nrnnnb NET1YR BONDS YESTPVSCHGAGO f–rbnn r• f”nnnn f”‘ntbnn •rrfr’bb fr’tt f”r’nnnnt ntt Thepriceof goldticked higher,haltinga five-daylosing streakthathad sentittoitslowestsettlement pricesinceNovember.Crude oilalsorose, whilenatural gasfell.nnntnbt ‘r ntn bn fbb ”fbnn FUELS CLOSEPVS.%CHG%YTD rr— nnnn r— bbn “r— n nnn r’’ t “r—nnnn METALS CLOSEPVS.%CHG%YTD nb r bntt r btn rr nnb –nnnbnnn nb rfttbtntn ‘ tb AGRICULTURECLOSEPVS.%CHG%YTD ”’f‘“rnnb rtnnnntb ”’rnnnnnnnb ’ftnnn •“frtnnnnnn 1YR. MAJORS CLOSECHG%CHGAGO f‘nnnnnnnn rrbtnnntbtn r‘nbnnnnbbt f‘rbnnnnnn ff ttnnnn nnbb EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLE EAST fr tnnnn ‘fbnnnnbt rrrbbtnntnbbnb ’tntntn ’rrbtnnnn r‘rrtn rntn ASIA/PACIFICrtb b Thedollarwas mixedagainst major currencies.It dippedagainst theBritish pound,butit roseversusthe Japaneseyen andwasclose toflatagainst theeuro.YEST6MOAGO 1YRAGO rbb nn‘b ‘ntn –n tn ffbn f’n ‘tt n’nnnnn rfnn ‘bbn ‘’tnb tn ‘nt nr“r’n f•tn ntt frtb ‘•rbnb n ’tt rbb nr’nnn rrr“n r’bb nrfntn nrbnnn nr nr‘rnn fnn ...SwstnEngy22.29-1.36 nnr ’n ’ tb“•fnnb tn“‘b b“tnb t“rfb “b n“ n“ftt b“‘tn n“”bn ntb ’fb .35StarGas6.80-.61 ftn nnn nbbb trbtb b tnt n“’nt r’n nftt bbb rt frn nfnb nfntb ’ ’ntn fbn n nrff nfrtt •r”nn –nnb “’–t tnt n bfbbnn nbb n b rbn n nnr f•rtnnn bnfrrb fb ‘ftb nt nrtt ‘rtn fnt n•rbn b nntbb nnn nnb r‘fnt nrfnn nrn rrtn 3.00Transocn14.58-.94 nfnbt brt n’nt r n nfb ...TrueBlue23.72+1.12 fbn b’’bbn nfrb nfrn bt nrnnb nfrn n”tt b”’f b”–rttt ...UTiWrldwd13.92+1.33 ”n ”fbnnn ”fttt b”b n”r“fbbb ”bbt ”r t”“nnn b ”ftn t”’t ...USNGas13.62-.7 5 ” n”b ”‘b n”‘‘’tnn n”f’b ”’b t ”n ”t r’bnb n t n’ “‘ntt nrn ’tbn n ’b t btt tbn t f fbnnnn t f n—rn rbt nr’t ’f‘r’f tfbn f‘n ...VivintSoln11.52+.8 0 •b rrnn nrt b n• n n t nt n“ “bn t• t rrfn nn f•bn ftb ‘t nf ‘ttn n nfrbn frntn t ftn n tf•n fn nnnn f”rtb f’tn t ‘f nn‘’nbn ...WhitingPet37.71+3.6 8 ‘rrrn frf nf“fnnt nnfbn t tf n b’n b nrrtn t t nn –’ •b n r nn b t t ‘rrt n ’ nrn b fbt b t t n r’‘t rft rb b t n nbn StockFootnotes: rrrrfff‘fr ’rr’rr’r fr‘‘fr’• ’ffrf‘rf rrfff–‘ rfff‘f‘‘‘r frr‘r’“fr ff’“f ’’rrfffr’‘f ’‘rff’’fr‘f rffrf’rfn‘‘’f fr‘ff’fn’‘‘f ff‘‘frfff‘f r’‘frfr ‘‘”r‘rfr’ ’rf‘’r r—‘’ ’’frr‘ rf bold r‘ f‘’rr’” rn rffrfr‘ DividendFootnotes: f’r’f fr–rr’f r‘f‘‘ffrf rrf’frf’r rf’‘f•rf frrr’‘f ff‘ff‘‘f frfr’ rrrf‘rr’ ’r‘f’ffr“fr’’r f‘rfr PEFootnotes: rf rfr“rf‘r“ftt –rfffr‘f MutualFundFootnotes: r rff f’rfffff‘r ’rrrff‘f•’f ‘f‘ffr’r r’’rfffff f’f‘f‘’fr‘ Source •rf‘ffr“ff STOCKS LISTING CHANGE REQUESTS WELCOME!The Sun Newspaper is tweaking the way stocks are listed in the daily paper. We will continue to run a wide range of stocks, but we’re trying to eliminate stocks our readers don’t want. If you do not see your stock in the paper, please let us know and we will put it in the listings. Email the name of the company and the symbol to nlane@sun-herald.com, or call 941-206-1138. You can leave the stock name and symbol on voice mail. ............................ .......................................... ......... ........ ..............................................._.......................................... ...................................................................................tN

PAGE 18

Page 8 WIRE www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 WEATHER/STATE NEWS Port Charlotte Tampa Bradenton Englewood Fort Myers Myakka City Punta Gorda Lehigh Acres Arcadia Hull Bartow Winter Haven Plant City Brandon St. Petersburg Wauchula Sebring Lake Wales Frostproof La Belle Felda Lake Placid Brighton Venus Longboat Key Placida Osprey Limestone Apollo Beach Venice Ft. Meade Sarasota Clearwater Boca Grande Cape Coral 0-50 Good; 51-100 Moderate; 101-150 Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200 Unhealthy; 201-300 Very Unhealthy; 301-500 Hazardous Source : scgov.net 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m.The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. RealFeel Temperature is the exclusive AccuWeather. com composite of effective temperature based on eight weather factors.UV Index and RealFeel Temperature Today Precipitation (in inches)Temperatures Gulf Water Temperature Source : National Allergy BureauPunta Gorda Englewood Boca Grande El Jobean Venice High Low High Low Cape Sable to Tarpon Springs Tarpon Springs to Apalachicola Wind Speed Seas Bay/Inland direction in knots in feet chop City Hi Lo W Hi Lo WCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo WCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo W WORLD CITIESCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo WCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo W City Hi Lo W Hi Lo WCity Hi Lo W Hi Lo W FLORIDA CITIES CONDITIONS TODAY TIDES AIR QUALITY INDEX POLLEN INDEX Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. ALMANAC Sanibel Bonita Springs Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. North Port MARINE THE NATION Cold Warm Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow Ice Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Fronts Precipitation -10s-0s0s10s20s30s40s50s60s70s80s90s100s110sU.S. ExtremesThe Sun Rise Set The Moon Rise SetPossible weather-related delays today. Check with your airline for the most updated schedules. Hi/Lo Outlook Delays Minor Major Minor MajorThe solunar period schedule allows planning days so you will be fishing in good territory or hunting in good cover during those times. Major periods begin at the times shown and last for 1.5 to 2 hours. The minor periods are shorter. AIRPORT SUN AND MOON SOLUNAR TABLE Publication date: 03/10/15697987887977 TODAY Partly cloudy, isolated p.m. rain86 / 6740% chance of rainPartly cloudy, isolated p.m. rain86 / 6840% chance of rain WEDNESDAY Partly cloudy, isolated p.m. rain86 / 6740% chance of rain THURSDAY Partly cloudy, isolated p.m. rain85 / 6630% chance of rain FRIDAY Partly cloudy, isolated p.m. rain84 / 6520% chance of rain SATURDAYAir Quality Index readings as of MondayMain pollutant: ozoneForecasts and graphics, except for the WINK-TV 5-day forecast, provided by AccuWeather, Inc. Punta Gorda through 5 p.m. Monday24 hours through 5 p.m. Monday 0.00” Month to date 0.36” Normal month to date 0.93” Year to date 4.59” Normal year to date 5.16” Record 3.19” (1969) High/Low 85/59 Normal High/Low 80/57 Record High 90 (1974) Record Low 33 (1971) Today Wed. Today Wed. Today Wed.Apalachicola 76 64 c 74 65 c Bradenton 82 67 sh 82 66 s Clearwater 82 67 pc 81 67 pc Coral Springs 84 72 pc 86 72 pc Daytona Beach 82 66 pc 82 64 pc Fort Lauderdale 82 74 pc 83 73 c Fort Myers 87 69 sh 88 68 pc Fort Pierce 84 67 pc 84 66 pc Gainesville 86 64 pc 83 64 pc Jacksonville 83 62 pc 82 64 pc Key Largo 82 72 pc 83 71 pc Key West 82 75 pc 83 74 pc Kissimmee 86 69 pc 86 68 sh Lakeland 86 68 pc 86 67 sh Melbourne 83 68 pc 82 67 pc Miami 84 75 pc 85 74 pc Naples 86 70 sh 87 69 pc Ocala 87 65 pc 84 64 sh Okeechobee 85 64 pc 85 64 sh Orlando 85 69 pc 85 67 sh Panama City 75 61 sh 74 63 c Pensacola 74 62 sh 72 63 r Pompano Beach 83 76 pc 84 75 c St. Augustine 80 64 pc 79 63 pc St. Petersburg 85 68 pc 83 67 pc Sanford 85 68 pc 84 67 pc Sarasota 83 67 sh 82 67 s Tallahassee 82 59 c 79 63 sh Tampa 85 69 pc 84 69 pc Titusville 82 66 pc 82 64 pc Vero Beach 84 69 pc 84 67 pc West Palm Beach 84 75 pc 85 73 c Winter Haven 87 69 pc 86 69 shToday 6:44a 12:59a 6:13p 12:22p Wed. 7:43a 1:51a 6:51p 12:49p Today 5:21a 10:38a 4:50p --Wed. 6:20a 12:07a 5:28p 11:05a Today 4:26a 8:59a 3:55p 10:28p Wed. 5:25a 9:26a 4:33p 11:31p Today 7:16a 1:28a 6:45p 12:51p Wed. 8:15a 2:20a 7:23p 1:18p Today 3:36a 9:17a 3:05p 10:46p Wed. 4:35a 9:44a 3:43p 11:49p SE 10-20 1-3 Light ESE 6-12 1-3 Light 86/67 86/65 87/66 87/68 87/66 86/67 86/64 86/63 86/65 85/69 82/67 82/68 82/68 87/69 86/66 87/67 87/67 87/66 87/66 86/67 87/69 86/68 86/68 85/68 86/66 80/67 81/67 81/67 87/66 84/68 81/66 86/67 83/67 82/67 80/68 86/68 85/6670 Pollen Index readings as of Monday Today Wed. Today Wed. Today Wed. Today Wed.Albuquerque 64 35 s 67 39 s Anchorage 18 6 s 19 6 s Atlanta 76 58 sh 76 63 sh Baltimore 49 45 r 60 35 r Billings 63 38 s 66 42 pc Birmingham 75 61 r 72 62 r Boise 71 46 s 62 45 c Boston 46 39 pc 52 31 pc Buffalo 44 35 pc 41 25 pc Burlington, VT 46 36 s 46 22 pc Charleston, WV 57 50 r 57 40 r Charlotte 72 60 sh 76 59 sh Chicago 53 36 pc 49 31 s Cincinnati 53 44 r 61 36 c Cleveland 49 36 c 47 29 pc Columbia, SC 81 60 c 82 62 c Columbus, OH 51 40 r 56 32 pc Concord, NH 48 33 pc 50 24 pc Dallas 64 45 c 70 47 pc Denver 59 30 s 68 35 s Des Moines 67 38 s 62 38 s Detroit 48 37 pc 52 31 pc Duluth 47 26 pc 44 31 s Fairbanks 3 -19 c 4 -20 pc Fargo 55 27 pc 58 42 pc Hartford 47 37 pc 52 29 pc Helena 65 38 s 63 40 c Honolulu 79 66 pc 76 65 sh Houston 66 52 r 70 53 c Indianapolis 53 39 r 58 35 pc Jackson, MS 75 60 r 70 60 r Kansas City 66 41 s 69 41 s Knoxville 68 58 r 66 55 r Las Vegas 77 52 s 74 53 c Los Angeles 82 57 pc 72 54 c Louisville 56 49 r 63 43 c Memphis 63 52 r 62 55 c Milwaukee 50 34 pc 46 32 s Minneapolis 59 31 s 54 37 s Montgomery 81 62 r 78 65 sh Nashville 68 56 r 63 53 r New Orleans 75 63 r 73 64 r New York City 49 42 r 55 36 pc Norfolk, VA 64 56 c 65 40 sh Oklahoma City 67 41 pc 73 43 s Omaha 69 35 s 66 39 s Philadelphia 51 44 r 60 36 pc Phoenix 85 57 s 87 64 pc Pittsburgh 52 40 r 51 29 pc Portland, ME 44 35 s 50 28 pc Portland, OR 67 49 pc 60 49 sh Providence 45 36 pc 50 28 pc Raleigh 73 58 c 76 55 c Salt Lake City 63 40 s 67 45 pc St. Louis 62 44 r 67 41 s San Antonio 69 48 pc 71 49 s San Diego 75 60 pc 71 58 c San Francisco 65 55 pc 64 53 c Seattle 61 51 pc 57 50 sh Washington, DC 52 49 r 62 40 r Amsterdam 51 32 c 50 35 pc Baghdad 83 50 s 81 52 s Beijing 49 27 s 52 27 s Berlin 54 34 c 47 32 s Buenos Aires 84 70 s 85 69 s Cairo 79 60 c 75 55 pc Calgary 56 32 s 61 29 pc Cancun 84 73 s 85 73 pc Dublin 48 38 pc 50 33 r Edmonton 41 26 c 39 26 c Halifax 35 31 s 42 24 sh Kiev 53 32 s 52 37 pc London 52 37 pc 52 43 r Madrid 73 39 s 73 41 s Mexico City 72 47 pc 69 45 sh Montreal 43 34 c 41 21 pc Ottawa 42 32 pc 41 19 pc Paris 54 41 c 56 38 c Regina 37 23 pc 40 28 c Rio de Janeiro 90 77 c 90 77 t Rome 58 41 s 60 43 pc St. John’s 20 11 sf 37 20 sn San Juan 84 74 s 84 74 pc Sydney 78 70 sh 83 68 pc Tokyo 51 36 r 51 40 pc Toronto 45 36 pc 47 26 pc Vancouver 54 43 pc 54 45 r Winnipeg 39 18 s 39 31 c 85/66High ............. 90 at Palm Springs, CALow ....................... -3 at Houlton, MEFt. Myers 87/69 showers afternoon Punta Gorda 87/67 showers afternoon Sarasota 83/67 showers afternoon Last Mar 13 New Mar 20 First Mar 27 Full Apr 4 Today 11:58 p.m. 10:35 a.m. Wednesday none 11:17 a.m. Today 7:44 a.m. 7:34 p.m. Wednesday 7:43 a.m. 7:35 p.m. Today 9:56a 3:44a 10:19p 4:07p Wed. 10:48a 4:36a 11:12p 5:00p Thu. 11:41a 5:29a ---5:54p(For the 48 contiguous states yesterday) MONTHLY RAINFALLMonth 2015 2014 Avg. Record/YearJan. 0.64 3.67 1.80 7.07/1979 Feb. 3.59 1.24 2.43 11.05/1983 Mar. 0.36 5.10 3.28 9.26/1970 Apr. 2.00 2.03 5.80/1994 May 3.68 2.50 9.45/1991 Jun. 6.34 8.92 23.99/1974 Jul. 5.21 8.22 14.22/1995 Aug. 7.06 8.01 15.60/1995 Sep. 11.40 6.84 14.03/1979 Oct. 1.67 2.93 10.88/1995 Nov. 4.60 1.91 5.53/2002 Dec. 0.15 1.78 6.83/2002 Year 4.59 52.12 50.65 (since 1931)Totals are from a 24-hour period ending at 5 p.m. JUNO BEACH (PRNewswire) — Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) today led updated fuel cost projections for 2015 with the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC), requesting to reduce customer rates beginning May 1, 2015, thanks primarily to projected savings on natural gas costs. If approved by the PSC, FPL’s typical 1,000-kilowatt-hour residential customer bill would decrease by $3 a month. With this reduction, FPL’s typical bill will be approximately 30 percent lower than the latest national average. “We’re thrilled to be able to reduce rates while we continue to deliver clean power and outstanding service for our customers,” said Eric Silagy, president and CEO of FPL. “The investments we’ve made in converting our old, oil-red power plants to modern energy-efcient centers that run on clean natural gas continue to deliver benets. U.S.produced natural gas is critical to reducing emis sions and keeping our customers free from the past’s reliance on foreign oil, and the projected decrease in cost is an excellent added benet for our customers.” On track to continue to be the lowest in Florida for a sixth year in a row, FPL’s typical 1,000-kWh residential customer bill with the rate reduction will be more than 10 percent lower than it was in 2006, nearly a decade ago. Beginning with the May 2015 billing cycle, the requested fuel charge reduction would result in a $3 decrease on a 1,000-kWh residential customer bill. All rates are subject to change and must be approved by the PSC before implementation. Bill totals include the state’s standard gross receipts tax but do not include any local taxes or fees that vary by municipality. FPL residential customers can calculate their estimated savings by entering their monthly electricity usage into the online calculator at FPL.com/lowerbills. Investments in high-efciency natural gas generation since 2001 have enabled FPL to cut its use of foreign oil by more than 99 percent — from more than 40 million barrels of oil in 2001 to less than 1 million barrels annually today. The company has been strategically phasing out older, less-efcient fossil fuel plants and replacing them with new, high-efciency natural gas energy centers that use approximately one-third less fuel per megawatt-hour. Since 2001, the effectiveness of these investments has saved FPL customers more than $7.5 billion on fuel and prevented more than 85 million tons of carbon emissions. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency calculates that this amount of carbon reduction is equivalent to removing more than 16 million cars from the road annually or switching more than 2 billion incandescent lights to compact uorescents. “Our affordable clean energy strategy is working for our customers. The combination of clean, high-efciency natural gas energy centers, along with cost-effective energy efciency programs and zero-emissions nuclear and solar power, ensure we can continue to reliably deliver affordable clean electricity for customers 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, now and in the future,” Silagy said. FPL.com’s advanced energy tools can help customers save more FPL’s Online Home Energy Survey can help customers reduce their bills further with per sonalized energysavings plans, tips and recommendations.FPL files to reduce customer rates | HEADLINE NEWS FROM AROUND THE STATEFlorida probes cyber-attack on school testing programTALLAHASSEE (AP) — The state’s top law enforcement agency is investigating cyberattacks that caused several school districts to suspend standardized tests. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement and the Department of Education announced the investigation Monday, a week after school districts started reporting problems with the tests. Administrators were having problems logging into the testing system and some students were being logged out before completing tests. The Department of Education blamed the problems on software issues and thought the situation was resolved Tuesday, but then suspected a cyberattack when there were numerous reports of “white screens” after people tried to log into the system. FDLE was contacted and is now trying to determine the source of the attacks.10th Florida panther of 2015 diesFORT MYERS (AP) — Another Florida panther has been killed by a car. The News-Press of Fort Myers reported Monday that the cat’s carcass was found Sunday in Collier County on County Road 951. It was a male, approximately 2.5 years old. An 18-month-old panther had been found dead on Saturday on Interstate 75 in Lee County. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission says these were the ninth and 10th Florida panthers to be killed this year, and the seventh and eighth to be killed by a car.Apopka sculptures called ‘Balinese junk’APOPKA (Orlando Sentinel) — Apopka’s mysterious stone gures, thought possibly to be priceless Asian artifacts, apparently are the Indonesian equivalent of lawn gnomes. Southeast Asian art scholars who viewed photographs of the carvings believe they are, in the opinion of one expert, “contemporary Balinese junk.” The curious gures, each weighing hundreds of pounds, were discovered by weed-whacking city workers about a decade ago near Highland Manor, a wedding and banquet venue at the intersection of State Road 436 and U.S. Highway 441, one of Apopka’s busiest intersections.Man sues Sarasota jail over poor back pain treatmentSARASOTA (AP) — A former inmate of the Sarasota County jail has led a lawsuit claiming he was left with permanent and serious issues after jail ofcials refused to adequately treat his back pain. The Sarasota HeraldTribune reports that the man sued Armor Correctional Health Services, the company that runs the jail clinic. The man, who was jailed on drug charges, claims jail ofcials did little to help him when he was suffering from pain so severe that he could not walk. He later required sur gery for a disk herniation and was diagnosed with a rare disorder involving the lower spinal cord. Armor Correctional Health Services said in a statement that it could not discuss specics of the case but that the company has extensive experience providing high levels of care.Bear contractors wanted in Lee and Highlands countiesFORT MYERS (AP) — Wanted: Bear contractors. Must have exible schedule, vehicle able to haul small trailer, clean criminal history and people skills. The News-Press reports that because Lee and Highlands counties are experiencing an increase in human-bear conicts, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is seeking a contractor to assist in trapping bears, retrieval of carcasses resulting from vehicle collisions and community outreach. FWC has divided the state into seven Bear Management Units. Lee and Collier counties are in the South BMU, which contains the state’s second-largest bear population, 516 to 878, compared to the Central BMU, with 825 to 1,225. Human-bear conicts include a bear digging through trash, walking through a yard, destroying crops, threatening or attacking humans or domestic animals. 50477201 Where Shopping Makes Cents charlottecountychamber.org Shop Charlotte

PAGE 19

SPORTSTuesday, March 10, 2015 YourSun.com Facebook.com/SunCoastSports @ S unCoastSports SunCoastSportsNow .com Sports Editor: Mark Lawrence INDEX | Lottery 2 | Golf 2 | Preps 2 | College baseball 2 | NBA 3 | NFL 3 | College basketball 4 | Scoreboard 5 | Baseball 6 AP PHOTOTampa Bay second baseman Alexi Casilla throws to rst to record an out during Monday’s spring training game against the New York Yankees in Tampa. MLB: Tampa BayCan a new wrinkle smooths Karns’ pathTAMPA — Nathan Karns made two starts for Tampa Bay last season, but that was enough to know he needed an extra pitch. So this spring, the righthander — primar ily a fastball/ curveball pitcher throughout his minor league career — is working on his changeup. Karns always has had that pitch as part of his repertoire, but it’s never been something he threw frequently. That’s something he’s trying to change as he competes for the Rays’ fth starter job out of camp. “Throw it for a strike, throw it out of the zone; really just get control of it,” Karns said of his focus this spring. “Being able By JOSH VITALESPORTS WRITERStarter works on changeup to give him a third optionAP PHOTOTampa Bay starting pitcher Nathan Karns delivers a pitch during his perfect rst inning against the New York Yankees on Monday. Karns also worked a perfect third inning. In the second, however, the Yankees tagged him for two runs. INSIDE Kevin Cash faces a former team for the first time as the Rays manager, Page 6 Charlotte Stone Crabs put singlegame tickets on sale, Page 6 Monday’s linescores, Page 5 Rays play split-squad games Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte, 1:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, Fort Myers, 1:05 p.m. Check out the Tampa Bay Rays Morning Report each day at SunCoastSportsNow.com and follow Twitter @SunCoastSports for breaking news anytime from the Rays camp.TODAY ONLINEKARNS | 6 MOST CAP SPACEWhen the NFL’s new year begins at 4 p.m. today, teams can start signing free agents. These teams have the most money to spend. JACKSONVILLE : Estimated $68 million. The Jaguars have plenty of needs to fill except at quarterback. OAKLAND : Estimated $64 million. The Raiders finished the season last in the league in total offense and rushing. N.Y. JETS : Estimated $53 million. New general manager Mike Maccagnan has several holes to fill. Team was criticized for not spending last offseason. CLEVELAND : Estimated $49 million. Despite taking Johnny Manziel in the first round last year, the Browns’ quarterback situation is still muddled. TENNESSEE : Estimated $41 million. Tennessee has had only one winning season since last making the playoffs in 2008. Note: Among the 2014 playoff teams, the Indianapolis Colts (estimated $41 million) and the Cincinnati Bengals (estimated $39 million) have the most cap space going into free agency.KEEP AN EYE ONDefensive lineman Ndamukong Suh, one of the biggest prizes in this year’s free agent class, reportedly agreed to sign a record-setting contract with Miami. For those teams with the least amount of money to spend, see Page 3The NFL’s free agent market is scheduled to open this afternoon. The question is: Will any NFL free agents remain available at that point? That is overstating the case, of course. Plenty of players eligible for unrestricted free agency will have their services up for grabs when the market ofcially opens at 4 p.m. But after a weekend of maneuvering leaguewide and reports of deals being lined up between teams and some of the top available free agents during the league’s threeday negotiating window, it’s clear today’s market opening could be comparatively anticlimactic. Defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, widely regarded as the top available free agent, reportedly is in line to receive a six-year, $114 million contract from Miami that includes $60 million in guaranteed money, ensuring his departure from Detroit. Other top free agents such as corner back Byron Maxwell, wide receiver Jeremy Maclin and linebacker Pernell McPhee reportedly have Signing period begins with a surplus of irony NFL: Free agencyTop free agents are off the market before it even opensBy MARK MASKETHE WASHINGTON POST NFL | 3MIAMI — Chris Bosh was back around the Miami Heat on Monday night. “Back where I belong,” Bosh said. And with that, his recovery from a condition that could have ended his career — or life — keeps moving along. In another encouraging step, the Heat said that Bosh is scheduled to resume “full basketball activities” in September, which would indicate that he expects to be able to play when training camp for the 2015-16 season starts. Bosh will be evaluated later this month and if cleared, “may begin regular exercise with plans to start strength training next month,” the team said. The Heat released the statement from team thoracic surgeon John DeRosimo and team cardiologist Ed Neff. “I knew I was going to play basketball again,” Bosh expects to be ready for training camp NBA: MiamiBy TIM REYNOLDSASSOCIATED PRESS “ AP PHOTO I knew I was going to play basketball again.CHRIS BOSH Miami Heat veteran in his first public comments since he was diagnosed with blood clots on one of his lungs last month “ CB would do just about anything to be out there right now.ERIK SPOELSTRA Miami Heat coach on ailing veteran Chris BoshBOSH | 3 iAlf *AP414 41=rw.jL4J

PAGE 20

Page 2 SP www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 Florida Lotterywww.flalottery.com CASH 3March 9N .....................................8-2-7 March 9D ......................................0-6-3 March 8N .....................................9-9-9 March 8D ......................................6-0-0 March 7N .....................................7-8-5 March 7D ......................................5-9-6 D-Day, N-Night PLAY 4March 9N ..................................6-4-2-8 March 9D ...................................7-6-9-5 March 8N ..................................1-3-1-0 March 8D ...................................9-1-7-0 March 7N ..................................9-0-5-9 March 7D ...................................6-7-7-8 D-Day, N-Night FANTASY 5March 9 ........................10-12-15-16-36 March 8 ..........................7-12-14-28-31 March 7 ..........................5-13-21-30-31PAYOFF FOR MARCH 83 5-digit winners ................$67,059.92 331 4-digit winners .......................$98 9,437 3-digit winners .................$9.50 LUCKY MONEYMarch 6 .................................4-9-11-45 Lucky Ball ..........................................11 March 3 ...............................4-24-41-42 Lucky Ball ............................................9PAYOFF FOR MARCH 60 4-of-4 LB ........................... $2 Million 4 4-of-4 ................................$2,861.50 102 3-of-4 LB ...............................$245 976 3-of-4 .................................$75.50 LOTTOMarch 7 ..................28-33-37-41-44-45 March 4 ....................5-19-23-31-44-46PAYOFF FOR MARCH 70 6-digit winners ..........................$2M 17 5-digit winners ....................$7,358 1,191 4-digit winners ...............$86.50 POWERBALLMarch 7 ........................34-36-38-42-50 Powerball ..........................................33 March 4 ..........................8-12-15-35-50 Powerball ..........................................32PAYOFF FOR MARCH 70 5 of 5 + PB .............................$100M 0 5 of 5 ...............................$1,000,000 3 4 of 5 + PB ............................$10,000 56 4 of 5 ......................................$100ESTIMATED JACKPOT $119 million MEGA MILLIONSMarch 6 ........................30-48-55-68-73 Mega Ball ............................................5 March 3 ..........................9-11-42-44-50 Mega Ball ............................................3PAYOFF FOR MARCH 60 5 of 5 + MB ..............................$20M 0 5 of 5 ...............................$1,000,000 1 4 of 5 + MB ............................$5,000 18 4 of 5 ......................................$500ESTIMATED JACKPOT $25 million Contact usM ark Lawrence Sports Editor mlawrence@sun-herald.com Rob Shore Staff writer shore@sun-herald.com Josh Vitale Staff writer jvitale@sun-herald.comEMAIL: sports@sun-herald.com FAX: 941-629-2085 SunCoast Sports NowWhen news breaks, we blog it at www.suncoastsportsnow.com Like us and share our photos on Facebook: facebook.com/SunCoastSports Follow us on Twitter for live event updates and breaking news: @SunCoastSportsCorrections It is the Sun’s policy to correct all errors of fact. To report an error, call the sports department at 941-206-1175 or email sports@sun-herald.com. GARAGESALELISTINGSALW AY SI NTHECLASSIFIEDS How to Submit a story idea: Email or call Mark Lawrence 941-206-1175. Email or voice message must contain name, address and phone number. Submit local golf scores: Email scores to golfscores@sun-herald.com. Scores appear in the weekly Heralds. Report a high school result: Call 877-818-6204 or 941-206-1126 by 10:30 p.m. the day the event is held. North Port resident Jack Conte continues to thrive in gymnastics. In eight meets during the past year, the 10-yearold has won the allaround in six and nished second in two. The level 4 gymnast has been competing through South Florida Gymnastics in Bradenton since October. The fth-grader is practicing in a bid to move to level 5. “We got lucky,” said his father, Chris Conte. “It’s a great program.” Jack Conte said he isn’t surprised by his success, including a rst-place all-around nish March 1 at the Gasparilla Men’s Classic, where South Florida Gymnastics nished rst among the large teams. He scored a career-best 65, which, according to his father, was the highest total among the more than 200 in that level. Conte was rst in the rings, parallel bars, oor exercise, vault and high bar and second in the pommel horse. He said his favorite event remains the rings, the event in which he usually does best. At Gasparilla, though, he scored a 11.2 on the high bar and 11.1 on the rings and parallel bars. He excelled at Gasparilla despite missing time because of a foot injury suffered in a January practice after the Sand Dollar/Whitlow Invitational, where his father said he was second among more than 180 level 4 boys of all ages. He improved from his second place all-around at the LaFleur Invitational during February, where he was still recovering from the injury. Normally a top nisher in most events, he was third in the high bar and fourth in the vault at that meet, won by South Florida Gymnastics. The vault is his toughest event. “He’s so light,” his father said. “He’s 60 pounds. He can’t get the spring off the vault.” Conte practices four days a week, with two sessions of three hours and two of four hours. He will compete this weekend in the state championships in Fort Lauderdale.Share an accomplishment with Barbara Boxleitner at BKLE3@aol.com.Jack Conte thrives in gymnasticsBy BARBARA BOXLEITNERSUN CORRESPONDENT RECREATIONAL SPORTS: GymnasticsConte has won six all-around competitions in the past year PORT CHARLOTTE — After falling behind 2-0, the St. John Fisher scored the game’s nal three runs to pull out a 3-2 14-inning victory in the Snowbird Baseball Classic on Monday at North Charlotte Regional Park. In the seventh, Fisher’s Matthew Cahill, who went 2-for-4, scored on a wild pitch. In the bottom of the ninth, with the bases loaded and two outs, Cahill scored his second run when Mike Roman was hit by a pitch. It would stay tied at 2 going into the bottom of the 14th, when Fisher delivered the game-winning run. After Roman walked, he advanced to second on a sacrice bunt from Calvin Woolhiser. He advanced to third on a wild pitch and scored the game-winner on a balk.B aldwin Wallace 6, Moravian College 2: Baldwin Wallace won its second game on its annual spring break trip to Port Charlotte. The Yellow Jackets play six more games during the next five days. On the mound, senior ace and two-time All-Ohio Athletic Confer ence right-hander Cory Waite started and made his school-record 55th career appearance, including 39 in relief. He pitched the first seven innings to gain the win Heidelberg 7, Montclair State6: Heidelberg scored three runs in the ninth inning to force extra innings, and won in the 10th. Montclair State took the lead with two runs in the third and one in the fourth. The Red Hawks tacked on three more runs before Heidelberg began its comeback. St. Bonaventure 12, Lehigh2: St. Bonaventure scored nine runs in the third and fourth innings en route to the victory against Lehigh in the second game of a three-game set between the Bonnies and the Mountain Hawks at the Snowbird Classic. Lehigh falls to 3-4 with the loss while the Bonnies improve to 4-2. Wabash 6, Hampden-Sydney4: Wabash rallied for runs in the seventh and eighth innings for its first win of the season. Wabash lost a 4-0 lead in the fifth when the Tigers tied the game with a four-run outburst with two outs in the frame. The Little Gaints took the lead for good in the seventh when Lucas Stippler scored from second on a Tyler Owensby single down the left field line. Heidelberg 6, St. John Fisher3: The Cardinals took a 1-0 lead in the top of the third with Victor Konstantinovsky scoring on a groundout from Cody Wiktorski. In the fourth inning, Konstanti novsky ripped a two-run double to right-center scoring Malcolm Kelsey and Frank Carnevale. With Fisher holding a 3-1 lead and two outs in the bottom of the eighth, Heidelberg scored five runs — all unearned — to take the lead for good. Fisher sent the tying run to the plate in the ninth, but couldn’t complete the comeback. Webster 5, Marietta 4: Webster scored single runs in the seventh, eighth and ninth innings, and Dylan Dean Smith pitched 2 innings of scoreless relief as the Gorloks defeated 12th-ranked Marietta. Webster trailed 4-2 before mounting its comeback. Western Michigan 4, Georgetown 1: Junior lefthander Derek Schneider recorded a career-high seven strikeouts over 6.1 innings to lead Western Michigan. Schneider had his longest outing of the season allowing just two hits, giving up no earned runs and striking out a career-high seven in the victory.St. John Fisher wins marathon over Hampden-Sydney COLLEGE BASEBALL: Snowbird ClassicHeidelberg nets two comeback victories TODAY’S SCHEDULESt. Bonaventure University vs. Lehigh University, 10a.m., NCRPNo. 3 Salve Regina University vs. Marietta College, 10a.m., SCRP Florida International University vs. Seton Hall University, 11a.m., NCRP No. 6 Heidelberg University vs. Wabash College, 2p.m., NCRP No. 3 Montclair State University vs. Baldwin Wallace University, 2p.m., SCRP Florida International University vs. Saint Joseph’s University, 3p.m., NCRP No. 6 Wabash College vs. Muskingum University, 5p.m., NCRP No. 3 Ohio Wesleyan University vs. Moravian College, 6p.m., SCRP Site Key: NCRP — North Charlotte Regional Park, SCRP — South County Regional Park DORAL — Whether by choice or coercion, Dustin Johnson sat out for six months. That much should not be forgotten as Johnson, fresh off another World Golf Championship title that renewed his credentials as an elite player, tries to move forward even as there are lingering questions about his past. And those questions linger in part because the PGA Tour doesn’t release all information about suspensions. “We don’t think the fans really want to know about most of the stuff we would be talking about,” Commissioner Tim Finchem said Sunday. “We don’t think there’s a large volume of it, and we don’t think much of it is very serious.” Heading into the nal major of last year, Johnson was No. 5 in the Ryder Cup standings, a lock to make his third straight team. He was No. 4 in the FedEx Cup, poised for a shot at a lucrative payoff. And then he walked away under curious circumstances by announcing a leave of absence in a statement that contained words like “personal challenges” and “mission of self-improvement.” The PGA Tour said nothing except to wish him well, and to deny a report by Golf.com that Johnson was suspended for six months. Golf.com reported Johnson failed three drug tests, the last two for cocaine, including in 2012 when he missed three months for what he said was a back injury from lifting a jet ski out of the water. Six months later, Johnson looks as good as ever. In the last ve weeks, he has tied for fourth at Pebble Beach, lost in a playoff at Riviera and won at Doral. There was a vibe on Twitter and in the locker room at Riviera when Johnson was in the playoff that it was not right for him to leave quietly and return with so little inspection. Johnson was helped because most of the attention went to Tiger Woods and his lost tooth and lost game. Johnson received no earnings in golf tourna ments for six months. He has averaged $164,183 per tournament in his career and missed at least seven tournaments he ordinarily would have played. The tour is required under its anti-doping policy to announce a suspension (but not the substance). There have been two cases in seven years. But when it comes to recreational drugs, the tour conveniently tucks that under its ubiquitous “conduct unbecoming a professional” category, in which the tour is not required to publicly disclose anything. And it rarely does. Conduct unbecoming could be a 3-iron that gets hurled into the water or any other t of frustration. It could be comments that disparage another player. It could be marijuana. Finchem said it doesn’t make sense to announce a ne when it would only serve to remind people of something “that ve people saw on the fourth green.” Then again, millions of television viewers heard Patrick Reed berate himself over a three-putt in Shanghai by using a gay slur. The only comment came from Reed, who apologized. By not saying anything, the tour creates a vacuum lled with speculation, innuendo and rumors. These are what follow Johnson.By DOUG FERGUSONAP GOLF WRITER GOLFGolfer leaving 6-month layoff in the pastJohnson ready to move onAP PHOTODustin Johnson smiles as he walks o the 17th green after making par during the nal round of the Cadillac Championship golf tournament Sunday, in Doral, Fla. PREP SCHEDULETODAY Baseball Imagine at Manatee HEAT, 6:30p.m. Island Coast at Lemon Bay, 7p.m. Port Charlotte at Charlotte, 7p.m. DeSoto County at Gateway Charter, 7p.m. Boys lacrosse St. Stephens at Port Charlotte,6p.m. Girls tennis DeSoto County at Avon Park, 4p.m. Boys tennis Avon Park at DeSoto County, 4p.m. Boys weightlifting Lemon Bay at Travis Todd Invitational, 5:30p.m. STAFF REPORT l _ -Ilk.-jot

PAGE 21

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net SP Page 3 agreements lined up as well: Maxwell with Philadelphia, Maclin with Kansas City and McPhee with Chicago. With some would-be free agents having been franchise-tagged and others having re-signed with their teams, the destinations of only two of the top 10 free agents in The Washington Post’s rankings remained unknown as of Monday afternoon (barring a last-minute unraveling of the Suh and Maclin deals). That intensies the spotlight on the free agent deliberations of Dallas tailback DeMarco Murray, last season’s NFL rushing leader, and San Francisco guard Mike Iupati. There is other intrigue, of course. Wide receiver Torrey Smith has written an online farewell to Baltimore and is thought to be headed to San Francisco. But there have been no indications of a deal with the 49ers being nalized. Brian Hoyer, perhaps the best remaining option in an underwhelming class of free agent quarterbacks, is believed to be planning to sign with Houston. But the New York Jets reportedly had not given up as of early Monday after noon on signing him. Tight end Julius Thomas, who had 12 touchdown catches in each of the last two seasons for Denver, appears to be close to signing with Jacksonville. But that situation is not ofcially resolved. The Texans have given wide receiver Andre Johnson permission to seek a trade and could end up releasing him if such a deal cannot be completed. The Jets appear poised to release Percy Harvin after agreeing to a trade with the Bears for fellow wideout Brandon Marshall. Cornerback Darrelle Revis could become available if he does not agree to a reworked contract to remain with New England. The Bears must decide whether to retain, attempt to trade or release quarterback Jay Cutler. The Marshall trade, like the deal sending tailback LeSean McCoy from Philadelphia to Buffalo in exchange for Bills linebacker Kiko Alonso, cannot be ofcial before Tuesday afternoon. Under NFL rules, no deals were supposed to be struck during the three-day window that opened Saturday allowing teams to be in contact with agents for players from other clubs eligible for free agency. In fact, no formal contract offers even were to be extended during that negotiating period. The NFL informed teams Monday that it would investigate for possible violations of those rules. “Clubs were advised of the rules for the threeday negotiating period. These rules include limitations such as that a club cannot make an ‘offer;’ or enter into a written or oral agreement of any kind, express or implied, or make promises or representations of any type concerning the terms or conditions of employment to be offered to any Unrestricted Free Agent for inclusion in a Player Contract after the start of the new League Year; or provide assurances of intent as to the future execution of an NFL Player Contract,” a memo from the league to the teams read, according to the leagueowned NFL Network. “Clubs were further advised that ‘Any attempt to undermine the purpose of this negotiating period may be considered conduct detrimental to the League.’ At this time, the League ofce is beginning investigations into a number of reported agreements with clubs. Violations will be dealt with accordingly.”NFLFROM PAGE 1 THE LEAST CAP SPACEWhen the NFL’s new year begins at 4 p.m. today, team’s can start signing free agents. These teams have the most money to spend. New Orleans Saints, New England Patriots and Kansas City Chiefs: All three teams have been releasing players to get under the salary cap by Tuesday. NEW ORLEANS: General manager Mickey Loomis has been working to bring the payroll down by more than $20 million. . NEW ENGLAND: Defensive tackle Vince Wilfork will not be back, making him eligible for free agency. The money saved could help the Patriots bring back Darrelle Revis. KANSAS CITY: The Chiefs saved about $3 million by parting with linebacker Joe Mays and somewhat less by releasing receivers Donnie Avery and A.J. Jenkins and tight end Anthony Fasano. Bosh said during a brief news conference, his rst public comments since he was diagnosed with blood clots on one of his lungs last month — a condition that the 10time All-Star estimates he played with about three weeks before learning why he was in such pain. It was all part of a very hectic Monday for Bosh: Earlier in the day, 35 Heat employees arrived via bus at his house and sur prised him by dropping off 10,000 get-well cards. Bosh was in the driveway, basking in the sun and beaming as he held one of the many boxes. He’s been able to do some walking and is now taking short drives, but nothing taxing. “I’m doing a lot better,” Bosh said. His last game with the Heat this season was Feb. 11, just before the start of the All-Star break. Bosh was dealing with pain in his side and back but went to All-Star weekend in New York anyway — teaming with Dominique Wilkins and Swin Cash to win the Shooting Stars competition at the league’s midseason showcase for the third consecutive year. After All-Star, he went on vacation to Haiti for a few days, the pain intensied and eventually Bosh went to the hospital to get checked out. Before long, the scare was real to many people. To him, it wasn’t. “I don’t know why,” Bosh said. “It just didn’t come as a scary thing at the time.” After about a week in the hospital, Bosh went home and has been following Miami rather intently ever since. “He sends me texts during the game, things like ‘Shoot the ball, 3’” Heat guard Dwyane Wade said. “He knows I don’t see them until after. But it makes him feel better.” Wade and his wife, actress Gabrielle Union, visited with Bosh and his wife Adrienne after Saturday’s Heat win against Sacramento, catching up over red wine and conversation. Wade hadn’t seen Bosh in several days because of the Heat schedule and felt much better about how his friend is coming along when the night was over. Wade said Bosh has been inspiring. The Heat are a bangedup team, with about half the roster dealing with injuries. Wade’s one of them, and when his sore hip has acted up in recent days he said he’s talked his way through it in part by reminding himself that Bosh is going through something much more serious.BOSHFROM PAGE 1 BEREA, Ohio — Johnny Manziel’s commitment to xing his personal life has the Cleveland Browns feeling positive about his future as a quarterback. Browns coach Mike Pettine conrmed Monday that Manziel, whose disastrous rookie season in Cleveland was followed by him seeking help for an undisclosed issue, remains in a rehab treatment facility. Manziel entered a private facility in Ohio on Jan. 28, and Pettine said there is not a specic date for the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner to be released. Pettine, appearing at an area auto show, was asked if he viewed Manziel’s lengthier stay as a good sign. “Sure,” he said. “It’s something that he was very resolute that needed to get done.” Pettine said the team has had some communication with Manziel, who spent most of the season as Brian Hoyer’s backup before making two rather forgettable starts. Manziel led the Browns to three points in six quarters as a starter and appeared over whelmed by the speed of the pro game. Pettine reiterated that the Browns are solely concerned about Manziel getting well. “It’s more important the personal stuff now, football is an afterthought,” Pettine said, “so we’re just giving him his privacy and do what he has to do.” 49ers fullback arrested for spousal battery: San Francisco fullback Bruce Miller was arrested on spousal battery charges, Northern California authorities said. An arrest log for the Santa Clara police department shows the 28-year-old Miller was arrested last week at an undisclosed location. The 49ers were looking into details, the team said. Arizona linebacker Alex Okafor was jailed in Texas after leading police on a foot chase after a report of a disturbance in downtown Austin. Okafor was charged with evading arrest and released on bond. Free agency: Brian Hartline, released last month by Miami after six seasons, agreed to terms with Cleveland on a two-year, $6 million contract. Needing to add depth in the secondary, Seattle signed free agent cornerback Will Blackmon and extended the contracts of tight end Anthony McCoy and special teams standout Mike Morgan. Player moves: Green Bay officially re-signed receiver Randall Cobb. The team did not release terms but it was reported over the weekend that Cobb and the Packers agreed to a four-year, $40 million contract, keeping the wideout off the open market. Andre Johnson was released by Houston. Johnson, the longest-tenured Texan, completed his 12th season. Philadelphia agreed to a four-year contract with linebacker Brandon Graham. The 26-year-old Graham had 5 sacks and forced four fumbles for the Eagles in 2014 while splitting duties at outside linebacker with Trent Cole. Tight end Derek Carrier has received a two-year contract extension from San Francisco that takes him through the 2017 season.Manziel remains in rehabBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NFL NOTEBOOK AP FILE PHOTOSan Diego quarterback Philip Rivers is pursued by Kansas City outside linebacker Tamba Hali last season. The Chiefs and Hali have agreed to restructure his massive contract, freeing up some much-needed cash that the club is using to pursue wide receiver Jeremy Maclin. MIAMI — Isaiah Thomas scored 25 points in another strong game off the bench, Brandon Bass added 14 and the Boston Celtics beat the Miami Heat 100-90 on Monday night. Luigi Datome scored 13 for the Celtics, and Kelly Olynyk nished with 10. Dwyane Wade scored 34 points for the Heat, who got 14 from Michael Beasley and 12 from Mario Chalmers. The Heat got a pregame lift from the return of Chris Bosh to the team’s bench for the first time since he was ruled out for the season last month because of blood clots on a lung. But it wasn’t enough to keep Miami’s playoff hopes from taking another blow, and the Heat missed a chance to climb into seventh in the Eastern Conference playoff race. Instead, they remained in ninth, a half-game behind both Indiana and Charlotte. Luol Deng scored 11 for Miami, which lost Hassan Whiteside to a third-quar ter ejection. Thomas has appeared in 10 games, all off the bench, since the Celtics acquired him in a trade last month. He has averaged 21.4 points and Boston is 6-4. Thomas had five points in a 24-second span of the third to put Boston ahead to stay, then hit maybe the biggest shot of the night — a 3-pointer with 2:36 left that gave the Celtics a 96-87 lead.CELTICS 100, HEAT 90BOSTON (100) Crowder 0-3 4-4 4, Bass 7-14 0-0 14, Zeller 3-5 0-0 6, Smart 3-7 2-2 9, Turner 4-12 0-0 8, Thomas 7-17 8-8 25, Olynyk 4-9 1-2 10, Jerebko 4-9 1-1 9, Wallace 1-2 0-0 2, Datome 6-9 0-0 13, Pressey 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 39-87 16-17 100. MIAMI (90) Deng 3-10 4-4 11, Walker 0-2 2-2 2, White side 2-6 3-6 7, Chalmers 2-3 7-9 12, Wade 13-23 6-7 34, Johnson 1-7 0-0 2, Beasley 6-16 2-2 14, Andersen 2-2 2-2 6, Napier 0-0 2-2 2. Totals 29-69 28-34 90. Boston 24 19 30 27 — 100 Miami 19 21 24 26 — 90 3-Point Goals—Boston 6-25 (Thomas 3-10, Datome 1-2, Smart 1-3, Olynyk 1-4, Bass 0-1, Turner 0-1, Jerebko 0-2, Crowder 0-2), Miami 4-17 (Wade 2-4, Chalmers 1-2, Deng 1-3, Johnson 0-2, Walker 0-2, Beasley 0-4). Fouled Out—Smart. Rebounds— Boston 50 (Bass 9), Miami 45 (Whiteside 9). Assists—Boston 17 (Thomas, Bass 4), Mi ami 15 (Chalmers, Deng 4). Total Fouls— Boston 25, Miami 17. Technicals—Turner, Walker. Flagrant Fouls— Whiteside. Ejected—Turner, Walker, Whiteside. A— 19,600 (19,600).Pelicans 114, Bucks 103: In Milwaukee, Anthony Davis scored 43 points, tying a career high and helping the New Orleans Peli cans pull away from the Milwaukee Bucks. Eric Gordon added 16 and Tyreke Evans had 13 before leaving the game in the third quarter with an ankle injury. Giannis Antetok ounmpo had a career-high 29 points for the Bucks, who have lost seven of nine. Michael Carter-Williams tallied 25, his highest-scoring game for Milwaukee since being acquired last month in a trade-deadline deal. Grizzlies 101, Bulls 91: In Chicago, Marc Gasol scored 23 points to lead Memphis past his brother Pau Gasol and the Chicago Bulls. Gasol was 10 of 16 from the field for the Grizzlies, who moved to two games ahead of idle Houston for the Midwest Division lead. Pau Gasol had 13 points and 11 rebounds for his 43rd double-double to match the career high he set during the 2010-11 season with the Los Angeles Lakers. Hawks 130, Kings 105: In Atlanta, Kyle Korver and DeMarre Carroll each scored 20 points as Atlanta bounced back from a rare loss by becoming the first NBA team to 50 wins, scoring a season high in beating Sacramento. Resting three starters, the East-leading Hawks (50-13) were beaten by the lowly 76ers over the weekend to snap a six-game winning streak. The Hawks led 76-54 at the break — their most prolific half of the season. Wizards 95, Hornets 69: In Charlotte, N.C., Marcin Gortat scored 20 points and the Washington Wizards rolled over the Charlotte Hornets. John Wall added 15 points and nine assists, Bradley Beal had 14 points and Kevin Seraphin scored 12 for the Wizards, who snapped a nine-game road losing streak. Mo Williams scored 19 points for the Hornets, who shot just 32.5 percent (25 of 77) and committed 16 turnovers to tie their lowest-scoring game this season.BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NBA ROUNDUPHawks score season high in rout of SacramentoThomas’ lifts Celtics past banged-up Heat MAGIC AT PACERSWHO: Orlando (21-43) at Indiana (28-34) WHEN: Today, 7 p.m. WHERE: Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Indianapolis TV: Fox Sports Florida RADIO: No local affiliateNETS AT HEATWHO: Brooklyn (25-36) at Miami (28-35) WHEN: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. WHERE: AmericanAirlines Arena, Miami TV: Sun Sports RADIO: No local affiliate TICKETS: Ticketmaster.com adno=50479039 ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT "My Erectile Dysfunctionproblems are GONE..."I basically gave up -I Wed all the popularpills and nothingwas working. ThePhysicians ED.Center"m gave me mysex life back in justoneappointment It'scompletely changedMY Ift ITPhysicians E.D. Center patientRegardless of your age or medical history, the doctors at thePhysicians E.D. CenterN are so sure they can help you witherectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation that if youdon't respond to their custom blended prescription medica-tion on the first visit, right in their office, there's no charge,guaranteed. Call (239) 829-6586 today for full information. Alltreatments are Board Certified Urologist approved.Individual results may vary4110 Pointe Center Dr., Ste. 1Fort Myers, FIL 33916www.PhysiciansED.com

PAGE 22

Page 4 SP www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 | COLLEGE BASKETBALL POLLSAP TOP TWENTY FIVE The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ college basketball poll, with rst-place votes in parentheses, records through March 8, total points based on 25 points for a rst-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week’s ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Kentucky (65) 31-0 1,625 1 2. Duke 28-3 1,544 3 3. Virginia 28-2 1,454 2 4. Villanova 29-2 1,444 4 5. Arizona 28-3 1,360 5 6. Wisconsin 28-3 1,344 6 7. Gonzaga 30-2 1,229 7 8. Maryland 26-5 1,103 10 9. Kansas 24-7 1,040 9 10. N. Iowa 30-3 1,037 11 11. Notre Dame 26-5 1,026 12 12. Wichita St. 28-4 797 8 13. Iowa St. 22-8 786 17 14. Louisville 24-7 780 16 15. Oklahoma 21-9 772 15 16. Baylor 23-8 701 14 17. Utah 23-7 587 13 18. West Virginia 23-8 525 20 19. North Carolina 21-10 406 19 20. SMU 24-6 339 22 21. Arkansas 24-7 300 18 22. Butler 22-9 287 21 23. Georgetown 20-9 223 — 24. Davidson 23-6 99 — 25. Boise St. 24-7 82 — Others receiving votes: Oregon 69, Prov idence 63, Ohio St. 40, BYU 18, Michigan St. 15, LSU 8, Iowa 7, St. John’s 6, San Diego St. 3, Stephen F. Austin 2, Dayton 1, North Florida 1, Purdue 1, Valparaiso 1. USA TODAY TOP 25 The top 25 teams in the USA Today men’s college basketball poll, with rst-place votes in parentheses, records through March 8, points based on 25 points for a rst-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and previous ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Kentucky (32) 31-0 800 1 2. Duke 28-3 754 3 3. Villanova 29-2 716 4 4. Virginia 28-2 707 2 5. Wisconsin 28-3 686 5 6. Arizona 28-3 650 6 7. Gonzaga 30-2 611 7 8. Maryland 26-5 547 9 9. Notre Dame 26-5 518 11 10. Kansas 24-7 492 10 11. Northern Iowa 30-3 485 12 12. Wichita St. 28-4 390 8 13. Louisville 24-7 386 14 14. Oklahoma 21-9 378 15 15. Iowa St. 22-8 377 17 16. Baylor 23-8 318 16 17. Utah 23-7 300 13 18. West Virginia 23-8 241 20 19. North Carolina 21-10 186 19 20. Arkansas 24-7 167 18 21. SMU 24-6 162 22 22. Butler 22-9 138 21 23. Georgetown 20-9 99 — 24. Davidson 23-6 59 — 25. San Diego St. 24-7 40 — Others receiving votes: Providence 38, Boise St. 30, Michigan St. 21, Oregon 21, Ohio St. 20, Stephen F. Austin 13, Purdue 8, BYU 7, Texas A&M 7, LSU 6, Murray St. 6, Texas 6, Dayton 4, Valparaiso 4, Iowa 2. AP WOMEN’S TOP TWENTY FIVE The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ women’s college basketball poll, with rst-place votes in parentheses, records through March 8, total points based on 25 points for a rst-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last week’s rank ing: Record Pts Prv 1. UConn (35) 31-1 875 1 2. Notre Dame 31-2 836 2 3. South Carolina 30-2 798 3 4. Maryland 30-2 777 4 5. Baylor 29-3 718 6 6. Tennessee 27-5 706 5 7. Florida St. 29-4 672 7 8. Louisville 25-6 562 10 9. Arizona St. 27-5 555 9 10. Oregon St. 26-4 552 8 11. Kentucky 23-9 548 12 12. Mississippi St. 26-6 475 11 13. Princeton 29-0 469 13 14. Stanford 24-9 376 19 15. North Carolina 24-8 349 15 16. Duke 21-10 348 16 17. Chattanooga 29-3 297 17 18. Iowa 24-7 293 14 19. George Washington 29-3 202 21 20. Florida Gulf Coast 28-2 196 20 21. Texas A&M 23-9 141 18 22. Northwestern 23-8 124 24 23. Ohio St. 23-10 106 — 24. Seton Hall 27-4 99 25 25. California 24-9 90 — Others receiving votes: South Florida 55, Rutgers 48, DePaul 25, Green Bay 19, W. Kentucky 14, Syracuse 11, Texas 11, LSU 9, James Madison 7, Dayton 5, Quinnipiac 4, Wichita St. 3. | COLLEGE BASKETBALL SCOREBOARD MenNCAA AUTOMATIC BIDS Belmont, Ohio Valley Conference Coastal Carolina, Big South Conference Manhattan, Metro Atlantic Athletic North Florida, Atlantic Sun Conference Northern Iowa, Missouri Valley Conference Northeastern, Colonial Athletic Association Woord, Southern Conference CONFERENCE TOURNAMENTSAMERICA EASTAt Higher-Seeded Team Championship Saturday Stony Brook at Albany, 11 a.m.AMERICAN ATHLETICAt The XL Center, Hartford, Conn. First Round Thursday East Carolina vs. UCF, 3:30 p.m. Tulane vs. Houston, 6 p.m. UConn vs. South Florida, 8:30 p.m.ATLANTIC COASTAt Greensboro (N.C.) Coliseum Today Boston College vs. Georgia Tech, 1 p.m. Wake Forest vs. Virginia Tech, 3:30 p.m. Wednesday Clemson vs. Florida State, Noon North Carolina vs. Boston College-Georgia Tech winner, 2:30 p.m. N.C. State vs. Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Miami vs. Wake Forest-Virginia Tech winner, 9:30 p.m.ATLANTIC 10 CONFERENCEAt The Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. First Round Wednesday Fordham vs. George Mason, 6:30 p.m. Duquesne vs. Saint Louis, 9 p.m.BIG EASTAt Madison Square Garden, New York First Round Wednesday Seton Hall vs. Marquette, 7 p.m. DePaul vs. Creighton, 9:30 p.m. Quarternals Thursday Villanova vs. Seton Hall-Marquette winner, Noon Providence vs. St. John’s, 2:30 p.m. Georgetown vs. DePaul-Creighton winner, 7 p.m. Butler vs. Xavier, 9:30 p.m.BIG TEN CONFERENCEAt The United Center, Chicago First Round Wednesday Nebraska vs. Penn State, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota vs. Rutgers, 6:55 p.m. Second Round Thursday Illinois vs. Michigan, Noon Iowa vs. Nebraska-Penn State winner, 2:25 p.m. Indiana vs. Northwestern, 6:30 p.m. Ohio State vs. Minnesota-Rutgers winner, 8:55 p.m.COLONIAL ATHLETICAt Royal Farms Arena, Baltimore Monday Northeastern 72, William & Mary 61BIG 12 CONFERENCEAt The Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. First Round Wednesday Kansas State vs. TCU, 7 p.m. Texas vs. Texas Tech, 9:30 p.m. Quarternals Thursday Baylor vs. West Virginia, 12:30 p.m. Kansas vs. Kansas State-TCU winner, 3 p.m. Iowa State vs. Texas-Texas Tech winner, 7 p.m. Oklahoma vs. Oklahoma State, 9:30 p.m.BIG WESTAt The Honda Center, Anaheim, Calif. First Round Thursday UC Davis vs. Cal State Northridge, 3 p.m. Long Beach State vs. Hawaii, 5:30 p.m. UC Irvine vs. UC Riverside, 9 p.m. UC Santa Barbara vs. Cal Poly, 11:30 p.m.CONFERENCE USAAt Arena at the BJCC, Birmingham, Ala. First Round Wednesday UTSA vs. FIU, 1 p.m. Middle Tennessee vs. Charlotte, 3:30 p.m. Western Kentucky vs. Marshall, 7 p.m. North Texas vs. Rice, 9:30 p.m.HORIZONChampionship Today Green Bay at Valparaiso, 7 p.m.IVYOne-game playo At The Palestra, Philadelphia Saturday Harvard vs. Yale, TBAMETRO ATLANTIC ATHLETICAt The Times Union Center, Albany, N.Y. Championship Monday Manhattan 79, Iona 69 MID-AMERICANFirst Round Monday Bowling Green 88, Ball State75 Akron 76, Northern Illinois 52 Eastern Michigan 62, Miami (Ohio) 61 Western Michigan 82, Ohio 74 At Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland Second Round Wednesday Bowling Green-Ball State winner vs. Eastern Michigan-Miami (Ohio) winer, 6:30 p.m. Western Michigan-Ohio winner vs. Ak ron-Northern Illinois winner, 9 p.m.MID-EASTERN ATHLETICAt Norfolk Scope, Norfolk, Va. First Round Monday Delaware State 64, Savannah State 58 Hampton 91, Morgan State 71 Today Bethune-Cookman vs. Coppin State, 6 p.m. S.C. State vs. N.C. A&T, 8:30 p.m. Quarternals Wednesday N.C. Central vs. Bethune-Cookman-Coppin State winner, 6 p.m. Norfolk State vs. S.C. State-N.C. A&T winner, 8:30 p.m. Thursday Maryland-Eastern Shore vs. Hampton-Mor gan State winner, 6 p.m. Howard vs. Delaware State-Savannah State winner, 8:30 p.m. MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCEAt Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas First Round Wednesday New Mexico vs. Air Force, 3 p.m. UNLV vs. Nevada, 5:30 p.m.NORTHEASTAt Higher-Seeded Team Today Robert Morris at St. Francis (N.Y.), 7 p.m. PACIFIC-12 At MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas Wednesday California vs. Washington State, 3:10 p.m. Arizona State vs. Southern Cal, 5:40 p.m. Oregon State vs. Colorado, 9:10 p.m. Stanford vs. Washington, 11:40 p.m.PATRIOTAt Campus Sites Wednesday American at Lafayette, 7:30 p.m.SOUTHEASTERNAt Bridgestone Arena, Nashville, Tenn. Wednesday Mississippi State vs. Auburn, 7 p.m. South Carolina vs. Missouri, 9:30 p.m. Thursday Florida vs. Alabama, 1 p.m. Texas A&M vs. Mississippi State-Auburn winner, 3:30 p.m. Vanderbilt vs. Tennessee, 7 p.m. Mississippi vs. South Carolina-Missouri win ner, 9:30 p.m.SOUTHERNAt U.S. Cellular Center, Asheville, N.C. Monday Woord 67, Furman 64SUMMITAt PREMIER Center, Sioux Falls, S.D. Monday South Dakota State vs. South Dakota, 7 p.m. North Dakota State vs. Oral Roberts-IUPUI winner, 9:30 p.m.WEST COASTAt Orleans Arena, Las Vegas Monday Gonzaga79, Pepperdine 61 Portland vs. BYU, 11:30 p.m.WomenWOMEN’S CONFERENCE TOURNAMENTAMERICA EASTAt The Events Center, Binghamton, N.Y. At Higher-Seeded Team Friday Hartford vs. Albany, 4:30 p.m.AMERICAN ATHLETICAt Mohegan Sun Arena, Uncasville Monday UConn 84, South Florida 70ATLANTIC SUNAt Higher-Seeded Teams Wednesday Jacksonville at Florida Gulf Coast, 7 p.m. Northern Kentucky at Stetson, 7 p.m.BIG EASTAt Allstate Arena, Rosemont, Ill. Monday Seton Hall 72, St. John’s 60 DePaul 58, Villanova 55BIG 12At American Airlines Center, Dallas Monday Baylor vs. Texas, lateBIG WESTAt Titan Gym, Fullerton, Calif. Today UC Davis vs. UC Irvine, 9 p.m. UC Riverside vs. Cal State Fullerton, 11:30 p.m. Wednesday Cal Poly vs. lower-seeded rst-round win ner, 9 p.m. Long Beach State vs. higher-seeded rstround winner, 11:30 p.m.CONFERENCE USAAt Bartow Arena, Birmingham, Ala. Wednesday UAB vs. UTEP, Noon Louisiana Tech vs. FAU, 2:30 p.m. Charlotte vs. Marshall, 6 p.m. Old Dominion vs. Rice, 8:30 p.m.HORIZONMonday Milwaukee 77, Valparaiso 64 Wednesday Oakland at Wright State, 7 p.m. Illinois-Chicago at Cleveland State, 7 p.m. Detroit at Youngstown State, 7 p.m. Milwaukee-Valparaiso winner at Green Bay, 8 p.m.METRO ATLANTIC ATHLETICAt Times Union Center, Albany, N.Y. Monday Quinnipiac 72, Marist 61MID-AMERICANMonday Eastern Michigan 70, Kent State52 Western Michigan 65, Bowling Green42 Central Michigan 49, Northern Illinois 44 Toledo 62, Miami (Ohio) 47 At Quicken Loans Arena, Cleveland Wednesday Bowling Green-Western Michigan winner vs. Central Michigan-Northern Illinois win ner, Noon Kent State-Eastern Michigan winner vs. Mi ami (Ohio)-Toledo winner, 2:30 p.m.NORTHEASTWednesday St. Francis (N.Y.) at CCSU, 7 p.m. Robert Morris at Bryant, 7 p.m.PACIFIC-12At KeyArena, Seattle Sunday Stanford 61, California 60PATRIOTAt Higher-Seeded Teams Monday American 60, Navy53 Lehigh 76, Army 57 Saturday Seminal winners, 6 p.m.WEST COASTAt Orleans Arena, Las Vegas Monday BYU 61, Gonzaga 55 San Francisco 65, Santa Clara 57 Today Seminal winners, 4 p.m. Hard times over, Terps roll into B10 tournament With seven straight wins, Big Ten runner-up Maryland is the hottest team heading into this week’s event in Chicago. Not bad considering the Terrapins endured a tumultuous offseason and were picked to finish 10th in their first year in the league. They are ranked No. 8 in the Top 25 — their highest ranking in 12 years — and fresh off a victory at Nebraska that gave them a school-record 26 regular-season wins. Last spring five players transferred, including starting point guard Seth Allen, and it left coach Mark Turgeon to reassess his program. The players who stayed and the newcomers have formed a strong bond, and the Terps are assured of making the NCAA Tournament for the first time in five years. Freshman point guard Melo Trimble has been one of the Big Ten’s big surprises, averaging a team-leading 16.1 points. Senior guard-forward Dez Wells has averaged 18.7 points and 6.7 rebounds the last seven games. “Dez Wells just brings a toughness to that team that is uncanny, and Trimble — I don’t know if anybody knew how good he was. Most of us didn’t. But he’s had an extraordinary year,” said Michigan State coach Tom Izzo. SEC coaches praise Kentucky before final shot Kentucky this. Kentucky that. The talk leading up to the Southeastern Conference tournament is all about the undefeated, top-ranked Wildcats. Vanderbilt coach Kevin Stallings said John Calipari has one of the best teams he has ever seen. South Carolina’s Frank Martin called it comical that some believe the Wildcats are struggling because of a few close league games. To Texas A&M coach Billy Kennedy, someone needs an “unbelievable” game to knock off the Wildcats. Well, the SEC tournament this week offers teams in the league a last chance to hand Kentucky its first loss this season before the Wildcats head on into the NCAAs. Kentucky’s Big Blue Nation is expected to turn Bridgestone Arena into Rupp South, but this is the time of year when it’s one-and-done. “It’s a one-game deal, different set of emotions,” Martin said Monday. “That’s the beauty of postseason basketball.” The Wildcats have trailed 169 minutes, 53 seconds of the 1,255 minutes played this season, and they have been their best in marquee games. Virginia goes for 2nd straight title For the second consecutive year, it’s Virginia — not traditional powers Duke or North Carolina — entering the Atlantic Coast Conference tourna ment aiming to follow a regular-season title with another championship. The No. 3 Cavaliers (28-2, 16-2) became the first league team from outside the state of North Carolina to win the regular-season race outright in consecutive years. Now they can be the first to win two straight ACC tournaments, too. Coach Tony Bennett said that a weekend loss at Louisville highlighted “a few little holes” for his team to fix to play its best. “We’ve got to be as ready as we can but I also know our guys understand that,” Bennett said. “That Louisville game certainly showed that. ... I think we understand it clearly now. Now we have to do something about it.” The Cavaliers are waiting for starting guard Justin Anderson to return from a broken finger that has sidelined him for several weeks, followed by an appendectomy last week. Bennett said Anderson would be evaluated by a doctor Tuesday and said he wants to see him practice fully before his return. — Associated PressCONFERENCE TOURNAMENT PREVIEWS UNCASVILLE — Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis led four UConn players in double gures with 23 points and the topranked Huskies beat South Florida to win their second straight American Athletic Conference tournament. Breanna Stewart had 22 points and 12 rebounds for the Huskies (32-1), who led by 23 at halftime and held off USF (26-7) after intermission. Morgan Tuck had 17 points and 10 rebounds and Moriah Jefferson added 14 points. The Huskies have never lost an AAC regular-season or tournament game, and had never before won a conference game by fewer than 20 points. Shalethia Stringeld tied a career high with 20 points to pace South Florida (26-7). Tamara Taylor had 17 points and Courtney Williams added 16 for the Bulls. This was the 20th conference championship for UConn in 25 tries. No. 24 Seton Hall 72, St. John’s 60: In Rosemont, Ill., Ka-Deidre Simmons scored 20 points, 14 in the second half, as and top-seeded Seton Hall beat fourthseeded St. John’s to advance to its first Big East Conference tournament final since 1995. Seton Hall jumped out to a 38-27 lead at halftime behind four 3-pointers by Janee Johnson and three from Tabatha Richard son-Smith. Eight of Seton Hall’s 14 first-half field goals were from behind the 3-point arc. Seton Hall will play DePaul, the winner of Monday’s other semifinal, today. Quinnipiac 72, Marist61: In Albany, N.Y., Jasmine Martin scored 18 points to help Quinnipiac win the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference tournament, ending the Red Foxes’ nine-year run as champions. Nikoline Ostergaard added 15 points for the Bobcats, who secured their second NCAA bid in three years. Quinnipiac won the NEC tour nament in 2013 before joining the MAAC the next season. Quinnipiac (31-3) became the first MAAC team to go 20-0 during conference play this season, stopping Marist’s 11-year run as regular season champions. Baylor 75, Texas64: In Dallas, Nina Davis had 16 points with 11 rebounds and No. 5 Baylor clinched its fifth Big 12 tournament championship in a row with a win over Texas. While Davis had only one basket after halftime, Alexis Prince scored 10 of her 13 points during that same span. Prince had a couple of big 3-pointers, the first setup by her impressive defensive play. The Lady Bears (30-3) won their seventh Big 12 tournament title. They clinched the league’s automatic NCAA tournament berth though they were already a sure bet to play a first-round game at home.No. 1 UConn roll past USF COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Women’s roundupBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESSLAS VEGAS — Byron Wesley scored 25 points and led a second-half run with teammate Kyle Wiltjer as top-seeded and seventh-ranked Gonzaga defeated Pepperdine 79-61 Monday to reach its 18th consecutive West Coast Conference tournament championship game. Wiltjer had 17 points and Przemek Karnowski added 13 for the seventh-ranked Bulldogs (31-2), who will face the winner of the BYUPortland game for the title. Leading by two points at halftime, Gonzaga used a 30-12 run over the rst 912 minutes of the second half to take a 65-45 lead. Wesley scored 13 points and Wiltjer 12 during the run. Stacy Davis scored 15 points for the Waves (18-13) but shot 5 for 15. Jeremy Major added 12 points. The Waves were hoping to reach the WCC conference tournament championship game for the rst time since 2002. Instead, they suffered their 29th consecutive defeat to Gonzaga. Northeastern 72, William & Mary 61: In Baltimore, Northeastern captured the Colonial Athletic Association championship with a victory over top-seeded William & Mary, which failed again to earn its first trip to the NCAA Tournament. Quincy Ford scored 22 points and David Walker added 15 for the Huskies (23-11), who will be making their first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1991. That’s a relatively short stretch compared to that of William & Mary (20-12), one of only five of the orig inal Division I teams that has never participated in the NCAA Tournament. Wofford 67, Furman 64: In Asheville, N.C. Lee Skinner scored 17 points, Eric Garcia added 15, and top-seeded Wofford held off 10th-seeded Furman to capture the Southern Conference championship and earn its fourth trip to the NCAA Tournament in six seasons. The Terriers (28-6) ended the Paladins’ unlikely run to the cham pionship and won despite Furman shooting 52 percent from the field. Karl Cochran added 11points, and Spencer Collins had 10 for the Terriers. Manhattan 79, Iona 69: In Albany, N.Y., Ashton Pankey had 21 points and 10 rebounds, Emmy Andujar added 18 points and 11 rebounds, and third-seeded Manhattan beat top-seeded Iona to win the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference title for the second straight year. It was the third straight time the New York City rivals had met for the MAAC tournament title and the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, and the defending champion Jaspers (19-13) rallied late to win it again.Gongaza moves on to WCC finalBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS COLLEGE BASKETBALL: Men’s roundupWilliam & Mary falls short of rst tourney bid AP PHOTOFurman guard Stephen Croone, left, drives to the basket as Woord guard Karl Cochran defends in the rst half of the Southern Conference tournament championship game on Monday in Asheville, N.C. r r ,eft `rr

PAGE 23

The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 www.sunnewspapers.net SP Page 5 Sports on TVCYCLING2 a.m. NBCSN — Paris-Nice, stage 2, ZooParc de Beauval-Saint-Aignan to Saint-AmandMontrond, France (delayed tape)MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL1 p.m. ESPN2 — Atlantic Coast Conference, rst round, Boston College vs. Georgia Tech, at Greensboro, N.C. 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Atlantic Coast Conference, rst round, Wake Forest vs. Virginia Tech, at Greensboro, N.C. 7 p.m. ESPN — Horizon League, championship, Green Bay at Valparaiso ESPN2 — Northeast Conference, champi onship, Robert Morris at St. Francis (N.Y.) 9 p.m. ESPN — West Coast Conference, champi onship, Gonzaga-Pepperdine winner vs. Portland-BYU winner, at Las Vegas ESPN2 — Summit League, championship, South Dakota State vs. TBD, at Sioux Falls, S.D.NBA7 p.m. FSFL — Orlando at IndianaNHL7:30 p.m. SUN — Tampa Bay at Montreal 9 p.m. NBCSN — Los Angeles at ColoradoSOCCER3:30 p.m. FS1 — UEFA Champions League, round of 16, second leg, Schalke at Real MadridTENNIS11 p.m. ESPN2 — Paribas Showdown, exhibition, Roger Federer vs. Grigor Dimitrov, at New York (same-day tape)WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL8 p.m. FS1 — Big East Conference, championship, at Rosemont, Ill.Pro baseballAMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct Kansas City 6 0 1.000 New York 5 2 .714 Boston 4 2 .667 Oakland 4 2 .667 Houston 3 2 .600 Detroit 4 3 .571 Seattle 4 3 .571 Texas 4 3 .571 Minnesota 2 2 .500 Chicago 2 3 .400 Los Angeles 2 3 .400 Toronto 3 5 .375 Cleveland 2 4 .333 Baltimore 2 6 .250 RAYS 1 3 .250 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct Arizona 5 1 .833 Los Angeles 4 1 .800 MARLINS 3 2 .600 Pittsburgh 3 2 .600 St. Louis 3 2 .600 Washington 3 2 .600 Cincinnati 4 3 .571 Philadelphia 3 3 .500 San Diego 3 3 .500 New York 3 4 .429 Colorado 2 3 .400 Atlanta 2 4 .333 San Francisco 2 5 .286 Chicago 0 5 .000 Milwaukee 0 5 .000 NOTE: Split-squad games count in the standings; games against non-major league teams do not. Sunday’s results Minnesota 2, Baltimore 1 N.Y. Yankees 3, Washington 2 Philadelphia 5, RAYS 4 Houston (ss) 2, Atlanta 2, tie, 10 innings Houston (ss) 14, Detroit 9 St. Louis 5, MARLINS 2 Pittsburgh 1, Toronto 0 Boston 6, N.Y. Mets 3 Arizona 12, San Francisco 2 Colorado 7, San Diego 5 Texas (ss) 6, Chicago Cubs 4 Texas (ss) 8, Cleveland 7 Cincinnati 10, Seattle 1 L.A. Dodgers 4, Milwaukee 3 Chicago White Sox 10, Oakland 4 Arizona 10, San Francisco 5 Kansas City 6, L.A. Angels 4 Monday’s results Pittsburgh 1, Minnesota 1, tie Philadelphia 1, Baltimore 0 N.Y. Yankees 4, RAYS 3 Detroit 6, Toronto (ss) 4 Atlanta 2, Washington 1 Boston 3, St. Louis 0 Houston 1, Toronto (ss) 0 MARLINS 13, N.Y. Mets 2 San Francisco 5, L.A. Dodgers 5, tie San Diego 6, Chicago Cubs 3 Seattle 4, Cleveland 3 Chicago White Sox 3, Arizona 3, tie Texas 4, Oakland 1 Cincinnati (ss) 7, L.A. Angels 5 Kansas City 5, Milwaukee 4 Colorado 2, Cincinnati (ss) 2, tie Today’s games RAYS (ss) vs. Boston at Fort Myers, 1:05 p.m. Detroit vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, 1:05 p.m. Washington vs. MARLINS at Jupiter, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, 1:05 p.m. St. Louis vs. Houston at Kissimmee, 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee, 1:05 p.m. Pittsburgh vs. RAYS (ss) at Port Char lotte, 1:05 p.m. Minnesota vs. Toronto at Dunedin, 1:07 p.m. San Francisco vs. San Diego at Peoria, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Colorado (ss) vs. L.A. Dodgers at Glendale, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati vs. Milwaukee at Phoenix, 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox vs. Kansas City at Sur prise, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Arizona vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs vs. Cleveland at Goodyear, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Texas vs. L.A. Angels at Tempe, Ariz., 4:10 p.m. Seattle vs. Colorado (ss) at Scottsdale, Ariz., 4:10 p.m.TIGERS 6, BLUE JAYS (SS) 4At Lakeland Toronto (ss) 011 000 200 — 4 7 1 Detroit 012 000 30x — 6 10 1 Da.Norris, Guilmet (3), R.Osuna (4), Hendriks (6), Rasmussen (7), S.Copeland (7), J.Oramas (8) and D.Navarro, J.Murphy; An.Sanchez, K.Ryan (3), Nathan (5), Krol (6), A.Wilson (7), Dolis (8), J.Valdez (9) and Avila, A.Green. W—A.Wilson. L—Rasmussen. Sv—J.Valdez. HRs—Toronto, Bautista (1).ASTROS 1, BLUE JAYS (SS) 0At Dunedin Houston 000 001 000 — 1 6 0 Toronto (ss) 000 000 000 — 0 5 1 McHugh, R.Hernandez (4), Wojciechowski (6), Harris (9) and Conger; Stroman, A.Bibens-Dirkx (3), Loup (4), Francis (5), R.Tepera (6), Burke (7), C.Burns (8), West (9) and R.Martin, S.Ochinko. W—R.Hernandez. L—R.Tepera. Sv—Harris.PHILLIES 1, ORIOLES 0At Sarasota Philadelphia 000 010 000 — 1 6 0 Baltimore 000 000 000 — 0 7 0 Harang, Aumont (3), A.Morgan (4), De Fratus (6), Clemens (7), Lu.Garcia (9) and K.Hill, Rupp; Tillman, Matusz (3), McCoy (5), Z.Britton (6), T.Wilson (7), O’Day (9) and Clevenger, C.Joseph. W—A.Morgan. L— Matusz. Sv—Lu.Garcia. HRs—Philadelphia, A.Blanco (1).RED SOX 3, CARDINALS 0At Jupiter Boston 000 000 201 — 3 9 1 St. Louis 000 000 000 — 0 6 1 Miley, Paulino (4), Ogando (5), Mujica (6), Tazawa (7), M.Barnes (8) and Quintero, Vazquez; Wacha, Belisle (3), Choate (4), Z.Petrick (5), Lyons (7), Maness (8), Green wood (9) and Molina, T.Cruz. W—Mujica. L—Lyons. Sv—M.Barnes.TWINS 1, PIRATES 1At Bradenton Minnesota 010 000 000 — 1 4 0 Pittsburgh 100 000 000 — 1 5 0 Nolasco, Meyer (3), A.Salcedo (4), Boyer (5), Darnell (7), A.Thompson (9) and K.Suzuki, Herrmann; G.Cole, Liz (4), Caminero (6), Leesman (7), A.Sanchez (8), W.Boscan (9) and C.Stewart, E.Diaz. HRs—Minnesota, Sano (1).BRAVES 2, NATIONALS 1At Viera Atlanta 002 000 000 — 2 8 0 Washington 000 000 001 — 1 7 0 W.Rodriguez, Wang (4), Kohn (7), Jaime (8), J.Brigham (9) and Flores, Bethan court; G.Gonzalez, Roark (3), Stammen (5), M.Grace (6), Meek (7), T.Hill (8), Fornataro (9) and W.Ramos, Lerud. W—W.Rodriguez. L—Roark. Sv—J.Brigham. HRs—Atlanta, E.Young (1).MARLINS 13, METS 2At Port St. Lucie Miami 063 010 300 — 13 12 0 New York (N) 001 010 000 — 2 7 1 D.Phelps, Crow (4), Masset (6), Dunn (7), Claiborne (8), A.McKirahan (9) and Saltalamacchia, Realmuto; Z.Wheeler, C.Brad ford (2), Edgin (3), Familia (4), J.Mejia (5), Rice (6), S.Gilmartin (7), Black (8), C.Torres (9) and Plawecki, Monell. W—D.Phelps. L—Z. Wheeler. HRs—Miami, A.Romero (1).REDS (ss) 7, ANGELS 5At Goodyear, Ariz. Los Angeles (A) 003 001 100 — 5 14 1 Cincinnati (ss) 100 030 003 — 7 9 1 Heaney, Tropeano (4), C.Ramos (7), Lind strom (8), Mattheus (9) and Iannetta, C.Cut ler, C.Perez; DeSclafani, A.Chapman (4), Badenhop (6), Mijares (7), N.Travieso (8) and R.Cabrera, Skipworth. W—N.Travieso. L— Mattheus. HRs—Los Angeles (A), Giavotella (1). Cincinnati, Bourgeois (1), Skipworth (1), J.Duran (1).ROYALS 5, BREWERS 4At Phoenix, Ariz. Kansas City 002 003 000 — 5 10 0 Milwaukee 011 001 001 — 4 10 1 J.Vargas, K.Herrera (3), F.Morales (4), Mad son (6), Brooks (7), Broderick (8), Flynn (9) and Kratz, C.Gallagher; J.Nelson, Cotts (3), Thornburg (4), M.Strong (5), B.Hall (7), Woo ten (8) and Maldonado, Centeno. W—F. Morales. L—M.Strong. Sv—Flynn. HRs— Milwaukee, M.Long (1), Clark (2).DIAMONDBACKS 3, WHITE SOX 3At Glendale, Ariz. Arizona 010 010 010 — 3 9 1 Chicago (A) 000 000 201 — 3 9 1 C.A nderson, W.Locante (3), R.De La Rosa (4), Blair (7), E.Burgos (9) and Gosewisch, M.Thomas; Quintana, Dav.Robertson (3), Penny (4), Albers (6), Asencio (7), Duke (8), Cleto (9) and Flowers, Nieto. HRs—Chicago (A), Ju.Diaz (1), M.Johnson (1).MARINERS 4, INDIANS 3At Peoria, Ariz. Cleveland 000 002 100 — 3 6 0 Seattle 001 020 001 — 4 6 0 Carrasco, B.Chen (4), Rzepczynski (7), S.Downs (8), Maronde (9) and A.Moore, Y.Gomes; T.Walker, T.Olson (4), D.Rollins (5), Ca.Smith (6), Luetge (7), R.Vargas (7), Lowe (9) and Zunino, S.Baron. W—Lowe. L—Ma ronde. HRs—Cleveland, Moss (1). Seattle, Zunino (1), B.Miller 2 (2).RANGERS 4, ATHLETICS 1At Surprise, Ariz. Oakland 000 000 010 — 1 5 0 Texas 001 012 00x — 4 10 1 Hahn, J.Chavez (4), E.De La Rosa (6), R.Alva rez (7), Ch.Smith (8) and Vogt, Carlin; A.Gon zalez, J.Perez (4), K.Kela (5), Mendez (6), Feliz (7), J.Pirela (8), M.Rogers (9), K.Tomita (9) and Gimenez, Alfaro. W—A.Gonzalez. L— Hahn. Sv—K.Tomita. HRs—Oakland, Olson (1). Texas, Odor (1).DODGERS 5, GIANTS 5At Scottsdale, Ariz. Los Angeles (N) 000 200 210 — 5 7 1 San Francisco 000 050 000 — 5 7 0 Bre.Anderson, Bedard (3), League (5), Frias (5), Hatcher (7), Y.Garcia (8), M.Thomas (9) and Grandal, A.Barnes; M.Cain, Vogelsong (3), Heston (6), S.Casilla (8), Strickland (9) and Quiroz, Posey. HRs—Los Angeles (N), Puig (1).PADRES 6, CUBS 3At Mesa, Ariz. San Diego 040 020 000 — 6 12 1 Chicago (N) 000 021 000 — 3 6 3 Cashner, Lane (4), C.Rearick (5), Kelley (6), Quackenbush (7), Vincent (8), Valverde (9) and De.Norris, Hedges; E.Jackson, Hen dricks (3), Motte (5), Germen (5), H.Rondon (6), Strop (7), C.Edwards (8), Grimm (9) and Schwarber, D.Ross. W—Cashner. L—E. Jackson. Sv—Valverde. HRs—San Diego, Alonso (1), Middlebrooks (1). Chicago (N), M.Montero (1), Olt (2).REDS 2, ROCKIES 2At Scottsdale, Ariz. Cincinnati (ss) 020 000 000 — 2 6 0 Colorado 000 100 010 — 2 8 1 Holmberg, Axelrod (4), M.Lorenzen (6), Villarreal (8) and Barnhart, C.Wallach; Lyles, Laey (3), Kahnle (5), Brothers (6), K.Roberts (7), B.Brown (8), Ortega (9) and W.Rosario, McKenry.College baseballMONDAY’S SCORES SOUTH Emory & Henry 11, Averett 5 Fontbonne 3, Stockton 2 Heidelberg 7, Montclair St. 6 James Madison 7, Canisius 5 Ohio St. 6, W. Kentucky 4 Pikeville 9-12, Goshen 5-3 Saint Augustine’s 9, Clain 3 Samford 8, Memphis 4 St. John Fisher 3, Hampden-Sydney 2 St. Scholastica 4-4, Bridgewater (Mass.) 0-2 Tampa 20, LIU Post 9 Tennessee Tech 9, Morehead St. 8 Thiel 13, Baruch 3 Wabash 6, Hampden-Sydney 4 Webster 5, Marietta 4 Westeld St. 13-2, Wentworth 3-8 EAST Kean 6, Old Westbury 1 St. Bonaventure 12, Lehigh 2 Washington (Md.) 3, Mount Aloysius 0 MIDWEST Baldwin Wallace 6, Moravian 2 COLLEGIATE BASEBALL POLL TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — The Collegiate Base ball poll with records through March 1. Vot ing is done by coaches, sports writers and sports information directors: Record Pts Prv 1. Texas Christian 10-2 494 1 2. Louisiana St. 15-1 493 3 3. Virginia 12-1 492 2 4. Texas A&M 16-0 490 11 5. Florida 14-2 488 5 6. Southern California 15-1 484 20 7. Vanderbilt 11-4 483 4 8. Oregon 13-2 481 9 9. Central Florida 14-2 478 10 10. South Carolina 12-3 476 17 11. Florida St. 13-3 473 22 12. Cal St. Fullerton 9-5 469 30 13. UCLA 11-4 467 7 14. Arizona St. 9-5 460 13 15. Texas Tech 10-4 457 6 16. Mississippi St. 14-3 453 8 17. Texas 10-6 452 15 18. Rice 11-6 450 16 19. UC Santa Barbara 11-4 449 18 20. North Carolina 10-4 447 21 21. Louisville 10-5 445 24 22. Illinois 11-3-1 443 27 23. Oklahoma St. 8-6 441 14 24. Oregon St. 13-3 439 NR 25. Miami, Fla. 10-6 437 23 26. Georgia Tech 11-4 435 28 27. Notre Dame 11-3 434 25 28. Nevada 13-2 432 29 29. Florida Atlantic 14-2 429 NR 30. Auburn 13-3 427 NR BASEBALL AMERICA TOP 25 DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — The top 25 teams in the Baseball America poll through March 8 (voting by the sta of Baseball America): Record Prv 1. LSU 15-1 2 2. Florida 14-2 4 3. Virginia 12-1 3 4. TCU 10-2 7 5. Vanderbilt 11-4 1 6. Central Florida 14-2 13 7. South Carolina 12-3 12 8. Oregon 13-2 19 9. Southern California 15-1 25 10. Texas A&M 16-0 22 11. UCLA 11-4 6 12. Rice 11-6 15 13. Louisville 10-5 17 14. Texas Tech 10-4 5 15. Mississippi State 14-3 9 16. Arizona State 9-5 18 17. North Carolina 10-4 20 18. Florida State 13-3 21 19. Miami 10-6 11 20. Dallas Baptist 10-2 23 21. UC Santa Barbara 11-4 24 22. Texas 10-6 14 23. Cal State Fullerton 9-5 NR 24. Houston 9-7 8 25. Illinois 11-3 NRPro basketballNBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic W L Pct GB Toronto 38 25 .603 — Boston 26 36 .419 11 Brooklyn 25 36 .410 12 Philadelphia 14 49 .222 24 New York 12 49 .197 25 Southeast W L Pct GB x-Atlanta 50 13 .794 — Washington 36 28 .563 14 Charlotte 28 34 .452 21 Miami 28 35 .444 22 Orlando 21 43 .328 29 Central W L Pct GB Cleveland 40 25 .615 — Chicago 39 26 .600 1 Milwaukee 33 30 .524 6 Indiana 28 34 .452 10 Detroit 23 39 .371 15 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest W L Pct GB Memphis 45 18 .714 — Houston 43 20 .683 2 Dallas 41 24 .631 5 San Antonio 39 23 .629 5 New Orleans 35 29 .547 10 Northwest W L Pct GB Portland 41 20 .672 — Oklahoma City 35 28 .556 7 Utah 26 36 .419 15 D en ver 22 41 .349 20 Minnesota 14 47 .230 27 Pacic W L Pct GB Golden State 49 12 .803 — L.A. Clippers 40 23 .635 10 Phoenix 33 31 .516 17 Sacramento 21 41 .339 28 L.A. Lakers 16 46 .258 33 x-clinched playo spot Sunday’s results San Antonio 116, Chicago 105 Golden State 106, L.A. Clippers 98 Orlando 103, Boston 98 Charlotte 108, Detroit 101 Utah 95, Brooklyn 88 Oklahoma City 108, Toronto 104 Dallas 100, L.A. Lakers 93 Monday’s results Washington 95, Charlotte 69 Atlanta 130, Sacramento 105 Boston 100, Miami 90 Memphis 101, Chicago 91 New Orleans 114, Milwaukee 103 New York at Denver, late Golden State at Phoenix, late Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, late Today’s games Orlando at Indiana, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m. Cleveland at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Toronto at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m. New York at Utah, 9 p.m. Detroit at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.Pro hockeyNHL Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 66 42 18 6 90 177 146 LIGHTNING 67 41 20 6 88 222 177 Detroit 65 37 17 11 85 192 172 Boston 65 33 22 10 76 176 170 PANTHERS 66 29 23 14 72 163 188 Ottawa 64 30 23 11 71 184 173 Toronto 67 26 35 6 58 179 209 Bualo 66 19 42 5 43 126 224 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.Y. Islanders 68 43 21 4 90 218 192 N.Y. Rangers 64 40 17 7 87 198 155 Pittsburgh 65 38 18 9 85 188 160 Washington 67 36 21 10 82 200 165 Philadelphia 67 28 26 13 69 177 195 New Jersey 66 28 28 10 66 151 170 Columbus 65 27 34 4 58 166 207 Carolina 64 25 32 7 57 152 174 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Nashville 67 41 19 7 89 197 165 S t . Louis 65 41 19 5 87 204 163 Chicago 66 39 21 6 84 190 154 Minnesota 66 36 23 7 79 186 168 Winnipeg 66 33 21 12 78 183 176 Colorado 66 30 25 11 71 177 185 Dallas 66 29 27 10 68 207 220 Pacic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 67 42 18 7 91 198 184 Vancouver 65 37 24 4 78 187 178 Calgary 66 36 25 5 77 191 172 Los Angeles 65 31 21 13 75 175 168 San Jose 66 32 26 8 72 187 186 Arizona 66 21 38 7 49 142 222 Edmonton 67 18 38 11 47 152 227 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Sunday’s results Ottawa 5, Calgary 4, SO Boston 5, Detroit 3 Carolina 7, Edmonton 4 New Jersey 5, Philadelphia 2 Colorado 3, Minnesota 2 N.Y. Rangers 1, Chicago 0, OT Monday’s results N.Y. Islanders 4, Toronto 3, OT Detroit 5, Edmonton 2 Anaheim at Vancouver, late Nashville at Arizona, late Pittsburgh at San Jose, late Today’s games N.Y. Rangers at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m. Dallas at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Columbus at Carolina, 7 p.m. LIGHTNING at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Boston at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. Winnipeg at St. Louis, 8 p.m. New Jersey at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Los Angeles at Colorado, 9 p.m. ECHL Monday’s results Wichita 5, Brampton 2 Orlando 2, Cincinnati 0 Ontario at Utah, late Bakerseld at Idaho, late Today’s games Wheeling at Evansville, 8:15 p.m. Allen at Rapid City, 8:35 p.m. AHL Monday’s results No games scheduled Today’s games Hamilton at Adirondack, 7 p.m. Grand Rapids at Charlotte, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. Wednesday’s games Manchester at St. John’s, 6 p.m. Worcester at Bridgeport, 7 p.m. Lehigh Valley at Toronto, 7 p.m. Hershey at Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, 7:05 p.m. Utica at Chicago, 8 p.m. Milwaukee at San Antonio, 8 p.m. Lake Erie at Texas, 8:30 p.m.College hockeyDIVISION I POLL MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The top 20 teams in the NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey poll, compiled by U.S. College Hockey On line, with rst-place votes in parentheses, records through March 8 and previous ranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. North Dakota (43) 25-7-3 988 1 2. Minn. State (2) 25-7-3 928 2 3. Boston U. (4) 21-7-5 870 3 4. Michigan Tech (1) 26-8-2 848 4 5. Miami (Ohio) 21-12-1 809 5 6. Minn.-Duluth 20-13-3 739 6 7. Denver 20-12-2 683 7 8. Neb.-Omaha 18-10-6 661 8 9. Boston College 20-11-3 583 9 10. Providence 21-11-2 552 10 11. Quinnipiac 21-9-4 525 11 12. Yale 17-7-5 447 12 13. Bowling Green 21-10-5 412 13 14. Mass.-Lowell 18-10-6 344 14 15. Minnesota 19-12-3 273 15 16. Colgate 19-11-4 182 18 17. Vermont 20-13-4 177 17 18. Harvard 17-11-3 127 19 19. Michigan 19-13-0 113 16 20. Robert Morris 22-7-5 73 20 Others receiving votes: St. Cloud State 65, St. Lawrence 39, Bemidji State 26, Dart mouth 22, Penn State 5, RIT 3, Alaska 2, Canisius 2, Michigan State 2.SoccerMLS Sunday’s results Orlando City 1, New York City FC 1, tie Sporting Kansas City 1, New York 1, tie Seattle 3, New England 0 Friday’s game Orlando City at Houston, 7 p.m. Saturday’s games Vancouver at Chicago, 6 p.m. Toronto FC at Columbus, 7:30 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at FC Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Real Salt Lake, 9:30 p.m. San Jose at Seattle, 10 p.m.TransactionsBASEBALLMajor League Baseball OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF BASEBALL — Suspended free agent RHP Roman Madrid 50 games after a positive test for an amphetamine, a banned stimu lant, in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned RHP Oliver Drake to Norfolk (IL). Reassigned INF Michael Almanzar, RHP Dane De La Rosa, LHP Chris Jones and C Brian Ward to their minor league camp. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Agreed to terms with RHPs Cody Allen, Cody An derson and Shawn Armstrong; LHPs Kyle Crockett, Nick Hagadone and Ryan Mer ritt; OF Carlos Moncrief; INFs Jose Ramirez, Giovanny Urshela and Zach Walters and C-INF Tony Wolters on one-year contracts. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Agreed to terms with OF Kole Calhoun, 1B Efren Na varro, 2B Josh Rutledge, LHP Jose Alvarez, RHP Matt Shoemaker, LHP Andrew Heaney, 2B Johnny Giavotella, RHP Nick Tropeano, LHP Tyler Skaggs, RHP Cam Bedrosian, RHP Michael Morin, RHP Drew Rucinski, RHP Cory Rasmus, C Jett Bandy, 1B C.J Cron, 2B Taylor Featherston, 1B Marc Krauss, 3B Kyle Kubitza, OF Grant Green, C Carlos Bandy, OF Daniel Robertson and RHP Danny Reynolds on one-year contracts. SEATTLE MARINERS — Agreed to terms with RHP Kevin Correia on a minor league contract. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Optioned LHP Ian Thomas and INF Elmer Reyes to Gwinnett (AHL). Reassigned RHP Matt Capps, C Yenier Bello, C Tanner Murphy and INF Johan Camargo to their minor league camp. CHICAGO CUBS — Agreed to terms with LHP Phil Coke on a minor league contract.BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association NBA — Fined Los Angeles Clippers G Dahntay Jones $10,000 for bumping Gold en State F Draymond Green during a post game interview on March 8. Women’s National Basketball Association NEW YORK LIBERTY — Signed G Candice Wiggins. FOOTBALLNational Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Re-signed NT Alameda Ta’amu to a one-year contract. BUFFALO BILLS — Re-signed DE Jerry Hughes. Signed K Jordan Gay to a contract extension. CAROLINA PANTHERS — Re-signed WR Brenton Bersin, C Brian Folkerts and LB Ben Jacobs to one-year contracts and RB Fozzy Whittaker and Ted Ginn, Jr. to two-year contracts. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed K Mike Nugent to a two-year contract. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Re-signed OL Ryan Seymour. DENVER BRONCOS — Named Ray Jack son director of player development. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Re-signed WR Randall Cobb and QB Scott Tolzien. HOUSTON TEXANS — Released WR Andre Johnson. ST. LOUIS RAMS — Released OL Jake Long and OL Scott Wells, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Agreed to terms with LB Brandon Graham on a fouryear contract. PITTSBURGH STEELERS — Agreed to terms with LB Arthur Moats on a three-year contract. Released DE Brett Keisel. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Re-signed CB Brandon Flowers to a four-year contract. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Signed TE Derek Carrier to a two-year contract exten sion through the 2017 season. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Signed CB Will Blackmon. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Re-signed DE Larry English, DE Lawrence Sidbury, TE Luke Stocker and LB Jason Williams.HOCKEYNational Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Recalled F Brendan Shinnimin from Portland (AHL). COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Recalled F Luke Adam from Springeld (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS — Recalled G Petr Mrazek from Grand Rapids (AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Recalled F Viktor Stalberg from Milwaukee (AHL). Ac tivated D Anton Volchenkov from injured reserve. American Hockey League BRIDGEPORT SOUND TIGERS — Trad ed F Justin Courtnall to Syracuse for future considerations. GRAND RAPIDS GRIFFINS — An nounced RW Martin Frk was reassigned to the team from Toledo (ECHL). Signed G Je Lerg to a professional tryout. Released D Jared Nightingale from his professional tryout. WORCESTER SHARKS — Acquired F Vincent Arseneau from Manchester for fu ture considerations. ECHL ELMIRA JACKALS — Acquired D Joe Houk from Toledo for F Justin Daniels. GWINNETT GLADIATORS — Traded D Joe Stejskal to Toledo for F Anthony Luciani and future considerations.SOCCERNorth American Soccer League NEW YORK COSMOS — Signed G Brian Holt.COLLEGEAUSTIN PEAY — Fired women’s basket ball coach Carrie Daniels. KANSAS — Fired women’s basketball coach Bonnie Henrickson. MISSOURI — Named Mack B. Rhoades IV director of intercollegiate athletics. OKLAHOMA STATE — Announced QB Daxx Garman will transfer.Glantz-Culver LineNCAA BASKETBALLFAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG Princeton 3 at Penn Atlantic Coast Conference At Greensboro, N.C. First Round Boston College 1 Georgia Tech Wake Forest 4 Virginia Tech West Coast Conference At Las Vegas Championship Gonzaga 14 Portland or Gonzaga 6 BYU Summit League At Sioux Falls, S.D. Championship S. Dakota St. 5 Oral Roberts or S. Dakota St. 4 N. Dakota St. Horizon League Championship at Valparaiso 2 Green Bay Southwestern Athletic Conference At Houston First Round Alcorn St. 10 Grambling St. Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference At Norfolk, Va. Second Round Bethune-Cookman Pk Coppin St. NC A&T 1 SC State Northeast Conference Championship at St. Francis (NY) 6 Robert MorrisNBAFAVORITE LINE O/U UNDERDOG at Indiana 9 (192) Orlando at Brooklyn 2 (192) New Orleans at San Antonio 7 (207) Toronto Cleveland 2 (202) at Dallas at Utah 11 (186) New York Detroit 2 (200) at L.A. LakersNHLFAVORITE LINE UNDERDOG LINE at Philadelphia -135 Dallas +115 at N.Y. Islanders -110 N.Y. Rangers -110 at Carolina -125 Columbus +105 at Montreal -130 Tampa Bay +110 Boston -115 at Ottawa -105 at Minnesota -190 New Jersey +165 at St. Louis -190 Winnipeg +165 | SCOREBOARD | QUICK HITSSHEAHAN LEADS RED WINGS PAST OILERSDETROIT (AP) — Riley Sheahan scored the go-ahead goal in the second period, Jimmy Howard made 36 saves, and Detroit snapped a twogame skid with a 5-2 victory against Edmonton on Monday. Niklas Kronwall, Teemu Pulkkinen, Justin Abdelkader and Pavel Datsyuk added goals to help Detroit send the Oilers to their fth consecutive loss. Rob Klinkhammer and Nail Yakupov scored for Edmonton, and Ben Scrivens stopped 21 shots. Howard made 16 saves in the third period and allowed only Yakupov’s power-play goal that made it 3-2 with 1:55 left. In Toronto, John Tavares scored 4:38 into overtime, capping the New York Islanders’ two-goal comeback in a 4-3 victory against the hosts. Tavares, an Ontario native, went around several defenders to score the winning goal during a delayed Toronto penalty. Tavares has four overtime goals this season.SOCCERFrance will play the US for Algarve title: Gaetane Thiney scored twice, and France (3-0) advanced to the Algarve Cup final against the United States with a 3-1 victory over Japan at Parchal, Portugal. The United States (2-0-1) advanced to Wednesday’s title match with a 0-0 tie with Iceland. Ranked No. 2 in the world, the U.S. is seeking its 10th Algarve title. Third-ranked France, making its sixth appearance in the 22-year-old tourna ment, reached the final for the first time.CYCLINGKristoff wins Paris-Nice stage: In Contres, France, Alexander Kristoff of Norway sprinted to victory in the first stage of Paris-Nice to claim his fifth win this season, while former world champion Tom Boonen retired with a dislocated left shoulder. The Katusha rider edged Frenchmen Nacer Bouhanni and Bryan Coquard at the end of the 196.5-kilometer (122.1-mile) stage from Saint-Remy-lesChevreuse to Contres that was marred by Boonen’s crash. Ugur Erdener, head of the IOC medical commission, said the Olympic body expects cycling’s governing body to take further measures to combat doping and welcomes “the UCI’s commitment to tackling past abuses and putting in place future processes.”JUDICIARYHome surveillance video shows Hernandez: Home surveillance video played for jurors in the murder trial of former New England Patriots player Aaron Hernandez shows him holding what prosecutors say is a gun and leaving his house with two co-defendants hours before the killing. Prosecutors played the video during testimony by Jennifer Fortier, 28, who baby-sat for Hernandez and Jenkins’ infant daughter that night. Federal marshals seized America’s Cup champion Oracle Team USA’s prototype boat in San Francisco, before it could be shipped out of the country, in response to a lien filed by a fired sailor. In maritime law terms, the boat was arrested. The legal wrangling is expected to return to federal court.COLLEGE BASKETBALLUConn trio vie for Wooden Award: Teammates Moriah Jefferson, Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis and Breanna Stewart of top-ranked Connecticut are among the nominees for the women’s John R. Wooden Award as college basketball’s player of the year. They were among 15 players on the ballot released Monday by the Los Angeles Athletic Club. Voting runs from March 16-24 and takes into consideration the opening rounds of the NCAA Tournament. National media members vote on the award. Free-agent guard Candice Wiggins signed with the New York Liberty of the Women’s National Basketball Association. Wiggins, a seven-year veteran of the league, has averaged 9.6 points in her career while playing for Minnesota, Tulsa and Los Angeles.TENNISMauresmo to enter international HOF: Two-time major champion Amelie Mauresmo has been elected to the International Tennis Hall of Fame. Mauresmo won both the Australian Open and Wimbledon in 2006. She was No. 1 for 39 weeks in her career, becoming the first Frenchwoman to reach the top of the computer rankings since they were introduced in the 1970s. Also elected were six-time Paralympic medalist David Hall of Australia in the recentplayer category and longtime tennis industry leader Nancy Jeffett in the contributor category. The induction ceremony is July 18 in Newport, Rhode Island.BRIEFLYIditarod gets underway in earnest: Canadian rookie Rob Cooke, who hails from Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, was the first musher to leave Fairbanks in the staggered start. The race features 78 mushers, including 20 rookies and six former champions. Missouri named Houston athletic director Mack Rhoades IV as the school’s new AD. The school said Rhoades will assume the post in late April after the board of curators approved the hire in a special session.

PAGE 24

Page 6 SP www.sunnewspapers.net The Sun /Tuesday, March 10, 2015 PIRATES AT RAYSWHO: Pittsburgh (32) at Tampa Bay (13) WHEN: Today, 1:05 p.m. WHERE: Charlotte Sports Park, Port Charlotte SCHEDULED STARTERS: RH Burch Smith vs. LH Francisco Liriano TICKETS: Call 1888FANRAYS or go to the stadium box office. DIRECTIONS: From U.S. 41 North, turn left onto State Road 776 and proceed west. From U.S. 41 South, turn right onto State Road 776 and proceed west. Stadium is approxi mately 2 miles on the left. PITCHING PROBABLES: RAYS: RH Burch Smith (start), LH Enny Romero, LH Everett Teaford, RH Jhan Marinez, LH Grayson Garvin. PIRATES: LH Francisco Liriano (start), LH Tony Watson, RH Jared Hughes, LH Antonio Bastardo, RH Collin Balester.RAYS AT RED SOXWHO: Tampa Bay (1 -3) at Boston (42) WHEN: Today, 1:05 p.m. WHERE: JetBlue Park, Fort Myers SCHEDULED STARTERS: RH Matt Andriese vs. RH Justin Masterson DIRECTIONS: Take I-75 South to Exit 131 (Daniels Parkway). Turn left onto Daniels Parkway. Continue through intersection with Treeline. Ballpark is 1.6 miles past the intersection on the left. PITCHING PROBABLES: RAYS: RH Matt Andriese (start), RH Andrew Bellatti, RH Bryce Stowell, RH Dylan Floro, LH Mike Montgomery. RED SOX: RH Justin Masterson (start), LH Henry Owens, RH Koji Uehara, LH Dana Eveland, RH Zeke Spruill, RH Anthony Vavaro, RH Dalier Hinojosa.On deckWEDNESDAY: at Minnesota, 1:05 p.m. THURSDAY: vs. Toronto, 1:05 p.m. FRIDAY: at Philadelphia, 1:05 SATURDAY: at Baltimore, 1:05Rays ticketsAll tickets and locations are subject to availability and can be purchased at the Charlotte Sports Park box office, Ticketmaster outlets, online at raysbaseball.com or by phone at 1-888-Fan-RAYS. On days no game is scheduled, the Charlotte Sports Park box office is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Monday-Friday) and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. (Saturday). On game days, the box office is open from 9 a.m. to 30 minutes after the final out.Yankees 4, Rays 3HITTER OF THE GAMEDesmond Jennings, Rays. The left fielder went 2 of 2 and stole his first base of the spring, upping his batting average to .667.PITCHER OF THE GAMEC.J. Riefenhauser, Rays. The lefthander got out of an inherited bases-loaded jam in the eighth and pitched a clean ninth, striking out one over a perfect 1 innings.KEY INNINGEighth. The Rays were nearly able to climb out of a 4 -0 hole when Boog Powell scored on an error and Eugenio Velez and Jake Elmore hit RBI singles, but the comeback fell one run short.PROSPECT WATCHDaniel Robertson, Rays. The top shortstop prospect had an eventful day, getting tripped up at shortstop, hit by a pitch and striking out in his other at bat. “He’s had action,” manager Kevin Cash said. “Hopefully he’s having fun, because we’ve enjoyed watching him.”YANKEES 4, RAYS 3Tampa Bay New York ab r h bi ab r h bi Franklin ss 3 0 0 0 Ellsbury cf 3 0 1 0 Robertson ss 1 0 0 0 Hthcott cf 1 1 1 1 Jennings lf 2 0 2 0 Gardner lf 3 0 0 0 T.Motter lf 2 1 0 0 R.Flores lf 1 0 0 0 Loney 1b 2 0 0 0 Beltran rf 2 0 0 0 Belnome 1b 1 0 0 0 Astin pr-rf 0 0 0 0 Lngoria 3b 2 0 1 0 Teixeira 1b 3 0 0 0 Velez 3b 2 1 1 1 Bird 1b 1 0 1 1 Souza Jr. rf 3 0 0 0 McCann c 2 1 1 0 Elmore rf 1 0 1 1 Romine c 1 0 1 0 Kirmaer dh 2 0 0 0 Headley 3b 3 1 0 0 Brwn ph-dh 2 0 1 0 Figeroa 3b 1 0 0 0 A.Casilla 2b 3 0 1 0 Rdrgez dh 3 0 2 1 R.Br ett 2b 1 0 0 0 Cave ph-dh 1 0 0 0 B.Wilson c 2 0 0 0 Drew 2b 1 0 0 0 L.Maile c 2 0 1 0 Rfsnydr 2b 2 1 1 0 H.Lee pr 0 0 0 0 Grgrius ss 2 0 0 1 Mahtook cf 2 0 0 0 Culver ss 2 0 0 0 B.Powell cf 1 1 0 0 Totals 34 3 8 2 Totals 32 4 8 4 Tampa Bay 000 000 030 — 3 New York 020 000 20x — 4 E—De.Jennings (1), B.Powell (1), Refsnyder (2). DP— Tampa Bay 1, New York 1. LOB— Tampa Bay 7, New York 7. 2B—L.Maile (1), Bird (3), B.McCann (1). SB—De.Jennings (1), T.Motter (1), C.Brown (1), Refsnyder (1). CS—A.Casilla (1). Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO Karns L,0-1 3 2 2 1 1 1 B.Gomes 1 1 0 0 0 1 Frieri 1 1 0 0 1 0 Norberto 1 1 0 0 0 0 Yates 3 2 2 2 1 Riefenhauser 1 0 0 0 0 1 New York IP H R ER BB SO Pineda W,1-0 2 1 0 0 0 2 Eovaldi 3 3 0 0 0 5 D.Carpenter 1 0 0 0 1 1 Ju.Wilson 1 1 0 0 0 1 D.Moreno 1 2 3 3 1 1 C.Martin S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 2 HBP—by D.Moreno (Dan.Robertson). WP— D.Carpenter. Umpires—Home, Eric Cooper; First, Bob Davidson; Second, Mark Wegner; Third, Dan Iassogna. T— 2:50. A— 9,821 (11,076). MLB: Tampa Bay notebookCash faces old teamTAMPA — Before his rst game managing against the New York Yankees, Kevin Cash took a moment to look back on the time he played for them. The Tampa Bay manager spent three weeks with the Yankees in 2009, playing 10 games from May 8 to May 29. Catchers Jorge Posada and Jose Molina were both hurt at the time, so Cash and Francisco Cervelli received extended time behind the plate. Cash hit .231 with three RBIs during that stint, which saw the Yankees go 14 -5 on their way to the World Series title. “A lot of good times. You’d walk into that lineup every day and you’re playing with future Hall of Famers in just an AllStar lineup,” Cash said. “It was a pretty good stretch, so it was obviously a good time. I wasn’t part of any of the festivities in the playoffs and afterward and stuff, but I was denitely pulling for them and watching. It was neat.” Cash spoke specically of his relationship with Yankees manager Joe Girardi and rst base coach Tony Pena, both of whom were former big league catchers. Cash and Girardi came through the minor leagues under the tutelage of former Yankees catching instructor Gary Tuck. “Really understood the game,” Girardi said of Cash. “Thinker. Easy to get along with, in a sense, as a player. Easy to work with. He struck me as that type of guy.” The Yankees released Cash early that September to clear a spot on their 40 man roster, but the reserve catcher was still rewarded when New York took home the postseason crown. “I did get some jewelry,” Cash said. “Those veteran guys really took care of all the younger play ers. I had a great appreciation for how they carried themselves with the young players. A lot’s asked of the clubhouse over there, just being the Yankees, and they handled it really well.” Cash also has fond memories of the month he got to share a clubhouse with future Hall of Fame shortstop Derek Jeter. “You’re kind of in awe of every thing,” Cash said. “ I remember after I left, I was with Houston and I hit a double, like my rst one in four months. So I got on second base and Derek was out there, and I told him, I said, ‘Man, it was a pleasure getting to be around you for two months.’ “Just the way he carried himself. For everything that he has going on in his life — Yankee captain, Yankee shortstop, icon, face of baseball — the way he carried himself was remarkable. Something I really paid attention to.” Injury roundup: Lefthander Drew Smyly (shoulder tendinitis) did not throw, but he ramped up his exercises on Monday, something Cash said was a “good sign.” Nick Franklin (hip) returned to the Rays lineup on Monday, playing five innings at shortstop and going 0 for 3 at the plate with two strikeouts. John Jaso (leg) did not play, but is scheduled to start in left field for the home half of the Rays’ splitsquad games today. Outfielder Brandon Guyer (side) did rotational work on Monday. Cash said his status has been upgraded, but the Rays are going to take things slow because it’s “an injury you don’t want get any farther out of hand.” At long last: Alex Colome tweeted Monday that he’s “on my way to Florida,” meaning that the visa issues keeping him in the Dominican Republic have likely been resolved. The Rays had said earlier in the day that they are “cautiously optimistic” that right -hander will report to camp today or Wednesday. “He’s going to go through a physical and get checked out,” Cash said of when Colome does report. “But from all of our reports, he’s been right on line. He was actually facing hitters before our guys were facing hitters, so that’s a good thing.” Extra bases: Monday marked the 20 -year anniversary of the day a Vince Naimoliled group was awarded the expansion Tampa Bay Devil Rays. Contact Josh Vitale at 941 -206 -1122 or jvitale@ sun -herald.com.By JOSH VITALESPORTS WRITERManager spent three weeks with Yankees in 2009 AP PHOTOTampa Bay’s Evan Longoria bats during the rst inning of Monday’s game in Tampa. The New York catcher is Brian McCann. Stone Crabs tickets go on salePORT CHARLOTTE — The Charlotte Stone Crabs released single-game tickets for this season on Monday. Tickets cost $10 for reserved seating and $12 for box seats. The Stone Crabs also unveiled their daily specials: Monday: $1 food menu items and $1 tickets to any fan who purchases a regularpriced ticket. Tuesday: $2 tickets, parking, hot dog, fountain sodas and draft beers. Wednesday: Free ticket to another Wednesday game if the Stone Crabs win. Thursday: $1 fountain sodas and domestic draft beers. Friday: Free draft beer until the end of the first inning with purchase of a special $15 ticket. Saturday: Postgame fireworks or other promotional giveaways. Sunday: Kids 13 and under eat free. to have a reliable pitch like that, instead of just fastball, curveball — if I can add a third pitch in there that I feel comfortable with, I’d just feel even better out there.” Karns threw 50 pitches (33 strikes) over three innings in his second spring outing Monday against the New York Yankees, giving up two runs (one earned) on two hits and a walk while striking out one. Facing the Yankees’ A lineup, the righthander threw a perfect rst inning before getting hit around in the second. Brian McCann doubled to right. Chase Headley reached on a two -base error when Rays left elder Desmond Jennings couldn’t catch a y ball near the wall, and desig nated hitter Alex Rodriguez drove in his rst run of the spring with a single to left. The Yankees added a second run on Didi Gregorius’ RBI groundout to second. Karns threw a perfect frame in the third, getting Brett Gardner and Mark Teixeira to line out and Carlos Beltran to strike out. “It was awesome to see the majority of their starters out there, just to see where everything is at right now in the current moment and then just kind of go from there,” said Karns, who went 9 -9 with a 5.08 ERA for TripleA Durham last year. “And with all the lefties in their lineup, (the changeup) really came into play for me. So I’m getting the opportunity to do what I want, to work on what I want, in the game, so I’m pretty happy about that.” Manager Kevin Cash said he thought Karns had trouble gripping the ball — “he kept wiping his hand like it was slipping out of his hand,” he said — but was pleased with the way he threw. Catcher Bobby Wilson agreed that Karns’ stuff “looked really good,” and was especially impressed with his changeup. “It had some bottom to it. He wasn’t scared to throw it,” Wilson said. “Through the course of the game you’re going to push a couple and not feel the way you want them to, but I thought for the majority of them, it’s what he has to do to pitch at this level.” Karns went 11 with a 4.50 in those two major league starts last year, throwing seven shutout innings in the rst and giving up ve runs over ve innings in the second. This year, he’s hoping a rened changeup will give him the consistency to make much more than two starts in a Rays uniform. “It’s denitely a good test for him,” Wilson said of Monday’s outing. “The Yankees usually roll out a pretty good lineup, they have some bangers in their lineup, so it’s good for him to build condence. He saw today that he can pitch in this league and he has the stuff to do it.”Contact Josh Vitale at 9412061122 or jvitale@ sun -herald.com.KARNSFROM PAGE 1 CLEARWATER — Philadelphia pitcher Cliff Lee is awaiting a second opinion from Dr. James Andrews on his ailing left elbow and said surgery would end his season and possibly his career. The 36-year-old lefthander didn’t pitch after July 31 last year because of a left exor pronator strain. He said his left elbow felt normal as he threw two scoreless innings Thursday against Houston in his spring training debut, but he felt discomfort the following day. Lee realizes surgery would have major ramications on his career. “It’d be six-to-eight months out,” Lee said Monday. “So, basically, if I have the surgery this season will be done, possibly my career, I guess. I don’t know. We’ll have to see.” In other injury news, Cleveland starting pitcher Gavin Floyd underwent an MRI on his troublesome right elbow. Washington center fielder Denard Span had surgery to repair a right core muscle injury and will miss the Nationals’ opener next month. Reds (ss) 7, Angels 5: In Goodyear, Ariz., Albert Pujols singled twice and drove in a pair of runs off Anthony DeSclafani — a leading candidate for Cincinnati’s rotation — before the split-squad Reds rallied. Diamondbacks 3, White Sox 3, 9 innings: In Glendale, Ariz., A.J. Pollock got three hits and Paul Goldschmidt had a sacrifice fly in the tie. Micah Johnson hit a tying, solo homer in the bottom of the ninth for the White Sox. The game was called after the inning ended. Padres 6, Cubs 3: In Mesa, Ariz., Andrew Cashner pitched three hitless innings and Will Middlebrooks had a three-run homer for San Diego. The Cubs, full of high hopes this season under new manager Joe Maddon, and Milwaukee are the only teams that haven’t won in exhibition play this year. Mariners 4, Indians 3: In Peoria, Ariz., Brad Miller hit two home runs and Mike Zunino also connected for Seattle. Cleveland’s Brandon Moss got his first at-bats in a game after October hip surgery and hit a solo home run in the seventh inning to tie it at 3. Twins 1, Pirates 1: In Bradenton, Neil Walker hit a run-scoring double in the first inning for Pittsburgh. Walker drove in Andrew McCutchen, who hit a two-out double off Ricky Nolasco. Miguel Sano, a top Twins prospect who missed last season following elbow ligament-replace ment surgery, homered in the second off Gerrit Cole. Astros 1, Blue Jays (ss) 0: In Dunedin, Collin McHugh struck out three in three innings to lead Houston. The 27-year-old McHugh was a bright spot in Houston’s rotation last season, going 11-9 with a 2.73 ERA in 25 starts as a rookie. Marlins 13, Mets 2: In Port St. Lucie, Zack Wheeler struggled with his control and allowed six runs in 1 innings in his spring debut as New York lost. Wheeler gave up two hits, walked two, hit two batters and struck out two. He pitched a perfect first, then got in trouble in the second. Phillies 1, Orioles 0: In Sarasota, Chris Tillman pitched two scoreless innings in his first appearance of the spring in Baltimore’s loss. He allowed one hit, struck out one and walked one. Red Sox 3, Cardinals 0: In Jupiter, Michael Wacha struck out four of the six batters he faced in his spring debut for St. Louis. Wacha threw 27 pitches in two perfect innings.Philadelphia pitcher faces possible endBY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MLB: Monday’s highlights 50477202 THE SUPREME GOLF SWING adno=50482121 PROBLEM Bring your 7 iron. Punta Gorda Charlotte Harbor Event Center (indoors) 75 Taylor St (41 & Taylor St) (I-75 exit 164) Mon. March 9 10AM OR 2PM Thurs. March 12 11AM Millions of recreational golfers are inconsistent arm swingers, can’t hit with their practice swing, do great on the range, but not on the golf course. Everyone will lower their score in this Revolutionary Golf School with U.S. Marine now Sports Scientist Stephen Cornetta. You will become a silky smooth power leg player and make it look easy. Enroll at class $14 Bring One Friend FREE with this AD Reservations not required (no small children please) www.cornettasgolf.com You will Slash your Golf Scorein 90 minutes... Guaranteed!"This clinic is priceless"4 , 6OAN) K -T.( \'I NS AR-AIPloi Szend Here Slays Hereww.punbpdochamber cam

PAGE 25

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 1 TM 9308 Spring DR Port Charlotte, FL 33981 Single Family Home 3 Bedrooms 2 BathsListing Price $319,900 Sold For $309,000 Stay on Top of Sales and Prices in YOUR Neighborhood!Check the Listings inAREA PROPERTY TRANSFERS Every Saturday in Your Sun Newspaper`s Real Estate Classified Section www.sun-classifieds.com HOMES FOR SALE1020 DEEP CREEK Immaculate 3/2/2, Split Bedrooms, Open & Airy, Kitchen w/Breakfast Bar & Nook. Large Fenced Yard. $162,000. Doris Walters, Bud Trayner Realty. 941-661-4019 DEEP CREEK 3/2/2 Pool 1989 SF Coral Fireplace, Tile floors, Tile Roof, $249,900 LAKE SUZY ESTATES Lake Front, Pool Home 3/2/2 2,279 SF Metal Roof, Dock, $350,000 DEEP CREEK 3/2/2 Pool 2,206 SF Paver Deck, Jetted Tub, Updated Kitchen & Bath $234,900 PUNTA GORDA 2003 Salt Water Canal 2,132 SF Paver Deck, Concrete Seawall No Bridges $200,000 Mike Raffo 941-268-6442 Century 21 Aztec ADVERTISE! HOMES FOR SALE1020 Prairie Creek Est. POOL Home Stunning Architecture ,Fabulous 5 Bdrm, 5 full +2 half baths, 5755 Sf under on PRIVATE 7 acres. Att 3 Stall Garage w Private Bonus Ste. Crown molding 3 Fireplaces Huge Master Suite with Firepl & adjoining private Den. Formal Dining Rm , Dramatic Great Rm w firepl , Living, kit/dining area . Pool & Private lake Views through out this home are spectacular! PUNTA GORDA RANCH & EQUESTRIAN COMMUNITY ! $748,900 JUDY K PETKEWICZ GRI CRS Allison James Estates & Homes 941-456-8304 REDUCED BRAND NEW 3/2/3 POOLHOMESINROTONDAWEST. A 5 GOLFCOURSECOMMUNITY! HOMESFEATUREWOODCABI-NETS, GRANITECOUNTERS, SSAPPLIANCES, BEAUTIFULMAS-TERBATHSW/ DUALVANITIES,GIANTWALKAROUNDSHOWER+ SOMUCHMORE. CALLRONMCGUIRETARPONCOASTREALTY941-223-4781 Lookingfor Adventure? Findit inthe Classifieds HOMES FOR SALE1020 1335 ABSCOTT ST. PT CHARLOTTE 3/2/1 COMPLETELY RENOVATEDNew Kitchen, baths, tile, carpets & paint. $124,900. SUNCOASTISLESREALESTATE941-268-6820 NORTH CAROLINA LAND $69,900.00 Lenoir...1.7 Acres... All flat land! Magnificent Location City Water, Phone, Deep Well, Cable, Electric and a Beautiful Relaxing stream! Taxes only $150.00 per year. OWNER FINANCING with small down. Call 941-496-9252 3/2/2 NEW CONSTRUCTION IN ROTONDA WEST Due to be Completed 4/1/15. Granite Counter-Tops, Wood Cabinets, Tile Flooring Throughout, 8 ft. Interior Doors, Step Ceilings & Crown Moldings, Huge Lanai, and More. This is a MUST SEE. $219,000.Custom Homes of Rotonda Inc. 941-769-0332 Lic# CRC1327567 Burnt Store Isles Canal Front 2539 SQ FT home offers BIG water views large corner lot. NEW AIR CONDITIONER,2015 ALL NEW STAINLESS APPLIANCES IN KITCHEN!Family Rm / Great Rm Spacious kitchen viewing Beautiful Pool & Gorgeous water views. Spacious Living Rm & Dining Rm tray ceilings custom built in's .Master Bdrm/ bath Suite w Glass Sliders to pool /waterfront . OVER sized screened Lanai & Pool , heated self cleaning pool & spa is ideal for entertaining ! ALL with SPECTACULAR WATER VIEWS! New Listing.. $439,000 Call Judy Petkewicz 941-456-8304 Allison James Estates & Homes PUT CLASSIFIEDS TOWORK FORYOU!FINDAJOB! BUYAHOME! BUYACAR! OPEN HOUSE1010 03/10/15 26169 Explorer Rd. DEEP CREEK Open Sat 12-3 PM Rare 3/2/2 Villa Style Condo. Updated and move in ready w/low mo. fee of $260 includes W&S. $1000 buyer rebate if purchased through Fla Golf Properties 941-698-4653 WEDNESDAY 12PM2PM 701 HOLLYHILL CT. Port Charlotte 2014 3BR/2BA Modular home on corner lot, with direct sailboat water access to Charlotte Harbor $219,000 Harold T. Goffe Realtor Inc. 941-639-5777 WHY RENT? OWNTHIS2/2 BIRDBAYCONDOW/GOLFVIEW! SPOTLESS, 2NDFLOOR2/2 OPEN FLOORPLANWITHSPLITBED-ROOMS, CARPORTANDSTORAGE. CERAMICTILE, VAULTEDCEILINGS,BONUSOFFICEON23-FTSCR.LANAI. INCLALLAPPLIANCES+FULL-SIZEW/DENCLINCARPORT. MOSTFURNISHINGSINCL. OPEN HOUSE SAT MARCH. 14TH1PM-4PM,ORCALLFORAPPT. 668 BIRDBAY#17 CALLVALERIELABOY941-564-5020 VALERIE@FINDMYLANAI.COMEXIT KINGREALTY HOMES FOR SALE1020 SELLING YOUR HOME, CONDO, OR LOT? WE CAN HELP YOU. Advertise your home, condo, or lot with us and reach over 150,000 readers in Charlotte, Sarasota, & DeSoto Counties and online everyday. Ask about our 90 day special. Call one of our classified experts for all the details at 866-463-1638 Realtors Welcome! 1000REAL ESTATEWe Are Pledged To The Letter And Spirit of U.S. Policy For The Achievement Of Equal Housing Opportunity Throughout The Nation. We Encourage And Support An Affirmative Advertising And Marketing Program In Which there Are No Barriers To Obtaining Housing Because of Race, Color, Religion, Sec, Handicap, Familial Status Or National Origin. EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY OPEN HOUSE1010 11782 COURTLY MANOR LAKE SUZY OPEN SUNDAY 12-3 This huge custom built 3/3/3 residence is full architectural features and appointments to please the most discriminating buyer and comes with a million dollar view. $ 349,000 Fla Golf Properties 941-698-4653 Open By Apt. only 26081 PAYSANDU DR DEEP CREEK $249,000.00 Huge 2678 sq ft 4 Bedroom 3 Bath Estate Style pool home with great curb appeal. Mature landscaping, custom curbing and storage galore. $1500 Buyer rebate if purchased through Fla Golf Properties941-698-4653 1000REAL ESTATEWe Are Pledged To The Letter And Spirit of U.S. Policy For The Achievement Of Equal Housing Opportunity Throughout The Nation. We Encourage And Support An Affirmative Advertising And Marketing Program In Which there Are No Barriers To Obtaining Housing Because of Race, Color, Religion, Sec, Handicap, Familial Status Or National Origin. EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY REAL EST A TE 1010 16501010Open House 1015 Real Estate Auctions 1020Homes/General For Sale 1030Waterfront Homes For Sale 1031 Foreclosures For Sale 1035 Golf Course Community For Sale 1040Condos/Villas For Sal e 1060Townhouses For Sale 1070Duplexes For Sale 1075Tri-Plex For Sale 1080Apartments For Sale 1090Mobile Homes For Sal e 1100Interval Ownership 1100 Out of Area Homes For Sale 1115Trade/Exchange 1120Wanted To Buy RENT 1205 Lease Option 1210 Homes 1240Condos/Villas 1280 Townhouses 1300Duplexes 1320Apartments 1330Hotel/Motel 1340Mobile Homes 1345Misc. Rentals 1350Efficiencies 1360Room ToRent 1370Rentals To Share 1390Vacation/Seasonal 1420Wanted To Rent LOTS 1500Lots & Acreage 1515Waterfront 1520Out Of Area Lots 1530Commercial Lots 1540Trade/Exchange BUSINESS 1600Business For Sale 1610Business Rentals 1615Income Property 1620 Commercial/ Industrial Prop. 1640Warehouse & Storage 1650Farm/Ranches T urnyou r trashinto cash! Advertise youryard sa l e! Y Y ouSa ouSa ve ve BigBuc BigBuc ks ks Shopping Shopping Classifieds! Classifieds! Atitr_SUNN".0., -Y.aNERSCLAIM, Iksoabft&--d Nth Nil KmccAmerica's BEST Community Daily"

PAGE 26

Page 2 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 WATERFRONT HOMES 1030 4347 ROCK CREEK DR, PC Spacious sailboat deep water 2/2/2+ home, 5 min. to harbor. 90' seawall cap, davits & dock w/elect & water. Lg. eatin kitchen, screened in lanai. $244,900. 954-261-1657 NOKOMIS WATERFRONT 2BR/2BAon Canal with access to Shakett Creek, Dona Bay, ICWW, Jettys and Gulf of Mexico. 1389sf, $225,000. 941-915-7113 PORT CHARLOTTE 3/2/2 Seawall, Dock & Boat Lift. Pool w/ Huge Screened in Lanai. Completely Renovated!! New Kitchen w/ SS Appliances, Baths, Tile & Paint. $249,900. By Appt. Only. 941-625-1952 PORT CHARLOTTE 3411 Pinetree St. GORGEOUS SUNSETS AND LONG WATER VIEW OF E. SPRING LAKE from this fantastic totally updated/upgraded 3/2 1800 SF waterfront home with your own dock, 10,000 boat lift, and cement seawall. Quick access (10-15 mins., 1 bridge) to Harbor $259,000 Patty Gillespie Re/Max Anchor 941-875-2755 CLASSIFIED WORKS! PORT CHARLOTTE FSBO 3bd/2ba/2cg with cathedral/vaulted ceilings. 1,683 SqFt. Hurricane shutters, oversized lovely canal front lot with new dock, boat lift, 80 seawall. Many upgrades inc. Newer: trane a/c, security sys, roof 2014, and water heater. Clean/ Move in Ready. $267,500 540-686-5290 PORT CHARLOTTE Meticulously Upgraded 3/2 with Pool on SW Canal Boat lift w/concrete dock & Seawall. $379,500. Bill Jones Barnes & Phillips Real Estate 941-743-4200 PENDING PENDING PORT CHARLOTTE Spectacular 4/4.5/2 POOL Home w/ HARBOR VIEW! 6100+sf. Lrg. Family Rm., Formal Living Rm., Den/Office, Bonus Rm. Dock and MORE! $889,900. Marie Sellitto, 941-626-3770 Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office HOMES FOR SALE1020 PUNTA GORDA 26055 Ancuda Dr. 3/3/2 Pool Home. Top of the Line Upgrades! Ready to Move In. Renovated & Reduced $189,900. Call Hollie Dustin, Home Choice Real Estate Inc. 941-5759775 or 941-916-2251 WATERFRONT HOMES 1030 15562 Meacham Circle South Gulf Cove Custom built pool home. No Bridges, Gulf Access. Boat Lift & Dock. $599,000 Carolyn Cantin941-809-9661 Floridian Realty Services Sale Pending ATTN: All Boaters BIG & small! PUNTA GORDA ISLES Lovely CUSTOM 2000 BUILT 2363 SF Sail Boat Canal No BridgesQuick Direct Access to Port Charlotte Harbor to the Gulf ! Features Galore through out. Spacious Living area opens to Large Pool Area ALL Tiled & Screened Cage, pool bath. Gourmet Kitchen ! PRIVATE Spacious Master Bedroom /Bath Suite! Concrete Sea Wall +Dock 10,000 LB Boat Lift + shore power. Well maintained. CALL JUDY PETKEWICZ ALLISON JAMES ESTATES & HOMES 941-456-8304 18442 DRIGGERS AVE PORT CHALROTTE 2br/2ba with 2 car detached gar. seawall Dock & boat lift. $140,000 Call 941-258-1364 $314,900 PUNTA GORDA Burnt Store Isles POOL HOME CANAL FRONT Access to Charlotte Harbor & Gulf, Seawall, Family Rm. 2/2 Full Bath, Spacious Florida Rm under air & screened pool area. 2 Car attached garage, Circular driveway, Spacious corner lot and Great water views JUDY K PETKEWICZ GRI CRS Allison James Estates & Homes 941-456-8304 HARBORTOWN MARINA CAPE HAZE PLACIDA OPEN SAT & SUN 1-4 PM Georgeous, large 1/1 in marina on ICW. Near 360 degree water views. Quick access to many Gulf beaches. Restaurants, fishing, boating just steps from your door. Decorator furnished residence, vacation home, or winter retreat w/ a great rental history. Only $179,900. Pet friendly. 941-769-0200 HOMES FOR SALE1020 PORT CHARLOTTE3/2/2 POOL Home. 1984 House is Full of Upgrades! 1716 sq. ft. A/C. Huge Lanai and Pool. No Flood Zone. New York & Beacon. $165,000. $157,500. **CONTRACT PENDING*** REDUCED! PUNTA GORDA, WOW! 2782 sf. of Beauty! Lg 3/2.5/2, POOL, Huge Bonus Room & Huge Kitchen w/ Granite Counters. Willie Keiser, Berkshire Hathaway FL Realty 941-276-9104 ROTONDA WATERFRONT HOME 23 MEDALIST TERR. Gorgeous 3/2 with den, Key West style metal roof, brand new top-ofthe-line heated, salt pool, cage and lanai. Granite/stainless kitchen, 8 ft. doors, many upgrades. You'll be amazed at the design and like new condition inside/out. Shown by appt. only! No flood zone. Asking $279,900. Owner moving and will look at all offers. 941-769-0200. SOUTH GULF COVEModel Home Located at 8042 Wiltshire Dr. 1672 to 2319 Sq. Ft. Waterfront Community On the Gulf of Mexico. Priced from the Unbelievable $170s 941-447-0003 SOUTH GULF COVE, 2008 4/2.5/2 HUGE Lanai. Pool. 2 LOTS. Shed. Irrigation Well. All Tile. Granite Kitchen. 10468 New Brittain $259,900 Marcia Cullinan 941-6625878 Michael Saunders & Co WHEN YOU'RE LOOKING FOR THE BEST PROPERTIES SEE THE HARBOUR HEIGHTS AND DEEP CREEK EXPERT!479 Londrina 3/2/2 $174,900 2268 Oberon 3/2.5/2 $214,900 1301 Odyssey 3/2/2 $236,900 27412 San Marino 3/2/2 $262,900 4170 Enclave 4/3/3 $299,000 27089 Solomon 4/3/2 $464,900 3260 Peace River 3/2/2 $649,900 27097 Solomon 4/5/2 $869,900Prime Building Lots Available!Steve Vieira, REALTOR 941-258-2891 Coldwell Banker Residential R.E. Harbour Heights Office www.HarbourHeights RealEstate.com HOMES FOR SALE1020 PORT CHARLOTTE 1314 Abalom St., DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH! Partially-renovated 3/2 2400+ SF Mediterranean-style with 64 scrd lanai overlooking very private rear yard. Walk to the elementary school! Quick access to I-75! City water & sewer! $170,000 Patty Gillespie Re/Max Anchor 941-875-2755 PORT CHARLOTTE 2/2/2 Split Plan 1500+SF Living Area, Enclosed Florida Room w/ CHA Living, Dining, & Family Room. Open Floor Plan! $99,900. 941-626-4841 Agent/Owner PORT CHARLOTTE 22120 Lancaster Ave Beautiful 3/2 oversize 2 gar solar heat pool, on city water & sewer Vinyl fenced, tiled & laminate floors, family room view of pool. Come & see all xtra features, $169,900. Rose Padua Century21 Sunbelt Realty 941-624-3800 P O RT C HARL O TTE 3 / 2 /1 Just Remodeled! For Sale by Owner. Financing Available. Easy Terms. 941-264-4439 PORT CHARLOTTE 3br/2ba split plan home with (2) 2 car garages, RV Pad w/30 amp. Lg family room and large lot. Nice landscaping. Great Location 41/Midway area. 941-875-1643 or 352-622-2030 PORT CHARLOTTE Beautiful 3/2 Carriage Home in Heritage Oaks. Totally Redone. New Paint, Porcelin Tile Throughout. Granite, French Doors, Sky Lights, Enclosed FL Room. Upgrades. 941-875-9219 FindyourBest Friendinthe Classifieds! PORT CHARLOTTE, 3/2/1 Brand New Kitchen, SS Appliances, New Baths, Oversized Garage. Fenced Yard. Large Lanai & Tile Floors. $115,000. 941-979-5918 or 941-249-9978 PORT CHARLOTTE21032 Riddle Ave. 3/2/2 Ready to Move In! 1989. House is Full of Upgrades! 1690 Sq. Ft. A/C $135,000. 815-341-9185 HOMES FOR SALE1020 NORTH PORT 3/2/2 Cypress Falls (Gated) 55+ Resort Style, single family w/private pool. 2006 Built 1910 SF. Clubhouse, Fitness Center, & more. $299,995 Bryan & Donna French Remax Palm 941-661-1202 NORTH PORT 4398 Appleton Terr Light, Bright, Open Move-In-Ready Windermere-Built 1831 SF 3/2/2 on fully-fenced lot, tiled lanai overlooking tranquil private wooded setting. Tiled front entry with double doors. Brand NEW 15 seer AC. NEW well! NEW stainless appliances. Freshly painted. $175,900 Patty Gillespie, Re/Max Anchor 941-875-2755 NORTH PORT Gorgeous 3/3/3 POOL Home + Den in N. P. Estates on 3+ Acres. Open Floor Plan. Peaceful & Private. $479,900. $469,900. Teri Abraham, Vanderee & Associates 941-483-0884 MOTIVATED SELLER!! NORTH PORT PRISTINE 3Bd/2Ba home with A GREAT KITCHEN, Call Mary Oliveri Century 21 Almar 941-525-4042 A PLACE FOR YOU AND ONE FOR THE KIDS/FOLKS NEXT DOOR! NORTH PORT 2525 Traverse Ave. Gorgeous 2200+ SF Custom-designed 3/2/2 on oversized canal front lot! Formal Living Room, Dining Room plus Family Room! Meticulous $214,900 NORTH PORT 2545 Traverse Ave. Dont Be Deceived by the exterior! Prepare to be Amazed! Immaculate, light, bright open Grean room Plan with 1 HUGE (23X15) bedroom, Plus separate efficiency apartment. A MUST SEE! $139,900 Patty Gillespie ReMax Anchor941-875-2755 NEEDCASH? HaveAGarage Sale! ONLY4.5 %COMMISSION!WhenYou List Your Home With Me. Must Mention This Ad.Jeff Runyan 941-979-2843 Re/Max Palm HOMES FOR SALE1020 DEEP CREEK4/2/2/Pool 91 Catamaraca Ct Open plan w/family room On greenbelt, 2,298 air Formal Liv/Din $224,900 Suncoasteam Realty 941-235-7474 DEEP CREEK Spacious, Newly Updated 3/2/2! Hardwood Floors in Living & Dining Rm. Granite & Custom Cabs! $215,000. Deb Sestilio 941-391-1873 Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office ENGL. HOMEFORSALEBYOWNER2,000+ SF, CAGED POOL& SPA. 5+MINSTO GULFBYBOAT, NOBRIDGES,W/ LG. LAGOONWMANATEES, NONEIGHBORSFRONT& REAR. 37X22+COVEREDBOAT DOCKWITHEXISTINGCRADLE WILLLIFT5 TONS. ADDITIONAL2 DAVITS& 92FT. SEAWALL. 941-697-7474 LAKE SUZY Exquisite Estate Property on almost an acre. 6/4.5/5 Courtyard Pool/Spa Home. Separate in-law suite. Gourmet Kitchen. 4,691SqFt $675,000 Remax Palm Bryan & Donna French 941-661-1202 FREE MERCHANDISE ADS!! To place a FREE merchandise ad go to: sun-classifieds.com and place your ad. Click on Click Here to Place Your Ad Now and follow the prompts. FREE ads are for merchandise UNDER $500. and the ad must be placed online by you. One item per ad, the ad must be 3 lines or less, price must appear in the ad. Your ad will appear online & in print for 7 days! Some restrictions do apply. LIMIT 5 FREE ADS PER WEEK **Everyone Needs to Register on Our New Site** Need To Place a Classified Ad? Enter your classified ad and pay with your credit card 24 hours a day, 7 days week.ssi NEW! NEW! NEW! JUST COMPLETED ROTONDA MODEL HOME Open House Sat & Sun 1-4 PM. 33 Medalist Circle. 2,200 sq. ft., 3/2 w/den, 3car gar & pool. Superior quality const, luxury custom upgrades top-to-bottom & 1 yr builder warranty. Best new construction you can find! Just reduced over $10K. NO flood zone: 941-769-0200. GETRESULTS USECLASSIFIED! w,,IooooooooLaft1%L wft-ih.AWMLkf"71 W-eLawsMONO*-H,, t ezz-'-a nryawner Ltr ,x FOR SALEb'--_'' BY OWNER. qh, . . FFOR SALEBY **a::1OWNERCsRESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATEpS++ nJ I1 r .-----.-.iJ n IL._._._._..J

PAGE 27

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 3 NEED000CUSTOMERS.001,(941) 206-1000Display Ads(941) 429.3110Classified AdsNEWSPAPERS

PAGE 28

Page 4 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE1060 DEEP CREEK2/2.5 w/ 12x12 Upstairs & Downstairs Fully Screened in Lanai in Lake Rio Town Homes HOA. Lake View! Close to On Site Pool. Unique Must See! $97,000. obo 313-300-7351 APARTMENTS FOR SALE1080 8 RENTALAPARTMENTS2/2 Over 1000sf each. Gross income $67,200 Pt. Charlotte . Seller Financing! 941-625-6534 Ask for Dale! MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE 1090 PALM HARBOR HOMES Factory model center Liquidation sale:FREE factory tours, FREE color brochures, SAVE over $15k on 22 models! CALL FOR APPT! 800-622-2832www.plantcity.palmharbor.com MOBILE HOME REPAIRS Roof Overs Coatings Vinyl Siding Windows Doors Carports941-505-2441Lic# CBC1252070 PUNTA GORDA, Partially Furnished 2BR/2BA DW Mobile w/ 2 Storage Sheds, Large Deck, Attached Sunroom in Beautiful Shell Creek 55+ Park. $42,900. 941-979-8342 VENICE RANCH MOBILE HOME ESTATESWALKING DISTANCE TO PUBLIX & CVS No Dogs, Cats ok! Call Jane 941-488-5672 www.VeniceRanch.com 55+ Lot Rental Community! MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE1095 2013 JACOBSEN RIVERSIDE OAKS No Carpet Allergy Free! Watch the Birds From Your Private Porch 2/2 Plus Bonus Room & MUCH MORE! Only $79,900 Call Mike 941-356-5308 riversideoaksflorida.com SALE PENDING! CONDOS/VILLAS FOR SALE1040 PORT CHARLOTTE RIVERWOOD Newer VILLAS For You Den, Tile Roof,2 Car Gar, Lanai, Views, All Appliances. EASY to Buy & Enjoy This Season! Carl Anderson Real Estate Broker 941-629-9586 PUNTA GORDA ISLES Furnished 2/2/1 on Sailboat Canal w/ Deeded Boat Dock & Lift! 1427 sf., 1st Floor, Heated Pool, Tile, Granite Counters, $269,900. Elaine Martin Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office 941-661-4800 PUNTA GORDAISLES, 2/2, Banyon Pt, Waterfront, Boat Slip. $179,900 Brian Helgemo Five Star Realty 941-380-3727 PUNTA GORDA Manatee Alert!!! PGI/Tarpon Cove Condo 3/2 w/ 13k Lb. Boat Lift Direct To Harbor $525,000 Macks Dillon, Sun Realty 941-916-3022 RIVERWOOD Gated Golf/ Tennis Community. Spectacular View/Myakka River. Pristine Cond. 3/2/1 2,000+ SF. MUST SEE! For Sale By Owner. $279,200 941-276-4307 REDUCED HERITAGEOAK, P.C. RARELYAVAILABLE/2/2 SPACIOUS1561 SQ. FTA/C GREENBELTVIEWREDUCEDTO$177,900 BARBMCHENRY. 941 COLDWELLBANKERMORRISREALTY SALE PENDING! To Advertise in The Showcase of Homes Please Call 866-463-1638 or Email; special@sunnewspapers.net VENICE ISLAND CONDO by owner 55+ 2br/2ba carport Nicely furnished and updated. Only $83,500 612-222-9449 GETRESULTS USECLASSIFIED! VENICE New on Market & Won`t Last! 2/2/Carport Furnished Condo Overlooking Golf Course. Pool, Tennis, Clubhouse & MORE! $179,900. Hans Kirsten, Bird Bay Realty, 941-485-4804 or 941-350-0441 CONDOS/VILLAS FOR SALE1040 EN G LEW OO DF S B O Newly Updated Furnished 2/2/1 Villa. Boat Dock w/ Gulf Access. $144,900. 724-448-1060 PUNTA GORDA 2/2/1 1st Flr. Condo in Gated Comm! 3 Pools, Waterfront, Yacht Club, Dock and MORE! $114,900. $108,000. Marge Trayner, Bud Trayner Realty, PA 941380-2823 REDUCED! PUNTA GORDA 2/2/2 w/ Deeded Dock & Boat Lift! Open Floor Plan, SS Appliances, 2 Walk-In Closets in Master. $210,000. Deb Sestilio 941-391-1873 Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office PENDING! PUNTA GORDA 3702 Tripoli Blvd. Beautiful 2005 2/2/2Villa w/ Den, Great Room, Breakfast Bar & MORE! Maintenance Free! $179,900. Sue Ellen Fumich, 941-276-2894 Coldwell Banker Morris RE Inc PENDING!! Finditinthe Classifieds! DEEP CREEK Beautiful Lake Views w/ this 2/2/CP Condo in Gated Community! Fully Furnished, Totally Renovated w/ Loads of Amenities! $124,900. $119,900. Elaine Martin Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office 941-661-4800 REDUCED! PUNTA GORDA ISLES Beautiful 2/2 Condo in Vivante! 1600+ Sq.Ft. Living Area! Cherry Cabs, Granite & LOTS of Amenities! $262,500. $254,900. Deb Sestilio 941-391-18 73 Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office REDUCED! PUNTA GORDA ISLES Bright/Sunny 2BR, Den, 2BA Condo. Enjoy the Privacy & Views. Tropical Waterfront Setting, Open Floor Plan, Split Bedrooms, 10 Ceilings, Private Garage & More! Willie Keiser, Berkshire Hathaway FL Realty 941-276-9104 PUNTA GORDA ISLES FSBO 3311 Purple Martin Dr. 3/2 1800 SF, partially furnd, View of salt water canal & Nature Park. Has a Pool, Dock, Tile & Carpet, S/S Appliances, Elevator. Small 12 unit complex. $275,000 763-242-8465 CONDOS/VILLAS FOR SALE1040 Only 726 MLS Statistics as of 2/20/15 Houses, Villas, Condos are Available As of Today in Beautiful Venice, Florida Call us For Showings OR To List We do all of Venice & Area 941-485-4804 Sales 941-484-6777 Rentals DEEP CREEK Furnished 2/2 Condo w/ Breakfast Bar, Great Room & Lanai w/ Waterview. Lots of Amenities! $73,900. $69,900. Sue Ellen Fumich, 941-276-2894 Coldwell Banker Morris Realty, Inc REDUCED! HARBORTOWN MARINA CAPE HAZE PLACIDA OPEN SAT & SUN 1-4 PM Georgeous, large 1/1 in marina on ICW. Near 360 degree water views. Quick access to many Gulf beaches. Restaurants, fishing, boating just steps from your door. Decorator furnished residence, vacation home, or winter retreat w/ a great rental history.Only $179,900. Pet friendly. 941-769-0200 T urnyou r trashinto cash! Advertise youryard sa l e! HERITAGE OAK PARK PC LAKEFRONT CONDOS 2/2 BUILT2003 & 2004 $99,900-$114,000 BARB MCHENRY 941-833-1667 COLDWELL BANKER MORRIS REALTY PORT CHARLOTTE 2Bd Furnished Condo. River Views & Gulf Access. Heated Pool, & Amenities $139,000 Carolyn Cantin, Floridian Realty Services 941-809-9661 JUST REDUCED! PORT CHARLOTTE Beautiful Resort Style Harbor Point Condo Community! Furnished 3/2.5, Elevator & POOL. Gorgeous Resort Style Pool Views! $154,900. $149,900. Elaine Martin Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office 941-661-4800 REDUCED! WATERFRONT HOMES 1030 PUNTA GORDA ISLES Live the Florida Dream in This 3/2/2 POOL Home on Canal! Tile Throughout, Updated Kitchen, SS Appliances. Boat Lift . $399,900.Deb Sestilio 941-391-1 8 73Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office PUNTA GORDA ISLES Nighthawk Ct. The ONLY NEW Waterfront Home with 92 Seawall. 3/3/2 No Bridges, POOL, Gourmet Kitchen, Granite Tops, Tile. $499,000. $469,900. Chris Pelletier, Broker Pelletier Home Builders (941)-400-7730 REDUCED! FINDYOUR BESTFRIEND INTHE CLASSIFIEDS! PUNTA GORDA ISLES Well Maintained POOL & SPA Home! 4/5/4, 3600 sf. w/ Meticulous Detailing, Sauna & Steam Room! 156` on Canal, 30` Dock & Min. to Harbor! $587,000. $549,900. Marie Sellitto, 941-626-3770 Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office REDUCED! GOLFCOURSE COMMUNITY1035 55+ Active Community Affordable Manufactured Homes!!! 1 Year FREEGolf Membership With New Home Purchase! Call Ted @ 800-538-2590 for Details or Please Visit Our Websitewww.arcadiavillage.com GOLF COMMUNITY HOMESFree list w/pics of homes for sale in the areas best Golf Communities and Country Clubs.www.GolfHomes4Sale.comFree recorded message 1-800-862-7425 ID#5001Lisa Ziegler, Remax Platinum NORTH PORT BOBCAT TRAIL 3/2/2-1/2. Pool/Spa, 2006 Fero Custom Home. Panoramic Golf Course View, Full Hurricane Protection, Oversized Lot, Irrigation Well, Numerous Custom Features. $398,000 630-606-9300 Pat@pri-solutions.com WATERFRONT HOMES 1030 PORT CHARLOTTELuxurious 3/2/2 HEATED POOL Home on Canal! $364,900. $339,000. Sue Ellen Fumich, 941-276-2894 Coldwell Banker Morris Realty, Inc REDUCED! PT CHARLOTTE 1700sf Home on salt water canal 2 bd 1 bth 11x77 ft dock 6000 lb lift, 10 minutes to harbor. PRICE REDUCED $134,900.00 BUY APT. ONLY 941-255-9911 PUNTA GORDA Beautiful 3/2/2 POOL Home on 2 Serene Tip Lots on Alligator Creek! Many Upgrades! Must See! $329,900. $299,900 Diana Hayes, Coldwell Banker Morris Realty 562-537-7290 REDUCED! PUNTA GORDA ISLES 2006 Custom 4/2+/2 POOL Home on Sailboat Canal w/Attached RV Garage! Open Floor Plan. High Volume Ceilings. 12K Boat Lift, 42` Dock & MORE! Minutesto Harbor! $597,5 00. John Littlejohn 941-380-5354 Coldwell Banker Residential RE PUNTA GORDA ISLES 3/2/2 w/ POOL. 80` on Water. Min. to Harbor! Remodeled Kitchen, High Impact Windows & MORE! $329,900. Ken Poirier, Coldwell Banker Sunstar Fishermen`s Village Office 941-661-9773 PUNTA GORDA ISLES 3/3/2 Canal Front Home with Dock, Lift, Pool, Fenced Yard & is Close to Harbor! New Carpet. $279,900 Now $249,900. Willie Keiser, Berkshire Hathaway FL Realty 941-276-9104 REDUCED! PUNTA GORDA ISLES Custom 2360sf 3/2/2 POOL Home on Sailboat Canal w/ Fabulous Expansive Water Views. 95` on Water. Lots of Extras! $449,900. $429,900. John Littlejohn 941-380-5354 Coldwell Banker Residential RE REDUCED!! PUNTA GORDA ISLES 4BD/3BA/3CG with 2810SF. Loads of Extras & Upgrades On 2 Full Size Sailboat Lots. 160Ft On Water. $597,500. John Littlejohn 941-380-5354 Coldwell Banker Residential RE Lava% Leo%17FFFFl6kr -,, UREAT:. OPpjTUyl7yHEAD;I`i *" rum {E'y:-+a ,y;yrsk i*2-let._49oorZ, i._ ,f^11,=ORYtrriY S /f L17AEI.M4V f, r MT y'..*;-."fdli, `:.:i i r:k,4'i,I,,, $TdBa.`491L-ag8t 1IAlllaBGOPP"

PAGE 29

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 5 2000EMPLOYMENT PROFESSIONAL2010 LETS GO EDITORDO YOU HAVE A PASSION FOR MUSIC, FOOD AND FUN? AREYOUWILLINGTOBE INVOLVEDINTHEENTERTAINMENT ENVIRONMENTTOHELPGROW OURPRODUCTINVENICE, ENGLEWOOD, NORTHPORT, ARCADIA, PORTCHARLOTTEANDPUNTAGORDAMARKETS? DOYOUHAVEACOMMUNITY SPIRIT? THEEDITORISRESPONSIBLEFOR STORYASSIGNMENTS, WRITING,KEEPINGANUPDATEDCALENDAR,EDITINGANDLAYOUTFORTHE WEEKLYENTERTAINMENT PUBLICATION, LETSGOOFTHESUNNEWSPAPERS. THERIGHTPERSONNEEDSTO BRINGACOMMITMENTTO PROVIDINGEXCITING, FUN COVERAGETOOURENTIRE MARKETDISTRIBUTIONAREA. APPLICANTSMUSTHAVE EXCELLENTCOMMUNICATION,GRAMMARANDSPELLINGSKILLS,BEORGANIZEDANDBEABLETO MEETDEADLINES. A WORKING KNOWLEDGEOFSOFTWARE; INDESIGNAPLUS. PLEASECONTACT: LETSGO, PUBLISHER CYMOORE@SUN-HERALD.COMCAROLMOORE941-681-3031 WEAREADRUGANDNICOTINE FREEWORKPLACE. PRE-EMPLOYMENTDRUGAND NICOTINETESTINGREQUIRED. CLERICAL/OFFICE2020 ADMIN ASST/ INSTALL COORDINATOR: F/T M-F 8a-5p AC or Constrc Exp PrefBut Will Train Right Person. Must have Quickbooks & Excel Exp, & Excep. Attitude & Organizational Skills. Must Pass Background ChkDFWP. NO PHONE CALLSApply in person. 24700 Sandhill Blvd, Deep Creek PUT CLASSIFIEDS TOWORK FORYOU!FINDAJOB! BUYAHOME! BUYACAR! EXPERIENCED R ecept i on i st for busy Veterinary practice in North Port. PT. 3-4 days/wk. 2030 hrs/wk. Email or fax ONLY. No phone calls. 941-423-3577. AmandaHCAH1@gmail.com FULL CHARGE BOOKKEEPER, Needed Part Time. Profiecint QuickBooks, Sales Tax, Payroll, P & L Quartly Reports Etc. Flexible House. D.F.W.P. Apply: Casa Pool 1212 Enterprise Dr. Port Charlotte TRADE/ EXCHANGE1540 OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS! Exchange Possibility. Villa and/or SF House in Riverwood For Your Unwanted Rental Property, Duplex, etc. Trade Up Down Out Carl Anderson Real Estate Broker 941 629 9586 BUSINESS FOR SALE1600 PORT CHARLOTTE-BASED Growing Dry Ice Business No Competition. Turn Key. Deliver to Clinics. Great ROI. $49K. 941-286-4022 BUSINESS RENTALS1610 PORT CHARLOTTE 3315 Harbor Blvd, off US41 Retail or Office Space. Approx. 425 sqft. , All Tile Floor, Great Location. Call for More Details: 941-206-0201 Y Y ouSa ouSa ve ve BigBuc BigBuc ks ks Shopping Shopping Classifieds! Classifieds! COMMERCIAL/ INDUSTRIALPROP1620 1.4 acres CI (commercial intensive) on hwy 17 1.5 mi. from hwy 75, Fully fenced with 3 structures, 2 egresses, Great for boat, rv, auto Storage, Sales and repair etc. huge potential. See full details @ puntagordaland.net $499,000 Reduced to $349,000 941-268-7516 ARCADIA 5.26 ac By Owner! House & Shop, 800 ft. Hwy 17 Frontage, Zoned Comm. Info. 863-494-5540 or 863-244-3585 P ORT CHARLOTTE P r i me office space, 3 units 1,000sf. ea. Brand new. Sandhill Blvd. Turnkey/Fully built out. ( 941 ) -624-5992 2000EMPLOYMENT EMPLOYMENT 2005Services 2010Professional 2015Banking 2020Clerical 2025Computer 2030Medical 2035Musical 2040 Restaurant/Hotel2050SkilledTrades 2060Management 2070Sales 2090Child/Adult Care Needed 2100General 2110Part-time/ Temp 2115Home Based Business 2120Seeking Employment LOTS & ACREAGE1500 SELLING YOUR HOME, CONDO, or LOT?We Can help you.Advertise your home, condo, or lot with us and reach over 175,000 readers in Charlotte, Sarasota, & DeSoto Counties and online everyday. Ask about our 90 day special.Call one of our classified experts for all the details at 866-463-1638 Realtors Welcome! NORTH CAROLINA LAND $69,900.00 Lenoir...1.7 Acres... All flat land! Magnificent Location City Water, Phone, Deep Well, Cable, Electric and a Beautiful Relaxing stream! Taxes only $150.00 per year. OWNER FINANCING with small down. Call 941-496-9252 NORTH PORT Prime building lot on Sumpter, East of I-75 across from Ibis St. Great Model home site. $6300. Phil (941)-457-6811 SO UTH VENI C E/ S ARA SO TA Beauitful Tree Lot. 9.77 Acres. Exclusive Estate Properties. Gated Community. Club House. Off River Rd, Myakka River Trails. Boat Access. $175,000 or trade 941-815-6204 WATERFRONT1515 LEMON BAY FRONT LOT AC +/estate lot, 1600 New Point Comfort Rd., Englewood. Can be split into 2 lots. New 90 ft. dock &1,800 sq. ft. waterfront paver patio. Utilities in place. Owner financing possible $575,000. O.B.O Call 941-769-0200 NORTH PORTCANAL LOTS Also Grouping of adjacent standard size lots 3, 4, & 5. Buy 1 or Buy Trak at Discounted Price. All Lots well located. 941-286-7003 WATERFRONT LOTSLocated in a Boating Community South Gulf Cove Waterfront Home Sites with Quick access to Harbor & Gulf Beyond. Short drive to beaches, Shopping Restaurants of Boca Grande, Englewood, & Manasota Key.10194 Owl Head Cir, PC 10155 Hallandale Dr. PC941-626-8200 HOMES FOR RENT1210 NEED A RENTAL Paradise Properties & Rentals, Inc 941-625-RENT PORT CHARLOTTE Waterfront, 4/3, Spring Lake area, 3,000 SF, New Carpet, $1,600/mo 1st, L, Sec 941-380-9212 Rentals & Property Management www.floridarpm.com (941)629-1121 Real Living All Florida Realty VENICE N ew l y D ecorate d . 3 Bdrm, 2.5 Bath in Chestnut Creek on Water. Scrnd. Pool, Dbl. Garage, Near Shopping. Available. $1500. mo 507-254-2437 or 507-450-2096 CONDOS/VILLAS FOR RENT1240 DEEP CREEK Fresh, Clean 1st Flr. Gated Comm. No Steps. 2BR/2BA New Flooring. $875 mo. Avail. 4/1 440-521-7800 GreatDealsin theClassifieds! P O RT C HARL O TTE 55+, 2 / 2 Furnd Near Cultural Center, Library, NO Pets, Avail May 20th $800/mo 989-780-2843 PORT CHARLOTTE , 1 st fl oor, 2/2, off Kings hwy.$795mo 1st, Last, Sec. Water, Pet, Pool incl. 941-286-6252 APARTMENTS FOR RENT1320 NOW ACCEPTING WAITINGLIST APPLICATIONS941-473-0450 HERON COVE APTS 2BR/2BA $850/MO EFFICIENCIES FOR RENT1350 HARBOUR HEIGHTS c l ose to river, newly renovated efficiencies w cable & internet, SunnybrookMotel 941-625-6400 ROOMS FOR RENT1360 W M, 7 2 , Lives on Boat S eeks a Room For Rent Between Englewood & El Jobean While Boat in Yard. 941-204-0936 VACATION/ SEASONALRENTALS1390 ENGLEWOOD NORTH 2/2/2, lanai home, Turnkey, 5 Mins to beaches. Avail 4 mths Nov., Dec. & April, May 2015/16 $1,650 incl. utilities. 941-474-3639 HARBORTOWN MARINA, CAPE HAZE-PLACIDA Lrg, 1/1 condo w/ great water views on ICW. Heated pool/spa, minutes to pristine gulf island beaches. Restaurants & boating at your doorstep. Completely furnished w/laundry. Just bring your toothbrush and swim suit! Avail monthly this April through next season, book now. PET FRIENDLY. 941-769-0200 OUTOFAREA HOMES1110 GREENWOOD, S.C. For Sale or Trade. 4/3/2.5 Maintenance Free Home w/Low Taxes on 1.25 Acres of Wooded Setting. Seasons, Fishing, Golf, Superb Healthcare & Quality of Life. $265,000. 864-229-7786 www.113planters.com HOMES FOR RENT1210 PORT CHARLOTTE 2/2/1 Saltwater Canal $875W E N EED R ENTAL L ISTINGS FULLPROPERTYLISTONLINEwww.almar-rentals.com941-627-1465 800-964-3095LETUSMANAGEYOURPROPERTY Almar Rentals & Management Services 1/1 Condo, Forrest Nelson Blvd., P.C. $600/mo 3/2/1 No Pets, Edgewater Dr., P.C. $900/mo*we welcome new listings* AWARD WINNINGSUNBELT MGT. SERVICES RENTALS COMPLETE LISTINGS (941) 764-7777 sunbeltmgtservices.com BAY INDIES RESORT COMMUNITY Come see what our lifestyle has to offer! 950 Ridgewood Avenue Venice, FL 34285 941-485-5444 Aged Qualified Rentals Starting at $875. 00 1st Month Special $199.00 ENGLEWOODLARGE 2/2/2 FL RM $975WEST COAST PROPERTY Mgmt 941-473-0718www.rentalsflorida.net Classified=Sales ADVANTAGE REALTY INC.$1600....3/2/2 Pool Canal....PC $1600...3/2/2 Pool Svc Inc..DC $1075..3/2/2 1416 SF.........NP $925....3/1 1065 SF............PC $850....2/2/1 1293 SF.........PC941-255-0760 800-940-5033 eraportcharlotte.com LET US RENT YOUR HOME Agent Available On Weekends We Forgive Foreclosures For Renters MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE1095 FISHERMANS DELIGHT Lazy Lagoon Waterview 2005 2/2/CP fully furn, Resident owned 55+ Park, Access to Shell Creek. w/sunrm, LR, DR. Ex. Cond $65,700 941-505-0758 NEW 3/2 DblWide Delivered & Set-Up on Your Lot w/ Skirting, Steps & Air! Only $50,995 + Tax. Financing For ALL Credit Scores Avail! Prestige Homes, Punta Gorda 941-637-1122 ON THE LAKE IN PUNTA GORDA Adult Comm. 2/2 w/ Great Views from Lanai. Updates Incl. New Laminate Floors & Updated! $55,900. Call Mike 941-356-5308 riversideoaksflorida.com Findthe perfect companion inthe Classifieds! PORT CHARLOTTE Located on the Peace River! Sensational Panoramic Views! 2005 2/2, Den, Great Room, Palm Harbor 1450sf $99,900. Owner/Agent 941-204-2303 OLD FLORIDA NEW HOME! Beautiful Punta Gorda Riveside Oaks Adult Community Under Constuction. Quality Stunning 1500 sq ft 2/2 + Bonus Room, 9 Ceilings laminate floors + much more amazing huge site w/ serene views of Alligator Creek. $119,500. Call Mike 941-356-5308 riversideoaksflorida.com SALE PENDING SOUTH PUNTA GORDA1997 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath in Gated 55+ Tropical Palms Park. Lanai, Carport & Shed. Clubhouse w/ Nightly Activities & Pool. $49,900. 320-282-2433 VENICE Like new. 2004 Palm Harbor 2/2 w/ den in well maint 55+ community. fully furn. Tommy Bahama style. Includes raised enclosed lanai, dblwide car port, lrg storage rm & new central heat & air. A must see! $118,900. 941-493-0019 -.rice. p`\LGQK GREATINVESTMENTLAWN&"FOR SALEBY OWNERERAREAL ESTATE

PAGE 30

Page 6 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 SKILLED TRADES2050 ROOFING TECH Entry or Advanced. CMM Commercial Contractors Inc 941-232-0888 Window & Door Manufacturing CompanyAccepting Applications for: PRODUCTION ASSOCIATEStarting hourly wage $11.69 Must have a High School Diploma or GED, Higher Education a plus, Good Work History, and Attention to detail.Apply in person only: 355 Center Court Venice, FL 34285 GETRESULTS USECLASSIFIED! SALES2070 Advertising Sales ExecutiveThe Charlotte Sun is looking for "Winners" to join our team of professional Advertising Sales Executives. If you are never satisfied with average successes, are self-motivated, goal oriented, confident, enthusiastic and believe that the customer is all important, we would like to talk to you. The successful candidates must possess good oral and written communication skills, be organized and a team player. Sales experience a plus but we will train the right persons. We offer:Competitive salary plus commission Vacation Health insurance Sick and short term disability Training Stable company that is very Community minded and involved. Please send resume to: Advertising Director, Leslee Peth Charlotte Sun 23170 Harborview RoadCharlotte Harbor, FL 33980 Email: Lpeth@sun-herald.com We are an Equal Opportunity Employer & a Drugand nicotine Free Diversified Workplace. Furniture Sales & Interior Designers PORT CHARLOTTE, FL STORE Join Baers Furniture, The Leading Premier Retail Furniture Store In Florida! Furniture Salespeople Needed Some Prior Sales Exp. Furniture Sales Exp. Is A Definite Plus! We Seek Energetic, Driven Individuals Who Want To Make Money! Excellent Compensation, Generous Benefits & Pleasant Working Environment. All F/T Positions. Nights & Weekends Req. APPLY IN PERSON: Baers Furniture 4200 Tamiami Trail Port Charlotte, FL 33952 EOE/DFWP SKILLED TRADES2050 APEXRoofmasters, Inc. is looking for ROOFERS,with Experience in Shingle, Tile, Metal, installation and repairs. Great Pay, Positive work environment. Drug free workplace. 941-460-6011 FRAMING CARPENTERS NEEDEDwall framing, sheeting, trusses, and window installation. Boca Grande. Pay based on experience 941-468-7248 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS SHOP MECHANIC Exp repairing heavy machinery, must have own tools. For well-established construction company. Excellent pay and benefits. Apply in person 3801 N. Orange Ave Sarasota, FL 34234. Or send resume to: JobsAtDerr@gmail.com EOE DFWP IRON WORKERS NEEDED IN PUNTA GORDA Experienced in Structural Steel, Bar Joist, Deck Installation. Top Pay! Benefits. Project Working Overtime. Call John at 561-718-2007 LOCALGOLFCOURSE INROTONDAISLOOKINGFORABLE BODIED LABORERS FORFULLANDPARTTIMEPOSI-TIONS. PLEASECALLANDLEAVEAMESSAGE@ 941-697-7030 Looking For Good Qualitifed MECHANIC, Valid DL & Own Transportation. Please Call 941-637-4694 or Apply In Person @ 4322 Duncan Rd. P.G. MAINTENANCE POSITIONS (3)BAY INDIES IN VENICEis now accepting applications for basic maintenance positions. Applicants with experience preferred but will train. Bay Indies is a 1300 site 55+ community. If you are seeking long term employment and are dependable, positive and enjoy working hard, Please apply in person with resume to: Bay Indies 950 Ridgewood Ave. Venice, FL 34285 M ARINE F ORKLIFT O PERATORExperienced Only. Harbor at Lemon Bay. 900 S. McCall, Englewood. 727-735-5036 Now accepting applications for SURVEY PARTY CHIEF & INSTRUMENT OPERATOR. Call 941-628-9448 ROOFER NEEDED , E xper i enced, Clean FL drivers lic. required. 941-628-0251 ROOFERSFULLTIMEEXPERIENCED in all phases. Drivers Lic & trans. required. Call 941-426-8946 WANTEDOWNERS/OPERATORS & COMPANY DRIVERS WITH A CLASS A CDL. To run dedicated loads between Ohio and Florida. Must have a clean MVR plus 2 years experience. Call Ken or Ray at 1-800-362-9779. ASKUS HOWyoucanplaceaPICTUREofyouritem forsale inyour classifiedad! MEDICAL2030 FRONT DESK CLERK FT BUSY MEDICAL OFFICE EMAIL RESUME: EMPLOYMENTOP.HR @OUTLOOK.COM RESTAURANT/ HOTEL2040 BARTENDERS & SERVERS The Boca Grande Clubis now hiring FULLY EXPERIENCED BARTENDERS AND SERVERSfor High Season. Lunch and Dinner shifts available. ARE YOU LOOKINGfor an opportunity to earn great money? Our servers earn an average of $1,495.00 (gross) weekly during season. You must be able to step right into fine dining service without training. IF THIS OPPORTUNITY SOUNDS RIGHT FOR YOU, please contact us at 941-964-7543 and ask for Becki; or e-mail a resume to becki@ bocagrandeclub.com to schedule an interview. DFWP, EOE, Bridge toll paid EXPD CONV. STORE MANAGER /Assistant MGR 941-882-4015 FUNSTAFFFORBUSYWATERFRONTKEYWESTSTYLEBAR& GRILLEXPD, LINECOOK,BUSSERS, DISHWASHERAPPLY: 10AM-2PMNAV-A-GATOR(941)-627-3474 THE BURNT STORE GRILL is looking for full and Part time experienced team members We are seeking: SERVERS HOSTS COOKS BUSSERS APPLYINPERSONONLY 3941 TAMIAMITRP.G. COLONIAL-BURNTSTOREPLAZABETWEENPUBLIX& HOMEDEPOT SKILLED TRADES2050 AC INSTALL, DUCT MECH, HELPER F/T, Exp PrefBut Will Train Motivated Person. Paid Vac & Ins. DFWPNO PHN CALLSAPPLY IN PERSON M-F 8A-5P. 24700 SANDHILL BLVD, DEEP CREEK MEDICAL2030 ALF is now hiring caring and qualified MEDTECHS to join our team! We offer vacation, sick, and holiday pay. Must be able to pass a Level 2 background, must be flexible with hrs. $11/hr. Please apply in person at 100 Base Ave E Venice, FL 34285 CAREGIVER For Group Home. Please Be Assertive. Immediate Opening 941-628-9030 CHEF for an Assisted Living Facility. Must have Experience with multiple diets, cycle menus. Benefits, Salary based on experience. Apply in person at the Palms of Punta Gorda 2295 Shreve St. No PHONE Calls. CNA's / HHA's WORK WHERE YOU LIVE! WORK ON YOUR SCHEDULE! Busy homecare agency immediate openings. FT / PT hours available. Exp required. Visiting Angels Call 941-257-0306. DENTALSTERILIZATION TECH, P/T, Possibility for Advancement. Willing to Train. 941-639-1124 or Fax to 941-639-6527 GETRESULTS USECLASSIFIED! F/T REC/ASST ., f or au di o l ogy office. Ins billing, computer and phone exp req. Send Resume & References to: 21216 Olean Blvd. Suite 4, P.C. 33952 FT LPN NEEDED For Busy Dermatology Office. Must Be Able to Multi-Task. Competitive Pay, Great Benefits. Mail Resume To: PO Box 494710 Port Charlotte 33949 or Fax to 941-613-2401 MEDICAL BILLING POSITION MUST HAVE 1 YEAR EXPERIENCE Computer and 10 Key Efficiency Required. Experience in Medicare and Commercial Insurances Plus Input Claims, Processing Payments, Billing Research & Collections. Positive Attitude & Team Player. Paid Insurance and Vacation Benefits. State Salary Requirements & Experience. Email resume: jilld@sunletter.comOr Fax: 941-429-3111 Attention: Dept 4116All Emails/Faxes are Confidential RN/LPN/MA CLINICAL EMR& multi tasking experience needed. Send CV to: Healthcarepractice1@gmail.com www.HorizonTechInstitute.ComADVANCE YOUR CAREER Licensed & Accredited School Murdock Town Center on 411032 Tamiami Tr Unit 3YOUcan become a LPN within 11 months. Enrollment ongoing.Start Working In 2-5 wks! Classes Start Each Month Call For Class Dates Nursing Assistant (120hrs) Home Health Aide (75hrs) Phlebotomy Tech (165hrs) EKG Tech (165hrs) Patient Care Tech (600hrs) Job Assist. & Pymt. Plans Call Now to Register! 941-889-7506 PHLEBOTOMY,EKG, CNA, Classes Start Mar 30 LPN-Days & Weekends Class starts April 27 MEDICAL2030 ALF is now hiring caring and qualifiedCNAsto join our team! We offer vacation, sick, and holiday pay. Must be able to pass a Level 2 background, must be flexible with hrs. $10/hr. Please apply in person at 100 Base Ave E, Venice 34285. CLINICAL CO-ORDINATOR NEEDED ToPerform & Assist Management Service Area. Plan Coordinate All Services Rendered by the Clinic. Navigate Outscouring Medical Services. Bachelors`s Degree a Must! Please Mail Resume to: Dr. Asperilla`s Office , 3300 Tamiami Trail Suite 102A , Port Charlotte, Florida 33952 ENGLEWOODHEALTHCAREIS OFFERINGFULL& PARTTIME CNA OPPORTUNITIESAT OURSKILLEDNURSINGFACILITYINENGLEWOODFL!CANDIDATESMUSTHAVE ACTIVEANDVALIDCNALICNESEINFL ANDHAVE CLINICALANDLTCEXPERIENCE. WEOFFER EXCELLENTBENEFITSWHICH INCLUDEMEDICAL, DENTAL ANDVISIONINSURANCE,GENEROUSPAIDTIMEOFF ANDMUCHMORE. TO APPLY, PLEASE EMAIL PAYROLL@ ENGLEWOODHEALTHCARE.COM1111 Drury Lane Englewood Fl 34224 Ph. 941-474-9371 Fax. 941-475-6593 EOE DFWP NEW INCREASED CNA WAGES!!!EARN UP TO $12.00/HR. FOR FT/PT AND SHIFTDIFFERENTIALSUP TO $2.00!!! T urnyou r trashinto cash! Advertise youryard sa l e! GETRESULTS USECLASSIFIED! MEDICAL2030 www.LCCA.com Were Life Care Centers of America, the nations largest privately-owned skilled care provider. If you share our heartfelt approach to caring for the elderly, consider joining our family at Life Care Center of Punta Gorda. We offer competitive pay and benefits in a mission-driven environment.CNA'S F.T./P.T. 3-11, 11-7, DOUBLES W.E. PREP COOK: FULL TIME DIETARY AIDE\RELIEF COOK: FULL TIME DIETARY AIDE: PART TIMECome visit with us at 450 Shreve St. Punta Gorda EOE COOK ASSISTED LIVINGThe Cook is responsible for delivering products of the highest quality in terms of freshness, taste, and consistency. Cooks are responsible for batch, a la minute, and line cooking techniques. He /she reports directly to theDirector of Hospitality. The Cook is responsible for following all standardized recipes and notifying the Director of Hospitality of any shortages or discrepancies in products or ingredients. The Cook is responsible for keeping their immediate work area clean at all times. ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS Ensures all food is prepared fresh and is of the highest quality Strictly adheres to all recipes, methods & instructions from supervisor Maintains an organized and efficient flow of production, with regards to changes in forecasts and menus Responsible for the food service for station Consistently checks temperatures in foods and follows proper procedures in regards to chilling, reheating, and holding food. Checks station prior to leaving to ensure cleanliness, proper disposal /removal of food, and proper storing and labeling HarborChase offers competitive wages and an excellent benefits package such as Medical, Dental, Vision & 401K Part-time team members receive benefits at 20+ hours. For consideration please apply in person to: HARBORCHASE OF VENICE (941) 484-8801 ph (941) 484-3450 fax 950 Pinebrook Road Venice, FL 34285 EOE M/F/D/V Cashinwith Class! Lmmw,,IooooooooLaftoftLifeCenterNOWillI1 ','. i f f 1I 11 r. I1 Ipj1 NHARBORCHASE I I RU I Nelebratin ,1 11, S cnmr iin1 WANTED AER'SI 1I I uu.NOWnl

PAGE 31

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 7 BIBLE STUDY & CHURCHES3065 C ARD PLAYIN G & D O MIN OS Free to Play at: First Presbyterian Church, 2230 Hariet St. Port Charlotte Starting at 1pm Every Wed. Call ( 941 ) -979-8239 for Info. COMMUNITY CENTER 4PM 7PM each Wednesday. Christ the King Lutheran Church, 23456 Olean Blvd. PC, Open to All Ages. For more info 941-766-9357 EDGAR CAYCE A . R . E . Search for God Study Grou p 6 PM 7 PM each Tuesday a t Venice Public Library More Info call 941-966-1964. FAITH BUILDERS A Basic Study to Build your Christian Faith. Call Pastor Martin at Christ the King Lutheran Church for times. 941-766-9357 Port Charlotte GREAT BIBLE STUDY Dr. J. Vernon McGee Thru The Bible Radio Network 91.5 FM 6am & 9:30pm 91.3 FM 12:30pm & 7:30pm 1-800-65Bible (2-4253) www.ttb.org GULF COAST HEALING ROOMS If you need healing, we want to pray with you! Our prayer teams are available to minister to you by appointment. Thursdays 10 am-12:30 pm For apt. call p.863.558.7455 1538 Rio de Janeiro Blvd. Punta Gorda, Fl 33983 Jesus Still Heals Today! LIC. CHRISTIAN COUNSELING941-876-4416Liberty Community Church North Port Charlotte BURIALLOTS/ CRYPTS3070 C HARL O TTE MEM O RIAL GARDENS Side by side Crypts (2), Level C Near Enterance, Asking $12,000 for both 941624-3162 TRAVEL/TICKETS3080 RAY S TI C KET S , 2 w/ Parking Pass) Minnesota 3/19, $50. Yankees, 3/26, $100. Baltimore,3/30, $50. 941268-3549 LOST& FOUND3090 CLAIM YOUR OAR AT THE NEW MARKER 4 BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 10:30 AND 4. CALL 941-486-0500 O R COME TO THE FISHERMAN' S WHARF MARINA BAIT SHOP. L OS T C AT G rey & white Male, 11lbs Friendly, Answers to Henry. lost near , Sandrift & Sunnybrook in East Englewood. Please Call 941-204-0273 L OS T DIAM O ND w/ 5 S mall Sapphires in Venice. Sentimental Family Piece REWARD! Please Call 607-329-6563 L OS T KEY S on Thursday March 5th in Venice possibly on the Island near US 41 and Miami Ave Please call 941-237-1866 ARTS CLASSES3091 Beginning watercolor classes with award winning artist Robert Broyles at North Port Hobby Lobby. Private lessons also avail Call 941-875-8163 HAPPYADS3015 Place your Happy Ad for only $16.25 3 lines 7 day. Add a photo for only $13.00! Please call (866)-463-1638 PERSONALS3020 L OO KIN G F O R A S ingles G roup For Mature Adults For Trips, Etc. New To Area. 239-851-5542 RELAXATION WITH BRANDI 941-467-9992 SINGLE LADY i n searc h o f Single Man 50-65 for friendship/relationship 941-201-9853 S IN G LE MALE 6 4 searching for Single female 45-60 Call 941-624-2183 Serious inq only RESTAURANTS3031 BARTENDER NEEDED Last Chance Saloon Now taking Applications No experience necessary, will train. Apply in person 9am till Noon Mon Fri SCHOOLS & INSTRUCTION3060 CNA Training, HHA, CPR North port and Sarasota Onsite testing -Financing 941-429-3320 Imagine BECOME A CNA CNA, HHA CPR & 1st aide classes Call 941-255-0675 www.bestchancecpr.com ED KLOPFERSCHOOLS OF CNA TRAINING 1 Week class $250 Sarasota, Port Charlotte, Ft. Myers. 1-800-370-1570 TRADITIONAL SHAOLIN KUNG FU CLASSES for Adults & children. FREE classes available. All areas. Call for more info. 941-204-2826 T urnyou r trashinto cash! Advertise youryard sa l e! UNEMPLOYED? E arn Y our Commercial Drivers License (CDL) in Just 3 Wks. & Join the Ranks of Employed Truck Drivers Nationwide. Located Punta GordaFL. SunCoast Trucking Academy. 941-8550193 or 941-347-7445 BIBLE STUDY & CHURCHES3065 C AL VAR Y BIBLE C HUR C H 1936 E. Venice Ave. Venice Friday at 9am. Study features video teachings of noted Bible Scholars on various subjects. For more info. Call Rev. Jones at: 941-485-7070 or visit www.CBCVenice.com GENERAL2100 P OO L S ERVI C E TE C H, Full time, Experienced preferred. Good pay & benefits. Apply in person 781 US 41 By Pass So, Venice 34285 Economy Pool TE C HNI C IAN F/T f or busy office and shop in Port Char., M-F, 9-5, light duties maintaining equipment. Send Resume sunclassifieds1@gmail.com WANTED: FULL-TIME BOAT DETAILER, w/ buffing exp. Call Larry 941-270-0408 PARTTIME/ TEMPORARY2110 DRIVER NEEDED to Deliver Hunting & Fishing Magazines to Local Stores Once Per Month Call (386)-972-3067 LOOKING FOR A GREAT PART TIME JOB? The Venice Gondolier Sun NightPress and Bindery is now taking applications for: Part-time positions for stacking and working in the bindery. Both day and night positions available.Requirements: Must be able to lift & carry 25 lbs. Pushing & pulling of 25 lbs or more. Must be capable of working at a fast pace. A pre-employment drug and nicotine screening is required. If you are interested in a great part time job, stop by and fill out an application (between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday Friday). Upon review, calls will be made to set up interviews.The Venice Gondolier Sun 200 Miami Ave., Venice, FL D.F.W.P. E.O.E. 3000 NOTICES ANNOUNCEMENTS3010 FREE MERCHANDISE ADS!! To place a FREE merchandise ad go to: sun-classifieds.com and place your ad. Click on Click Here to Place Your Ad Now and follow the prompts. FREE ads are for merchandise UNDER $500. and the ad must be placed online by you. One item per ad, the ad must be 3 lines or less, price must appear in the ad. Your ad will appear online & in print for 7 days! Somerestrictions do apply. LIMIT 5 FREE ADS PER WEEK **Everyone Needs to Register on Our New Site** Need To Place a Classified Ad? Enter your classified ad and pay with your credit card 24 hours a day, 7 days week GENERAL2100 Open Position for VET ASSISTANT w/exp involving spay/neutering, ]medical equip, specialized treatment of Dogs & Cats. Apply in Person Animal Welfare League, 3519 Drance St., PC. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE POOL MAINTENANCE TECH Part-Time, Semi Retired OK. Mechnically inclined & experience helpful. 941-488-6489 POOL SERVICE TECH Full Time, Exp. Preferred, Will Train. Nice work environment. Must have 5 year driving record, 3 years clean. 941-637-6083 PRESSOPERATORVenice Gondolier press seeking experienced full time press operator with background with Goss Community single wide press. Supervisory experience a plus Good communication skills and ability to grow a good team atmosphere a must. Knowledge of 4 color back to back printing. Good mechanical skills knowledge of roll stands and stackers. Basic computer skills for reports. SCMG is a drug and nicotine free workplace. Pre-employment drug and nicotine testing required. Apply: 200 E. Miami Ave., Venice or Send resume to: schisesi@suncoastpress.com PT HOUSEKEEPINGfor retirement community in Venice/North Port Area. $11/hr to start. Fax Resume to: 941-423-8480 or email: harborisles@verizon.net SHIPPING POSITION Growing business looking for a self-motivated person for shipping and other duties. Computer skills a must. PT to FT. Email:jen.royalpalm@daystar.net SWIMMING POOL TECHNICIAN If You Are An Upstanding Person With Excellent Work Ethics. Applications Accepted Between 9 12noon. $12.00/HR TO START.Must Have Florida Drivers License & 5 Yrs Of Driving With Absolutely Clean Driving Record . Howards Pool World, 12419 Kings Hwy. Lake Suzy. NO PHONECALLS THE CHARLOTTE SUNis seeking an Operator for our Packaging Department. Candidates interested in this position should be able to oversee a crew of 10 to 15 people and have working knowledge of or the ability to learn how to operate the following equipment: inserters, stackers, post-it note labelers, strappers, forkslift, electric and manual pallet jacks. The ideal candidate will be a mechanically inclined team player that will interact well within his/her department as well as with all other departments involved in the day to day peration of the paper. The ability to operate in a fast-faced, deadline oriented environment is required. In interested please contact Amy Honoosic via emailahonoosic@suncoastpress.comor call 941-206-1416 Please, no phone calls We are a drug and nicotine free workplace Pre-employment drug and nicotine testing required GETRESULTS USECLASSIFIED! GENERAL2100 COUNTER HELPP/Tneeded for Local Seafood Company. 941-380-9212 CUSTOMER SERVICE , F u ll time, Typing & people skills a Must! Friendly environment. Apply at Tile & Carpet World 4820 Tamiami Trail PC Btw 9am-11am 941-625-9825 DOCK HAND N ee d e d at Marina on Boca Grande. Call 941-964-0154 DRAPERY WORKROOM SEWER PT/FT, Seeks CoOperative, Non Smoker. Good Communication Skills. Positive Attitude, Follows Directions, Strong Work Ethic. (941)-486-1066 (Venice) EXPERIENCED ZUMBA AND YOGA INSTRUCTORS,needed ASAP for Universal Fitness in Deep Creek. Contact Jessica @ 941-627-3359 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS! We have several open positions for Sales Representatives to promote the Sun Newspapers. We work in Retail Stores, high traffic shopping areas, special events, etc. This is an enjoyable year round position with potential to earn $100$300+ per day! Positive, professional work environment. Flexible hours. Must be outgoing, professional appearance, dependable and have reliable transportation and cell phone. Background check. For interview appointment call 941-623-2506. INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER CARRIERS NEEDED: The CHARLOTTE SUNhas home delivery routes available in various locations. Supplement your income with this great business opportunity. Earn $200-$300/week for a few early morning hours of delivery. Reliable transportation, a valid Florida drivers license and proof of insurance are required. Apply in person at the Charlotte Sun 23170 Harborview Rd Port Charlotte, Florida, or online at www.yoursun.com KITCHEN & HOOD CLEANER Must Be Able to WorkAll Shifts. Incl. Wkends. Cleaning Commercial Kitchen Hood & Ducts. Valid/Clean DL, Trans. & Climbing Ladders a Must. Drug/Alcohol Free Co. 941423-9149 or 941-915-2828 Y Y ouSa ouSa ve ve BigBuc BigBuc k s k s Shopping Shopping Class ifieds ! Class ifieds ! MAILROOM Supervisory Person:VENICE GONDOLIERmailroom is looking for a part time mailroom supervisory person for night shift in Venice. Good mechanical ability ability to supervise small production crew ability to operate equipment good communication skills. We are a drug and nicotine free workplace. Pre-employment drug/ nicotine testing required. Apply:VENICE Gondolier Print Center, 200 E. Miami Ave., VeniceOr e-mail:schisesi@suncoastpress.com SALES2070 AUTO SALES EXPERIENCED ONLY! Looking For A Motivated Auto Sales Professional Great Pay + Volume Bonus. 5 Day Week, Health Ins. APPLYCHARLOTTECOUNTYFORD3156 TAMIAMITR, PT.CHAR. MIKEELAM941-625-6141 LOCAL YACHT BROKERAGE IS LOOKING ForANEXPERIENCEDBOATSALESPERSON. PLEASECALLJIMORED AT941-833-0099 FORFURTHERINFORMATION. CHILD/ADULT CARE NEEDED2090 Christian Based School seeks FT TEACHER for 3 Year Olds. Must Have CDA. Fax resume to 941-743-0003 or email cccMelBaker@Hotmail.com Lic# C20CH0029 NEEDCASH? GENERAL2100 ALL SHIFTS, GENERAL LABOR RETAIL STOCKING IN ENGLEWOOD, VENICE, PORT CHARLOTTE, PUNTA GORDA. ALSO NEED ASSEMBLY/PRODUCTION FOR VENICE AREA. CDL A DRIVERS, MERCHANDISERS. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE PEOPLE. WE HAVE JOBS!!! CALL EXPRESS EMPLOYMENT 941-629-2611. BOCA GRANDE CLUB Full-Time Positions Available:POOL/BEACH ATTENDANTHOUSEKEEPING STAFFWeekends a must. DFWP, EOE, Bridge Tolls Paid.Send resume to housekeeping@ bocagrandeclub.com DISTRIBUTION MANAGERS:The Sunis currently seeking full and part-time Distribution Managers in our Circulation Department. Our Distribution Managers work directly with an independent contractor network to manage home delivery and customer relations in Charlotte County. Responsibilities include contractor recruitment and orienting, meeting established service goals, resolving service errors, managing contractor draw, and insuring customer satisfaction. Must be able to work early morning hours, weekends and holidays in an office/warehouse environment and outdoors in various temperatures and weather conditions. Requires valid Florida drivers license and insurance. Must have reliable transportation to perform daily job responsibilities. Drug and tobacco free workplace. Pre-employment drug/nicotine screening is required. Apply at 23170 Harborview Road Port Charlotte, FL 33980 or E-mail resume to myero@sun-herald.com Lmmw,,IooooooooLaft%ftooNOW HIRINGLOW.------------------------------------

PAGE 32

Page 8 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 Keep T T he C C ustomers C C oming! Keep T T he C C ustomers C C oming! Keep The Customers Coming! ADVERTISE! ADVERTISE! ADVERTISE! (941) 206-1000 Display Ads (941) 206-1200 Classified Ads SP32243 SP32243 ( ( 941) 4 4 29-3110 (941) 429-3110 ( ( 941) 4 4 29-3110 (941) 429-3110 HOME / COMM. IMPROVEMENT5100 HANDYMANHome repairs. 30+ yrs Exp. Call 941539-1694 J o h n s R escreen i ng & Handyman Service . No Jo b To Small, Free Estimate s Lic9341./Ins.941-883-1381 KEN LAN C A S TER G UTTER S over 25 years Experience. Fully Insured. Free Estimates 941-916-3934 SLIDING GLASS DOOR REPAIRS Wheels Tracks & LocksLicensed & Insured, Free Est. since 1981 Call Bob 941-706-6445 www.SlidingDoorsandmore.com Low overhead = Low prices! CARPENTER, INC. Handyman Rotten wood, doors, soffit, facia, etc. Phil 941-626-9021lic. & ins. TILE (Ceramic), Wood Flooring, Installation. Robert Jones Ceramic Tile (941)-204-2444Lic. #AAA006338/Ins. AdvertiseToday! TILE remo d e l , b at h s, fl oors. your tile or mine. 941-625-5186,Lic.#AAA006387 WESTSHORE BUILDERS Remodeling Additions Home Repairs Free Estimates Lic. Residential Contractor 941-204-8237 westshore-builders.com#CRC1330882 WINDSAFEHurricane Shutters Your #1 Choice for Hurricane Protection. Rolldowns, Accordions, Impact Windows/Doors, Lanai Shutters, Clear Panels. $350 off Exp 03/31/15. 1-800-691-3122 HEATING& AIR5090 HONEST AIR CONDITIONING & HEATING Comm. & Res. Serving Sarasota & Charlotte County. 941-423-1746 Lic. CA C056738 MAHLE COOL AIR & HEATINGRent to Own Your Home`s A/C. No Credit.. No Problem. Easy Payments Free Est. 941-584-6300 Lic#CAC1817878 S.O.S. A/C & Heat 941-468-4956 air conditioning systems low as $3175 installed installed 10 yr warranty 0% apr up to 5 yrs to pay! st. lic #CAC1816023 sosairfl.com HOME / COMM. IMPROVEMENT5100 BOBS CABINET SOLUTIONS 35 yrs exp. All you r cabinet/counter top needs. (941)-276-0599 Lic22535 COMPLETE DRYWALL Hang, Finish, Patchwork, All Textures, Paint. Matt Potter 941-232-8667Lic.& Ins CRC1328482 SLIDING GLASS DOOR And Window Repair Lowest Prices GUARANTEED!!! 941-628-8579Lic#CRC1130733 www.ezslider.net BEST VALUE GUTTERS , 6 S eam l ess. Ken Violette, Inc. (941) 240-6699Lic.CGC#060662/Ins. ELECTRICAL5070 DRMELECTRICAL SERVICE, Plug Into Personalized ServiceElectrical Maintenance Repairs Troubleshooting 941-480-0761 941-366-364 6 LUMINOUS ELECTRIC NO JOB TOO SMALL! LIC# ES12000942941-623-9140 EXCAVATING/ BUSH HOG5080 BUSHBUSTERS INC."JUST GRIND IT!Brush Mowing Bush Hogging Pepper Trees Invasives Selective Lot Clearing941-456-6332 HANDYMAN/ GENERALREPAIR5089 A CARPENTER AROUND THE HOUSE for all your carpentry needs! James M. Okell 941-270-1693 rely on ray50 Year Resident Handyman Services Retired Master plumber & Builder941-539-2301Save This ad! HEATING& AIR5090 AC/DC AIR CONDITIONING . Free Service Call with repair. $39 Maintenance Special for New Customers Only.. 941-716-1476 lic#CAC181436 7 F LO -T ECH S ER VICES Air Conditioning/Heating, Plumbing, Heat Pumps, Service Contracts, Water Heaters, Pool Heaters, Repipes, Remodels, Sinks, Faucets &Toilets.941-426-3664If WaterOr Air Run Through It-We Will Do it!LIC# CFC1426781/LIC# CAC1817540 CONTRACTORS5054 EDWARD ROSS CONSTRUCTION Services, Inc. 941-408-8500 pool cages, Scr. lanais, etc... RML CONTRACTING SERVICES,LLCWINDOWS,DOORS & MORE. Acrylic Rms,Additions, Bath & Kitchen Remodels,Custom Screen enclosures.Locally owned w/ over 25+ yrs experience.CBC060490 941-232-6606 TEDDY`S HANDYMAN & REMODELING, INC. No Job Too Big or Too Small! (941)-629-4966 Lic./Ins. Serving NP, Charlotte & PG CRC 1327653 COURIER/TAXI5055 SUNWISE AIRPORT VAN AND CAR SERVICE. VENICE 941-400-0034 OR 941-412-5630 DOOR TO DOOR ON YOUR SCHEDULE CONCRETE5057 A 1 ROOF CLEANING & COATINGS Decorative Concrete, Pool Deck, Lanai & Driveway Coating, Epoxy Flake Garage Floors, Poly Pebble Removal. (941)-485-0037 FLORIDA CONCRETE DRIVEWAYSSIDEWALKSADDITIONSRESIDENTIAL& COMMERICALNEWCONSTRUCTION941-628-5965 INS/LICCG034909 CLASSIFIED ADSSELL PRO PATH CONCRETE Driveways Patios Sidewalks PadsResurfacing Options AvailableFree Estimates 941-286-6415 Lic #AAA-11-00081 RICH LANDERS STUCCO, INC. Honest, Reliable work! LIC/INS New Const & Remodels. Rusted bands & wire lathe repair. spraycrete & dry-wall repair (941)-497-4553 WHY PAY MORE??? Concrete Driveways, Patio, Walkways. 941-237-6969 Lic/Ins CLEANING SERVICES5060 MRS . CLEANING UP! 1st class cleaning Service! Specials Now! $10% Senior Discount! 941-204-8057 www.mrscleaningup.com Lic & Insured A & R PR O WIND O W CLEANERS In/Out, Tracks & Screens, Also Vinyls, Clean & Polish, H/W Team. Lic#25014 & Ins. 941-441-8658 RETR O -W O MAN LL C Professional Home Cleaning & Organizing WeeklyBi-Weekly Monthly One Time 941-929-6257 Insured S HINEDERELLA Professional Cleaning . Affordable and Dependable, Free Estimates. Lic & Ins. 941-468-1947 Res. & Comm. ALUMINUM5006 CURTISALLENDESIGNS Aluminum & Remodeling Bathrooms, Kitchens, Windows, Lanai Enclosures, Storm Shutters, etc. $500 off with this ad. Call 941-627-6085 AIRPORTSHUTTLE5008 FLORIDA AIRPORT SHUTTLE TRANSPORT $25 TO/FROM RSW Arrive @ RSW: 10:45am & 3:45pm Depart @ RSW 11:30am & 4:30pmPickup/Drop-off Locations:NORTHPORTBUDGETINNPORTCHARLOTTEDAYSINN. PUNTAGORDAPG WATERFRONTHOTEL300 RETTAESPLANADEFLAirShuttle.com 941-451-1202 APPLIANCE SERVICE/REPAIR5020 DRYER VENT CLEANING & INSPECTION . $49 30 yrs. exp. (941)-889-7596 DRYER VENT CLEANING THE VENT DOCTOR Book Your Dryer Vent Cleaning and Save! 10% Off With This Ad! 941-268-9525 Competent, Thorough & Reliable. Lic. Fla. Home Inspector. ADULTCARE5050 A LENDING HAND , INC . Caregivers/Companions, Hourly or 24/7 Care 941-809-3725 SENIORS HELPING SENIORSLight Housekeeping, Meals, Errands and Companionship Licensed & Bonded 941-257-8483 CHILD CARE5051 ALL CHILDCARE FACILITIES MUST INCLUDE, WITH ADVERTISEMENT, STATE OR LOCAL AGENCY LICENSE NUMBER. FLORIDA STATE LAW requ i res all child care centers and day care businesses to register with the State of Florida. The Sun Newspapers will not knowingly accept advertising which is in violation of the law COMPUTERSERVICE5053 COMPUTER TUTOR (Your home or mine) ONLY $25.00 an hour! Please call Steve at: 941-445-4285 ANTHONYS COMPUTER SERVICE & REPAIR . ALLCOMPUTERNEEDS. SENIOR DISCOUNT 941-769-1415 B&B COMPUTERSOLUTIONSWEDOITALL! INTERNETANDWIFISET-UP HOMENETWORKING PRINTERANDROUTER INSTALLATION VIRUSANDMALWARE PROTECTIONANDREMOVAL TRAININGANDMUCHMORESENIORDISCOUNTS& SAMEDAY APPOINTMENTS, WHENAVAILABLECALLBILLAT941-441-5104 EXPRE SS CO MPUTER7 Days. $55. VIRUS REPAIRS & CLEAN-UP! LOW FLAT RATES! 941-830-3656 DOOR To DOOR WE BUY BROKEN LAPTOPS! Lic./Ins. EDUCATION3094 MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Become a Medical Office Assistant! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED. Online training can get you job ready. HS Diploma/GED & PC/Internet needed. 1-888-528-5547. EXERCISE CLASSES3095 GULF COAST ACUPUNCTURE 151 Center Rd. Wednesdays 5:30pm Thursdays 9:00 am Saturdays 8:30am YOGA FOR BEGINNERS Proceeds to Venice Wildlife Center Call Rick or Mary 941-488-1769 RELIGION CLASSES3096 BEGINYOURDAYIN BIBLE STUDY Christ the King Lutheran Church, 23456 Olean Blvd. Wednesdays 10AM-11AM. For more info 941-766-9357 Port Charlotte Do YOU Know What You Need?Should you prepare a new will? An advance health care directive? A living trust? A power of attorney? A DNR order? If you have questions about these or other end-of life matters, you are invited to attend a free seminar on Sunday, March 15, from 2:00pm to 4:00pm, at Gulf Cove United Methodist Church. The guest speaker will be Attorney Matthew R. Rheingans, an elder law specialist. He will address all of these things and more that you and your family may need to know, including specific requirements of the State of Florida. To attend, please register by Thursday, March 12, by calling the Gulf Cove UMC office at 941-697-1747; if no one answers, just leave a message which includes your name, phone number, and the number of people who will be attending. If you have any questions about the program, please call Jo Ann at 941-661-1976. GCUMC is located at 1100 McCall Road in Port Charlotte, just threequarters of a mile south of the Myakka River on Route 776. The churchs website can be found at: http://gulfcovechurch.com F AITH LUTHERAN CHURCH 4005 Palm Drive, Punta GordaVarious Days & Times CONFIRMATION/BIBLE STUD Y Adult Infomational Class 941-639-6309 OTHER CLASSES3097 CONCENTRATIVE MEDITATION with Linda Weser, 4 p.m. every Monday at Unity Church of Peace, 1250 Rutledg e Street, off Veterans Boulevard between Orlando Boulevard and Torrington Street, Por t Charlotte/North Port line. Free; open to the public. 941-276-0124 5000 BUSINESS SERVICES A N OCC UPATI O NAL LI C . may be required by the Cit y and/or County. Please call th e appropriate occupational licensing bureau to verify. f _I I) / I /k' I4Y" t

PAGE 33

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 9 HAVE YOU C'MON, MOM, ALL THE MOREDIRECTIONS: WRITTEN YOUR CHRISTMAS REASON TO 5Fil each square with a number, one through nine. THANK-YOU NOTES? WAS ONLY A THANK PEOPLE Horizontal squares should add to totals on right. COUPLE FOR LAST YEAR'SVertical squares should add to totals on bottom. 3-10 MONTHS AGO! GIFTS.39:iiter anal squares through renshould add to 1 9MAY HE MORE 1[` ITHAN ONE SOLUTION. 3 7a 5Today's Challenge 7 16Time 3 Minutes =46 Seconds 2 8Your Working2 29 5-1oTime MinutesSeconds 13 7 9 27 7 11 by King Features Syndicate., inc. World rights reserved. 15 MY COFFEE YOU'LL HAVE TO DRINK NO PROBLEMMI/ READY? INSTANT COFFEE. THE wuERGRINDER BROKE RC 3-10 3-10 0 0 0IIJ7G XC WIING GSGYI PVDP-Y H W 0 V W D J Y V X V R P MGN,AR6 Yod READY To 9FYodAFP44P To 7NO!T J ST lIAWIT To oleoFIGNrFORYouR1-1VE5 to4AY?' DIE LIKEAMAN LIKE Aj5-YE OLDMANIWCJZGNIIWk', V ECKZT R111 V -IM NOTyuRE.__PHSG HZZ NI TKOGR VW H YCE.Yesterday's Cry ptuquip: NICKNAME OF AGROUP OF GUYS WHO BECAME. KNOWN FORRECAPPING EVERY EVENT: "THE BOYS OF SUIVIVARY." X 10 c `Today's Cryploquip Clue: 11 equals A IIF.c. o .rriueiJcILL; I IOK YOU"REAl-I. 516NED EuP BUT YUURE I I I i 3_TPUy1tINO IT VV7-7L I i WITI+ WE _7_`"I l f I PRE EX1511N(7CONPITION3IDI5 -SORRY WEtF CAN ONLqALLOW TWO00CREATIONISTS"He's crawling under the bed again."WORD LOCHSLEUTH SCOTLAND1. Y U R O K H D A X U Q N K I I GRAMMA SAYS L?oU 6Y TNATS%E MEANS ON, LIKE WKEN 1 Ljq_,YEAfkE B Y V S P M J H E B Y V T Q NEED TO TRY To BE 'OUSA06LtTAKE 6RUS9 MY-CEETH SoMETNtNGA LITTLE MORE CAREBETTER AIM, t1 EEMS AMP SPITTt-(E LIKETOATO L I G D B D Y W R T R P M C FIJL IN THF_ YOU'VE BEEN M1551146 TCOTNPASTE WATERBAT-4ROOM, TNETAR&ETA LOT IMYNESINK?K I F D B Y W R U A U S Q 0 1 -`M K I F D B Z X 0 N W H E M AN F K C I R D L F , N I R T A K C1 I _ U S Q S S E N O O O I A N R RL J 11 F D C 0 1 A C Y K Y E AW V 1S Q P M N H H H L K L RI H F E C B 0 T Z S Y Y W W 0 PLUTD IMAGINARY DOGIMAGINARY PLANETV U S R Q P L E I H S N M A MMonday's unlisted clue SFIt)W[RFind the listed words in the diagram. IheV run in all directions -ilin-evard backward. up, down and di tonally.Iucsdav ti unllsicd clue hint LOCI I MONS I tiR 5 MArkaig Katrine Maree ShielArthur Kinord Morar ShinAwe Lochy Neldricken Tay yl/I`EYSEricht Lomond Rannoch 7'20 15 king I catures. Inc 3CO 3-1415 -whoea151.m7 C_Trus:i.oa-ar nu JrnHanrnpNSiFSe",e: DPI ,':=ato; _

PAGE 34

Page 10 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY btnnfbrnfbtnnnn nbtrfnrnrffr Saturdays in the Classi“ ed Section of the Sun! adno=8535454 r

PAGE 35

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 11 BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY You can “ nd every business and service under the sun in the Business & Service Directory!Make your business a part of it! Call 866.463.1638 adno=8535455 ci.i iIiij1 ,, `\

PAGE 36

Page 12 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 AMID OW-zolNGFJON S -TT Y ,,tiV4oy' fcKcoc s ,SoE1t{G;iYtJcv,AA, Rslcl, Ty1 Mic, AP ' .SiD>= Ca ' 11 Mlr1G' l!, ,, ,is >E-tam , Vl11G.
PAGE 37

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 13 ii liii _ ___ ___ ___ I I I I _______ I__ ii jiji i I _______ _______ I _______ ________ I I I I I _____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ I__ ii jiji i I I _______ I _______ ________ I I I I I I__ ii jiji i I I I I I _________ ii jiji i _______ I _______ I _______ I_ I____________ I I I I I I I I

PAGE 38

Page 14 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 LAWN/GARDEN & TREE5110 JOHN EDWARDS LAWN SERVICE Mowing Most Lawns $30. as Often as You Need! Monthly Service, Free Estimates. ALSO Fertilizing, Shrubs, & Mulch. 941-483-0138 LAWN REPLACEMENTMaloneys SODCharlotte 941-637-1333Sarasota 941-955-8327www.maloneysod.com AdvertiseToday! LAWN/GARDEN & TREE5110 ISLAND BREEZE LAWN SERVICE Residential & Commer cial 14 years experience Owner operated. Lic& Ins.Venice & surrounding areas. For free estimate call Keith 941-445-2982 J RIZTREESERVICES Specializing in Dangerous Tree Removal. Complete Tree & Palm Service. Servicing all Charlotte & Sarasota Counties FREEESTIMATES 941-306-7532 Lic & Ins LAWN/GARDEN & TREE5110 FAMILY TREE SERVICE T ree Trimming, Free Estimates. Call Toda y 941-237-8122. Lic/Ins. FLORIDA TREE INC .Tree Trimming & Removal Stump Grinding Lawn Service Bucket Service 941-613-3613 pcftree.comLic./Ins. ADVERTISE! GENERAL LAWN & Landscape services. (941)-426-7844 Wright & Son Landscaping Inc LAWN/GARDEN & TREE5110 C&D T ree & L awn S erv i ce Tree trimming/removal, lawn care & pressure washing. Lic & insured. Serving Charl. Co. 941-276-6979 Free Estimates DP`s ABILITY TREE SERVICE Removals, Stump Grinding, Palm Trimming, Topping & Shaping. 15 Yrs. Exp. Free Estimates! 941-889-8147 Lic#00000192 & Insured. LAWN/GARDEN & TREE5110 ALTMANTREESERVICE Tree Trimming, Removal, Stump Grinding. Lic & Ins. Call Mike Altman 941-268-7582 AMERICANIRRIGATIONCall 941-587-2027 FREEESTIMATES!!! Licensed & Insured Charlotte Co. lic#AAA-1100010. Serving Charlotte and Sarasota Counties CLASSIFIED WORKS! LAWN/GARDEN & TREE5110 AN OCCUPATIONAL LICENSE may be required by the Cit y and/or County. Please call th e appropriate occupational licens ing bureau to verify A JAMISON TREE SERVICE Complete & Professional 15% Sr Discount! FREEEST. LIC. & INSUREDENGL941-475-6611ORN. PORT941-423-0020 SERVINGCHARLOTTEANDSARASOTAFOROVER20 YEARS.JAMISON-TREESERVICEINC.COM GETRESULTS USECLASSIFIED! Tuesday. March 10. 2015GOREN BRIDGE 7 Little WordsWITH BOB JONES Find the 7 words to match the 7 clues. The numbers in parentheses#, > :, Trib.ire consent Agency, LLC represent the number of letters in each solution. Each letterESTHER'S LAITE combination can be used only once, but all letter combinationswill be necessary to complete the puzzle.Both vulnerable. North deals. "Miss Esther." said the waitress,"did you order the regular latte or theNORTH king size'?" "The king, please, said CLUES SOLUTIONSA A K 7 5 4 Esther. Fred had become a little hardA K 8 5 2 of hearing and the only thing he 1 wincing or flinching (8)K63 heard was "king, please." He46 Void dutifully played dunnnv's king of 2 endless (9)WEST EAS"I` diamonds. Esther w t5 still Settling uprl8 AQ J 10 9 2 with the w stress when she realized 3 interfering (8)Q 10964 71 J that everyone ).vas waiting for her toQ J 8 5 4 72 play. She quickly played her ace of 4 tennis Shot (1 Q)443 *A9752 diamonds to win the first trick, notSOUTH realizing that dummy's king wasrt63 already winning. She was sick when 5 acting up (11) o7 3 she noticed. "Oh, dear," thoughtA 10 9 Esther, "what have I done?" 6 recommendations (9) coK Q J 1086 Esther led the king of clubs frothher hand. East won with the ace and 7 ponders (6) oThe biddine; fired a diamond back, anxious to takeNORTH FAST SOUTH WEST advantage of Esther's mistake at trick1APass 24 Pass one. Esther "false-carded" with the2'H Pass 34 Pass 10, losing to West's jack. and found INC""Pass 3NT All pass herself back on play with the nine of RE ANT REAC N G Cdiamonds when West cleared the suit.Opening lead: Queen of She happily cashed three club tricks.and settled for nine tricks when theEsther was looking forward to club nine didn't fall. ESS BEHA MED CK MISanother game with her favorite "Nicely done," said Fred. "Whew,"partner. Fred. They arrived in three thought Esther, "it looks like Fred hasno trump after a normal auction. forgiven me for that horrible play atEsther decided to "make a plan," as trick one." DLI FERR HAND TING BRFred had often encouraned her to do.She thought she had to win the (Bob Jones welcomes readers'opening lead in her hand to preserve responses sent in care of thisthe finesse position over West for the newspaper or to Tribune Content ALS OODS VI NG ER BAjack of diamondsShe hadn't even A,gencv, LLC., 16650 Westgror'econsidered her entry problems with Dr., Suite 175, Addison, TX 75001.the club suit. when the waitress E-mail responses may be sent to Monday's Answers: 1. SPRYNESS 2. MONOGAMY 3. OBJECTIONSarrived. tctu:ditorsCn%tril>une.corn.) 4. COIFFED 5. ERRONEOUSLY 6. PIPELINES 7. AUTOLOGOUS 3/10TODAY'S 1 34i6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1314 15 16CROSSWORD PUZZLE 17 18 19ACROSS 47 Lose energy PREVIOUS PULLLE SOLVED 20 21 221 Champagne 48 Yawningand orange 51 Outback bird JAMB A M B L E I S A Kjuice 52 Count or 23 24 125 26 277 TV mfr. Duchess O M A R IF E R A L R E T E10 Part of MIT 53 Cooperate B A L I R E A D Y M O N E Y14 Ranges of view (2 wds.) S H E EP K I D ANDES 28 29 3015 Joule fraction 56 Astronaut F U M E D B 0'016 Make a footnote Sally R A C E 'C AR HARNESS 31 32 33 34 35 3617 Stymie 57 Menacing18 -tzu sound ERASER V E N I V I A19 Fencing 58 Drake's prey PERT O U A R K F E N G 37 38 39 40weapon 62 "Et tu" time 0 NO BUNT E V I N C E20 Rockies sight 63 Journey stage T A B L O I D P R I 'N TER 41 42 43 44(2 wds.) 64 Type of union ADS B O S S .A23 Play banjo 65 Mardi Gras P R U S E A R ELATE a5 46 4726 Cartoon shriek follower27 Bashfully 66 Monsieur's H I G H S T R U N G I G 0R28 Roller coaster summer E T R E U N I T E Z U'N' I 48 49 50 51 52cry 67 Self-defense art Wj E E D TEN S E E A S E29 Rock's -Leppard DOWN a;, 2;15 UFSby Uriiv. ud ck for v"s 53 54 5530 Kind of system 1 Santa Fe hrs.31 Previous to 2 Freud, to 21 over (fainted) 36 Long bout32 Cobbler's tool himself 22 Cravat cousins 42 Least scarce 56 57 58 59 160 16133 Stamen sites 3 Do yard work 23 Kind of tooth 46 Appear37 Aurora, to Plato 4 Not see-through 24 Afghan 47 More resolute 62 63 6438 Bridal notice 5 Vaccine 25 Pee Wee of 48 One of twelveword 6 "The Thin Man" baseball 49 Sherpa, often39 Mi. above sea pooch 29 Dork 50 Colonial suitor 65 0 1 66 67level 7 "Whew!" feeling 30 Ms. Barkin of 51 Snowy-white40 Livy's dozen 8 Grouchy one films bird41 Adjusted slightly 9 Excited 32 Harem jewelry 52 incognita Want more puzzles?43 Matter, in law 10 Place to see 33 "Like, wow, 54 Give the eye Check out the "Just Right Crossword Puzzles" books44 Hail, to Caesar Capades(2wds.) man!" (hyph.) 55 Swing an ax at QuillDrlverBooks.com45 Diamond org. 11 A bit cool 34 Put on a 59 Oklahoma town F46 Geological 12 Girder material pedestal 60 Morse clickperiod 13 Ant-size 35 Opponent 61 Tucked away

PAGE 39

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 15 SP20720 To Place, Correct, or Cancel Ad CALL Office Hours: Mon-Fri 8AM-5PM Fax : 866-949-1426 941-429-3110 Check Out More SUN Classified Ads Online sunnewspapers.net UPDATED DAILY!!! 13487 TAMIAMI TR NORTH PORT S UN C LASSIFIED WINDOWREPAIR5226 SLIDING GLASS DOORAnd Window Repair Lowest Prices GUARANTEED!! ! 941-628-8579Lic#CRC1130733 www.ezslider.net BEST VALUE SLIDING GLASS DOOR REPAIRS Wheels Tracks & LocksLicensed & Insured, Free Est. since 1981 visit us at www. SlidingDoorsandmore.com Call Bob 941-706-6445 Low overhead = Low prices! 6000 MERCHANDISE GARAGE SALES 6001Arcadia 6002Englewood 6003Lake Suzy 6004Nokomis 6005North Port 6006Port Charlotte Deep Creek 6007Punta Gorda 6008Rotonda 6009Sarasota 6010South Venice 6011Venice 6012 Out Of Area 6015Flea Market 6020Auctions MERCHANDISE 6013 Moving Sales 6025Arts & Crafts 6027Dolls 6030Household Goods6035 Furniture 6038 Electronics 6040TV/Stereo/Radio6060Computer Equip6065Clothing/Jewelry/ Accessories6070Antiques & Collectibles 6075Fruits/Veges 6090Musical 6095Medical 6100Health/Beauty 6110 Trees & Plants 6120Baby Items6125Golf Accessories6128Exercise/Fitness6130Sporting Goods 6131 Firearms6132 Firearm Access. 6135Bikes/Trikes 6138Toys 6140Photography/Video 6145Pool/ Spa & Supplies6160Lawn & Garden6165Storage Sheds/ Buildings6170Building Supplies6180Heavy Constr. Equipment 6190Tools/Machinery6220Office/Business Equip & Supplies6225Restaurant Supplies 6250Appliances 6260Misc. Merchandise 6270Wanted to Buy/T rade SCREENING5184 RESCREENING by NORTHSTAR Free Estimates. 941-725-7599 Lic# CC20597 & Insured ROOF ING5185 Repairs, Roofing Replacement 30 Years Experience Discounts to Srs & Vets Free Inspections & Est.Call Hugh 941-662-0555RM COATS INC.Lic. CCC#1325731 Ins. LEONARDSROOFING&INSULATIONINC.FAMILYOWNED&OPERATED SINCE1969Shingle, Tile, Built-Up, SinglePly, Metal, Full Carpentry, Service Available Reagan Leonard 941-488-7478LIC# RC0066574 PAUL DEAO ROOFING PROTECTINGYOURBIGGESTINVESTMENT. 22 YRSEXP. 941-441-8943 LIC#1329187 R . L . TEEL ROOFING Reroofs & Repairs Insurance Inspections Veterns Discounts 941-473-7781 RC29027453 Lic/Ins STEVE`S ROOFING & REPAIRSCall Steve & See What He Can Do For You! Voted Best of the Best 2011, 2012, 2013 & 2014! Free Est. 941-625-1894 Lic. CCC1326838 941-483-4630 H Shingles, Slats, Metal, Tile, Repairs H Old Roof Removal Our Specialty H Full Carpentry H Free Estimates lic #ccc 068184 fully insured SOD5191 LAWN REPLACEMENTMaloneys SODCharlotte 941-637-1333Sarasota 941-955-8327www.maloneysod.com TILE /GROUT5195 LEMON BAY TILE O ver 20 years in the Englewood are a Owner/install Lic & insured 941-474-1000 WINDOWCLEANING5225 SQUEEGEEMASTERS Window Cleaning, Pressure Washing, 20% OFF with this Ad. FREE Estimates 941-445-7285 Cell Lic/Ins. WE D O WIND O W S & PRESSURE WASHING. New Customers Specials Package Deals Residential & Commercial Free Estimates. Lic./Ins. (941)-661-5281 P R E SSURE CLEANING5180 AAA Power Washing & Cleaning Dont live with MOLD! Driveway Specialists. 941-698-2418 BAILEYS PRESSURE CLEANINGTile roof Cleanings starting at @$150. Call 941-497-1736 FULL HOUSE PRESSURE WASHINGRates Starting At: Tile Roofs $150 Houses $65 Pool Cage/Decks $65 Driveways Exterior Painting, Pool Deck Coatings AND MORE!! 941-451-7550 Lic./Ins Kelly Browns Pressure Washing & trash removal Honest & Reliable, Reasonable Rates & Sr. Special $39.99 Free Est. Lic.# 1413989 craig9mon@hotmail.com 941-626-1565 GreatDealsin theClassifieds! POWER WASHING SPECIAL MOBILE HOMES, Manufactured and Single wide, $49.95 POWER DRYER VENT CLEANING$39.95 North Port Property Watch 941-876-1555 SAFE NO PRESSURE ROOF CLEANING Pool Cages, Lanais, Driveways, ETC! 941-697-1749 or 941-587-5007 www.BensonsQualityCleaning.com SCREENING5184 ALL ABOUT ALUMINUM & SCREEN: Rescreen & new. 941-876-4779 wescreenflorida.comLic# SA37, AL0511993X CLASSIC ALUMINUM RESCREEN SERVICE INC. Your Florida Outdoor Living Experts 941-716-3984 941-799-0310 www.classicrescreen.comLic# CBC031986 Insured & Bonded DAVID WHITES RESCREENBUBBLEFREEGUARANTEESCREENREPAIR, VINYLREPAIRSERVINGSARASOTAANDCHARLOTTECOUNTIES. 941-525-4000 GULF COAST RESCREEN LIC& INSUREDFAMILYOWNED& OPERATEDSPECIALIZINGINRESCREENING,BUILDINGANDREPAIRING. SCREWCHANGEOUTS PRESSUREWASHING& PAINT-INGPOOLCAGES, LANAIS,FRONTENTRYWAYSETC... 941-536-7529 FREEESTIMATES RESCREENING Special $55 Tops, $30 Sides. Complete $1295(to 1500SF) 941-879-3136 Lic. 22454/Ins. Southwest RescreenComplete Rescreening: $1,095 (up to 1,500 SF) Screen Repair & Pressure Washing.941-465-2318Free Estimates! Insured. PA INTING/ W A LLPAPERING5140 DARINSPAINTING&POWERWASHING3RDGENFAMILYBUS. POWERWASHING, PAINTING& WALLPAPERINSTALLS& REMOVALS. FREEESTIMATES941-961-5878 LARRY ESPOSITO PAINTING INC Its Not What We Do, Its How We Do It!Free Estimates, 10% off Senior & Veterans 941-764-1171 lic & insured AAA007825 PAINTINGUNLIMITED Where Quality & Value Meet! Family Owned and Operated. Call Now for aFREEEstimate 941-979-7947 Lic. & Ins. AAA-12-00015 SERVINGENGLEWOOD, NORTHPORT,PORTCHARLOTTE, VENICEDANNY MILLER PAINTING, LLCINTERIOR/EXTERIORPAINTING941-830-0360 FREE ESTIMATESdanspainting4602@comcast.netLICENSED& INSUREDAAA009886 SUPERIOR PAINTING, INC. Full Spray Shop 941-474-9091Lic # AAA009837 SWEENEY`S PAINTINGPressure Cleaning MildewTreatment Painting Interior & Exterior Free Est. Sr. Discounts 941-916-1024 Lic# AAA0010702 We Do It A Shade Better! LARRY BATES PAINTING Free Estimates Locally Owned & Operated 941-625-1226Lic/Ins #RRR0002261 PETC A R E5155 DOG CARE by day/week, exercise, fenced, loving home environment. 941-625-0853 P LUMBING5160 DO ALL PLUMBING LLC A Full Service Company for ALL Your Plumbing Needs. 40 Gallon Electric Water Heater Installed. $500. + Permit.(if needed)941-626-9353Lic#CFC1428884 NEEDCASH? HaveAGarage Sale! F LO -T ECH S ER VICES Air Conditioning/Heating, Plumbing, Heat Pumps, Service Contracts, Water Heaters, Pool Heaters, Repipes, Remodels, Sinks, Faucets &Toilets.941-426-3664If WaterOr Air Run Through It-We Will Do it!LIC# CFC1426781/LIC# CAC1817540 LARRY`S PLUMBING , R e Pipes (Most in 1 Day) Beat An y Estimate Complete Servic e 941-484-5796 Lic.#CFC1425943 PLUMBER over 30 years Exp. $45 per hour. Permits & Inspections. Call 508-294-1271 Cell or Office at 941-575-1817 Lic# CFC1427981 & Ins. THINK PLUMBERS Are Too High? Give Us a Try! Retired Master Plumber. Ross & Son 941-204-4286Lic. CFC-1428339 P OOLSE RVICE S5165 S trong Pool S ervices REPAIRS & SERVICE motors, filters, leaks, tile, decks, heat pump Insured & Licensed Res. & Comm. 941-697-8580 RP0067268 MOVING/HA ULING5130 MOVING HELP $$$ Save $$$ Packing Loading Driving 30 yrs exp. 941-223-6870 ROBS ON THEMOVE , i nc. Moving and Delivery Honest, Reliable, Courteous! Grea t Rates!941-237-1823 SKIPS MOVING Local & Long Distance. 1 Item or Whole House! 941-766-1740 Reg.# IM1142 Lic/Ins PA INTING/ W A LLPAPERING5140 Best Prices -Quality Job Best Coast Painting and Pressure Washing Residential/Commercial 10% Off With Ad! 941-815-8184 AAA00101254 STEVENS CUSTOM PAINTINGRes/Comm. Int/Ext FREE EST. Lic. & Ins. 941-255-3834 A 1 ROOF CLEANING & COATINGSPressure Cleaning, Exterior Painting. Commercial & Residential. Warranties! Free Estimates! (941)-485-0037 50% off Call Now to Lock in an Amazing Bang For Your Buck From a Seasoned Painter 941-468-2660 AAA00101266 former firefighter C.T. LANE PAINTING 10% OFF!Screen Stucco Repair Power Washing Driveways & MORE! Commercial & Resid entialInterior & Exterior 941-628-5297Lic./Bonded/Insurance D . A . C . PAINTING We do the best put us to the test! Residental, Commercial, Int & Ext. Power Washing Free Estimates 941-786-6531 Lic #AAA-1300027 & Insured L A WN/GA RDE N & TR EE5110 MILAZZOS LANDSCAPING 941-830-1005 Most lawns $25.00 Punta Gorda & Pt. Charl. ALLPHASESOFRESIDENTIAL LANDSCAPING, INSTALLATIONS,PLANTING, PEPPERBERRY CONTROL& PATIOS. N N O O W W A A C C C C E E P P T T I I N N G G N N E E W W L L A A W W N N A A C C C C O O U U N N T T S S ! ! 9 9 4 4 1 1 4 4 6 6 8 8 4 4 3 3 7 7 2 2 ISA Certified Arborist John Cannon FL-6444A South Sarasota & Charlotte Co. RAINSCAPE INC,Irrigation, Maintenance, Repair, Installation. Monthly Maintenance starts at $40. FREE ESTIMATES 941-888-2988 SANDEFURS HOME &TREE Maintenance Tree trimming, removal. We do it all!License/Insured941-484-6042 STEVES TREE & HAULING Tree Removal & Trimming 29 Years Exp. Lic/Insd Free Estimates 941-866-6979 Tremendous TreeWhy Should I Hire a Certified Arborist? 1. We Know What Were Doing! 2. We Have Proven We Know What Were Doing. Removal Pruning Stump Grinding Designs Quality Service! Locally Owned & Operated ISA Certified Arborist John Cannon, FL-6444 A 10% SENIOR DISCOUNT! 941-426-8983 www.northporttree.com Fully Licensed & Insured M A SONRY5129 AST MASONRY,941-525-2435Over 20 yrs exp.in pavers, brickwork, concrete, stucco, stone & decorative concrete.NO JOB TOO SMALL!LICENSED,INSURED & BONDED MOVING/HA ULING5130 ALLTYPESOF CLEAN UPS! Same Day Service! 24 Hrs. a Day! 941-764-0982 or 941-883-1231 I

PAGE 40

Page 16 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 TV/STEREO/RADIO6040 S AM S UN G 4 6 4 6 Led TV Like new $475 941-585-7740 SO NY 5 2 IN C H PR O JE C T O R TV LIKE NEW $189 941-763-2581 S TERE O AMP, cd, speakers $75 941-889-7146 STEREO SONY 250 w i n ca bi net nice system $125 810-2829154 TV 1 9 WE S TIN G H O U S E L C D no stand $35 941-493-6271 TV 2 4 S ANY O f lat screen older model, w/remote $25 941-493-3851 TV 5 0 VIZI O f lat screen Plasma 720P VG $100 941255-0874 TV PR O JE C TI O N 5 2 in mitsubi good picture $100 810282-9154 COMPUTER EQUIPMENT6060 AC ER LAPT O P extensa4620z500gb 3gbram win7 $175 941-626-0266 CO M C A S T R O UTER LINK S Y S MO.#WRT110 $20 941-8751757 CO MPUTER HP C omp. window 7, Comp. $125 941-505-6290 COMPUTER WIN XP w /Offi ce, DVD, runs A+ $40 941-7432656 HOT SPOT V er i zon J et P ac k $65 941-979-5134 MONITOR 17 LCD Fl at P ane l , great picture $20 941-2704306 M O NIT O R 17 M O NIT O RPerfect cond, not a flat panel $10 941-743-2656 MONITOR ACER 19 exce ll ent condition $65 941-979-5134 ROUTER LINKSYS Wi re l ess B,2.4 GHz $20 941-505-6290 T OS HIBA LAPT O P i 3 1.80ghz,240ssd,6gb,win7 $275 941-626-0266 WIN XPTOWER 1 g b ram 80 g b HD cdrw/dvd $40 941-2704306 CLOTHING/ JEWELRY/ ACCESSORIES 6065 ASSO RTED JEWELRY your choice $4 941-467-2534 B OO T S SO REL C hildrens size 6, like new $10 941-764-7971 DRE SS JA C KET S (2) leather mens new,choice $45 941467-2534 JA C KET mens denim Harley Davidson XL $30 941-4672534 JACKET W omens Blk L eat h er Hip length, size S $8 941-8301531 JA C KET W O MEN S LEATHER SMALL $50 941-467-2534 LEATHER CO AT Ladies sz 8 , zip out lining $75 941-7667373 LEATHER JA C KET G reySuade/cotton large $5 941445-5619 TANK T O P S (6) S paghetti straps,bras,asst As New! $15 941-276-1881 TIE S MEN S S olids Prints Stripes Silks etc 9/pc $25 941276-1881 W EDDIN G GO WN S z 2 4.Lace/Satin. $35 941-8301531 ANTIQUES COLLECTIBLES6070 WANTED Old postcards (Pre 1950s), Stamp collections, old photographs and paper items. Collector pays highest prices. 207-7126216 or 941-493-4714 FURNITURE6035 FREE B O X S PRIN G Twin XL like new $1.00 941-661-6127 HEAD B O ARD 1-King. $3 5 941-496-9252 HUT C H 2 pieces solid light oak $400 941-697-6553 HUT C H DE S K 4 drawers, 2 shelves. $200 941-629-5418 IBUYFURNITURE Or anything of value! 941-485-4964 KIT C HEN TABLE WITH S IX CHAIRS GD CD $100 717-4755237 LIFT C HAIR C ATNAPPER tan leather $450 708-860-6055 L O VE S EAT, f abric greenish/good condition $100 941-275-5837 MATTRESS & BOX . New Will Sell $100. 941-629-5550 MIRROR 24 x 24 g ld d ecorative $20 941-629-4950 MIRR O R HALF M OO N 3 5x75in $35 941-763-2581 NI G HT S TAND Antique S olid Wood need finish $40 941223-7446 PATI O C HAIR S 4-WI C KER rustic $40 941-456-8479 PATI O FURNITURE C hairs are very comfortable $95 941-9169360 PATI O TABLE & 4 chairs glass top gd cond $100 941-4568479 PATI O TABLE & 4 chairs rd glass gd cond $100 941-4568479 PATIO TABLE & 4 c h a i rs rd.glass gd cond $100 941456-8479 RE S TAURANT B OO TH Black, New Condition, paid $700 Sell for $200 941-441-8255 SHOES RACK w i t h seat woo d with 15 spaces $10 941-6976553 SIDE TABLE S tone B ase, Gl ass Top $150 941-429-8221 S LEEPER SO FA & L O VE S EAT Very good con $150 330-5063429 SOFA & LOVESEAT mute d fl oral, very good condition. $95 for both 262-388-3559 PG SOFA BED QUEEN B e i ge w / muted print $150 941-4972880 SO FA FABRI C /LEATHER, bamboo trim $500 941-9141770 SOFA L eat h er, cream co l or good condition $150 651-4854984 SOFA TABLE All woo d , 60X16X30 $99 941-6816417 S PIDER LAMP 5 brass domes w/lites $25 941-496-7569 S WIVEL C HAIR light green f abric $95 941-496-7569 TABLE 6CHRS g l ass top Whi te Wicker 45x74 $295 937-4695113 TABLE HI T O P 4 0 granite, 2 stools $300 941-914-1770 TELEVI S I O N S TAND In dark wood. $50 941-629-5418 TV CABINET Whi te L aqure f or 60 TV $50 941-486-0189 TWIN BED (1) S et 6 pc li te oa k Exc. $400 941-258-1592 ELECTRONICS6038 DVD/VIDEO PLAYER T os hib a works great $40 941-6282616 FLEX USB CONNECT INSPEC TION CAMERA $50 714-5992137 SONY CDP CX400 system 400 CD disc capacity $50 941830-8589 TV CABINET Whi te L acquer f or 60 TV $50 941-486-0189 TV HEADPHONES WIRELESS for TV listening $30 219-8636696 FURNITURE6035 CO FFEE & end table wicker look glass top $45 941-4568479 COFFEE TABLE 36 w 8 s id e pedstl whtgr fx marb VGC $75 941-474-3194 CO FFEE TABLE Beveled glass / 50X25X15 $99 941-6816417 COFFEE TABLE S tone B ase, glass $300 941-429-8221 COFFEE ta bl e w i t h2 en d tables,key west style $350 941766-0679 CO FFEE TABLE Wood C o ff ee Table $50 574-315-3891 CO U C H & C hair Lzboy Recliners Ltr Md Br $300 941-7400248 CO U C H & loveseat aqua $2 5 0 480-298-4208 CO U C H & L O VE S EAT O B O faux leather $350 941-7401842 COUCHLARGE Fl . co l ors, Wicker Trim $300 941-4298221 COUCH Lik e new go ld/b ur gundy 90 x 38 $250 309-6486000 COUCH W/2 rec li ners & l ove seat good cond $350 941-7660679 COUCH , f a b r i c 90X36X36/blue/delivery $150 941-275-5837 COUCH , RED , FAUX SUEDE 83x36x32 $150 941-2755837 DESK c h erry woo d h as 8 d rawers $65 941-445-2078 DE S K DR O P lea f 3 drawers 42w x 41h $299 941-5648757 DESK for computer mahogany, exc cond $225 941-629-3490 DINETTE S ET 5pcs. Wrought Iron, Chairs on Casters. $250 941-637-1628 DINETTE SET 5 pcs. P u b glass/wrought iron $250 941456-3986 DINETTE SET d rop l ea f 42 new condition $250 941-8281771 DINETTE S ET Pine dinette table and 4 chairs $50 941697-6553 DINETTE SET WOOD CHAIRS & TABLETOP $125 941-6816417 DINETTE W/4CHAIRS All Wood Counter High top table $400 941-475-4455 DININ G R OO MTABLE 38 x 7 0 glass insert $80 941-429-8221 DINING ROOMTABLE , S o lid Oak w/1 leaf. $100 941-6616697 DINING SET 36 roun d ta bl e /4 chairs/wood $250 941-6816417 DININ G S ET all glass table/six wood chairs $350 941-2755837 DINING SET counter hi g h 6 chairs $379 941-412-5844 DININ G S ET outdoor resin f urniture $200 941-681-6417 DININ G TABLE 2 l f s 4 pad chairs wood fm tp $35 765469-9018 DININ G TABLE w/ 6 chairs Like new-solid wood. $150 941766-1536 DINNIN G R OO M 6 C HAIR S $400 941-697-6553 DRESSER 5d raw k ey west sty l e 3x5 $300 941-766-0679 DRE SS ER 7 0 W 3 1H,BRN wd/rattan tr 6drws/1 ctr dr $100 941-474-3194 DRESSER + MIRROR B am b oo PERFECT COND $225 941763-2581 END TABLE dk w d 28wx24h/shelves,wheels EXC $50 941-474-3194 END TABLE/ C ANE drs 28x28x21h/inner storage EXC $50 941-474-3194 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER 3 pcs/whitewash $150 941-2755837 HOUSEHOLD GOODS6030 PAINTIN G G IRL in thought, 26w x 36h $20 941-6294950 RE S TAURANT E Q UIPMENT various $500 941-375-4054 RU G 5 x 7.5 Taupe/ C ream (Area Rug) $60 941-766-7373 RU G D OC T O R Mighty Pro X3;New in-box $350 941-2358397 RU G Unique shag rug 3 -1/ 2 x 5, off-wh EC $30 941-6294950 RU GS brns.blk,grn.4 to choose.(area rugs) 5x7. $65 941-235-2203 S EWIN G MA C HINE 1 9 5 0 s w/cab zigzag A+ $80 941-7432656 SEWING MACHINES Ph a ff , White. Exc. Cond! $50. & Up. 941-493-7166 (Venice) S ILK DAI S YPLANTBushy/Realistic,ceramic pot New! $8 941-276-1881 TABLE C L O TH 66 X 8 4wht embr trim 8 naps new $15 941-6970501 T O ILET Wht Rd Bowl E. C . C omplete w seat $20 941-6291084 VACUUM CLEANER E ure k a, 12 amps $25 941-914-1770 VA C UUM C LEANER S , Eureka,Hoover $25 941-488-4341 HOLIDAYITEMS6031 S ANTA COO KIEJAR on the beach.new in box. $30 941235-2203 FURNITURE6035 A NTI Q UE SO LID Wood Night Stand need finish $40 941223-7446 A RM O IRE C ABINET S olid oak, Amish made $100 941-6254363 ARMOIRE CHERRY fi n. TV/closet/shelves $150 941624-0364 AUDIO CONSOLE Radio/Record/Tape. $70 941629-5418 BAKER RACK Wi t h woo d an d wire shelves $50 941-6976553 BAR STOOLS ( 4) 24 S w i ve l $40 941-627-1004 BAR S T OO L S ( 4 ) swivel 2 4 $40 941-627-1004 BARREL S WIVEL C HAIR rust red floral fabric $95 941-4967569 BAR S T OO L HI G H end distressed look(MINT) $150 941391-0042 BAR S T OO L S , THREE Metal, 31, Gloss Seats & Back, All for $75, OBO 941-999-7738 BART OO L S 2 wood 29 .cloth seats.ex.c. $70 941-235-2203 BA SS ETT FURNITURE$ 5 00 410-382-7394 BED MATTRESS & BOX . New Will Sell $100. 941-629-5550 BED ki ng w 2 s id e stan d s so lid cherry $400 941-766-0679 BEDR OO M S ET f ull oak 3 -pc w/mattress $300 941-6294950 BEDROOM SET f u ll s i ze B rass Headboard $199 941-6267530 BEDROOM SET , Q ueen Si ze, Mattress & Boxspring. SLEEPER SOFA, Queen Size. $200 For All. (Cash Only) 941698-1075 CHAIR W/OTTOMAN R attan plus cushions $50 941-7640929 CHAISE LOUNGE Al um f rame exc. cond. $50 941-505-1811 CHINA CABINET g l ass shelves, lighted $399 941-3915263 MOVINGSALES 6029 MOVING SALE! TV S tan d , S amsung TVs (46, 32, 19), Coffee Table, Accent Stands, 8x10 Rug, Pictures. All Like New. Best Offer. 330-962-2578 HOUSEHOLD GOODS6030 ARMOIRE WICKER White,6x38,sliding doors NICE $359 941-276-1881 AS IANPrints ( 4 ) Matted & framed $30 941-627-6542 BEAN P O T W/B O WL S BR O WN $25 941-505-0094 BED MATTRESS & BOX . New Will Sell $100. 941-629-5550 BOOK ROMANCE 100 paperbacks $25 941-628-5293 B O X & MATTRE SS FULL,W/Frame CLEAN $90 941-268-8951 CANISTERS(4) BLUE g l ass /Sil ver rooster tps $30 941-6240364 C HANDELIER BB/MAPLE 4DnGlobes w/medal LN $25 941-629-1084 COO KWARE PR O FE SS I O NAL ss 14 pc, all-clad clone $200 941-875-4464 CORNER SHOWER MARBLE base Beige used. $100 941497-6271 CO RNER WALL G uard C lear plastic 96L x5/8W $3 941743-2656 FIESTA DISHES p i n k . 49 pcs. ex, cond. 8pl.s. $145 941-2352203 FL O WER P O T RA C K S 2 O RNAMENTAL IRON $80 941-6276780 F O LDIN G C HAIR Mac S port turqoise quality Unused $10 941-276-1881 G RILL NATHAN S Electric. 10x14. $7 941-830-1531 LAMP White,jacaranda blvd. venice $4 937-427-9653 LAMP S Horse Head and impressive $60 941-769-2389 MAR G ARITA BLENDER El paso $30 941-375-4054 MATTRESS , QUEEN & BOX . Brand New Will Sell $175. Also Have KING. 941-629-5550 MEMF O AM MATTT O PPER 3Queen new $100 419-2832460 MIRR O R 44 x 2 4 vertical $30 941-627-6542 MIRRORS 36 x 30 , 30 x 24 , 26x21, each $39 941-3915263 FREE MERCHANDISE ADS!! To place a FREE merchandise ad go to: sun-classifieds.com and place your ad. Click on Click Here to Place Your Ad Now and follow the prompts. FREE ads are for merchandise UNDER $500. and the ad must be placed online by you. One item per ad, the ad must be 3 lines or less, price must appear in the ad. Your ad will appear online & in print for 7 days! Some restrictions do apply. LIMIT 5 FREE ADS PER WEEK **Everyone Needs to Register on Our New Site** N ee d to Pl ace a Classified Ad? Enter your Classified ad and pay with your credit card 24 hours a day, 7 days week ORIENTAL PICS C oor d vases, decos 4 pcs ea $10 941-8300524 6000 MERCHANDISE NOKOMIS/OSPREY GARAGE SALES6004 Casey Key Luxury Sale1492 Casey Key Rd Nokomis Fri. Mar. 13 8:45am-4pm Sat. Mar. 14 8:45am-1pm Like new designer furniture: Baker & Henredon tables, Natchez chest, ultra suede chair/ottoman, John Widdicomb console, library table & chairs; Chapman lamps, Hancock & Moore chairs, Gieme demi-lune chest, leather lounge chair/ottoman, Kron/Crown leather sofa & chair, Helicon table desk/credenza, Italian chandelier, Leroy Neiman & Appel serigraphs; paintings, telescope, Rosenthal & Royal Doulton china, stemware, barware, silver, kitchenware, 13 oriental rugs, 500 cookbooks, golf clubs,TVs &audio items, designer clothes & accessories, Sidmar Hydrotherapy table & more. Pix: estatesales.net Sale by Julie McClure PUNTAGORDA GARAGE SALES6007 THURS .SAT ., 8AM 3PM , 30329 Cedar Rd. Ridge Harbor. ESTATE SALE!! Collectables & MUCH MORE! ROTONDAAREA GARAGE SALES6008 FRIS AT 8 -4 7 G ol f view Rd. Washer & Dryer, Range, Ref., Tools & Household Furn, Kitchen Items, Pool Equipt. AUCTIONS6020 JACK ROBILLARD, Auctioneers & Appraisers Robillardauctioneers.com (941)-575-9758 ARTS AND CRAFTS6025 A UDUB O N N O RTH american bird prints 6 prints $50 941497-7230 KNITTIN G MA C HINE Passap DM80 w/extras $250 941-4734685 TWIN RAM S tatue i ns id e / outside, 40 X 16 $55 941-7647971 DOLLS6027 BARBIE WINTER VELVET co l lectible newinbox $15 941-8300524 DOLL AMERICAN GIRL J osefina Square Piano vgc $225 941-979-6362 GEISHA PORCEL . D o ll G e i s h a Porcel. Doll 18 $70 941-6131442 FINDYOUR BESTFRIEND INTHE CLASSIFIEDS! MR WONDERFUL or i g b ox $35 941-764-1503 o Q00 II _

PAGE 41

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 17 BICYCLES/ TRICYCLES6135 BEA C H C RUI S ER Panama Jack Mens Clean $65 941-544-0042 BICYCLE ALUMINUM 26 Cruiser Like New $70 201-3902715 BICYCLE R ecum b ent E 21 sp, $225 941-468-1291 BIKE 20 girls S lumber Party NEXT Like NEW $40 941-2688951 BIKE 3 WHEEL DELIVERY AVAIL. $225 941-626-3102 BIKE AMERICAN SCHWINN Typhoon Cln with New tires $175 941-544-0042 BIKE g i r l s goo d f or 6 to 9 yr o ld $35 941-276-0814 BIKE RA C K Trunk Mount $20 941-627-1004 BIKE Revo C ruiser Retro styled Mens $175 941-544-0042 BIKE WE S TERN FLYER G rand Trophy Very Clean! $85 941544-0042 BIKES HIS & h ers bi g t i re n i ce cond. $120/pair 941-626-3102 CANNONDALE MOUNTAIN BIKE USA, Cadium, Like new. Orig. $639; Sell $285. has been stored (315)-225-1896 Engl. TRI C Y C LE brand new, in the box! $275 941-524-1025 TRI C Y C LE new desoto C lassic 3 wheeler Bright lt Blue!! $350 941-544-0042 TRI C Y C LE S 2 Adult good cond. $50/ea 941-214-5901 TOYS/GAMES6138 BARBIE D O LL SCOO TER vespa barbie doll scooter $5 941-258-0810 PHOTOGRAPHY/ VIDEO6140 C AMERA WW 2 1 6 m/m G un Camera x cond $75 941-2769283 S LIDE PR O JE C T O R Kodak 4400 Carousel, $40 931-8412666 TELAPH O T O C AMERA C ase 35mm case. New $20 941505-6290 POOL/SPA/ & SUPPLIES6145 **SPAS & MORE** www.spasandmoreflorida.com new/used 110volt Plug ins. Trade ins Welcome! We Move Hot Tubs 941-625-6600 We Buy Used Hot Tubs HAYWARD P OO L vac with hoses $200 941-637-4668 HOT TUB SEATS 5, WITH LOUNGER AND MAINTENANCE FREE CABINET. 110 OR 220 VOLT. CAN DELIVER $1,895 941-462-0633 POOL EQUIPMENT Ab ove ground pool 110v pump w/filter $300 941-347-8939 SOFTUB PORTABLESPA 110 volts, easy setup $200 941586-9737 S PA CO VER grey 7x7 hardly used $150 941-764-0929 Y Y ouSa ouSa ve ve BigBuc BigBuc ks ks Shopping Shopping Classifieds! Classifieds! EXERCISE/ FITNESS6128 W EI G HT BEN C H Nice condition with weights. $1 941-625-0690 W II S P O RT S NINTEND O New $50 941-375-4054 SPORTINGGOODS6130 A N C H O R DANF O RTH, up to 36 boat $60 941-460-9698 BERKLEY R O D NI C E 2 pc 8 6 12-30# Medium $30 941-4933851 C AMPIN G C HAIR Almost new $25 941-257-8921 C AN O E CO LEMAN W/TROLLING MOTOR $350 941-505-0094 FIREWOOD No camping trip is complete without it! Pine, Oak, or Citrus Split, Bundled, and ready for the firepit! 941-468-4372 FI S HIN GS AND S PIKE S ( 1 0) ALL FOR $25 714-599-2137 FLY FI S HIN G R O D S & Tackle. $50 for ALL! 941-451-8958 F OSS BALL TABLE $ 1 00 9 41468-8690 G AME TABLE BRUNSWICK CENTENNIAL like new 54 inch w/4 swivel adj ustable height black leather chairs $1,800 309-648-6000 GO LF C LUB S Beginners $ 5 0 941-375-4054 G RAPHITE R O D shakespeare intrepid 7 Med $20 941-4933851 G RILL MA G MA 15 Kettle gas New in box $240 941-4566091 HARLEY LEATHERJA C KET XL Las Vegas $100 941-2559427 HARLEY M/ C B OO T S Ladies, Blk, 7 1/2 M $35 941-7667373 H O R S E S H O E S ET PR O F RE G SIZE USA LIKE NEW $20 941286-4894 JER S EY Donovan Mcnabb o ff icial Redskins $40 714-5992137 MI SC S PINNIN G REEL S ALL WORK GREAT $15 714-5992137 POOL TABLE 4 x 8 1 s l ate goo d cond u remove $400 941-6245801 RAWLIN G 5 Fasback Ball G lv RBG34 $50 941-474-4959 S PINNIN G R O D 76 F O R 1530# MONO $35 714-599-2137 FIREARMS6131 9MM REUGER ; 22 G o ld en boy Magnum 22 silver eagle, 380 Thunderbird. Call 440289-1595 BLA C K S EA M O DEL 5 9 mm. Brand New, Never used. $500 (516)-457-8772 BUYING WW II Memorabilia & GunsU.S., Nazi, Japanese Call Eric 941-624-6706 G UN S . S everal Rugers. ALL in Excellent Condition! Some N.I.B. Call (941)-564-8778 S&W MODEL 52-2, 38 Cal Target $950. RareS&W MODEL 41, 22 Cal Long Barrel Target, $1,100., Rare 12 GA BROWNING AUTO, Gold Sporting Clay $585. 941-380-2762 FIREARMS ACCESSORIES6132 GUN CABINET O a k , w / etc h e d glass front light and lock $120 941-456-3388 GOLFACCESSORIES6125 CO BRA Z/L Driver 1 0 .5* R/H VGC $90 941-423-5701 Darsgolfcarts.com EZGO TXT 2 Passenger, high Speed. NEW BATTERIES! Factory Lights, Bag rack, Windshield Rain Curtains Sand buckets. Good Bushings, cables. Fresh tires 5 panel rear view mirror Trades considered Local Delivery $2,485 941-769-1431 DRIVER COBRA b a ffl er lik e new $125 239-826-2388 EZGO TXT 2 Passenger rear seat Red sparkle paint New Batteries TODAY! Lights, Windshield, Bag rack, Sunbrella Rain Curtains Sunbrella Club Cover New Bushings, cables Fresh tires, 5 panel rear view mirror Trades considered Local Delivery $2485, 941-769-1431 darsgolfcarts.com GO LF BALL S , like new, mixed brands, per dozen $6 941-488-7774 GO LF C ART 20 11 C lub C ar, Batteries 1 Year Old. Asking $2,800 715-869-2787 GO LF C LUB S CO BRA S 9 Irons Cobra S-9 Irons R flex. $125 678-523-4575 GO LF C LUB S KIN G CO RBR A 1 iron3 thru S/W-1&3 wds1 Great Big Bertha drv $400 941-661-2631 GO LF C LUB S Ladies 1 0 Tour Model 2 irons $40 941-2704306 REFURBISHER Club Car DS 4 Passenger, Folding Rear Seat, Trojan 875 (E3) 8 Volt Batteries, 6" Lift Kit, 10" Rims, 22x11x10 Tires Stainless Steel Brush Guard and Side Steps, Factory Headlights & Tail Lights, High Speed Motor ( +-20mph) Windshield Charger and Top, Great Blue Paint, Excellent Condition $ 3675. 941-716-6792 Delivery Available NO TEXT PLEASE TRAVEL BA G LK New Huge Pocket paid $120 selling for $45 315-964-2156 TR O JAN BATTERIE S S ix used 6-volt with exchange $150 941-423-3020 EXERCISE/ FITNESS6128 A BR O LLER f or ab exercise $25 941-488-4341 ELIPTICAL GOLDS GYM Lik e new $75 941-828-1311 EXERCISE BIKE COMPACT SIZE W/Timer/Tension $45 941-268-8951 EXERCISE BIKE lif esty l er Model JH4000 $30 941-7640929 TOTAL GYM Ch uc k N orr i s T ota l Gym Like New . $100 941626-4299 TREADMILL P ro f orm C rosswalk nice $150 941-268-8951 VIBRATION PLATE F u ll B o d y new in box $125 941-7632900 HEALTH / BEAUTY6100 BED S IDE CO MM O DE, adjustable $25 941-488-4341 C RUT C HE S Aluminum 4 6 to 5 vgc $10 941-627-6542 FOOT MSGR h omeme di cs f ootpleaser ultra w/heat $30 941474-7866 MASSAGINGSEAT CUSHON $25 941-488-4341 TREES & PLANTS6110 C HERRY T O MAT O or yel pear tomato 8 plants $1.50 941258-2016 FRUITIN G MULBERRY Bush $15 941-204-9100 HAWAIIAN TI Plant Unique TI Plant $15 941-204-9100 HU G E DE S ERTR OS E S BI G Flowering $150 941-204-9100 LG MULBERRYTREE 5 caliper $250 941-474-4959 VIBURNUMGREATFORPRIVACYHEDGE3GAL++ PALMS: FOXTAIL, SYLVESTERPIGMY& MORE. GREAT PRICESSUISNUSURY941-488-7291 PAPAYA C ARIBBEAN Red Fruiting Papaya $10 941-2049100 PONYTAILBONSAIPALMS For 2 plants $10 941-6285293 P O NYTAIL PALM 2 healthy strong 15 in 3 gal pot $8 941258-2016 S EEDLIN G T O MAT O big daddy, delicious, E.girl $1.50 941-258-2016 STAGHORN FERN EXTRA Large Must See $125 315790-9217 STAR FRUITTREES Fl or id a $30 941-204-9100 T O MAT O PLANT S cherry yel pear b.daddy delicious $1.50 941-258-2016 VEGGIES tomatoe, cu k e, k a l e S.chard pepper $1.50 941258-2016 BABYITEMS6120 BREST PUMP M e d e l a P ump N Style w/shoulder bag $99 941493-3851 C RIB Almost New $ 1 2 5 9 41249-8288 GRACO 3 i n 1 0 24 mont h s 3 i n 1 $100 941-375-4054 MOBILE FISHERPRICE R a i nforest motion & music $22 941-764-7971 GOLFACCESSORIES6125 2008 EZGO exc cond. rear seat, new batteries, Cover, Asking $3,200 401-640-4819 DarsGolfCarts.com 2011 club car ds Custom Built. 48 Volt New Batteries (6-8 Volt). Pearl Yellow Paint. Custom Upholstery. Fresh Tires, Charger, New Lights, SS Hubcaps, Rearview Mirror, New Windshield. Local Delivery! $3,975 941-769-1431 MUSICAL6090 3 /4 S TUDENT C ello made in USA $400 941-475-3599 BASS PEDAL B oss ME50B Multi Effects Pedal l $225 810689-8151 B eg i nn i ng Pi ano l essons, For Adults, 16-99, 45 min./$20 En g l. 941-468-6899 Have Fun! CO MPA C T DI SCS Unbelievable collection! $2 941-828-1311 DRUM C ARRYIN GC A S E XL 32x16x24 grt 4 drum kit $55 315-964-2156 KALA TENOR UKULELE M ahogany, Gig Bag $75 575-7702259 KEYB O ARD Yamaha Model#2100 $450 941-7641544 O R G AN L O WRY PRE S TI G E, A5000, 52 Presets, Memory Stick, Disc Recorder 941-629-8730 PIANO K o hl er an d C amp b e ll plays nicely $400 941-4753599 PIAN O DI G ITAL 88 weighted keys $140 941-244-8835 W IND C HIME tuned bass,90L.Nice! $225 941979-6362 MEDICAL6095 BATHTUB & SHOWER GRAB BARS INSTALLED Dont Wait to Fall to Call! Free In-Home Evaluation 25 Years Experience CALL JIMS BATHROOM GRAB BARS, LLC 941-626-4296 4 WHEELWALKER Li f estyle brakes seat pouch $85 941493-3851 ADJUSTABLE BED $100 or with mattress $200 941-639-8121 A IR PURIFIER austin health mate 1500sq ft $125 941-6257900 ALUM RAMP 8 `, f olds in hal f , easy to carry $200 651-491-3784 BL OO D PRE SS URE C UP digital Omron unit,mem & adaptr $30 941-474-7866 C RUT C HE S Wood adjustible $10 941-445-5619 F OO T M SG R homemedics f ootpleaser ultra w/heat $30 941474-7866 H OS P BED air mattress electric $400 941-423-9610 JAZZY MOTORIZED WHEEL CHAIR. New Cond! L/R Controls. $500. 941-697-8925 JAZZY POWERCHAIR b y Pride ex. cond. $475 941-2351946 JAZZY S ELE C T 6 , f our wheels, about 2 yrs old, rarely used. $475 651-491-3784 KNEE SCOO TER WITH BA S KET Roscoe Medical Knee Scotter white with basket $150 941-764-1691 PILLOW THERAPEUTIC SCI A TICA PILLOW NEW $10 941627-6780 P O WER S PA WHIRLP OO L Pollenix $30 941-764-0929 SCOOTER LIFT , B runo. For inside of trunk. $300/obo 941-575-9023 S TETH OSCO PE C lassic II new $75 941-488-4341 WALKER M t l , f o ldi ng,a dj l egs,no wheels,pad hands $25 941474-7866 W HEEL C HAIR extra wide excellent condition $160 941223-7446 ANTIQUES COLLECTIBLES6070 ALWAYS BUYING ANTIQUES, ART, SILVER NEW ENGLAND ANTIQUES (941) 639-9338 ANSONIA PORCELAIN mantle clock no case repair $280 941-223-7446 ANTIQUE SINGER S ew i ng M achine w/ treadle $200 941475-3599 A V O N CO LLE C TIBLE S O LD CAR TRUCK,MUST SEE $20 941-391-6377 BALLANTINE BEER Cl oc k B attery operated $25 941-7648669 BELLE C K S HELL C reamer Tridacna Yellow $30 941-4458958 BELLE C K S HELL C up & Saucer Vintage Neptune $35 941-445-8958 CAMERA ARGUS 75 HAVE BULBS $20 941-391-6377 C L OC K AN SO NIA, keeps perfect time. $139 941-764-7971 CLOWN COLLECTION M any to choose from. $60 941-6295418 C L O WN CO LLE C TI O N variety, figures, pictures $39 941-3915263 COCA COLACOOLERS 2 PAUL FRUM $200 941-3916090 COO R S LI G HTMIRR O R NFL Official Sponsor $35 941-7648669 DRE SS ER 5 drawers. Walnut ex.c. $395 941-235-2203 EARNHARDT SR . S tan d up. Cardboard. $20 941-764-8669 ELVI S TEDDY BEAR S HAVE 4 $75 941-627-6780 FANTAUTI C O AK hall seat $430. Cherry china cupboard $180. 941-421-4646. G EI S HA G IRL P O R C ELAIN CUPS/SAUCERS&CRMR $35 941-505-0094 HEINEKEN W OO DEN S H O E S one pair. $25 941-764-8669 METAL BEERSIGNS 2 IN EX CELLENT CONDITION $40 941391-6090 MI C HEL O B ULTRAMIRR O R 2 Bike riders $20 941-764-8669 MILK GLASS FRUIT BOWL/PITCHER/GLASSES $25 941-505-0094 MIRR O R GO LD LEAF mirror 23X27 $50 941-497-7230 MIRR O R, GO LD LEAF 23 X 2 7 $50 941-497-7230 MULTI FA C EDVA S E 1 0 very different $100 941-445-8968 MURANO GLASS c l own tumbler/juggler $30 941-4743194 PAIR O F Vintage Wicker C hairs online picture $200 941-4853217 PLATE SPODE (2) 200 A nn i v boxed w/cert ea $15 941-6970501 RE CO RD S 1 00 SO F 33 AND 45S $150 941-391-6090 ROUTER C ra f tsman Vi ntage $60 941-451-3958 S AM SO NITE R O UND suitcase faux alligator leather $40 941497-7230 S UIT C A S E S AM SO NITE round faux alligator leather $40 941497-7230 S WAR O V S KI C RY S TAL several items,call $69 941-391-5263 TABLE S INdark wood. $ 15 0 941-629-5418 THE SHOE BOOK BILL SHOEMAKERS SIGN B $15 941-391-6377 TREADLE SEWINGMACHINE Vintage Singer $50 941-4513958 WATERFORD BISCUIT B arre l Cookie Jar Lismore $100 941445-8958 WATERFORD SHIPS D ecanter 10, no chips $100 941-4458958 iW4000000000 Lomita Lomita,r---------iII II.-.-.-.-.JLomitaLomita, Lomitaw9Lomita,Lomita.."may fLomita

PAGE 42

Page 18 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 CADILLAC7030 200 4 C ADILLA C DEVILLE 84K MI $5,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2006 CADILLAC DTS 49K MI $10,990 855-280-4707 DLR 200 7 C ADILLA C DT S 4DR V8 LTHR 94K MI $9,785 855-481-2060 DLR 20 14 C ADILLA C ELR NAV 2,338 MI $47,990 855-280-4707 DLR GreatDealsin theClassifieds! CHEVY7040 1978 CHEVY EL-CAMINO Good Cond., Runs Good. 74K MI $3,500 941-627-4437 1999 CORVETTE CONV. 6 SPD Z51 New Tires & Wheels $19,500 941-374-2562 2003 MONTE CARLO SS Price Correction $4,500. Garage Kept. 941-661-7450 2007 CHEVROLET HHR LT 135K MI $5,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2007 CHEVY MONTE CARLO 44K MI $9,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2008 CHEVY HHR LT 55K MI $10,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2011 CHEVY IMPALA 34K MI $13,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2014 CHEVY CAMARO CONV 14K MI $26,989 855-242-9258 DLR 20 11 C HEVY C AMAR O COUPE 2SS 17K MI $26,988 855-242-9258 DLR CHRYSLER7050 05 CHRYSLER PT-CRUISER 2.4L TURBO CONV. 63,500 MI, Beautiful condition & maintained, always garaged. Automatic top, mechanics simple and quick. Osprey, $5,450/obo **SOLD!** 2002 C HRY S LER S EBRIN G 2DR LTHR CONV 77K MI $5,744 855-481-2060 DLR 2006 CHRYSLER 300C 4DR LTHR 99K MI $10,987 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 2 C HRY S LER 300 M NAV 32K MI $23,990 855-280-4707 DLR DODGE7060 2005 DODGE DURANGO XLT 150K MI $6,987 855-481-2060 DLR 200 5 D O D G E G RANDCARAVAN 89k MI $8,995 941-916-9222 dlr 2012 DODGE GRAND CARA VAN 66K MI $14,875 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 3 D O D G E C HAR G ER SXT RWD 8,248 MII $21,989 855-242-9258 DLR MISCELLANEOUS6260 RECORD COLLECTION includes album covers 5 0 cents each. Entire collection. 941-496-9252 RED SO X S PRIN G TRAININ G 3/16,3/22,3/23 $20 941-2761354 RED SO X V S MET S JET BLUE 3/16 $25 EACH $25 941-2761354 RED SO X V S TWIN S 3 /1 8 2 TKTS $40 EACH $40 941-2761354 RU G D OC T O R Mighty Pro X3;New in-box $350 941-2358397 SCOO TER FUZI O N S P O RT good cond. yellow $20 941628-6251 S EWIN G MA C HINE C ab. Futura II $50 941-627-1004 S I G NAL FLARE 1 2 gauge O lin $15 941-575-0690 TABLE ROUND 5f o ldi ng, M axchief . $75 941-496-9252 TI C KET S RAY S /NYY 3 / 26 Sec204r6s15,16 $100 941391-2325 TI C KET S RAY S /R SO X 3 / 28 Sec204row6s15,16 $100 941-391-2325 T O ILET WHT Rd Bowl E. C . Complete w/seat $20 941629-1084 TV 32 JV C per f ect . $ 45 9 41496-9252 UTILITY/ G R OC ERY C ART Wheels, fold alum $15 941743-2656 VINYL ROLLS s i gn ma k er 15 & 24 $100 612-716-8425 W ATER SO FTNER, Fleck 5 600 with salt tank $200 941-6293279 W ATERPR OO F C HART Ch.Hbr/Wigg Pass,25x48 $15 941-505-6290 WATERPROOF CHART F t. M yr. to Tampa 25x48 $15 941-5056290 WANTED TO BUY/TRADE6270 HAMMOCK FRAME 941-484-6086 W ANTED: JEWELRY G rade Black Sharks Teeth. Call Mike 941-650-3030 7000TRANSPORTATION AUTOMOTIVE7005 WE BUY CARS Top Dollar for your car or truck Call us today 941-473-2277www.pctcars2.com BUICK7020 2000 BUI C K RE G AL L S 61K miles, $5,995 941-916-9222 dlr 2002 BUI C K LE S ABRE 92K MI! $5,295 941-916-9222 DLR 2003 BUICK REGAL 4 D oor Good Looking, Great Running Rebuilt Trans. Good Tires & Brakes. $1,650. 941-505-8258 200 5 BUI C K LE S ABRE Custom, 59K miles $7,995 941-916-9222 DLR 2012 BUICK LACROSSE FWD PREM 3. 38K MI $18,988 855-242-9258 DLR MISCELLANEOUS6260 BATHTUB & SHOWER GRAB BARS INSTALLED Dont Wait to Fall to Call! Free In-Home Evaluation 25 Years Experience CALL JIMS BATHROOM GRAB BARS, LLC 941-626-4296 1 TONHOIST construct i on workers $50 941-445-5619 2 SCOOTER R amps 2 1/2 x 6 aluminum $50 906-322-3198 AFFORDABLE SMOKES$1.30/PACK$13./CARTON ROLLYOUROWNATHOME! TOPBRANDTOBACCOS, TUBES, CASES, RYO MACHINES& PARTSVAPOR E-CIGS E-LIQUIDMADEINUSA LOW PRICES! ROLL A PACK TOBACCO 2739 Taylor Rd. P.G. 941-505-2233 A LUM.TRU C K T OO L Box 6 1 x 20 x 18 1/2 $125 941-6264299 A LUM.TRU C K T OO L Box 70x21 58x17 x21deep $125 941-626-4299 APACHE TEARS C ur i ous m i neral. $2 941-467-4320 BA S EBALL TI C KET S (2) RED SOXvs nyy jet blue 3/13 $75 each 941-276-1354 BA S EBALL TI C KET S (3) RED VSMETS JET BLUE 3/16 GMSR $30 941-276-1354 BEA C H C HAIR S 2 w/att pillow, qck dry fabric $49 941-7647971 BUFFAL O NY C irca 1 8 4 0 s reprints 3,mat/frame $20 941255-0874 BUFFER C AR waxer $ 15 9 41276-0814 C AR GO C ARRIER . Inserts into cargo hitch $100 941-4744959 C ARRYIN G BA G 39 x1 6 x 20 great for decoys etc. $45 315964-2156 CO M C A S T R O UTER WIRELESS , CISCO $20 941-8751757 DAVIT $ 1 30 ,riding lawn mower w/trailer $900. 70 chainlink fence $60. 609-886-5360. D OG B OO K by Margaret Keenan 17x2 . $75 941-4969252 FIREWOOD Split, Bundled, and ready for the firepit! Perfect for these cooler nights! Pine, Oak, Citrus 941-468-4372 G ENERAT O R 6 5 00 BLA C KMAX 5 GALS TANK. $300 941-6976553 HARD HAT S construction workers $5 941-445-5619 JFK B OO K S Presidents statues $10 941-445-5619 LANTERN P OS T LI G HT READY TO INSTALL $19 941-7632581 Finditinthe Classifieds! LEAD MELTER bottom pour 20 # cap. $150 941-624-4244 MASSAGE TABLE case w wheels ec cond $125 941-2760814 PATIO SCREENS s lidi ng patt i o $40 941-497-6979 RAYS VS RED SOX 3/26 2 TKTS $50 EACH $50 941-2761354 RAY S V S YANKEE S 3 / 26 4 TKTS $75 EACH $75 941-2761354 RE CO RD ALBUM CO VER S all kinds of Music. .50 Cent s each. Bulk Sale! 941-496 9252 CATS6232 NOTICE : S tatute 585 . 195 states that all dogs and cat s sold in Florida must be at leas t eight weeks old, have an offi cial health certificate and prop er shots, and be free of intes tinal and external parasites. DOGS6233 NOTICE : S tatute 585 . 195 states that all dogs and cat s sold in Florida must be at leas t eight weeks old, have an offi cial health certificate and prop er shots, and be free of intes tinal and external parasites. DOGS OF VENICE. Your Dog Groomed in my Mobile Salon. 15 Yrs. Exp. Call Stacy (941) 786-7877 PETSUPPLIES & SERVICES6236 A & R Aqua Pros Inc Aquarium Services Installation~Maintenance Fresh & Saltwater Reef Aquariums Livestock Delivery 941-441-8658 Lic/Ins DOG JACKET h ar l ey bik e blk med LN paid $70.00 selling for $20.00 941-830-0346 FISH TANK l g nee d s c l eane d $15.00 941-628-6251 PET CO NTAINMENT Wireless Pet fence $75 941-740-4300 TRAININ G CO L O R Dogtra 1900NCP 1/2 mile $122.00 941-740-4300 APPLIANCES6250 A VANTI WINE C ooler Black & chrome with lock $50 941-5756283 DRYER , KENMORE $100 941-257-8921 ENCOREAPPLIANCES 4155 Whidden Blvd Unit 10 Port Charlotte. Great Pre-owned Name Brands for Less!! 30 day Warr. 941-979-5287 MI C R O WAVE Black, used 3 months, built in $125 941-6285293 MI C R O WAVE ge Above oven $45 941-497-6271 NINJA kitchen system never used. $100 941-979-5134 RAN G E-ELE C TRI C RAN G EELEC.,GE,CLEAN $125 $125 317-933-3444 REFRIGERATOR $175 . Washer & Dryer $350 941626-3102 del avail REFRIGERATOR F r i g id a i re Dorm Type Black & SS $55 941-629-7130 REFRIGERATOR FRIGIDARE stainless, s/s, water/ice VGC $450 630-234-5180 REFRI G ERAT O R G .E.BI SQ UE S/S 25CF $240 941-629-7130 REFRIGERATOR GE Whi te Freezer on top. $80 941-4976271 STOVE KENMORE Bl ac k , use d very little $250 941-628-5293 STOVE KENMORE , Bl ac k Smooth top, Self cleaning $125 941-475-2533 S T O VE MA G I C C HEF , White self clean coil burners $100 941-475-2533 WA S HER & DRYER $350 941-626-3102 WASHER & DRYER A Li tt l e Rust But They Work Great. $100. For Set. 941-456-5059 HEAVY/CONST. EQUIPMENT6180 W HEEL BARRR O W C ontractorsLike New $55 941-4744959 TOOLS/ MACHINERY6190 BELT S ANDER P O RTABLE Ryobi 3x18 $35 941-451-3958 C ARPENTER BELT leather 1 2 holders as new $10 941-2864894 CO MPRE SSO R 4 0 gallon with hose $225 941-626-3102 CORDLESS DRILL/DRIVER Ryobi 12v 3/8 $25 941-4513958 DRILL cra f tsman 19 . 2V T wo Drill Set in Case $29 941-5758736 DRILL/ DRIVER accessories kit Craftsman 76 pieces $25 941-451-3958 G ENERAT O R-coleman 6200 -w $250 941-627-1004 G LA SS G RINDIN G MA C HINE Commercial 4 wheels $50 941-204-1849 LADDER 28 alum ext. Werner $100 941-204-1849 LADDER Werner collapsible 300 LB $125 941-391-6090 PRE SS URE WA S HER Troybuilt 2500 psi $220 941-485-0681 R O UTER B & D PLUN G E call Joe in Venice FL $30 941-4936271 SCREW GUN f or D ry W a ll Corded Dewalt new cord $45 315-964-2156 SC R O LL S AW C ra f tsman 1 6 $90 315-790-9217 TABLE S AW C entral Machinery 10 $100 315-790-9217 TABLE SAW C ra f tsman 8 $80 315-790-9217 TABLE S AW Ryoai 1 0 with stand In exc cond $50 941786-7001 TOOL CHEST cra f tsman, EXC cond $500 941-743-3321 TOOLS ASSORTMENT TABLE FULL CALL $45 941-391-6377 WAXER/POLISHER ORBITAL 11 3AMP USE ONCE $20 941286-4894 W EED EATER G as Hand Held Blower E/C $50 941-493-6309 OFFICE/BUSINESS EQUIP./SUPLIES6220 DE S K S ET 3 P C C herry wood l shaped $300 941-258-1255 EXE C UTIVE DE S K metal 30Wx60L 6 drawers $100 941-204-1691 FILE C ABINET S auder 4 drawer with file set up $30 315790-9217 OFFICE OUTFITTERS Pre-owned & new office furniture. VENICE 941-485-7015 TYPEWRITER & TABLE S pare ribbon. $45 941-467-4320 RESTAURANT SUPPLIES6225 BUTCHER BLOCK stan di ng 24x24 w/oil $175 941-4976271 DI S HE S 7 0 restaurant dishes, assorted sizes, $500 941-7404300 DISHES 772 restaurant di s h es, asst sizes $500 941-740-4300 BIRDS6231 COCKATIELS PEARL FEMALE & Gray male 10mths old $100. (941)-270-8206 Englewood LAWN & GARDEN6160 1 8 VBAT & C HAR G ER f its weedeater eqpt $10 941-2864894 BL O WER RED MAX Runs G ood $175 863-286-1127 C RAFTMAN 15 C U dmp cart Pull with tractor $50 941-7435249 C RAFTMAN R O T O TILLER 5Hp Briggs Motor $75 941743-5249 C u ddl e up b y t h e fi re ! Firewood Split, Bundled and ready for the firepit! Pine, Oak, or Citrus, 941-468-4372 DR TRIMMER/MOWER Lik e new condition. $175 941-4758061 EDGER B@D e l ec hd uty new $25 941-276-0814 HED G E TRIMMER b & d good condition $30 941-493-7794 LAWN ED G IN G , concreteedging scalloped side 190 LF 125pcs x 18 $100 941-6377706 LEAF BL O WER Toro lea f blower. 30.00. 493-7794 $30 941-493-7794 PRE SS UREWA S HER excell 2400psi Honda 5hp $220 941485-0681 PU S H LAWNM O WER Bolens 22. $45 941-467-4320 PUSH MOWER MTD PUSH Mower Like New $100 941485-0681 PU S HM O WER, C RAFT S MAN 21 6.75hp $150 941-485-0681 RIDIN G LAWNM O WER Craftsman vgc 42MD 18hp $500 518-424-3069 RIDIN G M O WER S cotts by John Deer 17.5hp 42 cut, $400 941-743-4089 SHELL AGGREGATE 3 cu y d , U load & haul $15 941-4756424 TOP SOIL F or S a l e ! Pl eas e call: 941-468-4372 W EEDEATER gas (f eatherlite )) $75 941-626-4274 STORAGE SHEDS/ BUILDINGS6165 WEATHER KING PORTABLE BUILDINGS Purchase or Rent To Own! Free Delivery & Set Up. Ask Your Dealer, Mattas Motors About Options 941-916-9222 BUILDING SUPPLIES6170 1000 ATTIC FOIL CUT COSTS! $115 941-441-0252 A/C UNIT PORTABLE 12 , 000 BTU used 1 week $250 941255-9427 AC UNIT 1 0 , 000 BTU W/Remote Works Well $50 941-2688951 AC -UNIT Air handler 3 -ton Clean R-22 $100 941-6286251 BRI C K S A SSO RT. O F S Z.MU S T SEE $20 941-391-6377 CERAMIC BATHHODLER new towel/papr/soap $15 941-2864894 GALVANIZED CHAIN li n k f ence 117 x 4 $250 518-791-4137 HURRICANE SHUTTERS Lexan 14 x73.5 $15 941-6253802 LI G HT FIXTURE S W/BULB S Single(7)4ft&(2)6ft $50 941764-0929 TOILET WHTRd B ow l E . C . Complete w/seat $20 941629-1084 TUB CORNER NEW READY TO INSTALL $175 941-763-2581 r dv11 11 1 1 1II. 1

PAGE 43

Tuesday, March 10, 2015 ads.yoursun.net E/N/C The Sun Classified Page 19 BUDGETBUYS7252 #1 TOP CASH PAID UP TO $5,000 CARS, TRUCKS,ANYCOND. 941-650-5785 1998 CHRYSLER SEBRING Conv. Loaded, Great Cond. 110K Mi. $2300 941-626-8448 1998 LINCOLN TOWN-CAR 106k miles, Runs well. $1100 . 941-429-2774 North Port AUTOS WANTED7260 ALL VEHICLES Wanted Dead or Alive, Top $$ Paid Starting at $250$5000 Free pick up 941-623-2428 BEST $$ FOR JUNKERS Available 24/7 941-286-3122, 623-5550 WE BUY CARS RUNNING OR NOT! $400 CASH + UP Frank 941-276-0204 ALL AUTOS WANTED w i t h or without title, any condition, year, make or model. We pay up to $20,000 and offer free towing. Call Cindy at 941-565-1571 We Buy & pick up junk CARS 941-661-1928 AUTO PARTS/ ACCESSORIES7270 BF GOODRICH (4) 15 Ti res, 225/15/75, 32K on Tire, $50 941-575-2883 CAR DOORS 92 T oyota $125 941-676-2019 ELE C TRI C IMPA C T DRILL with charger in case like new 24 volt 4 sockett sizes $75 941306-8583 LEBRA $39 9 416 7 6 20 1 9 REAR END f or a 200 5 2 Corvette $490 941-698-0722 RIM S ( 4 ) 1 6 " Nissan oem each $20 989-790-0638 ROOF TOPCARRIER $75 941-697-7370 S PARE WHEEL Toyota C amry $45 941-676-2019 TIRE S ( 4 ) less than 5 000 miles Good Year Eagle GT. 215/55/R17. Like new. 60,000 mile $250941-889-8558 TIRE S ( 4 ) P1 9 5 6 5R15 2 -very good cond & 2-fair cond $150 941-740-4300 TIRES N ew ta k e o ff s start i n g @ $39.95 Installed & Balanced Call for Inventor y 941-639-5681 TRUCK BED D o d ge D a k ota 4 dr. $350 941-484-2383 AUTO SERVICE & REPAIR7280 C HEVY and F O RD vehicles Are Eligible For FREE Oil Change/Tire Rotation Combo! Visit www.Shop.BestMark.comor call us at 800-969-8477 NISSAN7200 2009 NISSAN ALTIMA 58K MI $13,987 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 0 NI SS AN 3 7 0 Z 50K MI $22,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 0 NI SS AN ALTIMA 84K MI $11,875 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 3 NI SS AN PATHFINDER 39K MI $29,990 855-280-4707 DLR TOYOTA7210 2000 T O Y O TA SO LARA C onv. Camry Body, good cond., books at $4200, sell for $3200, has everything, works 941-613-3423 2004 TOYOTA CAMRY XLT, Non-smoker,Exc. Cond. $6,500 941-786-6239 200 4 T O Y O TA HI G HLANDER 189K MI $9,978 855-481-2060 DLR 200 4 T O Y O TA RAV4 BASE 125K MI $7,685 855-481-2060 DLR 2007 TOYOTA CAMRY SOLARA 2DR SE 117K MI $7,844 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 0 T O Y O TA CO R O LLA 64K MI $11,784 855-481-2060 DLR 2010 TOYOTA PRIUS 26K MI $18,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 0 T O Y O TA RAV4 BASE 76K MI $13,874 855-481-2060 DLR 20 11 T O Y O TA AVAL O N LTD 18K MI $23,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 11 T O Y O TA RAV4 36K MI $17,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 2 T O Y O TA CO R O LLA 35K MI $14,854 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 2 T O Y O TA S IENNA 20K MI $23,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 14 T O Y O TA PRIU S NAV 26K MI $24,990 855-280-4707 DLR VOLKSWAGEN7220 20 1 3 V O LK S WA G EN PA S SAT SUNROOF 23K MI $25,988 855-242-9258 DLR 2013 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA TDI TRIM 13K MI $23,988 855-242-9258 DLR VOLVO7230 2009 V O LV O S80 SDN I6 TURBO AWD 50K MI $15,988 855-242-9258 DLR MISC. IMPORTS7240 20 1 2 FIAT 1 2 4 13K MI $11,745 855-481-2060 DLR ANTIQUES/ COLLECTIBLES7250 1929 FORD HUCKSTER All Orig. Exc. Cond. 4 Cyl. 29K MI $35,000 941-639-7430 INFINITI7165 2011 ACURA RDX TECH PKG 36K MI $25,911 855-242-9258 DLR JAGUAR7175 2011 JAGUAR XF NAV 45K MI $29,911 855-242-9258 DLR 20 1 3 JA G UAR XF I4 RWD 19K MI $35,520 855-242-9258 DLR KIA7177 2009 KIA OPTIMA LX Cert Loaded, Warranty Incld. 21 K MI $12,900/obo 941-387-4485 2010 KIA SOUL 5DR 38K MI $13,855 855-481-2060 DLR 2011 KIA RIO FUEL EFFICIENT. 60K MI $10,695 941-916-9222 DLR 2012 KIA SEDONA LX 47K MI $15,877 855-481-2060 DLR LEXUS7178 20 1 0 LEXU S I S 2 5 0C CONV. 15K MI $30,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 0 LEXU S I S 2 5 0C CONV. 24K MI $32,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 0 LEXU S I S 2 5 0C CONV. 37K MI $30,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2010 LEXUS IS 250C NAV. 23K MI $35,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2010 LEXUS IS 250C NAV. 33K MI $32,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 2 LEXU S I S 2 5 0C CONV. 31K MI $34,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2008 LEXU S L S -4 60 42K MI $28,988 855-242-9258 DLR MAZDA7180 2006 MAZDA 6 94K MILES $6,895 941-916-9222 DLR 20 1 2 MAZDA MIATA-MX-5 CONV 5,606 MI $19,990 855-280-4707 DLR MERCEDES7190 2007 MERCEDES BENZ C230 94K MI $11,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 11 MER C EDE S -BENZ E350 NAV 76K MI $26,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2012 MERCEDES BENZ CLS63A 20K MI $69,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2012 MERCEDES BENZ 21K MI $33,189 855-242-9258 DLR MINICOOPER7192 2008 MINI COO PER 79K MI $9,911 855-280-4707 DLR 2010 MINI COOPER 46K MI $14,987 855-481-2060 DLR HONDA7160 2006 H O NDA PIL O T 117K MI $10,777 855-481-2060 DLR 2006 H O NDA PIL O T EXL RES 71K MI $13,874 855-481-2060 DLR 2007 HONDA ACCORD 4DR LX 75K MI $11,454 855-481-2060 DLR 2008 H O NDA C IVI C 62K MI $10,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2008 H O NDA C IVI C HYBRID 4DR 78K MI $9,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2008 H O NDA C R-V LX 2WD 128K MI $9,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2008 H O NDA ELEMENT SC 79K MI $15,877 855-481-2060 DLR 2008 H O NDA PIL O T 2WD VP 94K MI $12,985 855-481-2060 DLR 2009 HONDA CR V 64K MI $15,844 855-481-2060 DLR 2009 HONDA FIT SPORT MT 30K MI $11,950 855-481-2060 DLR 2010 HONDA ACCORD 31K MI $14,774 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 0 H O NDA A CCO RD 40K MI $14,874 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 0 H O NDA IN S I G HT 49K MI $13,758 855-481-2060 DLR 2010 HONDA PILOT DVD 85K MI $16,911 855-280-4707 DLR 2011 HONDA ACCORD 59K MI $14,854 855-481-2060 DLR 2011 HONDA PILOT 45K MI $22,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 2 H O NDA A CCO RD 4DR LX 20K MI $14,987 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 2 H O NDA A CCO RD 4DR LX 33K MI $14,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2012 HONDA CR-Z Hybird, Red, Nav. 11k mi, under warr. 12/15 $12,900 941-255-0070 20 1 2 H O NDA PIL O T 16K MI $27,990 855-280-4707 DLR 20 1 3 H O NDA A CCO RD 26K MI $22,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2013 HONDA FIT 48K MI $13,987 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 3 H O NDA FIT BSE 12K MI $15,874 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 3 H O NDA A CCO RD EX-L ONLY 10K MI $22,989 855-242-9258 DLR 2013 HONDA CIVIC LX 26K MI $15,911 855-242-9258 DLR HYUNDAI7163 2006 HYUNDAI SO NATA GLS SNRF 96K MI $7,844 855-481-2060 DLR 2008 HYUNDAI AZERA LMTD 111K MI $8,975 855-481-2060 DLR 2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT CLEAN, LOW MILES $7,995 941-916-9222 DLR 20 1 2 HYUNDAI A CC ENT 4DR 55K MI $10,785 855-481-2060 DLR 2012 HYUNDAI ACCENT 4DR GLS 54K MI $10,874 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 2 HYUNDAI A CC ENT 5DR GAS 22K MI $11,687 855-481-2060 DLR MERCURY7100 1999 GRAND MARQUIS LS69k mi, Sr. Owned, 25mpg,Garaged, Only $3450/obo Call 941-786-5640 2004 M ERC. G RANDM ARQUISLS 42K MI, 941-916-9222 dlr PONTIAC7130 1 99 7 P O NTIA C F O RMULA 2DR LTHR CONV 73K MI $11,985 855-481-2060 DLR SATURN7135 PRO POWER AUTO SALES4140 Whidden Blvd Port Charlotte, 33980 01 L200 Sedan $3,175 02 L200 Sedan$3,599 04 Vue SUV $4,200 04 Vue SUV, AWD $4,599 06 Vue 4 cyl $5,200 07 Vue $5,495 06 Vue 6cyl $5,899 08 Vue XE $8,299 07 Sky Conv.$8,850 07 Outlook XE 8 pass $8,999 07 Outlook XR 8 pass$9,450 Used Saturn Parts & Service941-627-8822 USED CAR DEALERS7137 Mattas Motors 941-916-9222 Buy Here Pay Here WE FINANCE EVERYONE MUSTHAVEINCOME& DOWNPAYMENT941-473-2277www.pctcars2.com ACURA7145 200 7 A C URA TL 63K MI $15,185 855-481-2060 DLR 20 11 A C URA MDX 50K MI $29,990 855-280-4707 DLR AUDI7147 200 7 AUDI A4 20 T 4DR LTHR SNRF 66K MI $11,474 855-481-2060 DLR BMW7148 2011 BMW 535I SE 1-OWNER. 75K MI $27,988 855-242-9258 DLR 20 1 2 BMW 33 5I TURBOCHARGED 12K MI $35,988 855-242-9258 DLR Y Y ouSa ouSa ve ve BigBuc BigBuc ks ks Shopping Shopping Classifieds! Classifieds! DODGE7060 20 14 D O D G E C HALLEN G ER RT 2DR 29K MI $27,989 855-242-9258 DLR FORD7070 1 989 MU S TAN G CO NVERTIBLE 5.0 82k MI. AT, AC. Good Cond. $6,500 941-460-0355 2002 F O RD THUNDERBIRD 127K MI $11,990 855-280-4707 DLR 2003 F O RD MU S TAN G 127K MI $5,987 855-481-2060 DLR 2007 FORD FUSION V6 73K MI $8,995 941-916-9222 DLR 2010 FORD FOCUS 35K MI $9,987 855-481-2060 DLR 20 1 2 F O RD F OC U S 4DR SE 69K MI $11,854 855-481-2060 DLR 2013 FORD ESCAPE SEL, Ecoboost. Touch Panel + Sync. Loaded! $19,900 315-9 64-2156 20 1 3 F O RD F OC U S 25K MI $13,990 855-280-4707 DLR FREE MERCHANDISE ADS!! To place a FREE merchandise ad go to: sun-classifieds.com and place your ad. Click on Click Here to Place Your Ad Now and follow the prompts. FREE ads are for merchandise UNDER $500. and the ad must be placed online by you. One item per ad, the ad must be 3 lines or less, price must appear in the ad. Your ad will appear online & in print for 7 days! Some restrictions do apply. LIMIT 5 FREE ADS PER WEEK **Everyone Needs to Register on Our New Site** Need To Place a Classified Ad? Enter your classified ad and pay with your credit card 24 hours a day, 7 daysa week. GMC7075 20 1 3 G M C TERRAIN NAV 14K $27,990 855-280-4707 DLR JEEP7080 1997 JEEP GRAND CHERO KEE 4wd, Cold ac, Great condition. Hi miles, Asking $2000. 631-848-1611 2012 J EEP G RANDC HEROKEELARE 4WD 37K MI $26,989 855-242-9258 DLR 20 14 JEEP WRAN G LER SAHA. 7,532 MI $31,910 855-242-9258 DLR LINCOLN7090 2010 LINCOLN MKS Low miles New tires Prestine cond. ! $18,500/obo 941-626-0067 %0 L%%% % w,,IooooooooLaftoftL0440,LOOKBaas`Eurvx CAL S w,sNTVna"PlEA.# 179608 lr-. Pik-MATTAS MOTORS o`ip941-916-9222"SAVING YOU MONEY MATTERS4.AT NATTASMOTORS" ---rtiwft

PAGE 44

Page 20 The Sun Classified E/N/C ads.yoursun.net Tuesday, March 10, 2015 MOTOR HOMES/ RVs7380 31 2001 Ch a ll enger new t i res, & battery, 24K mi, no slides, no pets, no smoke. $22,000 Call 941-766-1022 I BUY TRAVEL TRAILERS, 5th Wheels Motor Homes & Trucks I Come to You! Call Dave Anytime. 813-713-3217 I WANT YOUR RV. Well Sell It FREE! SKIP EPPERS RVs941-639-6969 Punta Gorda Closed Sun. & Mon. Y Y ouSa ouSa ve ve BigBuc BigBuc ks ks Shopping Shopping Classifieds! Classifieds! NEWHOLIDAYRAMBLERSA MUSTSEEMOTORHOMEMANYMODELSRV WORLD INC OF NOKOMISFAMILYOWNED/OPERATEDFOR37 YRS2110 US 41 NOKOMIS941-966-2182 RV Collision RepairsCustomer and Insurance Modern shop, quality work! FREE ESTIMA TES .RV WORLD Inc.of NokomisFAMILYOWNED/OPERATEDFOR37 YRS2110 US 41Nokomis 941-966-2182 RV SERVICE $PECIAL$ Lg. Parts Showroom Factory Warranty All models Wash & Hand Wax Brake Flush Roof Reseal RV Propane & Bottles Water Leak Test RV Wash New Tires & BalanceRV WORLD INC.of Nokomis FAMILYOWNED/OPERATEDFOR37 YRS2110 US 41 Nokomis, 941-966-2182 RVSWANTEDCASH/CONSIGN/TRADECALL: MARKRV WORLD INC OF NOKOMISFAMILYOWNED/OPERATEDFOR37 YRS2110 US 41 NOKOMIS941-966-2182 SATURN TOW-CARS Starting at $2,500. Blue-Ox Tow hitches sold & installed. THE SATURN GUYS PRO-POWER AUTO SALES 4140 Whidden Blvd PC 33980 (941) 627-8822. WANTED All M otor Homes, TTs, 5th whls, PopUps, Vans conversion & passenger, cars & trucks. CASH paidon the spot for quick sale. 941-347-7171 RV/CAMPER PARTS7382 BRAKE S AIR C YLINDER RoadmasterModel 9000 $75 941-769-3895 EVEN BRAKE SYSTEM F or Tow Car. Like New! $700 941-697-4426 HITCH ADAPTER R oa d master high low 8 inch Drop $50 941769-3895 PATIO RUG 6 x 9 R evers ibl e lik e new condition $30 941-6243091 REE S E E Q UALIZIN G Hitch with sway control $150 Roadmaster Stow master Tow Bar $200 941-460-6686 TOW BAR ROADMASTER FALCON 2 w/cover $150 941769-3895 WATER SOFTENER $125 941-697-0940 CYCLES/MOPEDS/ SCOOTERS7360 SCOOTER , 150 CC , H ar dl y used, only 300 miles, $1,600 941-875-2393 CAMPERS/ TRAVELTRAILERS7370 2012 23F un Fi n d er Brand New, Never Used! $16,000/obo 941-460-6040 28` COPPERCANYON Very Good Condition, Lots of Extras. $16,000 OBO 941-276-9401 30 20 15 PUMA RK SS , S uper slideouts, Loaded, Must Sell Now! $19,300 321-287-8747 33`6 FLEETWOOD 3 Slides. in a 5 Star Resort in Arcadia. $18,500. (304)-476-2202 ADVERTISE In TheClassifieds! MOTOR HOMES/ RVs7380 2006 FOURWINDS CHATEAU 28 Class C 450 Ford super duty, V-10, new tires Sleeps 8, ex cond. $23,995 OBO 941-423-7771 2015 WINNEBAGOS2014 Model CLEARANCE!NO .1 SELLING R V RV World Inc.of Nokomis FAMILYOWNED/OPERATEDFOR37 YRS2110 US 41,Nokomis I-75 Exit 195 1-800-262-2182www.rvworldinc.com 2 20 0 1 1 5 5 R R O O A A D D T TR R E E K K# # 1 1 S SE E L L L L I I N N G GC CA A M M P P E E R RV VA A N NRV WORLDINCOFNOKOMISFAMILYOWNED/OPERATEDFOR37 YRS2110 US 41 NOKOMIS941-966-2182www.rvworldinc.com 6 DAYS ONLYMARCH 10th-15thMOTOR HOMESTRAILERS5TH WHEELSVAN CAMPERSBring your Trade, Title and Payment Book!$AVE BIG NOWR.V. WORLD INC. OF NOKOMIS2110 RT 41, NOKOMIS, FL I-75 EXIT 195 1-800-262-2182 WWW.RVWORLDINC.COM March Mega RV Sales Event TRAILER & ACCESSORIES7341 2014 LOOK 6` x 12` V-Nose, Drop Door, Like New! $2,200 Paid $2,700. 704-968-3244 2014 TRIPLE CROWN TRAILER 6x16 $1900 941-916-9222 Dlr. 2014 TRIPLE CROWN TRAILER 7x16 Car Hauler 941-916-9222 Dlr. 6`X12` KRISTI Like New! VNose, Tubular Steel Construction. $2,595 315-964-2156 6X10 LARK ENCLOSED V-NOSE TRAILER $2,095 941-916-9222 Dlr. TRAILER 2008 GVR 5X8, 2200LBS, $1150/OBO CALL 941-204-3811 P O NT OO N TRAILER, up to 20, tandem wheels, $350. Call 941-916-1923. ROYS TRAILER COUNTRY NewPre-Owned CargoUtility Trailers Parts Repairs-Tires Welding. We BUY Trailers! Trades Welcome. Open Sundays 10am-3pm Ask For Shawn. 941-575-2214 4760 Taylor Rd P.G. TRAILER WIN C H o ff boat trailer $25 941-257-8921 WANTED : GALV BOAT TRAILER for 17-18 I/B/O/B Boat. 513-470-0977 Engl Area CYCLES/MOPEDS/ SCOOTERS7360 1987 H/D FXRS/SE 33K mi, Exc. Cond. Garaged $7,000 941-661-7844 2002 HONDA VTX-1800 Black. Many Access. 10,500 Mi $6,500 941-979-7656 2004 HONDAVLX Shadow 600 CC, 13,600 mi, like new, extras $3,500 941-525-6493 2007 HARLEY-DAVIDSON SOFTAILCUSTOM. Low Mi. Great Cond. 1600cc. 6 Speed. Windshield. Leather Saddlebags. $10,000 obo 239-313-9867 HARBOR SCOOTERS for all your scooter needs... 3315 Tamiami Trl. PG We Repair Scooters too! 941-347-8705 Sym Scooters Are here! BOATS-POWERED7330 1 8 200 7 AN G LER 1 80 CC with 2007 Trailer. 115 HP Merc Optimax $12,995 941-625-0132 28 LARSON 280 Cabrio : NEW fuel tank, pumps, starters, batts, new SB engine, PT refurb, carbs rebuilt, w/ raft & MUCH more! Can fax/email list 2 U. $17,900. 941-697-3335 REDUCED 28 SEA FOX cc Pro Series W/twin Suzuki 175hp. 4 strokes low hrs. With/Magic tilt alum. Trailer, Well maintained. Nice Boat $36,300 816-365-9305 29 6 Regal Commodore 2002 Twin IO, AC, Radar, GPS, Canvas Camper Covers. Electric Toilet, TV, VCR, Windless, Generator. Loaded. $32,000 OBO 508-942-4600 JUST REDUCED SAILBOATS 7331 17 VICTORIA SAIL BOAT inclds trailer & motor. $4,500 303-517-4266 Punta Gorda 2 5 O DAY swing keel in water now $100 941-286-7746 8 SAILING DINGHY w i t h oars, light weight, almost new $499 863-465-7554 Lake Placid MISC. BOATS7333 13 1978 BOSTON WHALER-SPORT, 35HP Mercury. Fish Finder, No Trailer. Great Condition! $3,800. 920-765-2026 DINGHY N ew, H an d cra f te d , Wood $399 OBO 941-625-4764 OUTBOARD/ MARINE ENGINES7334 J O HN SO N 2 HP, 2 stroke $150.00 575-770-2259 MARINE SUPPLY & EQUIP.7338 BOAT CUSHIONS 2 f o ldi ng / reclinig canvas navy $20 941637-4668 BOOK Ch apman Pil ot i ng S ea & Sm Boat Handling LN $15 941697-0501 CAT TRAX B eac h Wh ee l s launch you boat off the beach. $225 864-376-3725 MARINE RADIO Cl ar i on M235 AM/FM/CD. New in box. $30 941-505-2672 OUTRIGGERS (2) sets an d 9 pole holders. Lees Miami $275 941-460-6180 941-473-6644 PADDLE BOAT , seats 5 $225 941-468-1291 BOATS-POWERED7330 21 2007 SEA RAY LAGUNA B210SC, incls alum Trailer, 150HP Verado Merc OB, Full Bimini Top, Pwr Pole & Trim Tabs $18,900 941-374-2562 21 HURRICANE03 Center console 150 Yamaha F.I, low hrs, Garmin GPS, compass, porta potty room & much more. Well maintained; Bargain at $9,900 sold sold sold 2 1.5 1 998 LAR SO NWeekender, 265 orig Hour, 5.7 V8 engine, Tandem Trailer, Like New $9,900 941-698-0979 22 2006 SEA CHASER T-top. Set Up For Fishing. Stored Indoors Year Round. Many Extras. $17,500 941-697-4006 22 HURRICANE DECK BOAT 115HP Yamaha 4 stroke outboard, Garmin Navagation system, Tandem 3 wheel trailer. $7,000 sold sold sold 22 SUNCRUISER PONTOON Boat 2004. 115HP 4stroke Johnson motor Trailer/ Marine GPS GREAT condition. Many extras. Ready for the water. $11,000. 217-493-9636 Cashinwith Class! 24 2000 OCEAN RUNNER CCWA, Newer 225 Yamaha, Low Hrs., Enclosure T-Top, Electronics & Trailer. $18,500. 941-706-7798 24 SPORT 2000PRO-LINE Center Console T-Top. 2006 Evinrude 250HP, E-Tec, bait well, 8 rod holders, Lowrence GPS /Fishfinder, Porta-pottie, 5.2 gal, Excellent cond. $23,900. (Below NADA) 941766-7311 or 941-840-8228 25 1997 FOUR WINNS Cruiser, 5.7L V8, low hrs, many extras $11,000 941-473-4308 27 SEARAY 1987 268 SUNDANCER freshwater, 454 Chevy, Cary on A/C Sleeps 6 New items, inclds trailer $10,500 937-750-7620 VANS7290 2007 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY LMTD Van. 78k mi $10,795 941-916-9222DLR 2009 MAZDA 5 MINIVAN 57K Mi! 6 Psgr. Red w/ Tan Int. Clean! $7,950. 941-456-0053 2012 DODGE G ran d C aravan W HEELCHAIR van, 10 lowered floor & ramp. 941-870-4325 TRUCKS/ PICK-UPS7300 2004 D o d ge R am1500 LIke New w/ Cap. 93k MI $10,995 941-916-9222 DLR APPLY NOW DONTWAIT. DRIVETODAYGUARANTEEDCREDIT APPROVAL941-473-2277www.pctcars2.com Y Y ouSa ouSa ve ve BigBuc BigBuc ks ks Shopping Shopping Classifieds! Classifieds! BOATS-POWERED7330 13 2001 BOSTON WHALER SPORT w/ 40HP Mercury & 2005 Galvanized Trailer. $3,500 941-575-7352 17 TAHOEQ3, Run About. 2002 Mercruiser 3.0L I/O, Incl. Trailer w/ Surge Brakes, New Bimini Top. Excellent Condition! $7,500. 937-382-0009 18 2005 SWEETWATER Pontoon Boat 40HP, 100 Running Hrs.On Motor, New Fish Finder & Marine Radio, $8,500 863-558-6124 20 SOUTHWIND fiberglass deck boat w/ motor & trailer. 115 Yamaha 4 stroke. Low Mileage, Exc. Cond. $16,200 508-951-1530 20 Team Sailfish, 1996 w / trailer. Ctr console, Yamaha 130 2 stroke w/SS prop, EC $6,900 941-626-4571 or 941-627-5777 REDUCED 20 2000 HYDRA-SPORTCC w/ Yamaha, 4s, 225HP, 375 Housrs on Motor, 2 New Batteries, Garmin GPS Color, Exc. Cond. $16,500 941-391-6377 Not Actual photo Lwa4Ltom, aAll1 1 1 1V,4N0, AARK" M4


xml version 1.0 encoding UTF-8
REPORT xmlns http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss xmlns:xsi http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance xsi:schemaLocation http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitssReport.xsd
INGEST IEID E7J2DLLYD_DT087L INGEST_TIME 2015-04-06T18:51:34Z PACKAGE AA00016616_00651
AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT UF PROJECT UFDC
FILES