Citation
News-herald

Material Information

Title:
News-herald
Uniform Title:
News-herald (Panama City, Fla. : 1970)
Added title page title:
Panama City News Herald
Place of Publication:
Panama City, FL
Publisher:
Halifax Media Group, Tim Thompson - Publisher, Mike Cazalas - Editor
Creation Date:
August 6, 2016
Publication Date:
Frequency:
Daily
regular
Language:
English

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Newspapers -- Panama City (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Newspapers -- Bay County (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Florida -- Bay County ( fast )
Florida -- Panama City ( fast )
Genre:
Newspapers. ( fast )
newspaper ( sobekcm )
newspaper ( marcgt )
Newspapers ( fast )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Florida -- Bay -- Panama City
Coordinates:
30.166847 x -85.665513

Notes

Dates or Sequential Designation:
Vol. 1, no. 1 (May 1, 1970)-

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
Copyright Halifax Media Group, Tim Thompson - Publisher, Mike Cazalas - Editor. 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:
34303828 ( OCLC )
sn 96027210 ( LCCN )
ocm34303828

Related Items

Preceded by:
Panama City news
Preceded by:
Panama City herald (Panama City, Fla. : 1952)

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** Business .........................A7 Diversions ......................B7 Local & State ...............B1-6 Obituaries ......................B3 Sports.........................C1-5 Viewpoints ....................A6 THURSDAYMostly sunny 61 / 45WEDNESDAYSunny; cool 59 / 38TODAYSunny 61 / 41 Panama City News Herald Want to subscribe? Call 850-747-5050 SPORTS | C1WOMENS SOFTBALLGulf Coast set for Panhandle Conference opener NATION & WORLD | A3A PICTURE IS WORTH ...George W. Bush reveals instant bestseller Portraits of Courage LOCAL & STATE | B1BACK ON THE ATTACKGov. Scott keeps up pressure on House Republicans Tuesday, March 14, 2017 PANAMA CITY @The_News_Herald facebook.com/panamacitynewsherald75 ¢ www.newsherald.comFord Seeuws takes a break from sur“ ng at St. Andrews State Park in 2016. A new online campaign to advertise the Beach year round was endorsed Monday by the Bay Tourist Development Council. [ANDREW WARDLOW/NEWS HERALD FILE] By John Henderson522-5108 | @PCNHjohn | jhenderson@pcnh.comAnew online campaign to advertise the Beach year round was endorsed Monday by the Bay Tourist Development Council (TDC).The council voted in favor of its new advertising Make It YoursŽ campaign unveiled by Birmingham, Alabama-based Luckie advertising, which the TDC hired to direct its annual campaign.We want people to feel like they belong here,Ž said Mary Winslow, the group account director for Luckie advertising. We know that people come here time and time again. Its a place that really resonates with people „ something that is very personal to people. It makes this emotional connection, and for the people who love coming here, its all about it being their beach.ŽThe campaign, which is expected to be fully up and running by May, will feature short films, a 360-degree camera as well as a vacationers quiz on the TDCs visit-panamacitybeach.com site. People who go on Tourist Development Council approves new campaign for PCB Make it yoursFrom News Herald reportsPANAMA CITY „ A man who killed his 2-month-old son after stuffing a sock in his mouth was sentenced to life in prison Monday after pleading no contest, according to court records.Gene Anthony Quinones-Rivera, 27, will spend the rest of his days in jail without the possibility of parole, the maximum sentence for second-degree murder. He attempted to dispose of the childs body in eastern Bay County, police reported.The investigation began in December when QuinonesRivera walked into the Springfield Police Depart-ment and began to tell officers he had caused the death of his infant son in June 2015 in Parker. Quinones-Rivera later confessed to Parker Police Lt. Aaron Wilson and members of the Bay County Sheriffs Office, telling them he placed a sock in the infants mouth to make him Dad gets life for killing infant QuinonesRivera Panama City Beachs campaign emphases activities year round. [SPECIAL TO THE NEWS HERALD] By Eryn Dion 522-5069 | @PCNHErynDion edion@pcnh.comPANAMA CITY „ The first deposits from the halfcent infrastructure surtax will be available for use this month, according to County Manager Bob Majka, just as the countys and cities citizens oversight committees are getting off the ground.Bay Countys Citizens Oversight Committee met for the first time Monday, ratify-ing their bylaws and electing Doug Moore as chairman and Will Cramer as vice chairman. They also listened to what their duties would entail, which amounts to reviewing invoices and expenditures to ensure the funds are being spent appropriately.In other words, youre not going to be looking at projects and deciding on projects when, where and how much,Ž said Ashley Stukey, the coun-tys budget officer. What youre going to be looking at is the expenditures of these projects and determining that they meet the criteria that it can be paid for by half-cent surtax.Thats the key duty,Ž Stukey added.In future meetings, county staff will bring expenditure reports from the budget office and public works for the Half-cent oversight committee of Bay holds rst meeting See SENTENCE, A4 See TDC, A4 See HALF CENT, A4 LOCAL & STATE | B14 PARCELS SNAGGED IN 6 MONTHSGeorgia developer buys Beach Drive waterfront property

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** A2 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald PICTURE PERFECT We want your photos: Post your photos to the News Herald Facebook page with your name, city of residence and information about the photo. You can email photos to yourpix@pcnh.com. CATCH OF THE DAYThree-yearold Colten Grif“ n, here with his father Wes, shows off his “ rst “ sh, caught from the West Bay Bridge. We want to see your catch of the day: Post your photos to the News Herald Facebook page with your name, city of residence and information about the photo. Email photos to yourpix@ pcnh.com.READER FEEDBACK TODAY IN HISTORY GO AND DOHAPPY BIRTHDAY FLORIDA LOTTERY YOUNG ARTIST NEWSROOM DIRECTORY Tim Thompson, Publisher .....................................850-747-5001 tthompson@pcnh.com Mike Cazalas, Editor ..............................................850-747-5094 mmcazalas@pcnh.com Shane Spence, Regional Operations Director .....850-747-5078 sspence@pcnh.com Robert Delaney, Regional Controller ....................850-747-5003 rdelaney@pcnh.com Eleanor Hypes, Regional Human Resources .......850-747-5002 ehypes@pcnh.com Roger Underwood, Regional Circulation Director ... 850-747-5049 runderwood@pcnh.com CIRCULATION Make the Panama City News Herald a part of your life every day. Home delivery: Subscribe to 7-day delivery and get unlimited access to our website and digital edition of the paper. Customers who use EZ Pay will see, on their monthly credit card or bank statement, the payment has been made to Halifax Media Florida. Online delivery: Take The News Herald with you when you go out of town, or go green by subscribing to an online replica edition of The News Herald and get unlimited access to our website. Go to subscribe.newsherald.com to subscribe to digital only. Print delivery available within the newspaper distribution area only. By submitting your address and/or email, you understand that you may receive promotional offers from GateHouse Media and its related companies. You may opt out of receiving any such offers at any time by calling 850-747-5050. An additional one-time $5.95 activation fee applies. Due to the size and value of premium editions, there will be up to a $2.00 surcharge on each date of publication of any premium edition. However, rather than assess an extra charge for premium editions, we will adjust the length of your subscription, which accelerates the expiration of your subscription, when you receive these premium editions. There will be no more than 12 premium editions per calendar year. ADVERTISING To place a display ad, call 850-747-5030 Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. To place a classi“ ed ad, call 850-747-5020. SINGLE COPIES Daily, 75 cents; Sunday, $1.50. DID WE MISS YOU? If we missed you, we want to correct the oversight. For redelivery: Call The News Herald at 850-747-5050 between 6 a.m. and 10 a.m. Monday through Friday and 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. COPYRIGHT The entire contents of The News Herald, including its logotype, are fully protected by copyright and registry and cannot be reproduced in any form for any purpose without written permission from The News Herald. Published mornings by The Panama City News Herald (USPS 419-560), 501 W. 11th St., Panama City, FL 32401. Periodicals postage paid at Panama City, FL. Postmaster: Send address changes to The News Herald, P.O. Box 2060, Panama City, FL 32402Setting it straight It is the policy of The News Herald to correct all errors that appear in news stories. If you wish to report an error or clarif y a story, call 747-5070.P.O Box 1940 Panama City, FL 32402 501 W. 11th St. Panama City Fl, 32401 Phone: 850-747-5000 WATS: 800-345-8688 Online: newsherald.com PANAMA CITY CELEBRATE COMMUNITYMichelle Rush on a story regarding fears by the National Free Lunch and Breakfast Program that the federal government might make cuts to the program: This is horrible! Many students bene“ t from free or reduced lunch. These children need to eat! Some only eat 2 meals a day AT SCHOOL! This program need to stay in place! #feedthekidsŽ Alix Farley: Kids need to eat. You can be angry at the politics that got us in this position but the solution is never to take food from kids. The kids dont understand the politics, they just want to eat.Ž Hannah Marie Kelly: Did you guys read the article? Theres been no indication so far that changes are coming to the program... Such a bogus article to get people “ red up.Ž Jim Ardary: This is not a hypothetical people. Trumps “ rst budget draft comes out tomorrow, and sources close to the white house suggest that it will contain substantial cuts to the EPA budget and the Dept of Education budget. Yes, its going to hit the school lunch program. Thats certainly in keeping with the Republican talking point that everything the government does to try and help someone is bad. The free lunch program is one of the best government programs to ever exist, and theyre going after it.Ž Stacey Brannen: How can we as people even think to take away a childs food!? If its their only food or not is not the point. You cant expect a child to go all day without eating and actually learn something! Way to make the children worry over something they dont need to be worrying with!Ž Jessica Josh Pman: Maybe if we stopped wasting so much food, telling the kids you have to take it but you dont have to eat it, we could reduce the overall cost.Ž Kelly Duncan: How can anyone justify taking food away from children? For some kids, this is the only food they get during the day.Ž E. Don Harpe: Yeah, well, Florida voted for Trump and his posse of lunatics. Its not like people didnt try to warn you. Dont any of you think its a damn shame that there are 15,000 kids who cant pay for their lunches? That is where the real problem lies.Ž Today is Tuesday, March 14 the 73rd day of 2017. There are 292 days left in the year. Todays Highlight in History: On March 14, 1967 the body of President John F. Kennedy was moved from a temporary g rave to a permanent memorial site at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. On this date: In 1794 Eli Whitney received a patent for his cotton gin, an invention that revolutionized Americas cotton industry. In 1900 Congress rati“ ed the Gold Standard Act. In 1907 President Theodore Roosevelt signed an executive order designed to prevent Japanese laborers from immigrating to the United States as part of a gentlemens agreementŽ with Japan. In 1923 President Warren G. Harding became the “ rst chief executive to “ le an income tax return, paying a levy of $17,990 on his $75,000 salary. In 1939 the republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved, opening the way for Nazi occupation of Czech areas and the separation of Slovakia. In 1964 a jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of murdering Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy, and sentenced him to death. In 1980 a LOT Polish Airlines jet crashed while attempting to land in Warsaw, killing all 87 people aboard, including 22 members of a U.S. amateur boxing team. In 1990 the Soviet Congress of Peoples Deputies held a secret ballot that elected Mikhail S. Gorbachev to a new, powerful presidency. In 1991 a British court overturned the convictions of the Birmingham Six,Ž who spent 16 years in prison for a 1974 Irish Republican Army bombing, and ordered them released. Travis Burge of Port St. Joe is 30. Singer Phil Phillips (Song: Sea of LoveŽ) is 91. Former astronaut Frank Borman is 89. Actor Michael Caine is 84. Composer-conductor Quincy Jones is 84. Comedian Billy Crystal is 69. Prince Albert II the ruler of Monaco, is 59. Country singer Kristian Bush is 47. Olympic gold medal gymnast Simone Biles is 20. Travis Burge 1PLEIN AIR TUESDAYS: 9 a.m. to noon with Beach Art Group. Bring your paints for a casual art session at a different location every week; arrive when you like and leave when youre ready. Check BeachArtGroup.com for this weeks location. Details, Helen, 850-541-38672BEGINNER LINE DANCE CLASS: 10-11:30 a.m. at Frank Brown Park, 16200 Panama City Beach Parkway, Panama City Beach. Classes are held Tuesdays and Thursdays. $3 per dancer. Details, 850-233-50453TUESDAY @ 2: 2-3 p.m. at the Bay County Public Library, 898 W. 11th St., Panama City. Weekly classes on a variety of subjects taught by local experts. This week, Introduction to the DulcimerŽ presented by Kathy Krausnick. Details, 850-522-2120 or NWRLS.com4BAY COUNTY REPUBLICAN ROUNDTABLE: 5:30-8 p.m. at Bone“ sh Grill, 641 W. 23rd St., Panama City. All candidates for municipal of“ ces have been invited to attend the forum and speak to attendees. Non-partisan event; all are welcome. Details, 850-541-80395 ELLA FITZGERALD CELEBRATION: 6:30 p.m. at The Place, 429 Harrison Ave., Panama City. The Gulf Jazz Society celebrates Ella Fitzgeralds centennial year with a tribute featuring renditions of such classic Fitzgerald tunes as Stomping at the Savoy,Ž Oh, Lady Be Good,Ž Mack The KnifeŽ and A-Tisket, A-Tasket.Ž Admission $10 for GJS members and $12 for non-members. Details and reservations, Larry or Amy, 850-784-2106; Bob, 850-258-40226 DOWNTOWN DANCE: 7 p.m. at CityArts Cooperative, 318 Luverne Ave., with Russell Mace. Details, 769-0608, CityArtsCooperative.com Gabe Ezell Grade 8 Margaret K. Lewis School These Florida lotteries were drawn Sunday: Fantasy 5: 01-04-05-07-19 Pick 2 Evening: 0-7 Pick 2 Midday: 5-3 Pick 3 Evening: 2-6-0 Pick 3 Midday: 5-5-8 Pick 4 Evening: 9-4-9-7 Pick 4 Midday: 9-9-9-0 Pick 5 Evening: 8-6-6-3-1 Pick 5 Midday: 8-8-9-6-5 Powerball: estimated jackpot $123 million Mega Millions: estimated jackpot $119 million Linda Arnold sent us this picture, saying that after a tree removal at Panama Country Club, this tree stump was left at Hole 18. Perfect spot for fox squirrel tee graf“ ti.Ž

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 A3By Michael S. RosenwaldThe Washington PostFour years after the Taliban blew off most of his left arm in Afghanistan, former Army Sgt. First Class Ramon Padilla trav-eled to Dallas for a wounded warrior golf tournament. For putting advice, he relied on the man who sent him to war.Sir,Ž Padilla asked former President George W. Bush, where is this hole breaking?ŽBush, looking at Padillas ball 20-feet from the hole, gave his ex-soldier an order: Ramon, just make the freakin putt.ŽA few months later, Bush took up painting and was given a similar order from his instructor while brooding over colors „ Just paint the cube, George.ŽNow, with the wars behind him but still ever present in his mind, Bush has published Portraits of Courage,Ž an immediate best-selling book of 98 portraits of warriors he befriended after they came home not quite the same as they left. Padilla, 42, is on the cover with six other veterans staring off into the distance „ pensive, wounded. Only one is smiling.Inspiration for the book began in spring 2012, after a Yale history professor visited Bush at his office. The professor mentioned Winston Churchills essay Painting as a Pastime.Ž Bush reveres Churchill. He said to himself, If that old boy can paint, I can paint.ŽBush took an online art his-tory course from the Museum of Modern Art. He hired an instructor. Theres a Rembrandt in this body,Ž he told her. Your job is to liberate him.Ž And he turned his man caveŽ into an art studio.For the first time in my sixty-six years,Ž he wrote in the books introduction, I picked up a paintbrush that wasnt meant for drywall.ŽThe cube. Landscapes. Those much-talked-about self-portraits in the bathtub and shower. Bush painted whenever he had time. Eventually, he painted portraits of world leaders he knew „ Vladimir Putin, Tony Blair, the Dalai Lama. In 2015, painter Sedrick Huckaby suggested Bush paint people he knew but others didnt.Instantly, I thought of painting wounded warriors I had gotten to know,Ž Bush wrote, then directing his staff to collect photos and stories of veterans he remembered, including Padilla, who also served in Iraq.Padilla got an email that Bush wanted to paint him and the former president used a photo taken of him during his trip to Dallas.This was not some sort of apology, a way to make amends for decisions that many Ameri-cans still vehemently condemn and that have killed almost 6,900 U.S. service members. In promoting the book last week, Bush told the Today ShowŽ he still thought he had made the right decisions in sending American troops to war in Iraq and Afghanistan.I regret they got hurt,Ž he said.The portraits of the wounded warriors are meant to show their determination to recover, lack of self-pity, and desire to continue to serve in new ways as civilians,Ž Bush wrote in the introduction. I painted these men and women as a way to honor their service to the country and to show my respect for their sacrifice and courage.ŽGeorge W. Bush reveals Portraits of CourageFormer President George W. Bush has released a book of portraits of wounded warriors, men and women wounded in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Read a longer version of this story and watch a related video at newsherald.com. [GRANT MILLER/THE WASHINGTON POST] By Julie Pace and Deb RiechmannThe Associated PressWASHINGTON „ Facing a Monday deadline, the Justice Department asked lawmakers for more time to provide evidence backing up President Donald Trumps unproven assertion that his prede-cessor wiretapped his New York skyscraper during the election. The request came as the White House appeared to soften Trumps explosive allegation.The House intelligence committee said it would give the Justice Department until March 20 to comply with the evidence request. Thats the date of the com-mittees first open hearing on the investigation into Russias interference in the 2016 election and possible contacts between Trump associates and Russia.A spokesman for the committees Republican chairman said that if the Justice Department doesnt meet the new deadline, the panel might use its subpoena power to gather information.If the committee does not receive a response by then, the committee will ask for this information during the March 20 hear-ing and may resort to a compulsory process if our questions continue to go unanswered,Ž said Jack Langer, a spokesman for Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif.Trumps assertions have put his administration in a bind. Current and former administration officials have been unable to provide any evidence of the Obama administration wiretapping Trump Tower, yet the presidents aides have been reluctant to pub-licly contradict their boss.White House spokesman Sean Spicer tried to clarify Trumps com-ments Monday, saying the president wasnt using the word wiretapping literally, noting that Trump had put the term in quotation marks.The president used the word wiretap in quotes to mean broadly surveil-lance and other activities,Ž Spicer said. He also suggested Trump wasnt accusing former President Barack Obama specifi-cally, but instead referring to the actions of the Obama administration.Trump himself has not commented on the matter since his March 4 tweets, in which he said he had just found out that Obama had my wires tapped in Trump Tower just before the vic-tory.Ž He also wrote: Is it legal for a sitting President to be wire tapping a race for president?ŽIn two other tweets, Trump described Obama tapping his phones, but did not put the phrases in quotation marks.The presidents accusa-tions against Obama came amid numerous political questions surrounding his associates possible ties to Russia. The FBI is investigating Trump asso-ciates contacts with Russia during the election, as are House and Senate intelli-gence committees.Justice Department asks for more timeGranted extension to prove claims as spokesman so ens Trumps stance 1169039

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** A4 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Heraldstop crying.Quinones-Rivera also spoke about his role in his sons death in a January interview with The News Herald. He said he had smoked marijuana that night and was angry with the child because he would not stop crying.The court recommended Quinones-Rivera be placed in South Florida, according to court records.The childs mother, Yanoshua Ramos-Melendez, also is charged with aggravated manslaughter of a child in relation to the case. She was arrested in New York in Janu-ary after she relocated there following her sons death.A Bay County judge denied bond for Ramos-Melendez, 25, in February. No further information on her case was available Monday. News Herald Writers Zack McDonald and Collin Breaux contributed to this story. SENTENCEContinued from A1the site also will be able to make a video of their fun experiences here. The site will outline fun activities vacationers can enjoy in four categories: family beach, eco-tourism, adrenaline-rush experiences and romantic experiences.Brad White, the chief creative officer for the firm, said they wanted the campaign to feel more like an invitation.ŽSo we came up with the idea: Make It Yours because a lot of the people that we talk about ... really do feel that way about this destination,Ž he said. They feel that way about making it theirs. They talk about it as if they really do have ownership in it.ŽHe said the campaign will focus on the quintessential family vacation.ŽBut we also want to create content that we can use in a lot of different areas „ on eco-tourism and eco-adventure,Ž White said. We have so much to offer between the parks, and underwater, and the walkways, and bird watching and shell col-lecting and all that.Ž White said essentially what we are creating this year is sort of a test-and-learn strategy.ŽDan Rowe, executive director of the TDC, said the 360-degree camera will enable them to cap-ture events.If someone wants to know what it is like fishing on the pier, they can get a 360-degree view of that, or what its like if you are kayaking down Econfina Creek,Ž he said. There is some idea that we can use media influence. There are people that have a large social media fol-lowing that we can bring them in and they can do a 360-video showing their experiences. Its really important to get a variety of different people doing it so you remove the bias.ŽThe TDC also approved a request for proposal a document for the new sports park slated to open in spring 2018. Firms first will submit their qualifications to do the job and then a cost estimate. The TDC and County Commission will weigh both in picking a firm to build the esti-mated $30 million project. TDCContinued from A1 nine-member committee to review. Approval and prioritization of the proj-ects themselves comes from the County Commission. Stukey said the extra layer of oversight is there to assureŽ citizens the proceeds are being spent correctly.The committee will have several things to look out for when reviewing expenditures. For example, half-cent money cannot be spent on per-sonnel costs for a project.The committee heard a presentation by Director of Public Works Keith Bryant about the $18.2 million worth of half-cent expenditures on the table for the next two fiscal years, covering 28 projects already approved by the County Commission. Those proj-ects include stormwater improvements, capacity improvements, roadway safety projects, resurfac-ing projects, intersection improvements and dirt road stabilization projects.According to Majka, the sales tax is collected by vendors and sent to the states Department of Revenue, and from there it is distributed to the county and cities. Bay County will receive 59 percent of the proceeds, and their project list will largely benefit unincorporated areas, according to Moore.Its going to benefit the whole community,Ž he said.The sales tax will last for the next 10 years and Majka said as of right now, the intention is to come before the community in about eight years time to talk about extending the tax another 10 years. He also said the next budget he presents to the county will include the promised millage reduction.A project list can be found at bayhalfcent.com. HALF CENTContinued from A1 By Joby WarrickThe Washington PostOn the day of North Koreas first atomic test in 2006, aides to President George W. Bush began phoning foreign capi-tals to reassure allies startled by Pyongyangs surprising feat. The test, aides said, had been mostly a failure: a botched, 1-kiloton cry for attention from a regime that had no warheads or reliable delivery systems and never would be allowed to obtain them.The current course that they are on is unacceptable,Ž State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said publicly at the time, and the international community is going to act.ŽA decade later, that confidence has all but evaporated. After a week in which Pyong-yang successfully lobbed four intermediate-range missiles into the Sea of Japan, U.S. offi-cials no longer are seeing North Koreas weapons tests as ama-teurish, attention-grabbing provocations. Instead, they are viewed as evidence of a rapidly growing threat „ and one that increasingly defies solution. Pyongyangs fifth and latest nuclear weapons test occurred Sept. 9 on the 68th anniversary of North Koreas founding. Seismic monitoring stations picked up vibrations from the underground blast and quickly determined that this one was exceptional.Scientific analyses of the test determined the new bombs explosive yield approached 30 kilotons, two times the force of the Little BoyŽ bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, in 1945. The device was twice as pow-erful as the bomb North Korea tested just nine months earlier, and it was 30 times stronger than one detonated in 2006 in a remote mountain tunnel. More ominously, North Korea last March displayed a new compact bomb, one that appears small enough to fit inside the nose cone of one of its indig-enously produced missiles.Regardless of whether the miniature bomb is real or a clever prop, North Korea finally appears to be on the verge of a nuclear breakout,Ž said Robert Litwak, an expert on nuclear proliferation and director of International Security Studies at the Woodrow Wilson Inter-national Center for Scholars. He said Pyongyangs arsenal is believed to now contain as many as 20 nuclear bombs, along with enough plutonium and highly enriched uranium to make dozens more.When I got into this field,Ž Litwak said at a symposium on North Korea this month, I couldnt have conceived of North Korea acquiring a nuclear arsenal approaching half the size of Great Britains.ŽThe countrys missiles also have grown more sophisti-cated. Last year, North Koreas military conducted the first test of a two-stage ballistic missile that uses solid fuel „ a significant advance over the countrys existing liquid-fueled rockets because they can be moved easily and launched quickly. Also in 2016, North Korea broadcast images of engineers testing engines for a new class of advanced mis-siles with true intercontinental range, potentially putting cities on the U.S. mainland within reach.The provocations have continued in the weeks since the inauguration of President Donald Trump, who, just before taking office, appeared to taunt Pyongyang in a Twit-ter post, saying that North Koreas plan for building inter-continental ballistic missiles wont happen.ŽAnxiety grows over North Koreas arsenal 1163979 YourKitchenCan BloomAgain! 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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 A5 FREEADMISSIONWITHTHEPANA MANIA CARDSPINNAKERBEACHCLUB.COMNooN€5pm SPRINGBREAK2017 PANAMACITYBEACH SPINNAKERBEACHCLUB

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** A6 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News HeraldWRITE TO US: Letters should not exceed 300 words and include the writers name, address and phone number for veri“ cation. Letters may be edited for clarity and brevity. Guest columns of up to 600 words may be submitted as well. Write: Letters to the editor, The News Herald, 501 W. 11th St., Panama City, FL 32401 Email: pcnhletters@pcnh.com LETTERS TO THE EDITOR SQUALL LINE ANOTHER VIEW Tim Thompson | Publisher Will Glover | Managing Editor Mike Cazalas | Editor PANAMA CITY VIEWPOINTSIf you woke up grumpy, tired and a little irritated Monday morning, you are not alone. You are one of the many Americans dealing with the lossŽ of an hour of sleep with the government-ordered timemeddling edict known as Daylight Saving Time. Some set their clocks ahead an hour at bedtime Sunday night, others waited until morning. Some we know did neither, counting on their advanced electronic devices like smart phones and Fitbits to magically adjust themselves at 2 a.m., the anointed witching hour. We are here to say that enough is enough, that not only is there little evidence left to support the pros of this time manipulation, but there is mounting evidence that it is bad for us. What, you ask? Would our government allow something harmful? Lets take a look. Daylight Saving Time „ its history is erratic and spotty „ first appeared in the United States during World War I as a means to conserve fuel needed in the war effort. It quickly went away, with farmers among those complaining. It upsets cows. It reappeared during World War II and has been around in one form or another pretty much since then. But because it was loosely defined and some states heeded it while others did not, confusion ensued and the federal government stepped in and mandated it across the country, according to www.timeanddate.com. They fiddle with it from time to time, like during the gas shortage of the 1970s. Now we are in 2017 and the number of grumpy folks is growing. One can argue all day long, philosophically, that no one is losingŽ an hour of sleep, that there are still 24 hours in the day. Tell that to our bodies when the alarms ring. And now studies are showing that the irritation many feel with the Spring change is real and that not only are the cons of the practice growing, so are the questions about whether the benefits we thought came with Daylight Savings even exist. For instance, it was reported on WTOP.com that the AAA Foundations John Townsend said research shows an increase in the number of traffic fatalities in the days immediately after the Spring transition. He said studies show the effects of loss of sleep can last about a week. And there are more issues: € More heart attacks. WWW.timeanddate.com reports that being tired leads to a decrease in many areas like productivity and our general well being, and an increase in heart attacks. € Depression. Depressions like Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) can be triggered by the time change, according to a Swedish study. We like their danishes, we accept this finding. € We may not even be saving energy. Scientific American reported that recent studies cast doubt on the energy saving claim, and that the time change may even lead to more energy being used. More than 70 countries use DST, mainly to save energy. There are 196 countries in the world. There is no need to sleep on it; it is time to abandon this practice and join our friends in the majority.Daylight Saving is a time-wasterObamacare unconstitutional Seven years ago, the Democrats in Congress passed the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). For people who work for a living, the ACA has been anything but affordable. I understand wanting to provide health care for those who cant afford it and for those who have pre-existing conditions. But it doesnt take a 2700page bill to accomplish that. If covering the poor and those with pre-existing conditions was really the main goal of the Democrats, they wouldve passed a bill to put such people into Medicaid. Obviously, Obamacare was very much about getting the federal government more thoroughly involved in healthcare. There isnt anything in the US Constitution „ as specified in the 17 powers granted to Congress in Article I, Section 8„ that authorizes the federal government to be steeped in healthcare; nor is there any authority to mandate the purchase of health insurance. Obamacare is unconstitutional. The Republican alternative is the American Health Care Act (AHCA), which does not fully repeal Obamacare. The AHCA also has unconstitutional provisions in it (click here: https://en.wikipedia. org/wiki/American_Health_ Care_Act ). Once again, establishment Washington Republicans have conceded a philosophical victory to Democrats over an issue, and have offered a not-as-left-wing counter-proposal. Its quite appropriate to call the AHCA, Obamacare Lite.Ž Over the last several years, many conservatives and libertarians supported candidates who vowed to repeal Obamacare. Now, the GOP leadership in the house is pushing something less than complete repeal. Speaker Paul Ryan et al. are on the wrong side of this issue; President Trump should not side with them. Senators Rand Paul (R-KY), Ted Cruz (R-TX), Mike Lee (R-UT), and Congressman Justin Amash (R-MI) and other members of the House Freedom Caucus, are on the right side of the GOP healthcare debate. I hope they prevail over the GOP establishment. Mike Zix, West BayRemember this my friends: With great power comes a great electric bill.Is there anyone in the White House NOT under investigation?There are barking dogs and then there are Constantly barking dogs....the owners of these dogs are the Public Nuisances and should be finedDrinking alcohol on the beach is against the law during March in PCB, no matter how old you are. Anyone caught should be arrested.Bed races. Now that will make me want to visit downtown P.C.Friends of mine got their IRS tax refund back through the mail than I did through direct deposit even though mine was simpler 1040A.America wont be truly great again until we eradicate anyone who willingly orders coleslaw as a side item.When snowbirds are run-ning around with
their pants down and puking beside your car, then we can cut the booze off to them.Noisy loud motorcycles and trucks keep our family awake all night long! Isnt there a noise ordinance against loud and proud motor vehicles?Gee, do I miss the hun-dreds of beer cans and trash littered beach in March? No! Soon after being confirmed as the new chief of the Environmental Protection Agency, Scott Pruitt said this to a conference of conservative activists: I think people across the country look at the EPA the way they look at the IRS.Ž Pruitts remark makes clear the sort of people hes listening to and aims to serve. Corporate polluters look at the EPA the same way corporate tax cheats look at the IRS „ as the enemy. Regulation can be burdensome even for good companies trying to do the right thing. But for those dumping waste into rivers or spewing toxins in the sky, the slightest shadow of oversight is threatening and therefore despised, for obvious reasons. The good people of Flint, Michigan, whose tap water turned undrinkable, likely hold a different view of the EPA than, say, coal lobbyists. If you live in Flint, you might wish the agency were stronger, not weaker. As Oklahomas attorney general, Pruitt, in league with gas and oil companies, made a sport of suing the EPA. So far he seems content with the White House notion to whack the agencys budget by 24 percent and fire 3,000 employees. Polluters have been whining about the EPA since it was signed into existence 47 years ago by that radical environmentalist Richard Nixon. The idea was that the American families have a right to breathe clean air and drink clean water. Here in Florida, the agency became a key player in the complex, politically fraught effort to clean up the Everglades. Progress has been halting and uneven, but without the EPA there would have been almost no progress at all. Pruitts takeover of the EPA is happy news for Big Sugar and other industrial agricultural interests that have been trying for decades to shake free of federal scrutiny. They eagerly await the day when anemic state agencies „ not the EPA „ are the ones in charge of regulating levels of phosphorus, mercury and other chemicals in the farm runoff that flows into public waterways. Showered with campaign donations from Big Agriculture, Gov. Rick Scott and GOP lawmakers have obediently labored to deliver control of water policy to major landowners and user-groups, with the exception of ordinary Floridians. Last years gift-wrapped water bill placed the states farming and ranching companies on a laughable honor system, allowing them to selfmonitor their cleanup efforts with only occasional state inspections. Recently, seeking to shed all federal oversight, Florida officials distributed maps intended to show that water quality throughout the Everglades has improved to the threshold of almost-clean. This sunny report came from the South Florida Water Management District, whose board is stacked with the governors surrogates. The good news puzzled the Miccosukee Tribe, which says phosphorus levels in some reservation waters are seven to 10 times higher than legal limits. The nutrient-loaded runoff comes from canals transporting farm effluent south to tribal wetlands bisected by Alligator Alley. A spokesman admitted the district has quit monitoring pollution in those canals, saying it was part of a research program that ended. Theres a receptive new audience at the Justice Department, and the EPA. Scott Pruitt will probably be delighted to abandon future custodianship of the Everglades to Gov. Scott and Big Agriculture. Its true that water flowing off the vast farm fields below Lake Okeechobee is much less polluted than it was 20 years ago, but thats because federal judges kept kicking the plan forward. The feds havent been perfect partners in the restoration epic, but without that pressure the hacks in Tallahassee would have bailed a long, long time ago.Like phosphorus in water? Youre in luck! Carl Hiaasen

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 A7 BUSINESS MARKET WATCHDow 20,881.48 21.50 Nasdaq 5,875.78 14.05 S&P 2,373.47 .87 Russell 1,370.28 5.02 NYSE 11,519.44 18.68 COMMODITIES REVIEWGold 1,202.40 1.70 Silver 16.935 .052 Platinum 941.20 3.00 Copper 2.6165 .0300 Oil 48.40 .09Stocks steady to start key weekBy Tom KrisherThe Associated PressDETROIT „ Computer chip maker Intel paid handsomely for a piece of the next big thing Monday as it offered more than $15 billion for Mobileye, an Israeli company at the forefront of autonomous vehicle technology.The purchase, scheduled to close by years end, cre-ates another major player in self-driving technology as traditional automakers and tech companies vie to put the cars into public use. Most companies have predicted autonomous vehicles will be carrying people in the next three-to-five years.The big investment by Intel validates predictions that autonomous cars will someday come in large numbers, signifying a sea change in the way we all get around, said Timothy Carone, a Notre Dame University professor Major players are find-ing ways finding ways to position themselves for a change as seminal as the personal computer revo-lution,Ž he said. Mobileye, which makes software that processes information from cam-eras and other car sensors to decide where the cars should steer, has products on just about every automakers autonomous test fleet. The combination with Intel adds hardware, soft-ware expertise and data centers the companies say will hasten deployment of autonomous technology, including wider use of automatic emergency braking and other technologies .The companies said Mondays deal combines Mobileyes software with Intels hardware, data centers and its own soft-ware, giving automakers a one-stop place to shop for autonomous systems.Intel o ers $15B for tech rm MobileyeFederal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen testi“ es Feb. 14 on Capitol Hill in Washington, before the Senate Banking Committee. The Fed seems all but sure to raise rates this week, and to signal that more hikes are likely coming. Fed watchers appear buoyed by signs of a stronger economy than worried about whether slightly higher rates might slow growth. [ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] By Martin CrutsingerThe Associated PressWASHINGTON „ For years after the Great Recession ended, inves-tors fretted „ sometimes panicked „ over the prospect that the Federal Reserve might begin to raise interest rates from record lows.Now? The Fed seems all but sure to raise rates Wednesday for the third time in 15 months and to signal more hikes probably coming. And the response from investors has been something akin to a yawn.Wall Street appears too busy extending the stock market rally that began with President Donald Trumps election in November, cheered by the prospect of tax cuts, an easing of regulations and higher spending for infra-structure to worry about a rate hike.Fed watchers, it seems, are more buoyed by expectations for a vigor-ous economy than worried about whether slightly higher rates might slow growth.When Chair Janet Yellen and several other Fed offi-cials separately suggested earlier this month that the economy was sturdy enough to withstand a modest raising of loan rates, investors quickly raised their estimate of the probability of a rate hike at the Feds meeting this week from around 20 percent to 80 percent.After Fridays robust February jobs report „ 235,000 added jobs, solid pay gains and a dip in the unemployment rate to 4.7 percent „ the likelihood has grown to 91 percent, according to the CME Group, which tracks investor expectations of Fed actions.Yet no one seems very concerned.Were just at a different place now than in 2013 when there was a lot of angst and uncertainty about the economys prospects,Ž said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moodys Analytics. Now, the fundamentals of the economy are much better. We are close to full employment and investors feel more comfortable about where we are.ŽIn light of Fridays jobs report, optimism about Trumps economic program and other signs that growth may pick up, some economists said they were raising their forecast for the number of rate increases this year from three to perhaps four.I think a March rate hike is a fait accompli,Ž said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State Univer-sity, Channel Islands, who expects four rate increases in 2017. The more important question is: How many more hikes they will give us for the balance of the year?ŽIf the Fed is no longer unsettling investors with the hint of a forthcom-ing rate increase, it marks quite a change from the anxiety that prevailed after 2008, when the cen-tral bank cut its key rate to a record low and kept it there for seven years. During those years, any slight shift in senti-ment about when the Fed might begin raising rates „ a step that would lead eventually to higher loan rates for consumers and businesses „ was enough to move global markets.In 2013, then-Chairman Ben Bernanke sent markets into a panic merely by men-tioning that the Fed was contemplating slowing the pace of its bond purchases, which it was using then to keep long-term borrowing rates low. Why so few are worried about likely Fed rate hike Were just at a di erent place now than in 2013 when there was a lot of angst and uncertainty about the economys prospects. Now, the fundamentals of the economy are much better. We are close to full employment and investors feel more comfortable about where we are.ŽMark Zandi, chief economist at Moodys Analytics By Stan ChoeThe Associated PressNEW YORK „ Stocks held steady in a calm day of trading Monday, but the storm may be coming.This upcoming week is full of events that could swing markets: The Federal Reserve may raise interest rates, more countries around the world may move to shake up the eco-nomic status quo and several high-profile updates on the U.S. economy are due.Thats all in the near future, though. Mondays calendar was decidedly light, and the Standard & Poors 500 index flipped between modest gains and losses before closing at 2,373.47, up just 0.87 points, just 0.04 percent. It remains within 1 percent of its record, which was set earlier this month.The Dow Jones industrial average fell 21.50 points, or 0.1 percent, to 20,881.48. The Nasdaq rose 14.06 points, or 0.2 percent, to 5,875.78. Three stocks rose for every two that fell on the New York Stock Exchange.In such a hectic week, one event still stands out from the rest: the Federal Reserves meeting on interest rates, which begins today and ends Wednesday. Most investors expect the Fed to raise rates for only the third time since they went to nearly zero during the financial crisis in 2008.Usually, rising interest rates are bad news for stocks because they make borrowing more expensive and can be a drag on economic growth. But many analysts say this time may be different. As long as the pace is gradual, these increases will only be getting rates back to normal rather than slamming the brakes on the economy. It was only a few weeks ago that many investors were expecting the Fed to stand pat at its March meeting and then raise rates later in the spring. But expectations have swung following a series of strong reports on the economy. The headliner was Fridays jobs report, which showed healthy levels of hiring.A year ago, such a swing in expectations may have meant a sell-off in stocks as investors worried about the impact of higher rates, said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade. Now, its met with more equanimity because investors are focusing instead on the improving economy and hopes for bigger corporate profits in the future.Its a very good sign,Ž Kinahan said. It shows that people do have faith in stocks.ŽInvestors will likely focus more on what Fed Chair Janet Yellen has to say after the announcement than on the rate increase itself, which is expected to be only a quarter of a percentage point.What the market is curi-ous about is: How many more rate increases will there be, and what is the primary data that would drive that?Ž Kinahan said.The job market has been on the upswing recently, and so has inflation. But a recent drop in the price of oil may pull down inflation levels, which could encourage the Fed to move more slowly. The government will offer updates this week on inflation at both the consumer and wholesale levels, along with reports on retail sales and other economic indicators.STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTCOMPANY CLOSE CHG At & T $42.37 +0.02 Darden Rests $74.45 +0.29 Gen Dynamics $191.56 +0.72 Hanger Inc $12.90 -0.85 Hancock Hldg $46.25 +0.35 Home Bancs $28.26 +0.29 Itt Corp $41.04 +0.91 The St Joe $16.85 +0.00 Kbr Inc $14.42 -0.26 L-3 Comms $170.27 -0.05 Oceaneering $25.92 +0.04 Regions $15.12 -0.01 Sallie Mae $11.92 +0.08 Southern $49.73 +0.10 Suntrust $58.76 -0.18 Westrock $51.32 +0.08 Ingersoll-Rand $79.66 +0.17 Engility Holds $30.12 +1.25Source: Matt Wegner Financial Advisor The Edward Jones Co., Panama City, 769-1278 COMPANY CLOSE CHG 3M $191.52 +0.31 Am. Express $79.21 -0.17 Apple $139.20 +0.06 Boeing $179.05 +0.35 Caterpillar $92.64 +0.33 Chevron $109.35 -1.26 Cisco $34.10 -0.16 Coca-Cola $42.03 +0.11 DuPont $81.23 +0.37 Exxon $81.42 -0.19 Gen. Electric $29.86 -0.42 Goldman Sachs $248.16 -0.22 Home Depot $147.43 +0.58 Intel $35.16 -0.75 IBM $176.46 -1.37 J&J $126.68 +0.47 JP Morgan $91.36 +0.08 McDonalds $127.61 -0.37 Merck $64.15 -0.98 Microsoft $64.71 -0.22 Nike $56.67 +0.24 P“ zer $34.11 +0.00 Proc. & Gamble $91.31 +0.24 Travelers $122.15 -0.68 United Tech $112.31 +0.17 Verizon $49.47 +0.12 Walmart $69.95 -0.15 Walt Disney $111.52 +0.60 United Health $170.21 +0.23 Visa $90.11 +0.38THE DOW 30 FOREIGN EXCHANGEU.S. $1.00 = Canadian 1.34 U.S. $1.00 = Mexican peso 19.60 U.S. $1.00 = Euro 0.94 U.S. $1.00 = British Pound 0.82BRIEFCASE BBB awards, scholarships nominations due March 31PENSACOLA „ Nominationsfor the Northwest Florida Better Business Bureaus awards and scholar-ships are being accepted.The Torch Award for Ethics publicly recognizes businesses and charities that maintain a solid commitment to conduct-ing their business practices in an ethical manner.The Customer Service Excellence Award is given to individuals who go above and beyond with their interactions with customers.Student Ethics Scholarships will be awarded to high school juniors and seniors who demonstrate leadership, community service and overall personal integrity.The deadline for all award nominations and scholarship applications is March 31.For entry forms and guidelines, visit bbb.org/nwfl/TorchAward/ or call 850-429-0002 or 800-729-9226. News Herald staff reportInevitable raise

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 B1 LOCAL & STATE UNDER THE RADAR | B3$240 MILLION LEGAL BILLTop GOP o cials spent big sums on private attorneys By Katie Landeck522-5114 | @PCNHKatieL klandeck@pcnh.comPANAMA CITY „ In the past six months, a Georgiabased developer quietly has purchased four major properties in Panama City.The purchases of the Cabana Motel, the Grocery Outlet building at 301 E. Sixth St., Daffin Supply Company building at 401 W. Sixth St., and a parcel of waterfront property near Panama City City Hall all trace back to George Kingston, a largely elusive figure who has been purchasing property in the Panhandle for years.The sum of the combined purchases is a little more than $4.7 million, according to public records.Kingston could not be reached for comment for this story, and real estate agent Dwight Hicks, who often represents Kingston, had no commentŽ for this story.While tight-lipped about the plans, Kingston purchas-ing the Beach Drive property means he now owns all the waterfront property from Government Street to West Fifth Street, according to the property appraisers website, save one parcel owned by the city.Developer buys Beach Drive propertyAbove, Outreach Librarian Heather Ogilvie reads to children at the Panama City Mall on Monday. Story Mornings at the Mall happens each Monday from 10-11 a.m. and includes books, art and music in the play area at the mall. At right, children sing songs and play music Monday during Story Mornings at the Mall at the Panama City Mall. [PHOTOS BY ANDREW WARDLOW/THE NEWS HERALD] Man on the ” y lands DUIA Bay County sheriffs deputy patrolling Back Beach Road clocked a vehi-cle headed in the opposite direction out of a curve at 83-84 mph in a 55 mph speed zone.ŽThe deputy turned around and tracked down the vehi-cle, which had slowed to 69 mph and continued at this speed.Ž The deputy stopped the vehicle and wrote that when he asked the driver for his drivers license, he fumbled around with other paperwork and decided to talk to me instead. He was thick tongued, speaking slow and did not make sense in his conversation.ŽThe deputy wrote the man continued showing signs of impairment and also had a minor abrasionŽ on his head, which appeared to me that he was involved in a fight or maybe ... fell.ŽAfter learning the man was headed home from a bar on the Beach, the deputy was told he also got into an altercation with a service member who was in the Coast Guard. (He) would not go into detail about how he got the mark on his forehead.ŽThe man agreed to a field sobriety test, the deputy wrote, but things were not going well on the three-part test. The deputy wrote the man did poorly on the first two parts but still had the one-leg standŽ to get through.When (he) noticed that he was having trouble, he put his foot down and said that this was designed for him to fail.Ž The deputy agreed he had failed and placed him under arrest for DUI.While en route to the jail, THE BLOTTERBy Brandon LarrabeeThe News Service of FloridaTALLAHASSEE „ Gov. Rick Scott on Monday continued his campaign against House Republicans who oppose economic-development spending, telling a business roundtable in Talla-hassee that bills approved last week would cause some families to lose their jobs.Scott also declined to rule out veto-ing the budget for the year that begins July 1 if it doesnt include funding for business incentives.The roundtable event, at Danfoss Turbocor Compressors Inc., came three days after House members approved legislation that would abolish business-recruitment agency Enterprise Florida and over-haul tourism marketer Visit Florida.As he has done at other stops during a recent media blitz aimed at saving business incentives, Scott singled out a local lawmaker: Rep. Halsey Beshears, R-Monticello, whose district extends from Calhoun and Gulf counties on the west to Lafayette and Madison counties to the east.Why in the world would Halsey Beshears or anybody else vote to eliminate Enter-prise Florida and decimate Visit Florida?Ž Scott told reporters after meeting with business leaders and state economic development offi-cials. This is about some family getting a job. Im going to fight for those families all this session.ŽThe showdown over incen-tives has escalated into one of the most heated clashes between Scott and legislative Republicans since the gover-nor took office in 2011. Scott used a sizable piece of his State of the StateŽ address Gov. Scott keeps up pressure on HouseWaterfront plot is one of se veral bought by Georgia man Tales from the mall Beshears See SCOTT, B6 See BLOTTER, B6 See PROPERTY, B6

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** B2 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald 6 a.m Noon6 p.m Low Hazard Medium Hazard High Hazard Water closed to public Dangerous Marine Life High Low 59/36 62/39 59/33 60/40 61/42 58/36 60/37 60/37 58/33 52/29 60/37 60/36 61/37 61/43 62/42 62/42 61/37 61/4159/3861/4568/5373/54Cool with plenty of sunshine Sunny much of the time Plenty of sun Pleasant with partial sunshine6148575841Winds: NNW 8-16 mph Winds: NNE 6-12 mph Winds: SSE 4-8 mph Winds: WNW 7-14 mph Winds: NW 10-20 mphBlountstown 7.34 ft. 15 ft. Caryville 7.95 ft. 12 ft. Clairborne 34.50 ft. 42 ft. Century 9.67 ft. 17 ft. Coffeeville, AL 16.70 ft. 29 ft. Through 7 a.m. Mon.Apalachicola 5:49a 12:09p 5:49p --Destin 1:22a 6:47a 12:56p 8:24p West Pass 5:22a 11:42a 5:22p --Panama City 12:35a 6:34a 12:26p 7:21p Port St. Joe 2:39a 12:08a 9:41a 6:07a Okaloosa Island 11:29a 5:53a --7:30p Milton 3:35a 9:08a 3:09p 10:45p East Bay 2:39a 8:38a 2:13p 10:15p Pensacola 1:55a 7:21a 1:29p 8:58p Fishing Bend 2:36a 8:12a 2:10p 9:49p The Narrows 3:32a 10:12a 3:06p 11:49p Carrabelle 4:24a 9:56a 4:24p 10:15pForecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. 2017LastNewFirstFull Mar 20Mar 27Apr 3Apr 11Sunrise today ........... 6:53 a.m. Sunset tonight .......... 6:50 p.m. Moonrise today ........ 8:56 p.m. Moonset today ......... 8:12 a.m. Today Wed. Today Wed.Clearwater 67/53/pc 61/45/s Daytona Beach 67/42/pc 60/36/s Ft. Lauderdale 83/54/pc 72/52/s Gainesville 64/35/pc 59/29/s Jacksonville 60/35/pc 57/29/s Jupiter 80/52/pc 68/51/s Key Largo 80/60/pc 72/58/s Key West 78/64/pc 72/61/s Lake City 62/38/pc 58/28/s Lakeland 69/44/pc 62/36/s Melbourne 74/46/pc 64/41/s Miami 82/55/pc 73/52/s Naples 75/53/pc 69/47/s Ocala 65/38/pc 59/29/s Okeechobee 77/46/pc 67/39/s Orlando 71/45/pc 63/39/s Palm Beach 80/53/pc 68/53/s Tampa 67/49/pc 62/42/s Today Wed. Today Wed.Baghdad 76/51/s 79/55/s Berlin 53/44/pc 54/36/pc Bermuda 69/64/sh 70/57/r Hong Kong 68/62/c 70/64/pc Jerusalem 58/42/pc 56/44/pc Kabul 54/35/c 49/34/r London 60/47/c 59/44/c Madrid 67/43/c 68/39/s Mexico City 70/48/pc 70/48/pc Montreal 22/17/sn 24/10/sn Nassau 87/68/sh 82/62/s Paris 59/44/pc 56/42/c Rome 60/42/pc 64/41/s Tokyo 54/42/r 48/42/r Toronto 20/8/sn 22/11/sf Vancouver 52/43/r 49/38/r Today Wed. Today Wed.Albuquerque 76/44/s 77/45/s Anchorage 23/5/s 19/6/pc Atlanta 50/28/pc 47/27/s Baltimore 37/19/sn 31/17/sf Birmingham 48/27/pc 47/27/s Boston 37/21/sn 34/18/sf Charlotte 55/23/pc 44/20/pc Chicago 27/14/sf 32/14/s Cincinnati 34/15/sf 35/17/pc Cleveland 26/19/sf 29/23/sf Dallas 65/46/s 70/55/pc Denver 70/43/pc 75/45/pc Detroit 28/13/sf 32/17/pc Honolulu 85/71/pc 84/69/pc Houston 68/46/s 71/56/pc Indianapolis 32/18/sf 33/18/pc Kansas City 36/17/sf 39/30/pc Las Vegas 88/63/s 88/63/s Los Angeles 85/59/s 82/57/pc Memphis 46/26/c 46/32/s Milwaukee 27/14/sf 33/16/s Minneapolis 27/10/pc 31/18/pc Nashville 43/21/c 43/22/s New Orleans 62/46/s 61/48/s New York City 33/21/sn 30/20/sf Oklahoma City 58/32/s 62/45/pc Philadelphia 35/21/sn 30/19/sf Phoenix 92/63/s 92/63/s Pittsburgh 30/15/sn 25/18/sf St. Louis 36/20/c 41/27/s Salt Lake City 72/49/pc 75/49/s San Antonio 71/49/pc 76/59/c San Diego 77/60/s 75/58/pc San Francisco 70/52/s 65/53/c Seattle 56/48/r 54/40/r Topeka 38/19/sf 43/31/pc Tucson 91/58/s 92/60/pc Wash., DC 40/22/sn 32/21/sfWednesdayThursdayFridaySaturday Gulf Temperature: 66 Today: Wind from the northwest at 12-25 knots. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility clear. Wind northnorthwest at 12-25 knots. Seas 2-4 feet. Clear. Tomorrow: Wind from the north at 8-16 knots. Seas 2-4 feet. Visibility generally clear.Sunny and breezy today. Winds northnorthwest 10-20 mph. Clear and chilly tonight. Winds northnorthwest 6-12 mph.High/low ......................... 53/49 Last year's High/low ...... 76/63 Normal high/low ............. 71/51 Record high ............. 81 (1985) Record low ............... 23 (1998)24 hours through 4 p.m. .. 0.50" Month to date .................. 0.73" Normal month to date ...... 2.47" Year to date ................... 10.90" Normal year to date ....... 12.47" Average humidity .............. 90%through 4 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ......................... 56/53 Last year's High/low ...... 75/64 Normal high/low ............. 68/52 Record high ............. 86 (1989) Record low ............... 26 (1998)24 hours through 4 p.m. .. 0.31" Month to date ................... 1.00" Normal month to date ...... 2.31" Year to date .................... 12.14" Normal year to date ....... 12.68" Average humidity .............. 93%PANAMA CITY Port St. Joe Apalachicola Tallahassee Perry Quincy Monticello Marianna Chipley DeFuniak Springs Pensacola FORT WALTON BEACH Crestview Destin Carrabelle Mobile Bainbridge ValdostaFLORIDA CITIESCity Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W WORLD CITIESCity Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W NATIONAL CITIESCity Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W TODAY FIVE DAY FORECAST FOR NORTHWEST FLORIDAHigh LowREGIONAL WEATHERWeather(W): ssunny, pcpartly cloudy, ccloudy, shshowers, tthunderstorms, rrain, sfsnow ” urries, snsnow, iice. Shown is todays weather. Temperatures are todays highs and tonights lows.Shown are todays noon postions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.TIDESMARINE FORECASTBEACH FLAG WARNINGSThe 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+ Extreme10 a.m.Noon2 p.m.4 p.m.UV INDEX TODAYALMANACSUN AND MOON MOON PHASESRIVER LEVELS Offshore Northwest Florida Flood Level StageApalachicola Choctawhatchee Alabama Escambia Tombigbee Temperatures PrecipitationPanama CityTemperatures PrecipitationFort Walton Beach WEATHER TodayWOMENS HISTORY MONTH EXHIBIT: at the Bay County Public Library, 898 W. 11th St., Panama City. An exhibit of local artifacts celebrating women who signi“ cantly contributed to Bay County, past and present, featuring Lillian Carlisle West, Jane Patton, Vera Shamplain, Marlene Womack and Barbara Mulligan. For details, NWRLS. com or 850-522-2132 SENIORS IN MOTION: 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Lynn Haven Senior Center, 905 Pennsylvania Ave., Lynn Haven. Classes offered throughout the week. Activities include yoga, tai chi, Zumba, chair exercise, mahjong, bridge, dominoes, book club, Spanish class and more. For details and schedule, 850-277-2730 PLEIN AIR TUESDAYS: 9 a.m. to noon with Beach Art Group. Bring your paints for a casual art session at a different location every week; arrive when you like and leave when youre ready. Check BeachArtGroup.com for this weeks location. For details, Helen, 850-541-3867 SENIOR ACTIVITIES: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Panama City Beach Senior Center, 423 Lyndell Lane, Panama City Beach. Classes offered throughout the week on a variety of activities including yoga, strength and chair exercises, carving, cribbage, bocce, card games and more. For details and schedule, 850-233-5065 AARP TAX-AIDE: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Bay County Fairgrounds, 2230 E. 15th St., Panama City. Free income tax assistance and free electronic “ ling for middleand low-income individuals and families. Bring 2015 tax return and all 2016 tax forms, Social Security cards for dependents and taxpayer, ID, check book to verify electronic deposit or debit, and all other pertinent information. For details, Tom, 850-784-1452; Phil, 850-774-7953 VITA: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at A.D. Harris Learning Village, 819 E. 11th St., Panama City. Free income tax “ ling assistance for individuals and families who earned less than $64,000 last year. Bring a copy of last years tax return and Social Security cards for everyone in your household. For details, 850381-4988 or MyFreeTaxes. com BOOK BABIES: 9:30-10 a.m. at the Bay County Public Library, 898 W. 11th St., Panama City. Activities for babies from birth to 17 months (with caregiver). For details, 850-522-2118 or NWRLS.com BEGINNER LINE DANCE CLASS: 10-11:30 a.m. at Frank Brown Park, 16200 Panama City Beach Parkway, Panama City Beach. Classes are held Tuesdays and Thursdays through March 16. $3 per dancer. For details, 850-233-5045 TERRIFIC TOTS: 10:30-11 a.m. at the Bay County Public Library, 898 W. 11th St., Panama City. Stories and activities for children 18-36 months (with caregiver). For details, 850522-2118 or NWRLS.com BAY BOOMERS ACTIVITY PROGRAM: 1-3 p.m. at the Bay County Council on Aging, 1116 Frankford Ave., Panama City. Line dancing. For details, Robin Khalidy, 850-769-3468 TUESDAY @ 2: 2-3 p.m. at the Bay County Public Library, 898 W. 11th St., Panama City. Weekly classes on a variety of subjects taught by local experts. This week, Introduction to the DulcimerŽ presented by Kathy Krausnick. For details, 850522-2120 or NWRLS.com BEACH BOOK BABIES: 3 p.m. at The Panama City Beach Library, 12500 Hutchison Beach Blvd., Panama City Beach. Stories and activities for children from birth to 2 years old (with caregiver). For details, 850-233-5055 or NWRLS.com FREE TUTORING: 3:15-8 p.m. at Bellamy-Hines-Bautista Learning Center, 2335B State Ave., Panama City. Tutoring for ages 13 and up. For details, Andre Goss, 850-818-0976 TEEN MAKER TUESDAY: 4-5 p.m. at the Panama City Beach Library, 12500 Hutchison Blvd., Panama City Beach. Crafts and projects for ages 12 and up. For details, 850-233-5055 or NWRLS.com BAY COUNTY REPUBLICAN ROUNDTABLE: 5:30-8 p.m. at Bone“ sh Grill, 641 W. 23rd St., Panama City. All candidates for municipal of“ ces have been invited to attend the forum and speak to attendees. This is a non-partisan event; all are welcome. For details, 850-541-8039 EMPTY BOWL SUPPER: 5:30-7:30 p.m. at Bay High School, 1200 Harrison Ave., Panama City, in the cafeteria. Chautauqua Learn and Serve Charter School presents a dinner of soup and bread donated by local restaurants and a silent auction with handmade bowls by area students. Tickets are $6. Proceeds support Chautauquas mission to aid the elderly and disabled by providing transportation through trolley passes. For details, chautauqua-school. org PUBLIC WORKSHOP: 6-8 p.m. at Battery Park Center, 1 Bay Ave., Apalachicola. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) hosts a public workshop in Apalachicola to address possible rule amendments reducing vessel speed limits within the Florida Intracoastal Waterway in the Apalachicola River in Franklin County. For details, MyFWC.com A COURSE IN MIRACLES: 6:30 p.m. at Unity of Panama City, 1764 Lisenby Ave., Panama City. Facilitated by Agustin Peralta and Lynn Gilbert. Nothing real can be threatened. Nothing unreal exists. Herein lies the peace of God.Ž For details, CourseInMiracles.com or 850-769-7481 ELLA FITZGERALD CELEBRATION: 6:30 p.m. at The Place, 429 Harrison Ave., Panama City. The Gulf Jazz Society celebrates Ella Fitzgeralds centennial year with a tribute featuring renditions of such classic Fitzgerald tunes as Stomping at the Savoy,Ž Oh, Lady Be Good,Ž Mack The KnifeŽ and A-Tisket, A-Tasket.Ž Admission $10 for GJS members and $12 for non-members. For details and reservations, Larry or Amy, 850-784-2106; Bob, 850-258-4022 SLICK KICKERS: 6:30-8:30 p.m. at Grand Square Hall, 1105 Bob Little Road, Panama City. Country line dancing and classes. $5. For details, 850-258-9847 DOWNTOWN DANCE: 7 p.m. at CityArts Cooperative, 318 Luverne Ave., with Russell Mace. For details, 769-0608, CityArtsCooperative.comWHATS HAPPENINGSubmit an eventEmail pcnhnews@pcnh. com with Whats HappeningŽ in the subject line. Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday events: Due by 5 p.m. Wednesday before Wednesday events: Due by 5 p.m. Monday before Thursday events: Due by 5 p.m. Tuesday before ALPHAAudiologyHearingAids AffordableSales,Repair588-5460 PhonakStarkeyReSoundWidexOticonmore #1Winner2016BestofBayHearingAids AudiologicalTests:Education Matters Save,Shop,LOVEPCB!GodisGreat! Alpha-audiology.com DirectSavingQualityofLife 203NorthHwy79588-5460 Dr.AnneMarieTaylor,Au.D,CCC-A 1169586 EmeraldCoast Rheumatology&InfusionCenter NowAcceptingNewPatients! State-Of-e-Art InfusionCenter AymenA.Kenawy,M.D. UniversityofFlorida&ShandsHospital-TrainedPhysician Dr.Kenawyisoneoftheareasleading specialistsandisBoard-Certiedin Rheumatology,RegenerativeMedicine andInternalMedicine. 850-215-64003890JenksAvenue|LynnHaven,FL32444Monday-ursday:8:00am-5:00pm|Friday:8:00am-12:00pm DrKenawy.com 1170519

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 B3Guidelines and deadlinesObituary notices are written by funeral homes and relatives of the deceased. The News Herald reserves the right to edit for AP style and format. Families submitting notices must type them in a typeface and font that can be scanned into a computer. Deadline for obituaries is 3 p.m. daily for the following days newspaper. Obituaries may be e-mailed to pcnhobits@pcnh.com or delivered to The News Herald, 501 W. 11th St., Panama City. View todays obituaries and sigh the online guest books of your loved ones at newsherald.com/obituaries. OBITUARIES LOCAL & STATE James David Barr, 91, of Panama City, Florida, passed away on Saturday, March 11, 2017. He was born Feb. 8, 1926, in Enterprise, Alabama, to James David Barr, Sr. and Willie Lourine Andrews Barr. He served in the United States Army during World War II and was the retired owner of James Barr Contractors, Inc., having started the business in 1964. He was preceded in death by his parents; his loving wife of 64 years, Blondell Grace Barr; a son, Rodney Dean Barr; a brother, William DickŽ Barr; and two sisters, Lillian Barr and Lily Clois Barr. He is survived by two sons, Jimmy Barr (Kathy) and Mike Barr (Evelyn); seven grandchildren, Chris Barr (Kristen), Craig Barr, Kevin Barr (Heidi), McKenzie Barr, Tyler Barr, Mary Beth Barr, and Matthew Bruhn; his great-granddaughter, Isabelle Grace Barr; two brothers, Herbert Barr (Joyce) and Douglas Barr (Joan); a sister, Joyce Hyatt (Morris); a sister-in-law, Pauline Barr; and numerous nieces and nephews. James was strong in his faith „ he lived his beliefs, always smiling, always encouraging, always loving, and always sincere. As long as he was physically able, he served. He was all about his family (immediate and extended), especially his wife and his boys and their families. He was always there for them „ ball games, school events, birthdays, holidays, family gatherings. He will be missed forever. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday in the Central Pentecostal Ministries with Pastor Don Shoots officiating. Graveside services will be held at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Mount Pleasant Baptist Church Cemetery, Enterprise, Alabama. Active pallbearers will be his grandsons. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 5:30-7 p.m. Tuesday. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorial donations be made to your favorite charity in memory of James Barr.Wilson Funeral Home Family Owned Since 1911 214 Airport Road Panama City, Fla. 850-785-5272JAMES DAVID BARRArnold LeeŽ Etheridge, 69, of Panama City, Florida, passed away Sunday, March 12, 2017, at a local hospital. Lee was born in Marianna, Florida, but lived most of his life in Panama City. He was a Vietnam veteran, and retired as a staff sergeant after 20 years service in the U.S. Army. After his military career, Lee worked with NASA in Houston, Texas, and as an engineer for both WJHG and WMBB television stations. He enjoyed fishing, golfing, and spending time with his family and friends. Lee was preceded in death by his parents, Herman and Cleland Etheridge. Survivors include his wife of more than 25 years, Paula AngieŽ Etheridge; his children, Victoria Williams (Jim Lowe) of Rockvale, Tennessee, Penny Jensen (Mike) of Dallas, Georgia, and James Etheridge (Christina) of the U.S. Army, Germany; his siblings, Diane Adair (Jesse) of Youngstown, Florida, Phillip Etheridge (Sue Watson) of Springfield, Florida, and Donna Creel (Gregory) of Cedar Grove, Florida; his cousin, Ronnie Taylor of Panama City Beach, Florida; a sister-in-law, Karen Davis of Panama City; his grandchildren, Kristopher, Stephanie, Allison, Lindsey, Matt, Karissa, Makayla and Hunter; and two great-grandsons. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday, March 15, 2017, at the KentForest Lawn Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Chip Shows officiating. Interment will follow at Evergreen Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 5-8 p.m. Tuesday. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Wounded Warrior Project, 4899 Belfort Road, Suite 300, Jacksonville FL, 32256.Kent-Forest Lawn Funeral Home 2403 Harrison Ave. Panama City, Fla. 32405 850-763-4694 www.kentforestlawn.comARNOLD LEE ETHERIDGECharles J. Jones, 72, of Panama City, Florida, died Friday, March 10, 2017. Memorialization will be by cremation. Those wishing to extend condolences maydo so at www. heritagefhllc.com.CHARLES J. JONESLula L. Oliver, 88, of Panama City, Florida, died Thursday, March 9, 2017. Funeral services will begin at 11 a.m. today, March 14, 2017, at The Salvation Army Church. Interment will follow at Brown Cemetery. Those wishing to extend condolences may do so at www. heritagefhllc.com.LULA L. OLIVERCharles E. GeneŽ Segovis, 89, of Panama City, passed away Saturday, March 11, 2017, at his home surrounded by his family. Gene was born in Syracuse, New York, but lived most of his life in Panama City. He retired as an E-6, Petty Officer 1st Class, after 33 years in the U.S. Navy during World War II, Korea, and Vietnam and proudly served on the aircraft carrier USS Constellation. After his military career, Gene attended Gulf Coast College, and worked at the Magic Onion sandwich shop. He was an avid reader, and enjoyed bowling in earlier days. Gene was preceded in death by his wife of 69 years, Virginia Segovis; and his brother, Jack, and sister-in-law, Helen. Survivors include his daughter, Sharen LeGette (B.J.) of Panama City; two granddaughters, Cathy Lancaster and Jennifer Duncan (Bubba); two great-grandchildren, Allyson and Justin Duncan; an old friend and Navy buddy, Leslie Stessel; and many, many nieces, nephews and great-nieces and great-nephews whom he dearly loved. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, March 15, 2017, at the KentForest Lawn Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Craig Brannon officiating. Interment will follow at Forest Lawn Memorial Cemetery with military honors offered by the U.S. Navy. The family will receive friends at the funeral home Wednesday morning from 10:30 a.m. until service time at 11 a.m. The family extends special thanks to Emerald Coast Hospice for their loving care and attention.Kent-Forest Lawn Funeral Home 2403 Harrison Ave. Panama City, Fla. 32405 850-763-4694 www.kentforestlawn.comCHARLES EUGENE GENE SEGOVIS Larry Nixon Tate, 67, of Panama City, Florida, died Friday, March 10, 2017. Funeral services will begin at 11 a.m. Wednesday, March 15, 2017, at Bible Believers Baptist Church. The family will receive friends beginning at 10 a.m. Interment will follow at Callaway Cemetery. To extend condolences, visit www. heritagefhllc.com.LARRY NIXON TATE By Gary FineoutThe Associated PressTALLAHASSEE „ Gov. Rick Scott and other top Florida Republicans frequently complain about government spending, but they have quietly spent more than $237 million on private lawyers to advance and defend their agendas, an Associated Press inves-tigation has found.Florida taxpayers also have been forced to reim-burse nearly $16 million for their opponents private attorney fees. That means an overall $253 mil-lion has been spent on legal fights in the last six years, including a water war with Georgia and losing battles to test welfare recipients for drugs, trim the states voter registration lists and ban companies that do business with Cuba from bidding on government contracts.A quarter of a billion dollars is a gosh lot of money,Ž said Dominic Calabro, president of Florida TaxWatch, a busi-ness-backed group that scrutinizes state spending.Much of the states legal spending doesnt show up in the normal process of assembling the states $82 billion budget.Attorney General Pam Bondi oversees a legal budget of nearly $309 million a year that helps pay for 450 state lawyers, but all that in-house legal firepower hasnt stopped state leaders from hiring private attorneys. And no one in state government is closely tracking what their hourly rates add up to.We do not have that information and are unaware of a way to cap-ture expenditures for the purchase of outside legal services that would not entail an exhaustive search of documents,Ž said Whitney Ray, a spokesman for Bondi.The Associated Press came up with the figure by analyzing budget doc-uments and the results of public records requests.The AP review found that Florida has spent more than $237 million on outside lawyering since 2011, a figure that averages to nearly $40 million a year, plus nearly $16 million reimbursing private attorney fees on opposing sides.Hiring private counsel in expenditures that fall outside the normal budget process seems common in state governments around the country, though perhaps not on the same scale as during the Scott administration.New York has spent more than $86 million since 2012, or about $17 million a year, on outside lawyering, according to that states comptroller. Californias Democratic leaders recently approved payments of $25,000 a month to former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and his law firm to defend the states interests against President Donald Trumps policies.In Florida, it was the soaring cost of the states water war against Georgia „ more than $41 million in the last 18 months alone„ that started to raise eyebrows when the Department of Environ-mental Protection sought more money in January.Rep. Carlos Trujillo, a Miami Republican and House budget chief, called the departments legal spending a runaway train.ŽHis response when told that the overall state tab for private legal fees is about a quarter-billion dollars? Insane,Ž Trujillo said.Trujillo said nobody is disputingŽ that defend-ing Floridas water rights is important, but as tax-payers and constituents, we have the right to ask: Is it necessary, are we overpaying?ŽHouse Speaker Richard Corcoran, who ordered a legislative review, was even more blunt: We are getting gouged, and that needs to be fixed.ŽA spokeswoman for Scott, Jackie Schutz, sought to downplay the outside legal costs during Scotts administration, saying that private law firms are sometimes necessary.When there are complex legal matters or specific expertise needed, including defending laws passed by the legislature, we utilize available resources and, as required by statute, get approval from the Attorney Gen-erals office,Ž Schutz said.Its no surprise that our office vigorously defends the laws we sign,Ž she said.The decades-long water dispute took a new and expensive turn when Scott asked the U.S. Supreme Court in 2013 to limit the water Georgia takes from the Apalachicola, Chattahoochee and Flint river basin. Florida argues that Georgia has guzzled more than its share of water at the expense of Floridas oyster industry.Bondis office handed the case over to one of the worlds most prestigious firms, Latham & Watkins, whose lawyers charge up to $825 an hour. The firms bills to date almost doubled the funding Scott personally requested in late 2014 to repair the Apalachicola Bay watershed.Scott, an attorney and multimillionaire businessman who ran one of the nations largest forprofit hospital chains, has backed the use of taxpayer money to bol-ster the states legal team with private attorneys for defending his initiatives, despite the rising costs. Its important to make sure that Florida gets the water it deserves,Ž Scott said.Ryan Matthews, the interim secretary for the Department of Environmental Protection, said last week that his staff carefully reviews every invoice.Ž He also said that since July 2015, DEP has denied more than $3 mil-lion in legal expenses and hourly charges.Ray, the spokesman for Bondis office, notes her agencys lawyers are assigned to duties such as handling criminal appeals and Medicaid fraud cases. Bondis office must approve the hiring of outside attorneys by state agencies. Her office keeps a list of outside law-yers hired and hourly fees charged.Ray added there are several reasons that Bondis office may not take up a case including that it falls into an area in which our office lacks specialized exper-tise, there is a conflict of interest, or the matter is pending outside the state of Florida.ŽBut no one keeps track of the overall spending. The governor, Legislature and other state elected officials, such as Agricul-ture Commissioner Adam Putnam, do not have to report their spending on legal fees to the states chief legal officer.To capture that total, the AP sought public records on all the firms hired and outside lawyers used. It asked agencies how much they spent. The office of Floridas Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater maintains a website where the public can see spending on indi-vidual contracts, and provided information on legal settlements.Calabro said the state may be hiring outside counsel for good reasons, but the cost of this lawyer-ing has hardly gotten any attentionŽ by either Dem-ocrats or Republicans.Under radar, Florida spent $240M on lawyersFlorida Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks at the Republican National Convention on July 20, 2016, in Cleveland. [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO]

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** B4 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald TALLAHASSEETriumph bill advances in Florida SenateThe Senate Committee on Commerce and Tourism has passed a bill that would provide the Florida Panhandle with funding from the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill settlement.The committee, which is chaired by Sen. Bill Montford, D-Tallahassee, approved the legislation, Senate Bill 364 (The Recovery Fund for the Deepwater Horizon Inci-dent), on Monday. The legislation sponsored by Sen. George Gainer, R-Panama City, Sen. Doug Broxson, R-Pensacola, and Montford is intended to ensure funds received in the oil spill settlement remain in Northwest Floridas eight disproportionately affected counties.Our constituents are counting on us to ensure these critical settlement funds are distributed in a transparent manner,Ž Gainer said in a news release. This legislation requires all currently held and future settlement payments to be transferred directly to Triumph Gulf Coast Inc., where we have proper checks and balances in place to ensure accountability.ŽUnder current law, the eight disproportionately affected counties would receive 75 percent of all economic damage settlement funds received by the state. Senate Bill 364 appropriates the initial set-tlement payment directly to Triumph Gulf Coast Inc. and directs future settlement payments directly to Triumph Gulf Coast Inc. no later than 30 days after they are received by the state, according to the news release.Families and businesses in our communities are still feeling the impacts of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. This important legislation will make certain these critical settlement funds are allocated in a thoughtful and deliberative manner that will provide for ongoing and long-term economic recovery,Ž Montford said in the release. Additionally, this legislation ensures that even our small dispropor-tionately affected counties have representation on the Triumph Board.ŽTriumph Gulf Coast Inc. is tasked to work with local governments to award programs and projects that meet the priorities for economic recovery, diversification and enhancement of the disproportionately affected counties. This includes economic development projects, grants to support programs of excellence that prepare students for future occu-pations, and infrastructure projects. The corporation is required to abide by the states public record laws and public meeting notice requirements.CHIPLEYWCSO: Man charged after crawling into holeA Washington County man was charged with felony resisting arrest with violence and battery on a police officer after he crawled into a hole he dug under his barn, authorities reported.Jamie Baker ran from police Friday after he was served an arrest warrant for child support at his house on Pleasant Hill Road, according to a news release from the Washing-ton County Sheriffs Office (WCSO). K-9 teams from Holmes Correctional Insti-tute and the Northwest Florida Reception Center tracked Baker to the barn after he ran into the woods near his house, deputies reported.The K-9 teams from both of our local correctional institutes were integral parts of this apprehension and were an invaluable tool for the Washington County Sher-iffs Office,Ž Sheriff Kevin Crewssaid in the press release. I believe that we would not have been able to locate Baker without these K-9s and their handlers assistance.ŽALFORDMan sought in gas station holdupThe Jackson County Sheriffs Office (JCSO) is asking the public for help with a robbery investigation.A white male wearing a Halloween mask walked into the Dixie Food and Gas in Alford on Monday with a gun and demanded money, according to JCSO. The suspect then exited the store with an undisclosed amount of money and ran on foot behind the store.Canine teams from Alford and theSheriffs Office arrived at the scene and conducted a search of the area, but the suspect was not located,Ž JCSO wrote in a news release. Anyone with information about this crime can contact the Jackson County Sheriffs Office 850-482-9648 or Chipola Crime Stoppers at 850-526-5000.ELKHART, IND.Missing dogs owner rents billboard asking for help A Florida woman whose dog vanished during a trip to northern Indiana has rented a billboard in hopes of finding her lost pet.Leigh Bowden, of Pace, rented the billboard in Elkhart, Indiana, follow-ing a GoFundMe campaign that raised more than $450. The sign near the Indiana Toll Road seeks information on the whereabouts of Bowdens beloved York-shire terrier, Toot.Bowden told The Elkhart Truth she hopes the sign spurs Toots return or information on his where-abouts. Bowden and her trucker husband were staying at an Elkhart hotel in early February when someone opened their hotel rooms door while they were out and Toot escaped. Hotel surveillance video appears to show someone inside a car in the parking lot stop, grab Toot and drive away.PORT CANAVERALDeputy saves jet skiers just before cruise ship hits them A Port Canaveral harbor pilot and a sheriffs deputy teamed up to rescue two spring breakers on a personal watercraft as a Carnival Cruise ship moved toward them. A Canaveral Pilots Asso-ciation statement said Capt. Doug Brown spot-ted them while navigating the Carnival Magic out of the port and alerted Prim-mer. As he approached in a marine patrol boat, one woman fell off the Jet-ski. It flipped as she tried to get back on, sending both women into the water. With the ship bearing down, Primmer pulled them out and steered his boat away. Area news outlets identified them as 19-year-old Skylar Penpasuglia and 20-year-old Allison Garrett of Princ-eton, West Virginia.TALLAHASSEEFlorida leads in job growth, but rate goes upFloridas unemployment rate is inching back up again. State officials announced Monday the rate rose to 5 percent in January. Thats higher than the overall national unemployment rate.The state, however, did add 54,300 jobs during January and has gained almost 300,000 jobs during the past year. Florida added more jobs in that month than any other state. Texas added 51,300 jobs and New York added 28,700.Monroe County had the states lowest unemploy-ment rate at 3.5 percent. Staff and wire reportsAREA AND STATE BRIEFS 4527120 PublicNoticeAFinalPublicHearingwillbeheldattheGulf CountyBoardofCountyCommissioners(BOCC) meetingonTuesday,March28,2017at9:00a.m., ET.ePublicHearingwillbeheldintheGulf CountyBOCCMeetingRoomattheRobertM. MooreAdministrationBuilding,1000CecilG. Costin,Sr.Blvd.,PortSt.Joe,Florida.ePublic Hearingwillbetodiscussandactonthefollowing: ANORDINANCEPERTHEREQUIREMENTSOFFLORIDASTATUTE 163.3177(3)(b)TOYEARLYREVIEWAND UPDATETHEGULFCOUNTYFIVE-YEAR CAPITALIMPROVEMENTSCHEDULE; INCORPORATINGTHEGULFCOUNTY SCHOOLDISTRICT2016/2017WORK PLAN;INCORPORATINGBYREFERENCETHEUPDATEDCONCURRENCY TRACKINGDATA;PROVIDINGFORREPEALOFORDINANCEINCONFLICT THEREWITH,PROVIDINGFORSEVERABILITYANDPROVIDINGFORANEFFECTIVEDATE. epublicisencouragedtoattendandbeheard onthismatter.eordinanceandcontentsareon lewiththeClerkofCourtandatthePlanning Department,Room311intheRobertM.Moore AdministrationBuilding,1000CecilG.Costin, Sr.Blvd.,PortSt.Joe,FL.1169302 PUBLICNOTICECityofParkerSpecialReferendumElection Date: Tuesday,April18th2017 Location: ParkerCommunityBuilding-935WestParkStreet,Parker Hours: 7:00a.m.to7:00p.m. CharterAmendmentProvidingforElectionofCouncil MembersBySeat ShalltheCityofParkeramenditsChartertoprovidethatacandidatefor CityCouncildeclarewhichseat,eachofwhichrepresentstheentireCity, heorsheisrunningfor? Yes_____ No_____ Call784-6100torequestaVotebyMailBallotInformationprovidedbyBayCountySupervisorofElections,MarkAndersen 1169033 Tuesday,March14€5:30-7:30BayHighCaf-$6person;$20Family Soups+Breads+Desserts

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 B51147797 WHATAREPATIENTSASKING? KNOWLEDGE&EXPERIENCEX Medicallysupervised X Leadingphysicianfocusedonthetreatment ofPeripheralNeuropathy X Individualapproachtotreatment&healing X Multi-facetedapproachtodiagnosis,treatment,andrehabilitation X LatestFDAclearedtreatments Aftertreatinghundredsofpatients,weat FloridaNeuroPain&SpineCenterhaveagreat understandingofeachconditionandknowwhat protocolstoincludeforsuccessfultreatment. CALLTODAY! 850.215.30001008JenksAvenue PanamaCity,FL32401850.215.3000www.FLMedicalGroup.com1008JenksAvenuePanamaCityMON-THUR:8AM-5PM | FRI:8AM-1PM www.FLMedicalGroup.comHaveyoubeentold eresnothingthatcanbedoneforyou?Ž Now eresaSolutionandWeHaveAnswersforPeripheralNeuropathy. IfyousuerfrompainduetoPeripheral Neuropathy;tingling,numbness,oryoucant evenfeelyourfeet;weinviteyoutocallour oceandscheduleanappointmenttolearn moreaboutthelatesttreatmentavailable.More than20millionAmericanssuerfromPeripheral Neuropathy,aconditioncausedbydamageto thenerves.ispainaectseverythingthatyou do,yourwork,yourplayandultimatelyyour qualityoflife.Wereheretotellyouthatthereis hope.Wehaveseveraleectiveoptionstohelp yougetyourlifeback.Atouroce,weoer advancedprogramsandourgoalistohelpyou haveabetterqualityoflife.XTherearemanysymptomsofPeripheralNeuropathy,whichisessentiallydamagetotheperipheralnerves.Some woulddescribeitaswearinganinvisibleglove,extremeelectric-likesensitivitytothetouch,hurting,orwalking onpins-and-needles. Istherealastingtreatment forthesymptomsof Neuropathy? Treatingaproblembymaskingthe symptomshasneverbeenaviablelong termsolution.Previoustreatmentoptions forPeripheralNeuropathyhavebeena smallhandfulofpainmedications.This typeofpainreliefistemporary.Often thesetreatmentsleadtoevenmore healthproblemsorworseyet-addiction. Somanypeopleinnocentlyfallinto abusingpainpillswhileinitiallyusing themtoalleviatethepain.Itstimeto lookintoasolutiontoyourpainthat doesnotinvolveprescriptionpainpills. Neuropathymay contributetoemotional stressanddepression. Manypeoplesufferingwithpaindont realizethatthesymptomscouldbedue toPeripheralNeuropathy.Itisacondition thatcanbemisdiagnosedorignored untilitisunbearable.Thiscanaffectall aspectsofyourlifeandmayevencause emotionalstressordepression.Why sufferlongerthanyouneedto?Ifyou feelthatyoursymptomsmaybecause byPeripheralNeuropathy,calland scheduleyourappointmenttoday.Ifyou areexperiencingseverepain,takeaction now!Dontletpaincontrolyourlife! Thesolution:Thelatest FDAClearedNeuropathy treatment. OurnewprogramfortreatingPeripheral Neuropathyisacombinationofadvanced treatmentswithbreakthroughtechnology thataidsinhealingthedamagednerves. Thistreatmentstabilizes,andrebuilds thenervesinyourextremities.Treatment hasalsobeeneffectiveintreatingpainful symptomsofarthritis,MS,andotherforms ofchronicpain.Patientsgenerallyfeel reliefphysicallythroughoutthetreatment periodandevenfeelbetteremotionally afterexperiencingareductioninpain. When consideringyouroptions,ask yourselfthisquestion...Ifthereisa solutiontoPeripheralNeuropathythat cangivemereliefandaddressthe probleminsteadofthesymptoms,isit worthexploring? NotallNeuropathy treatmentsarecreated equal. ThePeripheralNeuropathyTherapy atFloridaNeuroPain&SpineCenter incorporatesthelatestproceduresto reducethesymptomsofNeuropathy. Whendealingwithyourpain,remember thatthereisanon-surgicaltreatmentwith littlediscomfortandnoprescriptiondrugs whichisarealoptionforlastingrelief. Isntthissomethingworthexploring? Findoutifyourea candidateforthis treatment. Thereareseveralconditionsthatcanbe treatedincludingburningpain,shooting pain,balanceproblems,sensationsof walkingonbrokenglass,andmuchmore. Ifyouhavepaininyourfeetorlegs,you maybeacandidateforthistreatment. Whyouroce? Ourofceofferssomeofthemost advancednon-surgical,proceduresfor relievingchronicpain.Ourtreatment protocoloffersthelatestmedical technology.Weofferprogramsand proceduresthatwillimproveyourhealth withtheutmostsafetyandprecision. Wewillprovideyouwithanaccurate diagnosisandrecommendaprogram thatbesttsyourneeds. Fromyourrstvisitwhenyoumeetour friendlystaffandcompleteatourof theofce,youwillgetasenseofour deepcommitmenttoyourhealthand toyouasaperson.Wewillcustomizea programspecicallyforyourneedsand conditions.Insteadofonlytreatingyour symptoms,wetreatthecause.Wedo thisbyidentifyingthebesttreatmentfor yourspecicsituation,andhelping you toformlife-longhabitsthatwillimprove yourentirewayoflife. Ifyousuerfrom PeripheralNeuropathy, changeyourlifetodayby beingoneoftherst30 callers! Wearecondentthatyouwillndhealing andreliefatourofce.Youwillhavea one-on-oneconsultationwherewewill evaluateyourconditionanddetermine ifyouwouldbeacandidateforthis treatment.Duetothedemand,wehave openedandadditional30appointments thisweek.Timeslotsllquicklyso CALL TODAY tosecureyourappointment. Ifyouhaveoneormoreofthe followingsymptomsinyourlegs andfeet,wecanhelp! X Tinglingorburning. X Thefeelinglikethereissomethinginyourshoe. X Numbness,abnormalsensations. X Feellikeyouhavesockson,eventhoughyouare barefoot. X Younditharderandhardertowalk. X Stumbleintothingsorloseyourbalance. X Yourfootisagonizingtothetouch. X Thefeelingofwalkingonpins-and-needles. X Sensationoflittlebugscrawlingonyourfeet. X Uncontrollableurgetomoveorkicklegstondrelief. X Lossofthesenses,warmorcold. X Spontaneouspinching,sharpness,orelectricshocks. WILLMYINSURANCECOVERTHIS?Ž YES! FloridaNeuroPain&SpineCenter isabletocoverthesetreatmentswith mostmajorinsurancepoliciesincluding MedicareandTriCare. IHAVENOINSURANCE.WILLTHEREBEA LARGEUP-FRONTFEE?Ž NO! Ourcashpricefeesarevery reasonableandequaltowhatyourcoverage co-paywouldbeatadoctorsofce. Istherealastingtreatment forthesymptomsof Neuropathy? Treatingaproblembymaskingthe symptomshasneverbeenaviable longtermsolution.Previoustreatment optionsforPeripheralNeuropathyhave beenasmallhandfulofpainmedications. Thistypeofpainreliefistemporary. Oftenthesetreatmentsleadtoeven morehealthproblemsorworseyetaddiction.Somanypeopleinnocently fallintoabusingpainpillswhileinitially usingthemtoalleviatethepain.Itstime tolookintoasolutiontoyourpainthat doesnotinvolveprescriptionpainpills. Neuropathymaycontributeto emotionalstressanddepression. Manypeoplesufferingwithpaindont realizethatthesymptomscouldbe duetoPeripheralNeuropathy.Itisa conditionthatcanbemisdiagnosed orignoreduntilitisunbearable.This canaffectallaspectsofyourlifeand mayevencauseemotionalstressor depression.Whysufferlongerthanyou needto?Ifyoufeelthatyoursymptoms maybecausebyPeripheralNeuropathy, callandscheduleyourappointment today.Ifyouareexperiencingsevere pain,takeactionnow!Dontletpain controlyourlife! Thesolution:Thelatest FDAClearedNeuropathy treatment. OurnewprogramfortreatingPeripheral Neuropathyisacombinationof advancedtreatmentswithbreakthrough technologythataidsinhealingthe damagednerves.Thistreatment stabilizes,andrebuildsthenervesinyour extremities.Treatment hasalsobeeneffectiveintreating painfulsymptomsofarthritis,MS,and otherformsofchronicpain.Patients generallyfeelreliefphysicallythroughout thetreatmentperiodandevenfeel betteremotionallyafterexperiencinga reductioninpain. Whenconsideringyouroptions,ask yourselfthisquestion...Ifthereisa solutiontoPeripheralNeuropathy thatcangivemereliefandaddressthe probleminsteadofthesymptoms,isit worthexploring? NotallNeuropathytreatments arecreatedequal. ThePeripheralNeuropathyTherapy atFloridaNeuroPain&SpineCenter incorporatesthelatestproceduresto reducethesymptomsofNeuropathy. Whendealingwithyourpain, rememberthatthereisanon-surgical treatmentwithlittlediscomfortandno prescriptiondrugswhichisarealoption forlastingrelief.Isntthissomething worthexploring? Findoutifyoureacandidate forthistreatment. Thereareseveralconditionsthatcanbe treatedincludingburningpain,shooting pain,balanceproblems,sensationsof walkingonbrokenglass,andmuchmore. Ifyouhavepaininyourfeetorlegs,you maybeacandidateforthistreatment. Whyourofce? Ourofceofferssomeofthemost advancednon-surgical,proceduresfor relievingchronicpain.Ourtreatment protocoloffersthelatestmedical technology.Weofferprogramsand proceduresthatwillimproveyourhealth withtheutmostsafetyandprecision. Wewillprovideyouwithanaccurate diagnosisandrecommendaprogram thatbesttsyourneeds. Fromyourrstvisitwhenyoumeetour friendlystaffandcompleteatourofthe ofce,youwillgetasenseofourdeep commitmenttoyourhealthandtoyou asaperson. Wewillcustomizeaprogramspecically foryourneedsandconditions.Instead ofonlytreatingyoursymptoms,wetreat thecause. Wedothisbyidentifyingthebest treatmentforyourspecicsituation,and helpingyoutoformlife-longhabitsthat willimproveyourentirewayoflife. IfyousufferfromPeripheral Neuropathy,changeyourlife today! Wearecondentthatyouwillnd healingandreliefatourofce. Youwillhaveaone-on-oneconsultation wherewewillevaluateyourcondition anddetermineifyouwouldbea candidateforthistreatment. CALLTODAY toscheduleyour appointment. WHATAREPATIENTSASKING? SCHEDULEYOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY 11 690 1 7

PAGE 14

** B6 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald(he) was noticed to sleep part of the way to the jail,Ž the deputy wrote. He would lean forward and I could hear him snoring.ŽThe man was booked after refusing to take a Breathalyzer test. Crumpled work, ruf” ed feelingsBoys will be boys, but as one bus driver learned recently, look out for their mothers.The bus driver found this out last week when she called Bay County Sheriffs Office deputies after an incident involv-ing a parent.The woman advised that two male students were being boys and playing around with each other. (She) further advised that one of the boys homework was taken out of his backpack and crumpled up,Ž the deputy wrote. She said she flatted it back out and placed it back in his bag and told the two boys to leave each other alone.ŽThe driver said the boys were separated and left each other alone, but the next morning as she pulled into one of the boys stop, his mother confronted her about the homework. (She) stated that (the mother) said, Step off that bus and Ill kick your ass. (She) advised she did not step off the bus.ŽThe driver asked for a report at the request of her supervisor. Woman grilled over tagA woman called Bay County Sheriffs Office deputies to report she had been grilled. Actu-ally, she called to report that someone stole her car tag, which she had put on her barbecue grill for safekeeping.The woman told a deputy her last car had been repossessed and she had placed the Flor-ida license plate from the vehicle on top of the bar-becue grill on the front porch of her home.Ž She recently bought a new car, but when she went to locate the old tag, it was gone.She asked her room-mates if they had seen it, and she received nega-tive replies,Ž the deputy reported, adding that the woman asked for a theft report.She added she lives in a fairly nice neighbor-hood, but occasionally there were some sketchy people walking by. She advised she had no concrete idea for any suspect(s). She was unable to provide the tag number.ŽThe deputy made a report. A bite out of crimeA deputy on patrol spotted a truck turning on his LED Bar and his bright lights.ŽWhen I flashed my headlights at the driver ... he cut the LED light Bar off and then cut it back on making hard to see the road,Ž the deputy wrote, saying he then pulled over the vehicle and asked the man for his drivers license. He handed me a Flor-ida drivers license with half the drivers license number gone, and the license had teeth marks all over it and it was mostly unreadable,Ž the deputy wrote. I issued a ticket for failure to dim and I informed (him) that his drivers license would be sent to DHSMV.Ž BLOTTERContinued from B1Owning that much property near the proposed Panama City Downtown Marina rede-velopment could have implications for the project. So far, however, Kingston is not in talks with the city.Panama City Mayor Greg Brudnicki said while he doubts Kingston would propose something for the spot that wouldnt bene-fit the marina project, he could only speculateŽ on what Kingston might be doing.Similarly, Commissioner Mike Nichols has said Kingston buying the prominent Cabana Motel property is a great thingŽ for St. Andrews, but he declined to comment on what Kingstons plans might be.Kingston, while based in Georgia, is not a new property owner in Panama City. His properties speckle the greater downtown area, including a few spots on Harrison Avenue, the lots off Sixth Street between Mulberry and Florida avenues and a cluster of parcels off Fifth Street near Massalina Bayou. He has been buying these properties since at least 2005.The land and build-ings have been purchased under various limited liability companies, including Reese Investment Inc., Beach Drive PC Properties and 1212 Beck Avenue. While the companies have differ-ent names and registered agents, all of them have 6622 E Broad St., Suite A, Douglasville, Georgia „ Kingstons offices „ listed as the primary mailing address and his signature appears often on the documents.Panama City is not the only place Kingston has been buying up land. He also owns a number of parcels in Walton and Okaloosa counties. PROPERTYContinued from B1last week to blast House Speaker Richard Corcoran, R-Land O Lakes, and others who oppose the incentives.A bipartisan group of legislators critical of Enterprise Florida say the spending represents corporate welfareŽ that gives some businesses special privileges. The Visit Florida reform measure follows attacks on the agency for a controversial $1 mil-lion contract with Miami hip-hop artist Pitbull to promote Florida.There are better, higher uses for that money, whether its public safety, whether its quality education, or infrastructure,Ž Rep. Paul Renner, a Palm Coast Republican who is spon-soring the bills, said after the Enterprise Florida measure was approved Friday.But Scott was unapolo-getic Monday for savaging Republicans, even as he applauded House members Ramon Alexander and Loranne Ausley, a pair of Tallahassee Democrats, for voting against the bills on Enterprise Florida (HB 7005) and Visit Florida (HB 9).Whoever votes to help me make sure we get more jobs, Im going to praise them,Ž Scott said. If youre going to vote to decimate the job market in this state, Im not going to praise you.Ž When asked, Scott also declined to rule out veto-ing the entire state budget „ an extraordinarily rare move in Florida, given the line-item veto „ if it does not include funding for incentives.Im going to do my best to work through the session, make sure the right thing happens during session,Ž Scott said. But ... at the end of the session, Ill go through (the budget). I have the opportunity to review the budget. I have the oppor-tunity to review every line in the budget and thats what Ill do. Ive done it for six years; Ill do it for my seventh.Ž SCOTTContinued from B1 Georgia-based developer George Kingston has purchased this waterfront property on Beach Drive in downtown Panama City, according to court records. [MIKE CAZALAS/ THE NEWS HERALD] Gov. Rick Scott, center, stopped in Panama City Beach last month for a roundtable discussion about the local economic impact of Visit Florida and Enterprise Florida at Capt. Andersons restaurant. [ANDREW WARDLOW/NEWS HERALD FILE] DrugCompaniesFear ReleaseOfNew$2Sex PillF orOlderMenNEWYORK-Itshard tobelievethatinAmerica todayanaffordablepill thatcouldimprovethe sexlivesofmillionsof menisindangerofbeing yankedfromtheshelves. Anditsjustbecausebig drugcompaniesfearfor theirpro“ts. Thepharmaceutical industryisdesperately tryingtostopshipments oftheremarkablenew JackedUpŽpill.Big Pharmaisworried becausemenare reportingincreasedsex drive,strongererections andmorestamina-all withouttheside-effects and$40-per-pillpricetag associatedwithdrugs likeViagra.Clinical resultsshowmenfeel thesebene“tswithin justafewweeksof takingJackedUpsactive ingredient. Thepill,madeformen over50,wasreleased earlylastmonth.Despite BigPharmasefforts, saleshavealready exceededexpectations.ExcitingBene“tsThereareverygood reasonswhysalesare boominganddrug companieswantitgone. Apartfromcostingjust twodollarsperdaily dose,theclinicalresults con“rmJackedUps activeingredientisvery impressive.Itgreatly boostsamansabilityto getandkeeperections. Staminaduringsexalso improves. Theproductalsohas auniqueabilitytohelp menfeelmorepassion, desire,andsexdrive. Theseimpressivebene“ts comefromboosting testosteronelevelsbyup toawhopping193%. Doctorsareastoundedby itseffects. Whydodrug companieswantthis pillstopped?Since theJackedUpŽpillis natural,drugcompanies cantpatentit(likethey didwithViagra)and makebigpro“ts.Plus, ifyoureover50and sufferingfromlowsex drive,decreasedstamina andinabilitytoperform, lowtestosteroneisthe biggestfactor.Ifyou cansafelyboostyour testosterone, youwont needtheirexpensivepills. Thatstheveryreason bigbusinessistryingto haveitpulledfromthe shelves.StrongClinical ResultsWorry BigPharmaRecentclinicaltrials onJackedUpsactive ingredienthavemade thedrugcompanies moredesperate.Thetrial resultswerepublishedin majormedicaljournals, anddoctorsarenow recommendingJackedUp topatients. Thetestingwasdone onmen40…65years old,andtheresults wereremarkable.The menwhotookthe activeingredientin JackedUpreportedmajor improvementsintheirsex lives.Theirabilitytoget andkeeperectionswent upbyover200%.Libido andsexdrivesurged. Evenstayingpowerand staminaduringsexmore thandoubled! Headofproduct development,Dave McNeill,saidthebig drugcompanieswerent worriedat“rst.They didntcarebecausethe activeingredientcan tak e a fe w we eks befor e manymenreallyfeel thebene“ts.Butthese awesomeclinicaltrials reallygottheirattention. TheyrelearningA LOTofmenwillwaita fewweeksifitmeans avoidingnegativeside effectsandsaving money.ŽHowItWorksTheJackedUpŽpill worksbyhelpingolder menproducemore testosterone.Itdoesnt forcedangerousfake testosteroneintoyour bodylikeinjectionsdo. Instead,itworkswith yourbodytoproduce testosteronenaturally. Andtheresultshave beenextraordinary.Its likeyourbodyreboots itselftofeellikeitdidin theprimeofyourlife.InitialUsersAre ThrilledƒAnd WorriedJackedUphasbeen awesomeformysex driveandperformance! Imworrieditmay notbeavailableinthe future.Theideathatit maybetakenawayjust tosecuresomebigdrug companyspro“tsisvery frustrating.Ž -RobH.,49yearsold, ColoradoSprings,CO MywifeandIwere bothsexuallyvibrant untilIhadprostate cancer.Aftermysurgery wetriedeverythingmy doctorrecommendedbut nothingworked.Within afewweeksoftaking JackedUp,everything hasbeenfunctioning beautifullyandweve beenridinghighever since!Ž -KenS.,78yearsold, Phoenix,AZDoctorsSpeakOutDrugcompanies arealsoconcerned thatdoctorsare nowrecommending JackedUp.Theactive ingredienthasstrong clinicalresultsandlacks thesideeffectsseenin currentdrugsonthe market.Thismakesitan easyoptionfordoctorsto suggest. Dr.Laguna-Bedia,a specialistininternal medicinesays,Alotof menthinktheirlackof interestandinabilityto performaresimplyparts ofaging.Thisisjust nottrue.JackedUpcan helpthesemenregaina healthyappetiteforsex andthephysicalability toperform.Ž JackedUpworks byboostingkeymale hormoneswithoutside effects.Thebene“ts ofthesehormonesto sexualhealtharewell known,buttheyactually domorethanthat.Men alsoreportmoreenergy, lessbodyfatandhigher motivation,ŽsaidDr. G.Pereira,arenowned surgeoninFlorida. Dr.JacobMossnotes, IrecommendJackedUp ifyourestrugglingwith gettingandkeeping erectionsorlowlibido. Itsalsoagreatoption formenwhowanttolast longerandhavemore controloverwhenthey orgasm.ŽSpecialOpportunity forOurReadersDrugcompaniesare “ghtinghardtogetrid ofthisproduct.This ismakinginventory disappearfast. Thankfully,aspecial discountedsupply hasbeenreservedfor PanamaCityNews Heraldreaders.Butonly forthosewhocallwithin thenext48hours. Thisisthebest opportunitytotry JackedUprisk-free withtheir100%results guarantee. ARegionalOrder Hotlinehasbeenset upforlocalreadersto call.Thisgivesallmen anequalchancetotry JackedUp. Startingat6:00am todaytheorderhotline willbeopenforthenext 48hours.Allyouhave todoiscallTOLLFREE 1-888-580-8924andthe companywilldotherest. Duetothepossibility ofJackedUpbeingpulled fromtheshelf,phone linesareoftenbusy. Ifyoucallanddonot immediatelygetthrough, pleasebepatientandcall back.Currentsupplies ofJackedUparelimited, andcallersthatdont getthroughtotheorder hotlinewithinthenext 48hourswillbeforcedto waitformoreinventory tobeproduced.Thiscan takeaslongas6weeks. BigPharmaWorried: Oldermenarehavingbettersexafter takingthenewlyreleased$2pillcalledJackedUp.Clinical trialsshowactiveingredienttriggerssurgeindesire,strength oferections,andsexualactivityinoldermen.THESESTATEMENTSHAVENOTBEENEVALUATEDBYTHEFOODANDDRUGADMINISTRATION.THISPRODUCTISNOTINTENDEDTODIAGNOSE, TREAT,CUREORPREVENTANYDISEASE.ALLDOCTORSMENTIONEDAREREMUNERATEDFORTHEIRSERVICES.ALLCLINICALSTUDIES ONJACKEDUPSACTIVEINGREDIENTWEREINDEPENDENTLYCONDUCTEDANDWERENOTSPONSOREDBYTHEMAKERSOFJACKEDUP. Meninclinicaltrialseehugeboostindesire,strength oferections,andsexualactivitywithoutsideeffects. Ifyoureover50 andsufferingfrom lowsexdrive,decreasedstaminaand inabilitytoperform,lowtestosterone isthebiggestfactor. Drugcompanies doNOTwantmentoknowaboutthis affordablenewpillƒŽ 1162799

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 B7ARIES (March 21-April 19) „ Youve a success story to share. Be discerning, though. Certain friends will be too jealous to be genuinely happy for you. Its obviously less than ideal, but the friendship will be stronger when youre sensitive to such quirks. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) „ You crave the joy that comes from letting go of control. The way to get exciting results is to set boundaries and then encourage your crew to go wild within those boundaries. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) „ Youre thinking deeper and wider. Dont be surprised if the people around you do not see the same options that you see. Youll either show them the way or preserve a special route for yourself. CANCER (June 22-July 22) „ This is not a zero-sum game. Your success will not come at the expense of anyone else. The cost will be paid by you and you alone. The rewards will go to you, too. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) „ Youre not lost. Youre just paying attention in a new way, which can be disorienting. Close observation can make the familiar seem unfamiliar. Take breaks. Observation takes energy. Its harder work than it seems. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) „ Would happiness prevail if not for the current problem? No. The current problem itself is integral to happiness. Youll derive great satisfaction and pride from solving it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) „ While it would be foolish to aim to make mistakes, its equally silly to avoid and fear them. The wise do not aim to live without folly. There will be much to learn in a tidy little mess. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) „ Trust your instincts. They are creative, accurate, attractive, compelling and healthy. Whoever told you that you couldnt trust your instincts was acting out of self-interest at the time. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) „ From Shakespeare to Disney, the dramatists agree that evil plans are most harmful to the one planning them. All you have to do is mind your own business and the drama will take care of itself. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) „ While its cynical to think that people are being nice in hopes of future favors returned, its not altogether wrong today, either. Luckily, the land of politics is one in which youre well versed. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) „ Managing expectations will be a very important part of your day. If you can master this (mainly by under promising and over delivering), youll wind up a hero. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) „ If you downplay your accomplishments, youll insinuate doubt in an otherwise neutral mind. If you praise yourself, it will only annoy. For today, youll win socially by not discussing yourself at all.HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY MATHIS DIVERSIONSTrivia FunŽ with Wilson Casey, Guinness World Record Holder from Woodruff, S.C., is published in more than 500 newspapers across the country. Comments, questions or suggestions? WC@TriviaGuy.com 1. Which MLB team shares the record with the 1906 Cubsfor most regular season wins at 116?1969 Mets, 1976 Reds, 1998 Yankees, 2001 Mariners2. On whose grave marker does it read, Tomorrow is the most important thing in life.Ž?John Wayne, Elvis Presley, Sigmund Freud, Miguel Ferrer3. Which continent is about the same size as the U.S., less Alaska?Asia, Australia, Antarctica, Europe4. What are brassie, spoon and cleekŽ older terms or names of?Bowties, Plow blades, Golf clubs, Shotguns5. Edison Automatic and Regina Nexaphone are names of?Saxophones, Stages, Jukeboxes, Guitars6. What is Gatun Lake in the middle of?Moon crater, Sahara, Area 51, Panama Canal ANSWERS: 1. 2001 Mariners, 2. John Wayne, 3. Australia, 4. Golf clubs, 5. Jukeboxes, 6. Panama CanalTRIVIA BY WILSON CASEY ACES ON BRIDGE: BOBBY WOLFF (Answers tomorrow) SPURN MESSYGARLIC AGENDA Yesterdays Jumbles: Answer: The churchs new choir director was well liked. Members of the choir „ SANG HIS PRAISES Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. FINSF TINNH FLEKIC ALGGGE 2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved. Check out the new, free JUSTJUMBLE app SUDOKUAnswer to yesterdays sudokuDEAR ABBYGirls e orts never good enough for familyDEAR ABBY: Im a 15-year-old girl, and Im struggling with abuse. Im mentally and physically abused by my family constantly, yet they make me out to be the abusive one. I could do amazing on a test, and they yell at me for something that happened on the last one. Theyre always pushing me so hard to do better that its making me do worse. How can I make my family see that Im not them, and I can do good if they just give me the chance to learn from my mistakes? „ STRUGGLING IN WISCONSINDEAR STRUGGLING: Parents always want their children to perform to their level of capacity. Because you say you are being abused physically and emotionally for your inability to live up to your familys expectations, discuss whats going on with a counselor at your school. Its possible there needs to be an intervention by someone they will listen to. Please dont wait to do it.DEAR ABBY: My husband of three years has visits with his son every Tuesday and Thursday evening. My mother-in-law picks up her grandson, takes him to her home and makes dinner for the three of them. I work 10-hour days Monday through Friday and am not able to attend these dinners. My question is, isnt it proper etiquette that my mother-in-law should send a plate of food home for me with my husband? She never has, and I think this is rude and inconsiderate of her. What is your opinion? „ HUNGRY IN EL PASODEAR HUNGRY: Although brief, your letter speaks volumes about your relationship with your motherin-law, which appears could be better. No rule of etiquette dictates that she is obligated to send a plate of her food home with her son for you. Perhaps if your relationship with her was warmer, or your husband was thoughtful enough to suggest it, she would. However, since you asked, my opinion is that rather than complain, you should pick up some take-out on your way home from work. Jeanne PhillipsWORD SCRIMMAGE: JUDD HAMBRICK Wilson Casey

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** B8 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald COMICS & PUZZLES PEANUTS ZITS FRANK & ERNEST WIZARD OF ID THE BORN LOSER BEETLE BAILEY DILBERT BLONDIE PEARLS BEFORE SWINE FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE PICKLES HAGAR THE HORRIBLE GARFIELD CRANKSHAFT HERMAN PLUGGERS Daily CROSSWORD

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 C1 SPORTS WOMENS HOOPS C2REBUILDING YEAR?Unbeaten UConn returns to NCAA tourney as top seed MENS HOOPS | C4PROMISING COACHESA look at leaders who could raise their stock during March Madness By Aaron BeardThe Associated PressCHAPEL HILL, N.C. „ North Carolinas Joel Berry II still replays it in his mind, over and over.The ball left the hand of Vil-lanovas Kris Jenkins, reached the height of its arc as the horn sounded then dropped through the net a split second before confetti started falling from the rafters. And as the Wildcats celebrated a national championship, the Tar Heels walked off the court in Houston in disbelief.Nearly a year later, that 3-pointer still hangs over both teams as they start the NCAA Tournament as Final Four favorites. For Villanova, the goal is to follow Jenkins shot by becoming the first repeat champion since Flor-ida a decade ago. For UNC, its about getting back to that moment and finishing. I just think about it all the time,Ž Berry said recently. Four seconds made a difference in my life. I wish I could get those four seconds back, but I cant. This is the time where we just have to lock in, and every time we go out „ whether its practice, whether were just shooting around, no matter what it is „ weve got to remember that four seconds.ŽThe play binds two teams offering an unusual bit of continuity amid college basketballs era of one-and-dones and roster turnover.The Wildcats (31-3) are the tournaments top overall seed in the East Region while the Tar Heels (27-7) headline the South making this only the second time the national finalists both earned a No. 1 seed the following year since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985 (Duke and Kansas were the others in 1992).And five current players were on the court for those final 4.7 seconds: Jenkins and national player of the year candidate Josh Hart for Villanova; Berry, Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year Justin Jackson and Isaiah Hicks for UNC.We know this years going to be tougher,Ž Jenkins said. Its a totally different year. Teams are different. The teams that were going to face are different, but last year does nothing for us.ŽJenkins shot has earned a permanent place in tournament lore alongside oft-replayed moments such as Christian Laettners shot against Kentucky to send Duke to the Final Four or Jenkins shot still lingers In this April 4, 2016, “ le photo, Villanovas Kris Jenkins makes the game-winning three-point shot during the second half of the NCAA Final Four tournament college basketball championship game against North Carolina, in Houston. North Carolina players are, from left: Brice Johnson (11), Joel Berry, Isiah Hicks (4), Justin Jackson (44) and Marcus Paige (5). Nearly a year after Jenkins shot, the Wildcats and Tar Heels are both No. 1 seeds in the NCAA Tournament. [DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP PHOTO] By Pat McCannThe News HeraldPANAMA CITY „ As the joke goes, when youre being chased by a shark you dont have to be the fastest swimmer, you just have to swim faster than one other guy.That mantra could be adopted by the Gulf Coast softball team when it begins Panhandle Conference play with a doubleheader starting at 4 p.m. today against visit-ing Pensacola at Joe Tom King Field.The Lady Commodores are 19-10, with Pensacola coming in 15-6 and on a conference-best seven-game winning streak. Four of the five conference ballclubs will qualify for the state tournament this year, for the last time, so Gulf Coast has to be better than just one of them to advance.Gulf Coast coach Beth Wade noted, however, that the Panhandle is the only conference in the state where every team has a winning record in nonconference play.Everybody is good again this year,Ž Wade said. Its going to be a dogfight, so hopefully were prepared.ŽThe Lady Commodores have battled through an early stretch where they couldnt close out games and wound up losing, and lately havent had their three-pitcher rota-tion healthy at the same time.Wade said Brittany Lee was out for a while, then Kristina Manthei went down. Only Payton Carpenter has remained available.Manthei threw two innings against Indian Hills (Friday) and two against Wabash Valley (Saturday),Ž Wade said. Shes not at full strength, but hopefully we can use all three.Weve been successful Gulf Coast softball awaits conference openerGulf Coast players celebrate a home run by Bailey Burk (14) in tournament play last month. [PATTI BLAKE/THE NEWS HERALD] Gulf Coasts Brittany Lee is part of a three-pitcher rotation leading the Lady Commodores into conference play this afternoon. [PATTI BLAKE/THE NEWS HERALD] By Steven WineThe Associated PressMIAMI „ Andrew Miller said yes to taking part in the World Baseball Classic when many other top U.S. pitchers said no, including Clayton Kershaw, Noah Syndergaard and Justin Verlander. As a reward for show-ing up, Miller gave up two home runs in an inning for the first time since 2011. That fueled a comeback by the Domin-ican Republic, which rallied from a five-run deficit to beat the U.S. team, delighting a rau-cous sellout crowd.An hour after his dismal WBC debut, Miller said he didnt regret deciding to participate.I want to pitch in this atmosphere,Ž the Indi-ans All-Star closer said. I want to get better at pitching in games like this. I want to play on teams like this. I want to play against lineups like that. At this point in Taking WBC seriously, Team USA advancesDog ght expectedSee VILLANOVA, C3 See WBC, C3 See SOFTBALL, C3

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** C2 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald By Doug FeinbergThe Associated PressNEW YORK „ UConns drive for five will begin at home.Winners of 107 straight games, coach Geno Auriemma and the Huskies wont have to leave the state of Connecti-cut in the NCAA Tournament until the Final Four as they try for an unprecedented fifth consecutive national championship.The top seed will open at home Saturday against Albany and if they advance to the Bridgeport Regional would have a short drive.I worry sometimes about being at home. I worry about the distractions that kids have,Ž Auriemma said. When you are on the road you can just huddle everybody up and you can eliminate a lot of distractions. Sometimes the officials get funny against the home team in the NCAA Tournament.ŽWhile the Huskies wont have to leave the state until potentially heading to Dallas for the national semifinals, the other No. 1 seeds arent as lucky.South Carolina is the top seed in Stockton, California. The Gamecocks are headed out of the Eastern time zone for the third time in four sea-sons. The Gamecocks lone trip to the Final Four came when they played a regional in Greensboro in 2015.I dont know what more we can do,Ž South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said. We won our conference tournament to play closer. Two years ago, we got sent to Greensboro. Last year, we had to take the time zone flight, over two time zones. I thought it was our turn to get flipped back to the Greensboro kind of ideol-ogy. Im not going to say its not fair. But they got to figure out a different way.ŽBaylor is the No. 1 in the Oklahoma City Regional and Notre Dame is the top choice in Lexington, Kentucky. NCAA selection committee chair Terry Gawlik defended the choice to send South Carolina out west again. It made the most sense for the good of the game and the student-athlete experience to go out to Stockton and have Baylor go to Oklahoma City,Ž she said.All four hope to get to Dallas for the Final Four on March 31. The NCAA switched the national semifinals back to a Friday-Sunday format this season for the first time since 2002. The Huskies would match up with Baylor while South Carolina and Notre Dame would play if all four teams advance that far. The Lady Bears are hoping to make the short drive from Waco to Dallas.That scenario might be unlikely. Last year, the Hus-kies were the only top team to make the Final Four as Wash-ington, Syracuse and Oregon State all pulled off upsets to advance.UConn, which has won a record 11 national championships, is the prohibitive favorite to win again. Unlike the past few years where it almost seemed a foregone conclusion that UConn would win the title, the Huskies werent the favorite coming into the season with big losses to graduation.Geno Auriemma challenged his young team with a difficult schedule that saw the Huskies play most of the other top teams in the country, including Notre Dame, South Carolina and Baylor. Still, they did show some vul-nerability with a single digit win over Maryland „ the No. 3 seed in their region „ and a two-point victory over Florida State in November „ the No. 3 seed in the Stockton Regional. UConn also only beat Tulane by three points in February, giving other teams hope that the Huskies are beatable.We might be the No. 1 seed but I dont know that we are the clear-cut favorite,Ž Auriemma said.Maryland coach Brenda Frese wasnt thrilled at the low seed. The Terrapins were fourth in the final AP poll Monday.We understand its tournament time. Im most surprised that being a team ranked top four in the country, (we) earn a three seed,Ž Frese said. Thirty wins, win your conference regular season and conference tournament at this point it doesnt matter. Put your head down and given the bracket you have, its the next opportunity.ŽDuke is the No. 2 seed in the region after missing the NCAAs last year for the first time since 1994.For the second consecutive season the NCAA is having the top four teams in each region host the opening two rounds. No. 2 Stanford couldnt host because of a conflict in its facility so the Cardinal will head to seventh-seeded Kansas State.Tennessee isnt one of those 16 teams, but the Lady Vols will be making their 36th consecutive appearance in the NCAA Tournament. Theyve been in the field every year.The Lady Vols have shown they can beat nearly anyone in the field but also can lose to many teams, too. They open up against Dayton in Louisville. The Cardinals are the four seed in the Oklahoma City Regional.Elon and Texas Southern are the lone teams playing in their first NCAAs.The SEC has eight teams in the field while the ACC and Pac-12 each have seven.The Missouri Valley Conference got a second team in with Northern Iowa making the field as a 10 seed. Drake won the conferences automatic bid, going unbeaten in conference play.UConn, Irish, South Carolina, Baylor top seedsConnecticut head coach Geno Auriemma gestures to his team during the “ rst half against South Florida in the American Athletic Conference tournament “ nal March 6 in Uncasville, Conn. UConn “ nished the season at No. 1 in The Associated Press womens basketball poll for the 14th time in school history. [JESSICA HILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] AP March 31Final FourDallas First Round First Round Second Round Second Round Sweet 16Sweet 16 Elite 8Elite 8April 2 All times CDT 2017NCAA TOURNAMENT National Championship9 13 11 14 8 4 12 5 6 3 10 7 15 2 1 16 9 13 11 14 8 4 12 5 6 3 10 7 15 2 13 11 14 9 8 4 12 5 6 3 10 7 15 2 1 16 1 16 9 13 11 14 8 4 12 5 6 3 10 7 15 2March 17-18 March 17-18 March 19-20 March 19-20 March 24-25 March 24-25 March 26-27March 26-27 Albany (NY) (21-11) UConn (32-0) Notre Dame (30-3) Robert Morris (22-10) Green Bay (27-5) Purdue (22-12) Ohio St. (26-6) Western Ky. (27-6) Kentucky (21-10) Belmont (27-5) N. Carolina St. (22-8) Auburn (17-14) Texas (23-8) Central Ark. (26-4) Kansas St. (22-10) Drake (28-4) Stanford (28-5) New Mexico St. (24-6) South Carolina (27-4) UNC Asheville (19-14) Arizona St. (19-12) Michigan St. (21-11) Marquette (25-7) Quinnipiac (27-6) Miami (FL) (23-8) FGCU (26-8) Missouri (21-10) South Fla. (24-8) Florida St. (25-6) Western Ill. (26-6) Creighton (23-7) Toledo (25-8) Oregon St. (29-4) Long Beach St. (23-10) Syracuse (21-10) Iowa St. (18-12) Texas A&M (21-11) Penn (22-7) UCLA (23-8) Boise St. (25-7) West Virginia (23-10) Elon (27-6) Maryland (30-2) Bucknell (27-5) Temple (24-7) Oregon (20-13) Duke (27-5) Hampton (20-12) Baylor (30-3) Texas So. (23-9) LSU (20-11) California (19-13) Tennessee (19-11) Dayton (22-9) Louisville (27-7) Chattanooga (21-10) Oklahoma (22-9) Gonzaga (26-6) Washington (27-5) Montana St. (25-6) DePaul (26-7) UNI (24-8) Mississippi St. (29-4) Troy (22-10)Stockton, Calif. Oklahoma City Lexington, Ky. Bridgeport, Conn.Storrs Los Angeles College Park Durham Waco Louisville Seattle StarkvilleNotre DameLexingtonAustinManhattanColumbiaCoral GablesTallahasseeCorvallisMar. 20 Sat. 10 a.m. Fri. 6:30 p.m. Fri. 1:30 p.m. Fri. 1:30 p.m. Fri. 4 p.m. Fri. 6:30 p.m. Fri. 4 p.m. Fri. 4 p.m. Fri. 6:30 p.m. Fri. 6:30 p.m. Sat. 12:30 p.m. Sat. 3 p.m. Sat. 3 p.m. Sat. 12:30 p.m. Fri. 11 a.m. Fri. 11 a.m. Fri. 4 p.m. Sat. 12:30 p.m. Sat. 8 p.m. Sat. 5:30 p.m. Fri. 1:30 p.m. Fri. 11 a.m. Sat. 5:30 p.m. Sat. 8 p.m. Sat. 5:30 p.m. Sat. 8 p.m. Sat. 3 p.m. Sat. 12:30 p.m. Sat. 5:30 p.m. Sat. 8 p.m. Fri. 11 a.m. Fri. 1:30 p.m. Mar. 25 Mar. 25 Mar. 24 Mar. 24Mar. 26Mar. 27 Mar. 27Mar. 26Mar. 19 Mar. 19 Mar. 19 Mar. 20 Mar. 20 Mar. 19 Mar. 19 Mar. 25 Mar. 25 Mar. 24 Mar. 24 Mar. 19 Mar. 20 Mar. 20 Mar. 20 Mar. 20 Mar. 20 Mar. 19 Mar. 191 16

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 C3U.S. pitcher Andrew Miller stands in the dugout after being relieved during the eighth inning in a “ rst-round game of the World Baseball Classic against the Dominican Republic, Saturday, March 11, in Miami. The Dominican Republic won 7-5. [LYNNE SLADKY/AP PHOTO] when weve been able to use all three and keep teams off-balance. Thats the key for us.ŽGulf Coasts .341 team batting average is second in the conference only to Northwest Florida, and the Lady Commodores have hit for power with 26 home runs, most among PC teams.Alexis Marchozzi leads with seven homers and is tied with Kynadi Tipler with 32 runs batted in. Tipler has four homers and hits a team-high .457. Annsley Brown is at .416 and has combined with Bailey Burk (36 steals) for 64 of Gulf Coasts 96 stolen bases. Marchozzi hits .381.I knew she could hit well, but didnt do as good a job swinging the bat in the fall and struggled in the opening games,Ž Wade said of Marchozzi. She has worked a lot of extra time outside of practice.ŽThe Lady Commodores also have more balanced power as Keala Cordeiro was far and away their long-ball threat the past two seasons.Wade prefers a team fielding percentage of .950 be higher, as it currently ranks only third among conference teams. She projected that almost half the teams errors have come out of the third base position which has been in transition much of the early season.Chipola and Northwest Florida again look to be the teams everyone else will chase in a 20-game conference schedule.Every game means something, but every game counts the same ulti-mately,Ž Wade said as she eyed todays opening twin-bill. But from a mental standpoint its good to get wins early.Ž Around the conferencePensacola, 15-6: The Pirates hit .318 as a team, but have hit the fewest home runs among conference ballclubs with 10. However, they can post a starting lineup with at least seven players at .300 or above. Lia Johnson is a freshman outfielder leading with a .474 batting average. Lani Kaleikini hits .373, and Emily Corbitt bats .364 and is tied with Danielle de Ruiter for the RBI lead with 15.Pensacola relies on a three-pitcher rotation as does Gulf Coast. Erika Greek is 6-4 with a 1.74 ERA, Jensen Strickland 5-1 and 1.75 and Heather Keane 4-1, 1.22.Jensen Strickland and Madison Marshall are tied for the home run lead with three, but neither do the Pirates run very much with Kacie Cahill tops with five stolen bases.Chipola, 33-2: The Indians are best defined by speed, in the pitching circle and on the base paths. Chipola does everything well, however.Alexis Gramp tops a squad that hits .324 overall with a .396 average and a teamhigh seven homers and 32 RBIs. She supplies most of the power for the Indians, who have hit 13 homers.Debora Fernanda hits .369 with 22 RBIs and Ashley Morris .342 and 22.Team speed is more noteworthy. The Indians average more than five stolen bases a game with 10 players in double figures for the season. Gramp and Morris each have 29 steals, but just about the entire roster can cut it loose.A pair of aces dominate the rotation. Morgan Goree is 15-0 with a .045 ERA and 101 strikeouts in 92.2 innings. Krystal Goodman is 14-0, 0.72 with 102 Ks in 87.2 innings. Devyn Terry, 4-2, 1.24 also is very capa-ble and has thrown 39.2 innings.Northwest Florida 27-7: The Raiders have transitioned from a team that relied heavily on power hitting to one that leads conference contenders with a .344 average. NWFS also is bal-anced as nine players have between 12-21 RBIs.Kristan Lizardi hits .421 and is tied for the run lead with 29. Tori Robinson is at .359 and has six home runs and 20 RBIs. No other Raider has more than three homers as the team totals 21.Mariana Pereira (.291) and Taylor Luther (.393) are tied for the RBI lead with 21.Almost all of the innings pitched have been man-aged by Dharma Rosbrugh and Louise Disi. Rosbrugh is 14-4 with a 1.80 ERA and 86 strikeouts. Disi is 12-3, 1.72 and 83ks.The Raiders also lead conference teams with a .955 fielding percentage.Tallahassee, 14-8: The Eagles average almost a home run (20) per game led by Kristin Gunter and Samantha Malik, who each have slugged seven.They havent hit for a high average as a team, their .282 mark lowest among PC squads. Gunter hits .371 with a team-high 20 RBIs and Elisa Cec-chetti tops out at .424 and 19. No other TCC regular surpasses .300, and the team has only 19 total stolen bases.Raya Moncus and Callie Paine have logged by far the most innings in the circle. Both are known for control more than power as Moncus is 7-3 with 34 strikeouts and 16 walks in 62 innings and Paine 6-3 with 24 Ks and eight walks in 51.2. SOFTBALLContinued from C1Lorenzo Charles dunk at the buzzer to cap North Carolina States Car-diac PackŽ championship win against Houstons Phi Slama Jama.The Tar Heels had just rallied from 10 down in the final 5 minutes to tie it on Marcus Paiges double-pump circus shot of a 3-pointer with 4.7 seconds left. Villanova called timeout, then had Jenkins inbound the ball to Ryan Arcidiacono.Arcidiacono pushed upcourt against Berry, cut to his right then flipped an underhand toss to a trailing Jenkins „ who caught it in stride and launched the 3 over a closing Hicks.The ball hit the inside of the rim with an audi-ble thud and banged through for the 77-74 win, sending Villanovas bench spilling onto the court to mob Jenkins. For me, the motiva-tion I use is the feeling that we had when that confetti came down and it wasnt for us,Ž said Jackson, who was defending Hart near the right sideline. It felt simultaneous when-ever he hit the shot and the confetti was coming down. It wasnt a feel-ing of upset, it wasnt a feeling of sad, it was just a feeling of, Did that really just happen?ŽTheres been no easy way to avoid it, either.Any time they start talking about the tournament, boom, the shots on,Ž Jackson said. For about a month and a half, thats all that was on SportsCenter, all that was on ESPN. So its hard to get away from it.ŽIndeed, even when Paige and Arcidiacono recently crossed paths in the NBAs D-League a long way from the spotlight.Berry got his own reminder during last weeks Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament in Brooklyn. He told reporters there that the team caught Jenkins shot in a highlight on a Times Square video board.I see myself just look-ing at the ball,Ž Berry said, adding: I dont want to see it but then I do because it makes me realize what my goal is for this year.ŽAs for Jenkins, he isnt looking back.He even sounded almost nonchalant about the shot when asked during the Big East Tournament. Maybe he doesnt want to get ahead of himself; Villanova and North Carolina cant meet in this years tournament until the title game again in Phoenix.I have forgotten about that shot,Ž Jenkins said. I have taken so many shots after that, its just one of the shots that I shot. Thats it.ŽMaybe, but it was a lot more than just another shot for the two schools. AP Sports Writer Tom Canavan in New York contributed to this report. VILLANOVAContinued from C1my career, this is the fun stuff you get a chance to take part in.Honestly, I never would have thought a couple of years ago I would have had an opportunity to make a roster like this. Its a special thing you get to participate in. I wish I had performed better, and I hope I get some chances to atone for it.ŽHe will. The Ameri-cans bounced back from their deflating loss Saturday to the defending champion Dominicans, and both teams advanced to the second round in San Diego beginning Tuesday.Team USA, a perennial World Baseball Classic underachiever, believes this year will be different. The Americans have never reached the finals, much less won the tournament, and participation has been only so-so because of tepid support by major league teams fearful of injuries to players unaccustomed to going all-out in March.But this years roster might be the Americans best yet, even without many top pitchers. Starters Danny Duffy, Chris Archer and Marcus Stroman combined for 12 scoreless innings as Team USA went 2-1 in round one. Brandon Crawford and Christian Yelich had five hits each, and Nolan Arenado and Buster Posey homered.The Dominicans, meanwhile, went 3-0 and are 11-0 in the past two WBCs. Their comeback win over the U.S. team rocked Marlins Park, packed with spectators from the Caribbean nation.Thats an atmo-sphere Ive never been a part of,Ž said Duffy, who pitched in the 2015 World Series. It was the loud-est Ive ever heard any place ever.ŽEnthusiastic fan sup-port by other countries is one reason Duffy, Miller and other American players are glad theyre taking part.But can the U.S. team get spectators in San Diego excited?If we keep playing our game and keep doing our thing, I think were going to start drawing some crowds,Ž Arenado said.The Rockies All-Star made headlines back in Denver when he slid headfirst to reach first base after striking out on a wild pitch against Colombia. He laughed when asked how eager the Americans are for breakthrough WBC success.Theres no doubt were taking it real seri-ous,Ž he said. Im diving headfirst into first. I mean, I dont know how serious I can take it other than that.ŽMaximum effort will be needed to get past the Dominicans, who have outscored opponents 62-24 in the past two WBCs. They batted .342 in the first round, and Manny Machado, Nelson Cruz and Sterling Marte homered in the come-back against Team USA.The Dominican is a top-to-bottom fearsome lineup,Ž U.S. manager Jim Leyland said. They have stars all over the field. Weve got a lot of stars all over the field. Theres a mutual respect there, I think. It wasnt like we were intimidated or embarrassed. We had our shot, and we just didnt quite get it done.ŽAfter losing to the Dominicans, Team USA recovered Sunday and eliminated Canada. The Canadians finished 0-3, but manager Ernie Whitt nonetheless joined other participants in praising the WBC.Whitt noted the enthusiastic crowds and said hes dumbfoundedŽ some major league play-ers are reluctant to take part.You have to get the general managers and the ownership to buy into it and encourage their players to go,Ž said Whitt, a former All-Star catcher. I understand their point. They have a vested interest in some of these players with a lot of money. But if theyre going to get this to go, theyre going to have to go all out and encourage their players to go play for their countries.Ž WBCContinued from C1 1164072

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** C4 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald COLLEGE BASKETBALLVillanova, Gonzaga, lead “ nal mens pollVillanova, the overall No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, is No. 1 in the final Associated Press college basketball poll of the season.The Wildcats (31-3) were a runaway choice Monday, receiving 59 first-place votes from the 65-member media panel.Gonzaga (32-1), which received the other six first-place votes, and Kansas, two No. 1 seeds for the tournament, were second and third UConn No. 1 in “ nal womens poll of yearNEW YORK „ UConn heads into the NCAA Tournament in a familiar place „ No. 1 in the poll.For the 14th time in school history, the Huskies sit atop The Associated Press womens basketball poll in the final week. The Huskies (32-0) were the unanimous choice from the 33-member national media panel on Monday, holding the No. 1 spot for the last 15 weeks of the season. COLLEGE FOOTBALL2 ex-Penn State of“ cials plead guiltyHARRISBURG, Pa. „ Two former Penn State administrators accused of covering up child sexual abuse allegations against Jerry Sandusky pleaded guilty to reduced charges Monday, more than five years after the scandal rocked the university and led to the downfall of football coach Joe Paterno.Tim Curley, a 62-year-old former athletic director, and Gary Schultz, 67, a one-time vice president, could get up to five years in prison for misdemeanor child endangerment. No sen-tencing date was set. NFLDefensive end Ware retires, cites healthENGLEWOOD, Colo. „ DeMarcus Ware wont be returning to the Dallas Cowboys nor the Denver Broncos as expected. The 12-year NFL veteran is instead retiring from the NFL.Ware announced his decision Monday on Twitter.Next to a split image of the Cowboys and Broncos, Ware wrote, After a lot of thought and prayer, Ive decided to accept the unknown and retire from my NFL career. Tempting opportunities still present themselves for me to play and I feel better than I have in years. However, longterm health of quality of life outweigh the spark and passion to play that I once had.Ž Foles returns to Eagles as backup QBPHILADELPHIA „ The Philadelphia Eagles have agreed to terms on a two-year contract with quarterback Nick Foles. Foles will be Carson Wentzs backup. Chase Daniel is expected to be traded or released. Foles was 14-4 as a starter for the Eagles in 2013-14. The Associated Press By Eddie PellsThe Associated PressHeres one thing millions of Americans can agree on: March Madness is fun, especially when theres a little money on the line. So fun, in fact, that more people will fill out NCAA Tournament brackets this week than voted for either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton in last years presi-dential election. Combining all those $10 and $20 entry fees that go along with most of the 70 million-plus office pools being filled out as we speak, Americans will put around $2 billion at stake when the tournament kicks off later this week. But though the brackets and the money spent on them have driven the tournaments popularity upward „ the 2015 tourna-ment was the most-viewed in more than two decades, while last years took a hit because the Final Four was televised exclusively on cable „ the NCAA itself does not condone gambling or filling out brackets for anything more than fun. Adding to the outlandish-ness of it all „ CBS, which combines with Turner Sports to pay more than $1 billion a year to televise every game of the tournament through 2032, runs one of the countrys biggest bracket contests, offering players a chance to form their own private pools (for fun, of course) or to compete for prizes, including a trip to the 2018 Final Four (no pur-chase necessary).The NCAA also runs a bracket contest on its own website. But in a statement on gambling, it reminds players that while entering a bracket contest that doesnt require an entry fee is not banned by the NCAA (but may be barred by individual schools), that we have learned that these types of pools are often the entry for youth to begin betting.ŽWhile the bracket is an important part of the excitement around the tournament, money does not have to be involved to enjoy March Madness,Ž NCAA director of public and media relations Stacey Osburn says. It certainly can make things more interest-ing, though. The American Gaming Association estimates that, in total, around $10.4 billion will be wagered on the three-week hoops extravaganza that starts Tuesday with opening-round games and ends April 1 and 3 at the Final Four in Phoenix. Thats $1.2 billion more than last year. Only $295 million of that will be bet legally „ mainly at sports books in Nevada. Geoff Freeman of the AGA, which seeks to destigmatize gambling while making it legal in more parts of the country, says the NCAAs stance is strangeŽ and hypocritical.Ž The other word is, its danger-ous,Ž Freeman said.The AGA, the lobbying arm for commercial and tribal casinos, believes the more regulatory eyeballs placed on the games if gam-bling became legal in more places, the less chance there is of point shaving and other forms of tampering, the likes of which have hit the college game hard in the past.NCAA: No wagering, but ll out a bracketLeVelle Moton, NC CentralAge: 42 First-round game: Wednesday vs. UC Davis in Dayton, Ohio Notable: Moton, the third-leading career scorer at NC Central, has made his alma mater the dominant program in the MidEastern Athletic Conference. He owns a 152-102 record in eight seasons .Will Wade, VCUAge: 34 First-round game: Thursday vs. Saint Marys at Salt Lake City Notable: Wade owns a 91-44 record in four seasons as a head coach, including a 51-19 mark in two seasons at VCU. He has sent VCU to the NCAA Tournament each of his two seasons on the job .Kevin Keatts, UNC WilmingtonAge: 44 Notable: Keatts owns a 72-27 record in three seasons at UNC Wilmington and is making his second straight NCAA Tournament appearance The Seahawks had “ nished last in the CAA the year before Keatts arrival. Pat Kelsey, WinthropAge: 41 First-round game: Thursday vs. Butler in Milwaukee Notable: Kelsey owns a 102-58 record in “ ve seasons at Winthrop, which had a 20-loss season the year before his arrival. Kelsey has Winthrop in the NCAA Tournament for the “ rst time since 2010 Steve Forbes, East Tennessee St.Age: 51 First-round game: Thursday vs. Florida at Orlando, Florida Notable: Forbes is a former Texas A&M, Tennessee and Wichita State assistant who owns a 51-19 record in two seasons at ETSU and has the Bucs in the NCAA Tournament for the “ rst time since 2010. Mitch Henderson, PrincetonAge: 41 First-round game: Thursday vs. Notre Dame at Buffalo, New York Notable: Henderson, a Princeton alum who played in three NCAA Tournaments, has led the Tigers on a 19-game winning streak He owns a 119-59 mark in six seasons, though this marks his “ rst NCAA appearance as a head coach. Nathan Davis, BucknellAge: 42 First-round game: Thursday vs. West Virginia at Buffalo, New York Notable: Bucknell has won two Patriot League regular-season championships and one Patriot League tournament title in Davis two seasons. He owns a 43-22 record at Bucknell after going 141-39 at Division III Randolph-Macon from 2009-15. Joe Dooley, Florida Gulf CoastAge: 51 First-round game: Thursday vs. Florida State at Orlando, Florida Notable: Dooley owns a 91-45 record at Florida Gulf Coast has won at least 21 games each of his four seasons. Hes in the NCAA Tournament for the second straight year This is Dooleys second head coaching stint, as he went 57-52 at East Carolina from 1995-99. John Becker, VermontAge: 48 First-round game: Thursday vs. Purdue in Milwaukee. Notable: Becker owns a 139-68 record at Vermont and has won at least 20 games in each of his six seasons on the job, though this is just the Catamounts second NCAA Tournament appearance during that stretch. Vermont is 29-5 and has the nations longest active winning streak with 21 straight victories. John Brannen, No. KentuckyAge: 43 First-round game: Friday vs. Kentucky in Indianapolis Notable: Brannen, the Horizon League coach of the year, has Northern Kentucky in the NCAA Tournament in its “ rst season of eligibility. After going 9-21 last season in Brannens “ rst year on the job, Northern Kentucky is 24-10 this year. Brannen was an assistant on Anthony Grants staffs at VCU and Alabama. Wichita State head coach Gregg Marshall celebrates by cutting down the net after defeating Illinois State 71-51 in the Missouri Valley Conference mens tournament championship game March 5 in St. Louis. [JEFF ROBERSON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] By Steve MegargeeThe Associated PressThis is the time of year when a coach from outside the major conferences can make a name for himself and perhaps parlay an NCAA Tournament upset into a bigger job. Its been done before.Brad Underwood led Stephen F. Austin to an NCAA Tournament victory two of the last three years, including an upset of West Virginia last season. Underwood is back in the NCAA Tournament this season with Oklahoma State, which hired him after Stephen F. Austins recent run of March success.Daytons Archie Miller and Wichita States Gregg Marshall will undoubtedly be mentioned in connection with various coaching vacancies, but theyre already more established than the guys on this list. This years group of several promising, and maybe not-so-well-known coaches includes Kevin Keatts at UNC Wilmington and VCUs Will Wade. Here are 10 coaches in the tour-nament „ all 51 or younger and listed in alphabetical order „ who could emerge as candidates on the coaching carousel.MEN OF MARCH IN BRIEFSeveral young coaches could raise stock at NCAA Tournament SPORTS TICKER

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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 C5 EBRO SCHEDULEMonday Matinee: Thoroughbred simulcast: Parx 11:55 a.m. Greyhound simulcast: Derby Lane 11:30 a.m., Sarasota 11:30 a.m., Palm Beach noon. Evening: Greyhound simulcast:Jacksonville6:45 p.m. Dania Jai Alai 7 p.m.TuesdayMatinee: Thoroughbred simulcast: Parx 11:55 a.m. Greyhound simulcast: Sarasota 11:30 a.m., Palm Beach noon.WednesdayMatinee: Thoroughbred simulcast: Tampa Bay 11:25 a.m., Gulfstream 11:35 a.m. Greyhound simulcast: Derby Lane 11:30 a.m., Sarasota 11:30 a.m., Jacksonville 11:35 a.m., Palm Beach noon. Evening: Greyhound simulcast: Derby Lane 6:30 p.m., Jacksonville 6:45 p.m. Dania Jai alai 7 p.m.ThursdayMatinee: Thoroughbred simulcast: Gulfstream 11:35 a.m., Santa Anita 3 p.m. Greyhound simulcast: Derby Lane 11:30 a.m., Sarasota 11:30 a.m., Palm Beach noon. Evening: Greyhound simulcast: Jacksonville 6:45 p.m. Dania Jai alai 7 p.m.FridayMatinee: Thoroughbred simulcast: Aqueduct 12:20 p.m., Tampa Bay 11:25 a.m., Gulfstream 11:35 a.m., Santa Anita 3 p.m. Greyhound simulcast: Sarasota 11:30 a.m., Derby Lane 11:30 p.m., Palm Beach noon. Evening: Greyhound simulcast: Palm Beach 6 p.m., Derby Lane 6:30 p.m., Sarasota 6:30 p.m., Jacksonville 6:35 p.m. Dania Jai alai 7 p.m.SaturdayMatinee: Thoroughbred simulcast: Gulfstream 11:35 a.m., Aqueduct 11:50 a.m., Tampa Bay 11:25 a.m., Santa Anita 2 p.m. Greyhound simulcast: Derby Lane 11:30 a.m., Sarasota 11:30 a.m., Jacksonville 11:35 a.m., Palm Beach noon. Evening: Greyhound simulcast: Palm Beach 6 p.m., Derby Lane 6:30 p.m., Sarasota 6:30 p.m., Jacksonville 6:45 p.m. Dania Jai-Alai 7 p.m.SundayMatinee: Thoroughbred simulcast: Gulfstream 11 a.m., Aqueduct 12:20 a.m., Tampa Bay 11:25 a.m., Santa Anita 2:30 p.m. Greyhound simulcast: Palm Beach noon, Jacksonville 12:30 p.m. POKER ROOM … (Ext. 180) Open 9 a.m. to 3 a.m. Monday through Friday and 24 hours on weekends and holidays. LOCATION … Intersection of State 79 and State 20. INFORMATION … 234-3943. ODDS PREGAME.COM LINECOLLEGE BASKETBALLTodayFavorite Line Underdog New Orleans 1 Mount Saint Marys Wake Forest 1 Kansas State at Syracuse 12 NC Greensboro at Monmouth 3 Mississippi Indiana 3 at Georgia Tech at Illinois 8 Valparaiso at California 10 CS Bakers“ eld at Colorado State 3 Coll. of Charleston at Alabama 7 Richmond at Clemson 10 Oakland at Utah 10 Boise StateWednesdayNC Central 4 UC Davis Southern Cal 3 Providence at Georgia 6 Belmont at BYU 5 Texas-Arlington at Houston 8 Akron at Iowa 11 South Dakota at TCU 10 Fresno State at Illinois State 11 UC Irvine at UCF 2 Colorado at George Mason 12 Loyola Maryland at Coastal Carolina 10 Hampton at George Washington 5 T oledo at Wyoming 6 Eastern Washington at UMKC Pk Green Bay at Rice 1 San Francisco at Georgia Southern 5 Utah Valley at IPFW 5 Ball State at UMBC 3 Fair“ eld Georgia State 3 at Texas A&M CC at Idaho 5 Stephen AustinThursdayWisconsin 5 Virginia Tech Notre Dame 7 Princeton West Virginia 13 Bucknell Virginia 7 UNC-Wilmington Florida 10 E Tennessee State Florida State 12 Florida Gulf Coast Maryland 2 Xavier Iowa State 6 Nevada Purdue 8 Vermont Minnesota PK Middle Tennessee Butler 11 Winthrop Gonzaga 22 South Dakota State Vanderbilt 1 Northwestern Arizona 16 North Dakota Saint Marys Calif. 4 Va Commonwealth at Albany NY 1 Saint Peters Furman 5 at S. Car olina Upstate NC Asheville 3 at UT Martin at Texas State 8 Lamar Weber State 1 at Cal St.-FullertonFridayDuke 19 Troy South Carolina 1 Marquette North Carolina 26 Texas Southern Arkansas 1 Seton Hall Louisville 20 Jacksonville State Michigan 2 Oklahoma State Kentucky 19 N. Kentucky Wichita State 6 Dayton Baylor 12 New Mexico State Miami 2 Michigan State Oregon 14 Iona Creighton 1 Rhode Island UCLA 17 Kent StateNATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATIONTodayFavorite Line O/U Underdog at Cleveland 8 215 Detroit Indiana 3 211 at New York Oklahoma City 6 225 at Brooklyn at New Orleans 2 217 Portland at Golden State 17 221 PhiladelphiaNATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUEToday Favorite Line Underdog Line at Washington -145 Minnesota +135 at New Jersey -108 Winnipeg -102 at Carolina -110 NY Islanders +100 at Florida -115 Toronto +105 at Ottawa -135 Tampa Bay +125 at Montreal -120 Chicago +110 at Edmonton -165 Dallas +155 at Los Angeles Off Arizona Off at San Jose -215 Buffalo +195Updated odds available at Pregame.com PRO BASKETBALL NBAAll Times Central EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct. GB Boston 42 25 .627 „ Toronto 39 28 .582 3 New York 26 41 .388 16 Philadelphia 24 42 .364 17 Brooklyn 12 53 .185 29 Southeast Division W L Pct. GB Washington 41 25 .621 „ Atlanta 37 30 .552 4 Miami 32 35 .478 9 Charlotte 29 38 .433 12 Orlando 24 43 .358 17 Central Division W L Pct. GB Cleveland 43 22 .662 „ Indiana 34 32 .515 9 Detroit 33 33 .500 10 Milwaukee 32 34 .485 11 Chicago 32 35 .478 12 WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct. GB x-San Antonio 52 14 .788 „ Houston 46 21 .687 6 Memphis 37 30 .552 15 Dallas 28 38 .424 24 New Orleans 26 40 .394 26 Northwest Division W L Pct. GB Utah 41 25 .621 „ Oklahoma City 37 29 .561 4 Denver 31 35 .470 10 Portland 29 36 .446 11 Minnesota 28 38 .424 13 Paci“ c Division W L Pct. GB x-Golden State 52 14 .788 „ L.A. Clippers 40 26 .606 12 Sacramento 25 41 .379 27 Phoenix 22 45 .328 30 L.A. Lakers 20 46 .303 32 x-clinched playoff berthSundays GamesBoston 100, Chicago 80 Indiana 102, Miami 98 Brooklyn 120, New York 112 Portland 110, Phoenix 101 Houston 117, Cleveland 112 Philadelphia 118, L.A. Lakers 116Mondays GamesChicago 115, Charlotte 109 Toronto 100, Dallas 78 San Antonio 107, Atlanta 99 Memphis 113, Milwaukee 93 Minnesota 119, Washington 104 L.A. Clippers at Utah, late L.A. Lakers at Denver, late Orlando at Sacramento, lateTodays GamesDetroit at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Indiana at New York, 6:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m. Portland at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Golden State, 9:30 p.m. MONDAYS BOX SCORES BULLS 115, HORNETS 109CHICAGO (115)Portis 2-7 0-0 5, Lopez 3-7 0-0 6, Rondo 8-15 1-1 20, Butler 8-15 5-6 23, Wade 8-15 7-8 23, Felicio 1-1 0-0 2, Mirotic 8-16 3-3 24, Lauvergne 0-1 1-2 1, Payne 0-6 0-0 0, Valentine 3-8 2-2 11. Totals 41-91 19-22 115.CHARLOTTE (109)Kidd-Gilchrist 9-12 4-5 22, Williams 5-12 2-2 13, Zeller 4-10 3-3 11, Walker 9-24 0-0 21, Lamb 10-17 3-4 26, Kaminsky 2-7 0-0 4, Weber 2-2 0-0 4, Roberts 0-1 0-0 0, Graham 0-1 1-2 1, Belinelli 2-7 3-3 7. Totals 43-93 16-19 109. Chicago 36 22 29 28 „ 115 Charlotte 24 24 29 32 „ 109 3-Point Goals„Chicago 14-40 (Mirotic 5-12, Rondo 3-6, Valentine 3-8, Butler 2-5, Portis 1-3, Wade 0-2, Payne 0-4), Charlotte 7-29 (Lamb 3-5, Walker 3-12, Williams 1-5, Graham 0-1, Belinelli 0-2, Kaminsky 0-4). Fouled Out„None. Rebounds„Chicago 49 (Mirotic 11), Charlotte 44 (Williams 18). Assists„Chicago 29 (Butler 11), Charlotte 25 (Walker 10). Total Fouls„Chicago 20, Charlotte 18. Technicals„Chicago defensive three second, Chicago team. A„16,489 (19,077).RAPTORS 100, MAVERICKS 78DALLAS (78)Barnes 7-16 3-3 18, Nowitzki 7-16 0-0 17, Curry 2-8 0-0 5, Ferrell 1-7 3-4 5, Matthews 1-5 0-0 2, Brussino 1-5 0-0 2, Uthoff 0-1 0-0 0, Finney-Smith 3-4 0-0 8, D. Powell 4-9 2-3 10, Mejri 1-1 0-0 2, Barea 1-6 0-0 2, D.Harris 3-6 0-1 6, M.Harris 0-1 1-2 1. Totals 31-85 9-13 78.TORONTO (100)Ibaka 0-4 0-0 0, Valanciunas 5-11 4-5 14, Joseph 4-10 0-0 9, DeRozan 10-17 4-4 25, N. Powell 6-8 5-5 19, Tucker 1-6 0-0 2, Patterson 4-6 0-0 11, Siakam 0-1 0-0 0, Poeltl 1-1 2-2 4, Nogueira 0-0 0-0 0, VanVleet 2-6 0-0 5, Wright 4-8 2-2 11. Totals 37-78 17-18 100. Dallas 26 20 20 12 „ 78 Toronto 25 25 29 21 „ 100 3-Point Goals„Dallas 7-25 (Nowitzki 3-5, FinneySmith 2-2, Barnes 1-2, Curry 1-4, Barea 0-1, Matthews 0-3, Brussino 0-4, Ferrell 0-4), Toronto 9-25 (Patterson 3-5, N. Powell 2-4, VanVleet 1-1, DeRozan 1-2, Wright 1-3, Joseph 1-4, Ibaka 0-3, Tucker 0-3). Fouled Out„None. Rebounds„Dallas 34 (D.Powell 10), Toronto 55 (Valanciunas 12). Assists„Dallas 21 (Barea 7), Toronto 19 (Joseph 4). Total Fouls„Dallas 19, Toronto 16. A„19,800 (19,800). COLLEGE BASKETBALL NATIONAL INVITATION TOURNAMENT All Times Eastern First Round TuesdayMississippi (20-13) at Monmouth (27-6), 6 p.m. UNC-Greensboro (25-9) at Syracuse (18-14), 6 p.m. Valparaiso (24-8) at Illinois (18-14), 6:15 p.m. Oakland (24-8) at Clemson (17-15), 7 p.m. Indiana (18-15) at Georgia Tech (17-15), 8 p.m. College of Charleston (25-9) at Colorado State (23-11), 8 p.m. Richmond (20-12) at Alabama (19-14), 8:15 p.m. Boise St. (19-11) at Utah (20-11), 9 p.m. CS Bakers“ eld (22-9) at California (21-12), 10:15 p.m.Wednesday, March 15South Dakota (22-11) at Iowa (18-14), 6 p.m. Belmont (22-6) at Georgia (19-14), 6 p.m. Colorado (19-14) at UCF (21-11), 6 p.m. Akron (26-8) at Houston (21-10), 6:30 p.m. Fresno St. (20-12) at TCU (19-15), 7 p.m. Texas-Arlington (25-8) at BYU (22-11), 8 p.m. UC Irvine (21-14) at Illinois State (27-6), 8:30 p.m.COLLEGE BASKETBALL INVITATIONALAll Times Eastern First Round WednesdayUtah Valley (15-16) at Georgia Southern (18-14), 7 p.m. San Francisco (20-12) at Rice (22-11), 7 p.m. Stony Brook (18-13) at UIC (15-18), 7 p.m. Green Bay (18-13) at UMKC (17-16), 7:05 p.m. Loyola (Md.) (15-16) at George Mason (20-13), TBA Hampton (14-16) at Coastal Carolina (16-17), TBA Toledo (17-16) at George Washington (19-14), TBA Eastern Washington (22-11) at Wyoming (18-14), TBAQuarter“ nals March 20Loyola (Md.)-George Mason winner vs. HamptonCoastal Carolina winner Stony Brook-UIC winner vs. Toledo-George Washington winner Eastern Washington-Wyoming winner vs. Green Bay-UMKC winner San Francisco-Rice winner vs. Utah Valley-Georgia Southern winner HOCKEY NHLEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 69 39 22 8 86 189 172 Ottawa 67 39 22 6 84 182 173 Boston 68 36 26 6 78 190 176 Toronto 67 31 22 14 76 204 199 Tampa Bay 68 33 26 9 75 189 186 Florida 67 29 27 11 69 168 193 Buffalo 69 28 29 12 68 177 203 Detroit 67 26 30 11 63 166 202 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington 68 44 17 7 95 218 152 Pittsburgh 67 43 16 8 94 236 186 Columbus 68 44 18 6 94 219 160 N.Y. Rangers 70 44 24 2 90 225 183 N.Y. Islanders 68 32 25 11 75 203 209 Philadelphia 68 31 29 8 70 176 204 Carolina 66 28 27 11 67 170 193 New Jersey 68 25 31 12 62 153 197WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Minnesota 67 43 18 6 92 223 163 Chicago 68 43 20 5 91 204 171 Nashville 69 34 24 11 79 205 196 St. Louis 67 35 27 5 75 186 189 Winnipeg 70 30 33 7 67 208 224 Dallas 68 27 31 10 64 189 221 Colorado 67 19 45 3 41 131 221 Paci“ c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 68 41 20 7 89 190 158 Anaheim 69 36 23 10 82 181 174 Calgary 68 38 26 4 80 187 182 Edmonton 68 35 24 9 79 191 181 Los Angeles 67 33 28 6 72 168 168 Vancouver 68 28 31 9 65 156 195 Arizona 67 24 35 8 56 164 217 2 points for win, 1 point for OT/shootout lossMondays GamesColumbus 5, Philadelphia 3 Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Rangers 2 Carolina 8, N.Y. Islanders 4 Nashville 5, Winnipeg 4, OT Pittsburgh at Calgary, late Colorado at Arizona, late St. Louis at Los Angeles, late Boston at Vancouver, lateTodays GamesN.Y. Islanders at Carolina, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Washington, 6 p.m. Winnipeg at New Jersey, 6 p.m. Tampa Bay at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m. Chicago at Montreal, 6:30 p.m. Toronto at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Dallas at Edmonton, 8 p.m. Arizona at Los Angeles, 9:30 p.m. Buffalo at San Jose, 9:30 p.m. MONDAYS SUMMARIES BLUE JACKETS 5, FLYERS 3Columbus 2 1 2 „ 5 Philadelphia 1 2 0 „ 3 First Period„1, Columbus, Gagner 18 (Bjorkstrand, Jenner), 7:42. 2, Columbus, Atkinson 31 (Werenski), 8:42. 3, Philadelphia, Konecny 9 (Gostisbehere, Couturier), 14:10. Penalties„ Provorov, PHI, (hooking), 10:42; Dubinsky, CBJ, (slashing), 15:24. Second Period„4, Philadelphia, Schenn 20 (Giroux), 4:23 (pp). 5, Philadelphia, Konecny 10 (Gudas, Read), 11:03. 6, Columbus, Werenski 10 (Jones, Calvert), 14:30. Penalties„Anderson, CBJ, (roughing), 0:32; Gudas, PHI, (roughing), 0:32; Johnson, CBJ, (interference), 3:32; Karlsson, CBJ, (interference), 4:51; Jones, CBJ, major (high sticking), 6:30; Hartnell, CBJ, (interference), 11:13; Anderson, CBJ, (roughing), 18:54; Konecny, PHI, (roughing), 18:54; Anderson, CBJ, served by Gagner, (roughing), 18:54. Third Period„7, Columbus, Dubinsky 10 (Saad, Jones), 8:46 (pp). 8, Columbus, Atkinson 32 (Saad), 19:39. Penalties„Konecny, PHI, (roughing), 7:20; Jenner, CBJ, (hooking), 15:59. Shots on Goal„Columbus 11-10-8„29. Philadelphia 10-9-7„26. Power -play opportunities„Columbus 1 of 2; Philadelphia 1 of 8. Goalies„Columbus, Bob rovsky 37-13-4 (26 shots-23 saves). Philadelphia, Mason 19-19-7 (28-24). A„19,447 (19,537). T„2:38. Referees„TJ Luxmore, Chris Rooney. Linesmen„ Steve Barton, Pierre Racicot. AUTO RACING NASCAR MONSTER ENERGY CUPKOBALT 400Race Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, Nev. Lap length: 1.5 miles(Start position in parentheses)1. (2) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 267 laps, 0 rating, 60 points. 2. (5) Kyle Larson, Chevy, 267, 0, 52. 3. (12) Chase Elliott, Chevy, 267, 0, 47. 4. (6) Joey Logano, Ford, 267, 0, 39. 5. (1) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 267, 0, 48. 6. (15) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 267, 0, 31. 7. (3) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 267, 0, 43. 8. (10) Jamie McMurray, Chevy, 267, 0, 37. 9. (4) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 267, 0, 30. 10. (13) Clint Bowyer, Ford, 267, 0, 27. 11. (16) Jimmie Johnson, Chevy, 267, 0, 31. 12. (7) Kasey Kahne, Chevy, 267, 0, 25. 13. (20) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 267, 0, 24. 14. (30) Aric Almirola, Ford, 267, 0, 23. 15. (8) Erik Jones, Toyota, 267, 0, 22. 16. (18) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Chevy, 267, 0, 26. 17. (21) Ryan Newman, Chevy, 267, 0, 22. 18. (26) Michael McDowell, Chevy, 267, 0, 19. 19. (14) Paul Menard, Chevy, 267, 0, 18. 20. (11) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 267, 0, 17. 21. (24) Ty Dillon, Chevy, 267, 0, 16. 22. (9) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 267, 0, 18. 23. (25) Chris Buescher, Chevy, 266, 0, 14. 24. (23) AJ Allmendinger, Chevy, 266, 0, 13. 25. (22) Austin Dillon, Chevy, 266, 0, 12. 26. (31) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford, 265, 0, 11. 27. (27) Landon Cassill, Ford, 264, 0, 10. 28. (33) Cole Whitt, Ford, 264, 0, 9. 29. (32) David Ragan, Ford, 264, 0, 8. 30. (17) Kurt Busch, Ford, 263, 0, 7. 31. (37) Reed Sorenson, Chevy, 262, 0, 6. 32. (36) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Chevy, 261, 0, 5. 33. (29) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 261, 0, 4. 34. (35) Gray Gaulding, Toyota, 260, 0, 3. 35. (38) Derrike Cope, Chevy, 254, 0, 2. 36. (28) Danica Patrick, Ford, engine, 246, 0, 1. 37. (39) Timmy Hill, Chevy, suspension, 135, 0, 0. 38. (19) Kevin Harvick, Ford, accident, 68, 0, 1. 39. (34) Corey Lajoie, Toyota, accident, 16, 0, 1.Race StatisticsAverage Speed of Winner: 136.034 mph. Time of Race: 2 hours, 56 minutes, 39 seconds. Margin of Victory: 1.495 seconds. Caution Flags: 6 for 34 laps. Lead Changes: 14 among 6 drivers. Lap Leaders: B.Keselowski 1-19; M.Truex 20-24; B.Keselowski 25-70; J.Logano 71-75; M.Truex 76-124; B.Keselowski 125-126; T.Dillon 127-128; M.McDowell 129-130; M.Truex 131-153; J.Johnson 154-156; M.Truex 157-211; J.Johnson 212-227; M.Truex 228-243; B.Keselowski 244-265; M.Truex 266-267 Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): M.Truex, 6 times for 144 laps; B.Keselowski, 4 times for 85 laps; J.Johnson, 2 times for 17 laps; J.Logano, 1 time for 4 laps; T.Dillon, 1 time for 1 lap; M.McDowell, 1 time for 1 lap. Wins: Ku.Busch, 1; B.Keselowski, 1; M.Truex, 1. Top 16 in Points: 1. B.Keselowski, 132; 2. K.Larson, 131; 3. C.Elliott, 129; 4. M.Truex, 127; 5. J.Logano, 119; 6. R.Blaney, 106; 7. Ku.Busch, 93; 8. K.Harvick, 91; 9. K.Kahne, 88; 10. J.McMurray, 86; 11. T.Bayne, 82; 12. C.Bowyer, 73; 13. M.Kenseth, 71; 14. A.Almirola, 70; 15. D.Hamlin, 68; 16. P.Menard, 62. BASEBALL MLBSPRING TRAINING All Times Central AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. New York 13 4 0.765 Oakland 10 5 0.667 Los Angeles 10 6 0.625 Baltimore 10 6 0.625 Minnesota 9 6 0.600 Chicago 10 7 0.588 Seattle 10 7 0.588 Kansas City 8 8 0.500 Cleveland 8 8 0.500 Tampa Bay 7 8 0.467 Boston 7 10 0.412 Houston 5 9 0.357 Toronto 5 10 0.333 Texas 4 11 0.267 Detroit 4 12 0.250NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. St. Louis 11 4 0.733 Pittsburgh 12 5 0.706 Milwaukee 10 8 0.556 Los Angeles 10 8 0.556 New York 9 9 0.500 Arizona 8 8 0.500 Colorado 8 8 0.500 Philadelphia 8 8 0.500 Washington 7 7 0.500 Chicago 6 8 0.429 Cincinnati 8 11 0.421 San Francisco 7 10 0.412 San Diego 6 10 0.375 Atlanta 6 10 0.375 Miami 4 9 0.308Sundays GamesAtlanta 10, N.Y. Yankees 2 Baltimore 8, Minnesota (ss) 6 Washington 5, Houston 4 Pittsburgh 4, Minnesota (ss) 3 Detroit 4, N.Y. Mets 3 St. Louis 9, Miami 9 Tampa Bay 8, Toronto 2 Philadelphia 6, Boston 5 Texas 10, Chicago White Sox (ss) 8 San Francisco 12, Arizona 4 L.A. Dodgers (ss) 5, Kansas City 4 Cincinnati (ss) 4, Milwaukee 2 Cincinnati (ss) 9, Colorado 8 Cleveland 11, San Diego 3 L.A. Angels 9, Seattle 2 Oakland 9, Chicago Cubs 8 Chicago White Sox (ss) 15, L.A. Dodgers 5Mondays GamesDetroit 3, Washington 3, 10 innings St. Louis 6, Houston 3 Baltimore 6, Philadelphia 4 Atlanta 7, Pittsburgh 6 Minnesota 9, Tampa Bay 4 Toronto 4, Boston 3 N.Y. Mets 6, Miami 4 Cincinnati 3, Oakland 1 Chicago White Sox 9, Cleveland 5 Cincinnati 3, Oakland 1 Milwaukee 24, Seattle 3 Chicago Cubs 3, San Diego 1 Kansas City 4, Colorado 2 L.A. Dodgers 3, L.A. Angels 1 San Francisco vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., lateTodays GamesAtlanta vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Detroit vs. Miami at Jupiter, Fla., 1:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets vs. Houston at West Palm Beach, Fla., 12:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees vs. Tampa Bay (ss) at Port Charlotte, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (ss) vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Toronto vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Cincinnati vs. L.A. Dodgers at Glendale, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Colorado vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels vs. Kansas City at Surprise, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Chicago Cubs at Mesa, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. San Francisco vs. Cleveland at Goodyear, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox vs. Seattle at Peoria, Ariz., 3:10 p.m. Texas vs. Arizona at Scottsdale, Ariz., 4:10 p.m.WORLD BASEBALL CLASSICFIRST ROUND Round Robin All Times Eastern(x-advanced to second round)POOL C At Marlins Park, Miami W L Pct GB x-Dominican Rep. 3 0 1.000 „ x-United States 2 1 .667 1 Colombia 1 2 .333 2 Canada 0 3 .000 3March 9Dominican Republic 9, Canada 2March 10United States 3, Colombia 2SaturdayColombia 4, Canada 1 Dominican Republic 7, United States 5SundayDominican Republic 10, Colombia 3, 11 innings United States 8, Canada 0POOL A At Gocheok Sky Dome, Seoul, South Korea March 6Israel 2, South Korea 1, 10 inningsMarch 7Israel 15, Taiwan 7 Netherlands 5, South Korea 0March 8Netherlands 6, Taiwan 5March 9x-Israel 4, x-Netherlands 2 South Korea 11, Taiwan 8, 10 inningsPOOL B At Tokyo Dome March 7Japan 11, Cuba 6March 8Cuba 6, China 0 Japan 4, Australia 1March 9Australia 11, China 0, 8 inningsMarch 10x-Cuba 4, Australia 3 x-Japan 7, China 1POOL D At Estadio Charros de Jalisco March 9Italy 10, Mexico 9March 10Puerto Rico 11 Venezuela 0SaturdayVenezuela 11, Italy 10, 10 innings Puerto Rico 9, Mexico 4SundayPuerto Rico 9, Italy 3 Mexico 11, Venezuela 9MondayItaly vs. Venezuela, lateSECOND ROUND Round Robin POOL E At Tokyo Dome SundayIsrael 4, Cuba 1 Japan 8, Netherlands 6, 11 inningsMondayNetherlands 12, Israel 2, 8 inningsTodayCuba vs. Japan, 5 a.m.WednesdayNetherlands vs. Cuba, 10 p.m. Tuesday Israel vs. Japan, 5 a.m.ThursdayTiebreaker game, 5 a.m., if necessaryPOOL F At Petco Park, San Diego W L Pct GB Dominican Republic 0 0 .000 „ Puerto Rico 0 0 .000 „ United States 0 0 .000 „ Pool D runner-up 0 0 .000 „ GOLF PGA TOURVALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIPSaturdays leaders at Innisbrook Golf Resort (Copperhead Course), Palm Harbor, Fla. Purse: $6.3 million. Yardage: 7,340. Par: 71 (36-35)FinalAdam Hadwin (500), $1,134,000 68-64-67-71„270 Patrick Cantlay (300), $680,400 71-66-66-68„271 Dominic Bozzelli (163), $365,400 67-68-70-67„272 Jim Herman (163), $365,400 62-71-71-68„272 Tony Finau (110), $252,000 67-72-70-64„273 Charl Schwartzel (100), $226,800 70-70-67-68„275 Wesley Bryan (88), $203,175 68-68-72-68„276 Henrik Stenson (88), $203,175 64-71-71-70„276 Russell Henley (78), $176,400 64-71-75-67„277 John Huh (78), $176,400 69-70-69-69„277 Chad Campbell (65), $144,900 71-69-69-69„278 Jason Dufner (65), $144,900 68-71-72-67„278 Keith Mitchell, $144,900 69-70-71-68„278 Alex Cejka (54), $110,250 68-70-72-69„279 Graeme McDowell (54), $110,250 75-67-70-67„279 J.T. Poston (54), $110,250 69-70-69-71„279 Nick Watney (54), $110,250 70-69-70-70„279 Lucas Glover (46), $85,050 68-70-69-73„280 David Hearn (46), $85,050 68-74-68-70„280 Ryan Moore (46), $85,050 69-72-68-71„280 Kevin Streelman (46), $85,050 71-68-71-70„280 Jonas Blixt (37), $60,480 69-71-72-69„281 Graham DeLaet (37), $60,480 71-71-72-67„281 J.J. Henry (37), $60,480 72-67-67-75„281 Matt Kuchar (37), $60,480 69-69-73-70„281 Danny Lee (37), $60,480 72-69-70-70„281 David Lingmerth (25), $39,346 70-72-72-68„282 Luke List (25), $39,346 68-69-75-70„282 Jamie Lovemark (25), $39,346 69-69-74-70„282 Chez Reavie (25), $39,346 72-68-73-69„282 Stewart Cink (25), $39,346 69-71-71-71„282 Bryson DeChambeau (25), $39,346 67-70-72-73„282 Harris English (25), $39,346 77-65-69-71„282 Soren Kjeldsen (25), $39,346 68-70-73-71„282 Seamus Power (25), $39,346 66-74-72-70„282 Kyle Stanley (25), $39,346 69-71-71-71„282 Tyrone Van Aswegen (25), $39,346 69-65-75-73„282 Patrick Reed (17), $28,350 70-72-72-69„283 Brian Stuard (17), $28,350 70-72-70-71„283 Hudson Swafford (17), $28,350 68-69-73-73„283 Blayne Barber (12), $21,452 70-67-74-73„284 Ryan Blaum (12), $21,452 68-73-75-68„284 Jim Furyk (12), $21,452 69-73-70-72„284 Bill Haas (12), $21,452 70-72-73-69„284 James Hahn (12), $21,452 65-72-77-70„284 Rod Pampling (12), $21,452 70-69-76-69„284 Ian Poulter (12), $21,452 72-67-76-69„284 Webb Simpson (12), $21,452 67-75-70-72„284 Byeong Hun An (9), $15,918 69-72-71-73„285 Charles Howell III (9), $15,918 67-71-73-74„285 Cameron Smith (9), $15,918 74-67-72-72„285 Robert Garrigus (7), $14,774 71-70-75-70„286 SCOREBOARD ON THE AIR AREA EVENTS College baseballGulf Coast at Tallahassee 4 p.m. College softball Pensacola State at Gulf Coast (2.) 4 p.m.SoftballMosley at Bozeman 6 p.m. Baseball Fort Walton Beach at Bay 6:30 p.m. Bozeman at Crestview 6:30 p.m. South Lake at Rutherford 6 p.m. North Bay Haven at Sneads 5 p.m. Mosley Spring Break Tournament, games at 10 a.m., noon, 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. Mount Dora at Molsey 6 p.m.TennisNorth Bay Haven at Bay 3:30 p.m. Mosley at Arnold 3 p.m. Today BASEBALL 5 a.m. MLB „ 2017 World Baseball Classic, second round, Cuba vs. Japan, at Tokyo 8 p.m. MLB „ 2017 World Baseball Classic, second round, Dominican Republic vs. Puerto Rico, at San Diego 11 p.m. MLB „ 2017 World Baseball Classic, second round, Netherlands vs. Cuba, at Tokyo (joined in progress) BOXING 8 p.m. FS1 „ Premier Champions, Sergiy Derevyanchenko vs. Kemahl Russell, middleweights, at Tunica, Miss. COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5:40 p.m. TRU „ NCAA Tournament, First Four, Mount St. Mary's vs. New Orleans, at Dayton, Ohio 6 p.m. ESPN „ NIT, “ rst round, UNC-Greensboro at Syracuse 6:15 p.m. ESPN2 „ NIT, “ rst round, Valparaiso at Illinois 7 p.m. ESPNU „ NIT, “ rst round, Oakland at Clemson 8 p.m. ESPN „ NIT, “ rst round, Indiana at Georgia Tech 8:10 p.m. TRU „ NCAA Tournament, First Four, Kent St. vs. Wake Forest, at Dayton, Ohio 8:15 p.m. ESPN2 „ NIT, “ rst round, Richmond at Alabama 9 p.m. ESPNU „ NIT, “ rst round, Boise St. at Utah 10:15 p.m. ESPN2 „ NIT, “ rst round, CS Bakers“ eld at California MLB noon MLB „ Spring training, Atlanta vs. Philadelphia, at Clearwater, Fla. 3 p.m. MLB „ Spring training, San Francisco vs. Cleveland, at Goodyear, Ariz. NBA 6 p.m. NBA „ Detroit at Cleveland 9:30 p.m. NBA „ Philadelphia at Golden State NHL 6:30 p.m. NBCSN „ Chicago at Montreal SOCCER 2:30 p.m. FS1 „ UEFA Champions League, Round of 16, Leg 2, Leicester City vs. Sevilla FS2 „ UEFA Champions League, Round of 16, Leg 2, Juventus vs. PortoThe Associated PressNikola Mirotic scored 24 points, Rajon Rondo had a season-high 20 in his return to the starting lineup and the Chicago Bulls beat the Char-lotte Hornets 115-109 on Monday night to snap a season-high, five-game losing streak.Dwyane Wade and Jimmy Butler each had 23 points for the Bulls (32-35), who got a needed win to boost their hopes of earning the eighth playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.Mirotic, who didnt play in Chicagos loss to Boston on Sunday, had five 3-pointers, while Rondo provided the spark for the Bulls in his first start since Dec. 30. Along with hitting a season-high three 3-pointers, he had six assists and seven rebounds.Jeremy Lamb scored 26 points filling in for Nic Batum (migraine), while Michael Kidd-Gilchrist had 22 and Kemba Walker 21 for the struggling Hornets. Marvin Williams had 13 points and tied a career high with 18 rebounds.Looking to provide an early spark to his strug-gling offense, Bulls coach Fred Hoiberg went with Rondo over Jerian Grant as the starting point guard. The move couldnt have worked better, as the Bulls scored 36 points in the first quarter „ two shy of their season high „ after knocking down 8 of 13 3-pointers. Rondo had three of those 3-pointers and added three assists as the Bulls built a 12-point, first-quarter lead.The Hornets battled back from 16 points down to tie the game in the third quarter at 69 but could never take the lead. Every time Charlotte got close, Mirotic seemed to come up with a big basket. RAPTORS 100, MAVERICKS 78: DeMar DeRozan scored 25 points, Norman Powell added 19 and the Toronto Raptors beat Dallas, their third straight victory over the Mavericks. Jonas Valanciunas had 14 points and 12 rebounds as the Raptors beat Dallas for the sixth time in their last eight meetings. Toronto swept the season series last year. Harrison Barnes had 18 points and Dirk Nowitzki scored 17 for Dallas, which lost starting forward Wesley Matthews to a strained right calf. Matthews, who was averaging 14.7 points coming into the game, was removed with 1:07 to play in the “ rst half and did not return. Rondo provides spark as starter, Bulls top Hornets

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** C6 Tuesday, March 14, 2017 | The News Herald TUESDAY MORNING C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 14 C W S1 S27 AM7:308 AM8:309 AM9:3010 AM10:3011 AM11:3012 PM12:30 WJHG (7) 3 3 7 7 Today Elizabeth Banks; female firsts. (N) Todays Take (N) Today (N) NewsChannel 7 at 11am (N) Days of our Lives (N) CW (7.2) 99 9 8 8 Cheaters Cops Rel.The Steve Wilkos Show The Steve Wilkos Show Jerry Springer Jerry Springer Dirty FightsŽ Paid ProgramPaid Program WMBB (13) 2 2 13 13 Good Morning America (N) LIVE with Kelly (N) The View WMBB Midday News (N) The Chew METV (13.2) 209 133 2 BeaverBeaverPerry MasonMatlock The DJŽ Diagnosis Murder Food FightŽ The Big ValleyGunsmokeGunsmoke WECP (18) 4 4 4 18 CBS This Morning (N) Lets Make a Deal (N) The Price Is Right The Young and the RestlessNews at NoonBold/Beautiful MNT (18.2) 227 13 Extra (N) Dish Nation (N) Jerry Springer The Real (N) The Wendy Williams Show (N) Paternity CourtPaternity CourtJudge FaithJudge Faith WPGX (28) 8 8 28 28 Paid ProgramOn the SpotBest Pan Ever!Paid ProgramJudge Mathis The Peoples Court The Peoples Court (N) Pawn StarsPawn Stars WFSG (56) 11 11 56 56 Nature CatCuriousDaniel TigerDaniel TigerSplashSesame StreetDinosaur TrainPeg Plus CatSuper Why!Thomas & Fr.Martha SpeaksDinosa ur Train A&E 34 43 118 265 Bounty HunterBounty HunterBounty HunterBounty HunterStorage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsSto rage WarsStorage Wars AMC 30 62 131 254 More SexLifeLockM*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*H ‰‰‰‰ Alien (79) Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Weaver, John Hurt. ‰‰‰ Batman Begins (05) ANPL 46 69 184 282 Bad Dog! Naughty by NatureŽPit Bulls and Parolees Pit Bulls and Parolees Life at Vet U Life at Vet U River Monsters PiranhaŽ BET 53 46 124 329 Martin (:35) Martin (:10) Martin (:45) Martin Variety ShowŽ (:19) Martin (9:53) Martin (:27) Martin (:01) Martin (:35) ‰‰ Love Dont Cost a Thing (03) COM 64 53 107 249 PiYo Workout!Paid Program70s Show70s Show70s Show70s ShowAlways SunnyIts Always Sunny in Phila.Always Sunny (11:55) Tosh.0Tosh.0 DISC 36 39 182 278 Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners Green DragonŽ E! 63 57 114 236 KardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianThe KardashiansKardashian ESPN 9 23 140 206 (5:00) Mike & Mike (N) (L) First Take (N) (L) Tournament Challenge SpecialOutside LinesTournament ESPN2 47 24 144 209 (5:00) Mike & Mike (N) (L) SportsCenter (N) (L) SportsCenter (N) (L) The Dan Le Batard ShowSportsCenterNFL Insiders FOOD 38 45 110 231 PiYo Workout!Paid ProgramPaid ProgramPioneer Wo.Trishas Sou.Trishas Sou.Trishas Sou.Trishas Sou.Trishas Sou.Trishas Sou.P ioneer Wo.Pioneer Wo. FREE 59 65 180 311 Gilmore GirlsGilmore Girls Lizs wedding. 700/InteractiveThe 700 Club Last-StandingLast-StandingLast-StandingLast-StandingReba Reba FS1 24 27 150 219 NASCARMonster JamSkip and Shannon: Undisputed (N) (L) The Herd with Colin Cowherd (N) (L) FX 45 51 136 248 (6:00) ‰‰‚ In Time (11) Justin Timberlake. ‰‰ The Counselor (13) Michael Fassbender, Penlope Cruz, Cameron Diaz. Two/Half MenTwo/Half MenHow I MetHow I Met HALL 23 59 185 312 Golden GirlsGolden GirlsGolden GirlsGolden GirlsHome & Family Power RangersŽ actors. (N) Home & Family Melissa Peterman; Derek Theler. HGTV 32 38 112 229 House HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse Hunters House HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHunters IntlFixer Upper HIST 35 42 120 269 Being Evel (15) The life and legacy of legendary daredevil Evel Knievel. Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars LIFE 56 56 108 252 To Be AnnouncedTo Be AnnouncedTo Be AnnouncedTo Be AnnouncedHow I MetHow I MetGreys Anatomy SPIKE 28 48 241 241 Body Beast Paid Program ‰‰‚ The Mummy (99) Brendan Fraser. A mummy seeks revenge for a 3,000-year-old curse. ‰‰‰ X-Men (00) Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart. SUN 49 422 656 DatelineIns. LightningLightning Post.Lightning Post.NHL Hockey Tampa Bay Lightning at New York Rangers. Lunch with the Lightning SYFY 70 52 122 244 Face Off Beautiful DisasterŽ Face Off Creature CarnageŽ Face Off One Knight OnlyŽ Face Off Puppet MastersŽ Dark Relic (10) James Frain, Clemency Burton-Hill. TBS 31 15 139 247 MarriedMarriedKingKingKingKingClevelandClevelandAmerican DadAmerican DadAmerican DadAmerican Dad TCM 25 70 132 256 (6:45) ‰‰‰‰ The Gold Rush (:15) ‰‚ The Silver Horde (30) Joel McCrea.(:45) ‰‰‚ There Goes the Groom (37) ‰‰‚ Petticoat Fever (36) Myrna Loy Fatal Glass TLC 37 40 183 280 Say YesSay YesShes in Charge Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive My 600-Lb. Life My 600-Lb. Life: Where TNT 29 54 138 245 Charmed Charmed Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Into the MysticŽ USA 62 55 105 242 CSI: Crime Scene InvestigationNCIS Code of ConductŽ NCIS Outlaws and In-LawsŽ NCIS EndgameŽ NCIS Citywide blackout. NCIS Childs PlayŽ WGN-A 13 239 307 Paid ProgramCreflo DollarWalker, Texas RangerIn the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night M*A*S*H LilŽ M*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*H TUESDAY LATE NIGHT C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 14 C W S1 S21 AM1:302 AM2:303 AM3:304 AM4:305 AM5:306 AM6:30 WJHG (7) 3 3 7 7 (:07) HarryThe Bankruptcy HourShepherds ChapelAgDayEarly TodayNewsChannel 7 Today (N) CW (7.2) 99 9 8 8 CheatersBest Pan Ever!OmegaNever FearFacelift!Hollywood BtyRed CopperAmazing AbsNo AgingPaid ProgramKing of the HillKing of the Hill WMBB (13) 2 2 13 13 Judge Karen (:37) ABC World News Now (N) MorningNews 13 This Morning (N) METV (13.2) 209 133 2 MannixIronside The TormentorŽ 77 Sunset StripMiss BrooksDonna ReedMister EdI Love LucyBrady BunchBev. Hillbillies WECP (18) 4 4 4 18 Ac. HollywoodThe Insider (N)(:07) CBS Overnight News (N) Paid ProgramCountry Heat!Business FirstMorning News MNT (18.2) 227 13 Tosh.0Jewelry TelevisionJewelry TelevisionJuice CleansePaid ProgramPiYo Workout!AgDay WPGX (28) 8 8 28 28 Two/Half MenHow I MetPaid ProgramEverstrongMauryPaid ProgramProphetFried FoodsOutdoor ShowAsk-Tech.Paid Program WFSG (56) 11 11 56 56 Suze OrmansYou Are the Universe With Deepak ChopraEnergy Weight Loss Solution With NealCat in the HatArthur (EI) Wild Kratts (EI) Ready Jet Go! A&E 34 43 118 265 Kids Behind Bars: Lost for Life60 Days InPaid ProgramNew Looks!No SmokePaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramParking WarsParking Wars AMC 30 62 131 254 (12:00) ‰‰ Alien vs. Predator Humans Mattie reconnects with Leo. Comic MenComic MenPaid ProgramNo SmokePaid ProgramPaid Program ANPL 46 69 184 282 River MonstersRiver Monsters Jungle KillerŽ Wild BrazilBig Cat DiaryBig Cat DiaryDogs 101 BET 53 46 124 329 The Wendy Williams Show (N) The Real (N) Paid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramAbundant LifePaid ProgramStop SufferingPaid ProgramJoyce Meyer COM 64 53 107 249 At MidnightSouth ParkKey & PeeleKey & PeeleChappellesThe High CourtSex ToysFacelift in Min.Paid ProgramGoodGREATPaid Program PiYo Craze! DISC 36 39 182 278 MoonshinersMoonshinersMoonshiners A Price to PayŽ MoonshinersInside the FBI (Part 1 of 2) Inside the FBI (Part 2 of 2) E! 63 57 114 236 KardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianThe KardashiansE! News ESPN 9 23 140 206 SportsCenter (N) (L) SportsCenterSportsCenterSportsCenterSportsCenterSportsCenter (N) (L) ESPN2 47 24 144 209 JalenNFL Live30 for 30Mike and Mike: ICYMI (N) Mike & Mike (N) (L) FOOD 38 45 110 231 Chopped Taco Time!Ž ChoppedGuys Grocery GamesPaid ProgramWhy blend?PiYo Workout!Paid ProgramSEXY at 50!Paid Program FREE 59 65 180 311 Amazing AbsPaid ProgramThe 700 ClubSkinCarePiYo Craze!Joseph PrinceRobisonJoyce MeyerJohn HageeBaby DaddyGilmore Girls FS1 24 27 150 219 Skip and Shannon: UndisputedTMZ SportsBoxing Premier Boxing Champions.UFC Main EventUFC Main EventUEFA Soccer FX 45 51 136 248 Mike & MollyFXM PresentsPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramAmazing AbsLifeLock ‰‰ The Counselor (13) HALL 23 59 185 312 FrasierFrasierFrasierFrasierCheersCheersI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love Lucy HGTV 32 38 112 229 Fixer UpperFixer UpperPaid ProgramNew Looks!Paid ProgramTransformPiYo Craze!Kitchen Crash.Yard CrashersHouse Crasher HIST 35 42 120 269 Forged in Fire: Cutting DeeperCounting CarsCounting CarsPaid ProgramNew Looks!Hazuki!LifeLockNo SmokeMore SexModern Marvels LIFE 56 56 108 252 (:04) Little Women: Atlanta (:04) Little Women: LAHollywood BtyThick HairDarkspotsPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramJoyce MeyerBalancing Act SPIKE 28 48 241 241 (12:30) ‰‰ Clash of the Titans (10) Sam Worthington. Sex ToysAmazing AbsPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPiYo Craze!Paid ProgramSEXY at 50! SUN 49 422 656 Skin SecretsGoodGREATHurricane SpinCook SmartWhy Use a Pressure Cooker?PiYo Workout!Paid ProgramFlorida SportSport FishingPai d ProgramJoint Health SYFY 70 52 122 244 ‰ Cabin Fever: Patient Zero ‰‚ The Darkest Hour (11) Emile Hirsch, Max Minghella. Paid ProgramPaid ProgramThe Magicians Plan BŽ Piranhaconda (12) TBS 31 15 139 247 ‰‰ Hit & Run (12) Dax Shepard, Kristen Bell, Bradley Cooper. New GirlNew GirlMarriedMarriedMarriedMarriedMarriedMarried TCM 25 70 132 256 ‰‰‰ Shaft (71) Richard Roundtree, Moses Gunn. ‰‰‚ Shafts Big Score! (72) Richard Roundtree. The Woman on the Beach (47) Woman in theToo Late TLC 37 40 183 280 (:04) My Big Fat Fabulous LifeMystery DiagnosisMystery DiagnosisWhat Not to Wear JenniferŽ What Not to Wear TenessaŽ Say YesSay Yes TNT 29 54 138 245 The LibrariansThe LibrariansThe LibrariansLaw & Order BlingŽ Arrow Blind SpotŽ Charmed Bride and GloomŽ USA 62 55 105 242 Law & Order: Criminal IntentLaw & Order: Criminal IntentLaw & Order: SVULaw & Order: SVUHouse A Pox on Our HouseŽ House Small SacrificesŽ WGN-A 13 239 307 EngagementEngagementRaising HopeRaising HopeLaw & Order SanctuaryŽ SupernaturalTummy TuckAmazing AbsLifeLockPaid ProgramJoyce Meyer TUESDAY AFTERNOON C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 14 C W S1 S21 PM1:302 PM2:303 PM3:304 PM4:305 PM5:306 PM6:30 WJHG (7) 3 3 7 7 Rachael Ray (N) The Doctors (N) Harry Family FeudJeopardy! (N) NewsNightly NewsNewsWheel Fortune CW (7.2) 99 9 8 8 Paid ProgramPaid ProgramJudge Alex Judge Alex The Robert Irvine Show Cops Rel.ClevelandAmerican DadAmerican DadFamily Guy Family Guy WMBB (13) 2 2 13 13 General Hospital (N) Hot Bench Hot Bench The Dr. Oz Show (N) Dr. Phil (N) NewsWorld NewsNews 13 at 6Ent. Tonight METV (13.2) 209 133 2 BonanzaThe RiflemanThe RiflemanCHiPs Dog GoneŽ MacGyver Hind-SightŽ Mamas FamilyMamas FamilyM*A*S*HM*A*S*H WECP (18) 4 4 4 18 The Talk MillionaireMillionaireFamily FeudFamily FeudThe Ellen DeGeneres Show (N) Jeopardy! (N) Local 18 NewsEvening NewsInside Edition MNT (18.2) 227 13 Divorce CourtDivorce CourtAndy GriffithAndy GriffithLaw & Order: Criminal IntentLaw & Order: Criminal IntentLast-StandingLast-S tandingMike & MollyMike & Molly WPGX (28) 8 8 28 28 Maury Crime Watch DailySteve Harvey (N) ThisMinuteThisMinuteJudge Judy Judge Judy Big BangBig Bang WFSG (56) 11 11 56 56 SplashCuriousNature CatReady Jet Go!Odd SquadOdd SquadWild KrattsCapitol UpdatePBS NewsHour (N) World NewsPatsy Cline A&E 34 43 118 265 Storage WarsStorage WarsThe First 48 The First 48 10 PoundsŽ The First 48 The First 48 Juvenile Lifers AMC 30 62 131 254 (12:00) ‰‰‰ Batman Begins (05) Christian Bale, Liam Neeson. ‰‰‚ Sherlock Holmes (09) Robert Downey Jr., Jude Law, Rachel McAdams. Sherlock Holmes-Game ANPL 46 69 184 282River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters Jungle KillerŽ River Monsters River Monsters BET 53 46 124 329 (11:35) ‰‰ Love Dont Cost a Thing (03) (:35) Brotherly Love (15) Keke Palmer, Cory Hardrict, Romeo Miller. ‰‚ A Madea Christmas (13) Tyler Perry, Kathy Najimy. COM 64 53 107 249 Tosh.0Tosh.0Archer (:35) Archer (:10) Archer (:45) Futurama BenderamaŽ(:20) FuturamaFuturama (:20) FuturamaSouth ParkSouth Park DISC 36 39 182 278 Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners Moonshiners: Outlaw Cuts (N) E! 63 57 114 236 KardashianThe KardashiansKardashianThe KardashiansThe KardashiansThe KardashiansE! News (N) ESPN 9 23 140 206 Tournament Challenge SpecialThe JumpSportsNation (N) (L) QuestionableAround/HornInterruptionSportsCenter W/MichaelCollege Basketball ESPN2 47 24 144 209 NFL Live (N) (L) First Take (N) (L) Tournament Challenge Special (N) (L) College Basketball FOOD 38 45 110 231 Chopped Winging ItŽ Chopped On the LineŽ ChoppedChoppedChoppedChopped FREE 59 65 180 311 Reba SwitchŽ RebaThe Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle ‰‰‚ The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (12) Kristen Stewart. FS1 24 27 150 219 The Herd with Colin CowherdUEFAUEFA Champions League Soccer Leicester City FC vs Sevilla. (N) (L) Speak for YourselfNASCAR Race Hub (N) (L) FX 45 51 136 248 How I MetHow I MetTwo/Half MenTwo/Half MenMike & MollyMike & Molly ‰‰ Taken 2 (12) Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace. ‰‰‚ Jack Reacher (12) HALL 23 59 185 312 Home Improve.Home Improve.Home Improve.Home Improve.Home Improve.Home Improve.Home Improve.Home Improve.Last-StandingLast-Stand ingLast-StandingLast-Standing HGTV 32 38 112 229 Fixer UpperFixer UpperFixer UpperFixer Upper Fixer UpperFixer Upper HIST 35 42 120 269 Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Counting CarsCounting CarsCounting CarsCounting Cars LIFE 56 56 108 252 Greys Anatomy Greys Anatomy Little Women: LALittle Women: LALittle Women: LA Sail AwayŽ Little Women: LA SPIKE 28 48 241 241 (11:00) X-Men ‰‰ Clash of the Titans (10) Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson. ‰‚ Wrath of the Titans (12) Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson. Hercules (14) SUN 49 422 656 Ins. LightningIns. LightningP1 AquaX USAOlympicsInside HEATFocusedSpotlightto Do FloridaInside RaysLightning Pre.NHL Hockey SYFY 70 52 122 244 (:03) ‰‰‚ Shutter Island (10) Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo, Ben Kingsley.(:09) ‰‚ Jonah Hex (10) Josh Brolin, John Malkovich. ‰‰‰ Zombieland (09) TBS 31 15 139 247 Family Guy Family Guy New Girl New Girl Friends Friends Friends Friends 2 Broke Girls2 Broke GirlsBig BangBig Bang TCM 25 70 132 256 ‰‰ Tugboat Annie Sails Again (40) Alan Hale ‰‰‚ Chain Lightning (50) Humphrey Bogart.(:15) ‰‰‰ The Great Race (65) Tony Curtis. Foes enter a 1908 New York to Paris auto race. TLC 37 40 183 280 Island MediumIsland MediumIsland MediumIsland MediumSay YesSay YesSay YesSay YesSay YesSay YesMy Big Fat Fabulous Life TNT 29 54 138 245 Supernatural Supernatural Love HurtsŽ ‰‰‚ The Expendables 2 (12) Sylvester Stallone, Jet Li. ‰‰‚ Con Air (97) Nicolas Cage, John Cusack. USA 62 55 105 242 NCIS FaithŽ NCIS IgnitionŽ NCIS Flesh and BloodŽ ChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisley WGN-A 13 239 307 M*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*HCops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops TUESDAY EVENING C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 14 C W S1 S27 PM7:308 PM8:309 PM9:3010 PM10:3011 PM11:3012 AM12:30 WJHG (7) 3 3 7 7 The Voice (N) This Is Us MoonshadowŽ Trial & ErrorTrial & ErrorNewsTonight Show-J. FallonLate Night With Seth MeyersLast Call/Daly CW (7.2) 99 9 8 8 The Flash (N) DCs Legends of Tomorrow (N) SeinfeldSeinfeldKingKingEngagementEngagementRaising HopeCheaters WMBB (13) 2 2 13 13 The Middle (N) Am HousewifeFresh Off-BoatReal ONealsPeople Icons (N) News 13 at 10 (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (N)(:37) NightlineThe MiddleJudge Karen METV (13.2) 209 133 2 Mayberry RFDMayberry RFDMacGyver Honest AbeŽ Hogan HeroesHogan HeroesCarol BurnettPerry MasonTwilight ZoneAlfred Hitchcock Hour WECP (18) 4 4 4 18 NCIS M.I.A.Ž (N) NCIS: New Orleans (N) NCIS: New Orleans (N) Modern FamilyLate Show-ColbertLate Late Show/James CordenModern Family MNT (18.2) 227 13 The X-Files GethsemaneŽ The X-Files ReduxŽ 2 Broke Girls2 Broke GirlsAngerAngerHot, ClevelandHot, ClevelandName GameName Game WPGX (28) 8 8 28 28 New Girl (N)(:31) The Mick (:01) Bones (N) Two/Half MenTMZ (N) Crime Watch DailySteve HarveyFriendsFriends WFSG (56) 11 11 56 56 Patsy Cline: American MastersJohn Denver: Country BoyBest Of ...Capitol UpdateCharlie Rose (N) Suze Ormans Financial Solutions for You A&E 34 43 118 265 Kids Behind Bars: MaximumKids Behind Bars: Lost for Life60 Days In60 Days In Truth or DareŽ Kids Behind Bars: MaximumLost for Life AMC 30 62 131 254 (6:00) ‰‰‚ Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (11) ‰‰‰‚ Inception (10) Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ellen Page. ‰‰ Alien vs. Predator (04) ANPL 46 69 184 282 River MonstersWild BrazilRiver MonstersRiver Monsters Exploring Guyanas Essequibo River. BET 53 46 124 329 (5:00) A Madea Christmas (13) Being Mary JaneBeing Mary Jane (N) Being Mary JaneDaily ShowThe Game (12:15) The Game COM 64 53 107 249 South ParkSouth ParkTosh.0Tosh.0Tosh.0 (N) Detroiters (N) Daily ShowAt MidnightThe High Court (:16) Tosh.0DetroitersDaily Show DISC 36 39 182 278 Moonshiners (N) Moonshiners Last CallŽ (N) Killing Fields (N) Moonshiners Last CallŽ MoonshinersMoonshiners E! 63 57 114 236 ‰‰‰ Wedding Crashers (05) Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn. BotchedE! News (N) KardashianKardashian ESPN 9 23 140 206 College BasketballCollege Basketball NIT Tournament, First Round: Teams TBA. SportsCenter (N) (L) SportsCenter W/Van PeltSportsCenter (N) (L) ESPN2 47 24 144 209 College BasketballCollege Basketball NIT Tournament, First Round: Teams TBA. College Basketball NIT Tournament, First Round: Teams TBA. JalenBasketball FOOD 38 45 110 231 ChoppedChopped Chili Cook-OffŽ Chopped (N) Chopped Taco Time!Ž Chopped Chili Cook-OffŽ Chopped FREE 59 65 180 311 The Fosters The Long HaulŽ (:01) ‰‚ Big Daddy (99) Adam Sandler, Joey Lauren Adams. The 700 Club ‰‰‚ Bruce Almighty (03) Jim Carrey, Morgan Freeman. FS1 24 27 150 219 UFC Main Event (N) Boxing Premier Boxing Champions. (N) (L) UFC Main EventSpeak for YourselfSkip and Shannon: Undisputed FX 45 51 136 248 (6:00) ‰‰‚ Jack Reacher (12) Tom Cruise, Rosamund Pike. The Americans PestsŽ (N) The Americans PestsŽ Legion Chapter 5Ž The Americans PestsŽ HALL 23 59 185 312 Last-StandingLast-StandingThe MiddleThe MiddleThe MiddleThe MiddleGolden GirlsGolden GirlsGolden GirlsGolden GirlsFrasierFrasie r HGTV 32 38 112 229 Fixer UpperFixer Upper (N) House HuntersHunters IntlFixer UpperFixer UpperHouse HuntersHunters Intl HIST 35 42 120 269 Counting CarsCounting CarsCounting Cars SuperchargedForged in Fire: Cutting DeeperCounting CarsCounting CarsCounting CarsCounti ng CarsCounting Cars Supercharged LIFE 56 56 108 252 Little Women: LA (N) Little Women: LA (N)(:02) Little Women: Atlanta (N)(:02) Little Women: LA (:02) Little Women: LA (12:02) Little Women: LA SPIKE 28 48 241 241 (6:30) ‰‰‚ Hercules (14) Dwayne Johnson, Ian McShane.Adam Carolla and Friends ‰‰‚ Hercules (14) Dwayne Johnson, Ian McShane, Rufus Sewell. Clash-Titans SUN 49 422 656 (6:30) NHL Hockey Tampa Bay Lightning at Ottawa Senators. Lightning Post.Ins. LightningIns. LightningIns. LightningAfter Midnight With the Lightning From Mar. 14, 2017. SYFY 70 52 122 244 (6:00) ‰‰‰ Zombieland (09) Face Off Odd CouplesŽ (N) ‰‚ The Legend of Hercules (14) Kellan Lutz, Scott Adkins. Face Off Odd CouplesŽ ‰ Cabin Fever: Patient Zero TBS 31 15 139 247 Big BangBig BangBig BangBig BangThe Detour (N) Big BangConan (N) The DetourConanSeinfeld TCM 25 70 132 256 ‰‰‰‚ Klute (71) Jane Fonda, Donald Sutherland. ‰‰‰‰ The French Connection (71) Gene Hackman. ‰‰‰ Night Moves (75) Gene Hackman, Jennifer Warren. TLC 37 40 183 280 My Big Fat Fabulous LifeMy Big Fat Fabulous Life (N)(:02) Shes in Charge (N)(:04) My Big Fat Fabulous Life (:04) Shes in ChargeMy Big Fat Fabulous Life TNT 29 54 138 245 ‰‰‰ Thor (11) Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Anthony Hopkins. ‰‰‚ Godzilla (14) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Ken Watanabe, Elizabeth Olsen. Major Crimes Quid Pro QuoŽ USA 62 55 105 242 WWE SmackDown! (N) (L) ChrisleyChrisleyModern FamilyModern FamilyModern FamilyModern FamilyChrisleyChrisley WGN-A 13 239 307 CopsCopsOutsiders HealingŽ (N) Outsiders HealingŽ(:01) Outsiders HealingŽ(:02) Outsiders HealingŽ How I MetHow I Met TV LISTINGS

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CLASSIFIEDSThe News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 C C 7 7 Medical/HealthOPHTHALMIC TECHNICIANThe Eye Center of North Florida, Bay County’s leader in eye care providers, is now accepting applications for a full-time Experienced Ophthalmic Technician. Duties are directing and testing patients as well as working closely with the doctors. Prior experience is required. Successful candidates will have a kind disposition, excellent people and communication skills, patience and a positive attitude. Eye Center of North Florida is an EOE. Please send resume to: Kathi Nichols, Business Operations Manager, The Eye Center of North Florida, 2500 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd, Panama City, Florida 32405, fax to (850) 522-9829 or stop by to complete an application. Web ID# 34369780 Security/Protective ServicesAdministratorJackson County Correctional Facility Graduation from high school supplemented by specialized courses in jail management, BS in Criminal Justice preferred, and 6 to 9 years of progressively responsible experience as a correctional supervisor; individual with state certification as a correctional officer preferred; or any equivalent combination of training and experience which provides the required knowledge, skills and abilities. Salary Range: $56,349 to $66,349/yr Complete job descriptions may be viewed on our web site www .jacksoncountyfl.net Deadline to apply: 04/10/2017 Submit Jackson County employment application to: Human Resources Dept., 2864 Madison St, Marianna, FL 32448 EEPO/ADA/AA VetPref/Drug Free Workplace Web ID # 34369789 14292 POTENTIALLY INELIGIBLE REGISTERED VOTER’S NOTICE The Bay County Supervisor of Elections, Mark Andersen, has received information that the persons listed below are potentially ineligible to be registered to vote. Failure to contact this office within 30 days after this notice is published may result in a determination of ineligibility by the Supervisor of Elections and removal of the registered voter’s name from the statewide voter registration system. You should contact this office by calling 850-7846100 to receive information regarding the basis for the potential ineligibility and instructions on how to resolve the matter, or request additional assistance if needed. The Supervisor of Elections will make a determination no less than 30 days after this published notice and if removed will notify the voter of the determination and action taken. POTENTIALLY INELIGIBLE REGISTERED VOTER: Ard, Donald L 7820 Cluster Rd Panama City, Fl. 32404 Barnes, Kentorya G 1007 E 9th Ct Panama City, Fl. 32401 Barrera, Goldie R 628 Camellia Ave Panama City, Fl. 32404 Bohn, Derick D 539 Wahoo Rd Panama City, Fl. 32408 Davis II, Dewey N 421 Jenks Ave Panama City, Fl. 32401 Hall, Michael R 1007 Georgia Ave Apt A Panama City, Fl. 32404 Hewett Sr Jesse M 528 Kraft Ave Panama City, Fl. 32401 Hill, Quandron D 1722 W 17th St Panama City, Fl. 32405 Hutto, Glenn S 12509 Owenwood Rd Fountain, Fl. 32438 Johnson, Jonathan L 2608 Briarcliff Rd Panama City, Fl. 32405 Kaufman, Frank T 9113 Front Beach Rd Apt 5 Panama City Beach, Fl. 32407 Kittle, Joshua A 8901 Dorothy Farris Rd Southport, Fl. 32409 Martin, Donald L 2310 E 4th St Panama City, Fl. 32401 Mascarenas, Jeffrey F 1612 Lake Ave Panama City, Fl. 32401 McClain, Jr Cedric T 261 Everitt Ave Apt I-1 Panama City, Fl. 32401 Meade, Randall W 15239 Pine Cir Panama City Beach, Fl. 32413 Milner, Darren R 10133 Cowels Rd Fountain, Fl. 32438 Routhier, Nathan C 6823 Kiser Rd Panama City, Fl. 32404 Sherrill, Donald E 322 Gulf View Dr Panama City Beach, Fl. 32413 Shore Jr, Robert O 755 Harmon Ave Panama City, Fl. 32401 Smith, Kevin T 609 Allen Ave Panama City, Fl. 32401 Stratton, Krystal P 6529 Winona St Panama City, Fl. 32404 Thomas, Rolanda M 801 W 13th St Apt D49 Panama City, Fl. 32401 Travasos, Gordon R 7555 Shadow Bay Dr Panama City, Fl. 32404 Turner, David W 213 El Prado Pl Panama City Beach, Fl. 32413 Van Horn, Paula D 6504 Oakenshaw Dr Youngstown, Fl. 32466 Villars, Robert A 1104 Brenau Ter Panama City, Fl. 32401 Ware, Todd T 240 Harmon Ave Apt 104 Panama City, Fl. 32401 Waters, William K 1216 Hamilton Ave Panama City, Fl. 32401 Waymire, Steven J 12214 Pine Ridge Rd Fountain, Fl. 32444 This notice published 14 March 2017. Mark Andersen Bay County Supervisor of Elections Pub: March 14, 2017 14096 PUBLIC NOTICE The Gulf Coast State College Foundation, Inc. Strategic Planning Retreat will be held on Thursday, March 16, 2017, in the Dean’s Conference Room, at 11:30 a.m. CST at Florida State UniversityPanama City Campus. Pub: March 14, 2017 14290REQUEST FOR PROPOSALTr-County Community Council, Inc., is soliciting proposals for video surveillance equipment, including installation, for approximately 40 public transit service vehicles in the fleet. For a copy of the Proposal Packet call 850547-3689 or email a request to t.community council@mchsi.com Please send proposals to: Tr-County Community Council, Inc. Video Surveillance Proposal 302 N. Oklahoma Street P. O. Box 1210 Bonifay, FL 32425 All proposals submitted shall be received no later than March 30, 2017; 4:00 p.m. The Council reserves the right to reject any and all proposals. Pub: March 14, 2017 14310 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION Case No.: 2017-000020-CP IN RE: ESTATE OF ANGELA MARIE MCKEE Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of Angela Marie McKee, deceased, whose date of death was October 19, 2016, is pending in the Circuit Court for Bay County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 300 East 4th Street, Panama City, Florida 32401. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.302 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is March 14, 2017. Personal Representative: Michelle Christine Schneider 7140 Roadrunner Rd. Youngstown, FL 32466 Attorney for Person Giving Notice: Todd C. Brister FL Bar No.: 24522 P.O. Box 1759 Panama City, FL 32402 Tel. (850) 215-7885 Fax (850) 215-0379 tbrister@knology .net Pub:March 14,21, 2017 14316 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA CIVIL ACTION CASE NO.: 16001126CA DIVISION: THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE F/B/O HOLDERS OF STRUCTURED ASSET MORTGAGE INVESTMENTS II INC., BEAR STEARNS ALT-A TRUST 2005-10, MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-10, Plaintiff, vs. ROGER S. GOLDEN AKA ROGER GOLDEN, et al, Defendant(s). NOTICE OF SALE PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 45 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated February 23, 2017, and entered in Case No. 16001126CA of the Circuit Court of the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit in and for Bay County, Florida in which The Bank of New York Mellon, successor trustee to JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, as Trustee f/b/o holders of Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II Inc., Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust 2005-10, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-10, is the Plaintiff and Roger S. Golden aka Roger Golden; Blue Lagoon Community Association, Inc. are defendants, the Bay County Clerk of the Circuit Court will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in/on www bay .realforeclose.com Bay County, Florida at 11:00AM CST, 12:00 PM EST on the 4th day of April, 2017 the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment of Foreclosure: UNIT NO 1 AKA UNIT NO. K OF BLUE LAGOON, A CONDOMINIUM, TOGETHER WITH AN UNDIVIDED INTEREST IN THE COMMON ELEMENTS APPURTENANT THERETO, ACCORDING TO THE DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM RECORDED IN OR BOOK 985 PAGE 716 AND ALL EXHIBITS AND AMENDMENTS THEREOF PUBLIC RECORDS OF BAY COUNTY FLORIDA. A/K/A 6545 N LAGOON DRIVE N K, PANAMA CITY, FL 32409 Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale. Dated in Bay County, Florida this 23rd day of February, 2017. BILL KINSAUL Clerk of the Circuit Court, Bay County, FL By: Jennifer Estrada Deputy Clerk Albertelli Law Attorney for Plaintiff P.O. Box 23028 Tampa, FL 33623 (813) 221-4743 (813)221-9171 fax eService: servealaw@ albertellilaw .com NL -16-010330 If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator by mail at P.O. Box 1089, Panama City, FL 32402 or by phone at (850) 747-5338 at least seven (7) days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than seven (7) days. If you are hearing impaired, please call 711. Pub:March 14,21, 2017 14314 NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS NAME LAW PURSUANT TO SECTION 865.09, FLORIDA STATUTES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name of: Taziki’s Mediterranean Cafe located at 15463 Panama City Beach Parkway, Unit B, in the County of Bay, in the City of Panama City Beach, Florida, 32413 intends to register the said name with the Division of Corporations of the Florida Department of State, Tallahassee, Florida. Dated at Panama City Beach, Florida, this 9th day of March, 2017. Taz Panama City Beach, Inc. Pub: March 14, 2017 14318 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO. 16000911CA CIT BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES AND ALL OTHERS WHO MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF MARILYN P. MOORHOUSE A/K/A MARILYN PATRICIA MOORHOUSE, DECEASED, et al. Defendant(s). NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated February 23, 2017, and entered in 16000911CA of the Circuit Court of the FOURTEENTH Judicial Circuit in and for Bay County, Florida, wherein CIT BANK, N.A. is the Plaintiff and THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES AND ALL OTHERS WHO MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF MARILYN P. MOORHOUSE A/K/A MARILYN PATRICIA MOORHOUSE, DECEASED; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ON BEHALF OF THE SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT; DELMAR A. MOORHOUSE; STEVEN MOORHOUSE; LAURA RUTH MARINO are the Defendant(s). Bill Kinsaul as the Clerk of the Circuit Court will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at www .bay .realfore close.c om at 11:00 AM, on April 04, 2017 the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to wit: LOT 5, BLOCK “C,” OF GULF HIGHLANDS, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 8, PAGE 79, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA. Property Address: 187 ESCANABA AVENUE, PANAMA CITY BEACH, FL 32413 Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale. Dated this 23rd day of February, 2017. Bill Kinsaul As Clerk of the Court By: Jennifer Estrada As Deputy Clerk IMPORT ANT If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator by mail at P.O. Box 1089, Panama City, FL 32402 or by phone at (850)747-5338 at least seven (7) days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than seven (7) days. If you are hearing impaired, please call 711. ADA Coordinator P.O. Box 1089, Panama City, Florida 32402, Phone: 850-747-5338 Fax: (850)747-5717, Hearing Impaired: Dial 711, Email: AD A Request@jud14.flcour ts.org Submitted by: Robertson, Anschutz & Schneid, P.L. Attorneys for Plaintiff 6409 Congress Ave., Suite 100, Boca Raton, FL 33487 Phone: 561-241-6901 Fax: 561-997-6909 File No.: 16-099511 Pub:March 14,21, 2017 14320 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO. 16000610CA CIT BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES AND ALL OTHERS WHO MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF MURIEL MALOY, DECEASED, et al. Defendant(s). NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated February 23, 2017, and entered in 16000610CA of the Circuit Court of the FOURTEENTH Judicial Circuit in and for Bay County, Florida, wherein CIT BANK, N.A. is the Plaintiff and THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES AND ALL OTHERS WHO MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST IN THE ESTATE OF MURIEL MALOY, DECEASED.; RICHARD ST. CLAIR; WILLIAM ST. CLAIR: JULIA HERRICK; TARA OLIVER; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ON BEHALF OF THE SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT are the Defendant(s). Bill Kinsaul as the Clerk of the Circuit Court will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at www .bay .realfore close.c om at 11:00 AM, on April 04, 2017 the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to wit: LOT 4, BLOCK C, LANNIE ROWE LAKE ESTATES UNIT 4, AS PER PLAT THEREOF IN PLAT BOOK 10, PAGE 42 OF THE PUBLIC OF BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA Property Address: 117 LANNIE ROWE DRIVE, PANAMA CITY, FL 32404 Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the us pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale. Dated this 1st day of March, 2017. Bill Kinsaul As Clerk of the Court By:Ladyne Swearingen As Deputy Clerk IMPORT ANT If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator by mail at P.O. Box 1089, Panama City, FL 32402 or by phone at (850)747-5338 at least seven (7) days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than seven (7) days. If you are hearing impaired, please call 711. ADA Coordinator P.O. Box 1089, Panama City, Florida 32402, Phone: 850-747-5338 Fax: (850)747-5717, Hearing Impaired: Dial 711, Email: AD A Request@jud14.flcour ts.org Submitted by: Robertson, Anschutz & Schneid, P.L. Attorneys for Plaintiff 6409 Congress Ave., Suite 100, Boca Raton, FL 33487 Phone: 561-241-6901 Fax: 561-997-6909 File No.: 16-026795 Pub:March 14,21, 2017 14322 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR BAY COUNTY CASE NO.: 2016CA1137 WHITNEY BANK, a Mississippi state chartered bank, formerly known as HANCOCK BANK, a Mississippi state chartered bank, as assignee of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as Receiver for Peoples First Community Bank, a Florida banking corporation, Plaintiffs, vs. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES and all other parties claiming an interest by, through, under or against the ESTATE of MARIE C. NORTON, Deceased; UNKNOWN TENANT IN POSSESSION 1 and UNKNOWN TENANT IN POSSESSION 2, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the undersigned Clerk of the Circuit Court of Bay County, Florida, pursuant to the Final Summary Judgment of Foreclosure, entered in this cause, will sell the property at public sale to the highest bidder for cash, except as set forth hereinafter, on April 7, 2017 at 11:00 am Central Time at www .bay .realfore close.c om in accordance with Chapter 45, Florida Statutes, the following described real property lying and being in Bay County, Florida, to-wit: Lot 16, Block A of COLONY SUBDIVISION PHASE ONE, according to the Plat thereof as recorded in Plat Book 13, Page(s) 19, of the Public Records of Bay County, Florida. Commonly known as 361 Eagle Drive, Panama City Beach, Florida 32407. This Notice dated this 1st day of March, 2017. BILL KINSAUL, Clerk, of Circuit Court By: Sharon Chambers Deputy Clerk Pub:March 14,21, 2017 14324PUBLIC NOTICEThe regular meeting of the Panama City Port Authority Board of Directors will be held Thursday, March 16, 2017 at 3:00 PM in the Port Board Room at One Seaport Drive. Pub: March 14, 2017 Healthy Start Coalitionhas opened an Invitation to Negotiate (ITN) for Healthy Services in Bay County Florida. Any interested organizations or agencies can email healthystart@com cast.net for details. txt FL70068 to 56654 Lost CatWhite, short haired cat, brown spot on hip, black and brown tail, one brown ear. Lost at Pinnacle Apts on Minnesota Ave. If found please call Sophie at (850) 387-3961. Found pair of black prescription eyeglasses in St. Andrew’s area on 3/7/2017. Call Cris at (850) 276-9625. 2 Westie Brothers 6/mo’s old, groomed, neutered, non-shedding, great with kids. $490ea. 850-687-1598 Text FL70127 to 56654 Alternative To BoardingHouse N PetSitting Svs. Licensed Bonded 265-0278 Beautiful 7 month Old Male Blue European Great Dane, $1200. Serious inquiries only. Call 774-0964. Cemetery Spaces Kent Forest Lawn Located at the Arch & Cross section. Priced at $1,000 each. Located in Lot 12 D in spaces 3 and 4. If interested, contact 850-747-8957 or 850-819-4836. Text FL70114 to 56654 DIABETIC TEST STRIPS NEEDEDWill buy sealed, unexpired boxes (850)710-0189 For Sale: 1 burial plot at Garden of Memories -Together Forever Garden. Section 118-6, space #3. $2,000. Linda 850-272-3447 Text FL69433 to 56654 Hot tub Free, come get it. 5125 Douglas Street. Text FL70059 to 56654 For SaleCustom Made Guitars Dobro-Fiddle Call(850)-722-5411 Text FL69936 to 56654 AKC Labrador Retrievers choc & blk, 8wks on 3/18, Bonifay. 850-547-9291 Text FL70162 to 56654

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CLASSIFIEDSC C 8 8 Tuesday, March 14, 2017| The News Herald STEAKPITREOPENINGMARCH20thTAKINGAPPLICATIONSMON.MAR.6TH SAT.MAR.11TH MON.MAR.13TH TH.MAR.16TH 11:00AM-5:00PMFrontDoorEntrance€SaleSperSonfor theGeneralStore €ServerSEXPERIENCED€hoSt/hoSteSSeS €BuS&Set-up(MUSTBE16YRSOLD)€Kitchenprep €DiShwaSherS €SteaKcooKSEXPERIENCED€cooKShelperS €caShierS €MeatcutterPORTIONCUTTINGEXPERIENCE RATEOFPAYDEPENDSONEXPERIENCEnophonecallSpleaSe9527FrontBeachRoad PanamaCityBeachEOEM/F/D/V1162584 Logistics/TransportClass A CDL DriversNeeded Immediately Local Mossyhead and surrounding areas $2,000 Retention Bonus Dump Trailer Drivers Home Nights Apply online only at: www .perdidotrucking.com Perdido Trucking Service, LLC251-470-0355 Web ID#: 34367981 Medical/Health Dermatology SouthEast is now hiring! We are looking for dynamic and talented LPN’s/MA’s and a Histologist. Excellent Pay and Benefits. Drug-Free Workplace To apply send resume to careers@datfl.com Web ID # 34370135 Medical/HealthRadiation TherapistHope Radiation Cancer Center is seeking an ARRT; Florida licensed Radiation Therapist to join a private practice in Panama City, Florida. Panama City is located on beautiful quartz crystal white sand beaches and emerald green waters. Our office uses the latest state of the art Varian Linac IX for treatment. The office is equipped with a GE CT Simulator, EMR and highly professional staff. We offer competitive salary and an excellent benefit package. An ideal candidate is an AART with a Florida license with a minimum of three (3) years experience. CT Simulation experience preferred. Must be a team player. Email your resume to nowhiringpc@gmail.com Web ID#: 34369782 Accounting/Finance NOW HIRING The City of Wewahitchka, seeks a full-time Worker to fill the position ofUtility Billing Clerk .Must be responsible for taking money Send utility bills, receive and post payments. If you are interested: request application email: connieparrish@fairpoint.net please send resume and completed employment application to City Hall, Attention: City Clerk, Connie Parrish, PO Box 966, Wewahitchka, FL 32465, or by email. Web ID # 34369790 Admin/Clerical Dermatology SouthEast is now hiring! We are looking for dynamic and talentedOffice Manager & Front OfficeExcellent Pay and Benefits. Drug-Free Workplace To apply send resume to careers@datfl.com Web ID # 34369432 Admin/ClericalOffice Manager/BillerPhysician’s office is seeking an experienced medical office manager/biller with 3-5 years of experience for a full time position. Qualifications: *Three to five years experience in medical office management *Three to five years of experience in medical billing *CPT and ICD 10 Coding *Experience with Insurance Authorizations, Data Entry and Insurance Claims *Set up payment plans, billing, processing of claims and collections Ideal candidate must be detail oriented and able to multitask. Excellent benefits package. Salary to commensurate with experience. Please send resume to nowhiringpc@gmail.com Web ID#: 34367684 Banking/RE/MortgageFSR I -Entry Level PositionInnovations Federal Credit Union is seeking motivated, ambitious and member service oriented individuals with excellent organiztional and customer service skills. If you have a positive attitude, a high standard of integrity, and you are a team player, we would like to talk with you about becoming a part of the exciting success and growth of this dynamic and innovative full service financial institution. We currently have openings for an FSR I -Entry Level Teller Position. Please submit your resume to: Innovations FCU, PO Box 15529, Panama City, Florida 32406, Attn: Human Resources, or email us at HR@innovationsfcu.org Cust Svc/Client CareNo Experience Necessary Blue Island Beach Company now hiring retail sales assistants/ cashiers for women’s swimwear & apparel stores at multiple locations. Great Starting Pay! Call Terri for appt 850-234-6278 or email blueislandbchco@aol.com Web ID 34369531 Customer SupportAlvin’s Island Now HiringEnergetic & hardworking people. Apply in person at any Alvin’s Island location. No phone calls, please. Web ID#: 34368669 EducationMath Teacher NeededWalton Academy Charter School in DeFuniak Springs, FL, is seeking a qualified Math Teacher to join our team. Qualified applicants must hold current and active certification. Statements of Eligibility will also be considered. Experience with at-risk youth is a plus. Send all inquiries/resumes to: employment@rader inc.com For more information on our school, please visit www .waltonacademycharterschool.org Web ID # 34370222 EXECUTIVE DIRECTORCape St. George Light and Museum, St. George Island, FL Exceptional opportunity to lead a dynamic new museum and lighthouse on a coastal barrier island in Florida’s Big Bend. The restored lighthouse and newly built museum is well organized by a strong volunteer force and operated by a small dedicated staff. The board of directors seeks to fully professionalize the organization with an executive director. The director will manage all operations including finance, collections, programs, personnel, marketing, and media relations. He or she will be responsible for fund raising including securing grants and matching funds from government, corporate, and private sources and building upon the already substantial membership. The ideal candidate will be an energetic museum professional enthusiastic about growing an institution. Qualifications: Management experience; fund-raising ability; written and verbal communications skills; degree(s) in business, history, museum studies or related field(s) or equivalent. A passion for history and knowledge of maritime activities desirable. Salary negotiable and based on qualifications. Send letter of interest, rsum and three references to: Executive Director Search, info@stgeorgelight.org. Deadline: April 1, 2017 Web ID#: 34370201 HospitalityPT Groundskeeper and FT Front Desk ClerkExperience with V-12 required for Front Desk position. Call for interview 850-234-3720. Ask for Anthony or Debbie. Continental Condominiums, 15413 Front Beach Rd. Web ID#: 34369640 Install/Maint/RepairB & C Fire Safety Fire Sprinkler Fitter/Foreman/Apprentice Fire Alarm Technician Admin Assistant (with contract exp.) Apply in person at: 823 Navy St, FWB or call 850-862-7812. Web ID#: 34370082 Install/Maint/RepairDriver – Water Truck Operator – Class A CDL With Air Brakesmust be dependable/ hard working – job responsibilities will include watering various job sites across northwest Florida with a 2,000 gallon tanker truck. $16.00-21.00/ hour plus 1.5x for overtime. Send resume to fax 850-230-9892 or applicationbl@gmail.com, or visit the employment link at www .bay landscape.com Web ID # 34369918 Install/Maint/RepairResort Vacation Properties of SGI Inc.Looking for dependable professionalHousekeepers/Independent Contractorsto perform departure cleans and deep cleans for vacation homes. Must have experience and references. Must carry liability insurance and worker’s compensation insurance if required by Florida Law. Weekend work is required. Call 850-670-1266 or visit us in person at 25 Begonia Street, Eastpoint, FL Web ID # 34369793 Installation/Maintenance/RepairFLEET MAINTENANCE SUPERVISOR Public WorksSalary: $21.20 Hourly The Washington County Board of County Commissioners is currently accepting applications for a Fleet Maintenance Supervisor position in the Public Works Shop. This position performs highly skilled mechanical work in the maintenance, repair and overhaul of automotive and heavy equipment as well as supervising and overseeing the shop. Minimum Qualifications: Graduation from an accredited high school or possession of an acceptable equivalency diploma. Basic computer skills. Must have a minimum of six (6) years of experience as a mechanic repairing both gasoline and diesel engines, light and heavy equipment repair and maintenance, and welding experience or any equivalent combination of training and experience which provides the required knowledge, skills and abilities. At least four (4) years of the required experience must be in diesel mechanics. Must possess and maintain a valid Florida drivers’ license with an acceptable driving record. Must obtain and maintain a valid CDL license, Class A, within one (1) year of hire. Note: ASE Heavy truck and other industry recognized certifications are highly desired, i.e., c ertifications from MACK Truck, Caterpillar, John Deer, etc Applications may be accessed on-line at www.washingtonfl.com. Applications and job descriptions may also be obtained at the Washington County Board of County Commissioners’ office located at 1331 South Boulevard, Chipley, FL 32428. All interested applicants MUST submit an Employment Application to the Human Resources Department in the Washington County Board of County Commissioners’ office by 4:00 PM on March 16, 2017. All questions regarding this position or other vacancies should be directed to the Human Resources Department, 850-415-5151. The selected applicant will be subject to a pre-employment background check. Veteran’s Preference is accepted in accordance with FS 295.08. Equal Opportunity/Drug-Free Workplace Web ID#: 34367745 Logistics/Transport Anderson Columbia Co., Inc. has a position of:Experienced Dump Truck DriverWith Class A or B license. Drug free environment / EOE/ Medical Benefits & 401K Please Call Scott Christy 850-573-1208 between 8am and 5pm only Web ID#: 34369823 Bldg/Const/Skill TradeCurrently Seeking: Foreman Equipment operators Rod Busters Pipe Layers Form Carpenters Concrete Finishers Laborers CDL Drivers Looking for motivated team players. Apply at: 2305 Transmitter Rd, Panama City, FL Web ID#: 34370133 Exp. CarpentersDLneeded. Own transportation. 850-381-4454. Food Serv/HospKitchen/Deil HelpApply in person, Modica Market: 109 Central Square, Seaside, Florida Web ID # 34370086 Install/Maint/RepairHouse CleanersEarthShine Cleaning is looking for housecleaners and condo cleaners. Part time, possible full time. Exp preferred but will train successful candidate. Valid driver’s license with reliable transportation. Saturdays a must. Call 850-215-8339 for an appointment. Web ID#: 34369815 Install/Maint/RepairMercury Marine Test Boat Driver40 hrs a week, Permanent contract position, $15per hr + more for highly qualified individuals. Apply online at Monster.com using 34369726. Install/Maint/RepairPlumber and Plumbers Helper, New ConstructionCall Frank Wood Plumbing. 850-234-2168 Web ID: 34370039 Install/Maint/RepairUtility Technician Right of Way (ROW) CrewGulf Coast Electric Cooperative is accepting applications for the position of Utility Technician working out of the Wewahitchka, FL office. Applicants must have a Class A CDL or the ability to obtain them within 6 months of starting. Must also have working knowledge or experience with electrical/ water distribution systems. Equipment Operator experience is preferred as well as previous line crew experience. You may apply at Career Source Gulf Coast Center, located at 625 Highway 231, Panama City, through Friday March 17, 2017 at 4:00 p.m. For more information visit our website at www.gcec.com. Equal Opportunity Employer Web ID#: 34369771 Logistics/TransportDelivery PositionPanama Cabinet Company is currently accepting applications. Please send or bring your resume to: 3637 N. Highway 231 Panama City Fl 32404. 850-769-3518 Web ID#: 34369878 Medical/HealthMA/LPNBusy specialty practice needs experienced MA/LPN. Must be computer literate and a fast learner. Flexible hours, 401K, benefits, Salary DOE. Send resumes to Blind Box 3689 c/o The News Herald, P.O. Box 1940, Panama City, FL 32402 Web ID#: 34344783 Other Emerald Falls 8602 Thomas Dr. Cobra Adventure Park 9323 Front Bch Rd.Now Hiring Ride Attendants Cashiers Multiple PositionsPick up applications at Emerald Falls or Cobra Adventure Park Web ID: 34369544 Sales/Business DevExperienced• Managers •Asst Managers •Sales PersonnelHeatwave & Purple Haze Now Hiring FT/PT -year round. Great pay. Great work environment. Apply at 10015 Front Beach Rd. Or fax to 850-234-9911 Web ID#: 34369265 Sales/Business DevHy’s ToggeryNow Accepting Applications for Sales Associates Full and Part TimeNo phone calls or emails. Apply in person only, at Hy’s Toggery Pier Park next door to Tootsie’s. Web ID#: 34369573 Commercial BuildingAt nice location. Ready for business! Call 850-960-0752 or 258-2611 for details. Text FL68496 to 56654 Whse w/office & docks 2500-5000-7500 up to 20k sqft 850-785-3031panamacitywarehouse.netBrokers Protected A local senior man wishes to lease a small, fully furnished appt. 850-257-3589. txt FL70173 to 56654 P.C. 1br garage apartment, new carpet & paint, no pets, $425 + $400 dep. 785-7341 or 814-3211 Text FL68833 to 56654 Panama City: 1 bd duplex, one person, $700/mo + electricity. Call 605-342-8777 Publisher’s NoticeAll real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on a equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. Panama City : 1512 Chandle Ave. 2bd/1ba, storage shed, $850/mo. 850-527-1894 Text FL370191 to 5664 St. Andrews: 3 bd/2 ba w/garage, $925/mo + dep. No pets. 785-7341 or 814-3211 Text FL70202 to 56654 Lynn Haven 2 & 3 Br’s starting at $640 mnth, W/D Hookup, CH/A, No Pets. 850-624-6552 $169,900 PCB30 days to completion on 2 new units. 2 story free standing townhouses. 1500 sqft 3br 2 1/2 ba beautifully finished with 9’ ceilings, stainless appliances, real granite countertops and vanity tops. Google Mimosa Place, Panama City Beach to see. Located on the east end of the beach in Mimosa Place, a private community of only 30 homes. Corner of Laird St and Anne Ave one block South of Front Beach Rd. All outside maintenance included in $50/mo. Association dues for carefree living. Pet park, grill and paved 2 car parking spaces. For sale by Developer with $3000 buyer closing cost allowance. Realtor coop @ 3%. 850 258-7792 ActionTree.NetBest Prices in Town Lic/Insured, Firewood, Call/Text 850-527-7017 Any Time Tree Removal!850-265-9794Text FL69248 to 56654 BJs Lawn and Tree ServicesMonthly specials! 15% off all ServicesAffordable rates. Accepting all major credit cards. Full tree removal, tree trimming & lot clearing. Licensed & insured. Call 850-596-4642 Creamer’s Tree ServiceCall Jason @ (850)832-9343 Pearce Tree & Stump Service“We go out on a limb for you!” Lic. & Ins. 850-596-5067 p anamacitytree surgeon.com Best Oriental Massage Health & Harmony Nice Professional QUALITYTOUCH! 914-9177.Lic #9026 Home Painting Pro’ s Residential/ Commercial/Interior & Exterior Painting & Pressure Washing Free Estimates 850-276-0606 $2999-NEW METAL ROOF for the Doublewide!! (up to 28x60) Licensed & Insured. Guyson Construction & Roofing (850) 258-5856 CALLTODAYText FL65996 to 56654 Complete Lawn CareSenior & Military Disc.Call Steven: 850-624-8798 Cell 850-235-2212 Office J3’s Lawn and Palm, LLC.Retired Military, Licenses and Insured, FREE ESTIMATES! We provide basic Lawn Service, Pressure Washing and Palm Tree Trimming. Call or Text James or Kay at 850-768-4589 or 850-703-1706. YARDEDGE 625-3942 ‘Spring Cleanup’ Regular Lawn Service 596-6293 Lic/Ins Home Repairs Any Job, Large Or Small. New Installs, Kitchens, Baths Paint, Tile, Woodrot, Electric, Plumbing. Robert 850-832-7972 Able Lawn SvcWe Show Up!Mulch, cleanups, pine straw, palms, leaf removal, trimming 596-4383/258-5072 Have It Your Way! Int/Ext Painting, Clean-Ups/Sod, Epoxy Floors, Rock/Flower Beds. Drainage Systems. Lot Clearing, Haul Offs. Weeding. Tree Trimming, Pressure Washing. Service Calls 850-303-8526 850-381-7960 Save 10-20%! Roy Smiley Jr. 24 Hr. Response SEATILE Tile & Wood All Types of Tiles & Wood Flooring installed. Bath & Kitchens Too! Free Est: Kenneth 850-532-4251 !!Bob’s Home Repairs!!Roof repairs, drywall repairs, small job specialist.35 Years Experience850-235-3769 !!Bob’s Home Repairs!!R oof repairs,Soffet and Facia, Also drywall, etc.35 Years Experience850-235-3769Leave Message. Don’s Home RepairPainting, Tile, Windows, Doors, General Carpentry, Metal Roofs, Pressure Washing, Plumbing. Insured. 850-630-9690 Golden Touch Cleaning Services Residential/Condos Insured Free Estimates Sherie @ 814-4002 Dianne @ 704-0514 Duncan ConcreteExp. & Ins. Driveway & Patio Specialist Now accepting all major credit cards 850-896-1574 KIPPLE & SON CONCRETE & POOL REPAIR Pool refinish, driveways & patios, 27 Yr’s Exp. Lic/Ins, Free Estimates 850-851-4015 WHITE’S CONCRETE Serv. Bay Co. 22 Yr 874-1515 / 896-6864 Accept Credit Cards If you didn’t advertise here, you’re missing out on potential customers. Turn to classified! You can bank on our bargains! Classifieds work! Call To Place An Ad In Classifieds. 747-5020 Turn to classified! You can bank on our bargains! SELL ALL YOUR ITEMS through classified.CALL 747-5020 These tiny ads sell, hire, rent and inform for thousands of families each week.Let a little Classified ad do a big job for you. The News Herald Classified 747-5020

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CLASSIFIEDSThe News Herald | Tuesday, March 14, 2017 C C 9 9 1164087 1164084 2007ToyotaTundraNiceTruck,Clean,#973 SalePrice:$19,992 BillCramerGM.comOver200UsedPartialListBelow Plustax,title,license,$50electronic lingfee,and$595dealerprepfee.2251West23rdSt.-PanamaCity,FL850-250-5489877-361-1815 BillCramerGM.com 2003ChevyTahoe Auto,V8,#351 SalePrice:$7,995 2011HyundaiVeracruz Auto,V6,#692 SalePrice:$16,9932013InfinityQX56Auto,V8,Moonroof,#482 SalePrice:$39,9952012BuickEnclaveAuto,V6,Leather,#549 SalePrice:$20,993 2016ChevySilverado1500 AutoV8,Leather,#566 SalePrice:$46,992 2009ChevyImpala Auto,V6,#396 SalePrice:$11,995 ShopHERE2014CadillacSRX Auto,V6,Leather,#114 SalePrice:$29,991 2015SubaruWRX Manual,2.5LTurbo#423 SalePrice:$32,993 2016JeepCompass Manual,4Cyl,#053 SalePrice:$12,993 2005ChevyCorvette Manual,V8,#320 SalePrice:$23,993 2013ChevySuburban Auto,V8,Bluetooth,#582 SalePrice:$21,991 2015ChevyCamaro Auto,V6,Sunroof,#226 SalePrice:$25,992 2015ChevyTraverse Auto,V6,Bluetooth,#084 SalePrice:$23,991 2013KiaSorento Auto,4Cylinder,#290 SalePrice:$13,9912015DodgeChallengerSRTHELLCAT!#162 SalePrice:$51,995 1164085 1164088 1169589 313RoseLn.PCB4br/3.5ba,3BlocksFromBeachAccess #82.Separateentranceforpossible motherinlawsuite.$319,900.Textor callforappointment850-814-9642 1163299 FORSALEBYOWNER ‘’Arts-and-Crafts’’ Style luxury home. 2900+ sq ft with a fabulous water view of Grand Lagoon in Bay Point. 3 Bdrm, 2.5 baths $479,000.Bay Point Real EstateHope Abbott (850) 596-7653 Executive Home in one of the most prestigious gated neighborhoods in Panama City Beach, Trieste. Nestled in the back of the Colony Club neighborhood & just a short bike ride from beaches. 4BR 2 BA Bay Point Real EstateHope Abbott (850) 596-7653 3.5 ACRE MOUNTAINTOP HIDEAWAY ONLY $15,900 Over 500 ft on trout stream – fish from your porch! Great location, just steps to National Forest! Unbeatable mountain views and beautiful waterfall and pond. MUST GO! Call (727) 314-3001 txt FL69469 to 56654 BUILD YOUR HOME on the West End of Panama City Beach Only 3 Blocks to the white sandy beaches On a very quiet cul de sac street 320 K Court Lot size 125x75 $65kBay Point Real EstateHope Abbott (850) 596-7653 Panama City: 2002 Pioneer 3 br/2ba New carpet, fresh paint, clean. In mobile home park. Asking $22k. Call (850)-691-3730 2008 Lexus IS250, low miles, NAV, LTHR, SUNROOF, extra clean offer at $12,995, call Jack 850-307-3476 2009 Cadillac CTS 6cyl, 4 brand new steel belted Michelin tires, 78,308 orig. miles, exc. condition, fully loaded, 3yr bumper to bumper warranty incl. w/free car cover. $19,995 Firm. Cash Only 850-381-7448 Text FL69535 to 56654 2013 BMW 328i, 31K miles, LTHR, NAV, certified warranty to 100K, value at $21,995, call Jack 850-307-3476 2013 Cadillac CTS, 1 owner, 46K miles, V6, LTHR, warranty, new tires, exceptional offer at $18,495, call Jack 850-307-3476 BMW 328is, 1999, local trade, lt blue, grey lthr, all pwr, non-smoker, alloys, Nice car! $3488 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars BMW Z4, 2005, convertible, local trade, red, tan lthr, all pwr, non-smoker, CD, alloys, Beautiful car! $7988 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Chevy Cobalt LT, 2010, local trade, burg, blk int, auto, all pwr, alloys, only 39k miles, $7988 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Buick Lacrosse CXS, 2011, local trade, cashmere pearl white, tan lthr, auto, dual climate ctrl, htd/cld seats, all pwr, alloys, only 80k miles! $11,888 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Chevy Corvette Stringray, 2014, yellow, 2LT, under 17k miles! Gorgeous car! Very well taken care of! Send a friend & earn a $300 referral! Call Chris Witt 850-866-6852 @ Bay Cars Chevy Cruze LT, 2013, local trade, non-smoker, auto, sunroof, CD, alloys, all pwr, Beautiful car! $9888 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Chevy SSR, 2004, low miles, very clean, auto, LOADED! $21,998 Call Sandro 832-9071 @ Bay Cars Chrysler 300 C 2013 HEMI. Great condition. 61,500 miles. Only selling due to health. $17,300. 419-348-8200 Text FL70203 to 56654 Chrysler 300, 2010, local trade, non-smoker, char grey, lthr, auto, V6, all pwr, dual climate ctrl, only 82k miles! $7888 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Chrysler 300C, 2016, white, pano sunroof, lthr, nav, htd/cld seats, 24k miles, Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Dodge Challenger SRT, 2015, blk, nav, backup cam, lthr, only 8k miles! Looks like new! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Ford Fusion SE, 2010, local trade, auto, sunroof, all pwr, rear spoiler, Nice car! $5988 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Ford Fusion SEL, 2012, pearl white, tan lthr, sunroof, pwr seat, 30k miles, Impeccable vehicle! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Ford Mustang, 2007, red, V6, 95k miles, Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Hyundai Elantra, 2010, local trade, non-smoker, tan, tan cloth, all pwr, CD, cold air, Great on Gas! Only $5888! Hurry, won’t last! Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Mercedes Benz E350, 2011, convertible, red w/ blk top, backup cam, nav, Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Hyundai Veloster, 2012, 1 owner, non-smoker, blk/blk, auto, all pwr, alloys, Only 20k miles! Under warranty! Beautiful car! $13,888 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Monte Carlo 197769k miles, drives like new, all original, 350 v8, a/c, ps, pb, all service manuals and records, last of the “big bodies”! $8900. Call (404) 583-0936. Text FL69804 to 56654 Porsche 911 Carrera S, 2007, local trade, black on black on black, auto w/ trip tronic, nav, high intensity lights, staggered wheels, Only 51k miles! $42,888 Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars 2012 Buick Enclave, CXL, 1 owner, 46K miles, LTHR, 3rd row seating, immaculate offer at $22,495, call Jack 850-307-3476 2012 GMC Terrain SLT, V6, 62K miles, LTHR, NAV, immaculate offer at $17,995, call Jack 850-307-3476 Buick Rainier CX, 2006, local trade, good mileage, 1 owner, Only $6995! Send a friend & earn a $300 referral! Call Chris Witt 850-866-6852 @ Bay Cars Dodge Durango Limited, 2016, blue, tan lthr, nav, htd/cld seats, backup cam, and more! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Hyundai Santa Fe Sport, 2016, very nice SUV! Only $19,998! Very well taken care of! Send a friend & earn a $300 referral! Call Chris Witt 850-866-6852 @ Bay Cars Jeep Wrangler, 2010, 4dr, soft top, 4x4, Sahara, $22,998 Call Sandro 832-9071 @ Bay Cars Jeep Wrangler, 2012, 4dr, hard top, 4x4, auto, Sahara, $32,988 Call Sandro 832-9071 @ Bay Cars Jeep Wrangler, 2012, 4dr, hard top, 4x4, auto, Sahara, $32,988 Call Sandro 832-9071 @ Bay Cars Jeep Wrangler, 2015, 2dr soft top, 4x4, manual, Sahara, $31,998 Call Sandro 832-9071 @ Bay Cars Lincoln Navigator, 2016, black, white, or burgundy. Low miles! LOADED! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars 01 FORD F150 -4-DOOR $4800 DEALER 215-1769 04 DODGE RAM -4-DOOR $5700 DELAER 215-1769 05 CHEVY SILVERADO $6800 DEALER 215-1769 2014 Dodge Ram 1500 Sport-HEMI One of a kind. Red with black and chrome! 29,500 miles. $25,900. Only selling due to health issues! 419-348-8200 Text FL70203 to 56654 Chevrolet 1500 High Country, 2014, 4x4, pearl white, brown lthr, nav, backup cam, htd/cld seats, and more! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Chevy Colorado, 2016, silver, 2dr, under 17k miles! Great deal! Very well taken care of! Send a friend & earn a $300 referral! Call Chris Witt 850-866-6852 @ Bay Cars For Cars, Trucks, SUVs, & Vans, Call Gary Fox @ Bay Mitsubishi 338-5257! Home of the $9888 OR LESS! Too many to put in the ads! Vehicles come in everyday and I’m HERE FOR YOU! Gary Fox 338-5257 @ Bay Cars Ram 1500 Big Horn, 2013, crew cab, blk, 33k miles, Runs & looks great! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Ram 2500, 2015, SLT, Crew Cab, Diesel, 20k miles, maroon, Ram boxes, 4x4, backup cam, Like new! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Chrysler Town & Country, 2016, white, black, burgundy or silver! All low miles! LOADED! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Dodge Grand Caravan R/T, 2016, blue, 33k miles, lthr, backup cam, pwr seat, Bluetooth & more! Call Victor 850-348-1038 @ Bay Cars Honda 1300VTXC 200520k miles, $3,000 OBO Call 850-896-7276 40 ft Navy Boat671-N Detroit Diesel, twin disc gear, 2 to 1. Hynautic steering. Trim cabins. Sacrifice $18, 900 OBO 850-785-9146 or 850-814-2763 Text FL57148 to 56654 1980 Sliverline 22’ Hardtop Cuddy Cabin New engine/drive. Needs TLC. $6,000. 770-231-3573 Text FL69855 to 56654 19ft Glasstream Bowrider. Trailer & 175hp Evinrude motor. Needs work. $900. 850-769-8496 Text FL69811 to 56654 Boat Storage Wet or dry. Near Hathaway Bridge. $35 daily. $150 weekly. $10.50 a ft. monthly. $9.70/ft per year. Free flush and wash. 850-234-7650 Text FL67428 to 56654 1976 One owner 31 foot AirstreamNew bedding and hardwood floors, ex. cond. Many extras, $9,000 OBO. Call Joseph at (850) 326-7298 or (850) 722-0679. Must see! Text FL70026 to 56654 If you didn’t advertise here, you’re missing out on potential customers.

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CLASSIFIEDSC C 1 1 0 0 Tuesday, March 14, 2017| The News Herald 1169566