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** Business .........................A5 Diversions ......................B6 Local & State ...............B1-5 Obituaries ......................B3 Sports........................C1-6 Viewpoints ....................A6 THURSDAYSome sun 75 / 58WEDNESDAYFog 77 / 60TODAYClear 75 / 61 Panama City News Herald Want to subscribe? Call 850-747-5050 LOCAL & STATE | B1HERO BEHIND THE WHEELBus driver honored for saving choking Breakfast Point student SPORTS | C1PREP BASEBALLArnold loses to Arkansas team in 9 innings BUSINESS | A5SETTLEMENT REACHEDGulf PowerÂs new proposal would add $7 to average bill NATION & WORLD | A4SUPREME COURTSenate opens Judge Neil GorsuchÂs con rmation hearing LOCAL & STATE | B1$500,000 DAMAGEHouse in Blue Mountain Beach destroyed by re Tuesday, March 21, 2017 PANAMA CITY @The_News_Herald facebook.com/panamacitynewsherald75 ¢ www.newsherald.comFrom staff reportsPANAMA CITY BEACH „ Police were seeking the publicÂs help Monday night after one person was killed in a late-night shooting.Panama City Beach Police Department (PCBPD) officials reported three males „ Diontez Jerel McCoy, 24; Jeffery Seymour Murray, 28; and Tyree Tylan Maddox, 14 „are wanted as Âpersons of interestÂŽ in connection with the Sunday night shooting that killed 27-year-old Ples Robinson of Panama City.The shooting happened near RockÂit Lanes in the parking lot of the Shoppes at Edgewater Plaza about 9 p.m., according to a PCBPD news release. Police did not say what led up to the shooting, only that police responded to a report of a shooting and found Robinson suffering from apparent gunshot wounds. He was transported to Bay Medical Center Sacred Heart but died shortly after his arrival, according to police.3 sought in fatal PCB shootingPolice probing connection to Foxwood shootingPolice are seeking the publicÂs help in “ nding three persons of interest in connection with a Sunday night shooting in the parking lot near RockÂit Lanes. [PATTI BLAKE/THE NEWS HERALD] McCoy Murray Maddox By Katie Landeck522-5114 | @PCNHKatieL klandeck@pcnh.comPANAMA CITY „ The small, boxy houses went up in the 1950s, scrunched so closely together you barely have to raise your voice to have a conversation with your neighbor one porch over. Today, the shotgun houses near the intersection of 15th Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard are some of the poorest housing units in Panama City, with rents as low as $150. They are run-down, residents say, and have issues with cold, heat, chipped paint, cracked win-dows, leaking roofs and more. And, quietly, residents say their neighbors arenÂt Âhigh-class people.ÂŽ Crime and drug use have been a problem, according to city documents.But itÂs home, and some residents have lived there for decades.ÂIÂve been here 47 years,ÂŽ Bobby Johnson said as he sat on his porch. ÂMy grandma used to live in that house.ÂŽOnly now, the Downtown North Community Redevel-opment Agency (CRA) and Panama City are looking to purchase the lots owned by Sidney, Julianne and Edgar Targets for removalPanama City wants to demolish Glenwood homes, build newBureau head also debunks presidentÂs wiretapping claimBy Eric Tucker and Eileen SullivanThe Associated PressWASHINGTON „ The FBI is investigating whether Donald TrumpÂs associates coordinated with Russian officials in an effort to sway the 2016 presidential election, Director James Comey said Monday in an extraordinary public confir-mation of a probe the president has refused to acknowledge, dismissed as fake news and blamed on Democrats.In a bruising five-hour session, the FBI director also knocked down TrumpÂs claim that his predecessor had wiretapped his New York skyscraper, an assertion that has distracted White House officials and frustrated fellow Republicans who acknowl-edge theyÂve seen no evidence to support it.The revelation of the inves-tigation of possible collusion with Russians, and the first public confirmation of the wider probe that began last summer, came in a remarkable hearing by one branch of government examining serious allegations against another branch and the new presidentÂs election campaign.Tight-lipped for the most part, Comey refused to offer details on the scope, targets or timeline for the FBI inves-tigation, which could shadow the White House for months, if not years. The director would not say whether the probe has turned up evidence that Trump associates may have schemed with Russians during a campaign marked by email hacking that inves-tigators believe was aimed at helping the Republican defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton.Comey: TrumpÂs links to Russia probedA mailbox with a handwritten name and address is seen Monday in Glenwood. The Downtown North Community Redevelopment Agency and Panama City are looking to purchase 37 lots „ 32 of which have houses on them. [PHOTOS BY PATTI BLAKE/THE NEWS HERALD] Homes in Glenwood are seen Monday. City of“ cials want to attract a developer to build some modest homes with porches valued at $75,000 to $85,000 as well as a small shopping plaza to “ ll some of the community needs. Homes in Glenwood are seen Monday. See SHOOTING, A3 See HOMES, A3 See PROBE, A3
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** A2 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald During the past two decades, St. Andrews has seen quite the revival. We asked Facebook readers to tell us about their favorite places in the neighborhood and what folks would like to see move in? HereÂs what they had to say: Bonnie Bieganowski Bloom: ÂWe come to PCB once a year (wish it [were] more) and our “ rst stop once we land is always Uncle ErnieÂs. WeÂve also eaten at the Shrimp Boat many times. Love that whole area along the shore.ÂŽ Carol Farriba: ÂI would like to see the derelict buildings either torn down or restored. It would be nice to have living and shopping in the same buildings. Stores, restaurants on ground level, condos or higher end apartments on upper ” oors. Maybe some sort of ferry to Shell Island and/ or the Grand Lagoon area, and parking. There needs to be accessible parking which would be reasonably priced. Local restaurants, bars, clubs venues for local musicians and maybe even an amphitheater.ÂŽ Amanda Huft: ÂThe only thing speci“ cally that would be nice would be public restroom facilities, nice ones. They donÂt have to be huge, just well-maintained. Since the community is active, and encourages biking, walking, etc., it would be nice to be able to stop somewhere along the way. ThatÂs my only major suggestion for now. At some point, parking will need to be addressed too.ÂŽ Ron Eheey: ÂIt isnÂt about what we want, as much as it is a viable free market and economy that would support real business that wants to take a chance on the area. If government is involved, they pick winners and losers; it isnÂt a level playing “ eld. Only the free market produces a neighborhood that attracts locals, visitors and real business without taxpayer subsidies. Private money will come and if they succeed based on what locals perceive as needed and wanted then a change will take place and a community thrives. Government needs to step aside and stop controlling what takes place based on their donors needs. PC has failed for 20 years; time for something different. Whatever has been played out in the past obviously hasnÂt worked; why keep going down the same path?ÂŽREADER FEEDBACKToday is Tuesday, March 21 the 80th day of 2017. There are 285 days left in the year. TodayÂs Highlight in History: On March 21, 1952 the Moondog Coronation Ball, considered the “ rst rock and roll concert, took place at Cleveland Arena. On this date: In 1556 Thomas Cranmer, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, was burned at the stake for heresy. In 1685 composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach, Germany. In 1925 Tennessee Gov. Austin Peay signed the Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of the Theory of Evolution in public schools. (Tennessee repealed the law in 1967.) In 1935 Persia of“ cially changed its name to Iran. In 1946 the recently created United Nations Security Council set up temporary headquarters at Hunter College in The Bronx, New York. In 1963 the Alcatraz federal prison island in San Francisco Bay was emptied of its last inmates and closed at the order of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. In 1972 the Supreme Court, in Dunn v. Blumstein, ruled that states cannot require at least a yearÂs residency for voting eligibility. In 1981 Michael Donald, a black teenager in Mobile, Alabama, was abducted, tortured and killed by members of the Ku Klux Klan. (A lawsuit brought by DonaldÂs mother, Beulah Mae Donald, later resulted in a landmark judgment that bankrupted one Klan organization.) In 1997 President Bill Clinton and Russian President Boris Yeltsin wrapped up their summit in Helsinki, Finland, still deadlocked over NATO expansion, but able to agree on slashing nuclear weapons arsenals.TODAY IN HISTORYTerrance N. Jones of Panama City is 18. Singer-musician Rose Stone (Sly and the Family Stone) is 72. Actor Timothy Dalton is 71. Singer Eddie Money is 68. Actor Gary Oldman is 59. Actress Kassie Depaiva (ÂDays of Our LivesÂŽ) is 56. Actor Matthew Broderick is 55. Comedian-talk show host Rosie OÂDonnell is 55. Actor Scott Eastwood is 31.HAPPY BIRTHDAYTerrance Jones FLORIDA LOTTERYThese Florida lotteries were drawn Sunday: Fantasy 5: 02-08-12-15-30 Pick 2 Evening: 3-6 Pick 2 Midday: 2-7 Pick 3 Evening: 3-1-4 Pick 3 Midday: 1-4-6 Pick 4 Evening: 0-4-2-9 Pick 4 Midday: 8-4-4-6 Pick 5 Evening: 5-0-9-7-7 Pick 5 Midday: 7-8-8-0-7 Powerball: estimated jackpot $155 million Mega Millions: estimated jackpot $140 million YOUNG ARTISTLillian Grade 1 Tyndall Elementary School CATCH OF THE DAYChrista Shiver showing off a speckled trout she caught “ shing in the kayak with Grandpa Jim Looker. 1PLEIN AIR TUESDAYS: 9 a.m. to noon with Beach Art Group. Plein air painting focuses on learning to use and incorporate natural lighting. Bring your paints for a casual art session at a different location every week; arrive when you like and leave when youÂre ready. Check BeachArtGroup. com for this weekÂs location. Details, Helen, 850-541-38672 FLUIDITY OF PLACE EXHIBIT: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Thursday, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays at the Amelia Center Main Gallery (Room 112) at Gulf Coast State College in Panama City. Free admission; open to the public.3BAY BOOMERS ACTIVITY PROGRAM: 1-3 p.m. at the Bay County Council on Aging, 1116 Frankford Ave., Panama City. Line dancing. Details, Robin Khalidy, 850-769-34684TUESDAY @ 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, ÂHabits of Happy PeopleÂŽ presented by Renee Ryals of Humana. Details, 850522-2120 or NWRLS.com5 PAINT PARTY FUNDRAISER: 6-8 p.m. at the Palms Conference Center, 9201 Front Beach Road, Panama City Beach. Bene“ ting Simply Self Esteem, which supplies hygiene products for needy teenagers. Details, BeachArtGroup.com6DOWNTOWN DANCE: 7 p.m. at CityArts Cooperative, 318 Luverne Ave., with Russell Mace. Details, 769-0608, CityArtsCooperative.comGO AND DO 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. Allan Ewing, From Grayson, Kentucky, sent us this picture he took from the Summerhouse on Thomas Drive. PICTURE PERFECTWe 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. CELEBRATE COMMUNITYNEWSROOM 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
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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 A3A few hours later, law enforcement on the other side of the Hathaway Bridge were called to the scene of a shooting.About 12:30 a.m., Panama City Police Department (PCPD) officers responded to Foxwood Garden Apartments, 1701 Ham-ilton Ave., regarding a report of a discharged weapon. When officers arrived, they could tell a firearm had been discharged, but no victims were present. A short time later, however, 23-year-old Deandra Marcell Powell of Panama City arrived at a local hospital with a gunshot wound to the abdomen, PCPD reported. The gunshot wound was not life-threaten-ing, police said.Authorities are investigating whether the shootings are connected, according to a news release.Anyone with information about the Beach incident or the whereabouts of the three persons of interest should call Panama City Beach police at 850-233-5000 or Crime Stoppers at 850-785-TIPS (8477). Anyone with information on the Fox-wood shooting is urged to call the Panama City Police Depart-ment, 850-872-3100, or they can report their tips anony-mously to CrimeStoppers. ÂThis ainÂt the rst timeÂThe shootings did not go unnoticed by locals, who spoke with The News Herald on Monday afternoon and noted the wave of violence that recently has plagued Foxwood, including the fatal shooting of 22-year-old Alton Mills in December and another shoot-ing that injured two people a month later.But, despite the bloodshed, the sunlight Monday brought with it aÂnormalÂŽ day at Fox-wood and Edgewater. Residents and business owners said they werenÂt rattled and instead were going about their usual business. Heather Morrison, who lives next door to Foxwood, said she was asleep during the shoot-ing but heard about it from her roommate after she woke up. While there wasnÂt a sense of panic or fear in the neighborhood Monday, Morrison said arguments are common in the area, especially among couples.ÂThis ainÂt the first time,ÂŽ Morrison said about the shooting while she sat in her front driveway. ÂThey had one in December; they had one when I moved in (in January); now theyÂre having another one.ÂŽAs for the Edgewater shooting, RockÂit Lanes owner Wayne Andrus said he heard the incident started at a bar in Panama City and involved locals with a history of bad blood.Andrus was quick to emphasize RockÂit Lanes and Edgewater were nonviolent spots and that the shooting happened in the parking lot, not inside a business.ÂWeÂre the least problem-atic business in Panama City Beach,ÂŽ he said. ÂNothing like this has happened in RockÂit Lanes. ... WeÂre a family-friendly place.ÂŽ News Herald Writers Collin Breaux, Eryn Dion and Katie Landeck contributed to this story. SHOOTINGContinued from A1Daffin for $475,000. The deal to purchase the 37 lots „ 32 of which have houses on them „ is not finalized, but the CRA board has approved the purchase. If it goes through, the city and CRA are planning to bulldoze the houses to start fresh.ÂIn order to have growth and progress, this has to go to bring in the new and the better,ÂŽ said Director of Community Development Michael Johnson, who is unrelated to Bobby Johnson.The plan, Michael John-son said, is to attract a developer to build modest homes with porches, valued at $75,000 to $85,000, as well as a small shopping plaza to fill some of the community needs.The mortgage payments, Michael Johnson said, will end up being between $600 and $700 a month, a price low enough itÂs possible some of the current tenants would be able to purchase them. For others, though, he admits home ownership is out of reach.His office, as well as the CRA, are talking to real estate agents and local charitable organizations to try to come up with options, but itÂs tricky. First, there isnÂt anywhere else in the city, he said, where rents dip as low as $150. Secondly, safety net programs, such as Section 8 housing, have an 18-month to two-year waiting list, making that not viable. And finally, criminal records and evictions could com-plicate it.ÂNone of us can wave a magic wand,ÂŽ Michael Johnson said. ÂBut I will certainly be involved in talking to renters and find-ing out where they areÂŽ and trying to help.In the neighborhood, most people are confused about whatÂs happen-ing. While itÂs been talked about at public meetings, they said they havenÂt been formally notified.ÂSome people have heard it, but they donÂt know for real,ÂŽ Bobby Johnson said.During interviews, resi-dents often asked The News Herald for information about whatÂs happening. They asked if they would be able to buy their houses, noting the number of years they had lived there. And they all wanted to know if the city had a plan for where they would go.ÂIt seems unfair to me,ÂŽ one woman said.Others in the neighborhood said they werenÂt surprised, and one person who lives on one of the few lots in the block not owned by Daffin said he thought it was a good thing.ÂIt going to be a higher class of people,ÂŽ he said, identifying himself only as ÂGypsy Fullilove.ÂŽThe letter of interest for the sale sent by the city to the Daffin family on Nov. 3 said the city hopes to close the deal by the end of March and stipulates it is the sellerÂs responsibility to vacate people. HOMESContinued from A1Robinson ÂI can promise you,ÂŽ the FBI director vowed, Âwe will follow the facts wherever they lead.ÂŽComey for the first time put himself publicly at odds with the president by contradicting a series of recent tweets from Trump that asserted his phones had been ordered tapped by President Barack Obama during the campaign.ÂWith respect to the presidentÂs tweets about alleged wiretapping directed at him by the prior administration, I have no information that sup-ports those tweets, and we have looked carefully inside the FBI,ÂŽ Comey said. The same was true, he added, of the Justice Department.His confirmation of the Russia-links investigation was striking given the FBIÂs historic reluctance to discuss its work. But Comey said the intense public interest in the matter „ and permission from the Justice Department „ made it appro-priate to do so.Comey said the collusion inquiry began last July as part of a broader probe into Russian meddling in American politics, meaning Trump was elected president as associates remained under investigation for possible connections to Russia.Clinton allies on Monday contrasted ComeyÂs silence during the campaign with public comments he made last year when closing out an inves-tigation into ClintonÂs email practices and then, shortly before Election Day, announc-ing that the probe would be revived following the discov-ery of additional emails. Many Democrats blame ComeyÂs public updates with stoking worries about ClintonÂs trust-worthiness and turning voters against her.Comey acknowledged that Âsome folks may want to make comparisons to past instancesÂŽ where he and other officials were more open, but he said those were about concluded investigations.In the current case, itÂs not clear how long it will take for the FBI to decide if a crime was committed, but counterintelli-gence investigations are known for being complicated and time-intensive „ and for frequently concluding without charges. Comey would not commit to a timetable. PROBEContinued from A1ÂNone of us can wave a magic wand. But I will certainly be involved in talking to renters and nding out where they are and trying to help.ÂŽMichael Johnson, director of Community DevelopmentÂSome people have heard it, but they donÂt know for real.ÂŽBobby Johnson, resident of Glenwood ELIGIBILITY:U.S.CitizenslivingintheFloridaPanhandle,62yearsandolder, notpresentlyunderourcare.CouponExpires4/30/17.CodeNH00 FREEEYE EXAMINATION PANAMACITY1600JenksAve.|850.763.6666 MARIANNA43205thAve.|850.526.7775 CHIPLEY1691MainSt.,Ste1|850.638.7220 FORNEWPATIENTS62ANDOLDERThisisgoodforacompleteMedicalEyeExamwithone ofourBoardCertiedEyePhysiciansTheexamincludesaprescriptionforeyeglasses&testsfor Glaucoma,Cataracts&othereyediseases.FORYOURAPPOINTMENTCALL: 850-763-6666€800-227-5704 ÂLetusTakeGreatCareofYouÂŽwww.mulliseye.comSPECIALIZEDEYECAREFOR OLDERADULTS ToddRobinson,M.D.BoardCertifiedEye Physician&Cataract SurgeonJulieWolf,O.D.BoardCertified Optometric Physician NOHIDDENCHARGES:Itisourofficepolicythatthepatientandanyotherpersonresponsibleforpaymenthastherighttorefuseto pay,cancelpaymentorbereimbursedforpaymentforanyotherservice,examinationortreatmentwhichisperformedastheresultof andwithin72hoursofrespondingtotheadvertisementforanyfee,discountedfee,orreducedfeeservice,examinationortreatment. 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** A4 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald NATION & WORLD DATELINESBy Mark Sherman and Erica WernerThe Associated PressWASHINGTON „ S upreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch pledged to be independent or Âhang up the robeÂŽ as the U.S. Senate began rancorous hearings Monday on President Donald TrumpÂs conservative pick to fill a Supreme Court seat that has been vacant for more than a year. Gorsuch sought to take the edge off Democratic complaints that he has favored the wealthy and powerful in more than 10 years as a federal judge. The 49-year-old Coloradan told the Senate Judiciary Committee he has tried to be a Âneutral and independentÂŽ judge and has ruled both for and against disabled students, prison-ers and workers alleging civil rights violations.ÂBut my decisions have never reflected a judgment about the people before me, only my best judgment about the law and facts at issue in each particular case,ÂŽ Gorsuch said. That was his opening statement a day ahead of expected pointed questioning from committee Democrats.A Supreme Court confirmation hearing is a major occasion on Capitol Hill „ the last one was in 2010 „ but MondayÂs was over-shadowed by a separate event in the Capitol complex. On the House side, FBI Director James Comey was testifying that the bureau is investigating Russian meddling in last yearÂs election and possible links and coordination between Russia and associ-ates of Trump. Blending the two hearings, Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut referred to Âa looming constitutional crisisÂŽ that the Supreme Court might need to resolve. The courtÂs eight current justices are roughly divided ideologically between conservatives and liberals.The Russian story line as well as TrumpÂs verbal attacks on federal judges both during the campaign and as president have fed into Democratic efforts to force Gorsuch to break publicly with the man who nominated him. Gorsuch already has told some senators in private meet-ings that he found the criticism of the judges disheartening. But Blumenthal said the nominee needs to make a statement Âpublicly and explicitly and directly.ÂŽ For their part, Republicans uniformly portrayed Gorsuch as a genial, principled judge whose qualifications make him eminently suitable for the nationÂs highest court. ÂIÂm looking for a judge, not an ideologue,ÂŽ Sen. John Ken-nedy of Louisiana said.Actual questioning is to begin Tuesday. Committee chairman Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican, said he expects a committee vote on GorsuchÂs nomination on April 3, which would allow the full Senate to take up the nomination that week. Gorsuch could be on the bench by the time the justices meet for a round of arguments in mid-April.Democrats, under intense pressure from liberal base voters horrified by the Trump presidency, entered the hear-ings divided over how hard to fight GorsuchÂs nomination given that the mild-man-nered jurist is no right-wing bomb thrower and is widely expected to win confirmation in the end, one way or another.Gorsuch swears to be unbiasedSupreme Court Justice nominee Neil Gorsuch is sworn in on Capitol Hill Monday in Washington during his con“ rmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. [PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] NORRISTOWN, PAPHILADELPHIALOS ANGELESBill Cosby departs after a pretrial hearing in his sexual assault case Dec. 13 at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa. CosbyÂs lawyers hope to prescreen potential jurors to weed out those with opinions about the sex-assault case before jury selection begins in earnest. A defense motion “ led Monday says the Âin” ammatoryÂŽ worldwide coverage of the case makes it likely that some potential jurors have opinions about the actorÂs guilt or innocence. [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] Former Penn State president Graham Spanier walks from a hearing before a Superior Court panel May 21, 2014, at City Hall, in Philadelphia. Jury selection is scheduled to begin in Harrisburg, Pa., in SpanierÂs trial on charges that children were put at risk by how he responded to complaints about Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky more than 15 years ago. [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] An investigation is underway after a shooting in the parking lot of the sheriffÂs Temple Station on Monday left a man dead inside a vehicle. A man armed with a shotgun and a handgun opened “ re on Los Angeles County sheriffÂs deputies in the parking lot of their station, unleashing a brief gun“ ght that ended with the suspect likely taking his own life, authorities said. [AL SEIB/LOS ANGELES TIMES VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] DURHAM, N.C. Prosecutor: No charges against of“ cers in shooting A North Carolina prosecutor says no charges will be filed against three police officers involved in a fatal shooting in 2016.News outlets report Dis-trict Attorney Roger Echols in Durham County said Monday that his office found no crim-inal wrongdoing in the Nov. 22 shooting of 34-year-old Frank Clark at a public housing community.A preliminary report released last year said Clark reached for his waistband while being questioned at McDougald Terrace. Officer M.D. Southerland fell to the ground during a struggle, and officer C.S. Barkley shot Clark.BEIRUT Al-Qaida steps up violenceUnder pressure from fellow insurgents and escalating airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition, SyriaÂs al-Qaida branch is stepping up violence against President Bashar AssadÂs strongholds with precise, high-profile attacks, including a surpris-ing breach of the capital in the most serious infiltration in years.SundayÂs attack, in which insurgents used tunnels they control in northeastern Damascus neighborhoods to hit government positions, appears to have caught the Syrian military off guard. It was a grim reminder that the fighting is far from over, despite significant advances by AssadÂs forces against rebels across the country in the past year.TOKYO North Korea: Not afraid of US threatNorth Korea said Monday it is not frightened by U.S. threats of possible pre-emptive military action to halt its nuclear and missile buildup.A spokesman for North KoreaÂs Foreign Ministry slammed U.S. Secretary of State Rex TillersonÂs recent talk of tougher sanctions, more pressure, and possible military action, and said the North would not be deterred in its nuclear program.ÂThe nuclear force of (North Korea) is the treasured sword of justice and the most reliable war deterrence to defend the socialist motherland and the life of its people,ÂŽ the official Korean Central News Agency quoted the spokesman as saying.NAIROBI, KENYA Kenya: 11 people killed in “ ghtingKenyan officials say 11 people died over the weekend in violence in the center of the country between two herding communities that was fueled by a drought that has affected about half the country.Isiolo County Commissioner George Natembeya said Monday the violence occurred about 200 kilometers (125 miles) northwest of Isiolo. Isiolo County Police Com-mander Charles Ontita said Borana herders attacked Samburu herders on Sunday and stole about 400 cattle prompting a revenge attack by Samburu leading to the deaths.JUBA, SOUTH SUDAN Plane crashes, all 49 passengers surviveA passenger plane crashlanded and burned in Wau, northwestern South Sudan on Monday, but all 49 passengers and crew survived, an airport official.The plane was landing but then crashed, said WauÂs Acting Airport Manager Stephen Youngule.ÂThe plane touched down and then jumped up again. The pilot couldnÂt control it,ÂŽ said Youngule, who is also Deputy Director of Air Traf-fic Services. ÂI saw it until the very last moment before the fire engulfed the aircraft.ÂŽMEXICO CITYMexico detains California fugitive in Cannery Row homicideMexico has detained a California fugitive wanted in connection with a 2016 homicide near the historic Cannery Row waterfront in Monterey.Hidalgo state prosecutors say in a statement that the 21-year-old suspect was arrested in Tizayuca, about halfway between the state capital of Pachuca and Mexico City.It identified him by the initials J.L.M., as is stan-dard practice in Mexico, and said Monday that he had fled California in November. The victim was identified as R.M. According to KSBW-TV of Monterey, Raul Melendez was shot dead in a Cannery Row parking garage Nov. 23.By Geir MoulsonThe Associated PressBERLIN „ Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday underlined GermanyÂs rejection of a claim by U.S. President Donald Trump that her country owes NATO large sums for underspend-ing on defense. She also pointed to GermanyÂs history of decades of post-World War II military restraint.Trump tweeted Saturday, a day after meeting Merkel in Washington, that ÂGermany owes vast sums of money to NATO.ÂŽ He added that Âthe United States must be paid more for the powerful, and very expensive, defense it provides to Germany!ÂŽBerlinÂs defense budget has long been below NATOÂs target of 2 percent of a mem-berÂs gross domestic product. The figure is currently at 1.23 percent, though Germany has been raising defense spending and Merkel has stressed its commitment to reaching the target by 2024. Merkel said defense spending is Ânot just about contributions to NATO, but also about European contri-butions in Africa for example, U.N. missions.ÂŽÂNot a single NATO member state pays its entire defense budget into NATO,ÂŽ she said Monday at a news conference in Hannover with Japanese Prime Minis-ter Shinzo Abe.Merkel ghts debt claim By Seth Borenstein and David KeytonThe Associated PressOSLO, Norway „ If you want to pursue happiness, grab a winter coat.A new report shows Norway is the happiest coun-try on Earth and Americans are getting sadder.What makes Norway and other northern European countries top the happiness list has a lot to do with a sense of community and broad social welfare support, according to experts and cheerful Norwegians, including one whose job it is to make people laugh.ÂThe answer to why Norwegians are happy „ itÂs a bit boring „ itÂs well functioning institutions,ÂŽ explained Norwegian comedian Harald Eia. ÂThe schools, health care, police, all the bureaucracy treat people with respect and that trickles down and makes us happy, makes us trust each other, makes us feel a part of the whole community. So itÂs very boring: bureaucrats are the secret to our happiness.ÂŽNorway vaulted to the top slot in the World Happiness Report despite lower prices for oil, a key part of its economy. In the U.S., happiness has been declining for the past decade even as the nation has become richer.WhoÂs happy, whoÂs not
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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 A5 BUSINESSTHE DOW 30COMPANY CLOSE CHG 3M $193.01 +0.65 Amer. Express $78.85 -0.40 Apple $141.46 +1.47 Boeing $179.39 -0.71 Caterpillar $95.40 +2.49 Chevron $107.66 -0.02 Cisco $34.28 +0.05 Coca-Cola $42.18 +0.15 DuPont $81.50 +0.25 Exxon $82.00 0.00 Gen. Electric $29.74 -0.14 Goldman Sachs $242.14 -1.80 Home Depot $147.80 -1.80 Intel $35.43 +0.16 IBM $175.70 +0.05 J&J $128.07 +0.01 JPMorgan $90.03 -0.65 McDonaldÂs $128.78 +0.14 Merck $64.11 +0.21 Microsoft $64.93 +0.06 Nike $58.68 +0.88 P“ zer $34.38 +0.06 Proc. & Gamble $91.22 +0.22 Travelers $122.36 -0.78 United Tech $113.51 +0.06 Verizon $50.24 -0.15 Walmart $69.98 +0.09 Walt Disney $112.71 +0.95 United Health $168.00 -1.70 Visa $89.18 -1.06 STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTCOMPANY CLOSE CHG At&T $42.42 -0.19 Darden Rests $76.86 +0.20 Gen Dynamics $191.98 -1.29 Hanger Inc $12.85 -0.05 Hancock Hldg $46.60 -0.80 Home Bancs $28.08 -0.35 Itt Corp $40.59 -0.37 The St Joe $17.10 -0.25 Kbr Inc $14.02 -0.16 L-3 Comms $168.00 -1.46 Oceaneering $25.61 -0.32 Regions $14.88 -0.17 Sallie Mae $12.23 -0.05 Southern $50.38 -0.29 Suntrust $57.27 -0.44 Westrock $53.09 +0.71 Ingersoll-Rand $81.26 +0.27 Engility Holds $29.97 -1.06 Source: Matt Wegner Financial Advisor The Edward Jones Co., Panama City, 769-1278 FOREIGN EXCHANGEU.S. $1.00 = Canadian 1.34 U.S. $1.00 = Mexican peso 19.00 U.S. $1.00 = Euro 0.93 U.S. $1.00 = British Pound 0.81PORT ST. JOECape Trading Post to unveil revamped pizza shopTo kick off the grand reopening of its revamped Hunt Brothers Pizza shop, Cape Trading Post is hosting a community event at 11 a.m. Wednesday to unveil the piz-zeriaÂs makeover.The pizza shop upgrade was given to Cape Trading Post as part of Nashville-based Hunt Brothers PizzaÂs 25th anniversary celebrations.Hunt Brothers Pizza asked its more than 7,300 retailers to submit a video sharing its Hunt Brothers Pizza story and how the brand has helped their storeÂs success. The 25 selected winners of the con-test were given a pizza shoppe upgrade, customized for each locationÂs needs.Cape Trading Postis at 4975 Cape San Blas Road inPort St Joe.By Jim TurnerThe News Service of FloridaTALLAHASSEE „ A rate hike on the horizon for hundreds of thousands of Gulf Power customers might not be as big as initially proposed.The Northwest Florida utility agreed Monday to a settlement with the state Office of Public Counsel, which objected to an original proposal to raise base rates by $106.8 million. An announcement of the settlement came just before the start of a hearing before the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC).The settlement proposal, which the commission agreed to consider April 4, would add about $7 to the monthly bills of typical residential customers who use 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity a month, according to Gulf Power.ÂEnergy providers canÂt just sit and coast,ÂŽ Gulf Power spokesman Jeff Rogers said. ÂWe have to continue to invest in infrastructure, transmission lines, substations. WeÂre a 90-year-old company. WeÂve got equipment con-stantly aging and that constantly has to be invested in to ensure the reliability our customers expect.ÂŽIf the request is approved, the company projects that starting July 1, the monthly bill for typical residential customers will grow from $144 to $151. The initial request sought to boost the typical monthly bill to $158.The state Office of Public Counsel, which represents customers in utility cases, initially argued base rates should decrease by about $2 million. No objection was raised to the settle-ment proposal Monday by other parties involved in the case, which range from Walmart to the Sierra Club.In the agreement, Gulf PowerÂs original request for a $106.8 million base-rate increase would fall to $62 mil-lion through the end of 2019. However, the company projects the net impact to customers would come to $54.3 million.The filing before the PSC now says Gulf Power would seek a Âreturn on equity,ÂŽ a measure of profitability, of 10.25 percent, down from the original proposal of 11 percent. Gulf Power also now is seeking to take a one-time $32.5 million writedown on costs related to a Georgia power plant, known as Plant Scherer.Gulf Power in the past has sold electricity from the plant on the wholesale market but now uses power from the plant for its retail customers.Pensacola-based Gulf Power is one of four major investor-owned utili-ties in Florida. It serves about 450,000 customers in eight Northwest Florida counties.Gulf Power reaches rates settlementGulf Power crews work the scene of a snapped power pole near the intersection of Jenks Avenue and Seventh Street in Panama City. Gulf Power backed off a proposed rate increase, the company announced Monday. [NEWS HERALD FILE PHOTO] Company to seek smaller increase By Danica Kirka and Jill LawlessThe Associated PressLONDON „ Britain will begin divorce pro-ceedings from the European Union on March 29, starting the clock on two years of intense political and economic negotiations that will fundamentally change both the nation and its European neighbors.BritainÂs ambassador to the EU, Tim Barrow, informed European Council President Donald Tusk of the exact start date on Monday morning.ÂWe are on the threshold of the most important negotiation for this country for a generation,ÂŽ Brexit Secretary David Davis said. ÂThe government is clear in its aims: a deal that works for every nation and region of the U.K. and indeed for all of Europe „ a new, positive partnership between the U.K. and our friends and allies in the European Union.ÂŽThe trigger for all this tumult is the innoc-uous-sounding Article 50 of the EUÂs Lisbon Treaty, a never-before-used mechanism for withdrawing from the bloc. British Prime Minister Theresa May, under the Article, will notify Tusk of her nationÂs intentions to leave the 28-nation bloc.The article stipulates that the two sides will have until March 2019 to agree on a divorce settlement and „ if possible „ establish a new relationship between Britain, the worldÂs No. 5 economy, and the EU, a vast single market containing 500 million people.The European Commission „ the blocÂs legislative arm „ said it stood ready to help launch the negotiations.ÂEverything is ready on this side,ÂŽ com-mission spokesman Margaritis Schinas said. Leaders of the 27 other EU nations will meet by the month of May to finalize their negotiating guidelines.MayÂs 10 Downing Street office said the prime minister will make a statement in the House of Commons on the day Article 50 is triggered. Britons voted in a June referendum to leave the EU after more than 40 years of member-ship. But May was not able to trigger the talks until last week, when the British Parliament approved a bill authorizing the start of Brexit negotiations.Closer to the edge The countdown begins: Britain to start EU exit on March 29MARKET WATCHDow 20,905.86 8.76 Nasdaq 5,901.53 .53 S&P 2,373.47 4.78 Russell 1,384.10 7.42 NYSE 11,556.93 32.08COMMODITIES REVIEWGold 1,233.60 3.80 Silver 17.403 .024 Platinum 972.40 9.40 Copper 2.6555 .0240 Oil 48.22 .56 CommercialPropertyforSaleMLS652460608S.TyndallParkway$268,000 CommercialPropertyforLeaseMLS63357211HarrisonAve#B,C&D$1,150 MLS6488643602E.15thStreet$1,650 MLS653881608BaldwinRoad$15persq.ft. MLS654121612BaldwinRoad$15persq.ft. MLS6541222931MartinLutherKingJrRoad$15persq.ft. CommercialLandMLS388463100Hwy2297Â…76.7acres$2,500,000 MLS3712496120Hwy98-.34acres$175,600 MLS64196118133Hwy231-.37acres$40,000 MLS655101Lot9N.EastAvenueÂ…0.8acres$139,900 MLS6551677540Highway22Â…3.17acres$275,000 MLS6523867305MorningsideSubdivisionHwy231Â…60acres$2,750,000 MLS656199Â…10810HutchinsonBoulevardÂ…1.27acres-$525,000 1800Highway77LocatedinLynnHaven,retailcentercurrently100% leased.Netoperatingincomeprovidesbuyer8.35% returnoninvestment.$700,000MLS64684922303NWLongleafRoadWellmaintainedGrassAirStrippropertyhasideal drainageÂ…totalof80acres.HasAircraftHangerwith workshop&2800sqftHome$430,000MLS6557001810IndustrialDrive10acresofindustrialpropertywith20,000SF manufacturingfacilityoffIndustrialDrive. $535,000MLS6252573602E.15thStreetVanillashellretailorprofessionalcommercialspacefor leaseÂ…1,419Sq.Ft.withtworestrooms.$1,650/month. MLS648864 850-522-4401COMMERCIALDIVISIONwww.PanamaCityERA.com 1170569 CORNER 11 70570
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** A6 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News HeraldWRITE TO US: Letters should not exceed 300 words and include the writerÂs 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 EDITORI wish more things in my life could be blamed on auto correct. With so much spare land, a horse-racing track would be a good idea. Another form of entertainment and a job creator for many. LetÂs do it! Anyone have Wyatt EarpÂs phone number? Someone needs to bring in the many gunslingers we have running loose in our fair city. Call me. As a school custodian I saw tons of food thrown out daily and people are starving in our world! What a waste of life! Feed the poor first! What a beautiful day. Sunshine, blue skies. Spring is almost here. Hooray!!! Let every American have the same health care that Congress has, which would solve the health care situation. My mother used Meals on Wheels. It greatly helped her after her heart surgery. The food was good and greatly appreciated! Good for Panama City Beach leaders trying to clean up! Poor unincorporated; just gets worse and worse. Junk cars and trash and mobile attics.SQUALL LINE ANOTHER VIEW OUR VIEWTighten belt on attorneys fees Tim Thompson | Publisher Will Glover | Managing Editor Mike Cazalas | Editor PANAMA CITY VIEWPOINTSAffordable care unaffordable At his first town hall on Sunday, Congressman Neal Dunn got an earful. Most importantly, he heard real life accounts of how Obamacare and Medicaid had saved lives, helped families avoid financial ruin and allowed a working father to provide his family health insurance. In a trembling voice, a woman credited the mental health benefits in Medicaid and Obamacare with literally saving her life. A working father drove over from Crawfordville to say the Republican tax credit plan would provide enough support for only about four months of the year. An Apalachicola woman who earned $21,000 per year thanked Obamacare for securing the drugs necessary to keep her lung cancer at bay. Although Dunn had earlier promised the Republican replacement plan would have Âno gapsÂŽ in coverage (NH 2/6/17), he seemed challenged by the independent analysis of the Congressional Budget Office that 14 million Americans would lose insurance in 2018. He responded by asking his staff to collect the names of these persons and he seemed plausibly interested in addressing their inability to afford health care under the new Republican plan. Dunn acknowledged that his family insurance cost him $23,000 per year. The Trumpcare plan calls for tax credits of between $2,000 and $6,000 to help buy insurance depending on age, not income. For a local family with a median income of $47,000, it is apparent that the Republican math will leave thousands more Bay Countians without health insurance. Unfortunately, the policies Dunn supports will cost his constituents more money and impose worse health consequences on them than he and his staff can ever hope to address by means of taking phone numbers and professing concern.Alvin Peters, Panama CityA rare and startling event happened in politics the other day. A well-known conservative Republican spoke out against the GOPÂs proposed healthcare plan because of humanitarian concerns, of all things. This open display of what appears to be compassion comes from Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Miami, who, in a long career, has seldom bucked the party leadership. Yet now sheÂs taking sides against House Speaker Paul Ryan as he pressures members to hastily approve the hastily cobbled American Health Care Act, his leaky replacement for Obamacare. Ryan needs Ros-LehtinenÂs vote in Washington, but sheÂs got a big problem back home. As of January, the congressional district she represents had more people enrolled in Obamacare than any other in the nation, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. The Republicans replacement bill would hammer seniors and low-income families, resulting in thousands of Ros-LehtinenÂs constituents losing insurance coverage because they could no longer afford it. Last week, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office „ whose projections are usually cheered by fiscal conservatives „ predicted the GOP plan would pitch 14 million insured Americans into the ranks of the uninsured, a number that could soar to 24 million over the next decade. Florida would be among the worst-hit states. The CBO said most of the 1.7 million Floridians now enrolled in Obamacare wouldnÂt be able to pay for health insurance under the new plan. And those covered by Medicaid „ about 4.3 million low-income elderly and disabled people, as well as children and pregnant women „ would face reduced access to medical services and specialized care. As devastating as this could be for patients, it could also be unhealthy for the politicians who promised to look out for them. Critics of Ros-Lehtinen arenÂt applauding her for standing up to Ryan. They note that over the last seven years she voted again and again to repeal Obamacare, when she and her fellow Republicans had no plan whatsoever to put in its place. But now, with Barack Obama gone and Donald Trump in the White House, Ros-Lehtinen and other Republicans must confront this heavy new thing called responsibility. They control both the House and the Senate, and whatever health plan they devise will be signed into law by Trump and affect many millions of lives. The plan on the table is a cruel and hectic mess. For instance, the proposed perperson cap on Medicaid would force patients with ongoing high expenses to seek assistance from the state where they live. Because states have less money, the chronically ill would end up competing for medical funds with ailing senior citizens and sick children. If you donÂt like the term Âdeath panel,ÂŽ call it a morbid lottery. The dead ones wonÂt be voting anymore, but their family members will. So will plenty of sick people whoÂve lost their insurance. This would be the nightmare scenario for Republicans in 2018. Yet many of them in Congress actually say the Ryan plan isnÂt too harsh, itÂs too generous, too much like Obamacare. It wasnÂt easy for RosLehtinen to break from the coldblooded party line and introduce some caring and humanity into the GOPÂs healthcare debate. While invisibles like Marco Rubio pretend to ponder and mull, Ros-Lehtinen is doing the brave thing by speaking up for those who canÂt write a big campaign check, those at the greatest risk. In other words, sheÂs doing her job. What a concept. Read more here: http://www. miamiherald.com/opinion/ opn-columns-blogs/carlhiaasen/arti cle139294058. html#storylink=cpyThe reality of killing Obamacare faces GOPNo body in Tallahassee was keeping track of the bills. State Rep. Carlos Trujillo, R-Miami, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, called it ÂinsaneÂŽ and Âa runaway train.ÂŽ Dominic Calabro, president of Florida TaxWatch, described the total as Âa gosh lot of money.ÂŽ House Speaker Richard Corcoran said, ÂWeÂre getting gouged.ÂŽ Is it spending on a taxpayer-subsidized economic or tourism development agency? An expensive and inefficient social welfare program? No, itÂs the more than $250 million Florida has spent on private legal fees since 2011. That includes $16 million the state had to pay for opponents attorney fees. ItÂs a total the state wasnÂt even aware of until The Associated Press (AP) added up the costs by analyzing budget documents and making public records requests and bringing the data to the attention of key officials. A chunk of that figure „ more than $41 million just in the past 18 months alone „ went to a legitimate cause: FloridaÂs legal fight with Georgia over water rights (colloquially known as the Âwater warsÂŽ). That battle, which has been ongoing for almost three decades, involves a dispute over how much water Georgia siphons from the ApalachicolaChattahoochee-Flint River Basin in Florida and Alabama to accommodate growth in the metro Atlanta area. More water for Georgia means less for the Apalachicola Bay, which harms marine life and, by extension, that areaÂs renowned oyster industry. Florida is justified in seeking to protect its environmental and economic interests, but its decision to spend so much on private attorneys when the attorney generalÂs office already employs 450 state lawyers „ with an annual budget of almost $309 million „ deserves a second look. Meanwhile, other legal fees are more questionable or flatout wasteful. These include Gov. Rick ScottÂs losing battle to test welfare recipients for drugs, a policy that, based on precedent, had no shot from the beginning of passing legal muster. The state also has hired outside legal counsel to defend efforts to trim the stateÂs voter registration lists and ban companies that do business with Cuba from bidding on government contracts. States commonly use private attorneys to supplement their state employees, but as the AP notes, FloridaÂs practice appears exceptionally lucrative to outside lawyers. For instance, it found that since 2012 New York state has spent more than $86 million on such fees „ an average of $17 million a year, or less than half what Florida has spent. WhatÂs worse is that nobody in Tallahassee was keeping track of the bills. The AP reports a spokesman for Attorney General Pam BondiÂs office explained he didnÂt have that information and was Âunaware of a way to capture expenditures for the purchase of outside legal services that would not entail an exhaustive search of documents.ÂŽ In addition, the governor, Legislature and other state elected officials do not have to report their spending on legal fees to the attorney general. When lawmakers this legislative session seek to identify spending to cut so they can fit more important priorities into the budget, one of the first places they should look is FloridaÂs reliance on private attorneys. They need to question whether the state needs to hire so many outsiders to do its legal work and whether it is paying exorbitant rates when it perhaps could get better deals elsewhere. Finally, the Legislature needs to create a process that accounts for every cent spent on attorneys fees so it is transparent and can be regularly monitored. A version of this editorial first appeared in the Daytona Beach News-Journal, a sister paper of The News Herald. Carl Hiaasen
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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 A7By Timothy R. SmithThe Washington PostDavid Rockefeller Sr., the heir to a vast and storied family fortune who, as president, chairman and chief executive of Chase Manhattan Bank, transformed a listless business into one of the worldÂs larg-est financial institutions, died Monday at his home in Pocantico Hills, New York. He was 101.A spokesman, Fraser Seitel, said the cause was congestive heart failure.Rockefeller was the last surviving grandchild of oil baron John D. Rockefeller, who became one of the richest men in the world by the time he died in 1937. The younger RockefellerÂs four brothers, John III, Nelson, Laurance and Win-throp, carved prominent careers in philanthropy, politics, conservation and politics, respectively.David Rockefeller became a banking stalwart. He was a globe-trotting financial diplomat and twice declined President Richard NixonÂs offer to become secretary of the treasury because he felt his position at Chase gave him more influence. In 1979, he used his contacts at the highest levels of govern-ment to bring the ailing and deposed shah of Iran to the United States for medical treatment.Rockefeller was a cel-ebrated philanthropist. He donated millions of dollars to the Museum of Modern Art, his alma mater Harvard and the Council on Foreign Relations, where he served as chairman from 1970 to 1985. He turned his family-sponsored medical research center into Rock-efeller University in New York.In 1998, President Bill Clinton awarded Rockefeller the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nationÂs highest civilian honor, for co-founding the International Executive Service Corps, a volunteer organization that since 1964 has sent American business executives to developing countries to provide management expertise.Rockefeller was most remembered for his influential role in banking. When Rockefeller arrived at Chase in 1946, New York law restricted the bankÂs business to the city. Using family connections „ particularly his brother Nelson, a Republican who was then governor of New York„ he got the restrictive laws overturned in 1960.Chase expanded into Westchester and Nassau counties. Eventually, the bankÂs reach extended across Europe, Latin America and Asia. The bank made loans to Pana-manian ranchers, financed bowling alleys in Europe and backed a bus line in the Virgin Islands. By the early 1960s, it had become the second-largest bank in the country.During his 12-year reign as chairman, Rockefeller often was accused of being an absentee leader; he took 78 trips abroad. Although many of those trips were associated with business, critics said he was gone too much to redress the bankÂs problems.David Rockefeller, the youngest of six children, was born in Manhattan on June 12, 1915. His mother, Abby, was a founder of the Museum of Modern Art. His father, John D. Rockefeller Jr., was emotionally distant, high strung and tormented by his inherited wealth, but he drove into his children a sense of noblesse oblige and a commitment to hard work.Rockefeller dead at 101Heir to family fortune, he once ran Chase Manhattan BankDavid Rockefeller, the last surviving grandchild of oil baron John D. Rockefeller, died Monday. [ANDREW SERBAN/ BLOOMBERG FILE] By Frazier MooreThe Associated PressNEW YORK „ Folks on Sesame Street have a way of making everyone feel accepted.That certainly goes for Julia, a Muppet youngster with blazing red hair, bright green eyes „ and autism. Rather than being treated like an outsider, which too often is the plight of kids on the spectrum, Julia is one of the gang.Look: On this friendliest of streets (actually Studio J at New YorkÂs Kaufman Astoria Studios, where ÂSesame StreetÂŽ lives) Julia is about to play a game with Oscar, Abby and Grover. In this scene being taped for airing next season, these Muppet chums have been challenged to spot objects shaped like squares or cir-cles or triangles. With that, they skedad-dle, an exit that calls for the six Muppeteers squat-ted out of sight below them to scramble accordingly. Joining her pals, Julia (per-formed by Stacey Gordon) takes off hunting.For more than a year, Julia has existed in print and digital illustrations as the centerpiece of a multifaceted initiative by Sesame Workshop called ÂSesame Street and Autism: See Amazing in All Children.ÂŽShe has been the subject of a storybook released along with videos, e-books, an app and website. The goal is to promote a better understanding of what the Autism Speaks advocacy group describes as Âa range of conditions characterized by challenges with social skills, repetitive behav-iors, speech and nonverbal communication, as well as by unique strengths and differences.ÂŽBut now Julia has been brought to life in fine Muppet fettle. She makes her TV debut on ÂSesame StreetÂŽ in the ÂMeet JuliaÂŽ episode airing April 10 on both PBS and HBO. Addi-tional videos featuring Julia will be available online.Developing Julia and all the other components of this campaign has required years of consultation with organizations, experts and families within the autism community, according to Jeanette Betancourt, Sesame WorkshopÂs senior vice president of U.S. Social Impact.ÂIn the U.S., one in 68 children is diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder,ÂŽ she says. ÂWe wanted to promote a better understanding and reduce the stigma often found around these children. WeÂre mod-eling the way both children and adults can look at autism from a strength-based perspective: finding things that all children share.ÂŽJulia is at the heart of this effort. But while she represents the full range of children on the spectrum, she isnÂt meant to typify each one of them: ÂJust as we look at all children as being unique, we should do the same thing when weÂre looking at children with autism,ÂŽ Betancourt says. It was with keen interest that Stacey Gordon first learned of Julia more than a year ago. ÂI said, ÂIf sheÂs ever a puppet, I want to BE Julia!ÂÂŽNo wonder. Gordon is a Phoenix-based puppeteer who performs, conducts classes and workshops, and creates whimsical puppets for sale to the public.She also has a son with autism, and, before she started her family, was a therapist to youngsters on the spectrum.Although she figured her chances of landing the dream role of Julia were nil, her contacts in the puppet world paid off: Two friends who worked as Muppeteers on ÂSesame StreetÂŽ dropped her name to the producers. After submitting tapes, then coming to New York for an audition, she was hired.ÂSesame Street to introduce Julia, a Muppet with autismThis image released by Sesame Workshop shows Julia, a new autistic Muppet debuting during the 47th Season of ÂSesame Street,ÂŽ April 10 on both PBS and HBO. [ZACH HYMAN/SESAME WORKSHOP VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] 1169825byDavidWaxman SeattleWashington: Drug c ompan y ex ecs ar e nervous.ThatÂsbecause thegreatesthealth advanceindecadeshashit thestreets.Andanalysts expectittoputahuge crimpinÂBigPharmaÂŽ pro“ts. SowhatÂsallthefuss about?ItÂsaboutanew ingredientthatÂschanging thelivesofpeoplewhouse it.SomecallitÂthegreatest discoverysincepenicillinÂŽ! AndotherscallitÂamiracle!ÂŽ Thenameoftheproduct istheAloeCure.ItÂsnot adrug.ItÂssomething completelydierent.And theproductisavailable toanyonewhowantsit, atareasonableprice.But demandsmayforcefuture pricestorise.TOPDOCWARNS: DIGESTIONDRUGS CANCRIPPLEYOU!Companyspokesperson,Dr.LizaLeal;a leadingintegrativehealth specialistoutofTexas recommendsAloecurebefore shedecidestoprescribeany digestiondrug.Especially aftertheFDAÂsstern warningaboutlong-term useofdrugsclassi“edas protonpumpinhibitorslike Prilosec,Nexium ,and Prevacid .Inanutshell, theFDAstatementwarned peopleshouldavoidtaking thesedigestiondrugsfor longerthanthree14-day treatmentperiodsbecause thereisanincreasedrisk ofbonefractures.Many peopletakethemdailyand fordecades. Dr.Lealshouldknow. Manypatientscometo herwithboneandjoint complaintsandshedoes everythingshecantohelp them.Onewayfordigestion suererstohelpavoidpossibleriskoftragicjointand boneproblemscausedby overuseofdigestiondrugs istotaketheAloeCure. ThesecrettoAloeCureÂs ÂhealthadjustingÂŽ formulaisscienti“cally testedAcemannan ,a polysaccharideextracted fromAloeVera.Butnotthe samealoeverathatmom usedtoapplytoyourcuts, scrapesandburns.Thisisa perfectstrainofaloethatis organicallygrowninspecial Asiansoil;underverystrict conditions.AloeCureisso powerfulitbeginstobene“t yourhealththeinstantyou takeit.Itsoothesintestinal discomfortandyoucan avoidthepossibilityofbone andhealthdamagecaused byoveruseofdigestion drugs.Weallknowhowwell aloeworksexternallyon cuts,scrapesandburns.But didyouknowAcemannan hasmanyofotherhealth bene“ts?...HELPSCALM DOWNPAINFUL INFLAMMATIONAccordingtoaleading aloeresearchscientist,the amazingAloeplanthasa powerfulanti-in”ammatory eect.AloeVeracalms the“reinyourbellylikeit doesthesunburnonyour skinandinmanyways helpshealdamagedcells. In”ammationisyourbodyÂs “rstreactiontodamage.So whetheritÂsdamagethatis physical,bacterial,chemical orautoimmune;thenatural planthelpssoothein”ammation„rapidlyreducing redness,heatandswelling.RAPIDACIDAND HEARTBURN NEUTRALIZERAloehasprovedto haveanastonishing eectonuserswhosuer withdigestionproblems likeboutsofacidre”ux, heartburn,cramping,gas andconstipationbecauseit actsasanaturalacidbuer andsoothesthedigestive system.Butnewstudies proveitdoesawholelot more.SIDESTEP HEARTCONCERNSSoyouÂvebeentaking protonpumpinhibitors (PPIÂs)foryearsandyoufeel just“ne.InJuneof2015 amajorstudyshowsthat chronicPPIuseincreases theriskofheartattackin generalpopulation.UNLEASHYOUR MEMORYThinkaboutit. Ifyou keptdumpingfatand greasedownyourdrain; howlongdoyouthinkit wouldtaketoclogitup? Theansweris,notverylong atall.AndthatÂsexactly whathappenstoyourbrain everytimeyoueatprocessed,friedorfattyfoods. Studiesshowthatyour brainneedsthehealthybacteriafromyourgutinorder functionatitsbest.Both lowandhighdosagesof digestiondrugsareproven todestroythathealthy bacteriaandgetintheway ofbrainfunction.SoyouÂre leftwithasluggish,slow-toreactbrainwithoutalotof roomtostoreinformation. Theacemannanusedin AloeCureactuallymakes yourguthealthier,so healthybacteria”owsfreely toyourbrainsoyouthink better,fasterandwitha largercapacityformemory.SLEEPLIKEABABYAnightwithoutsleep reallydamagesyour body. Andcontinuedlost sleepcanleadtoallsorts ofhealthproblems.But whatyoumaynotrealizeis thereasonwhyyouÂrenot sleeping.SomecallitÂGhost Re”uxÂŽ.Alow-intensityform ofacidre”uxdiscomfort thatquietlykeepsyou awakeinthebackground. AloeCurehelpsdigestion soyoumay“ndyourself sleepingthroughthenight.CELEBRITYHAIR, SKIN&NAILSOneoftheBest-Kept SecretsinHollywood. 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** A8 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald1170716 BAYSELLSFORLESS! $ 32 998 785-1591 BRANDNEW ALLDAYEVERYDAY RAMLARAMIECREWCAB 636W.15thSt. PanamaCity,FL www. BayDodge .net DODGE CHARGER BRANDNEW Stk#M0866 N0191 NEW2017JEEP COMPASSLATITUDE $ 20 998 JEEPS€JEEPS€JEEPS RENEGADE SPORT $ 19 798STK#M1218 BRANDNEWJEEP DonÂt missout! $ 31 998 BRANDNEW2017 CHRYSLER300LIMITED N0437200LXBRANDNEWCHRYSLERTHISISNOTALEASE! $ 279 PERMO *WAC.PlusTax,Tag,andDealerFees.Allrebatesappliedincludingmilitary.Seedealerfordetails. Auto,34MPG,Cruise,Bluetoothw/VoiceCmd, 17ÂŽAlloys,HalogenHeadlamps,M0113 $ 16 998 DARTSERALLYE BRANDNEWDODGE M1137 $ 20 998 JOURNEYSXT BRANDNEWDODGE $ 27 998 BRANDNEW2017 CHRYSLERPACIFICALX N0281 0 % APRM0906 N0224 NEW 2017 JEEP PATRIOTSPORT $ 18 788 ORIGINALLIST $ 51,340 $ 39 940 N0629 BRANDNEW2017 RAMSTEXPRESS QUADCAB $ 29 988 BAYDISCOUNT-$ 11 400 LOADED! 20 % OFF!
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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 B1 LOCAL & STATE VIRTUAL LINES | B4ÂBIT OF AN EXPERIMENTÂWhereÂs the line? Theme parks aiming to eliminate them SHOT RICOCHETS | B3HEAD WOUNDNo charges led in West Bay shooting By Eryn Dion522-5069 | @PCNHErynDion edion@pcnh.comPANAMA CITY BEACH „ Some heroes wear capes; others drive buses.When David Doss, a longtime bus driver for the district, started his run for Surfside Middle School and Breakfast Point Academy one January afternoon, he expected a normal, smooth ride.But when Zach Culbertson, a Breakfast Point fifth-grader, ran to the front of the bus at the Pier Park stoplight visibly choking, Doss knew exactly what to do and quite possibly saved his life.ÂI turned around and grabbed him and did the Heimlich,ÂŽ he said. ÂAnd out popped a gum ball.ÂŽDespite his insistence that it was Âjust another dayÂŽ on the job, the Bay District School Board recognized Doss for his actions during last weekÂs School Board meeting. He was presented with a certificate and met with a room full of applause.ÂHis comment was basically, ÂThatÂs what weÂre trained to do and thatÂs what we do to keep students safe, Ž said Superintendent Bill Hus-felt. ÂHeÂs just so humble.ÂI would say most of our bus drivers are like that,ÂŽ Husfelt added. ÂItÂs not something everyone can do.ÂŽDoss agrees, saying that while their primary job is to drive students to and from school, he also sees himself as a mentor and, sometimes, a guardian for students.ÂWeÂre a little bit of every-thing,ÂŽ he said. ÂWe try to get them home and to school safely.ÂŽDriving one of the longest buses in the fleet, with a capacity of 92 students, Doss said he tries to keep an eye on all his passengers and watch their well-being, although sometimes it can be difficult. He said he was thankful Zach ran to the front of the bus Bus driver honored for saving studentDavid Doss a longtime bus driver for Bay District Schools, is credited with saving a choking Breakfast Point Academy student. [PATTI BLAKE/THE NEWS HERALD] Too tired to lieA woman called police to report a man had slashed a tire on her car. She said the man had been there earlier Âand she told him to go away.ÂŽHe did, but he returned about an hour later, she said, Âbanging on the door, but she refused to answer,ÂŽ the officer wrote. ÂShe looked out the window and saw him crouched by the car on the driverÂs side but she couldnÂt tell what he was doing.ÂŽShe figured that out when she drove to the store Âand she felt something was wrong with the car. When she got there she noticed the tire was flat.ÂŽThe woman checked the tire and saw the valve stem had been damaged, and there Âwas Super Glue on the stem where someone appeared to have tried to cover up or fix what they had done.ÂŽThe officer contacted the man in question, read him his rights and said the man Âadmitted to damaging the tire because he claims (the woman) and her son owed him money.ÂŽ Case closed. Suspect treed A sheriffÂs deputy on patrol saw something unusual: ÂTwo white males pushing a blue Dodge Neon away from a palm treeÂŽ in a grocery store parking lot. So he stopped to inquire.The first man said he simply stopped to help the NeonÂs driver. The driver Âadvised that he lost control of his vehi-cle and hit the palm tree with his front bumper. The white male driver stated that he was not injured and did not need E.M.S. to check him out.ÂŽStill, the deputy told the man, the Florida Highway Patrol was on the way to inves-tigate the wreck and he would need his driverÂs license, registration and insurance. The man said the tag on the vehicle didnÂt belong on it, he didnÂt have insurance and had not yet registered the vehicle. He also said he could not find his driverÂs license, but would look in his car.He returned with an Ala-bama driverÂs license, but the deputy was suspicious and it turned out to be someone elseÂs license. The manÂs real identity then came out. ÂJason stated he has a warrant out of Athens, Alabama, and advised that is why he gave this deputy a different Alabama driverÂs license.ÂŽTHE BLOTTERBy Jennie McKeon 315-4434 | @jenniemnwfdn jmckeon@nwfdailynews.comBLUE MOUNTAIN BEACH „ South Walton Fire District crews fought a fire Monday morning that destroyed one home and damaged another.The cause of the fire on Sandcastle Court is under investigation, according to Sammy Sanchez, spokesman for the SWFD.Rumors that it had been caused by a natural gas explosion were unfounded, according to a spokesman for Okaloosa Gas. He said anytime there is a fire at a house with natural gas, Okaloosa Gas crews respond.Sanchez said the department was called to 16 Sandcastle Court at around 9:15 a.m. The fire was con-tained by noon, according to SWFD Facebook page.A family inside the home made it out safely. One person was transported to the hospi-tal for observation, Sanchez said.SWFD District Chief Corey Harned said the home was a total loss, estimating Blue Mountain Beach house destroyedNeighbors had to alert the family staying in the rental home that a “ re had started. [SWFD/SPECIAL TO THE DAILY NEWS] The house adjacent to the “ re also suffered damage. No one was injured. [NEIL BLAPPERT/SPECIAL TO THE DAILY NEWS] By Brendan FarringtonThe Associated PressTALLAHASSEE „ A small, all-natural Calhoun County dairy isnÂt being deceptive when it calls its skim milk Âskim milk,ÂŽ a federal appeals court ruled Monday in a vic-tory for the creamery thatÂs fighting the stateÂs demand to label the product Âimita-tionÂŽ because vitamins arenÂt added to it.The ruling overturns a decision last March when a federal judge sided with the Florida Department of Agriculture, which said the Ocheesee Creamery couldnÂt label itÂs skim milk Âskim milkÂŽ because the state defines the product as skim milk with Vitamin A added. The state instead said if the creamery wanted to sell the product, it should label it as ÂimitationÂŽ skim milk.But that didnÂt sit well with a dairy whose whole philosophy is to not add ingredients to natural prod-ucts. So instead of complying, the creamery has dumped thousands of gallons of skim milk down the drain rather than label it as an imitation Court: Calhoun dairyÂs skim milk is real See DOSS, B3 See BLOTTER, B5 See FIRE, B3 See MILK, B3
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** B2 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald WEATHER 6 a.m Noon6 p.m Low Hazard Medium Hazard High Hazard Water closed to public Dangerous Marine Life High Low 84/57 81/62 85/54 74/61 73/62 81/58 86/59 87/59 85/56 83/61 86/58 86/59 86/57 75/63 76/62 79/61 81/58 75/6177/6075/5875/6175/61Patchy low clouds and fog Times of clouds and sun Cloudy and breezy with a shower Showers and a heavier thunderstorm7561737161Winds: W 6-12 mph Winds: E 8-16 mph Winds: SE 10-20 mph Winds: SSE 10-20 mph Winds: WSW 7-14 mphBlountstown 6.44 ft. 15 ft. Caryville 6.96 ft. 12 ft. Clairborne 34.60 ft. 42 ft. Century 7.76 ft. 17 ft. Coffeeville, AL 11.00 ft. 29 ft. Through 7 a.m. Mon.Apalachicola 1:30p 6:01a 10:10p 5:38p Destin 5:19p 3:58a ----West Pass 1:03p 5:34a 9:43p 5:11p Panama City 4:56p 3:33a ----Port St. Joe 5:08p 3:05a ----Okaloosa Island 3:52p 3:04a ----Milton 7:32p 6:19a ----East Bay 6:36p 5:49a ----Pensacola 5:52p 4:32a ----Fishing Bend 6:33p 5:23a ----The Narrows 7:29p 7:23a ----Carrabelle 12:05p 3:48a 8:45p 3:25pForecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. 2017NewFirstFullLast Mar 27Apr 3Apr 11Apr 19Sunrise today ........... 6:45 a.m. Sunset tonight .......... 6:54 p.m. Moonrise today ........ 2:06 a.m. Moonset today ....... 12:55 p.m. Today Wed. Today Wed.Clearwater 76/61/s 76/63/s Daytona Beach 81/58/s 83/63/s Ft. Lauderdale 78/59/pc 82/64/s Gainesville 83/55/s 87/58/s Jacksonville 85/58/s 84/58/pc Jupiter 78/57/pc 83/63/s Key Largo 75/65/pc 76/67/s Key West 78/66/pc 78/67/s Lake City 85/56/s 88/61/pc Lakeland 81/55/s 83/61/s Melbourne 81/56/s 84/66/s Miami 78/60/pc 82/63/s Naples 79/59/pc 78/62/s Ocala 81/56/s 85/59/s Okeechobee 81/52/pc 84/59/s Orlando 84/57/s 87/64/s Palm Beach 76/60/pc 80/64/s Tampa 78/61/s 79/63/s Today Wed. Today Wed.Baghdad 73/52/s 77/57/pc Berlin 57/35/sh 53/37/pc Bermuda 64/62/pc 68/58/pc Hong Kong 77/65/pc 73/68/c Jerusalem 62/49/c 60/50/sh Kabul 48/44/r 55/43/r London 51/42/c 49/38/sh Madrid 67/38/pc 55/33/sh Mexico City 78/46/s 78/45/pc Montreal 41/11/c 18/8/pc Nassau 81/65/s 83/68/s Paris 53/38/pc 54/39/sh Rome 65/48/pc 62/50/pc Tokyo 52/45/r 56/42/s Toronto 51/17/pc 29/16/s Vancouver 50/43/r 52/40/r Today Wed. Today Wed.Albuquerque 80/51/s 80/50/pc Anchorage 30/11/pc 28/11/s Atlanta 80/60/pc 73/45/c Baltimore 62/34/pc 46/21/pc Birmingham 83/58/s 72/51/c Boston 51/30/c 31/15/s Charlotte 83/52/t 65/38/pc Chicago 51/26/pc 39/28/pc Cincinnati 60/27/c 43/25/pc Cleveland 51/27/pc 33/22/s Dallas 88/64/s 82/63/pc Denver 69/41/c 73/45/pc Detroit 55/23/pc 37/21/s Honolulu 85/72/s 84/72/pc Houston 85/63/pc 84/63/pc Indianapolis 57/26/pc 42/26/pc Kansas City 61/34/c 52/36/c Las Vegas 81/59/s 69/52/r Los Angeles 63/56/sh 64/51/r Memphis 80/53/pc 60/48/c Milwaukee 47/26/pc 36/26/s Minneapolis 37/18/pc 40/30/pc Nashville 74/44/t 59/41/pc New Orleans 81/61/pc 82/61/pc New York City 56/33/pc 36/21/s Oklahoma City 83/50/pc 70/54/t Philadelphia 59/35/pc 40/23/s Phoenix 90/64/s 84/58/pc Pittsburgh 56/25/pc 36/20/s St. Louis 62/36/sh 48/37/c Salt Lake City 75/51/c 67/46/sh San Antonio 83/62/pc 82/63/pc San Diego 68/62/c 65/56/r San Francisco 67/54/t 62/49/r Seattle 57/45/r 51/40/r Topeka 62/36/c 53/39/c Tucson 91/57/s 88/56/pc Wash., DC 63/39/c 48/26/pcWednesdayThursdayFridaySaturday Gulf Temperature: 67 Today: Wind from the west-southwest at 7-14 knots. Seas 2 feet or less. Visibility less than a mile in patchy morning fog. Tomorrow: Wind from the west at 6-12 knots. Seas 1-3 feet. Visibility less than a mile in patchy morning fog.Patchy fog, then sun today. Winds west-southwest 7-14 mph. Patchy low clouds and fog forming tonight. Winds west 6-12 mph.High/low ......................... 74/49 Last year's High/low ...... 66/48 Normal high/low ............. 72/52 Record high ............. 86 (1989) Record low ............... 33 (1988)24 hours through 4 p.m. .. 0.00" Month to date .................. 0.86" Normal month to date ...... 3.72" Year to date .................... 11.03" Normal year to date ....... 13.72" Average humidity .............. 44%through 4 p.m. yesterdayHigh/low ......................... 74/55 Last year's High/low ...... 66/49 Normal high/low ............. 69/54 Record high ............. 86 (1989) Record low ............... 30 (1960)24 hours through 4 p.m. .. 0.00" Month to date ................... 1.07" Normal month to date ...... 3.58" Year to date ................... 12.21" Normal year to date ....... 13.95" Average humidity .............. 48%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 todayÂs weather. Temperatures are todayÂs highs and tonightÂs lows.Shown are todayÂs noon postions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.TIDESMARINE FORECASTBEACH FLAG WARNINGSThe higher the AccuWeather.com UV IndexÂ’ 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 BeachWHATÂS HAPPENINGTodaySENIORS 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 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 PLEIN AIR TUESDAYS: 9 a.m. to noon with Beach Art Group. Plein air painting focuses on learning to use and incorporate natural lighting. Bring your paints for a casual art session at a different location every week; arrive when you like and leave when youÂre ready. Check BeachArtGroup. com for this weekÂs 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 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 yearÂs tax return and Social Security cards for everyone in your household. For details, 850-3814988 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, 850522-2118 or NWRLS.com ÂFLUIDITY OF PLACEÂŽ EXHIBIT: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Thursday, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays at the Amelia Center Main Gallery (Room 112) at Gulf Coast State College in Panama City. Free admission; open to the public. 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, 850-522-2118 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, ÂHabits of Happy PeopleÂŽ presented by Renee Ryals of Humana. For details, 850-522-2120 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 PAINT PARTY FUNDRAISER: 6-8 p.m. at the Palms Conference Center, 9201 Front Beach Road, Panama City Beach. Bene“ ting Simply Self Esteem, which supplies hygiene products for needy teenagers. For details, BeachArtGroup.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. ÂNothing real can be threatened. Nothing unreal exists. Herein lies the peace of God.ÂŽ For details, CourseInMiracles.com or 850-769-7481 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.comWednesdaySENIORS 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 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 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 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 yearÂs tax return and Social Security cards for everyone in your household. For details, 850-3814988 or MyFreeTaxes.com CHESS : 9:30 a.m. at the Lynn Haven Senior Center, 905 Pennsylvania Ave., Lynn Haven. Beginners welcome. For details, 850-277-2730 ADVENTURES IN ALYS: 10 a.m. each Monday and Wednesday through April 12 at the Alys Beach Amphitheatre. This free, original storytelling experience for children of all ages incorporates suggestions from the audience and might involve members of the audience as well. For details, LoveTheRep.com ÂFLUIDITY OF PLACEÂŽ EXHIBIT: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday-Thursday, and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays at the Amelia Center Main Gallery (Room 112) at Gulf Coast State College in Panama City. Free admission; open to the public. MEDITATION: 11 a.m. at Unity of Panama City, 1764 Lisenby Ave., Panama City. Facilitated by Darcey Blakley in the Unity Chapel. Join the group as they learn to lead and sit in meditation to “ nd peace in their souls. All are welcome. For details, UnityOfPanamaCity.org, unitypc” @ gmail.com or 850-769-7481 BAY BOOMERS ACTIVITY PROGRAM: 1-2 p.m. at the Bay County Council on Aging, 1116 Frankford Ave., Panama City. Stronger Seniors exercise class. Walking starts at 1:30 p.m. For details, Robin Khalidy, 850-769-3468 BEACH KIDS: 3-4 p.m. at the Panama City Beach Library, 12500 Hutchison Beach Blvd., Panama City Beach. Stories and activities for children in kindergarten through “ fth grade. For details, 850-233-5055 or NWRLS.com DANCE PARTY: 5-8 p.m. at SharkeyÂs Beachfront Restaurant, 15201 Front Beach Road, Panama City Beach. Music by Honky Tonk Attitude. CRIBBAGE CLUB: 5:30 p.m. at the VFW on Sherman Avenue in Panama City. For details, Jim, 850-866-7866 FILM FAN CLUB „ ÂBIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINAÂŽ: 5:30-8 p.m. at the Bay County Public Library, 898 W. 11th St., Panama City. This is the “ rst screening for Film Fan Club, which will host a free movie night at the library every fourth Wednesday of the month. Free admission; open to the public. ÂBig Trouble in Little ChinaÂŽ (1986) is rated PG-13. For details, NWRLS.com or 850-522-2100 CHILDRENÂS THEATRE „ ÂTHE TALES OF KING ARTHURÂŽ: 6 p.m. at North Barrett Square, Rosemary Beach. A troupe of traveling players revel in creating much onstage merriment. Join Arthur, Merlin, Guinevere and Lancelot in this sword and sorcery comedy adventure for audiences of all ages. Bring blankets and lawn chairs. Free admission. For details, 850-687-0568, rosemarybeachmerchants@gmail.com or RosemaryBeach.com SPRING CONCERTS : 6-8 p.m. at the Alys Beach Amphitheatre. Tonight: Fearless Heights. Free admission. HenryÂs Pizza Truck will be available for food and beverages. POOL TOURNAMENT: 7 p.m. at American Legion Post 375, 6937 N. State 77, Southport. For details, 850-271-8716Submit an eventEmail pcnhnews@pcnh.com with ÂWhatÂs HappeningÂŽ 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
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** and also was thankful he had been trained in the Heimlich and in CPR. Doss has been a bus driver with the dis-trict for six years, but this was the first time he had performed the Heimlich on someone.ÂIt was just reaction mode,ÂŽ he said. ÂIt hap-pened so quick I didnÂt even think.ÂŽ The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 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 dayÂs newspaper. Obituaries may be e-mailed to pcnhobits@pcnh.com or delivered to The News Herald, 501 W. 11th St., Panama City. View todayÂs obituaries and sigh the online guest books of your loved ones at newsherald.com/obituaries. OBITUARIES LOCAL & STATE Funeral services for Dennis Michael Bunce, 65, of Panama City, Florida, who died Friday, March 17, 2017, will begin at 2 p.m. today, March 21, 2017, at Wilson Funeral Home. Interment will follow in Evergreen Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 1-2 p.m. today.DENNIS MICHAEL BUNCEFuneral services for Harrell Eugene Causey, 68, of Lynn Haven, Florida, who passed away March 17, 2017, will begin at 11 a.m. today, March 21, 2017, at Wilson Funeral Home. Interment will follow in Lynn Haven Cemetery.HARRELL EUGENE CAUSEYNora Chizmar, 78, of Panama City, Florida, died Sunday, March 19, 2017. Services will begin at 10 a.m. Friday, March 24, 2017, at Kent-Forest Lawn Funeral Home. The family will receive friends from 6Â…8 p.m. Thursday, March 23, 2017, at the funeral home.NORA CHIZMARFuneral services for Thomas Jackson Henson Jr., 80, of Panama City, Florida, who passed away Thursday, March 16, 2016, will begin at 2 p.m. Wednesday, March 22, 2017, at Wilson Funeral Home. Interment will follow the service in Evergreen Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 5-7 p.m. today.THOMAS JACKSON HENSON JR.Elie E. ÂBuckÂŽ Lynn, 90, of Panama City, Florida, died Saturday, March 18, 2017. Funeral services will begin at 3 p.m. today, March 21, 2017, at Heritage Funeral Home. The family will receive friends at 2 p.m. Interment will follow at Callaway Cemetery. Those wishing to extend condolences may do so at www.heritagefhllc.com.ELIE E. LYNN (BUCK)Raylene Williamson Reale, 79, Kearney, Missouri, died on March 18, 2017. She was born in Henry County, Missouri, the daughter of Raymond Claude Williamson and Nadine (Wilson) Williamson. Graveside inurnment will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, March 22, at St. MaryÂs Cemetery, Kansas City, Missouri. She attended Urich public schools and graduated from Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas. She married Patrick J. Reale on July 4, 1969. She was a registered medical records technician and retired from North Kansas City Hospital. After retirement, she and Pat retired to Panama City Beach, Florida. She was a faithful parishioner of St. BernadetteÂs Church for 25 years and a dedicated volunteer of the John Lee Outreach Center and Family Services. She is survived by her sons, Raymond (Madelene) Wilson of Mandeville, Louisiana, and Delayne (Lisa) Wilson of Plattsburg, Missouri; five grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. Memorials may be made to St. JudeÂs ChildrenÂs Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, or Crossroads Hospice-Employee Appreciation Fund, 14310 E. 42nd South, unit 600, Independence, MO 64055. Arrangements: FryBross & Spidle Funeral Home, 816-628-4411RAYLENE WILLIAMSON REALE Dee Mathis Redding, 79, of Panama City, Florida, died Sunday March 19, 2017. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Wilson Funeral Home.DEE MATHIS REDDING By The News HeraldWEST BAY „ While only warning shots were fired, a confrontation in West Bay still ended with a wound to a manÂs head.The Bay County SheriffÂs Office (BCSO) respondedSaturday to a residence at Temple Avenue and State 388 about 6:45 p.m. after the victim called 911. The shooting happened after an argument between the victim and shooter Barry Turner over threatening text messages the victim allegedly sent to TurnerÂs daughter, BCSO reported.ÂTurner stated he held a handgun during the con-frontation and fired twice into a ditch to warn the victim to go away,ÂŽ BCSO said in a news release. ÂThe victim refused to leave. Turner stated he fired the gun a third time at the ground, pointing a significant distance away from the victim. ... It is believed the third shot Turner fired caused a rock to ricochet and hit the victim in the head, caus-ing the wound.ÂŽAfter the third shot, the victim grabbed his head, said he was shot and called 911 after driving off, deputies reported. He was taken to a local hospital and listed in stable condition with the wound from the rock, according to BCSO. No charges have been filed against Turner, who cooperated with law enforcement and allowed a search of his residence, BCSO reported.No charges led in West Bay shooting DOSSContinued from B1 milk product.ÂThe State was unable to show that forbidding the Creamery from using the term Âskim milk was reasonable,ÂŽ the three-judge, Jacksonville-based panel wrote in its ruling.The court said the state disregarded far less restrictive and more precise ways of labeling the product, Âfor example, allowing skim milk to be called what it is and merely requiring a disclosure that it lacks vitamin A.ÂŽThe Institute for Justice is representing Ocheesee Creamery owner Mary Lou Wesselhoeft in the lawsuit against the state.ÂAll Mary Lou wants to do is sell skim milk that contains literally one ingredient „ pasteurized skim milk „ and label it as pasteurized skim milk,ÂŽ Institute for Jus-tice lawyer Justin Pearson said.The creamery, located about 50 miles east of Panama City, has offered to add to its label that it doesnÂt add vitamins to the product, but the state hasnÂt accepted the compromise. It was selling between 100 and 300 gallons of skim milk a week for $5 a gallon before the dispute. The product made up about 25 percent of its profits.The dictionary defini-tion of skim milk is simply milk with the cream removed. But the Department of Agriculture says under state and federal law, skim milk canÂt be sold as skim milk unless vita-mins in the milk fat are replaced so it has the same nutritional value as whole milk.The department did not return phone calls and an email seeking comment. MILKContinued from B1By Derek HawkinsThe Washington PostDarren Rainey, an inmate at the Dade Cor-rectional Institution, was serving a prison sentence for cocaine possession in June 2012 when guards took him out of his cell, forced him into a shower stall and locked the door.From the outside, they turned the water on scald-ing hot, possibly as high as 180 degrees, then walked away. As the narrow room filled with steam, Rainey, a 50-year-old with schizo-phrenia, could be heard screaming, ÂI canÂt take it anymore,ÂŽ a fellow inmate would later say.After nearly two hours, the guards went in to check on him. Rainey lay dead on his back in 3 inches of water. His skin had reddened and begun to peel off, flecks of it float-ing next to him, the Miami Herald reported.RaineyÂs death prompted a sweeping investigation by the Miami Herald, which reported Dade corrections officers had rigged the shower to punish inmates who misbe-haved. The paper also reported Dade guards would douse inmates with chemicals, starve them and force them to fight. A New Yorker story called Rain-eyÂs treatment Âtorture.ÂŽBut a two-year probe of the incident by law enforcement officials has uncovered no evidence of wrongdoing.On Friday, more than four years after Rainey died, Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle released a 101-page report calling RaineyÂs death an acci-dent and clearing the four guards involved.According to the report, nothing turned up in the investigation that met the requirements for filing criminal charges against Sgt. John Fan Fan, or offi-cers Cornelius Thompson, Ronald Clarke and Edwina Williams.ÂThe evidence fails to show that any correctional officer acted in reckless disregard of RaineyÂs life,ÂŽ prosecutors wrote in the report.Rainey, the report said, died of a combination of factors, including complications from his schizophrenia, an undiagnosed heart disease and Âconfinement in a shower.ÂŽInvestigators said the peeling of RaineyÂs skin „ a condition called Âslip-pageŽ„ wasnÂt caused by the heat of the shower but by friction or pressure on his body, which could have occurred when medics tried to revive or move him.Medical Examiner Emma Lew said Rainey had suffered no burn injuries. ÂIt is not substantiated that the temperatures inside the shower room were excessively high,ÂŽ she wrote.Nor did the report cite any evidence that correc-tions officers would use the hot shower to punish or torture inmates, some of whom complained of treatment similar to RaineyÂs in interviews with police detectives and Herald reporters.No charges in inmateÂs deaththe damage at about $500,000. A Jeep parked in the driveway of the home as well as the neigh-boring home to the left was also damaged. Indi-viduals inside both homes were evacuated.Neil Blappert, who lives nearby the fire, said the owner of the home lives in Atlanta and that the visitors were unaware of the fire until they were awakened by neighbors.ÂThey had no time to grab belongings,ÂŽ he said. ÂNeighbors tried to get the fire out by putting water on it.ÂŽAs firefighters fought the fire, a crowd gathered, Blappert said.Walton County SheriffÂs Office assisted with crowd control. Corey Dobridnia, spokesperson for WCSO, said County Road 30A was closed down from Blue Mountain Beach Road to Highway 83 for several hours. FIREContinued from B1Rainey ÂAll Mary Lou wants to do is sell skim milk that contains literally one ingredient „ pasteurized skim milk „ and label it as pasteurized skim milk.ÂŽJustin Pearson, Institute for Justice lawyer These are complete answers for SundayÂs crossword puzzle. A portion of the answers was inadvertently omitted from SundayÂs paper.
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** B4 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News HeraldORLANDO (AP) „ A Florida state attorney says the governor overstepped his bounds when he removed her from a case after she pledged to not pursue the death penalty in any cases.State Attorney Aramis Ayala filed a motion in court Monday asking a judge to allow her to pres-ent that argument in court.ÂEvery day State Attor-neys here in Florida make important decisions on who to charge, what to charge and what to prioritize,ÂŽ Ayala wrote in the motion. ÂGiving the governor the tremendous and unfettered discretion to interfere in that decision making would be unprecedented and could undermine the entire jus-tice system in Florida.ÂŽGov. Rick Scott removed Ayala from Markeith LoydÂs case and reas-signed it to a prosecutor in a neighboring district after Ayala made her announce-ment against the death penalty on Thursday. Loyd is charged with first-degree murder in the killings of Orlando Police Lt. Debra Clayton and his pregnant ex-girlfriend, Sade Dixon.When asked in Tallahas-see about AyalaÂs motion, Scott said he was shocked that Ayala wouldnÂt seek the death penalty in LoydÂs case.ÂIÂm very comfortable that I made the right deci-sion and I had the authority to do it,ÂŽ Scott said.Scott said he would Âdeal with it at the timeÂŽ if Ayala declined to seek the death penalty in other cases. He also did not rule out seek-ing her removal.ÂWith regards to that, weÂre continuing to look at our options,ÂŽ he said.The confusion over who will prosecute the case was evident Monday morn-ing during a routine status hearing for LoydÂs case. Both Aramis and State Attorney Brad King, the prosecutor appointed by Scott to take over the case, were in the courtroom together.Judge Frederick Lauten scheduled a hearing for next week to hear arguments over who should handle the case.Ayala said in MondayÂs motion that the governor had no authority to remove her.ÂI retain complete authority over charging and prosecution decisions,ÂŽ she said.Meanwhile, almost 120 law experts from across the country sent Scott a letter urging him to reverse his decision, saying it infringed on the independence of prosecutors. The signees included two former justices of the Florida Supreme Court, a former president of the American Bar Association and dozens of law professors.Anti-death penalty prosecutor challenges removal by Gov. ScottORLANDO (AP) „ At Universal Orlando ResortÂs new ÂRace Through New York Starring Jimmy FallonÂŽ ride, waiting in line has been replaced by lounging on couches and listening to a racy barber shop quartet sing until itÂs time to enter the ride.Universal is leading the theme-park charge into Âvirtual linesÂŽ that give visitors options for explor-ing a park or watching live entertainment instead of the tedium of looking at someoneÂs back as you inch forward step by step to the thrill ride.ÂItÂs kind of a bit of a science experiment for all of us,ÂŽ said Jason Surrell, a Universal creative director said about the Âqueue-lessÂŽ waits. ÂWeÂve known for years that waiting in line is one of the biggest dis-satisfiers in our guests day.ÂŽ Universal also is trying the concept at another attraction. Later this year, when Universal opens its new Volcano Bay water parkin Orlando, visitors will be given wristbands that will alert them when itÂs their turn to get on a ride.ÂI think it represents the future of what weÂre going to be doing in themedentertainment,ÂŽ Surrell said. ÂI kind of joke that this is the first step on a journey that will eventu-ally lead us to a generation that doesnÂt even know about theme park lines. It will be ÂWhat do you mean, wait in a queue? WhatÂs that, Grandpa? ÂVirtual lines are the latest evolution in theme parks efforts to shorten or eliminate waits for rides, or if waits are necessary evils, to improve the expe-rience of biding oneÂs time.Almost two decades ago, those efforts were concentrated on elaborately-designed Âpre-rideÂŽ lines such UniversalÂs The Amazing Adventures of SpiderMan, which goes past an elaborately-detailed ÂDaily BugleÂŽ newsroom.A few years later came the ride reservations systems of the FastPass and Express Pass at Disney and Universal parks, respec-tively, in which ride-goers are assigned periods of time to show up for rides. But those reservations need to be made ahead of time, for the most part, and visitors can only make them on three rides a day.Universal opens that concept to everybody, not just advanced planners, with its two new attractions, while also offering entertainment during the wait.ÂEverybody is trying to do this, working not only on the rides but how to get you on the rides,ÂŽ said Dennis Spei-gel, who heads the theme parkconsulting firm, International Theme Park Services. ÂUniversal is at the forefront right now.ÂŽThe Jimmy Fallon attraction and the Volcano Bay water park take different approaches to virtual lines.At the Jimmy Fallon attraction, which opens next month, visitors enter an area made to look like the lobby of a Rockefeller Center building. Instead of getting in line, they can meander through the lobby looking at photos and memorabilia of past and present ÂTonight ShowÂŽ hosts and watch TVs playing clips of hosts Steve Allen, Jack Paar, Johnny Carson, Jay Leno and Jimmy Fallon. WhatÂs with lines? Theme parks aim to eliminate themThis photo shows the ÂRace Through New York Starring Jimmy FallonÂŽ ride in Orlando. Universal is leading the theme-park charge into Âvirtual linesÂŽ that give visitors options for exploring a park or watching live entertainment instead of the tedium of looking at someoneÂs back as you inch forward step by step to the thrill ride. [UNIVERSAL ORLANDO RESORT] By Katie Landeck522-5114 | @PCNHKatieL klandeck@pcnh.comPANAMA CITY „ A video of Ward 1 candidate Jenna Haligas daughter raised some eyebrows last week when it showed a cut of her mail-in ballot clearly demonstrating she voted for her mom.Critics of Haligas were quick to question if show-ing the ballot „ which is meant to be a secret „ violated Florida statutes. Chief among the critics was Carl Adams, a supporter of Haligas opponent, Commissioner John Kady.A complaint would have to be filed with the Florida Ethics Commission, which so far has not been done. And even if it were filed, Supervisor of Elec-tion Mark Andersen, who made it clear he was not involved in this specific incident, said it is unlikely to be considered a violation. The applicable Florida statute does say you must Âmark your ballot in secretÂŽ to be counted, and it does say mail-ins are subject to the election code including a muchdiscussed rule during the presidential election that Âno photography is per-mitted in the polling room or early voting area.ÂŽBut the devil is in the wording, according to Andersen. The Âmark your ballot in secret provisionÂŽ simply means voters have the option of voting in secret; to make it an actual rule it would have to say something along the lines of Âshall mark your ballot in secret.ÂŽAnd the other rule, he said, only applies to the polling room or early voting area.In the case of the video, it clearlywas shot in some-oneÂs home.The current interpre-tation of Florida statutes, according to Andersen, is that because there is noth-ing specifically written about social media plat-forms „ such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat „ sharing your vote on them is considered freedom of speech. The exception is if the post violates another part of the statute, such as corruption protections or taking photos in the poll-ing room.Social media Âhas really become a very large freedom of speech mega-phone,ÂŽ he said.As for Haligas, she said the video is cute and intends to leave it up.ÂItÂs perfectly legal and it was really sweet,ÂŽ she said.Haligas campaign video raises eyebrowsHaligas By Abby Phillip and Lori RozsaThe Washington PostPALM BEACH „ It is high season in South Florida: blue skies, low humidity, warm temper-atures and increasingly regular visits from the president of the United States.With those visits, the busiest time of year for longtime residents of Palm Beach has taken on a new unpleasantness. Airplane noise, traffic and a rash of angry confrontations between pro and anti-Trump demon-strators are beginning to seem like the new normal.ÂHeÂs baaaack!ÂŽ warned one resident on a neighborhood blog. ÂGet out your earplugs it is going to be another noisy weekend!ÂŽPresident Donald TrumpÂs trips here „ which have added up to more than half of the weekends since his inauguration „ are also forcing a brewing budget-ary crisis for Palm Beach County, which faces the prospect of millions of dollars in unexpected costs associated with aiding in securing the presidentÂs luxury estate.ÂIÂm not sure that anyone understood that when the president referred to Mar-a-Lago as the ÂSouthern White House he really intended to visit almost every week,ÂŽ said Rep. Theodore E. Deutch, D-Fla., who represents Palm Beach and is pushing for federal appropriators to address the growing costs. ÂThere are a lot of people who come to Palm Beach County over the entire winter to enjoy the weather and enjoy the golfing.ÂŽ Palm Beach County officials are warning about the ballooning costs associated with paying time and a half to sheriffÂs department deputies to secure the presidentÂs exclusive members-only club „ a pricetage that is already more than $1.5 million „ and county commis-sioners are pleading with federal officials to step in and relieve the financial burden.ÂI would never con-sider a proposal that says weÂre not going to use our county resources when the presidentÂs here. ItÂs our patriotic duty,ÂŽ said County Commissioner David Kerner. ÂIts just unfair that burden should be borne alone.ÂŽKerner has proposed an inventive solution: levy-ing a Âspecial benefitÂŽ fee on Mar-a-Lago to recoup some of the cost. The alternative, according to Kerner, is raising taxes for everyone or making cuts to the budget.Doing that could imperil proposals to allo-cate more county money to combat opioid abuse and to hire more sheriff deputies next year.ÂThose are real issues: keeping cops off the street and diminishing our opioid epidemic response,ÂŽ Kerner added.Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw, who has known Trump for the 25 years, met privately with the president in February at Mar-a-Lago.ÂI told him we were incurring these expenses, and he said, ÂIÂm going to take care of law enforce-ment,ÂÂŽ Bradshaw said. ÂWe were having a conversation, and he said, ÂIÂm a big supporter of law enforcement, you guys are doing a good job down here with the Secret Service, and I donÂt expect that you guys are doing it for free. So he gets it, he knows whatÂs happening.ÂŽThe White House did not respond to a request for comment on whether the president feels the county should be reimbursed for the cost of assisting in his security.Once just another celebrity living along what locals call Âmillionaires row,ÂŽ Trump is now the leader of the free world and along with straining the coun-tyÂs budget, his presence has upended some of the carefree peace of his winter enclave.TrumpÂs Mar-ALago visits stretch budget, locals patience ALPHAAudiologyHearingAids AffordableSales,Repair588-5460 PhonakStarkeyReSoundWidexOticonmore #1Winner2016BestofBayHearingAids AudiologicalTests:Education Matters Save,Shop,LOVEPCB!GodisGreat! 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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 B5 PANAMA CITY BEACHPCB man charged with sex crime A Panama City Beach man was arrested after he allegedly touched a juvenile inappropriately, police said Monday. Joe Hunter IV, 35, is charged with capital sexual battery and lewd and lascivious molestation on a victim under 12 after an investigation by the Bay County SheriffÂs Office (BCSO). The investigation began after the Department of Children and Families received a report Friday from a six-year-old stating Hunter had touched her, BCSO reported. Once notified, BCSO contacted and interviewed Hunter before arresting him, deputies said. PANAMA CITYGeorgia man arrested in robbery of topless club A Georgia man was arrested and charged following a robbery at the Gold Nugget Lounge. The Panama City Police Department (PCPD) responded to the topless club at 3901 W. U.S. 98 in reference to a robbery at 3:43 a.m. Monday. Trakell Duvol Comar, 26, of Columbus, Georgia, forcefully snatched a purse from a female patron and fled the business, according to a PCPD news release. Comar was located a short time later in a nearby hotel room. Comarconfessed to the robbery, was transported to the Bay County Jail, and charged with robbery by sudden snatching and grand theft of a firearm, PCPD reported. Anyone with information in the case is urged to call the Panama City Police Department, 850872-3100, orthey can report their tips anonymously to CrimeStoppers at 850-785-TIPS (8477). PANAMA CITYMom charged with child abuse, victim tampering The Panama City Police Department has arrested and charged a Panama City mother in connection with alleged child abuse. Angela N. Blalock, 33, ofPanama City, faces charges of child abuse, tampering with a victim andviolation of probation, according to a Panama City Police Department news release. Police reported Blalock inflicted physical and mentalinjury upon her 7-year-old child by striking the child repeatedly in the upper torso on Wednesday. Blalock then allegedly threatened the child with further harm if the child told anyone about the incident. Anyone with information in this case is urged to call the Panama City Police Department, 850872-3100,or they can report their tips anonymously to CrimeStoppers at 850-785-TIPS (8477). PANAMA CITY1 sought in BambiÂs burglary Police are seeking a man in connection with a theft at a Panama City topless club.The burglary happened between 8 and 8:15 a.m. Saturday at BambiÂs Doll House, 2915 E. 15th St., according to the Panama City Police Department. The suspect, who wore a light-colored hoodie and is described as a white male, is believed to have taken a large sum of money from the office after slipping in through the back door, police reported. Police received a call about 11:30 Saturday after employees found the business unsecured, according to a news release.Anyone with information can call PCPD at 850-872-3100 or report anonymous tips to CrimeStoppers at 850785-TIPS (8477).PANAMA CITYMan arrested, charged with robbery, battery A man has been arrested on charges of robbery, domestic battery and criminal mischief, police reported. Jeffery Allen Adkinson, 27,of Panama City, was charged after police respondedto a robbery in the area of East Seventh Street and North East Avenue at 2:48 p.m. Sunday. According to police, the victim saidAdkinson grabbed her, struck her in the upper torso, and forcefully took her purse. Adkinson also allegedly damaged the victimÂs vehicle door during the incident. Adkinson was found a shortdistance away with the victimÂs property and was taken into custody. PANAMA CITYPolice: 2 charged after trying to use fake $100 bill Police have arrested and charged two people in connection with counterfeiting and drug possession. Police responded to the Sonic Drive-In, 220 W. 23rd St., shortly before 2:40 p.m. Saturday after being contacted about two people who attempted to pass a counterfeit $100 bill. According to the Panama City Police Department (PCPD), Corey Evan Brown, 24, and Jessica Nicole Lewis, 23, tried to use the counterfeit bill to pay for their meal. While detained, police reported finding heroin and drug paraphernalia on Lewis. Both confessed to trying to pass the counterfeit bill, PCPD reported. Brown subsequently was charged with principal to uttering a forged bill; Lewis was charged with uttering a forged bill, possession of heroin and possession of drug paraphernalia, according to PCPD. Staff reportsAREA BRIEFS This time the man was telling the truth, but before he could be taken to jail he Âadvised that his lower back started giving him problems and was transported to Gulf Coast Regional Medical CenterÂŽ for treatment, and then to jail. EverythingÂs a Dollar Â… except stolen vanA deputy investigated the reported theft of a van from a limo service.The victim explained he last saw the black van about midnight and at 6 a.m. it was missing. The victim said he wasnÂt sure if it had been locked, but was sure there was a spare key on the dash-board. He also reported the van had just been serviced and had a full tank of gas.The deputy obtained video from a nearby business, but it was not enough to close the case and the vehicle was reported as officially stolen. About six hours later, deputies were called to a wrecker ser-vice, where they found the van and were told it had been towed from ÂEverythingÂs a DollarÂŽ earlier that morning. Deputies contacted an employee at the store who said it was there when she arrived for work. That store also had video surveillance and deputies were awaiting the footage to try to identify a suspect. BLOTTERContinued from B1 ENTREESELECTIONSEntreesincludechoiceofSteakHouseSaladorSoupDuJour$14.99EARLYDININGSPECIALS NoSubstitutionsorSharedDinnersMondaythruSaturday-4:30pmuntil6:00pm 3214West23rdStreet-850.481.0354BlackenedChickenPasta AndouilleSausage,HolyTrinity, GarlicCreamSauce ShrimpandGrits BloodyMarySauce,TassoHam, TomatoRelish CrabCake ColdWeatherGreens,SugarSnaps, Tartar BlackenedSalmon SweetCorn&TomatoSuccotash, Remoulade WagyuBistroFilet Arugula,HorseradishSauceand RoastedPotatoes1169042 TROYUNIVERSITYCongratulatesthe2017SunBeltConference MenÂsandWomenÂsBasketballChampions! ONEFAMILY.ONESPIRIT.ONETROY. TroyTrojans.com #OneTROY 1171713
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** B6 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News HeraldHOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY MATHIS DIVERSIONSTRIVIA BY WILSON CASEY ACES ON BRIDGE: BOBBY WOLFF SUDOKUAnswer to yesterdayÂs sudokuDEAR ABBY WORD SCRIMMAGE: JUDD HAMBRICK (Answers tomorrow) PERCH HAVOC FORBID SPRUCE YesterdayÂs Jumbles: Answer: In his off-time, Sleepy HollowÂs horseman worked in a restaurant as the „ HEAD CHEF 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. GOUBS INXOT STORYF CARIYP 2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved. Check out the new, free JUSTJUMBLE app DEAR ABBY: My fiance and I have been engaged for two years. Our wedding is set for a year from now. IÂm thinking about calling off our wedding, not because I donÂt love him, or because I donÂt want to spend the rest of my life with him. I know I want that. ItÂs because IÂm the only one with a decent job. He has a job, but doesnÂt earn enough to support us. I canÂt be the only one earning an income. How are we supposed to move out of our parents houses and start a life together if IÂm the one doing everything? What will happen when things need to start getting paid for, and thereÂs no guarantee heÂll find something? I have talked to him about it, and heÂs angry. Should I keep the date and keep my fingers crossed heÂll find a job by then, or postpone our wedding, which has a venue but nothing else planned? I donÂt need to get married anytime soon, and IÂd prefer to wait until he can support himself and we are in a better place financially. Then I feel like we could move forward. Am I making the right decision? „ CAUTIOUS IN NEW JERSEYDEAR CAUTIOUS: Yes, you are. You are thinking with your head instead of being swept away by your emotions, and I applaud you for it. I have said for many years that before a woman marries she should be able to support herself, in case future circumstances require it. Well, the same is true for a man.DEAR ABBY: I am a gay man. Recently, I rekindled a relationship I had with a guy I was close with many years ago. We have a lot of the same interests. When he asked what it would take for us to be permanent, I asked that he stop smoking pot. He responded that he does it only Âtwo or three times a yearÂŽ and that for me to make that request was Âcontrolling.ÂŽ I asked him for no other changes. I hate the smell of smoke, and pot is illegal in our state, so I broke it off because he wouldnÂt agree. Did I do the right thing? „ TONY IN FLORIDADEAR TONY: Yes, because his response to your simple request indicates that any accommodation you asked of him would likely be met with the same reaction. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby. com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.Wedding can wait until ance nds jobARIES (March 21-April 19) „ Nature is stronger than man. Then again, man is a part of nature. YouÂll p rove the mightiness of the human spirit in some way today as you go up against the big forces and win. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) „ After periods of high exertion you need time to relax and recover. If you donÂt consciously and regularly schedule this, youÂll miss it and burn out later. Take care of your health and happiness now by making a plan. GEMINI (May 21-June 21) „ In order to better achieve the group goal, people must feel safe enough speak up about whatÂs working and whatÂs not. If everyone is too afraid to challenge or change the way things are going, the outcome will suffer. CANCER (June 22-July 22) „ There will be ” ashy, glamorous and dramatic situations to get involved in today, but should you? You wonÂt be sorry if you instead choose your company the same way you choose your shoes „ for comfort and long wear. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) „ Maybe you shouldnÂt tell everyone about the extensive effort you put into getting to a certain result. Your payoff will come when the others “ gure out that they canÂt easily duplicate what you just pulled off. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) „ You wonÂt get the sale, promotion or attention necessary to move forward unless people know what youÂre doing and why. So donÂt be shy today; publicize your work. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) „ Your social talents will be put to good use now. YouÂll connect people who can do one another good. YouÂll set a tone where people feel comfortable enough to contribute. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) „ ThereÂs nothing wrong with wanting appreciation and love. It doesnÂt make you automatically needy just because you have the very basic human drive to be valued. Be suspicious of anyone who tries to make you feel otherwise. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) „ You may not agree right now with what you did back there, but you made the best decision you could make based on the information you had at the time. Knowing more, youÂll do it differently today. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) „ YouÂve been wronged „ probably just a misunderstanding „ and youÂll work it out. Being too conciliatory would be a mistake. DonÂt mute your own interests more than is good for the relationship going forward. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) „ The day has exciting potential for you as you follow a fascinating lead. Where high standards meet with prepossessing features, a strong attraction will develop. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) „ Mistakes teach us how to be more ” exible in the future. They also make us compassionate. Accept yourself and move on. YouÂre becoming stronger and more able every day. ÂTrivia Fun 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. Whose quotes included, ÂLife is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood.ÂŽ? Mark Twain, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Robert Frost 2. What is the largest ice shelf of Antarctica at about 188,000 square miles? Ross, Byrd, Hayes, Green 3. Which state is the only one bordered entirely by rivers to the east and west? Tennessee, Missouri, Kansas, Iowa 4. The Storting is whose legislative body? Germany, Norway, Vatican, Greece 5. Where was cheddar cheese invented? England, Wisconsin, Italy, France ANSWERS: 1. Ralph Waldo Emerson, 2. Ross, 3. Iowa, 4. Norway, 5. England Jeanne Phillips Wilson Casey
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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 B7 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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** B8 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald TV LISTINGS TUESDAY MORNING C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 21 C W S1 S27 AM7:308 AM8:309 AM9:3010 AM10:3011 AM11:3012 PM12:30 WJHG (7) 3 3 7 7 Today Daredevil Nik Wallenda; Today Food. (N) TodayÂs 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 (N) Jerry Springer Jerry Springer 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 ÂThe MayorÂŽ Diagnosis Murder The Big Valley ÂA Time to KillÂŽ GunsmokeGunsmoke WECP (18) 4 4 4 18 CBS This Morning (N) LetÂs Make a Deal (N) The Price Is Right (N) 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 (N) The PeopleÂs Court The PeopleÂs Court 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 Dog the Bounty Hunter Dog the Bounty Hunter Storage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsStorage WarsThe First 48 AMC 30 62 131 254 Paid ProgramLifeLockM*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*H ‰‰‰ Erin Brockovich (Â00) Julia Roberts, Albert Finney, Aaron Eckhart. ANPL 46 69 184 282 Bad Dog! ÂFood FiendsÂŽ Pit Bulls and Parolees Pit Bulls and Parolees The Vet Life ÂTraining DayÂŽ The Vet Life River Monsters BET 53 46 124 329 Meet, BrownsTyler PerryÂs Meet the BrownsMeet, BrownsTyler PerryÂs Meet the BrownsMeet, BrownsMeet, Browns (:14) Being Mary Jane ÂGetting NekkidÂŽ Mary Jane COM 64 53 107 249 PiYo Workout!Paid ProgramÂ70s ShowÂ70s ShowÂ70s ShowÂ70s ShowItÂs Always Sunny in Phila.Always SunnyAlways SunnyTosh.0Tosh.0 DISC 36 39 182 278 I (Almost) Got Away With It I (Almost) Got Away With It I (Almost) Got Away With It I (Almost) Got Away With It I (Almost) Got Away With It Death Row: The Final 24 Hours E! 63 57 114 236 KardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashianKardashian ESPN 9 23 140 206 SportsCenter (N) (L) SportsCenter (N) (L) First Take (N) (L) SportsCenter (N) (L) Outside LinesNFL Insiders ESPN2 47 24 144 209 (5:00) Mike & Mike (N) (L) SportsCenter (N) (L) SportsCenter (N) (L) The Dan Le Batard ShowFirst Take (N) FOOD 38 45 110 231 Paid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPioneer Wo.TrishaÂs Sou.TrishaÂs Sou.TrishaÂs Sou.TrishaÂs Sou.TrishaÂs Sou.TrishaÂs Sou.Pi oneer Wo.Pioneer Wo. FREE 59 65 180 311 Gilmore GirlsGilmore Girls 700/InteractiveThe 700 Club Last-StandingLast-StandingLast-StandingLast-StandingRebaReba FS1 24 27 150 219 NASCAR Racing XFINITY Series: DC Solar 200. Skip and Shannon: Undisputed (N) (L) The Herd with Colin Cowherd (N) (L) FX 45 51 136 248 (6:00) ‰‰‚ Red Tails (Â12) Cuba Gooding Jr. ‰‚ Red Riding Hood (Â11) Amanda Seyfried, Gary Oldman. Two/Half MenTwo/Half MenHow I MetHow I MetHow I Met HALL 23 59 185 312 Golden GirlsGolden GirlsGolden GirlsGolden GirlsHome & Family 2017 Daytona 500 winner Kurt Busch. (N) Home & Family Nicole Ari Parker; Daniel Gillies. HGTV 32 38 112 229 House HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHouse HuntersHunters In tÂlFixer Upper HIST 35 42 120 269 Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars LIFE 56 56 108 252 How I MetHow I MetSorority Murder (Â15) Scarlett Byrne, Nicole Muoz. Pretty Little Addict (Â15) Andrea Bowen, Scott Lyster. GreyÂs Anatomy SPIKE 28 48 241 241 Get Lean afterPaid ProgramBar Rescue Bar Rescue ÂEmergency ExitÂŽ Bar Rescue ‰‰‰ Men in Black (Â97) Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith. SUN 49 422 656 DatelineIns. LightningIns. LightningInside HEATInside HEATGolf AmericaGolf LifeGolf Dest.Endless GolfFacing WavesFlorida Keys SYFY 70 52 122 244 Ragin Cajun Redneck Gators (Â13) Jordan Hinson. Piranhaconda (Â12) Michael Madsen, Rachel Hunter. Lake Placid: The Final Chapter (Â12) Robert Englund. TBS 31 15 139 247 MarriedMarriedKingKingKingKingClevelandClevelandAmerican DadAmerican DadAmerican DadAmerican Dad TCM 25 70 132 256 ‰‰‰‚ Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Â31)(:45) ‰‰‰‰ The Invisible Man (Â33) ‰‰‰‰ M (Â31) Peter Lorre, Ellen Widmann, Inge Landgut. Sweeney Todd: Demon Barber TLC 37 40 183 280 Paralyzed and Pregnant6 Going on 60 Hoarding: Buried Alive Hoarding: Buried Alive My 600-Lb. Life My 600-Lb. Life TNT 29 54 138 245 Charmed Paige has a mishap. Charmed ÂSize MattersÂŽ Supernatural ÂBloody MaryÂŽ Supernatural ÂSkinÂŽ Supernatural ÂHook ManÂŽ Supernatural ÂBugsÂŽ USA 62 55 105 242 ImpostersImpostersImpostersImposters ÂThe Maddie CodeÂŽ ChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisley WGN-A 13 239 307 Paid ProgramCreflo DollarWalker, Texas Ranger In the Heat of the Night In the Heat of the Night M*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*H TUESDAY LATE NIGHT C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 21 C W S1 S21 AM1:302 AM2:303 AM3:304 AM4:305 AM5:306 AM6:30 WJHG (7) 3 3 7 7 (:07) Harry (N) The Bankruptcy HourShepherdÂs ChapelAgDayEarly TodayNewsChannel 7 Today (N) CW (7.2) 99 9 8 8 CheatersAmazing AbsCue VaporPaid ProgramFacelift!Regrow HairRegrow HairNo AgingSkin SecretsPaid 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 Mannix ÂMemory: ZeroÂŽ Ironside (Part 2 of 2) 77 Sunset Strip (Part 1 of 2) Miss BrooksDonna ReedMister EdI Love LucyBrady BunchBev. Hillbillies WECP (18) 4 4 4 18 Ac. HollywoodThe Insider (N)(:07) CBS Overnight News (N) Paid ProgramPaid ProgramBusiness FirstMorning News MNT (18.2) 227 13 Tosh.0Jewelry TelevisionJewelry TelevisionPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramAgDay WPGX (28) 8 8 28 28 Two/Half MenHow I MetPaid ProgramAdvanced DMaury (N) Paid ProgramProphetBest Pan Ever!Outdoor ShowAsk-Tech.Paid Program WFSG (56) 11 11 56 56 (12:00) American MastersFrontline ÂIraq UncoveredÂŽ Independent Lens ÂThe Bad KidsÂŽ Ribbon, SandCat in the HatArthur (EI) Wild Kratts (EI) Ready Jet Go! A&E 34 43 118 265 (:04) Intervention ÂKristieÂŽ(:04) 60 Days In: AtlantaPaid ProgramLifeLockNo SmokePaid ProgramPaid ProgramBloated?Parking WarsParking Wars AMC 30 62 131 254 (11:30) ‰‰‰ OceanÂs Eleven Humans Karen has no future with Sam. Into the BadlandsPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid Program ANPL 46 69 184 282 River MonstersRiver Monsters ÂDeath RayÂŽ Wild PatagoniaBig Cat DiaryBig Cat DiaryDogs 101 BET 53 46 124 329 The Wendy Williams ShowThe RealPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramAbundant LifePaid ProgramStop SufferingJoseph PrinceJoyce Me yer COM 64 53 107 249 At MidnightSouth ParkKey & PeeleKey & PeeleChappelleÂsThe High CourtPaid ProgramFacelift in Min.Paid ProgramSEXY at 50!Paid Pro gramPiYo Craze! DISC 36 39 182 278 Moonshiners: Art of the ÂShineMoonshiners: Art of the ÂShineMoonshiners: Art of the ÂShineAlaska: The Last FrontierAlaska: The Last FrontierAlaska: The Last Frontier E! 63 57 114 236 (12:00) ‰‰‰ Mean Girls (Â04) The Arrangement ÂThe LeakÂŽ ‰‰‰ CharlieÂs Angels (Â00) Cameron Diaz, Drew Barrymore. The KardashiansE! News ESPN 9 23 140 206 SportsCenter (N) (L) SportsCenterNBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Minnesota Timberwolves. SportsCenterSportsCenter (N) (L) ESPN2 47 24 144 209 NBA Basketball Chicago Bulls at Toronto Raptors. SportsCenter (N) SportsCenterMike & Mike (N) (L) FOOD 38 45 110 231 Chopped ÂBack in TimeÂŽ ChoppedGuyÂs Grocery GamesRegrow HairPiYo Craze!LifeLockPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid Program FREE 59 65 180 311 Paid ProgramThe 700 ClubPaid ProgramPaid ProgramJoseph PrinceRobisonJoyce MeyerJohn HageeBaby DaddyGilmore Girls FS1 24 27 150 219 TMZ SportsUFC Reloaded UFC SoundUFC SoundDrag Racing FX 45 51 136 248 The AmericansMike & MollyHazuki!Paid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramTop CookerTop CookerNew Looks! ‰‚ Red Riding Hood (Â11) HALL 23 59 185 312 FrasierFrasierFrasierFrasierCheersCheersI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love LucyI Love Lucy HGTV 32 38 112 229 House HuntersHouse HuntersFixer UpperPaid ProgramPiYo Craze!Amazing AbsWrinkles!Paid ProgramPaid ProgramYard CrashersHouse Cras her HIST 35 42 120 269 Forged in Fire: Cutting DeeperCounting CarsCounting CarsPaid ProgramTransformCue VaporNo SmokeBloated?Paid ProgramModern Marvel s ÂWineÂŽ LIFE 56 56 108 252 (:04) Little Women: Atlanta (:04) Little Women: LAAmazing AbsWrinkles!DarkspotsPaid ProgramDarkspotsPaid ProgramJoyce MeyerBalancing Act SPIKE 28 48 241 241 ‰‰ Super Troopers (Â01) Jay Chandrasekhar, Kevin Heffernan. Sex ToysAmazing AbsPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPaid ProgramPiYo Craze!Paid ProgramSEXY at 50! SUN 49 422 656 DarkspotsPaid ProgramHurricane SpinCook SmartPaid ProgramPaid ProgramWorry FreePaid ProgramFlorida SportSport FishingPaid Progr amPaid Program SYFY 70 52 122 244 (12:00) ‰‰‚ A KnightÂs Tale (Â01) Heath Ledger, Mark Addy. Cosplay MeleePaid ProgramPaid ProgramThe Magicians ‰ Ghost Town (Â09) TBS 31 15 139 247 ‰‰‰ The Librarian: Return to King SolomonÂs Mines (Â06) New GirlNew GirlMarriedMarriedMarriedMarriedMarriedMarried TCM 25 70 132 256 (12:30) ‰‰‰ Point Blank (Â67) Lee Marvin. ‰‰‰‚ White Heat (Â49) James Cagney, Virginia Mayo. ‰‰‰ Little Caesar (Â30) Edward G. Robinson. ‰‰‰ The Bad Seed (Â56) TLC 37 40 183 280 (:04) My Big Fat Fabulous LifeMystery DiagnosisMystery DiagnosisWhat Not to Wear ÂEmiÂŽ What Not to Wear ÂDollyÂŽ Say YesSay Yes TNT 29 54 138 245 Major Crimes ÂDead DropÂŽ The LibrariansThe LibrariansLaw & Order ÂExcaliburÂŽ Arrow ÂSuicide SquadÂŽ Charmed USA 62 55 105 242 Law & Order: Criminal IntentLaw & Order: Criminal IntentLaw & Order: SVULaw & Order: SVUHouse ÂCarrot or StickÂŽ House ÂFamily PracticeÂŽ WGN-A 13 239 307 EngagementEngagementRaising HopeRaising HopeLaw & Order ÂSecond OpinionÂŽ SupernaturalTummy TuckSkinCarePaid ProgramPaid ProgramJoyce Meyer TUESDAY AFTERNOON C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 21 C W S1 S21 PM1:302 PM2:303 PM3:304 PM4:305 PM5:306 PM6:30 WJHG (7) 3 3 7 7 Rachael Ray The Doctors (N) Harry (N) 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 GuyFamily 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 Bonanza ÂBlessed Are TheyÂŽ The RiflemanThe RiflemanCHiPs ÂGreen Thumb BurglarÂŽ MacGyver ÂSplit DecisionÂŽ MamaÂs FamilyMamaÂs 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 (N) Crime Watch DailySteve Harvey ThisMinuteThisMinuteJudge Judy Judge Judy Big BangBig Bang WFSG (56) 11 11 56 56 SplashCuriousNature CatReady Jet Go!Odd Squad (N) Odd SquadWild KrattsCapitol UpdatePBS NewsHour (N) World NewsRick Steves A&E 34 43 118 265 The First 48 The First 48 ÂCut Down; 9-1-1ÂŽ The First 48 Intervention ÂKevinÂŽ Intervention ÂKathyÂŽ Intervention ÂTiffanyÂŽ AMC 30 62 131 254 ‰‰ Death Sentence (Â07) Kevin Bacon, Garrett Hedlund, Kelly Preston. ‰‰‰ OceanÂs Eleven (Â01) George Clooney, Matt Damon, Andy Garcia. ‰‰‰ Lethal Weapon 3 (Â92) ANPL 46 69 184 282 River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters ÂDeath RayÂŽ River Monsters River Monsters BET 53 46 124 329 Mary Jane (:26) Being Mary Jane (:32) Being Mary Jane (:38) Being Mary Jane (:44) Being Mary Jane ÂGetting HomeÂŽ(5:50) Being Mary Jane COM 64 53 107 249 Tosh.0Tosh.0Archer (:35) Archer (:10) Archer (:45) Futurama (:20) FuturamaFuturama (:20) FuturamaSouth ParkSouth Park DISC 36 39 182 278 County Jail ÂOaklandÂŽ County Jail: Miami Moonshiners: Art of the ÂShineMoonshiners: Art of the ÂShineMoonshiners: Art of the ÂShineMoonshiners: Art of the ÂShine E! 63 57 114 236 The KardashiansKardashianKardashianThe KardashiansKardashianThe KardashiansKardashianE! News (N) ESPN 9 23 140 206 NFL Live (N) (L) The JumpSportsNation (N) (L) QuestionableAround/HornInterruptionSportsCenter W/MichaelNBA Basketball ESPN2 47 24 144 209 (12:00) First Take (N) NFL Live (N) The JumpSportsNation (N) ESPN FC (N) Special OlympicsCollege Basketball FOOD 38 45 110 231 ChoppedChopped ÂBird in the PanÂŽ Chopped ÂCleaver FeverÂŽ Chopped ÂHoofin It!ÂŽ Chopped ÂBurn for the WorseÂŽ Chopped FREE 59 65 180 311 Reba Reba The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle ‰‰ SheÂs All That (Â99) Freddie Prinze Jr., Matthew Lillard. FS1 24 27 150 219 The Herd with Colin CowherdSkip and Shannon: UndisputedSpeak for YourselfNASCAR Race Hub (N) (L) UFC SoundUFC Sound FX 45 51 136 248 Mike & MollyMike & MollyTwo/Half MenTwo/Half Men ‰‰ White House Down (Â13) Channing Tatum. Paramilitary soldiers take over the White House. ‰‰‰‚ Gone Girl (Â14) 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 UpperFixer 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 GreyÂs Anatomy GreyÂs Anatomy Little Women: LALittle Women: LA ÂSail AwayÂŽ Little Women: LALittle Women: LA SPIKE 28 48 241 241 Men in Black ‰‰ Kick-Ass 2 (Â13) Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Christopher Mintz-Plasse. ‰‰ Super Troopers (Â01) Jay Chandrasekhar. ‰‰‰ Knocked Up (Â07) SUN 49 422 656 Lost Treasure Fleet of 1715Pro-AmInside RaysInside the RaysInside RaysFocused (N) SpotlightInside HEATPregameBasketball SYFY 70 52 122 244 ‰‰‚ Piranha (Â10) Elisabeth Shue, Adam Scott. Face OffFace Off ÂChildÂs PlayÂŽ Face Off ÂLost LanguagesÂŽ Face Off ÂCovert CharactersÂŽ TBS 31 15 139 247 Family Guy Family Guy New Girl New Girl Friends Friends Friends Friends Seinfeld SeinfeldBig BangBig Bang TCM 25 70 132 256 Sweeney Todd: Demon Barber of Fleet St. ‰‰‰‰ All About Eve (Â50) Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, Celeste Holm. ‰‰‰‚ The Little Foxes (Â41) Bette Davis, Herbert Marshall. 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 ÂHomeÂŽ ‰‚ Law Abiding Citizen (Â09) Jamie Foxx, Gerard Butler.(:15) ‰‰‰ G.I. Jane (Â97) Demi Moore, Viggo Mortensen, Anne Bancroft. USA 62 55 105 242 ChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisleyChrisley WGN-A 13 239 307 M*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*HM*A*S*HCops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops ‰‰ Fast & Furious (Â09) TUESDAY EVENING C COMCAST W WOW! S1 DISH NETWORK S2 DIRECTV MARCH 21 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) (Part 2 of 2) Trial & ErrorTrial & ErrorChicago Fire (N) NewsTonight Show-J. FallonLate Night With Seth MeyersLast Call/Daly CW (7.2) 99 9 8 8 The Flash ÂDuetÂŽ (N) DCÂs Legends of Tomorrow (N) SeinfeldSeinfeldKingKingEngagementEngagementRaising HopeCheaters WMBB (13) 2 2 13 13 The MiddleAm HousewifeFresh Off-BoatblackishPeople Icons (N) News 13 at 10 (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live (:37) NightlineThe MiddleJudge Karen METV (13.2) 209 133 2 Mayberry RFDMayberry RFDMacGyver ÂGunz Ân BoyzÂŽ Hogan HeroesHogan HeroesCarol BurnettPerry MasonTwilight ZoneAlfred Hitchcock Hour WECP (18) 4 4 4 18 NCIS ÂPay to PlayÂŽ Bull ÂE.J.ÂŽ NCIS: New OrleansModern FamilyLate Show-ColbertLate Late Show/James CordenModern Family MNT (18.2) 227 13 The X-Files ÂRedux IIÂŽ The X-Files2 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 American Masters Photographer Dorothea Lange. Frontline ÂIraq UncoveredÂŽ (N) Capitol UpdateCharlie Rose (N) Tavis SmileyAmerican Masters A&E 34 43 118 265 Intervention ÂKatieÂŽ Intervention ÂDanaÂŽ(:01) Intervention ÂKristieÂŽ(:03) 60 Days In: Atlanta (:03) Intervention ÂKatieÂŽ(12:03) Intervention ÂDanaÂŽ AMC 30 62 131 254 (6:00) ‰‰‰ Lethal Weapon 3 (Â92) Joe Pesci ‰‰ Lethal Weapon 4 (Â98) Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Joe Pesci. ‰‰‰ OceanÂs Eleven (Â01) George Clooney. ANPL 46 69 184 282 River MonstersWild PatagoniaRiver Monsters ÂAsian SlayerÂŽ River Monsters Search for the greatest river monster. BET 53 46 124 329 (6:56) Being Mary JaneBeing Mary JaneBeing Mary Jane ÂGetting ItÂŽ(:07) Being Mary JaneDaily Show (:38) Martin (:19) Martin 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: Outlaw Cuts (N) Moonshiners (N) Killing Fields (N) Moonshiners: Art of the ÂShineMoonshiners: Art of the ÂShineMoonshiners: Art of the ÂShine E! 63 57 114 236 ‰‰‰ Mean Girls (Â04) Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams. The Arrangement ÂThe LeakÂŽ E! News (N) ‰‰‰ Mean Girls (Â04) ESPN 9 23 140 206 NBA Basketball: Bulls at Raptors NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Minnesota Timberwolves. (N) (L) SportsCenter W/Van PeltSportsCenter (N) (L) ESPN2 47 24 144 209 College BasketballCollege BasketballSportsCenter (N) (L) Baseball Ton.JalenGameDaySp. Olympics FOOD 38 45 110 231 ChoppedChoppedChopped ÂBest Laid PansÂŽ Chopped ÂBack in TimeÂŽ ChoppedChopped ÂBest Laid PansÂŽ FREE 59 65 180 311 The Fosters (N)(:01) Switched at Birth (N) The Twins: Happily Ever After?The 700 Club ‰‰‰ 13 Going on 30 (Â04) Jennifer Garner, Mark Ruffalo. FS1 24 27 150 219 UFC Reloaded Speak for YourselfSkip and Shannon: Undisputed FX 45 51 136 248 (6:00) ‰‰‰‚ Gone Girl (Â14) Ben Affleck, Rosamund Pike. The Americans ÂThe MidgesÂŽ(:03) The Americans (:05) Legion ÂChapter 6ÂŽ(12:14) The Americans 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) Home TownHouse HuntersHouse HuntersFixer UpperHome Town 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 (6:00) ‰‰‰ Knocked Up (Â07) Seth Rogen, Katherine Heigl.Adam Carolla and Friends ‰‰‰ Knocked Up (Â07) Seth Rogen. A one-night stand has an unforeseen consequence. SUN 49 422 656 (6:30) NBA Basketball Phoenix Suns at Miami Heat. (N) (L) PostgameInside HEATInside HEATInside HEATAfter Midnight with the HEAT SYFY 70 52 122 244 Face Off ÂOdd CouplesÂŽ Face Off ÂFrightening FamiliesÂŽ Cosplay MeleeFace Off ÂFrightening FamiliesÂŽ Cosplay Melee ‰‰‚ A KnightÂs Tale (Â01) TBS 31 15 139 247 Big BangBig BangBig BangBig BangThe Detour (N) Big BangConan ÂReese WitherspoonÂŽ The DetourConan ÂReese WitherspoonÂŽ Seinfeld TCM 25 70 132 256 ‰‰‰‰ Double Indemnity (Â44) Fred MacMurray. ‰‰ Detour (Â45) Tom Neal, Ann Savage. ‰‰‰ Cape Fear (Â62) Gregory Peck, Robert Mitchum. Point Blank TLC 37 40 183 280 My Big Fat Fabulous LifeMy Big Fat Fabulous Life (N)(:02) SheÂs in Charge (N)(:04) My Big Fat Fabulous Life (:04) SheÂs in ChargeMy Big Fat Fabulous Life TNT 29 54 138 245 ‰‚ Law Abiding Citizen (Â09) Jamie Foxx, Gerard Butler.(:15) ‰‰‰‚ Django Unchained (Â12) Jamie Foxx. An ex-slave and a German bounty hunter roam AmericaÂs South. USA 62 55 105 242 WWE SmackDown! (N) (L) ChrisleyChrisleyModern FamilyModern FamilyModern FamilyModern FamilyChrisleyChrisley WGN-A 13 239 307 (6:00) ‰‰ Fast & Furious (Â09) Outsiders Tensions escalate. Outsiders Tensions escalate. Outsiders Tensions escalate. Outsiders Tensions escalate. How I MetHow I Met
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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 C1 SPORTS NCAA MEN | C2BRACKET UPDATECheck out the menÂs Sweet 16 matchups DIAMOND TEAMS | C6COMMODORE CLASHESGC so ball team in second; Calzado leads baseball teamÂs romp BASKETBALL | C5NBA ROUNDUPSee how your favorite team fared on Monday By Pat McCannThe News HeraldPANAMA CITY „ Kayden Boyle had the key at-bat to send the game to extra innings, then drove in the go-ahead run in the ninth as Jonesboro, Arkansas, downed Arnold 8-6 on Monday in the Panama City Invitational high school baseball tournament.The Marlins, 6-2, seemed destined to win their first of two games in the annual tourney hosted by Bay High School, but despite playing with the lead for four innings couldnÂt pull away while stranding two runners in both the fifth and sixth.It cost them in the seventh when Nick Shaler couldnÂt track down Sam Edwards drive to center field against reliever Lucas Dunn, the Jonesboro outlasts Arnold in 9 inningsArnoldÂs Thomas Risalvato was tagged out by Jonesboro third baseman Jack Thyer (2) while trying to advance from second on a ground ball on Monday in the Marlins 8-6 extra-inning loss. [PATTI BLAKE/THE NEWS HERALD] Zane Ryne Neves pitched “ ve full innings for Jonesboro. [PATTI BLAKE/ THE NEWS HERALD] By Jenna FryerThe Associated PressCHARLOTTE, N.C. „ Kyle Larson finished second at Phoenix International Raceway and then headed to the beach for a brief family vacation.There was no lamenting his third consecutive runnerup finish because Larson is the current points leader of NASCARÂs top series. His positioning atop the stand-ings is almost as good as a trip to victory lane.Larson now has finished second in four of the past five Cup races dating to last seasonÂs finale, and he was in contention for the vic-tory in the Daytona 500 until he ran out of gas on the final lap and finished 12th. A two-tire stop put him in position to win Sunday at Phoenix in overtime, but a slip on the restart cost him any chance of running down leader Ryan Newman in the two-lap sprint to the finish.ÂI mean, I guess little mistakes or inexperience or whatever you want to call it,ÂŽ Larson said of his bridesmaid status. ÂHindsight is always ‡. But I should have went a lane up in one and two. I should have known to just stay close to Newman. ThatÂs what I wish I would have done. But, yeah, itÂs weird ... I finish second like every week. Maybe weÂll turn them into wins soon.ÂŽSure, wins would be great, but at this pace, Larson doesnÂt need them. HeÂs using consistency to run up front and stay in contention for a spot in NASCARÂs playoffs. ItÂs the beauty of NASCARÂs points system that often is overlooked. Yes, a win just about guarantees a spot in the 16-driver field. But there have not been 16 individual race winners yet in this format, and additional slots go to the highest-ranking drivers in points.Collecting points is how Newman almost won the championship two seasons ago despite not winning a race, so not making it to vic-tory lane is not a deal breaker.Of course, the way heÂs running, no one expects Larson to fall short of winning a race for much longer. He has LarsonÂs second vaults him to rstSee NASCAR, C3 See BASEBALL, C6The Associated PressUConnÂs Kia Nurse heard the boasts from Syracuse that it would bring the best backcourt in America into Monday nightÂs secondround rematch of last yearÂs national championship game.She used that as motivation. The junior guard scored 29 points and tied an NCAA Tournament record with nine 3-pointers to lead UConn to a 94-64 win over the Orange. The boasting Âallows you to play with a bit of a chip on your shoulder,ÂŽ she said. ÂFor us, we like to prove it with the way that we play.ÂŽNurse hit 10 of her 13 shots, missing three attempts from behind the arc for the Huskies, who won for the 109th straight time and 26th straight in the NCAA Tour-nament. That streak includes last AprilÂs 82-51 win over the Orange that gave the Huskies their fourth consecutive title. Gabby Williams and Katie Lou Samuelson each added 23 points and Napheesa Collier chipped in with 17 for UConn (34-0), which led by as many as 36 points. The Huskies shot 62 per-cent from the floor, 52 percent from 3-point range and had 30 assists on their 33 baskets. Geno Auriemma said the performance had him shaking his head in awe. ÂThose first three quarters I just thought we were about as good as we can be in a lot of the areas you need to be good in this time of the year,ÂŽ he said.Alexis Peterson had 25 points to lead Syracuse, which finished its season at 22-11. Backcourt mate Brittney Sykes added 15 and Briana Day had 13 for the Orange. ÂWe didnÂt expect to be going home,ÂŽ said Syracuse Coach Quentin Hillsman. ÂWeÂre extremely Nurse hits 9 3-pointers to lead UConn over SyracuseConnecticutÂs Kia Nurse reacts after hitting a 3-point basket in the “ rst half of a second-round game against Syracuse in the NCAA womenÂs college basketball tournament Monday in Storrs, Conn. [JESSICA HILL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] See NCAA, C3
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** C2 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald Buffalo, N.Y. Buffalo, N.Y.Milwaukee MilwaukeeOrlando, Fla. Orlando, Fla. Salt Lake City Salt Lake City Tulsa, Okla.Sacramento, Calif. Sacramento, Calif. Indianapolis IndianapolisGreenville, S.C. MIDWESTKansas City, Mo.March 25WESTSan Jose, Calif. March 25SOUTHMemphis, Tenn.March 26EASTNew YorkMarch 26NCAA TOURNAMENT Tulsa, Okla. Greenville, S.C. NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP AP April 1PhoenixFINAL FOURApril 3First RoundMarch 16-17Second RoundMarch 18-19Sweet 16March 23-24Elite 8March 25-26First RoundMarch 16-17Second RoundMarch 18-19Sweet 16March 23-24Elite 8March 25-26First FourMarch 14-15 Dayton, Ohio 16 Mt St. MaryÂs 67 16 New Orleans 66 11 Providence 71 11 USC 75 16 N.C. Central 63 16 UC Davis 67 11 Kansas St. 95 11 Wake Forest 88 March 16-17 West Virginia 16 9 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 1 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 2 Virginia 76 Virginia 39 Florida 80 Florida 65 East Tenn. St. 65 Gonzaga 66 Gonzaga 79 Gonzaga Northwestern 68 Northwestern 73 Vanderbilt 66 Notre Dame 60 Notre Dame 71 Princeton 58 West Virginia 86 West Virginia 83 Bucknell 80 Minnesota 72 Middle Tenn. 81 Middle Tenn. 65 Butler 76 Butler 74 Winthrop 64 UNC Wilmington 71 So. Dakota St. 46 Villanova 76 Villanova 62 Mt St. MaryÂs 56 Purdue 80 Purdue 80 Vermont 70 Maryland 65 Xavier 76 Xavier 91 Saint MaryÂs 85 Saint MaryÂs 60 VCU 77 Wisconsin 84 Wisconsin 65 Virginia Tech 74 Iowa St. 84 Iowa St. 76 Nevada 73 Florida St. 86 Florida St. 66 FGCU 80 Arizona 100 Arizona 69 Arizona North Dakota 82 SMU 65 USC 66 USC 78 Baylor 91 Baylor 82 Baylor New Mex. St. 73 Creighton 72 Rhode Island 84 Rhode Island 72 Oregon 93 Oregon 75 Oregon Iona 77 Michigan 92 Michigan 73 Oklahoma St. 91 Louisville 78 Louisville 69 Jacksonville St. 63 North Carolina 103 Texas So. 64 Arkansas 77 North Carolina 72 North Carolina Arkansas 65 Seton Hall 71 Duke 87 Duke 81 Troy 65 Kansas 100 Kansas 90 Kansas UC Davis 62 Cincinnati 75 Cincinnati 67 Kansas St. 61 Dayton 58 Wichita St. 64 Wichita St. 62 South Carolina 93 South Carolina 88 South Carolina Marquette 73 Miami 58 Michigan St. 78 Michigan St. 70 UCLA 97 UCLA 79 UCLA Kent St. 80 Kentucky 79 Kentucky 65 N. Kentucky 70 Wisconsin Florida Butler Purdue Michigan Kentucky Xavier 1171393
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** disappointed.ÂŽUConn held Syracuse without a field goal for more than 3 minutes early in the first quarter and used a 9-0 run to build an 18-7 lead. The Huskies hit 12 of their first 18 shots and led 28-11 after a fast-break bucket at the first-quarter buzzer by Crystal Dangerfield. A 3-pointer by Nurse gave UConn its first 20-point lead at 31-11 and another pushed the lead to 30 at 55-25. Nurse, who missed the final four games of the reg-ular season with a stress injury in her right ankle, had eight 3-pointers and 26 points by halftime and the Huskies led 57-29. Her ninth 3-pointer, a bank shot, put UConn up 66-37 in the third quarter and tied her with PurdueÂs Courtney Moses, who had nine in the 2012 tournament.ÂOnce you see one or two go in the net, you shoot it with confidence,ÂŽ she said. ÂConfidence is half the battle.ÂŽBRIDGEPORT REGIONOREGON 74, DUKE 65: Ruthy Hebard had 20 points and 15 rebounds, and Oregon earned its “ rst Sweet 16 berth by upsetting Duke. Maite Cazorla added 17 points and Lexi Bando “ nished with 14 points to help Oregon (22-13) become the “ rst No. 10 seed in a decade to reach the round of 16. The Ducks, in their “ rst tournament since 2005, had never advanced past the second round in their 12 previous appearances. Now theyÂre on to Bridgeport, Connecticut, to take on third-seeded Maryland (32-2) in a regional semi“ nal. Lexie Brown scored 25 points for the second-seeded Blue Devils (28-6), who have been upset at home in the tournamentÂs second round twice since 2014. They played without guard Kyra Lambert, who tore her left anterior cruciate ligament in the “ rst round against Hampton.OKLAHOMA CITY REGIONLOUISVILLE 75, TENNESSEE 64: Asia Durr scored 23 points, Mariya Moore made all “ ve 3-pointers for 19 points and Louisville beat Tennessee. MooreÂs perimeter shooting provided a lift on a night that fourth-seeded Louisville had to work hard late to “ nish 44 percent from the “ eld. She scored the Cardinals “ rst eight points of the fourth quarter with back-to-back 3s for a 54-47 lead before Durr followed with seven of their next eight points to make it 62-51 with 4:07 remaining. Durr also became the 28th Louisville player to reach 1,000 career points. Fifth-seeded Tennessee got within “ ve but no closer as Louisville earned its “ rst Sweet 16 berth in two years and seventh overall under coach Jeff Walz. The Cardinals will face the Baylor-California winner on Friday in the Oklahoma City Region semi“ nal. Jaime Nared had 28 points and 11 rebounds for Tennessee (2012), which shot 33 percent in losing its “ rst second-round tournament game in program history. Diamond DeShields had 15. BAYLOR 86, CALIFORNIA 46: Alexis Prince and Nina Davis each scored 16 points and the Baylor women are going to the Sweet 16 for the ninth year in a row after a win over California. Davis, one of four Baylor seniors, also had six rebounds and “ ve assists in her last game at the Ferrell Center, where the top-seeded Lady Bears have won 12 consecutive NCAA Tournament games. Prince added “ ve rebounds and six assists, while Kristy Wallace had 10 points and nine assists. Baylor (32-3) took control with a 13-0 run in the second quarter, including freshman Natalie Chou hitting consecutive 3-pointers in a 17-second span during which coach Kim Mulkey emphatically pumped her “ sts. After a California timeout and then a missed shot, Prince hit a runending jumper that put Baylor up 35-16. Kristine Anigwe had 20 points and 11 rebounds for ninth-seeded California (20-14). WASHINGTON 108, OKLAHOMA 82: Kelsey Plum scored 38 points, adding another record to her career resume, and No. 3 seed Washington raced past No. 6 seed Oklahoma to earn a berth in NCAA Tournament regional semi“ nals. The Huskies (29-5) are going to the Sweet 16 in consecutive years for the “ rst time in school history, thanks to an offensive showcase against the Sooners where Plum didnÂt do it alone. Plum passed another Jackie Stiles record to become the all-time single-season scoring leader, having already topped Stiles all-time career scoring mark last month. Plum now has 1,080 points this season. But she found others and her teammates regularly hit big shots after Plum drew attention, with a career-high 11 assists. The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 C3 The Associated PressJust in time, West Virgin-ia's Bob Huggins is getting the most out of his top three guards. Jevon Carter, Daxter Miles Jr. and Tarik Phillip were ter-rific on offense in a win over Notre Dame on Saturday that propelled the Mountain-eers into the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.The trio combined for 54 of West Virginia's 83 points against the Fighting Irish, going 17 of 29 from the floor, including 7 of 10 3-pointers.They'll take the fourth-seeded Mountaineers (28-8) into the regional semifinals on Thursday against top-seeded Gonzaga (34-1) in San Jose, California. "Everybody's just stepping up for us as the right time," Carter said.It hadn't been that way for parts of the season.Carter has overcome some cold shooting to emerge as the team's leading scorer. He's been in double figures in 11 of his last 12 games, reaching 24 points three times, including against Notre Dame.Miles missed the first three games with an illness. The low point came in December when he was ejected after elbowing Virginia's Isaiah Wilkins in the face. He scored in single digits in two-thirds of the regular-season games and spent several as a backup late in the season.Phillip went through a 2-for-21 shooting stretch over three games in late February.All three had struggles in the Big 12 tournament, when West Virginia lost to Iowa State in the championship game.A week later, they found a rhythm together."They put an enormous amount of time in," Huggins said. "They're in the practice facility 12 months out of the year. It's great when you don't have to kind of tell people to go in there. You can see it."Tarik came in not a very good shooter. He's a pretty good shooter now. J.C. came in and was not real consistent. He's pretty consistent now. They deserve a lot of credit. They want to get better and they want to win."Carter, Miles and Phillip have helped make up for the departure of the Mountaineers' top two scorers from last season, when West Virginia lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament to Stephen F. Austin.Now West Virginia heads to the West Coast, which doesn't seem to faze the Mountaineers considering their Big 12 road trips often consist of 1,000-mile trips or longer one way. "I would think they learned a lot from a year ago," Huggins said. "Our practices have been better. Our focus has been better. They've played in big games in really hard environ-ments and played well. That part of it I don't think bothers them." West Virginia's 28 wins are the second-most under Hug-gins to the 2010 team that went to the Final Four.West Virginia guards getting it doneWest Virginia guard Jevon Carter (2) drives to the basket against Notre Dame. [AP PHOTO/BILL WIPPERT] one career victory, but many believe he would have more if not for his own mistakes and his desire to not ruffle any feathers. Larson wants to run clean, so when he found himself bottled with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. on the restart Sunday, he didnÂt force the issue.Afterward, he admitted letting this win slip away "stings" but he wasnÂt very hard on himself because itÂs hard to be disappointed when youÂre the points leader.Larson is part of the rapidly changing face of NASCAR, in which young drivers are pushing toward the front and passed the veterans. Behind him in the stand-ings are Chase Elliott (third), Joey Logano (fifth) and Ryan Blaney (sixth). At 26, Logano is the oldest of the bunch. Everything is greatKyle Busch dropped the phrase "everything is great" in response to every single question he was asked at Phoenix about a meeting with NASCAR to discuss a scuffle with Logano. Then he said it again Sunday after finishing third in a race he likely would have won if not for a late cau-tion brought out by „ Logano.His response channeled the attitude Marshawn Lynch often took in the NFL, when he showed up to interviews only so he wouldnÂt get fined. But Busch is putting "every-thing is great" to a good cause.Busch said Monday that his charity will sell T-shirts with "Everything is Great" across the front. The shirts are $22 „ the same number as LoganoÂs car „ and thereÂs no shipping or handling. Busch might have been in a lousy mood at Phoe-nix, but heÂs at least trying to use it now to raise some money. Big nishesThere has been so much attention on the fast starts of Larson, Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney and Austin Dillon that somewhat overlooked through the first NASCAR month have been the Joe Gibbs Racing rookies. NASCARContinued from C1The Associated PressJeff Teague scored 21 points, Paul George added 19 and the Indiana Pacers beat the Utah Jazz 107-100 on Monday night.Indiana continued its trend of following a loss with a win „ failing to do either in consec-utive games since Feb. 16. The win helped the Pacers maintain the No. 6 spot in the Eastern Conference playoff chase.Former Butler star Gordon Hayward led the Jazz with a career-high 38 points. Rudy Gobert had 16 points and 14 rebounds on the final stop of a four-game trip.Utah looked sluggish all night, and the Pacers took advantage.HORNETS 105, HAWKS 90: Nicolas Batum and Kemba Walker each had 16 points and the Charlotte Hornets handed the slumping Atlanta Hawks their fourth straight loss. The Hornets scored 17 points off 18 turnovers and led by as many as 23 in the fourth quarter. Frank Kaminsky provided more strong play off the bench for Charlotte with 14 points and “ ve assists. The 7-footer came into the game averaging 16.9 points, 5.9 rebounds and 2.3 assists in his previous 15 games. Behind Kaminsky, CharlotteÂs bench outscored the Hawks 43-22. Charlotte pulled within three games of eighth-place Detroit in the Eastern Conference. The Hawks played without All-Star forward Paul Millsap and top reserve guard Kent Bazemore and never got in sync on offense. MAGIC 112, 76ERS 109, OT: Nikola Vucevic had 26 points and 13 rebounds, Evan Fournier scored 19 points and Orlando beat Philadelphia in overtime. Orlando overcame a 17-point second-half de“ cit. Fournier led the way in OT with eight points, and Terrence Ross had four points in the extra session and 15 overall. The Magic also beat Phoenix on Friday and have consecutive wins for the “ rst time since December. Ross gave the Magic a 106-104 lead on a jumper with 34.7 seconds left in overtime and hit two free throws with 17.4 seconds remaining. Fournier and Jodie Meeks then put the game away with four straight free throws. Richaun Holmes and Robert Covington led the 76ers with 24 points each. CELTICS 110, WIZARDS 102: Isaiah Thomas scored 25 points after missing the previous two games with a bruised right knee, leading Boston to a victory over Washington in another testy matchup between two of the top teams in the Eastern Conference. Avery Bradley added 20 points and nine rebounds for Boston, which moved 2 games ahead of the Wizards for second place in the East. The Celtics trail “ rst-place Cleveland by two games. Jae Crowder and Al Horford each scored 16 with nine boards. Bradley Beal led Washington with 19 points, and John Wall had 16 points with eight assists. ROCKETS 125, NUGGETS 124: James Harden drove the length of the ” oor for a layup with 2.4 seconds left to lift Houston over Denver. Harden had 39 points, 11 assists and was three rebounds shy of his 20th triple-double of the season. Houston outlasted Denver in a duel between the secondand third-highest scoring teams in the NBA. Harden likely saved the game for Houston, too, when he batted down an inbounds pass to Mason Plumlee near the basket following his layup. Will Barton gave Denver a one-point lead on a three-point play with less than a minute left. On the following possession, Harden missed a layup, but he got it back on the other end of the ” oor when he rebounded Jameer NelsonÂs air-ball. Harden took the ball down the court and scored on a “ nger-roll layup. WARRIORS 111, THUNDER 95: Klay Thompson scored 34 points to help the Golden State Warriors beat the Oklahoma City Thunder in a heated matchup “ lled with trash talking, physical play and technical fouls. It was Golden StateÂs second visit to Oklahoma City since former Thunder star Kevin Durant signed a free agent contract with the rival Warriors last summer. Durant has been out since February with a left knee injury and sat on the bench with his team. Even with Durant out, the negative energy from the “ rst meeting was still there. Stephen Curry exchanged shoves with Oklahoma CityÂs Semaj Christon just before halftime, and both were issued technical fouls. Oklahoma CityÂs Russell Westbrook and Golden StateÂs Draymond Green also got technical for their roles in the skirmish. The Warriors were overpowering in this one, leading by as many as 27 points while completing a sweep of the four-game season series. Curry scored 23 points for the Warriors, who won their fourth straight and halted Oklahoma CityÂs win streak at “ ve games. Westbrook scored 47 points the last time the teams met in Oklahoma City. This time, he had 15 points on 4-of-16 shooting.Pacers hit all right notes in victory over road-weary Jazz NCAAContinued from C1
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** C4 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald 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 12:20 p.m., Tampa Bay 11:25 a.m., Santa Anita 2:30 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 Â… (Ext. 180) Open 9 a.m. to 3 a.m. Monday through Friday and 24 hours on weekends and holidays. LOCATION Â… Intersection of State 79 and State 20. INFORMATION Â… 234-3943. ODDS PREGAME.COM LINENATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATIONTodayFavorite Line O/U Underdog at Toronto 7 201 Chicago Detroit 5 215 at Brooklyn at Miami Off Off Phoenix at New Orleans 2 205 Memphis Golden State 4 209 at Dallas San Antonio 5 205 at Minnesota at Portland 5 216 Milwaukee LA Clippers 8 221 at LA LakersCOLLEGE BASKETBALL TOURNAMENTSTodayFavorite Line Underdog at Mississippi 5 Georgia Tech at TCU 7 Richmond Wednesday at Texas State 5 IdahoThursdayKansas 5 Purdue Michigan 1 Oregon Gonzaga 3 West Virginia Arizona 7 XavierFridayFlorida 2 Wisconsin Baylor 3 South Carolina UCLA 1 Kentucky North Carolina 7 ButlerNATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUEToday Favorite Line Underdog Line at Washington -170 Calgary +158 Pittsburgh -183 at Buffalo +168 NY Rangers -145 at New Jersey +135 at Boston Off Ottawa Off at Montreal -230 Detroit +210 at Florida -150 Carolina +140 at Tampa Bay Off Arizona Off at Winnipeg -140 Philadelphia +130 at Chicago -285 Vancouver +255 at Minnesota -137 San Jose +127 St. Louis -190 at Colorado +175Updated odds available at Pregame.com HOCKEY NHLEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Montreal 72 41 23 8 90 199 180 Ottawa 71 39 24 8 86 188 185 Boston 72 38 28 6 82 207 192 Toronto 71 33 23 15 81 216 210 Tampa Bay 71 34 28 9 77 194 197 Florida 71 31 29 11 73 180 204 Buffalo 73 30 31 12 72 182 211 Detroit 71 28 32 11 67 178 212 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Columbus 71 47 18 6 100 228 164 x-Washington 71 46 17 8 100 228 159 Pittsburgh 71 45 17 9 99 249 198 N.Y. Rangers 72 45 24 3 93 231 189 N.Y. Islanders 71 33 26 12 78 210 218 Philadelphia 71 33 30 8 74 186 213 Carolina 70 30 27 13 73 182 203 New Jersey 71 26 33 12 64 164 209WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Chicago 72 47 20 5 99 218 178 Minnesota 71 43 22 6 92 232 178 Nashville 72 36 25 11 83 212 202 St. Louis 71 38 28 5 81 197 193 Winnipeg 72 32 33 7 71 217 230 Dallas 71 28 33 10 66 195 233 Colorado 71 20 48 3 43 138 234 Paci“ c Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA San Jose 71 42 22 7 91 196 165 Anaheim 72 38 23 11 87 186 178 Calgary 72 41 27 4 86 201 193 Edmonton 71 38 24 9 85 207 186 Los Angeles 71 34 30 7 75 175 179 Vancouver 71 28 34 9 65 161 207 Arizona 72 26 37 9 61 173 230 2 points for win, 1 point for OT/shootout loss; x-clinched playoff spotSundayÂs GamesColumbus 4, New Jersey 1 Pittsburgh 4, Florida 0 Winnipeg 5, Minnesota 4 Chicago 6, Colorado 3 Philadelphia 4, Carolina 3, OT Montreal 4, Ottawa 1 Calgary 5, Los Angeles 2MondayÂs GamesBuffalo 2, Detroit 1 Toronto 4, Boston 2 Nashville 3, Arizona 1 San Jose at Dallas, late Los Angeles at Edmonton, lateTodayÂs GamesOttawa at Boston, 6 p.m. Calgary at Washington, 6 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 6 p.m. Carolina at Florida, 6:30 p.m. Arizona at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Detroit at Montreal, 6:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Winnipeg, 7 p.m. San Jose at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at Chicago, 7:30 p.m. St. Louis at Colorado, 8 p.m. PRO BASKETBALL NBAAll Times Eastern EASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct. GB Boston 45 26 .634 „ Toronto 41 29 .586 3 New York 27 42 .391 17 Philadelphia 26 44 .371 18 Brooklyn 13 56 .188 31 Southeast Division W L Pct. GB Washington 42 28 .600 „ Atlanta 37 33 .529 5 Miami 34 36 .486 8 Charlotte 31 39 .443 11 Orlando 26 45 .366 16 Central Division W L Pct. GB x-Cleveland 46 23 .667 „ Indiana 36 34 .514 10 Milwaukee 34 35 .493 12 Detroit 34 36 .486 12 Chicago 33 37 .471 13WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct. GB x-San Antonio 53 16 .768 „ x-Houston 49 22 .690 5 Memphis 40 30 .571 13 Dallas 30 39 .435 23 New Orleans 29 41 .414 24 Northwest Division W L Pct. GB Utah 43 28 .606 „ Oklahoma City 40 30 .571 2 Denver 33 37 .471 9 Portland 32 37 .464 10 Minnesota 28 41 .406 14 Paci“ c Division W L Pct. GB z-Golden State 56 14 .800 „ L.A. Clippers 41 29 .586 15 Sacramento 27 43 .386 29 Phoenix 22 48 .314 34 L.A. Lakers 20 50 .286 36 x-clinched playoff berth; z-clinched division titleSundayÂs GamesDallas 111, Brooklyn 104 Philadelphia 105, Boston 99 Detroit 112, Phoenix 95 New Orleans 123, Minnesota 109 Portland 115, Miami 104 Toronto 116, Indiana 91 San Antonio 118, Sacramento 102 Cleveland 125, L.A. Lakers 120MondayÂs GamesCharlotte 105, Atlanta 90 Indiana 107, Utah 100 Orlando 112, Philadelphia 109, OT Boston 110, Washington 102 Golden State 111, Oklahoma City 95 Houston 125, Denver 124 New York at L.A. Clippers, lateTodayÂs GamesChicago at Toronto, 6 p.m. Detroit at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m. Phoenix at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Memphis at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Golden State at Dallas, 7:30 p.m. San Antonio at Minnesota, 8:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Portland, 9 p.m. L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m AUTO RACING NASCAR MONSTER ENERGY CUPCAMPING WORLD 500 Race Sunday at Phoenix Raceway, Phoenix(Start position in parentheses)1. (22) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 314 laps, 0 rating, 42 points. 2. (4) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 53. 3. (9) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 314, 0, 47. 4. (21) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 314, 0, 33. 5. (6) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 314, 0, 46. 6. (23) Kevin Harvick, Ford, 314, 0, 32. 7. (27) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 314, 0, 30. 8. (8) Erik Jones, Toyota, 314, 0, 33. 9. (14) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 38. 10. (19) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 314, 0, 29. 11. (16) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 314, 0, 26. 12. (7) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 42. 13. (13) Clint Bowyer, Ford, 314, 0, 24. 14. (3) Dale Earnhardt Jr, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 24. 15. (5) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 33. 16. (15) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 21. 17. (28) Aric Almirola, Ford, 314, 0, 20. 18. (17) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 19. 19. (24) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 314, 0, 18. 20. (10) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 17. 21. (18) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 16. 22. (26) Danica Patrick, Ford, 314, 0, 15. 23. (2) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 314, 0, 21. 24. (25) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 13. 25. (11) Kurt Busch, Ford, 314, 0, 12. 26. (20) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 11. 27. (33) Chris Buescher, Chevrolet, 314, 0, 10. 28. (29) Landon Cassill, Ford, 313, 0, 9. 29. (30) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford, 313, 0, 8. 30. (35) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 312, 0, 7. 31. (1) Joey Logano, Ford, accident, 307, 0, 16. 32. (39) Timmy Hill, Chevrolet, 307, 0, 0. 33. (37) Derrike Cope, Chevrolet, 307, 0, 4. 34. (32) Cole Whitt, Ford, accident, 256, 0, 3. 35. (34) David Ragan, Ford, accident, 204, 0, 2. 36. (36) Gray Gaulding, Toyota, accident, 201, 0, 1. 37. (12) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, accident, 190, 0, 1. 38. (31) Corey Lajoie, Toyota, accident, 115, 0, 1. 39. (38) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Chevrolet, transmission, 9, 0, 1. BASEBALL MLBSPRING TRAINING All Times Central AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. New York 18 6 .750 Seattle 15 9 .625 Minnesota 13 8 .619 Oakland 11 9 .550 Los Angeles 12 10 .545 Baltimore 12 10 .545 Tampa Bay 11 10 .524 Chicago 12 11 .522 Kansas City 12 11 .522 Cleveland 11 12 .478 Boston 11 12 .478 Detroit 11 13 .458 Houston 9 12 .429 Texas 9 13 .409 Toronto 6 14 .300NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. Pittsburgh 15 7 .682 St. Louis 14 7 .667 Milwaukee 13 10 .565 Arizona 11 10 .524 Colorado 12 11 .522 Los Angeles 13 12 .520 Cincinnati 12 12 .500 New York 12 13 .480 Washington 9 10 .474 Chicago 9 11 .450 Philadelphia 9 12 .429 San Francisco 10 14 .417 Miami 7 12 .368 San Diego 7 14 .333 Atlanta 6 17 .261SundayÂs GamesDetroit 7, Baltimore 1 Minnesota 13, Boston 8 N.Y. Yankees 6, Houston 4 Tampa Bay 8, Philadelphia 0 St. Louis 5, Atlanta 2 Toronto 11, Pittsburgh 11 Washington 10, Miami (ss) 4 Miami (ss) 7, N.Y. Mets 5 L.A. Dodgers 3, Japan 2 Arizona 4, Cleveland 4 Milwaukee 6, San Francisco 4 Texas 3, Seattle 2 Cincinnati 9, San Diego 4 Colorado 9, Oakland 2 Chicago White Sox 11, L.A. Angels 2 Kansas City 6, Chicago Cubs 2MondayÂs GamesBoston 7, Baltimore 4 Miami 9, Atlanta 3 Detroit 5, N.Y. Mets 1 N.Y. Yankees 9, Washington 3 Pittsburgh 5, Tampa Bay 4 Minnesota 8, Toronto 2 Cincinnati 10, Kansas City 6 Cleveland 14, L.A. Dodgers 5 San Francisco 3, Chicago White Sox 2 Chicago Cubs 9, Colorado 6 St. Louis 12, Houston 6 Arizona vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz., late Texas vs. San Diego at Peoria, Ariz., lateTodayÂs GamesAtlanta vs. Washington at West Palm Beach, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Houston vs. Miami at Jupiter, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Philadelphia vs. Minnesota at Fort Myers, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton, Fla., 12:05 p.m. Toronto vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla., 12:05 p.m. L.A. Angels vs. Cincinnati at Goodyear, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. L.A. Dodgers at Glendale, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. San Diego vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, Ariz., 3:05 p.m. Kansas City vs. Arizona at Scottsdale, Ariz., 3:10 p.m. Boston vs. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa, Fla., 5:35 p.m. Chicago White Sox vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., 8:05 p.m. Oakland vs. Seattle at Peoria, Ariz., 9:10 p.m.WORLD BASEBALL CLASSICCHAMPIONSHIP ROUND At Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles Semi“ nals MondayNetherlands vs. Puerto Rico, lateTodayJapan vs. United States, 8 p.m.Championship WednesdaySemi“ nal winners, 8 p.m. TRANSACTIONS BASEBALLAmerican LeagueTAMPA BAY RAYS „ Agreed to terms with OF Kevin Kiermaier on a six-year contract extension through 2022.National LeagueCOLORADO ROCKIES „ Reassigned RHP C.C. Lee and OFs Noel Cuevas and Mike Tauchman to their minor league camp. NEW YORK METS „ Assigned OF Tim Tebow to Columbia (SAL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES „ Optioned RHP Pat Light to Indianapolis (IL). Reassigned LHP Jared Lakind and RHPs Casey Sadler and Angel Sanchez to their minor league camp. WASHINGTON NATIONALS „ Reassigned LHP Braulio Lara, C Spencer Kieboom, INFs Neftali Soto and Grant Green to their minor league camp.American AssociationFARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS „ Released INF JD Pulfer. LAREDO LEMURS „ Signed RHP Tim Holmes. LINCOLN SALTDOGS „ Released RHP Daniel Carela.Atlantic LeagueSUGAR LAND SKEETERS „ Re-signed RHPs Michael Nix and Sean Gleason and INF Josh Prince to one-year contracts. Can-Am League NEW JERSEY JACKALS „ Signed C Adam Martin. QUEBEC CAPITALES „ Released LHP Sheldon McDonald and RHP Jasvir Rakkar.Frontier LeagueEVANSVILLE OTTERS „ Signed INF Josh Allen to a contract extension. JOLIET SLAMMERS „ Signed OF Juan Silva. LAKE ERIE CRUSHERS „ Signed INF Max Casper to a contract extension. RIVER CITY RASCALS „ Sent LHP Michael Gunn and 1B Vin Guglietti to Pittsburg (PA) to complete previous trades. SCHAUMBURG BOOMERS „ Signed SS Josh Gardnier. TRAVERSE CITY BEACH BUMS „ Signed LHP John Havird.BASKETBALLNational Basketball AssociationCHICAGO BULLS „ Assigned G Cameron Payne to Windy City (NBADL). MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES „ Assigned C Deyonta Davis to Iowa (NBADL). WomenÂs National Basketball Association ATLANTA DREAM „ Signed G Darxia Morris to a training camp contract. COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA TOURNAMENTEAST REGIONAL Second Round Sunday At Bon Secours Wellness Arena, Greenville, S.C.South Carolina 88, Duke 81At BOK Center, Tulsa, Okla.Baylor 82, Southern Cal 78At Madison Square Garden, New York Regional Semi“ nals FridaySouth Carolina (24-10) vs. Baylor (27-7), 6:29 p.m. Wisconsin (27-9) vs. Florida (26-8), 9 p.m.Regional Championship March 26Semi“ nal winnersSOUTH REGIONAL Second Round Sunday At Bon Secours Wellness Arena, Greenville, S.C.North Carolina 72, Arkansas 65At Bankers Life Fieldhouse, IndianapolisKentucky 65, Wichita State 62At Golden 1 Center, Sacramento, Calif.UCLA 79, Cincinnati 67At FedEx Forum, Memphis, Tenn. Regional Semi“ nals FridayButler (25-8) vs. North Carolina (29-7), 6:09 p.m. Kentucky (31-5) vs. UCLA (31-4), 8:40 p.m.Regional Championship March 26Semi“ nal winnersMIDWEST REGIONAL Second Round Sunday At Bankers Life Fieldhouse, IndianapolisMichigan 73, Louisville 69At BOK Center, Tulsa, Okla.Kansas 90, Michigan State 70At Golden 1 Center, Sacramento, Calif.Oregon 75, Rhode Island 72At The Sprint Center, Kansas City, Mo. Regional Semi“ nals ThursdayMichigan (26-11) vs. Oregon (31-5), 6:09 p.m. Purdue (27-7) vs. Kansas (30-4), 8:40 p.m.Regional Championship March 25Semi“ nal winnersWEST REGIONAL Second Round Saturday At KeyBank Center, Buffalo, N.Y.West Virginia 83, Notre Dame 71At Amway Center, Orlando, Fla.Xavier 91, Florida State 66At Vivint Smart Home Arena, Salt Lake CityGonzaga 79, Northwestern 73 Arizona 69, Saint MaryÂs 60At SAP Center, San Jose, Calif. Regional Semi“ nals ThursdayGonzaga (34-1) vs. West Virginia (28-8), 6:39 p.m. Xavier (23-13) vs. Arizona (32-4), 9:10 p.m.Regional Championship March 25Semi“ nal winnersFINAL FOUR At Univ. of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Ariz. National Semi“ nals April 1East champion vs. West champion South champion vs. Midwest championNational Championship April 3Semi“ nal winnersNATIONAL INVITATION TOURNAMENT First Round March 14Illinois 82, Valparaiso 57 Mississippi 91, Monmouth 83 Oakland 74, Clemson 69 Georgia Tech 75, Indiana 63 Colorado State 81, College of Charleston 74 Richmond 71, Alabama 64 Boise St. 73, Utah 68 CS Bakers“ eld 73, California 66 UNC-Greensboro at Syracuse, ppd.March 15Syracuse 90, UNC-Greensboro 77 Belmont 78, Georgia 69 UCF 79, Colorado 74 Akron 78, Houston 75 TCU 66, Fresno St. 59 Iowa 87, South Dakota 75 Illinois State 85, UC Irvine 71 Texas-Arlington 105, BYU 89Second Round SaturdayMississippi 85, Syracuse 80SundayGeorgia Tech 71, Belmont 57 TCU 94, Iowa 92, OT Richmond 87, Oakland 83MondayUCF 63, Illinois State 62 Texas-Arlington 85, Akron 69 Illinois 71, Boise State 56 CS Bakers“ eld (23-9) at Colorado St. (24-11), lateQuarter“ nals TodayTCU (21-15) vs. Richmond (22-12), 7 p.m. Mississippi (22-13) vs. Georgia Tech (19-15), 9 p.m.WednesdayCS Bakers“ eld-Colorado State winner vs. TexasArlington (27-8), TBA UCF (23-11) vs. Illinois (20-14), TBAWOMENÂS BASKETBALL NCAA TOURNAMENTBRIDGEPORT REGIONAL Second Round Sunday At College Park, Md.Maryland 83, West Virginia 56Monday At Storrs, Conn.UConn 94, Syracuse 64At Durham, N.C.Oregon 74, Duke 65At Los AngelesUCLA (24-8) vs. Texas A&M (22-11), lateRegional Semi“ nals March 25 At Bridgeport, Conn.UConn (34-0) vs. UCLA-Texas A&M winner Maryland (32-2) vs. Oregon (22-13)Regional Championship March 27Semi“ nal winnersOKLAHOMA CITY REGIONAL Second Round Sunday At Starkville, Miss.Mississippi State 92, DePaul 71Monday At Louisville, Ky.Louisville 75, Tennessee 64At SeattleWashington 108, Oklahoma 82At Waco, TexasBaylor 86, California 46Regional Semi“ nals Friday At Oklahoma CityBaylor (32-3) vs. Louisville (29-7) Mississippi State (31-4) vs. Washington (29-5)Regional Championship March 26Semi“ nal winnersLEXINGTON REGIONAL Second Round Sunday At Lexington, Ky.Ohio State 82, Kentucky 68At Austin, TexasTexas 84, N.C. State 80At South Bend, Ind.Notre Dame 88, Purdue 82, OT Monday At Manhattan, Kan.Stanford 69, Kansas State 48Regional Semi“ nals Friday At Lexington, Ky.Notre Dame (32-3) vs. Ohio State (28-6) Texas (25-8) vs. Stanford (30-5)Regional Championship March 26Semi“ nal winnersSTOCKTON REGIONAL Second Round Sunday At Columbia, S.C.South Carolina 71, Arizona State 68At Tallahassee, Fla.Florida State 77, Missouri 55At Corvallis, Ore.Oregon State 64, Creighton 52Monday At Coral Gables, Fla.Quinnipiac 85, Miami 78Regional Semi“ nals March 25South Carolina (29-4) vs. Quinnipiac (29-6) Florida State (27-6) vs. Oregon State (31-4)Regional Championship March 27Semi“ nal winnersFINAL FOUR At Dallas National Semi“ nals March 31Bridgeport winner vs. Oklahoma City winner Lexington winner vs. Stockton winnerNational Championship April 2Semi“ nal winnersWOMENÂS NITFirst Round March 15Little Rock 72, Southern Miss 62March 16Georgia Tech 71, Jacksonville 55 UCF 73, Stetson 53 Michigan 67, Kent State 60 Wright State 66, Central Michigan 64 Wake Forest 71, Bethune-Cookman 42 Indiana 71, Ball State 58 Grambling State 78, Mississippi 75 Iowa 95, Missouri State 74 South Dakota 78, North Dakota 55 Abilene Christian 66, Oklahoma State 56 Saint Louis 62, IUPUI 57 Tulane 62, UT Arlington 53 Alabama 81, Mercer 57 South Dakota State 94, Northern Illinois 84 Wyoming 68, Seattle 52 Colorado 66, UNLV 52 Washington State 72, BYU 64 Colorado State 80, Saint MaryÂs 68, OT Middle Tennessee 67, Morehead State 58FridayVillanova 59, Princeton 53 St. JohnÂs 72, Sacred Heart 43 Penn State 74, Ohio 65 Fordham 60, Georgetown 49 Navy 61, George Washington 51, OT Virginia Tech 76, Rider 62 Drexel 70, Duquesne 47 James Madison 80, Radford 59 Virginia 62, Saint JosephÂs 56 Harvard 69, New Hampshire 56 SMU 75, Louisiana Tech 70, OT UC Davis 72, Utah 62Second Round SaturdayMichigan 71, Wright State 66 Iowa 78, South Dakota 73 Washington State 68, Wyoming 67, OTSundayIndiana 71, Saint Louis 53 St. JohnÂs 60, Harvard 55 Villanova 56, Drexel 51 James Madison 61, Virginia 55 Virginia Tech 73, Navy 62 Penn State 70, Fordham 51 Colorado 81, South Dakota State 75, OT Alabama 55, Little Rock 53 Middle Tennessee 73, Wake Forest 66 UC Davis 58, Colorado State 57 Georgia Tech 63, UCF 51 Tulane 66, Grambling State 49MondaySMU 59, Abilene Christian 52Third Round ThursdaySt. JohnÂs at Michigan, 5 p.m. Middle Tennessee at Georgia Tech, 6 p.m. Virginia Tech at Penn State 6 p.m. Villanova at James Madison, 6 p.m. SMU at Indiana, 6 p.m. Colorado at Iowa, 7 p.m. Tulane at Alabama, 7 p.m. UC Davis at Washington State, 9 p.m. SCOREBOARD ON THE AIR AREA EVENTS BaseballMosley at Sarasota tournament Bozeman vs. Santa Fe at Providence tournament Panama City Invitational at Bay, Good Pasture vs. Jonesboro 1 p.m., Arnold vs. Har-Ber 4 p.m., Overton vs. Bay 7 p.m.Juco BasketballNWF State vs. winner of Jones County/Caldwell Tech in NJCAA Sweet 16, 4:30 p.m.Flag FootballNiceville at FWB, 6:30 p.m. Crestview at Choctaw, 7 p.m.BaseballWest Florida Tech at Crestview, 6 p.m. Choctaw at Niceville, 6 p.m. Baker at Northview, 6:30 p.m. FWB at Escambia, 6:30 p.m.SoftballProvidence (Jacksonville) at Walton, 5 p.m. Glenwood at Navarre, 5 p.m. Choctaw at Baker, 6 p.m. Crestview at Niceville, 6 p.m. Rocky Bayou at Pensacola Christian, 6 p.m.TennisChiles at Niceville 2:30 p.m. Track and FieldFreeport at South Walton, 3 p.m. The Associated PressJack Eichel and Matt Moulson each scored a power-play goal in the first two periods, and the Buffalo Sabres held off the Detroit Red Wings for a 2-1 victory Monday night.Robin Lehner made 34 saves for the Sabres.Tomas Tatar scored in his third straight game, pulling Detroit within a goal midway through the second.The Red Wings had power plays early and late in the third period but failed to take advantage of their opportunities to tie the game, falling to 0 for 4 with an extra skater.Petr Mrazek stopped 28 shots for Detroit. Buffalo, which hasnÂt made the playoffs since 2011, has won two straight for the first time in more than a month. The Sabres have an opportunity to pass sixth-place Florida in the Atlantic Division to end a three-year string of finishing in seventh or eighth.The last-place Red Wings, meanwhile, are five points behind Buffalo in the division and are moving closer toward being mathematically eliminated from the postseason for the first time since 1990. They had won two straight, giving them a chance to win three in a row for the first time in two months and just the third time this season.MAPLE LEAFS 4, BRUINS 2: Tyler Bozak scored the go-ahead goal on a power play with less than two minutes left and the Toronto Maple Leafs earned a victory over the Boston Bruins. The win pulled the Maple Leafs (81 points) within one point of the Bruins for third place in the Atlantic Division. Toronto, holding the “ nal wild-card position in the Eastern Conference, also has a game in hand. Morgan Rielly, William Nylander and Nazem Kadri also scored for the Maple Leafs, who swept the season series. Frederik Andersen was sharp with 32 saves, and James van Riemsdyk added two assists. David Backes and Dominic Moore scored for the Bruins. Tuukka Rask allowed two goals on 27 shots. PREDATORS 3, COYOTES 1: Ryan Ellis scored twice and Pekka Rinne made 25 saves in NashvilleÂs victory over Arizona. Viktor Arvidsson also scored for the Predators, who have won four of “ ve. Craig Smith added two assists. Oliver Ekman-Larsson had the lone goal and Mike Smith stopped 28 shots for the Coyotes, who have lost three straight.Eichel-led Sabres beat Red Wings on power-play goals „ , 1169587
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** The News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 C59 Number of Atlantic Coast Conference teams that entered the NCAA Tournament. NUMBER TO KNOW NFLHall of Famer Sayers battling dementiaKANSAS CITY, Mo. „ Relatives of Pro Football Hall of Famer Gale Sayers say the Chicago Bears legend has been diag-nosed with dementia.His wife, Ardythe Sayers, told The Kansas City Star that her 73-year-old husband was diagnosed four years ago and she blames Sayers football career. He played for the Bears from seven seasons starting in 1965 after setting records at the University of Kansas.ÂLike the doctor at the Mayo Clinic said, ÂYes, a part of this has to be on football,ÂÂŽ Ardie Sayers said at their home in Wakarusa, Indiana. ÂIt wasnÂt so much getting hit in the head. ItÂs just the shaking of the brain when they took him down with the force they play the game in.ÂŽSOCCERHoward always stayed optimisticSAN JOSE, Calif. „ As his U.S. teammates trained under cloudy skies on a brisk Bay Area morning, Tim Howard sat on the sidelines and stretched out his shoulders. He balanced on his left leg and warmed up his hips.This is the new normal for Howard, fresh off his 38th birthday and a November surgery on his right thigh to repair the adductor muscle.ÂIÂm old,ÂŽ chuckled Howard, the Americans top goalkeeper the past two World Cups. ÂThatÂs every day for me now, between now and the next three years thatÂs what every day looks like. ItÂs a process, but hopefully itÂll pay off.ÂŽHoward is expected to start for coach Bruce Arena in FridayÂs World Cup qualifier against Honduras at Avaya Stadium, home of the MLS San Jose Earthquakes, before the Americans play at Panama four days later.HOCKEYWomen: Talks with USA Hockey were productiveThe U.S. womenÂs national team says discussions with USA Hockey over an ongoing wage dispute were pro-ductive and will continue this week.The team released a statement Monday night after a lengthy meeting that included almost 20 players and top execu-tives from USA Hockey. Players announced last week theyÂd boycott the upcoming world championships in Plymouth, Michigan, unless signifi-cant progress was made toward a labor agreement.In the statement, play-ers said the goal was to reach an agreement this week that would still allow them to get to training camp and play in the tournament. Camp was set to begin Wednes-day with the tournament beginning March 31. The Associated Press The news seemed unimaginable, much as it might have 78 years ago when Yankees fans learned Lou Gehrig was diagnosed with the disease that would later bear his name. It came on a Sunday night via a more modern form of communication, a Twitter feed. Dwight Clark didnÂt need the full 140 characters to stun football fans everywhere. ÂI wanted to share some unfortunate news: I have ALS,ÂŽ Clark tweeted. The receiver beloved and lionized in the Bay Area for ÂThe CatchÂŽ now has weakness in his right hand, back and right leg. He canÂt play golf anymore, canÂt go for a run and canÂt walk any distances. That it came because of football canÂt be proved. But the player immortalized in football history by the 1982 catch on a throw from Joe Montana that won the NFC title game for the 49ers over the Dallas Cowboys has an idea that it does. It was part of a disturbing weekend for both fans of football and the players who risk their future in the sport. The same day Clark announced his diagnosis, columnist Vahe Gregorian wrote a piece in the Kansas City Star about spending seven hours at the house of Gale Sayers. Sayers, the Chicago running back considered one of the greatest NFL players ever, barely spoke during the visit. HeÂs battling dementia, and his wife said some days are better than others. Just before dinner, Gregorian wrote, Sayers went to wash his hands with carpet cleaner. ÂIt keeps you on your toes,ÂŽ Ardie Sayers said. ÂDonÂt let him out of your sight.ÂŽ ÂThis used to be a different league,ÂŽ DeMaurice Smith, head of the NFL players union said last month at the Super Bowl. ÂIf you stumbled to the sideline, somebody maybe pushed you back in.ÂŽ Still, players continue to risk their health, even knowing the possible consequences. Football players are tough guys. They have to be to survive in a sport where the toughest always come out on top. But with each new and terrible diagnosis weÂre reminded of the price our football heroes continue to pay.By Aaron BeardThe Associated PressGREENVILLE, S.C. „ The Atlantic Coast ConferenceÂs strong regular season only stood to set up a first-weekend flameout in the NCAA Tournament. The league had a record nine bids, but North Caro-lina is the only one alive in the Sweet 16. And the South RegionÂs No. 1 seed was fortunate to survive a second-round game against Arkansas to get there. Still, top seeds Gonzaga, Kansas and UNC headline a regional round featuring 12 of the top 16 seeds, two more than last season. The rest of the top confer-ences fared much better than the ACC. The Pac-12 is 8-1 and the Southeastern Conference is 7-2 so far, joining the Big 12 (8-3) and Big Ten (8-4) with three Sweet 16 teams each. HereÂs a look at the updated Final Four paths for the top remaining teams in each region: Nine to oneAnother sobering reminder of the price players paySouthThis is the only bracket with the top four seeds still alive, so the Tar Heels path looks the same as it did on Selection Sunday. UNC (29-7) needed a game-closing 12-0 run to rally past the eighth-seeded Razorbacks. Now the Tar Heels meets fourth-seeded Butler (25-8), which beat No. 1 seed Villanova twice this season. That game is the undercard to FridayÂs matchup of second-seeded Kentucky (31-5) and third-seeded UCLA (31-4) in Memphis, Tennessee. The Wildcats survived a tough “ ght with Wichita State, while the Bruins beat Cincinnati to set up a rematch of a December game won by the Bruins. ÂI donÂt know if all the other regions went chalk, but itÂs 1, 2, 3, 4 in the South,ÂŽ Bruins coach Steve Alford said. ÂSo that South Region and bracket is going to be a lot of fun.ÂŽWestThis is the only other region to have its No. 1 and No. 2 seeds both make the Sweet 16. Topseeded Gonzaga (34-1) faces fourth-seeded West Virginia (28-8) on Thursday in San Jose, California; No. 2 seed Arizona (32-4) meets 11-seed Xavier (23-13) „ the lowest-seeded team still in the “ eld after its rout of 3-seed Florida State. If seeds hold, that would set up a rematch of a December game won by the Bulldogs 69-62. But Arizona didnÂt have Allonzo Trier, who was suspended for the “ rst 19 games for performance-enhancing drugs. The matchup would still offer a Final Four breakthrough chance for GonzagaÂs Mark Few or ArizonaÂs Sean Miller, two coaches yet to get there despite a combined “ ve Elite Eight appearances. ÂI know this (team) certainly is right there, should be considered with any thatÂs ever playedÂŽ at Gonzaga, Few said. ÂThereÂs probably two or three of them that should be in that mix. Ultimately weÂre going to have to accomplish that Final Four to kind of put it to rest and all that.ÂŽMidwestThe Midwest also had three of its top four seeds reach the Sweet 16. But itÂs the bottom half of the bracket commanding the most attention with 7-seed Michigan, possibly the hottest team in the “ eld. The Wolverines (2611) had a scary moment before the Big Ten Tournament when the plane set to carry them to Washington slid off a runway during an aborted takeoff. They played the “ rst game in practice jerseys but ended up winning the title, and now have beaten Oklahoma State and 2-seed Louisville for their “ rst NCAA wins since 2014. Michigan made 16 3-pointers against the Cowboys and has made 33 of 52 shots (63.4 percent) after halftime in those two wins. ÂThatÂs been our identity in the last month and a half, “ nding different ways to win,ÂŽ leading scorer Derrick Walton Jr. said. ÂWhether itÂs the 3-ball or not, itÂs “ nding multiple different ways to win and taking what the game gives us.ÂŽ Michigan faces No. 3 seed Oregon (31-5) in Kansas City, Missouri, on Thursday. The Jayhawks (30-4) get fourth-seeded Purdue (27-7), the Big Ten regularseason champion.EastWelcome to the lone topsy-turvy bracket after losses by No. 1 overall seed Villanova and No. 2 seed Duke. Now thirdseeded Baylor (27-7) is the highest remaining seed entering a matchup with seventh-seeded South Carolina (24-10), which is in the Sweet 16 for the “ rst time in the current tournament format after hanging 65 second-half points on the preseason No. 1-ranked Blue Devils in SundayÂs 88-81 upset. The other half of FridayÂs bracket in New York features fourth-seeded Florida (26-8) against No. 8 seed Wisconsin (27-9), which upset the reigning champion Wildcats on Saturday. The Badgers are in the Sweet 16 for the sixth time in seven years behind Bronson Koenig and Nigel Hayes „ two holdovers from a run to the national-title game in 2015. ÂYou have all types of your ranking systems, statistic, analytics guys that they put,ÂŽ Hayes said. ÂThe thing is with all those algorithms, they canÂt calculate heart, will to win, toughness, desire. They canÂt put that into a formula to come out with a percentage chance to win, and thatÂs the things that we have.ÂŽACC ameout reshapes Sweet Sixteen outlook ABOVE: Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski th rows his jacket on the ” oor during the “ rst half of a second-round NCAA Tournament game against South Carolina on Sunday in Greenville, S.C. The Blue Devils lost 88-81 in an upset. [CHUCK BURTON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]RIGHT: North CarolinaÂs Joel Berry II reacts after making a 3-pointer against Arkansas during the “ rst half of a secondround game Sunday in Greenville, S.C. [RAINIER EHRHARDT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Sayers IN BRIEF T i m D a h l b e r g Tim Dahlberg SPORTS TICKER
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** The News HeraldDOTHAN, Ala. „ Carnegy Calzado hit two home runs and drove in six, start-ing pitcher Dylan Cyphert got back on track and Gulf Coast took a 15-3 victory over George Wallace in seven innings on Monday in junior college baseball.The Commodores, 23-8, are in their idle week from the Panhandle Conference and took advantage while pro-ducing a 13-hit attack to back Cyphert and reliever Jackson Cullen.Cyphert yielded three first-inning runs on a single and two doubles, but settled down and snapped a personal two-game losing streak by pitching six innings. He didnÂt allow a run or hit after the first while striking out six and walking a season-high seven. Cullen pitched a scoreless seventh.Calzado launched a grand-slam homer as the Commodores took the lead for good with five runs in the top of the second inning. He added a solo homer in the fourth and had a sacrifice fly when Gulf Coast scored six more runs in the fifth for a 13-3 cushion.The Commodores scored single runs in the sixth and seventh, the second inning their lone scoreless frame.Jacquez Koonce and Jackson Webb each had two hits and two RBIs for Gulf Coast. Jeff Omohundro had two hits and an RBI, CalzadoÂs two hits both were homers and Joe Sibeto added two hits. Alec Wisely had a hit and two RBIs.Joey Bend had a two-run double for Wallace in its three-run first inning.Gulf Coast plays a doubleheader against Spring Hill CollegeÂs junior varsity on Thursday in Mobile, Alabama. C6 Tuesday, March 21, 2017 | The News Herald The News HeraldPANAMA CITY „ The Gulf Coast softball team split two games on Saturday in the Panhandle Conference first round-robin, hosted by Northwest Florida State.The Lady Commodores, 22-11, 3-1, scored three runs in the top of the ninth inning to finally subdue Tallahassee 7-4 in their first game. Gulf Coast suffered its initial conference loss, 6-5, to Northwest Florida in its second game.That left Gulf Coast firmly in second place, two games behind conference leader Chipola which is 6-0. The Lady Indians are 39-2 and ranked No. 3 in the nation.Gulf Coast was unable to hold a 3-1 lead in its game against TCC, falling behind as the Eagles rallied for three runs in the bottom of the sixth inning when Brandie Calla-way had a two-run double.The Lady Commodores ral-lied for a run in the top of the seventh to force extra innings, however. Following a score-less eighth inning, their 15-hit attack finally wore down TCC when Kynadi Tipler blasted a three-run homer to settle the outcome.Payton Carpenter also homered for Gulf Coast and had three hits and two RBIs. Carpenter started on the mound and went five innings. She allowed four hits and one run which was unearned.Reliever Kristina Manthei also was victimized by a costly error during TCCÂs rally. She pitched four innings, allowed six hits and one earned run. Manthei was the winning pitcher.Every regular in Gulf CoastÂs lineup had at least one hit. Bayleigh Heineman hat two hits and an RBI and Annsley Brown, Payton Burton and Sam Burks also had two hits.Gulf Coast plays a doubleheader at Tallahassee on Wednesday and returns home to play Northwest Florida in a doubleheader beginning 2 p.m. Saturday at Joe Tom King Field.Lady Commodores in second placeChipola 6-0 Gulf Coast 3-1 Northwest 2-2 Pensacola 2-4 Tallahassee 0-6 By The Associated PressNew York Yankees short-stop Didi Gregorius has a bruised right shoulder, ending his time at the World Baseball Classic and leaving his status for opening day in doubt.Yankees manager Joe Girardi didnÂt put on a time-table on a return, only saying, ÂHeÂs going to be sidelined for a bit.ÂŽ The Yankees start the regular season April 2 at Tampa Bay.It is not certain how or when Gregorius got hurt while helping the Nether-lands reach the semifinals of the WBC. He hit .348, driv-ing in eight runs and scoring five in the tournament.Gregorius had an MRI in Los Angeles on Sunday. He was returning to the Yan-kees spring training complex in Tampa and will be re-eval-uated by team doctors.Gregorius is among a handful of major league play-ers to leave their WBC team because of injuries.Miami third baseman Martin Prado strained his hamstring while playing for Venezuela and returned to the Marlins during the weekend. All-Star catcher Salvador Perez of the Royals injured his knee in a home plate collision and also left the Venezuelan team.The Yankees have backup shortstops Ronald Torreyes and Ruben Tejada in camp, along with utilityman Tyler Wade and top prospect Gley-ber Torres.The 27-year-old Gregorius hit .276 with 20 home runs and 70 RBIs last season.BrantleyÂs backAll-Star outfielder Michael Brantley got two hits in his return to the Cleveland lineup. Coming off a year almost totally lost to shoul-der trouble, he drove in a run and scored once against the Dodgers.The 29-year-old Brantley is cautiously optimistic about becoming a regular once again for the AL champions.Brantley injured his shoul-der diving for a ball on Sept. 22, 2015. He played only 11 games last year and has had two surgeries.Tebow townTim TebowÂs next team on his baseball journey will be Columbia Fireflies. The former Heisman Trophy winner and NFL quarterback will start the regular season with the New York Mets Class A club in South Carolina. The 29-year-old Tebow is hitting .235 with four hits in 17 at-bats for the Mets this spring. The outfielder will wear his football number, No. 15, with the Fireflies.Twins 8, Blue Jays 2Toronto star Josh Donald-son made his spring training debut, going 0 for 2 with a walk in his first game since injuring his right calf more than a month ago. The 2015 Al MVP was the designated hitter, and is scheduled to play at his normal third base spot Wednesday.Blue Jays starter Francisco Liriano struck out 10 in 4 ‡ innings.Byung Ho Park and Miguel Sano homered for Minne-sota. Park is competing for a roster spot after being designated for assignment on Feb. 3.Red Sox 7, Orioles 4Kyle Kendrick continued his bid for a spot in the depleted Boston rotation by working five innings, allow-ing five hits and two earned runs while striking out four.The Orioles have said they want to stretch Vidal Nuno out as a starting pitcher, but the veteran just back from playing for Mexico in the World Baseball Classic did not make it out of the second inning, allowing three earned runs in 1 ‡ innings.Marlins 9, Braves 3Miami starter Stephen Fife worked four scoreless innings, giving up just three hits and walking one while lowering his spring ERA to 1.50. Justin Nicolino gave up an earned run on two hits in four innings of relief.R.A. Dickey went 5 ‡ innings in the start for Atlanta and was touched for six runs. Marcell Ozuna homered off the knuckleballer.Tigers 5, Mets 1Detroit starter Anibal San-chez pitched four scoreless innings, allowing just two hits and striking out five.Matt Harvey gave up three runs and seven hits in 4 ‡ innings, striking out four. Mets manager Terry Collins had expressed concerns about HarveyÂs command, and the former ace walked none.James McCann homered off Harvey and Nick Castellanos connected later.Yankees 9, Nationals 3Matt Holliday hit a two-run homer and Brett Gardner had a two-run single for New York. Michael Pineda had his first rough outing in four starts this spring, allow-ing three earned runs in 1 ‡ innings. Pineda entered the day with a 1.80 ERA.Adam Eaton and Adam Lind each had RBI hits for Wash-ington. Bryce Harper had two hits.Pirates 5, Rays 4Jordy Mercer and Jose Osuna hit two-run homers and Adam Frazier had three hits for Pittsburgh. Jameson Taillon pitched 4 ‡ innings and allowed two earned runs.Kevin Kiermaier, who finalized his six-year, $53.5 million contract with Tampa Bay earlier in the day, went 2 for 2 with an RBI. Rays starter Blake Snell, whoÂs fighting for a front-end rotation slot, went five innings and allowed four earned runs.Cubs 9, Rockies 6Matt Szczur homered and had three hits for Chicago and Kyle Schwarber added an RBI single.Cubs starter Kyle Hendricks allowed two earned runs in 4 ‡ innings. He has not walked anyone in 13 ‡ innings this spring and has 14 strikeouts.DJ LeMahieu doubled for Colorado.Giants 3, White Sox 2San Francisco starter Johnny Cueto threw five innings, allowing just one earned run.Reynaldo Lopez, one of the top pitching prospects the White Sox acquired from Washington for outfielder Adam Eaton, threw six shutout innings.Reds 10, Royals 6Jason Hammel went 5 ‡ innings in the start for Kansas City, scattering three hits and allowing one earned run while striking out five.Looking to nail down a spot in the Reds rotation after injuring an ankle in his last start, Rookie Davis worked four strong innings for Cin-cinnati, giving up one earned run. Joey Votto doubled in three at-bats and is hitting .164 this spring.Indians 14, Dodgers 5Cleveland starter Trevor Bauer gave up seven hits, including two homers, in five innings.Dodgers starter Brandon McCarthy was touched up for six hits and five runs, but only two of them were earned in 4 ‡ innings. Chase Utley and Joc Pederson homered.Yankees Gregorius hurts shoulderCalzado paces GC rompthird of seven Arnold pitchers. Edwards wound up with a leadoff triple, but it appeared Dunn might escape with a save when he struck out Cam-eron Poston and Cameron Hockle, the Nos. 3 and 4 hitters.He almost disposed of Boyle, too, but the Hurricane second baseman fouled off three two-strike pitches before grounding a clean single into left field to tie the game 4-4.Will BatsonÂs RBI double then scored Jack Thyer to put Jonesboro, 8-1, ahead 5-4 in the eighth. This time it was Arnold responding with two outs. Shaler had a double off reliever Thomas Fletcher for his fourth hit of the game, and Cole CaldwellÂs lone plate appearance resulted in a soft single to right field with Shaler beating the throw to the plate.Jonesboro, the Class 6A Arkansas state champ in 2013, finally ended it with three runs in the top of the ninth. Poston and Hockle opened with singles and Boyle again provided the key hit when his RBI single gave the Hurricane leverage. They eventually scored three runs in the frame that became crucial when Jarian Hardrick was hit by a pitch and Dawson Redd lined an RBI double in the bottom of the ninth.That was as close as the Marlins could come.Arnold initiated the scoring when Shaler singled in the first, moved up on a stolen base and passed ball and scored on starting pitcher Ethan Hess bouncer to third base.Boyle reached when Dunn dropped his popup to shortstop in the second inning and Jonesboro starting pitcher Zane Ryne Neves produced an RBI single.Shaler singled and Hess lofted a two-run homer to left field in the Arnold third that made it 3-2, the starting pitchers with a combined four RBIs to that point. The Hurricane had scored once in the top half when Thyer opened with a single and tallied on a wild pitch.Arnold inched its lead to 4-2 in the home fourth. Terry Byers doubled, was bunted to third by Redd and scored on a single by Thomas Risalvato. Risal-vato stole second, but was out when trying to advance to third on a ground ball to shortstop Batson. That became costly when Shaler produced a single one out later.Perhaps the most critical inning for Arnold was the sixth when Jonesboro reliever Ben Brown issued three walks. The Marlins bunted into an out, however, and had lead runner Risalvato erased on an attempted double steal. Cleanup hitter Anthony Vitale bounced to first and Jonesboro escaped.Jonesboro 011 010 113 „ 8 16 3 Arnold 102 100 011 „ 6 12 1 Neves, Brown 6, Fletcher (W) 8 and Hockle; Hess, Stewart 5, Dunn 6, Wichterman 8, Canfora (L) 9, Heitzman 9, Byers 9 and Hardrick. LOB: Jonesboro 12, Arnold 10. E: Boyle 2, Hockle, Dunn. S: Redd. 2B: Byers, Batson, Shaler, Redd. 3B: Edwards. HR: Hess. SB: Boyle 3, Shaler, Risalvato. CS: Copeland, by Hardrick. Risalvato, by Hockle. WP: Hess 2, Wichterman, Heitzman. PB: Hockle. Bk: Hess, Fletcher 2. HBP: by Neves (Vitale), by Heitzman (Copeland), by Fletcher (Hardrick). RBIs; Neves, Orr, Thyer, Boyle 2, Batson, Hess 3, Risalvato, Cadlwell, Redd. BASEBALLContinued from C1Netherlands designated hitter Didi Gregorius rounds third base after hitting a three-run home-run off IsraelÂs pitcher Danny Burawa during the fourth inning of their second round game at the World Baseball Classic at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo on Monday. [TORU TAKAHASHI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]
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CLASSIFIEDSThe News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 2017 C C 7 7 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 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 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 14394 IN THE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE 14TH JUDICIALCIRCUIT, IN AND FOR BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERALJURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO. 16000780CA BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.; Plaintiff, vs. WILLIAM G. KENNEDY, ETAL; Defendants, NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS GIVEN that, in accordance with the Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated March 6, 2017, in the above-styled cause, I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at http://www .bay .realforeclose.c om at 11:00 AM on April 19, 2017 the following described property: UNIT W2001, SPLASH, ACONDOMINIUM, ACCORDING TO THE DECLARATION OF CONDOMINIUM THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN OFFICIALRECORDS BOOK 2849, PAGE 1733, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF BAYCOUNTY, FLORIDA, TOGETHER WITH AN UNDIVIDED INTEREST IN THE COMMON ELEMENTS IF ANY, APPURTENANT THERETO, SUBJECT TO AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE COVENANTS, CONDITIONS, RESTRICTIONS, TERMS AND OTHER PROVISIONS OF SAID DECLARATION. PROPERTYADDRESS: 17729 FRONT BEACH RD 2001-WEST, PANAMA CITY, FL32413 ANYPERSON CLAIMING AN INTERESTIN THE SURPLUS FROM THE SALE, IF ANY, OTHER THAN THE PROPERTYOWNER AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MUSTFILE ACLAIM WITHIN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. Dated: March 7, 2017 BILLKINSAUL CLERK By: Jennifer Estrada Deputy Clerk IF YOU ARE APERSON WITH ADISABILITYWHO NEEDS ANYACCOMMODATION IN ORDER TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS PROCEEDING, YOU ARE ENTITLED, AT NO COST TO YOU, TO THE PROVISION OF CERTAIN ASSISTANCE. PLEASE CONTACT THE ADACOORDINATOR BYMAILAT P. O. BOX 1089, PANAMACITY, FL32402 OR BYPHONE AT (850) 747-5338 AT LEAST SEVEN (7) DAYS BEFORE YOUR SCHEDULED COURT APPEARANCE, OR IMMEDIATELYUPON RECEIVING THIS NOTIFICATION IF THE TIME BEFORE THE SCHEDULED APPEARANCE IS LESS THAN SEVEN (7) DAYS. IF YOU ARE HEARING IMPAIRED, PLEASE CALL711. MLG No: 16-06508 Pub:March 21,28, 2017 14400 IN THE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE 14TH JUDICIALCIRCUIT, IN AND FOR BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERALJURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO. 16001187CA PENNYMAC LOAN SERVICES, LLC; Plaintiff, vs. JAMES GEYER; HEATHER GEYER, ETAL; Defendants, NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS GIVEN that, in accordance with the Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated March 10, 2017, in the above-styled cause, I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at http://www .bay .realforeclose.c om at 11:00 AM on April 24, 2017 the following described property: LOT 14, BLOCK A, ECONFINAESTATES: COMMENCE AT THE NE CORNER OF SECTION 9, TOWNSHIP1 SOUTH, RANGE 13 WEST; THENCE S8929-10”W, ALONG THE NORTH LINE OF SAID SECTION 9, 1663.85 FEET; THENCE S0013.25”W, 546.33 FEET; THENCE S4446’56”E, 152.75 FEET; THENCE 556 10’55”E, 318.75 FEET; THENCE S0224;55”E, 184.79 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE S0224’55E, 200 FEET; THENCE N5908’45”E, 312.99 FEET; THENCE N0006.50”E, 204.78 FEET; THENCE S59 08.45”W, 323.13 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. PROPERTYADDRESS: 7218 ECONFINAESTATES ROAD, YOUNGSTOWN, FL32466 ANYPERSON CLAIMING AN INTERESTIN THE SURPLUS FROM THE SALE, IF ANY, OTHER THAN THE PROPERTYOWNER AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MUSTFILE ACLAIM WITHIN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. Dated: March 10, 2017 IF YOU ARE APERSON WITH ADISABILITYWHO NEEDS ANYACCOMMODATION IN ORDER TO PARTICIPATE IN THIS PROCEEDING, YOU ARE ENTITLED, AT NO COST TO YOU, TO THE PROVISION OF CERTAIN ASSISTANCE. PLEASE CONTACT THE ADACOORDINATOR BYMAILAT P.O. BOX 1089, PANAMACITY, FL32402 OR BYPHONE AT (850) 747-5338 AT LEAST SEVEN (7) DAYS BEFORE YOUR SCHEDULED COURT APPEARANCE, OR IMMEDIATELYUPON RECEIVING THIS NOTIFICATION IF THE TIME BEFORE THE SCHEDULED APPEARANCE IS LESS THAN SEVEN (7) DAYS. IF YOU ARE HEARING IMPAIRED, PLEASE CALL711. BILLKINSAUL Clerk By:Ladyne Swearingen Deputy Clerk MARINOSCI LAW GROUP, P.C. Attorney for the Plaintiff 100 WESTCYPRESS CREEK ROAD, STE 1045 FORTLAUDERDALE, FL33309 Phone: (954)644-8704; Fax: (954) 772-9601 ServiceFL@m1g defaul tlaw .com ServiceFL2@,m12 defa ultlaw .com MLG# 16-06981 Pub:March 21,28, 2017 14446 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BAY COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2017-242-CP IN RE: ESTATE OF SUSAN C. STROM, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of Susan C. Strom, deceased, whose date of death was December 13, 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 decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE 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 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 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD 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 21, 2017. Co-Personal Representative: Stephanie S. Epps 6378 Elizabeth Drive Douglasville, GA 30134 Angela S. Crawford 1106 Gornto Road Valdosta, GA 31602 Attorney for Personal Representative: Joy Marler Masters FL Bar# 0854581 Burke, Blue, Hutchison, Walters & Smith, P.A. 221 McKenzie Ave. Panama City, FL 32401 (850)769-1414 jmasters@burkeblue.co m Pub:March 21,28, 2017 14448NOTICE OF SALENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT EAST AVENUE STORAGE, LLC. Pursuant to F.S. 83.806 will offer for sale and will sell at public or private AUCTION on April 6, 2017 at 1:30 P.M. at 2131 N. East Avenue. Miscellaneous property located in Storage Unit: G35 and H24. Occupied by Christopher Raynor and Cory McFann. We also reserve the right to cancel the sale without notice. Pub:March21,28, 2017 Reward OfferedHeart shaped wedding diamond pendant. Has great sentimental value. Please call 608-346-0482 if found! 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 Able Lawn SvcWe Show Up!Mulch, cleanups, pine straw, palms, leaf removal, trimming 596-4383/258-5072 YARDEDGE 625-3942 ‘Spring Cleanup’ Regular Lawn Service 596-6293 Lic/Ins 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 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 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. Mr. Green LawncareBest value in Total Lawn Care & Landscaping. Lic/Ins. Free Est. 850-625-1538 Don’s Home RepairPainting, Tile, Windows, Doors, General Carpentry, Metal Roofs, Pressure Washing, Plumbing. Insured. 850-630-9690 Home Repairs Any Job, Large Or Small. New Installs, Kitchens, Baths Paint, Tile, Woodrot, Electric, Plumbing. Robert 850-832-7972 America’s LandscapersFlower beds, mulch, sod, lawn mowing and cleaning, palm and shrub trimming, pressure washing. Senior and Military Discount 850-532-4522txt FL66079 to 566544 Complete Lawn CareSenior & Military Disc.Call Steven: 850-624-8798 Cell 850-235-2212 Office DO ALL CONSTRUCTION Stucco, Stone, Concrete, Waterproofing, Doors, Windows, Painting, Sheetrock & Textures. Comm & Residential LLC & Bonded 276-791-7117 850-628-3224 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 All Home Repairs and RemodelingWood rot, metal roofs and repairs, drywall, painting, vinyl, windows, doors, fencing. Lic & Ins. Sam (850)348-0207 ACLASSIC TOUCH AHonest Person To Clean Your Home, Office Or Condo, Lic/Ins, 18yrs exp, Free Est Call Lauri 774-3977 txt FL70241 to56654 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 Turn to classified’s Merchandise Columns Our prices are on target for you! Need a helping hand? Advertise in the Help Wanted Section in the Classifieds! 747-5020
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CLASSIFIEDSC C 8 8 Tuesday, March 21, 2017| The News Herald 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 Security/Protect SvsSecurity OfficerSecuritas Security Services USA, Inc. has full-time and part-time openings at our premier client sites in Destin, Miramar Beach, and Panama City, Florida. (850-233-0245) **These are not seasonal positions** An ideal candidate must be willing to work various shifts and extra hours as needed. Prior Law Enforcement, Corrections or Military Police experience is a plus but not required. You will need to have a Security Class “D” License for the State of Florida. If you do not have a “D” license, we will help you get one. Mandatory State Training for 40 hour class (usually Monday thru Friday, 8 am – 5 pm) fees for class $200.00 waived and fees for State of Florida Class “D” License $97.40 waived, if you pass interview and sign a contract for employment for 90 days with Securitas Security Services USA, Inc. Must be able to stand and walk for 8 to 12 hours. Observes and reports activities and incidents at an assigned client site, providing for the security and safety of client property and personnel. Makes periodic tours to check for irregularities and to inspect protection devices and fire control equipment. Preserves order and may act to enforce regulations and directives for the site pertaining to personnel, visitors, and premises. If you are interested, please submit an application on-line at: www .securitasjobs.com Remember your User ID and Password (As we do NOT have access to unlock), Select Panama City Beach 32407 as your choice for your application. Join our Talent Network and complete the application. A member of our management team will call you after we review your application for accuracy and schedule you for an interview. We offer: Training; Benefits; 401K; free uniforms; Career advancement; and much more! Minimum Requirements: Must have a current Class “D” License or be willing to obtain one OR Hold an AA in Criminal Justice/Science or higher (to attain a class D license) 18 years of age or older Copy of your DD 214 if eligible Copy of your High School Diploma or G.E.D. Eligible to work in the U.S. Good written and verbal communication skills Reliable transportation Willing to submit to pre-employment proce dures including drug screen and background check Able to meet minimum state guard licensing requirements EOE M/F/D/V BB2900001 Web ID # 34370224 SecurityUNARMED SECURITY OFFICERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!!!Hiring Security Officers for a Panama City Hospital Florida D security license required Pay $12.00/hr. plus benefits Send resume to JobsT AL@yaleenforcement.com (888) 925-3363 x 2959 Web ID#: 34370279 Sales/Business DevelopmentTelemarketingWork from home. Permanent work, full time. Main responsibility would be setting appointments for sales representatives. Commission based. EXPERIENCE preferred. Contact Allison at 850-914-0054 or email prof t axhenry@cs.com Web ID # 34370380 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 Medical/HealthMedical Receptionist/BillerMedical office experience in registration, insurance verification with billing and coding preferred. Full time, team player, dependable with excellent communication skills necessary for busy multi-doctors office. Fax resume to 850-785-3490 or email: hiringmedicalreceptionist@gmail.com Web ID#: 34368199 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 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 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 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 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 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 Logistics/TransportationClass A CDL Truck DriverThe News Herald is accepting applications for a hardworking, responsible truck driver to load & deliver newspaper bundles to our contractors along with other related duties. Hours are late night to early morning, on a rotating schedule. Applicants must have a valid Class A CDL Florida driver license, a clean driving record, proof of insurance, a current medical card. Come by The News Herald front office located at 501 W. 11th Street Monday -Friday, 8 a.m.5 p.m. for an application or send resume to HR@pcnh.com Interviews will be scheduled at a later date. No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer Hiring will be contingent on a criminal background check and drug screen. Web Id 34370619 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 Install/Maint/RepairCable Installers NeededCable Contracting company based in Panama City is looking to expand into with several installing positions available. Responsibilities include installing Digital cable, internet, and phone service in residential homes. Excellent customer service and a strong work ethic is required. You will need to provide your own truck, van, or SUV and basic hand tools. All specialty tools and 28 ft ladder can be provided. Pay is performance based so the harder you work and the better quality of work you do the more you can make!!! Our installers make anywhere between 600 to 1200 per week. We will train the right people. Reply by email eddiebbi@outlook.com or call Ed at 712-269-6839. Web ID # 34370598 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 Customer SupportAlvin’s Island Now HiringEnergetic & hardworking people. Apply in person at any Alvin’s Island location. No phone calls, please. Web ID#: 34368669 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 Alternative To BoardingHouse N PetSitting Svs. Licensed Bonded 265-0278 Australian Laberdoodle Puppies miniature, fat & healthly, all colors, $2000. 229-886-5555 Text FL70313 to 56654 VIDEO EQUIPMENT FOR SALE Complete video set up! JVC Digital Camera w/Pelican Hardcase. Manfrotto Tripod and Sennheiser Wirless Mic System. Lowell and PBL Video Lighting Kit. Cotton Muslin Backdrops and Telepromter (for use with Ipad) and Stand. For pictures of equipment or more information, contact 618-218-1763. GUN SHOW CRESTVIEW COMMUNITY CENTER Mar. 25th & Mar. 26th SAT. 9-5 & SUN. 10-4 FREE PARKING Info. (407) 275-7233 northfloridagun shows.com Text FL69764 to 56654 GUN SHOW Santa Rosa County Auditorium: Milton, FLMar. 25th & 26th9:00 am -5:00 pmGeneral Admission $6Concealed Weapons Classes 1pm Daily, $50Reservation Suggested850-957-4952 or 850-261-8407Please Support Your Local Small Gun Shows DIABETIC TEST STRIPS NEEDEDWill buy sealed, unexpired boxes (850)710-0189 Hot tub Free, come get it. 5125 Douglas Street. 850-914-0987 Text FL70059 to 56654 Two Funeral PlotsKent Forest Lawn, complete with arrangements, double depth vault, monuments, all services, and caskets. $6500. Call David 229-309-6568. Food Serv/HospKitchen/Deil HelpApply in person, Modica Market: 109 Central Square, Seaside, Florida Web ID # 34370086 Food Serv/HospitalityNow Hiring Experienced Cook Experienced Server Dishwasher Bussers Shuckers Apply in person 2-4 pm at The Captain’s Table 1110 Beck Ave, PC Web ID#: 34370596 Logistics/Transport D & S Logging, Inc. is hiringCDL Driversat this time. Benefits and bonus package offered. Please call 850-638-5500 to apply. Web ID # 34370537 Logistics/Transport Mr Trash is hiring for the following positions: CDL Roll Off Driver Help/Slinger Please apply in person at 1108 School Ave Panama City Beach FL 32408 Web ID#: 34370295 Medical/HealthMedical Office Front DeskNow hiring FT. Must be hard working, team oriented, organized, and a quick learner. Medical exp. preferred. Full benefits. Email resume tonowhiring301@ gmail.com or bring resume to 2202 State Ave. Suite 301. NO PHONE CALLS! Web ID#: 34370617 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 G U A R A N T E E D GUARANTEED R E S U L T S RESULTS If you don't ll the position, we will run your ad again for FREE! For further information, call or email, Jessica Branda: 850-747-5019 | Jbranda@pcnh.com F o r f u u u r r t t h h e r Je e Reach the M O S T MOST QUALIFIED CANDIDATES The News Herald reaches 63% of all job seekers in the market… which is more than any other local media can offer.63% H e r a l d r e a c c h h h h h h h e e e e s s s s 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 3 3 3 3 3 3 % % % % % R e c r u i t m e n t Recruitment R e s o u r c e Resource# #1 1 Source: Scarborough 2013 R1, Bay County, FL; INA+ Audience
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CLASSIFIEDSThe News Herald | Tuesday, March 21, 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 OtherNow Hiring for Multiple Positions Food & Beverage Photo Department Dive Security Education InternApply in person or email resume to gulfworldhr@gmail.com Compensation varies on experience 15412 Front Beach Rd, Panama City Beach, FL 32413 Web ID#: 34370542 LegalParalegal/Legal AssistantFull-time Legal Assistant/Paralegal needed with experience in Litigation. Excellent organizational and computer skills required, including Microsoft Office, Word and Wordperfect. Self-direction, ability to multi-task and attention to detail a must. Send resume to Nowhiringpc@gmail.com or send resumes to Blind Box 3697 c/o The News Herald, P.O. Box 1940, Panama City, FL 32402 Web ID#: 34370539 HospitalityNavy Gateway Inns and SuitesLooking for several detail-oriented, dependable, courteous team players w/excellent customer service skills to perform a full range of related duties. Positions come with Training and Certification programs, and have daytime schedules, to include weekends and Holidays. Maintenance Mechanic (FT) $12.78/hr Maintenance Worker $11.87/hr Front Desk Assoc. $10.00/hr Housekeepers $9.45/hr Laundry Worker $9.45/hr Custodial Worker $9.45/hr Applicants must pass a background check and hold a current Driver’s license. Applications are available at the NSA-PC Visitors Center, Thomas Drive. For additional information call (850) 235-5737 Web ID # 34370479 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 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#: 34370320 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 23rd St. Office ParkOffices Available 4000sf, $3,300/mo 6000sf, $5000/mo 10000sf, $8,300/mo Call Don @ Nations Realestate 850-814-4242Txt FL70291 to 56654 WAREHOUSE/ OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 1560 sq ft warehouse including 400 sq ft office space with restroom. Right off of Middle Beach Rd. Panama City Beach $1200.00 mthly (850) 234-0032Txt FL70457 to 56654 A local senior man wishes to lease a small, fully furnished appt. 850-257-3589. txt FL70173 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. St. Andrews: 3 bd/2 ba w/garage, $925/mo + dep. No pets. 785-7341 or 814-3211 Text FL70202 to 56654 For Responsible working person, no drugs or exc drinking env, $90/wk. $25 dep Call 850-769-8496 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 ‘’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 Panama City: 2002 Pioneer 3 br/2ba New carpet, fresh paint, clean. In mobile home park. Asking $22k. Call (937)-554-0889 Text FL68858 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 Historical Home for SaleTurn of the century home in AL built with influence of Frank Lloyd Wright. Call 334-222-5273Txt FL70257 to 56654 Chevy Camaro, ‘15, auto, v6, sunroof, #226, $25,992! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Chevy Cavalier 2004 Sports LX $1,700. Call Roy 850-249-9809. Text FL70467 to 56654 Chevy Cruze, ‘13, auto, turbo 4 cylinder, #0555, $12,993! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981 Chevy Impala Limited, ‘15, auto, v6, bluetooth, $15,991! #138, Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Chevy Impala, ‘09, auto, v6, #396, $11,995! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Chrysler 300 C 2013 HEMI. Great condition. 61,500 miles. Only selling due to health. $17,300. 419-348-8200 Text FL70203 to 56654 Hyundai Accent, ‘16, auto, 4 cyl, #089, $11,992 Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Hyundai Elantra, ‘13, auto, 4 cyl, #111, $9,991! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. 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 SE HABLA ESPANOLPASAPORTE OK NO CREDITO OK TROCAS/CARROS/S UV $300 ALMES EJEMPLOS: 02 Monte Carlo 02 Chevy Blazer 01 Ford F150 02 Dodge Ram PLUS 75 MORE DAYLIGHTAUTO FINANCING 2816 WESTHWY 98 PANAMACITY, FLORIDA32401 9 AM TO 9 PM 215-1769 Toyota Avalon, ‘16, auto, v6, bluetooth, #002, $26,993! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Volkswagen Golf R, ‘16, 3,847 miles, #003, $36,990! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Buick Enclave, ‘12, auto, v6, leather, #549, $20,993! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Buick Encore, ‘13, auto, 4 cyl., bluetooth, #075, $17,991! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Cadillac SRX ‘14, auto, leather, #114, $29,991! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Cadillac SRX, ‘16, auto, Hard loaded, #144, $34,990! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Chevy Tahoe, ‘03, auto, v8, #351, $7,995! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City850-250-5981. Chevy Tahoe, ‘12, auto, V8, leather, #512, $29,991! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Jeep Grand Cherokee, ‘14, auto, v6, leather, #111, $25,993! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Jeep Wrangler, ‘06, manual, I6 cyl, #144, $15,991! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. 05 DODGE RAM -4-DOOR $6300 215-1769 05 FORD F150-4-DOOR $7100 DEALER 215-1769 06 CHEVY SILVERADO $7400 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 Chevy SSR, ‘06, auto, V8, #041, $19,990! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Ford F-150, ‘16, auto, v8, #060, $28,992! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Ram ProMaster 1500, ‘16, auto, v6, leather, #554, $21,992! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. Chrysler Town and Country, ‘16, V6, auto, #491, $20,995! Bill Cramer GM, Panama City 850-250-5981. FOR SALE BY OWNER: 2008 Harley Davidson Elctra Glide Classic Low, low miles! $9,300 firm. 541-2406 Text FL70367 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 2006 35 ft. Newmar RV. Seller motivated. Priced below average retail. More info: 850-615-5820. Call To Place An Ad In Classifieds. 747-5020 Need a helping hand? Advertise in the Help Wanted Section in the Classifieds! 747-5020 Buy it! Classified. Make your move to the medium that’s your number one source of information about homes for sale! For all your housing needs consult Classified when it’s time to buy, it’s the resource on which to rely. 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 21, 2017| The News Herald 1169573
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