Citation
The Lake City reporter

Material Information

Title:
The Lake City reporter
Uniform Title:
Lake City reporter (Lake City, Fla. 1967)
Place of Publication:
Lake City, FL
Publisher:
Community Newspapers Inc., Todd Wilson - Publisher
Creation Date:
March 3, 2012
Publication Date:
Frequency:
Daily (Monday through Friday)[<1969>-]
Weekly[ FORMER 1967-<1968>]
daily
normalized irregular
Language:
English

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Newspapers -- Lake City (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Newspapers -- Columbia County (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Genre:
newspaper ( sobekcm )
newspaper ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Florida -- Columbia -- Lake City
Coordinates:
30.18892 x -82.635512

Notes

Additional Physical Form:
Also available on microfilm from the University of Florida.
Dates or Sequential Designation:
Vol. 95, no. 4 (Oct. 5, 1967)-
Funding:
Funded in part by the University of Florida, the Library Services and Technology Assistance granting program of Florida, the State Library and Archives of Florida, and other institutions and individuals.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
Copyright Community Newspapers Inc., Todd Wilson - Publisher. Permission granted to University of Florida to digitize and display this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Resource Identifier:
000358016 ( ALEPH )
33283560 ( OCLC )
ABZ6316 ( NOTIS )
sn 95047175 ( LCCN )
UF00028308_01569 ( sobekcm )

Related Items

Preceded by:
Lake City reporter and Columbia gazette

Downloads

This item is only available as the following downloads:


Full Text
xml version 1.0 encoding UTF-8
REPORT xmlns http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitss xmlns:xsi http:www.w3.org2001XMLSchema-instance xsi:schemaLocation http:www.fcla.edudlsmddaitssdaitssReport.xsd
INGEST IEID EC0XS0V88_HU3AXK INGEST_TIME 2017-05-22T19:41:51Z PACKAGE UF00028308_03084
AGREEMENT_INFO ACCOUNT UF PROJECT UFDC
FILES



PAGE 1

Lake City ReporterTHURSDAY, APRIL 20, 2017 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SINCE 1874 | $1.00 LAKECITYREPORTER.COM CALL US: (386) 752-1293 SUBSCRIBE TO THE REPORTER: Voice: b 755-5445 F ax: b 752-9400 Vol. 143, No. 7 TODAY’S WEATHER Opinion . . . . . . 4A Obituaries . . . . . . . 5A TV guide . . . . . . . 2B Advice & Comics . . 3B ‘Art Around the Pool’Raising money for local art efforts, Page 5A. 86 b 59Patchy fog, 2A LC airport playing role in wildfire fight, See below. + PLUS >> How Does Your Garden Groove?SCHOOLS CHS boys tennis going to stateSPORTSSee Page 1B See Page 6AKATRINA POGGIO/Lake City Reporter‘Little Shop’CHS student Nick Smith portrays lead character Seymour during the school’s rehearsal for “Little Shop of Horrors,” which will be staged on Friday at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. at the Norman L. Choice Performing Arts Center. Tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for students (K-12). Citizen of the Year Mike Williams of PCS takes top honors for 2017.By CARL MCKINNEYcmckinney@lakecityreporter.comFor a second time, the judge set to oversee Lake City Mayor Stephen Witt’s DUI case has stepped down. Circuit Third Judge Paul Bryan on Monday signed an order recusing himself from the case. Bryan took over the trial after the original judge, Tom Coleman, recused himself in late March. Madison County Judge E. Bailey Browning has been assigned to the case, according to Bryan, who Bryan recuses self from DUI trial of Lake City mayor. WILLIAMS continued on 3A 2nd judge dumps Witt case Bryan By KATRINA POGGIOkpoggio@lakecityreporter.comMike Williams has a hand in many organizations that contribute to the community. Whether it’s United Way of Suwannee Valley or The Foundation for Florida Gateway College, for the last two decades Williams has been involved and ready to make decisions that make a difference. Which is why the Lake City/Columbia County Chamber of Commerce recognized him as the 2017 Citizen of the Year on Wednesday at a luncheon at the Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites. The large and small businesses of the year were also announced. Williams was surprised to be chosen as Citizen of the Year. He said he could not be so involved without his job as public affairs manager at PotashCorpWhite Springs or his wife of 7 years, Laurie Williams. “I won that award today Doctor: Driver likely dead or unconscious before crashBy CARL MCKINNEYcmckinney@lakecityreporter.comThe driver who died in a collision with a garbage truck earlier this month was likely unconscious before the crash, if not already dead, according to a Jacksonville medical examiner. Keith Lawrence Bell, 45, purportedly took no evasive actions before colliding with a garbage truck on State FILEKeith Lawrence Bell, 45, died in this April 5 wreck. LCPD: Woman threw scooter at childBy CARL MCKINNEYcmckinney@lakecityreporter.comAn argument about a sandwich escalated into a physical altercation between a local woman and a child, according to the Lake City Police Dept. Toya Denise Taylor, 40, address redacted, was arrested on Monday afternoon after she threw a pink scooter at a child DOCTOR continued on 2A JUDGE continued on 3A SCOOTER continued on 2A TaylorKATRINA POGGIO/Lake City ReporterJill Adams, left, 2016 Citizen of the Year, presents the 2017 Citizen of the Year award to Mike Williams during the Lake City/Columbia County Chamber of Commerce’s Business & Citizen of the Year Luncheon on Wednesday. LC airport playing a role in fight to contain wildfireBy TAYLOR GAINES tgaines@lakecityreporter.comAt Lake City Gateway Airport, those tasked with fighting the West Mims Fire sit and wait. They kill time watching movies on their iPads, riding their bikes around, working out, playing cards. And then duty calls. The U.S. Forest Service needs them. Helicopters bring crews out to fight the fire or dump water onto it. Tanker planes drop flame retardant along the border of the burn areas to keep the fire at bay. On some days, the tankers have made as many as 12 trips out to the fire. “We stay pretty busy,” said Andy Boas, a tanker pilot for Neptune Aviation, one of the Forest Service’s contractors. One tanker leaked retardant for about five miles between Fargo, Ga. and Lake City on Tuesday, according to a statement released after press time Tuesday. The plane experienced issues with a gate that releases the flame retardant. Meanwhile, the West Mims Fire grew AIRPORT continued on 2A TAYLOR GAINES/Lake City ReporterA spotter plane takes off from Lake City Gateway Airport on Wednesday to scout the West Mims Fire. A3

PAGE 2

2A t THURSDA Y, APRIL 20, 2017 DAILY BRIEFING t LAKE CITY REPORTER t 7a 1p 7p 1a 6a LAKE CITY ALMANAC SUN MOON UV INDEX EXTREME: 10 minutes to burn T oday’s ultra-violet radiation risk for the ar ea on a scale fr om 0 to 10+. FYI An exclusive service brought to our readers by The Weather Channel. SPONSORED BY City THE WEATHER WEA THER HISTORY Pensacola Tallahassee Panama City Valdosta Daytona Beach Cape Canaveral Gainesville Lake City Ocala Orlando Jacksonville Tampa West Palm Beach Ft. Myers Ft. Lauderdale Naples Miami Key West TEMPERATURESNormal high Normal low PRECIPITATIONMonth total Year total HI LO LO HI LO HI LO HI LO HI FridaySaturday Cape Canaveral PCPC Daytona Beach SPC Fort Myers PCPC Ft. Lauderdale PCPC Gainesville PCPC Jacksonville PCPC Key West PCPC Lake City PCPC Miami PCPC Naples PCPC Ocala SPC Orlando SPC Panama City PCPC Pensacola FGPC Tallahassee PCPC Tampa SPC Valdosta PCPC W. Palm Beach PCPC !MAJORTORNADO OUTBREAKSTRUCK NORTHERN!LABAMAON THISDATEINfAT LEASTTORNADOES TOUCHEDDOWNTHE WORSTOFWHICH REMAINEDONTHE GROUNDFORMILES !SMANYASPEOPLE WEREREPORTEDLYKILLED (IGH7EDNESDAY ,OW7EDNESDAY IN IN 7EDNESDAY 4EST AM PM AM PM AM PMApril 26 May 2 May 10 May 18 NewFirstFullLast Quarter Quarter 3UNRISETODAY 3UNSETTODAY 3UNRISETOM 3UNSETTOM -OONRISETODAY -OONSETTODAY -OONRISETOM -OONSETTOM 2ECORDHIGH 2ECORDLOW .ORMALMONTHrTOrDATE .ORMALYEARrTOrDATE 4(5 &2) 3!4 35. -/.7%!4(%2"9r4(%r$!9 ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ ˆ 4HU &RI 3AT3UN-ON 4UE 7ED !CTUALHIGH !CTUALLOW !VERAGEHIGH !VERAGELOW 2%')/.!,&/2%#!34-!0FOR4HURSDAYf!PRIL4HURSDAYSHIGHS4HURSDAYNIGHTSLOW %XTREME MINSTOBURN 0ATCHY FOGIN THE MORNING -OSTLY SUNNY ,IGHT WIND 0ARTLY CLOUDY #HANCE OF STORMS 0ARTLY CLOUDY PM(),/(),/(),/(),/(),/ AM&ORECASTSfDATAANDGRAPHICS ‚f4HE7EATHER#OMPANYf,,# HOW TO REACH USMain number ........ (386) 752-1293 Fax number .............. 752-9400 Circulation ............... 755-5445 Online ... www lakecityreporter com The Lake City Reporter, an affiliate of Community Newspapers Inc., is published Tuesday through Friday and Sunday at 180 E. Duval St., Lake City, Fla. 32055. Periodical postage paid at Lake City, Fla. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation and The Associated Press. All material herein is property of the Lake City Reporter. Reproduction in whole or in part is forbidden without the permission of the publisher. U.S. Postal Service No. 310-880. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Lake City Reporter, P.O. Box 1709, Lake City, Fla. 32056. Publisher Todd Wilson ..... 754-0418 (twilson@lakecityreporter.com)NEWSEditor Robert Bridges ..... 754-0428 (rbridges@lakecityre porter.com)A DVERTIS ING ......... 752-1293 (ads@lakecityre porter.com)CL ASSIFIEDTo place a classified ad, call 755-5440 BUSINESSController )UDQFHV:DLQZULJKW .... 754-0419 (sbrannon@lakecityreporter.com)CI RCUL AT IONHome delivery of the Lake City Reporter should be completed by 6:30 a.m. Tuesday through Friday, and by 7:30 a.m. on Sunday. Please call 386-755-5445 to report any problems with your delivery service. In Columbia County, customers should call before 10:30 a.m. to report a service error for same day re-delivery. After 10:30 a.m., next day re-delivery or service related credits will be issued. In all other counties where home delivery is available, next day re-delivery or service related credits will be issued. Circulation ............... 755-5445 (circulation@lakecityreporter.com)Home delivery rates(Tuesday -Friday and Sunday) 12 Weeks .................. $26.32 24 Weeks ................... $48.79 52 Weeks ................... $83.46Rates include 7% sales tax.Mail rates12 Weeks .................. $41.40 24 Weeks ................... $82.80 52 Weeks .................. $179.40 Lake City Reporter See an error? The Lake City Reporter corrects errors of fact in news items. If you have a concern, question, or suggestion, please call the editor. Corrections and clarications will run in this space. Thanks for reading. Submissions The Lake City Reporter accepts photographs and caption information to run at the discretion of the editor. If you would like to see your organization in the newspaper, send the picture and information to associate editor Justin Caudell at jcaudell@lakecityreporter.com. Scripture of the Day“But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept. For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead.” — 1 Corinthians 15:20-22 (KJV) Every time you have the courage to face your fears, you become a stronger person.— Barbara White Thought for Today Winning Lottery Numbers Pick 3: (Wednesday mid-day) 2-4-4 Pick 4: (Wednesday mid-day) 8-6-3-8 Pick 5: (Wednesday mid-day) 5-2-5-8-9 QUICK HITS COURTESYCHS student earns accoladesColumbia High School student Jack Duarte was recognized at a recent Columbia County School Board meeting for being selected as the Columbia County District Sunshine State Scholar for the 2016-17 school year. He also received an award from the National Hispanic Recognition Program for achieving academic excellence in the classroom and on the PSAT/NMSQT. Every year, the program recognizes about 5,000 of the 250,000 Hispanic/Latino juniors who take the test. Duarte is pictured at the board meeting with, from left, Superintendent Lex Carswell, Principal Trey Hosford and Columbia County School Board Chairwoman Dana Brady-Giddens. Road 47 on April 5, said Robert Pfalzgraf, a physician with the Jacksonville Medical Examiner’s Office. Bell had heart problems that likely caused him to pass out, Pfalzgraf said. “He was sort of like a ticking time bomb,” Pfalzgraf added. “His heart was just stopped.” Bell also had a severe neck injury prior to the crash, Pfalzgraf said. There is no way to know for certain whether Bell was unconscious or dead prior to the collision, however, so the wreck is still officially the cause of death, Pfalzgraf said. Bell was pronounced dead on the scene, according to the Florida Highway Patrol, after his Chevrolet Silverado collided with the rear of a Waste Pro garbage truck in the southbound lane on SR 47, near Southwest Act Lane. Kenneth Earl Robinson, the driver of the garbage truck, sustained minor injuries. another 500 or so acres on Wednesday, reaching 21,790 acres and 3 percent con tainment, an Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge news release said. The fire, which started on April 6 due to a light ning strike, is in parts of Okefenokee, John M. Bethea State Forest and Osceola National Forest in Baker County and South Georgia. There are now 330 person nel assigned to the incident, along with 36 tractor plows, 28 engines, six helicopters, five bulldozers and four crews, the release said. Workers from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Forest Service, the Florida Forest Service and the Georgia Forestry Commission are all fighting the fire. While the fire has gotten near the northeast corner, it has not touched Columbia County, according to Doc Bloodworth, the Florida Forest Service public information officer based in Lake City. He said the fir e has been slowly expanding to the northeast. Firefighters are preparing for a strong influx of winds from the south and southwest on Sunday. “We need to be prepared for Sunday,” Bloodworth told the Lake City Reporter on Tuesday. The fire is expected to take three or four weeks to fully contain. DOCTORContinued From 1A AIRPORTContinued From 1A under her care, according to the report. Taylor left the house earlier in the day to get food from the Christian Service Center, leaving the female child outside to play. When Taylor got back around 2 p.m., she noticed the girl had two sandwiches from inside the house, the report states. After noticing the front door had been pulled open, Taylor “became extremely irate” and started to yell at the child, according to LCPD. Taylor told the child to leave the house for the rest of the day, the report states. The child had belongings inside the house and tried to get back inside, but Taylor attempted to push the girl off the porch, the report states. The girl bit Taylor on the arm. Taylor responded by picking up a broom handle in an attempt to use it as a weapon, according to the report, but the child grabbed the handle and broke it. Taylor then grabbed a pink scooter and threw it at the girl, the report states. Taylor, who claimed to have missed the child, had a bite mark on her arm consistent with the story told to law enforcement, according to LCPD. The girl, who called law enforcement about her injured leg, was found walking east on Martin Luther King Boulevard, the report states. An officer noted the child had an injury on her left knee, which the girl said she sustained when Taylor threw the scooter, according to LCPD. Taylor’s mother, Evelyn Legget, was in a vehicle outside of the house when the incident occurred, the report states. Legget said she saw Taylor throw the scooter at the child’s leg, striking the minor in her knee. Taylor was arrested and taken to the Columbia County Detention Facility on charges of battery and cruelty toward children. SCOOTERContinued From 1ACOURTESYFaculty member recognized by school boardColumbia High School faculty member Jill Hunter was recognized at a recent Columbia County School Board meeting for being selected as the Florida Association of Student Council’s Advisor of the Year. She is pictured at the board meeting with, from left, Superintendent Lex Carswell, CHS Student Government President B.J. Wheeler, CHS Principal Trey Hosford and Columbia County School Board Chairwoman Dana Brady-Giddens.

PAGE 3

t THURSDA Y, APRIL 20, 2017 t LOCAL t LAKE CITY REPORTER t 3A I’ll show you how life insurance can come in handy for more immediate family needs, like college. We put the life back in life insurance.™ CALL ME TODAY. There are also benets now. With life insurance, the benefits live on. State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL 1311019 John Burns III, Agent 234 SW Main Boulevard Lake City, FL 32056 Bus: 386-752-5866 john.burns.cnj5@statefarm.com I’ll show you how life insurance can come in handy for more immediate family needs, like college. We put the life back in life insurance.™ CALL ME TODAY. There are also benets now. With life insurance, the benefits live on.State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL1311019 John Burns III, Agent 234 SW Main Boulevard Lake City, FL 32056 Bus: 386-752-5866 john.burns.cnj5@statefarm.com I’ll show you how life insurance can come in handy for more immediate family needs, like college. We put the life back in life insurance.™ CALL ME TODAY. There are also benets now. With life insurance, the benefits live on. State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL1311019 John Burns III, Agent 234 SW Main Boulevard Lake City, FL 32056 Bus: 386-752-5866 john.burns.cnj5@statefarm.com I’ll show you how life insurance can come in handy for more immediate family needs, like college. We put the life back in life insurance.™ CALL ME TODAY. There are also benets now. With life insurance, the benefits live on.State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL1311019 John Burns III, Agent 234 SW Main Boulevard Lake City, FL 32056 Bus: 386-752-5866 john.burns.cnj5@statefarm.com I’ll show you how life insurance can come in handy for more immediate family needs, like college. We put the life back in life insurance.™ CALL ME TODAY. There are also benets now. With life insurance, the benefits live on. State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL1311019 John Burns III, Agent 234 SW Main Boulevard Lake City, FL 32056 Bus: 386-752-5866 john.burns.cnj5@statefarm.com I’ll show you how life insurance can come in handy for more immediate family needs, like college. We put the life back in life insurance.™ CALL ME TODAY. There are also benets now. With life insurance, the benefits live on.State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL1311019 John Burns III, Agent 234 SW Main Boulevard Lake City, FL 32056 Bus: 386-752-5866 john.burns.cnj5@statefarm.com I’ll show you how life insurance can come in handy for more immediate family needs, like college. We put the life back in life insurance.™ CALL ME TODAY. There are also benets now. With life insurance, the benefits live on.State Farm Life Insurance Company (Not licensed in MA, NY or WI) State Farm Life and Accident Assurance Company (Licensed in NY and WI) Bloomington, IL1311019 John Burns III, Agent 234 SW Main Boulevard Lake City, FL 32056 Bus: 386-752-5866 john.burns.cnj5@statefarm.com Pence to North Korea: ‘The sword stands ready’Associated PressYOKOSUKA, Japan — From the wind-swept deck of a massive aircraft carrier, Vice President Mike   Pence on W ednesday warned North Korea not to test the resolve of the U.S. military, promising it would make an “overwhelming and effective” response to any use of conven tional or nuclear weapons. Pence, dressed in a gr een military jacket, said aboard the hulking USS Ronald Reagan that President Donald Trump’s administration would continue to “work diligently” with allies like Japan, China and other global powers to apply econom ic and diplomatic pressure on Pyongyang. But he told the sail ors, “as all of you know, readiness is the key.” “The United States of America will always seek peace but under Pr esident Trump, the shield stands guard and the sword stands ready,” Pence told 2,500 sailors wearing blue fatigues and Naval baseball caps on a sunny, windy morning aboard the carrier at the U.S. Yokosuka naval base in Tokyo Bay “Those who would challenge our resolve or readiness should know, we will defeat any attack and meet any use of conventional or nuclear weapons with an overwhelming and ef fective American response,” Pence said. The vice president said the U.S. would honor its alliance with Pacific Rim nations and protect freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, the sea lanes vita l to global shipping where China has been staking claim to disputed territory. From two continents, Pence and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis warned that North Korea’s latest failed missile launch was a reckless act of pr ovocation and assured allies in Asia that the U.S. was ready to work to achieve a peaceful denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. Mattis denounced North Korea’s attempted missile launch as he began a Middle East tour, telling reporters traveling with him to Saudi Arabia, “the leader of North Korea again recklessly tried to provoke something by launching a missile,” he said. The term “reckless” is one the North Koreans have used to describe ongoing large-scale U.S. and South Korean military exercises, which the North calls a dress rehearsal for an invasion. Mattis did not identify the type of missile but said it was not of intercontinental range, meaning it could not reach U.S. territory. He did not comment on what might have caused the missile to fail. Another official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss an intelligence matter, said the missile was a Scud variant that the U.S. calls a KN-17. Mattis credited China with trying to help get the North Korea situation “under control” with the goal of denuclearizing the penin sula. Pe nce’s speech on the aircraft carrier followed meetings Tuesday in T okyo with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, where he noted that “all options are on the table.” Abe said that it was a “mat ter of paramount importance for us to seek diplomatic effor ts as well peaceable settlements of the issue.” “But at the same time,” the prime minister said, “dialogue for the sake of dialogue is valueless and it is necessary for us to exercise pressure North Korea so that it comes forwar d and engages in this serious dialogue.” The Tr ump administration has signaled a forceful U.S. stance on North Korea’s recent actions, dispatching Pence to the Demilitarized Zone divid ing North and South Korea on Monday in a show of American resolve. But it r emains unclear what might come next.Tribune News Service Vice President Mike Pence visits the Observation Post Ouellette in the Demilitarized Zone near the truce village of Panmunjom, South Korea Photos by KATRINA POGGIO/Lake City ReporterThe Lake City/Columbia County Chamber of Commerce announced Busy Bee as the 2017 Business of the Year in the big business category. From left: Chamber President Brad Wheeler; Chamber Marketing Director Abbie Chasteen; Kin Johnson; Jackie Johnson; Marshall Beck; Busy Bee CEO Elizabeth Waring; Lucas Waring; Megan Forcey; David Johnson; Robb Cates; and Chamber Executive Director Dennille Decker. The Lake City/Columbia County Chamber of Commerce announced the North Central Florida Advertiser as the 2017 Business of the Year in the small business category. From left: Wheeler; Chasteen; Decker; Dana Hall, North Central Florida Advertiser President Mantha Young and Owner Tom Ricketson; Cindy Ricketson; Sandy Mooney; Justin Young; and Karen Leslie. but it probably should actually be both of us,” Williams said after the luncheon. “I couldn’t do what I do without her.” Some of the organizations Williams has been involved with are Lake City Regional Catholic Charities, Haven Hospice, Lake City/Columbia County Chamber of Commerce, The Foundation for Florida Gateway College, March of Dimes —   all while being a member of United W ay for 20 years. Even though Williams is involved in numerous organizations, he focuses on putting his effort into groups whose missions are aligned with his own values. “I only tr y to be involved in the things I truly believe in,” he said. Those things usually involve educa tion, community building and food security. W illiams is thankful to live in a place where so many people are bonded by a passion for improving their commu nity. All these years he has just been trying to do his par t. “It’s all the little things together when we all give our little part that in the end it makes our community better,” Williams said. Also at Wednesday’s luncheon, local businesses lar ge and small were rec ognized by the Chamber of Commerce for their role in the community Busy Bee food stores was named the 2017 Business of the Year in the large business category. Busy Bee CEO Elizabeth Waring said her company is excited about winning the award. “We’re just proud,” Waring said. “We’re just tickled and proud that we were able to receive this award.” The North Central Florida Advertiser was the 2017 Business of the Year in the small business category. Owner Tom Ricketson said he is thankful to live in the area and know that people value the product his company offers. “We’r e really pleased and thank all the Chamber members,” Ricketson said. WILLIAMSContinued From 1A declined to comment fur ther. Coinciding with Coleman’s r ecusal, Third Judicial Circuit State Attorney Jeff Siegmeister also recused himself, citing a desire to “avoid a conflict of interest or any appearance of impropriety.” After Siegmeister told Gov Rick Scott that Witt is a long-time defense attorney in the Third Circuit, Scott reassigned the pr osecution to Fourth Circuit State Attorney Melissa Nelson. Witt, 64, had a blood alco hol level of .220 when he started his GMC T errain in January and exited the vehi cle, sending it rolling into Lake DeSoto, according to the Florida Highway Patr ol. Charges were filed on March 6, after the Florida Department of Law Enforcement completed a blood test. Witt was also given a citation for careless driving. JUDGEContinued From 1A

PAGE 4

It’s tricky and scary, this business of trying to get North Korea’s tyrannical regime to give up its nuclear ambitions. Scarier still would be an inane go-ahead signal, the kind of thing, for instance, we got under the Clinton administration. Say about him what you will, but President Donald Trump is doing more than any predecessor to get China to do what’s needed, and China is the key in all of this. Reviewing the fumble in the Clinton years helps explain how we got where we are and what we ought to avoid. North Korea was then preparing for the production of nuclear weaponry, and President Bill Clinton, first telling the Pentagon to get ready for action if necessary, also asked the United Nations to figure out sanctions that might help avert disaster. Then came Jimmy Carter. As Steven F. Hayward related in his 2004 book, “The Real Jimmy Carter,” this ex-president insisted he be allowed to visit with dictator Kim Il Sung, and Clinton said OK despite misgivings. Carter’s presentation was prepared for him. He was to threaten sanctions if North Korea did not allow U.N. inspections, hand over spent fuel rods and otherwise trash its nuke program. Instead, he said forget the inspections and said the United States would not support U.N. sanctions. Negotiating beyond what Clinton wanted and beyond his rights as a private citizen, Carter mainly just wanted further talks and asked North Korea to give its word about no further development of the weapons while promising U.S. help in developing nuclear energy. North Korea was ready to trot, and, before calling the White House, Carter publicized the plan through CNN interviews. That put Clinton in a position of looking obstructionist if he did not go along with Carter, and he did after first weakly arguing for toughening things up some. Hayward tells us Kim Il Sung died soon afterwards and that the joke in the State Department was that he died of laughter at Carter’s giveaways. North Korea went right ahead with its weapons development to the point it is now bragging about having nuclear missiles capable of reaching the United States. Carter’s was a pathetically common mode of negotiation that substitutes starry eyed hopefulness for practical results. We saw the same thing in the Syrian deal on chemical weapons and approximations of it in the Iranian nuclear deal. An occasional harrumph is about as much as we’ve seen in recent years concerning North Korea, which is now being led by the murderously evil, short, fat, egomaniacal Kim Jong Un, who is threatening nuclear war as nonchalantly as if just calling for more dessert. A big part of the answer is China, which could erase North Korea’s economy virtually overnight by cutting off trade. It had long refrained from meaningful sanctions despite constant urging. Then Trump, in his talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, clearly got through to him. Trump backed off his own trade threats at a time when China itself needs all the economic help it can get. China quit importing coal from Korea in February and appears to be contemplating more such moves. A collapsed North Korea could mean major problems for China, but the point is to keep North Korea from risking collapse. Another huge concern is that North Korea could burst into a military frenzy that, among the horrors, would devastate South Korea. Might recent U.S. military actions in Syria and Afghanistan and an increased U.S. military presence near North Korea in a week or so help instigate such an outburst? Just the opposite, some say. Of course, the greatest fear of all is that a fanatically governed, already dangerous North Korea becomes a full-scale nuclear power. While there is no certainty in all of this and even the experts disagree, we do seem to be on the right track. The last thing we need is a return to negotiations people joke about. OPINION Lake City Reporter Serving Columbia County Since 1874 The Lake City Reporter is published with pride for residents of Columbia and surrounding counties by Community Newspapers Inc. W e believe strong newspapers build strong communities —-“Newspapers get things done!” Our primary goal is to publish distinguished and profitable community -oriented newspapers. This mission will be accomplished through the teamwork of professionals dedicated to truth, integrity and hard work. Todd Wilson, Publisher Robert Bridges, Editor Jim Barr, Associate Editor Sue Brannon, Controller Dink NeSmith, President Tom Wood, Chairman LETTERS POLICY Letters to the Editor should be typed or neatly written and double spaced. Letters should not exceed 400 words and will be edited for length and libel. Letters must be signed and include the writer’ s name, address and telephone number for verification. W riters can have two letters per month published. Letters and guest columns are the opinion of the writers and not necessarily that of the Lake City Reporter. BY MAIL: b Letters, P.O. Box 1709, Lake City FL 32056; or drop off at 180 E. Duval St. downtown. BY F AX: b (386) 752 -9400. BY EMAIL: b rbridges@lakecityreporter.com Thursday, April 20, 2017 t www.lak ecityreporter.com t 4A Lake City Reporter Serving Columbia County Since 1874 The Lake City Reporter is published with pride for residents of Columbia and surrounding counties by Community Newspapers Inc. W e believe strong newspapers build strong communities —-“Newspapers get things done!” Our primary goal is to publish distinguished and profitable community -oriented newspapers. This mission will be accomplished through the teamwork of professionals dedicated to truth, integrity and hard work. Todd Wilson, Publisher Robert Bridges, Editor Frances Wainwright, Controller Dink NeSmith, President Tom Wood, Chairman LETTERS TO THE EDITORTurkey has been bumping along on the ragged margins of democracy for years. With this week’s slim approval of a governmental reform referendum, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has proclaimed that the nation can “change gears and continue along our course more quickly.” Endorsement of his amendments to the Turkish constitution are likely to steer the nation into a spider web of harsh and unforgiving authoritarianism. With Turkey’s application for European Union membership all but dead now, and its continued role in NATO a dubious proposition, the West is entitled to shudder. The Erdogan-backed campaign for radical change prevailed by the narrowest of margins — 51.4 percent to 48.6 percent — and grants the president far-reaching new powers, foremost among them the way to complete the Islamization that will eliminate Turkey as the continental link between east and west that was established by Mustafa Kamal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey. The constitutional amendments that bolster the president’s executive powers eliminate the office of prime minister, enable the president to hold office for two five-year terms and a third one with approval of the Parliament, grant the president the freedom to lead a political party, and award him a leading role in appointing judges. The razor-thin winning margin has prompted charges of ballot fraud from opposition political leaders, who say the government “assisted” the Erdoganbacked “yes” vote. Indeed, Mr. Erdogan told the international monitors who support claims of ballot fraud, “Know your place.” President Trump, perhaps forgetting his place, couldn’t resist calling Mr. Erdogan with congratulations he might want to recall in the coming months. The vote was surprisingly close, considering that Mr. Erdogan put his heavy thumb on the scale, ordering a crackdown on independent newspapers and the men and women who write for them, and the arrest of tens of thousands of “suspects” in the army in the wake of the attempted coup last July. Mr. Erdogan tried to export his influence to expatriate Turkish communities in the West. This resulted in a bit of backlash in the Netherlands, where the government denied the Turkish foreign minister entry to campaign for the referendum among Turkish expats. Mr. Erdogan for his part called unfriendly Europeans “Nazis,” and among other things hinted that he would restore the death penalty for certain crimes, which would make Turkey ineligible for membership in the European Union. Mr. Erdogan is clearly no democrat. He once compared the pursuit of democracy to a journey by train: “You ride it until you arrive at your destination, then you step off.” The president may have decided that this is where he and Turkey step off the train. The loss of Turkey as its eastern buffer would be a particular blow to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. When Turkey joined NATO in 1952 many thought this would lead Turkey into full integration with the West. Now Mr. Erdogan’s growing hostility to Western values, his purging of his military to rid it of the remnants of democratic impulse, and a tilt toward a harsh version of Islam puts integration into the West in grave doubt. A China deal to remember? Q Washington TimesNew York tussle: The girl or the bull?For nearly three decades, the bronze sculpture of a menacing bull has stood in New York’s financial district, a massive symbol of American financial might and resilience. But earlier this year, a willowy 4-foot-tall Fearless Girl statue suddenly appeared yards away. Fists on hips, the little girl with windblown dress and ribbon in her ponytail defiantly faces the bull. The girl was supposed to be a temporary addition, but women across the country embraced the Fearless Girl as a rallying symbol, a tribute to the power of women in leadership during International Women’s Day in March. Former First Daughter Chelsea Clinton and actress Jessica Chastain extolled the statue, which was commissioned by State Street Global Advisors, a Boston-based financial firm. “Come on everyone! Let’s keep this badass girl strong!” Chastain tweeted. But the bull’s sculptor, Arturo Di Modica, is seeing red. Di Modica argues that the girl is an insult to his work, and is “attacking the bull.” He wants to banish the girl. The sculptor created the 11-foottall, 3-ton Charging Bull after the 1987 stock market crash to celebrate the resilience of America. Because of the girl, Di Modica’s attorney argues, the bull no longer is a powerful symbol of pride and optimism but “has been transformed into a negative force and a threat.” Pedestrians are capable of appreciating one sculpture at a time or taking in both. One doesn’t detract from the other, any more than a van Gogh and a Monet in the same museum battle for attention. We think the girl enhances the presence of the bull — and the bull underscores the resolve of the little girl with feet planted firmly against whatever comes next. As a friend wrote: “So what if the little girl is taking on the sacred old bulls of our culture? Isn’t that something we want for all our little girls?” New Yorkers are taking sides. Mayor Bill de Blasio is pro-girl (the statue is a symbol of “standing up to fear, standing up to power, being able to find in yourself the strength to do what’s right,” he says.) Our advice to New York: Don’t blow this serendipitous pairing. The statue face-off stirs controversy and could attract tourists by the busload. What city wouldn’t relish such a magnet? This is like Beyonce or Rihanna, Muhammad Ali or Joe Frazier, John or Paul. In other words: The rivalry is good for business. Instead of rearranging the statues, how about unleashing Madison Avenue to make the most of this? A contest to name the girl? The bull? A children’s book about the plucky girl and her ferocious pal? An American Girl doll? T-shirts? Mugs? Settle this tussle now. We say the girl stays.Q Chicago TribuneCooking Turkey’s goose ANOTHER VIEWHow to solve the blood shortage problemTo the Editor: It depresses me to read about the critical blood shortage at LifeSouth blood bank. It is a problem that could be easily remedied. All eligible donors could go by and donate a pint. It only takes 30 minutes of your time. Please take the time. J.E. Guthrie Lake City Jay AmbroseSpeaktoJay@aol.comQ Jay Ambrose, formerly Washington director of editorial policy for Scripps Howard newspapers and the editor of dailies in El Paso, Texas and Denver, is a columnist living in Colorado.

PAGE 5

t THURSDA Y, APRIL 20, 2017 t LOCAL t LAKE CITY REPORTER t 5A IT’S HOT AND HUMID HERE AND TROPICAL PLANTS LOVE IT!Some plants that we love struggle during our warm humid summers. Not tropicals! Hibiscus, mandevilla, duranta, alocasia and RWKHUVZLOOSURYLGHXVZLWKEHDXWLIXORZHUVDQG or unusual foliage from spring right through fall! By including a few tropicals in your pots or plantings you can watch as they smile at you right through the heat! Come see us! WK5RDG‡/LYH2DN (386) 362-2333 1(:635,1*+2856 0RQ)ULDPSP 6DWXUGD\DPSP &ORVHG6XQGD\We deliver to Lake City every week!)RURYHU
PAGE 6

6A t THURSDA Y, APRIL 20, 2017 t LOCAL t LAKE CITY REPORTER t Senator pitches counteroffer on ‘Schools of Hope’By BRANDON LARRABEEThe News Service of FloridaTALLAHASSEE — A Senate counteroffer on the House’s controversial “Schools of Hope” proposal emerged this week, shortly before it was attached to another piece of education legislation overwhelmingly approved by a budget subcommittee. Less than three hours after it was filed, the Senate measure was added to a bill dealing with teacher bonuses (SB 1552), which then was unanimously passed by the Senate PreK-12 Education Subcommittee. The move set the stage for negotiations with the House on how to help students in public schools that persistently get poor grades on state report cards. The House bill (HB 5105) would tap $200 million from the state budget for the “Schools of Hope” program, meant to encourage qualified charter schools to set up near academically troubled traditional schools. Because of its impact on the budget, the legislation is part of the House-Senate negotiations over state spending for the year that begins July 1. But the language proposed by Sen. David Simmons, an Altamonte Springs Republican who oversees the chamber’s education budget panel, would focus first on earlier interventions for public schools that would fall short of calling in charter operators. The bill would call on a district to give priority to one of three turnaround options, including an extra hour of learning time for students, giving principals more control or providing wraparound services, like health care and after-school programs. Schools that offer those services would be eligible for additional state funds. Three other turnaround options — including converting a traditional school into a charter school — would still be available to districts. “We’re giving them the flexibility, but we’re giving them the demand — the demand that this gets solved,” Simmons told the committee. He also repeated something that he said Monday about the House proposal: that while Simmons believes it is a good idea, it’s not enough on its own to address struggling public schools. The House has said that 115 schools could be eligible for the Schools of Hope program, though some of those are likely to move off the list before the next school year begins. “I think it’s impossible to ask charter schools to come in and take on the challenge by themselves right now without any other assistance,” Simmons said. The House proposal has also alarmed educators and some Democrats, who worry that it will continue a trend toward privatization of state schools. While charter schools are public schools, they are often managed by private for-profit or not-for-profit entities. Several Democrats have pushed for a more comprehensive approach to the problem, including providing wraparound services for public schools. “You cannot expect a stu dent to come to school hungry, or with a toothache, or coming from an environment where they couldn’t sleep peacefully the night before and expect them to be able to perform at a level that they are capable of doing,” said Sen. Bill Montford, a Tallahassee Democrat and head of the Florida Association of District School Superintendents. Following the subcommittee meeting, Simmons told reporters that negotiations with the House would focus on looking for ways to combine the best elements of both chambers’ proposals. “Obviously, this is a compromise in and of itself right here, and we look forward to working with our colleagues in the House to reach a consensus,” he said. Simmons Westside Elementary students inducted into academic clubFrom staff reportsA number of Westside Elementary second and third grade students recently gained membership into the Jr. Einstein Club after achieving outstanding scores in math fact fluency. The students enjoyed a morning of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) related activities to celebrate their accomplishment. The students who gained membership included: Second grade: Jackson Johnson; Ayla Miller; Nayarie Cannon; Ethan Swanson; Josue Hernandez-Mendoza; Breanna Brim; Griffin Hull; Cade Higgs; Jake Watkins; Hailey Hacht; Kayden Cheshire; Savannah Tickel; Sophie Morrison; Trace Williams; Mayson Miller; Jada Tollison; Riley Johnson; Adeline Mock; Ohm Patel; Jelen Martinez; Kinley King; Xavier Collins; Layla Alexander; Inigo Gruta; Joshua Livengood; Mychael Loch; Kinsey Ruark; Dashani Williams; Ryker Odum; Shreya Patel; and Caleigh Cruess. Third grade: Shriya Patel; Grayson Roberts; Nattalee Riggs; Kenidy Dow; Jazen Merriex; Lauryn Lee; Aarav Gandhi; Sheldon Williams; Christian Paschall; Addyson Sherman; Will Becker; Kyten Davis; Cade Frier; Lilla Chapman; Anisha Patel; and Griffin Roberts.COURTESY PHOTOSWestside Elementary’s new Jr. Einstein Club members. They gained membership after achieving outstanding scores in math fact fluency. Second grade student Hailey Hacht enjoys a morning of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) activities after being inducted into the Jr. Einstein Club. From left, third grade students Addyson Sherman, Christian Paschall and Aarvav Gandhi enjoy Jr. Einstein Day activities. Pinemount has eventful monthFrom staff reportsExciting events have been occurring around Pinemount Elementary all April.   Earlier this month, a police of ficer made a bullying presentation to third grade students.   Students lear ned how to handle themselves if they are ever in a position where they are being bullied. The school also celebrated students’ success at an Accelerated Reading party.   All of the students who met their AR goal for the third nine weeks were able to participate in duct taping Principal Donna Darby to the wall. Pinemount’s second grade students hit the stage to present a play titled, “How Does Your Garden Groove?,” and most recently, the school held a 100-point walk on the red carpet to spotlight students who have earned 100 reading points. So far this school year, 63 students have hit the 100point mark. The school said it is proud of their super readers.COURTESY PHOTOSPinemount Elementary celebrated its students’ success at an Accelerated Reading party.All of the students who met their AR goal for the third nine weeks were able to participate in duct taping Principal Donna Darby to the wall. Pinemount’s second grade students hit the stage earlier this month to present a play titled, “How Does Your Garden Groove?” Most recently, the school held a 100 point walk to spotlight students who have earned 100-reading points.

PAGE 7

Lake City Reporter SPORTS Thursday, April 20, 2017 t ww w.lakecityreporter.com t Section B Story ideas? Contact Eric Jackson or Tony Britt754-0420 754-0421ejackson@lakecityreporter.com tbritt@lakecityreporter.com CHS boys defend district title, sending two players to state Fort White 8, Bronson 2 LADY INDIANS FEAST ON EAGLESBy TONY BRITTtbritt@lakecityreporter.comFORT WHITE The Fort White Indians softball team picked up a win Tuesday night by defeating the Bronson Eagles in a non-district contest, 8-4. The Indians (8-10, 3-6) capitalized on several Eagles errors and made the most of clutch hits and timely pitching to get the win. “It was an intense win,” said Michele Padgett, Fort White head softball coach. “The girls hit the ball, Shelby [Dubose] did well pitching and the girls had a couple of errors and they always end up in runs. They had four [runs] because errors equal runs for the other team. The girls were definitely playing together tonight and the sometimes questionable calls cause the girls to get intense and that comes in to play.” The Lady Indians grabbed the lead early in the contest and although Bronson attempted a late rally, the Eagles (2-16, 1-9) were never able to catch up. The Indians were able to get the early lead through Eagle errors in the bottom of the second inning. Savanna Terry reached first base with one out on a error after she bunted. After the second out, Shaylen Raulerson also reached on a bunt single. Paige Dinges grounded back to the pitcher, who made an errant toss to first base allowing two runs to score. Kylee Crews followed with a triple, pushing across another run, but she was thrown out at the plate trying to stretch the triple into an inside the park homer. The Indians ended the inning with the 3-0 lead. Neither team was able to score in the third inning, but in the bottom of the fourth inning the Lady CHRISTINA FEAGIN/Special to the ReporterFort White’s Jennifer Allen stands alert at first base during a frame against Bronson. The Lady Indians shook off a previous defeat to Union County and won 7-2 at home on Monday night. Fort White girls pick up eighth win of the season CHS TENNISBy ERIC JACKSONejackson@lakecityreporter.comColumbia boys tennis team made history Tuesday night. The Tigers not only repeated as district champs for a second-straight season, but also qualified two players for next week’s decisive state final matches – a first apperance in school history. Hosting regionals again this year, Columbia wouldn’t be denied against visiting Creekside on Tuesday. This week’s victory tops off the Tigers’ undefeated season. Columbia teammates will cheer on singles star PK Patel in next week’s state matches in Sanlando Park. Patel will be joined by Daniel Rendel in the doubles event. Photos by BRENT KUYKENDALL/Special to the ReporterColumbia’s PK Patel (above) returns a shot against a Creekside player on Tuesday night. Patel will represent CHS at next week’s state matches. RIGHT: Reid Wehril and Tanner Thomas take doubles during the contest. See more photos on 6B. Tigers go undefeated in historic season NFLEx-NFL star Aaron Hernandez hangs himself in his prison cell By JIMMY GOLENAssociated PressBOSTON — Hours before his former New England Patriots teammates were due to visit the White House to celebrate their Super Bowl victory, prison officials say, Aaron Hernandez tied one end of his bedsheet to a window and the other around his neck and hanged himself. In a maximum-security prison outside Boston, about an hour from the stadium where he played alongside stars like Tom Brady and Rob Gronkowsi, Hernandez jammed the door to his one-man cell lest guards try to stop him, and put an early end to the life-without-parole sentence he received for a 2013 murder. He was 27. It was the last act in the downfall of an athlete who once seemed to have everything — including a five-year $40 million contract extension — and threw it all away. The former NFL star’s death left friends, family and his legal team shocked and in disbelief, searching for an explanation. Just last Friday, Hernandez was FILEFormer UF tight end Aaron Hernandez showed signs of trouble as early as with the Gators in Gainesville. Former UF star found dead HERNANDEZ continued on 6B TIWAHE continued on 6BMLBFormer MLB star Jeter, Bush join forces in bid to buy Miami MarlinsBy STEVEN WINEAssociated PressMIAMI – Derek Jeter and Jeb Bush have formed a team in their attempt to buy a team. The former New York Yankees star and former Florida governor have joined forces in their pursuit of the Miami Marlins, a person familiar with the situation said Wednesday. The person confirmed the partnership to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because Jeter and Bush have not commented. They initially had competing interests in efforts to buy the team. Jeter has long talked about owning a franchise. Bush’s brother, former President George W. Bush, was part-owner of the Texas Rangers from 1989 to 1998. Last week, Marlins president David Samson said talks with multiple parties interested in buying the team were in the “fourth inning.” He said owner Jeffrey Loria, 76, might sell before the end of the season or not at all. Price and financing could be major hurdles. Joshua Kushner, whose older brother is an adviser to President Donald Trump, had a preliminary agreement to buy the Marlins for $1.6 billion before breaking off negotiations. Loria bought the team in 2002 for $158.5 million. Spokesmen for Jeter and Bush didn’t respond to requests for comment. Jeter retired in 2014 after 20 seasons with the Yankees. His final manager, Joe Girardi, recently predicted Jeter would make a great owner even if it’s in a city other than New York. “That will be strange. In my mind he’ll always be a Yankee,” Girardi said. “But there is life after baseball, and sometimes the opportunity that presents itself is not always necessarily where you played.”COURTESYDerek Jeter was a star for the Yankees. B1

PAGE 8

2B t THURSDA Y, APRIL 20, 2017 t SPORTS t LAKE CITY REPORTER t TV LISTINGSTODAY BOXING 10 p.m. ESPN2 — Michael Perez vs. Marcelino Lopez, junior welterweights, at Verona, N.Y. FIGURE SKATING Noon NBCSN — ISU World Team Trophy (Short Dance, Ladies Short Program and Men’s Short Program), at Tokyo (same-day tape) GOLF Noon GOLF — Web.com Tour, United Leasing & Finance Championship, first round, at Newburgh, Ind. 3:30 p.m. GOLF — PGA Tour, Valero Texas Open, first round, at San Antonio 10:30 p.m. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shenzhen International, second round, at Shenzhen, China 2:30 a.m. (Friday) GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shenzhen International, second round, at Shenzhen, China MLB BASEBALL 12:30 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, Boston at Toronto OR Cleveland at Minnesota (1 p.m.) 7:30 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, Washington at Atlanta OR Kansas City at Texas (8 p.m.) 10:30 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, Seattle at Oakland OR Arizona at San Diego (11 p.m.; Games joined in progress) NBA BASKETBALL 7 p.m. TNT — NBA Playoffs, Eastern Conference, first round, Game 3, Cleveland at Indiana 8 p.m. NBA — NBA Playoffs, Eastern Conference, first round, Game 3, Toronto at Milwaukee 9:30 p.m. TNT — NBA Playoffs, Western Conference, first round, Game 3, San Antonio at Memphis NHL HOCKEY 7 p.m. USA — Stanley Cup Playoffs, Eastern Conference, first round, Game 5, N.Y. Rangers at Montreal NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs, Eastern Conference, first round, Game 5, Columbus at Pittsburgh 8 p.m. NBCSN — Stanley Cup Playoffs, Western Conference, first round, Game 4, Chicago at Nashville 10:30 p.m. NBCSN — Stanley Cup Playoffs, Western Conference, first round, Game 5, San Jose at Edmonton SOCCER 3 p.m. FS1 — UEFA Europa League, Quarterfinals, 2nd Leg, Manchester United vs. RSC Anderlecht FS2 — UEFA Europa League, Quarterfinals, 2nd Leg, Schalke vs. AFC AjaxMLB STANDINGSNational League East Division t W t L t Pc t t GB Washingt on t 8 t 5 t .615 t — Miami t 8 t 6 t .571 t New Yor k t 7 t 7 t .500 t 1 Atlan ta t 6 t 7 t .462 t 2 Philadelphia t 5 t 8 t .385 t 3 Cen tral Division t W t L t Pc t t GB Cincinna ti t 9 t 5 t .643 t — Milw aukee t 8 t 7 t .533 t 1 Chicago t 7 t 7 t .500 t 2 Pittsbur gh t 6 t 8 t .429 t 3 St Louis t 5 t 9 t .357 t 4 West Division t W t L t Pc t t GB Ar izona t 10 t 5 t .667 t — Color ado t 10 t 5 t .667 t — Los A ngeles t 7 t 8 t .467 t 3 San Francisco t 6 t 9 t .400 t 4 San Diego t 5 t 10 t .333 t 5 Americ an League East Division t W t L t Pc t t GB Baltimore t 8 t 4 t .667 t — Bost on t 9 t 5 t .643 t — New Yor k t 9 t 5 t .643 t — Tampa Ba y t 7 t 8 t .467 t 2 Tor onto t 2 t 11 t .154 t 6 Cen tral Division t W t L t Pc t t GB Detr oit t 8 t 5 t .615 t — Chicago t 7 t 6 t .538 t 1 Cleveland t 7 t 7 t .500 t 1 Minnesota t 7 t 7 t .500 t 1 Kansas C ity t 6 t 7 t .462 t 2 West Division t W t L t Pc t t GB Houston t 9 t 5 t .643 t — Los A ngeles t 7 t 8 t .467 t 2 Oakland t 6 t 8 t .429 t 3 Sea ttle t 6 t 9 t .400 t 3 Te xas t 5 t 9 t .357 t 4NASCAR STANDINGSPoints Leaders 1. Kyle Larson, 315. 2. Chase Elliott, 298. 3. Martin Truex Jr., 275. 4. Brad Keselowski, 274. 5. Joey Logano, 243. 6. Ryan Blaney, 224. 7. Kyle Busch, 211. 8. Jamie McMurray, 209. 9. Clint Bowyer, 204. 10. Kevin Harvick, 198. 11. Jimmie Johnson, 190. 12. Trevor Bayne, 164. 13. Ryan Newman, 163. 14. Erik Jones, 159. 15. Kurt Busch, 151. 16. Denny Hamlin, 151. 17. Kasey Kahne, 147. 18. Aric Almirola, 146. 19. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 139. 20. Dale Earnhardt Jr, 133. Loud sex sounds interrupt pro tennis match in Florida SARASOTA (AP) — An outdoor professional tennis match in Florida came to a brief halt amid sounds of loud sex. Frances Tiafoe was about to serve Mitchell Krueger during their Tuesday night match in the Sarasota Open when he paused and flashed a smile of disbelief over the sound of a woman moaning in pleasure. Broadcaster Mike Cation initially described the sounds as coming from someone playing a pornographic video in the stands, but later said they were coming from an apartment nearby. Both players had fun with the situation while the crowd laughed. Kreuger hit a ball sharply in the direction of the sounds, and Tiafoe screamed, “It can’t be that good!” Cation later saluted the responsible couple on Twitter, writing “Sounds like you guys had a good time!” Former NFL player, Tennessee broadcaster Bill Anderson dies KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Bill Anderson, who played on two NFL championship teams with the Green Bay Packers as part of an eight-year NFL career, has died. He was 80. Adam Starkey, funeral director at Rose Mortuary Mann Heritage Chapel, said Wednesday that Anderson died Tuesday at Parkwest Medical Center in Knoxville, Tennessee. Anderson played for the Washington Redskins from 1958-63 and Green Bay from 1965-66. SCOREBOARD THURSDAY EVENING APRIL 20, 2017 Comcast Dish DirecTV6 PM6:307 PM7:308 PM8:309 PM9:3010 PM10:3011 PM11:30 3-ABC 3 -TV20 NewsABC World NewsEnt. TonightBe a MillionaireScandal “The Trail” Scandal “Trojan Horse” (N) The Catch “The Birthday Party” (N) News at 11 Jimmy Kimmel Live 4-IND 4 4 4News4JAX at 6PMNews4JAXEnt. TonightInside Edition (N) Hot in ClevelandLast Man StandingBig Bang TheoryBig Bang TheoryThe 10 O’Clock News (N) News4JAX(:35) The Insider 5-PBS 5 -DW NewsNightly BusinessPBS NewsHour (N) The This Old House Hour (N) Murder in Suburbia “Salsa” Cypress Sessions: Soul of FloridaBBC World NewsCapitol Update 7-CBS 7 47 47Action News JaxCBS Evening NewsJudge Judy Family Feud (N) Big Bang TheoryThe Great IndoorsThe Amazing Race (N) The Amazing Race (N) Action NewsLate Show-Colbert 9-CW 9 17 172 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Mike & Molly Mike & Molly Supernatural H1Z1: Fight for the Crown (N) Law & Order: Criminal Intent Judge Faith Anger 10-FOX 10 30 30Action NewsAction NewsTMZ (N) Access HollywoodMasterChef “Junior Edition: Tag Team” (:01) Kicking & Screaming “Fear Pong” Action NewsAction NewsAction NewsModern Family 12-NBC 12 12 12News NBC Nightly NewsWheel of FortuneJeopardy! (N) Superstore (N) Powerless (N) The Blacklist “Dembe Zuma” (N) The Blacklist “Requiem” (N) News Tonight Show WGN-A 16 239 307Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Screams. Cops Cops Outsiders “What Must Be Done” TVLAND 17 106 304(5:48) M*A*S*H(:24) M*A*S*HM*A*S*H (:36) M*A*S*H(:12) M*A*S*H “A Holy Mess” Love-RaymondLove-RaymondLove-RaymondLove-RaymondKing of QueensKing of Queens OWN 18 189 27920/20 on ID “A Last Dance in Texas” 20/20 on ID 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on OWN “Stranger Danger” 20/20 on ID “A Family Plot” 20/20 on OWN A&E 19 118 265The First 48 “Snapshot” The First 48 The First 48 “The Invitation” 60 Days In “Atlanta: Bloods Rising” (N) (:01) Nightwatch “Thin Blue Line” (N) (:03) The First 48 HALL 20 185 312Last Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man StandingThe Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle The Golden GirlsThe Golden Girls FX 22 136 248(5:30) “Taken 3” (2014, Action) Liam Neeson, Forest Whitaker. “White House Down” (2013) Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx. Paramilitary soldiers take over the White House. “White House Down” (2013) CNN 24 200 202The Situation Room With Wolf BlitzerErin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Soundtracks: The AssassinationCNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) TNT 25 138 245Bones “The Strike in the Chord” d NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. NBA action from the rst round of the playoffs. d NBA Basketball First Round: Teams TBA. NBA action from the rst round of the playoffs. NIK 26 170 299Henry DangerHenry DangerThe ThundermansThe Thundermans“Cheaper by the Dozen” (2003) Steve Martin, Bonnie Hunt. Full House Full House Friends Friends SPIKE 28 168 241“Fast Five” (2011, Action) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker. Dom Toretto and company ramp up the action in Brazil. Lip Sync BattleLip Sync Battle (N) Lip Sync Battle (N)“Fast Five” (2011) Vin Diesel, Paul Walker. MY-TV 29 32 -Mama’s FamilyMama’s FamilyM*A*S*H M*A*S*H Bones “The Dentist in the Ditch” Bones Uniquely disgured remains. Seinfeld Hogan’s HeroesCarol BurnettPerry Mason DISN 31 172 290Bunk’d Bizaardvark K.C. UndercoverGood Luck CharlieStuck/MiddleGood Luck CharlieLiv and MaddieLiv and MaddieAndi Mack “Shhh!” Bunk’d Jessie Jessie LIFE 32 108 252(5:00) “The Devil Wears Prada” (2006) Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway. Married at First Sight (N) Married at First Sight “Wedding Prep; Weddings” The participants meet their spouses. Married-Sight USA 33 105 242Law & Order: Special Victims UnitLaw & Order: Special Victims UnitLaw & Order: Special Victims UnitLaw & Order: Special Victims UnitLaw & Order: Special Victims UnitModern FamilyModern Family BET 34 124 329(5:25) “A Madea Christmas” (2013) Tyler Perry, Kathy Najimy. “Soul Men” (2008) Samuel L. Jackson. Estranged singers reunite for a tribute concert. (:35) Martin (:10) Martin (:44) Martin ESPN 35 140 206SportsCenter With Michael and JemeleSportsCenter Special (N) (Live) SportsCenterWe the FansWe the FansBaseball Tonight (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) ESPN2 36 144 209Around the HornInterruptionSportsCenter (N) (Live) Welcome/NFLSportsCenter Special (N)s Boxing (N) SUNSP 37 -XTERRA USA Championship Florida Insider Fishing Report Inside the RaysInside the RaysP1 AquaX USA Florida Insider Fishing Report DISCV 38 182 278Naked and Afraid XL Naked and Afraid XL Naked and Afraid Pop-Up Edition (N) Naked and Afraid Pop-Up Edition (N) Naked and Afraid Pop-Up Edition (N) Naked and Afraid TBS 39 139 247Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang TheoryBig Bang TheoryBig Bang TheoryBig Bang TheoryConan Comic Seaton Smith. (N) HLN 40 202 204Forensic Files “See No Evil” Forensic FilesForensic FilesPrimetime Justice Forensic FilesForensic FilesForensic FilesForensic FilesForensic Files “Payback” FNC 41 205 360Special Report With Bret Baier (N) The First 100 Days (N Subtitled) The O’Reilly Factor (N) Tucker Carlson Tonight (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor E! 45 114 236Botched “Boob-Watch” E! News (N) “Friends With Benets” (2011, Romance-Comedy) Justin Timberlake, Mila Kunis. Botched E! News (N) TRAVEL 46 196 277Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum (N) Mysteries at the Museum Mysteries at the Museum HGTV 47 112 229Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop VegasFlip or Flop House Hunters (N) Hunters Int’lHouse HuntersHunters Int’l TLC 48 183 280Nate & Jeremiah by Design My 600-Lb. Life “Brittani’s Story” My 600-Lb. Life: Supersized Brittani needs surgeries; insider facts. (N) Skin Tight: Transformed (N) (:01) My 600-Lb. Life: Supersized HIST 49 120 269Swamp People (DVS) Swamp People “Busting Chops” Swamp People: Blood and Guts (N) Swamp People “Brutus the Cannibal” To Be Announced (:03) Swamp People “Busting Chops” ANPL 50 184 282North Woods Law “Summer Heats Up” Lone Star Law “Out For Blood” Lone Star Law “Roadside Sting” (:01) Lone Star Law: Bigger and Better(:01) Lone Star Law: Bigger and Better(:01) Lone Star Law FOOD 51 110 231Chopped “Basket Buzz” Chopped “Cheap Eats” Chopped Chopped “Souper Chefs” Beat Bobby FlayBeat Bobby FlayBeat Bobby FlayBeat Bobby Flay TBN 52 260 372John Gray WorldExperience ResurDrive Thru HistoryThe Potter’s TouchPraise Joseph Prince (N) Hillsong TVJoel Osteen Christine CainePraise FSN-FL 56 High School Basketball UFC Reloaded Women’s bantamweight champion and global superstar Ronda Rousey travels to Rio. Inside PanthersGolf Life World Poker SYFY 58 122 244(5:00) “Resident Evil: Retribution”“Resident Evil: Apocalypse” (2004) Milla Jovovich, Sienna Guillory. “Salt” (2010, Action) Angelina Jolie, Liev Schreiber. (DVS) The Magicians AMC 60 130 254(5:00) “The Hunt for Red October” (1990) Sean Connery. “3:10 to Yuma” (2007, Western) Russell Crowe, Christian Bale, Logan Lerman. “Saving Private Ryan” (1998, War) Tom Hanks. COM 62 107 249(5:50) Futurama(:20) Futurama(6:55) South ParkSouth Park South Park South Park “Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle” (2004) John Cho, Kal Penn. The Daily ShowAt Midnight CMT 63 166 327Last Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man StandingLast Man Standing“Indecent Proposal” (1993) Robert Redford. Premiere. A man offers a couple $1 million for a night with the wife. NGWILD 108 190 283Animal Fight Night “Killer Clashes” Animals Gone Wild Climbing Redwood Giants Animals Animals Animals Animals Climbing Redwood Giants NGEO 109 186 276Icy Killers: Alaska’s Salmon SharkExtreme Alaska A year in Denali. Wild Alaska “Before the Flood” (2016) Leonardo DiCaprio, Barack Obama. Alaska’s Glacier Bay SCIENCE 110 193 284How It’s MadeHow It’s MadeHow It’s MadeHow It’s MadeImpossible Engineering (:02) Impossible Engineering (N) (:04) Mysteries of the Abandoned(:06) Impossible Engineering ID 111 192 285Dead Silent Dead Silent “The Desert Drifter” Fear Thy Neighbor “Hell Hounds” Fear Thy Neighbor “Hysteria Lane” (N) Real Detective “Angel Doe” Fear Thy Neighbor “Hell Hounds” SEC 743 408 611(3:00) The Paul Finebaum Show (N)a College Baseball Alabama vs Mississippi State. From Polk-DeMent Stadium in Starkville, Miss. (N) SEC Now (N) (Live) SEC Now HBO 302 300 501“Chronicles of Narnia: Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe”VICE News Tonight“Suicide Squad” (2016, Action) Will Smith, Jared Leto. ‘PG-13’ (:05) Veep (:35) The Leftovers J. Cole: 4 Your MAX 320 310 515“The Ring” (2002, Horror) Naomi Watts, Martin Henderson. ‘PG-13’ “The Conjuring” (2013, Horror) Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson. ‘R’ (9:55) “Species” (1995) Ben Kingsley. ‘R’ (:45) Wonderland SHOW 340 318 545“Tears of the Sun” (2003, Action) Bruce Willis, Monica Bellucci. ‘R’ Guerrilla Billions “Sic Transit Imperium” Dark Net (N) Penn & TellerGigolos Dark Net NFLTrump congratulates Patriots, doesn’t mention death of former TE Hernandez CHRISTINA FEAGIN/Special to the ReporterGoing down swingingFort White’s Dylan Cason swings during a frame on Tuesday night. Williston shut out Fort White 6-0 in the district matchup. The Indians hope to bounce back tonight at rival Union County. By CATHERINE LUCEY Associated PressWASHINGTON — President Donald Trump congratulated the Super Bowl champion New England Patriots on Wednesday, a normally joyous White House ritual marred by the prison suicide hours earlier of former teammate Aaron Hernandez. Trump hosted the five-time champions on the South Lawn and declared that “no team has been good this long.” “It was a complete team effort. That’s the beauty of what they do, they win as a team,” said Trump, who then drew some parallels to the team’s 25-point comeback against the Atlanta Falcons in February to his own political upset win. “Pundits, boy, are they wrong a lot, aren’t they? They said you couldn’t do it.” Trump saluted a number of individual players but did not mention superstar quarterback Tom Brady, whose friendship he repeatedly touted during his campaign. Brady notified the White House that he was dealing with a “personal family matter” and did not attend the ceremony. Shortly before the event, Brady posted a photo of his parents on Instagram, wishing them a happy anniversary. More than two dozen Patriots did not attend the ceremony. Several had said beforehand that would not show for political reasons. Trump also made no mention of Hernandez, who hanged himself in a prison cell hours before the White House visit, according to Massachusetts prison officials. Hernandez, who played for the Patriots from 2010 to 2012, was serving a life sentence for a murder conviction. Days ago, the 27-year-old former tight end was acquitted of a double murder. A team spokesman said the Patriots were aware of the reports of Hernandez’s death but that the club wasn’t expected to comment. One player made an impromptu appearance at a White House press before the official ceremony. Tight end Rob Gronkowski stuck his head in the door of the briefing room as Press Secretary Sean Spicer was holding a televised press briefing. He jokingly asked Spicer whether he needed any help, drawing laughs. Spicer — an avid Patriots fan — responded “I think I got this. But thank you.” Trump has particularly close ties to the Patriots, counting owner Bob Kraft and Belichick as friends. One of Trump’s signature “Make America Great Again” hats was spotted in Brady’s locker in 2015. During the South Lawn ceremony, Trump recounted reading a supportive letter from Belichick on the eve of the election, while Kraft saluted the president as a friend for decades. “It is a distinct honor for us to celebrate what was unequivocally our sweetest championship with a very good friend and somebody whose mental toughness and strength I greatly admire,” said Kraft. The team presented the president with a personalized “Trump” No. 45 jersey and a helmet from the February’s Super Bowl, the first such game to go to overtime. Kraft was one of at least seven NFL team owners who gave $1 million each to Trump’s inaugural committee, a new fundraising report shows. Others include the owners of the Houston Texans, the Washington Redskins, the Jacksonville Jaguars and the LA Rams. Kraft gave the money via his Kraft Group LLC. After the triumphant victory, tight end Martellus Bennett quickly made it clear he was not coming to the White House and other teammates followed. Some noted their differences with the Republican administration though many others did not an issue a reason for their absence. Defensive back Devin McCourty told Time Magazine that “I don’t feel accepted in the White House. With the president having so many strong opinions and prejudices I believe certain people might feel accepted there while others won’t.” Players have turned down White House invites ever since such events began to take off under President Ronald Reagan. That includes Brady in 2015. He cited a “family commitment” at the time, but there was speculation he declined because of some unflattering comments a spokesman for President Barack Obama made about the “Deflategate” scandal. B2

PAGE 9

t LAKE b CIT Y b REPOR TER ADVICE & COMICS THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 2017 t 3B DEAR ABBY: My ex-husband had an affair with a woman who was one of my dearest friends. My heart is broken; my marriage is over. I have lost my home and my friend. It has been a struggle for me to recover. My daughter, with whom I am very close, continues to have a relationship with this woman. While I know it’s not my place to tell her who to be friends with (she’s 22), I can’t help but feel betrayed. My daughter is pregnant, and this woman seems to be attempting to play mother and push her way into every detail of my daughter’s pregnancy. It’s extremely upsetting to me to have to share one more thing with her. She already took my home and husband; I would like to keep my daughter and grandbaby. What to do? — THE REAL GRANDMA-TO-BE DEAR REAL GRANDMA: Although you cannot cut this woman completely out of your life because she is now with your ex, calmly discuss this with your daughter. She may have reasons that you are unaware of for wanting to include the woman to the extent that she has. DEAR ABBY: We need help with our dad. Many of his grandchildren participate in sports. For some reason, he thinks it’s perfectly fine to sit in the stands surrounded by people he doesn’t know and loudly criticize the other players. We talk to him before the games. We remind him that he’s sitting by these players’ parents and what he’s doing is not cool. Some of the parents become quite emotional if things don’t go well and Dad doesn’t need to be doing this. Yet he continues. Have you any ideas on getting Grandpa to keep his opinions to himself? We don’t want to ban him from games and treat him like a 5-year-old who can’t behave, since he is still able to travel to see us for these visits. We try to sit away from others, but it’s not always possible. — EMBARRASSED IN HOUSTON DEAR EMBARRASSED: You already know the answer to your problem, and I do not understand why you haven’t taken action. Was your father always this way, or has he become demented? When an adult acts like a 5-year-old and behaves inappropriately after having been cautioned against it, there is cause for concern. If he is unable to control his behavior at those games, instead of being allowed to ruin them for everyone within earshot, he should ABSOLUTELY be banned from attending. If you won’t do it for the sake of the players and other parents, then do it for your father’s safety because one of these days, an irate parent or relative may punch his lights out. Q Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 Abigail Van Burenwww.dearabby.com Ex-wife’s anger at her friend’s betrayal spills over to child DILBERT BABY BLUES BLONDIE BEETLE BAILEY B.C. FRANK & b ERNEST FOR BETTER OR WORSE ZITS HAGAR THE HORRIBLE SNUFFY SMITH GARFIELD CLASSIC PEANUTS DEAR ABBY HOROSCOPES | THE LAST WORD BY EUGENIA LAST ARIES (March 21-April 19): Control what’s going on instead of initiating change. It’s important to know where you are headed before you take a step in any one direction. Size up your situation and aim to stabilize your life. ++++TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You’ll be encouraged to follow when you should be leading. Don’t feel like you have to use force to get your way. Choose to go about your business, refusing to become entangled in what others do or say. ++GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Look for any opportunity to expand your knowledge and insight into situations that can influence your position or your reputation. Short trips, meetings and exploring what’s available will help you get over emotional matters that have been holding you back. +++++CANCER (June 21-July 22): You’ll be tempted to get involved in something that excites you, but before you do, make sure you can afford the emotional and financial burden that comes along with the offer. Draw on past experience and try to avoid loss. +++LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Problems will arise if you make impulsive moves regarding relationships. Take a step back and listen to what others have to contribute. Once you have gathered enough information, you will be able to make a responsible decision. +++VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): An opportunity will come from an unexpected source. Be willing to take on something extra if you want to bring about the changes that can help you get ahead. A change at home could have an important impact on your future. +++LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Get involved in events that you can share with the people you enjoy being with the most. Fraternizing with people who challenge you mentally and stimulate you emotionally will lead to new beginnings and unexpected opportunities. +++++SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Work at home or do your best to avoid a situation that will require you to reveal information you aren’t ready to discuss. Delve into a creative project that will give you the distance you need from difficult situations. ++SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take initiative and do your best to bring about personal changes that will bolster your skills, knowledge and future plans. Open up a dialogue with someone who can help you advance your career. ++++CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Look for any opportunity to broaden your knowledge or to gain information that can stop you from making a poor choice. Don’t give in to pressure or get involved with someone who is unpredictable and risky. +++AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emotions will surface just as an opportunity or unexpected gift comes your way. Look at the big picture and you will be able to balance the good with the bad in order to bring about positive results. +++PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): If your emotions are telling you one thing and someone you love is telling you another, you need to rethink what’s going on in your personal life. Secrets will be revealed if you pressure someone for answers. +++Actor George Takei (“Star Trek”) is 80. Singer Johnny Tillotson is 79. Actor Ryan O’Neal is 76. Keyboardist Craig Frost of Grand Funk Railroad is 69. Actor Gregory Itzin (“24”) is 69. Actress Veronica Cartwright (“Aliens”) is 68. Actress Jessica Lange is 68. Actor Clint Howard is 58. Actor Crispin Glover is 53. Actor Andy Serkis is 53. CELEBRITY BIRTHDAYS

PAGE 10

4B THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 2017CLASSIFIED LAKE CITY REPORTERClassi ed Department 755-5440 CLASSIFIEDLAKE CITY REPORTER Ad to Appear:Call by:Email by: TuesdayMon., 10 a.m.Mon., 9 a.m. Wednesda yTues., 10 a.m.Tues., 9 a.m. ThursdayWed., 10 a.m.Wed., 9 a.m. FridayThurs., 10 a.m.Thurs., 9 a.m. SundayFri., 3 p.m.Fri., 2 p.m.These deadlines are subject to change without notice.ADVANTAGEAd Errors: Please read your ad on the first day of publication. We accept responsibility for only the first incorrect insertion, and only the charge for the ad space in error. Please call 7555440 immediately for prompt correction and billing adjustments. Cancellations: Normal advertising deadlines apply for cancellation. Billing Inquiries: Call 755-5440. Should further information be required regarding payments or credit limits, your call will be transferred to the accounting department.Cancellations, Changes, and Billing Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Advertising copy is subject to approval by the Publisher who reserves the right to edit, reject, or classify all advertisements under appr opriate headings. Copy should be checked for errors by the advertiser on the first day of publication. Credit for published errors will be allowed for the first insertion for that portion of the advertisement which was incorrect. Further, the Publisher shall not be liable for any omission of advertisements ordered to be published, nor for any general, special or consequential damages. Advertising language must comply with Federal, State or local laws regarding the prohibition of discrimination in employment, housing and public accommodations. Standard abbreviations are acceptable; however, the first word of each ad may not be abbreviated.General Information Take ADvantage of the Reporter Classifieds!755-5440 You can call us at 755-5440, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Some people prefer to place their classified ads in person, and some ad categories will require prepayment. Our office is located at 180 East Duval Street. You can also fax or email your ad copy to the Reporter. FAX: 386-752-9400 Please direct your copy to the Classified Department. EMAIL: classifieds@lakecityreporter.com Placing An Ad > $17.50Each additional line $1.654 LINES € 3 DAYS GARAGE SALEIncludes 2 Signs btf tb NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be received in the Columbia County Managers office until 11:00 A.M. on May 23, 2017, for Columbia County Project No. 2017-01 This office is located on the second floor of the Courthouse Annex at 135 Hernando Avenue, Room 203 Lake City FL 32055. y This project consists of repairs to End Bent 9 of Bridge #294447, (Croft Street over Olustee Creek). Scope of Work for the Base Bid includes partial removal of the existing structure, timber piling and timber lagging at End Bent 9, timber wingwalls at End Bent 9, deadman anchor & tiebacks, embankment, limerock, and incidental items. Scope of Work for Bid Alternate #1 incudes rubble-rap, bedding stone, and incidental items for the slope protection. The Bid Forms and Construction specifications may be obtained from the County's web site at http://www.columbiacountyfla.com/PurchasingBids.asp. Deadline for questions regarding construction plans, specifications, and/or bid documents must be received before 11:00 A.M. on May 18, 2017. The successful bidder will be required to furnish the County Manager with a bid bond, performance bond, and proof of liability insurance prior to commencing work. The Columbia County Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to add to the contract or delete from the contract to stay within their funding capabilities. Columbia County Board of County Commissioners Ron Williams, Chair 334004 April 13, 20, 2017 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO. 14000215CAAXMX CITIFINANCIAL SERVICING LLC, Plaintiff, Vs. CHARLES A. MATTHEWS JR.; et. al., Defendants. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated April 4, 2017, entered In Case No. 14000215CAAXMX of the Circuit Court of the Third Judicial Circuit, in and for Columbia County, Florida, wherein CitiFinancial Servicing LLC is the Plaintiff and Charles A. Matthews Jr.; Dianne E. Matthews; Mary L. Reilly(deceased); Capital One Bank (USA), N.A.; StokesNassau, Inc. d/b/a Pine Oak Hammock Owners Association, Inc.; Unknown Tenant(s); Patrick Lee McCarthy; The Unknown Spouse, Heirs, Devisees, Grantees, Assignees, Lienors. Creditors, Trustees, and all other parties claiming an interest by, through, under or against the Estate of Mary L. Reilly, Deceased are the Defendants, that I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at, the Columbia County Courthouse, 173 NE Hernando Ave, Lake City, FL 32055, beginning at 11:00 AM on the May 3, 2017, the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to wit: LOT 6, PINE OAK HAMMOCK, A SUBDIVISION AS PER PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 6, PAGES 28-28D OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA. TOGETHER WITH THAT CERTAIN 1990 FUQUA MOBILE HOME, VEHICLE IDENTIFICATION NUMBER FH361117990A AND FH361117990B. 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. AMERICANS WITH DISABILITY ACT: 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 Carrina Cooper, Court Administration at 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Room 408, Lake City, Florida 32055, 386-758-2163 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. Dated this 5th day of April, 2017. P. Dewitt Cason As Clerk of the Court By: /s/ S. Weeks As Deputy Clerk 332744 April 13, 20, 2017 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO. 17-128-CA THE ARKY ROGERS LAND TRUST, Plaintiffs, v. ELEANOR WARREN; the Estate of ELEANOR WARREN; the personal representative of the Estate of ELEANOR WARREN; the unknown, spouse, heirs, devisees, grantees, assignees, creditors, lienors, and trustees of ELEANOR WARREN, deceased, or other parties claiming by, through, under or against any Defendant, or any known or unknown person who is known to be dead or not known to be dead or alive, Defendants. NOTICE OF ACTION TO:ELEANOR WARREN; the Estate of ELEANOR WARREN; the personal representative of the Estate of ELEANOR WARREN; the unknown, spouse, heirs, devisees, grantees, assignees, creditors, lienors, and trustees of ELEANOR WARREN, deceased, or other parties claiming by, through, under or against any Defendant, or any known or unknown person who is known to be dead or not known to be dead or alive. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that Plaintiff has filed a Verified Complaint to Quiet Title in the above-styled court as to the following described property in Columbia County, Florida: TOWNSHIP 4 SOUTH RANGE 17 EAST Section 34: Commence at the Southwest corner of the SE 1/4 of Section 34, Township 4 South, Range 17 East, and run S 8940" W, 15.8 feet to the East right of way line of U.S. Highway No. 41; thence N 4 23" W along said R/W line 1236.0 feet for a POINT OF BEGINNING; and run thence N 423" W along said R/W line, 137.5 feet; thence N 8741" E, 345.3 feet; thence S 423" E, 149.5 feet; thence S 8940" W, 345 feet to POINT OF BEGINNING. Tax Parcel No.: 34-4S-1709016-001 has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on MARLIN M. FEAGLE, Plaintiffs attorney, whose address is 153 NE Madison Street, Lake City, Florida 32055, on or before May 12, 2017, and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on the Plaintiffs attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise, a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. DATED this 6th day of April, 2017. P. DEWITT CASON Clerk of Court By:/s/ S. Weeks Deputy Clerk 333329 April 13, 20, 27, 2017 May 4, 2017 FLORIDA GATEWAY COLLEGE DISTRICT BOARD OF TRUSTEES LAKE CITY, FLORIDA Florida Gateway College (FGC), located in Lake City Florida is requesting a Statement for Qualifications (RFQ) from individuals or firms interested in providing programming, architectural design, engineering, and related services for the design and construction of a new Science Technology Engineering and Math Building located at 149 SE Academic Way, Lake City Florida 32025. Architectural Firm Qualifications/Skills Architectural firms submitting an RFQ must possess the professional skills and services required to produce the desired product and contract bid documents to include the following: mechanical, electrical, structural, and architectural. Firms must have demonstrated experience and expertise in areas such as: programming, design, permitting, cost estimating, construction bidding, facility planning, project management, and post construction services. While the degree of emphasis is likely to vary, all skills are necessary to achieve a cost effective and optimum design. All firms submitting an RFQ must be registered to do business in the State of Florida and must be licensed in accordance with Part I, Chapter 481 Florida Statutes (FS). Background Florida Gateway College is a small rural college of 2200 FTE serving a five county service area including: Columbia, Union, Baker, Dixie and Gilchrest Counties. This new STEM facility will house all of the Colleges STEM related labs, classrooms, offices and emerging program offerings in Engineering and Water Quality. The proposed project site is located on 4.3 acres of land at the beginning of the FGC campus property near the campuses current newest building the FGC Library. The building is expected to be about 40,000 Gross Square Feet and will like the Library represent the new generation of buildings on campus. Connections to its Library neighbor and the campus as a whole is very important. It is expected that this building be the showcase building for the campus and be both transformative and provide state of the art facilities in STEM programs for FGC. For the purpose of developing a submittal, individuals or firms should consider the site a blank slate, as the College is seeking the most efficient and attractive building to help transform the campuses look. It will be important to incorporate the traditional STEM related areas in Chemistry, Biology, Anatomy, and Physics along with labs related to Engineering and Water Quality. RFQ Due Date Six (6) copies of the Response package, of which at least one (1) copy will have the original signature, must be received in the Procurement and Contracts Office located in Room 138, Building 001 on the Main Campus of Florida Gateway College no later than 2:00PM EST, April 27, 2017. Responses received after that time will not be considered for this RFQ. Responses via facsimile, email or any other media will not be acy cepted. Pre-Submittal Site Visit All interested Responders are encouraged to attend a nonmandatory pre-submittal campus tour and site visit to be held at 10:00AM EST on Tuesday, April 11, 2017 in the Conference Room in Building 001, Room 103. RFQ Response Packages All parties interested in being considered for providing the described services may request an Architectural Services RFQ Response package from: Misty Taylor Director of Procurement and Contracts Florida Gateway College 149 SE College Place Lake City, FL 32025 (386)754-4381 Response packages may also be obtained via e-mail by sending a request to: misty.taylor@fgc.edu Schedule The following is a tentative schedule the College will follow throughout the selection process. The schedule is subject to change at the discretion of the College. March 30, 2017Advertise RFQ April 11, 2017Non-Mandatory Pre-Submittal Site Visit April 18, 2017 Last Day for Questions April 20, 2017 Addenda Issued (if necessary) April 27, 2017 RFQ Response Packages Due at 2:00PM EST May 1, 2017Selection Committee meets at 9:00AM in Building 001, Room 103 to evaluate RFQs and develop a short list of firms. May 3, 2017 Short List firms notified of interview schedule May 15, 2017Short List firms interviewed May 17, 2017College will begin negotiations May 30, 2017 Notice of Intent to Recommend Award posted June 13, 2017 Board of Trustees awards contract Right to Waive and Reject The College reserves the right to waive minor irregularities and technicalities and to reject any and all Request for Qualifications. Public Meetings All RFQ Selection meetings are open to the public. 330484 March 30, 2017 April 6, 13, 20, 2017 NOTICE OF INTENDED DISPOSITION OF PROPERTY TO ALL PERSONS WHO MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST IN THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY Pursuant to Florida Statute 705.103, the State of Florida, Florida Highway Patrol hereby gives notice of its intent To dispose of the following property: Assorted Jewelry Items These various items came into the custody of the Florida Highway Patrol during the timeframe of February 2013 thru December of 2016. The Florida Highway Patrol is the law enforcement agency controlling the property. Please contact Judy Morelan at 1350 West US Highway 90, Lake City, FL 32250, (386)754-6288. 334348 April 20, 27, 2017 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA CIVIL DIVISION CASE NO. 15000328CAAXMX Division No. BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. Plaintiff, vs. KAREN L. ARMSTRONG, et al, Defendants NOTICE OF SALE PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 45 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to an Order or Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated March 17, 2017, and entered in Case No. 15000328CAAXMX of the Circuit Court of the THIRD Judicial Circuit in and for Columbia County, Florida, wherein BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. is the Plaintiff and KAREN L. ARMSTRONG, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ON BEHALF OF SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT, UNKNOWN TENANT #1 NKA WILLIE G. ARMSTRONG, WILLIE C. ARMSTRONG, and UNKNOWN TENANT #2 NKA CENISE ARMSTRONG the Defendants. P. Dewitt Cason, Clerk of the Circuit Court in and for Columbia County, Florida will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at the front steps of the Columbia County Courthouse, 173 N.E. Hernando Ave, Lake City, FL 32055 at 11:00 AM on 24th day of May, 2017, the following described property as set forth in said Order of Final Judgment, to wit: LOT NO., 1, QUAIL RIDGE, A SUBDIVISION ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 5 PAGES 61-61A, PUBLIC RECORDS, COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA IF YOU ARE A PERSON CLAIMING A RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK OF COURT NO LATER THAN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY REMAINING FUNDS. AFTER 60 DAYS, ONLY THE OWNER OF RECORD AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MAY CLAIM THE SURPLUS. If the sale is set aside, the Purchaser may be entitled to only a return of the sale deposit less any applicable fees and costs and shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, Mortgagee or the Mortgagee's Attorney. AMERICANS WITH DISABILITY ACT: 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 Carrina Cooper, Court Administration at 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Room 408, Lake City, Florida 32055, 386-758-2163 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. DATED at Columbia County, Florida, this 12th day of April, 2017. P. Dewitt Cason, Clerk Columbia County, Florida By: /s/ S. Weeks Deputy Clerk 334717 April 20, 27, 2017 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA Case No.: 2017-222-DR Division: Domestic Relations IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF: MARYSA SERVIN, Wife, and FRANCISCO JAVIER UDAVE, Husband NOTICE OF ACTION FOR PUBLICATION TO: Francisco Javier Udave YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for Dissolution of Marriage, including claims for dissolution of marriage, payment of debts, division of real and person property, and for payments of support, has been filed against you. You are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to this action on Lisa A. Schlitzkus, Petitioner's attorney, whose address is 118 N. Marion Ave., Lake City, FL 32055, on or before May 5, 2017, and file the original with the clerk of this court at Columbia County Courthouse, 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Lake City, Florida 32055, either before service on Petitioner's attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the petition. WARNING: Rule 12.285, Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure, requires certain automatic disclosure of documents and information. Failure to comply can result in sanctions, including dismissal or striking of pleadings. DATED this 4 day of April, 2017. CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ T. Brewington Deputy Clerk 333005 April 13, 20, 27, 2017 May 4, 2017 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO: 16000381CA DIVISION: CIRCUIT CIVIL FIRST FEDERAL BANK OF FLORIDA, Plaintiff, vs. CHESTER M. TURNSPLENTY; YOLANDA Y. TURNSPLENTY; UNKNOWN TENANT IN POSSESSION 1; UNKNOWN TENANT IN POSSESSION 2, Defendant(s). CLERK'S NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS GIVEN that, in accordance with the Plaintiff's Final Judgment of Foreclosure entered on March 27, 2017 in the above-styled cause, I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash on May 17, 2017, at 11:00 a.m. (EST), at the Third Floor of the Columbia County Courthouse, 173 N.E. Hernando Avenue, Lake City, FL. LOT 10, BLOCK B, UNIT 2, SOUTHWOOD MEADOWS, A SUBDIVISION, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 6, PAGE 84, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA. Property Address: 398 Southwest Erin Glen, Lake City, FL 32024 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. AMERICANS WITH DISABILITY ACT: 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 Carrina Cooper, Court Administration at 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Room 408, Lake City, Florida 32055, 386-758-2163 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. Dated: March 27, 2017. P. DEWITT CASON, CLERK COLUMBIA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ S. Weeks Deputy Clerk 330834 April 13, 20, 2017 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 12-2017-CP-000072 IN RE: ESTATE OF TERRY RANDAL DOWLING Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of Terry Randal Dowling, deceased, whose date of death was November 7, 2016, is pending in the Circuit Court for Columbia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 173 NE Hernando Ave., Lake City, FL 32055. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representatives attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedents 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 decedents 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 FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENTS DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is April 13, 2017. Personal Representative: /s/ Michael J. Dowling 992 NW 231st Way Newberry, Florida 32669 Attorney for Personal Representative: SAM W. BOONE, JR., P.A. By: /s/ Sam W. Boone, Jr. Attorney for Personal Representative Florida Bar No. 0278963 4545 NW 8th Avenue, Suite A Gainesville, FL 32605 Telephone: (352) 374-8308 Facsimile: (352) 375-2283 () sboone@boonelaw.com eService@boonelaw.com 333830 April 13, 20, 2017 PUBLIC NOTICE Suwannee River Economic Council, Inc. will hold a pre-bid conference and walk-thru for the weatherization of four (4) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 12-2017-CA000050 REGIONS BANK D/B/A REGIONS MORTGAGE SUCCESSOR BY MERGER WITH UNION PLANTERS BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. RONALD P. PARRISH, BRANDY LEE DELAND PARRISH A/K/A BRANDY LEE DELAND, UNKNOWN TENANT IN POSSESSION NO. 1, UNKNOWN TENANT IN POSSESSION NO. 2, Defendants. NOTICE OF ACTION To the Defendants BRANDY LEE DELAND PARRISH A/K/A BRANDY LEE DELAND, and all others whom it may concern: You are hereby notified that an action to foreclose a mortgage lien on the following property in Columbia County, Florida: Commence at the Southeast corner of the Southeast 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4 Section 3, Township 4 South, Range 17 East, Columbia County, Florida, and run thence South 89 degrees 30' 20" West along the South line of said Southeast 1/4 of Northeast 1/4, 393.40 feet; thence North 00 degrees 29' 40" West, 1134.05 feet to the point of beginning, thence continue North 00 degrees 29' 40" West, 169.95 feet to a point on a curve that is 115.00 feet South from this Southerly rightof-way line of Emerson Road; thence Westerly along said curve concave to the right and a parallel with said Southerly right-of-way line and having a radius of 1235.34 feet along a chord bearing North 89 degrees 12' 29" West, 103.03 feet, thence South 00 degrees 29'40" East 172.26 feet, thence North 89 degrees 30' 20" East, 103.00 feet to the point of beginning, Columbia County, Florida. ALSO Commence at the Southeast corner of the Southeast 1/4 of the Northeast 1/4 of Section 3, Township 4 South, Range 17 East and run South 89 degrees 30' 20" West, along the South line of said Southeast 1/4 of Northeast 1/4 393.40 feet; thence North 00 degrees 29' 40" West 1304.00 feet to a point South 00 degrees 29' 40" East 115.00 feet from the Southerly right-of-way line of Emerson Road and to the point of beginning; thence Westerly along a curve concave to the right with a radius of 1235.34 feet, a distance of 12, 50 feet; thence continue Westerly along said curve concave to the right with a radius of 1235.34 feet, along a chord bearing North 84 gg degrees 06' 20" West, a distance of 169.30 feet; thence North 11 degrees 45' 06" East, 114.99 feet, to the Southerly right-of-way line of Emerson Road; thence Easterly along a chord concave to the left with a radius of 1120.34 feet, along a chord bearing South 84 degrees 03' 50" East, a distance of 144.77 feet; thence continue Easterly along said curve concave to the left, a distance of 25.20 feet; thence South 00 degrees 29'40" East, 115.00 feet; thence Westerly along a curve concave to the right with a radius of 1235.34 feet, a distance of 12.50 feet to the point of beginning, said lands lying wholly within the Northeast 1/4 of said Section, Columbia County, Florida. has been filed against you. You are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on Michael C. Caborn, Esquire, Winderweedle, Haines, Ward & Woodman, P.A., Plaintiff's attorney, whose address is 329 Park Avenue North, Second Floor, Winter Park, Florida 32789, on or before 30 days from the date of the 1st publication, and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on Plaintiff's attorneys or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. See §49.09, Fla. Stat. This Notice of Action shall be published once during each week for two (2) consecutive weeks under §49.10(c), Fla. Stat. Dated on April 6, 2017. Clerk of Circuit Court By: /s/ S. Weeks As Deputy Clerk 332935 April 13, 20, 2017

PAGE 11

Classi ed Department 755-5440 THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 2017 CLASSIFIED LAKE CITY REPORTER 5B 4 plus acres in White Springs city limits, sewer & water on property. 386-984-0215 Dryer white, good condition $75 386-965-6767 or 678-617-5560 Electric Stove white, works great $75 386-965-6767 or 678-617-5560 Washer white, works great $100 386-965-6767 or 678-617-5560 NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: AUTO EMPORIUM OF LAKE CITY INC. give Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 05/02/2017, 10:00 am at 2832 SW MAIN BLVD, LAKE CITY, FL 32025, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statues. AUTO EMPORIUM OF LAKE CITY INC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. JTDDR32T8Y0067649 2000 TOYOTA 335020 APRIL 20, 2017 Avalon Healthcare is seeking a part-time Dietary Cook/Aide. Shift varies Must be: -Experienced with quantity cooking -Able to follow recipes -Able to pass pre-employment screening Please apply in person at 1270 SW Main Blvd Lake City, FL 32025 Experienced Block Truck & Ready-Mix Truck Drivers needed. Must have CDL, Class B, clean driving record. Competitive pay with benefits. Apply at: Bell Concrete Products, 2480 N. US 129, Bell, FL Coldwell Banker-Bishop Elaine Tolar 365-8414 MLS93551 80' covered porches, updated ki t w/ SS appliances, FP, lots o f storage, metal roof $299,000 Coldwell Banker-Bishop Patti Taylor 623-6896 MLS96190 4/5.5, many upgrades: new roof, pool, pool house & more REDUCED TO $449,000 Coldwell Banker-Bishop Elaine Tolar 365-1548 MLS96592 2/1 older home w/lots of character! Priced to sell, extra rm could b e 3rd BR. $79,000 2BR/1BA, kit/dinette area, CH/A, 1 car garage, W/D hook up, new carpet. $580/mo, 1 mo sec. No pets. 386-961-8075 2BR/1BA Duplex Apt close to town $650/mo $650/dep, water included. Application/Credit check required. 386-965-2922 CARC is seeking healthcare aide for residential group home. CNA license not req'd. Please call 752-1880 for details. Caring Hands Animal Hospital is currently hiring for technician. Veterinary experience is preferred. Applicants should email resumes to hr@caringhandslc.com or drop off in person. Century 21-Darby Rogers 7526575 MLS96045 $201,000 Brick 4/2.5 w/lots of covered space to entertain, big workshop, fenced w/fruit trees. Century 21-Darby Rogers 7526575 MLS96475 $109,900 3/2 offers plenty of room, close to town and schools. Century 21-Darby Rogers 7526575 MLS96583 $200,000 Modern country feel! Open-plan living & dining, kit w/stainless steel appliances. Century 21-Darby Rogers 7526575 MLS96671 $345,000 Classic brick Cape Cod w/hardwood flooring, stainless steel kit overlooking family room. Century 21-Darby Rogers 7526575 MLS96720 $69,900 Coz y home w/metal roof, dbl insulated windows, garage/workshop, 2nd shop 1/1br apt. Century 21-Darby Rogers 7526575 MLS96767 $197,500 3/2 brick on 20 ac, brick wood FP, split plan, roughly 4ac planted oak & 7ac mature oaks. Homes of Merit is now hiring. Offering excellent benefits with great pay. Various open positions. Apply in person at: 1915 SE SR 100, Lake City. Drug Free Workplace btn btn btn btnfr bnfn bttnbfr fntb btn bn fbbrfb bnfrb b btffbr btnbf nb btnbf nb btnf ttb bnfr btftrb btftrb btftrb btnftr fb bnfr r bt ftr btnf tfb btnfnr rtnbft bttf rfbt b Daniel Crapps Agency 7555110 MLS96883 Midtown commercial, 3 units to choose from, $800/mo for 1, call for details on other 2. Daniel Crapps Agency 7555110 MLS96625 $199,500 4BR/3BA brick, 10' ceilings, hand-scraped oak flooring, open kit & fenced backyard. Daniel Crapps Agency 7555110 MLS96695 $69,900 3/1 concrete block home tha t needs some TLC, in Suwannee Co.on 4 acres Daniel Crapps Agency 7555110 MLS96721 $50,887 2/1 bungalow-style on 2ac w/ variety of mature trees, workshop, 2 carports on concrete slabs Daniel Crapps Agency 7555110 MLS96707 $56,000 14 acres MOL w/oaks surrounding old sinkhole in NE corner plus cave. Daniel Crapps Agency 7555110 MLS96738 $71,500 2/2 Condo in great location, 2-story, covered patio, easy access to community pool. 1/2 to 10 acre lots; owner financing. some with w/s/pp Deas Bullard/BKL Properties 386-752-4339 www.landnfl.com United Country, Dicks Realty 755-8585 MLS93123 $259,000 5/3, bonus room, master w/ door to screened lanai, open airy rooms, lg closets. United Country, Dicks Realty 755-8585 MLS96302 $134,000 3/2 brick home w/1 car garage on corner lot east of town. United Country, Dicks Realt y 755-8585 MLS96714 $39,900 2835 NW Suwannee Valley 3/2 DWMH move-in-ready, furnished on 2.21 ac. United Country, Dicks Realty 755-8585 MLS97053 $149,900 982 SW Lake Montgomery 3/2 brick, fenced and close to town United Country, Dicks Realt y 755-8585 MLS97066 $449,000 10728 SW Tustenuggee 4/3.5 on 10ac w/pool currently residence/Bed & Breakfast. United Country, Dicks Realty 755-8585 MLS96973 $87,000 3/2 2000 DWMH over 2000 sf on 6.3ac. WAREHOUSE WORKER Full time position available a t Nettles Sausage. Apply in person between 9 am and 4 pm at 190 SW County Road 240. Security Officers Needed in Live Oak & Lake City areas $10/hr Current D Security Lic., Clear background, Drivers Lic, phone, Diploma/GED. Benefits, DFWP EEO Must Apply at: www.dsisecurity.com BB9100030 Starting at $ 545/mo, tile floors, fresh paint. Great Area. Call ( 386 ) 752-9626 4674 SW County Rd 240, Sat 4/22 8a-3p, Boat, furn, table, mattresses, dressers, misc yard equip. Everything must go! First Coast Homes 288-8379 2/2 on 1 acre in Lake City. Move in ready! $34,900 FirstCoastMHS.com First Coast Homes 288-8379 Overstocked 3/2 doublewide delivered & set up with A/C $39,900. 288-8379 FirstCoastMHS.com First Coast Homes. Mobile Home Show Spring 2017. All models are reduced to make room for new show models! FirstCoastMHS.com Five Ash Forest, Lake Citys premier 55 plus manufactured home community. 752-7207 Lot lease includes water, sewer, garbage & lawn maintenance. 170 Lakewood Ct, 3 blocks South of DOT, Sat 9-12. Remnants of estate sale 1/2 price items Well drilling assistant wanted. Valid DL, CDL preferred, must pass drug and bkgd check. Must have flexible schedule. Competitive pay, benefits include IRA & health ins. Apply 904 NW Main Blvd, Lake City. Hallmark Real Estate Donna Dawson 288-5613 MLS95886 Spacious home on 4.08ac, detached storage bldg & pole barn. $89,900 Hallmark Real Estate Anita Tonetti 697-3780 MLS96015 3/2 totally fenced backyard, above ground pool, wooden playset. Move-in ready $79,000 Hallmark Real Estate Tanya Shaffer 397-4766 MLS96414 3/2, open floor plan, fenced back yard, landscaped w/oak trees. $149.900 Hallmark Real Estate Janet Creel 719-0382 MLS96951 Brick 3/2 on 1ac, new roof, cabinets & paint throughout. $92,000 Hallmark Real Estate Tanya Shaffer 397-4766 MLS96960 3/2 in the country club. Needs a little TLC. $65,000 Hallmark Real Estate Anita Tonetti 697-3780 MLS93785 .30ac lot needs no prep, water, sewer & power pole are in place. $10,500 Lake City's only full service hotel seeks the following: Restaurant Manager Restaurant Servers PM PT Line Cook PT Front Desk Agent PT Room Attendant PT Apply Mon-Fri 12-5pm, 213 SW Commerce Dr. EOE/DFWP. 4 BR/2 BA on almost one acre, 428 NE Doublerun Road, Lake City, Call 386-628-2570 Guns & coins, .40 S&W + 400rds, .45 1911 Colt, $600ea or both $1100; .9999 fine gold coins call for info 386-496-0840 Great 5 ton work truck, rblt, eng, trans, & rear gear. Not pretty, runs great $5000/obo 386-496-0840 PUBLISHER'S NOTE All Yard Sale Ads Must be Pre-Paid. PUBLISHER'S NOTE Florida Law 828.29 requires dogs and cats being sold to be at least 8 weeks old and have a health certificate from a licensed veterinarian documenting they have mandatory shots and are free from intestinal and external parasites. Many species of wildlife must be licensed by Florida Fish and Wildlife. If you are unsure, contact the local office for information. PUBLISHER'S NOTE All 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, disability, familial status or national origin; or any intention to make 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 the age of 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 an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll free at 1-800-669-9777, the toll free telephone number to the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. Reef hitch fits 1999-2014 Honda Odyssey. $75 386-288-0264 Magnolia Real Estate Group Nate Sweat 628-1552 2/1 on 20 acres. Live in while you build or rent for income. MLS94017 Magnolia Real Estate Group Nate Sweat 628-1552 Updated, renovated, private, deeded river access 3/2, new AC, stove, well & septic. MLS96042 Magnolia Real Estate Group Nate Sweat 628-1552 Vintage 4/3 needs some repair to bring back to its original grandeur, master on 1st floor. MLS96336 Magnolia Real Estate Group Teresa Brannon 365-834 3 Comm property S. side of Live Oak on Hwy 129, warehouse space MLS93437 $169,900 Magnolia Real Estate Group Teresa Brannon 365-8343 4BR handicap accessible, privac y fenced backyard, new roof in 2015 MLS96488 $79,000 Magnolia Real Estate Group Teresa Brannon 365-8343 3 parcels 37.19ac pastures w/grandfather oaks, partially fenced $171,074 MLS97070 Remax, Missy Zecher 6230237 MLS96723 $135,000 Remodeled home move-in ready, updated kit, metal roof is 2 1/2 yrs old, fenced backyard. Remax, Missy Zecher 6230237 MLS96724 $287,500 Stunning home on 4.7ac w/majestic oaks, chef's kit w/farm sink, gas range & granite island Remax, Missy Zecher 6230237 MLS96766 remodeled home on 5ac, mother-in-law suite, stocked pond, lg maste r w/office or sitting rm $245,000 Remax, Missy Zecher 6230237 MLS96861 $48,000 Estate home, great front porch, newer appliances, city water & gas avail, nice size yard Remax, Missy Zecher 6230237 MLS96891 $125,000 Cozy home on oversized lot, roof less than 1 yr old, electric has been upgraded. Pole barn Remax, Missy Zecher 6230237 MLS96917 $139,900 Move-in ready, open floor plan, covered back porch & nice sized yard. 5 acre lot. Lake City, beautifully cleared homesite, Owner Financing! NO DOWN! $39,900. $410/mo 352-215-1018. www.LandOwnerFinancing.com Madison FL: Full time Registered Nurse Faculty Position (PhD or be enrolled in a PhD program). See www.nfcc.edu for details. Janitorial person needed, PT or FT positions available, contact 386-292-9938 8a-11p Remax, Pam Beauchamp 3032505 $349,000 MLS94106 4/3 on 5ac, parquest & h/w floors, FP, garden rm, huge workshop, less than 10 min to town. Remax, Pam Beauchamp 3032505 $299,000 MLS96832 4/3, 5ac, well maintained home, stone FP, det 3 car garage, whole house generator. Remax, Pam Beauchamp 3032505 $1,300,000 MLS96956 Approx $150,000 in used car inventory, 1620sf show rm, 3 offices, 2 bay service center. Poole Realty Vern Roberts 6881940 Live Oak 3/3.5, HVAC 2 yrs old, completely remodeled inside 2 yrs ago, 20x41 metal shed $263,500 MLS94616 Poole Realty Glenda McCall 208-5244 MLS94714 $299,900 Two-story home on 9.54 acres Poole Realty Anita Handy2085877 Move-in ready 2BR/2BA 1656 sq ft, $139,000 MLS95912 Poole Realty Vicki Prickitt 5901402 MLS96500 $425,000 Custom 4BR/3BA home on 13.79 acres Poole Realty Kellie Shirah 2083847 MLS96835 $229,000 Immaculate 4/2 brick on 4+ acres Poole Realty Ronnie Poole 208-3175 MLS96842 $285,900 Beautifule 3BR/2BA on 60 ac w/fincing & cross fencing Medical help wanted for busy doctors office. Looking for experienced medical assistant & front office personnel Email resume to echo@ primarycaremedic.com Full Time position open for Purchasing, Shipping/Receiving, Data Entry and general office duties. Experience in Purchasing and good computer skills necessary, knowledge in steel fabrication/mechanical equipment fabrication and/or AutoCAD helpful. Send Resume to; Fab Purchasing 3631 US Hwy 90 East, Lake City Fl. 32055 Hiring Warehouse clerk fulltime position for industrial warehouse shipping, receiving, loading, unloading and ticket picking, computer knowledge needed, will train apply in person 3631 E US Hwy 90, Lake City FL, email: guy@qiagroup.com Rockford Realty Group, Debi Bennefield 288-1208/Scott Stewart 867-3498 MLS94086 $109,900 3/1 w/bonus rm, shed & fenced. Recently remodeled. Rockford Realty Group, Debi Bennefield 288-1208/Scott Stewart 867-3498 MLS94885 $120,000 3/2 open floor plan in new, well-located S/D Rockford Realty Group, Debi Bennefield 288-1208/Scot t Stewart 867-3498 MLS97056 $219,900 Ranch home on 8ac, lg back deck, lg live oaks Rockford Realty Group, Debi Bennefield 288-1208/Scot t Stewart 867-3498 MLS96791 $269,900 4/2 new construction, open floor plan. Rockford Realty Group, Debi Bennefield 288-1208/Scot t Stewart 867-3498 MLS96938 $179,900 '05 mfg home, screened bakckporch Rockford Realty Group, Debi Bennefield 288-1208/Scott Stewart 867-3498 MLS94358 $39,900 3.7ac on cul-de-sac in High Pointe Farms. Security company seeking full time employee for customer service, scheduling and managing the warehouse. Full benefit package, including retirement. Send resume to hrhd7@yahoo.com Now hiring experienced lawn maintenance laborer. Winning attitude. Apply at stoneridgemgmt.com () single-family dwellings in the Columbia county Weatherization program. This meeting will be held Friday, April 21, 2017 beginning at 8:00 a.m. at Suwannee River Economic Council, Inc., 971 West Duval Street, Suite 183 Lake City, FL 32056. The conference and walk-thru is mandatory, no exceptions, for contractors who plan to bid. Suwannee River Economic Council, Inc. requires each contractor to be properly licensed, carry general liability insurance of at least $1,000,000.00 and Workers Comp insurance during construction. Bids for these units will be due by 12:00 noon Wednesday, April 26, 2017 at Suwannee River Economic Council, Inc., 1171 Nobles Ferry Rd., Bldg. #2, Live Oak, FL 32064 Please mark envelope Sealed Bid of Homeowner, Weatherization. Bids to be opened noon Wednesday, April 26, 2017 at 12:05 p.m. Suwannee River Economic Council, Inc. has the right to reject any and all bids. The bids will be awarded on the most cost effective basis. Columbia County is a fair housing and equal opportunity and ADA employer. Minority and Women Contractors are urged to participate. MAY CONTAIN HOMES CONSTRUCTED PRIOR TO 1978 WHICH MAY CONTAIN LEADBASED PAINT. 335518 April 20, 2017 Looking for serviceman or helpers to install & do maintenance on dairy farms, tig weld, refrigeration, & electrical. Call 963-2842 or 19205 County Rd 49, O'Brien. Office space, warehouse space and storage units available. PRIME LOCATION just off US-90! 386-752-1444 Moving Sale: 162 NW Lake Vista Gln, Tues-Fri 4p-8p & Sat 8a-3p. Bed frames: twin, queen, king, night stands, china cabinet, TV armour, recliners, end tables, & sectional. CDL DRIVERS CLASS A Warren Pine Straw Co is hiring local drivers. Home every day/night or every other day/night. Good pay. Contact 386-935-0476. Lg 2br/2ba, DR, updated kit, CH/A, by VA, $725/mo 6/mo lease w/sec dep 813-784-6017 3BR's as low as $699/moWindsong ApartmentsWe offer 1, 2, & 3 BR's2580 SW Windsong Circle386-758-8455All amenities included! Anniversary Announcement Birth Announcement Change of Address Delivery Issues or Concerns Engagement Announcement Give a gift subscription Letter to the Editor News Tips Obituary Form Place a Classified Ad Submit an Event to the Calendar Vacation Delivery Service Wedding AnnouncementLook at what you can doONLINE www.lakecityreporter.com GO TOClickFORMS & SUBMISSIONSLake City ReporterEASAND CONVENIENT

PAGE 12

6B t THURSDA Y, APRIL 20, 2017 t SPORTS t LAKE CITY REPORTER t Photos by BRENT KUYKENDALL/Special to the Reporter Kings of the CourtColumbia boys tennis finished the season undefeated. The Tigers received help in Tuesday’s regional from Daniel Rendel (left), Reid Wehril (right) and Tanner Thomas (above). Two of the Tigers will take their talents to the state match next week. This is the first time in school history CHS is sending players to compete at the highest level of competition. acquitted in a separate murder case. “There were no conversations or correspondence from Aaron to his family or legal team that would have indicated anything like this was possible,” said his attorney, Jose Baez. “Aaron was looking forward to an opportunity for a second chance to prove his innocence. Those who love and care about him are heartbroken and determined to find the truth surrounding his untimely death.” Guards found Hernandez shortly after 3 a.m. Wednesday at the state prison in Shirley, Correction Department spokesman Christopher Fallon said. The former tight end was taken to a hospital and pronounced dead about an hour later. Fallon said he was not aware of any suicide note and officials had no reason to believe Hernandez was suicidal. Otherwise, he would have been transferred to a mental health unit, Fallon said. The Worcester County district attorney’s office and the Correction Department are investigating. The Patriots had no immediate comment. At the White House event in the afternoon, President Donald Trump congratulated the Super Bowl champions but made no mention of Hernandez. A star tight end for the University of Florida when it won the 2008 NCAA title, Hernandez dropped to the fourth round of the NFL draft because of trouble in college that included a failed drug test and a bar fight. His name had also come up in an investigation into a shooting. Still, he was a productive tight end for the Patriots for three seasons. After catching 79 passes for 910 yards and seven touchdowns in his second year to help the team reach the Super Bowl. But the Patriots released him in 2013, shortly after he was arrested in the killing of semipro football player Odin Lloyd, who was dating the sister of Hernandez’s fiancee. Hernandez was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. Last week, Hernandez was acquitted in the 2012 drive-by shootings of two men in Boston. As the jury was deliberating, cameras spied Hernandez blowing kisses to the young daughter he fathered with fiance Shayanna Jenkins. Prosecutors said he gunned the two men down after one accidentally spilled a drink on him in a nightclub. Hernandez then got a tattoo of a handgun and the words “God Forgives” to commemorate the crime, according to prosecutors. Investigators suggested Hernandez shot Lloyd to keep him quiet about the two earlier killings. In the Dorchester neighborhood where Lloyd grew up, a family friend of the victim wondered if Hernandez could no longer bear the weight of his crime and his squandered potential. “I just think it got to him — the guilt,” Mixson Philip said. “Each man has to live with himself. You can put on an act like nothing happened, but you’ve got a soul. You’ve got a heart. You can’t say you don’t think about these things. There’s no going around that.” Miami Dolphins center Mike Pouncey said on Instagram that he spoke with his former college teammate a day earlier. “Today my heart hurts as I got the worse news I could have imagined,” he said. “I will forever miss you and love you bro.” Friends were also grieving in Connecticut, where Hernandez was raised. “Especially after him getting acquitted of the double murder. That was a positive thing in our minds,” said Alex Cugno, who grew up with Hernandez in Bristol. “I don’t believe that he would have killed himself. It just doesn’t add up. It’s fishy. It makes you wonder what really went on behind those walls in prison.” HERNANDEZ Continued From 1B CHRISTINA FEAGIN/Special to the ReporterFort White senior slugger Kylee Crews swings against Bronson on Tuesday night. The Lady Indians hope to close the regular season strong in Thursday’s home finale versus defending 1A state champion Chiefland. CHRISTINA FEAGIN/Special to the ReporterFort White ace Shelby Dubose delivers a pitch during a frame Tuesday night. Dubose led the Lady Indians to an eighth win. Indians were able to scratch out two more runs. Terry reached on an error and was able to get to second base with one out when Raulerson also reached on an error. A passed ball allowed the runners to move up one base each and a run scored on a single by Dinges. Crews attempted a bunt and an error by the Eagles third baseman allowed another run to score, resulting in the Indians going to the fifth inning with a 5-0 advantage. Bronson pushed across a its first run of the game in their half of fifth inning resulting in a 5-1 score at the game’s halfway point. The Lady Indians answered Bronson by adding two runs of their own on a homer to centerfield by Raven Miles. The two-run blast gave Fort White a 7-1 advantage. Bronson wouldn’t give up and tacked on another run in its half of the sixth inning, making the score 7-2 in favor of the home team. Fort White once again answered the Bronson score in its turn at bat by manufacturing a run. Crews got on-base through a walk and stole second and third base. She scored a few pitches later on a passed ball, giving Fort White an 8-2 lead. Bronson strung together a bunch of hits and capitalized on Lady Indians errors in their last at-bat to score two runs before they were retired by Dubose, allowing Fort White to walk away with the 8-4 victory. Dubose picked up the complete game win in the contest, striking out four and giving up five hits and three walks. Padgett said she thinks the Indians are ready for this year’s district tournament. “We’re prepared,” she said. “If they come out and hit, Shelby will be fine. We’ve got the group back healthy, finally. We’ve got one [player] still out but she’s coming back in some capacity, but they’re prepared.” The Lady Indians are scheduled to play Williston 5 p.m. on Monday in Union County at the district tournament. “We’ve played them twice and they’ve won one and we’ve won one, so we’re ready for them,” Padgett said. “We know what to expect. So if we come out and hit like we did tonight, good things will happen.” TIWAHEContinued From 1BNBAHeat president Riley expresses hope for team’s future By TIM REYNOLDSAssociated PressMIAMI — Pat Riley has plenty of thoughts. Resting players is a travesty that the NBA needs to address. Having a head-to-head tiebreaker with Chicago for the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference, despite his Miami Heat playing the Bulls only three times instead of the customary four, was ridiculous. Boilermakers should only be made when shots of high-end tequila are dropped into beers. All that and more was revealed Wednesday in Riley’s annual end-of-season address, a rambling smorgasbord of comments from the Basketball Hall of Famer and Heat president who just finished his 22nd season with the franchise. And, as per usual, there was a clear sense of optimism for what’s next with the Heat. “I do love this team,” Riley said. “And I love what we have built.” Riley said he was gutted by Miami missing the playoffs this season, one where the Heat won 30 of their final 41 games. Even that wasn’t enough to fully overcome an 11-30 start to the season, and Miami didn’t reach the postseason for the second time in the past three years. But he clearly wants the core of this team back, including free-agents-to-be like James Johnson, Dion Waiters and Wayne Ellington. Johnson and Waiters are going to command significant raises this summer, and Ellington’s option is controlled by the Heat. They are three of the four biggest question marks on the Heat roster going into the offseason, and those questions might have been answered Wednesday. “We’re going to hopefully make the right selections,” Riley said. “I hope that Dion and James and the rest of our free agents like it here enough that we’re going to be fair with them and they’re going to be fair with us.” Riley also addressed his own future, and he’s not going anywhere anytime soon. “I just want to have a great summer, come back and have a great team and try to win the championship, contend for championships,” Riley said. B6