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By AMANDA WILLIAMSON
As an officer stops a woman tres-passing on private property, the unknown suspect reaches inside her jacket — in some instances she simply pulls a cell phone,
but sometimes it’s a gun. The question is, as she reaches inside
her jacket, do you shoot or not?Members of the Citizens Police Academy
face very real simulations of events just like this one, and they all have to make the decision. But according to Barbara Twing, a recent graduate, the lesson imparts knowl-edge of what officers handle on a daily basis.
The Lake City Police Department gradu-ated its second session of the Citizens Police Academy Monday night at the First Baptist Church of Lake City. Twenty-four individuals completed the academy, with the youngest member only 17 years old. The program is a 12-week course held on Thursday evenings from 6 p.m. until 9 p.m., and offers insight into the inner workings of LCPD. It is free to the public.
“These citizens took 12 weeks out of their busy schedules, their families and their lives,” said LCPD Chief Argatha Gilmore. “A lot of times after working all day, would come here, to learn about law enforcement. The end result is for them to be better educated and better informed about what we do.”
Different reasons drew the graduates to the program, which consists of briefings
on criminal law, firearm safety, commu-nity relations, internal affairs and crime prevention. For high school junior Zulema Quiterio, her dream is to eventually become a police officer.
“I thought it would give me knowledge about law enforcement,” Quiterio said. “Sometimes I’m kind of scared of what they go through, but I think I still want to be an officer.”
She even allowed herself to be tased in the pursuit of knowledge. A brief moment
of shock left her tense and unable to move, but she said as soon as it was over, every-thing was normal.
The program already has a waiting list for the next session, which begins in January. But the police department invites anyone in the community to join the acad-emy, as long as they are over 18 years old and can pass a background screening.
“We have a variety of different back-
People. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2AOpinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4AObituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5AAdvice & Comics . . . . . . . . . 5BPuzzles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3B
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Local news roundup.
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Vol. 139, No. 169
Lake City ReporterTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SINCE 1874 | 75¢
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Local officials: Scott did right thing
By AMANDA WILLIAMSON
TALLAHASSEE — Local leg-islative and school leaders sup-port Gov. Rick Scott’s decision
Monday to pull Florida out of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers test, a national assess-ment designed to measure students’ perfor-mance in Common Core State
Standards. Scott — caught in a crossfire
over the future of Florida’s public schools — is trying to respond to critics of new education standards slated to go into effect next year. Instead of rejecting or endors-ing the standards, Scott called for public hearings and possible changes to the Common Core State Standards in addition to the
state’s dismissal of PARCC.
“Florida’s had incredible suc-cess in preparing our children for the future, and we’re not letting up in demanding
high standards from classrooms,” said Elizabeth Porter, R-Lake
City. “That’s why the Governor should be applauded for setting a path forward to determine what’s best for Florida’s needs. The Governor also took an impor-tant step in informing the U.S. Department of Education that we will not subject Florida’s class-rooms to PARCC. We need to
ABANDONS NATIONAL TESTING REGIMEN
Common Core State Standards may alsobe revised, Gov. says.
Porter Huddleston
PARCC continued on 3A
LSHAchangescourseon taxesWon’t raise millage after all; may revisitissue of 5% raises.
By TONY BRITT
The Lake Shore Hospital Board unanimously adopted a .962 tax levy for its fiscal budget for the coming year, backing off an ear-lier proposal for a higher tax levy. The board also adopted a $9.2 million fiscal budget for the com-ing year, beginning Oct. 1.
The board approved the .962 millage rate during its final 2013-14 budget hearing Monday in a meeting that lasted about 45 minutes.
Last week during its initial budget hearing, the Hospital Authority Board adopted a 1.5 mill tax levy, but opted to go with the lower millage rate in its Monday meeting. For the past two years the board has levied a .962 millage rate. Had the Hospital Authority Board gone with the higher tax levy, it would have made for a $9.9 million budget.
The indigent care agreement between Lake Shore Hospital
BRAWL continued on 3A
Hospital brawl sends man to jailBy AMANDA WILLIAMSON
A Lake City man faces a felo-ny battery charge for allegedly kicking a local law enforcement officer Sunday morning.
Roderick Everett Higgins, 39, of 1736 SW Buckley Lane, also faces two assault charges and a misde-meanor charge of disorderly i n t o x i c a t i o n , according to a Lake City Police
Department arrest report. The Lake City Medical Center called police Sunday after Higgins repeatedly threatened medi-cal staff. Because Higgins was intoxicated, medical center staff did not want to release him.
Higgins reportedly became aggressive toward Officers Tammy Cox and Louis Troiano when they entered his room
Higgins
POLICE
LSHA continued on 3A
Citizens Police Academy graduates 24
Photos by JASON MATTHEW WALKER/Lake City Reporter
Lake City Mayor Stephen Witt (from right) and Lake City Police Chief Argatha Gilmore congratulate Darnel Schauer for completing the 12-week Citizens Police Academy at the 2013 Graduation Program held at the First Baptist Church Fellowship Hall on Monday. The graduates got to see police work first-hand, and gained a deeper knowledge of how the agency works to protect and serve. ‘I loved it,’ Schauer said. ‘It was very informa-tive. The officers were outstanding. We found out how much they have to do each day. We all wanted to go another 12 weeks.’
Program gives civilians a taste of police workTraining is much like real Lake City Police officers undergo, but ‘more fun.’
Lake City resident Barbara Twing tells the story of how she was the first to volunteer to be tazed. When asked what the best part of that experience was, she replied ‘When it was over. It’s like someone giving you a noogie. Your going to be surprised. It will take you to your knees. (Criminals) may want to run, but your body’s not going anywhere. You literally are frozen.’
LCPD continued on 3A
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The University ofMemphis law schoolbuilding was flooded toa depth of 7 inches onthis date in 1997 asover 4 inches of rainfell on the Memphis,Tenn. area. This wasthe third time thebuilding was flooded in14 months. This begsthe question: Did thelaw students sueMother Nature?
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CORRECTIONThe Lake City Reporter corrects errors of fact in news
items. If you have a concern, question or suggestion, please call the executive editor. Corrections and clarifications will run in this space. And thanks for reading.
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
Thought for Today
Celebrity Birthdaysn Model and actor Kevin Sorbo is 54. n Screenwriter and actress
Nia Vardalos is 50.n WWE vice president Stephanie McMahon is 36.
AROUND FLORIDANova wants teaching hospital
FORT LAUDERDALE — Nova Southeastern University wants to build a 100-bed teaching hospital.
The university is part-nering with HCA East Florida and asking state officials to approve their request. The univer-sity said in a statement Monday the proposed hospital will be privately owned by HCA East Florida and won’t use pub-lic funds for construction. HCA operates 14 South Florida hospitals.
HCA officials said in a statement they selected NSU’s campus because it’s in the middle of the tri-county area.
The hospital will focus on research, residencies, internships, clinical rota-tions, and practicums in various field including osteopathic medicine, dental medicine, optom-etry, pharmacy, physical therapy, nursing and occu-pational therapy.
Charges reduced in baby death case
HALLANDALE BEACH — Prosecutors have reduced the charges against a South Florida woman whose baby was found buried in a backyard.
The Broward State Attorney’s Office down-graded the charges on Monday against Brittney Sierra from second-degree neglect for causing bodily harm to third-degree child neglect.
Sierra, who is pregnant, may be able to bond out of jail.
Earlier this year the medical examiner’s office said her 5-month-old son died as a result of homi-cide. The boy’s remains were discovered in January after officials real-ized he had been missing for 18 months.
Single-engine plane crashes
LOXAHATCHEE — Authorities said the pilot of a single-engine plane that crashed in Palm Beach County was not seriously injured.
The plane crashed Monday afternoon near Loxahatchee. The pilot was the only person onboard.
The cause of the crash has not yet been deter-mined.
Police ID body found in Gulf
CLEARWATER — Clearwater police said the man whose body was found floating in the Gulf of Mexico had been before he went for a swim.
Police identified the man on Monday as Jose Gabriel Fajardo, 40, of Tampa. His body was found last Tuesday about three miles offshore.
Police said Fajardo told his cousin he was going to swim from one hotel where he had been drinking to another hotel on Sept. 15. He was not reported missing until the next day.
He was identified by the
Pinellas County Medical Examiner’s Office.
Allegiant Air to check MD-80s
LAS VEGAS — Allegiant Air is telling passengers that 12 flights are canceled while it continues to over-haul emergency slides on its MD-80 aircraft.
Monday’s cancelations are on six routes, includ-ing four into and out of McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas and one each involving flights in and out of Phoenix and Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla.
Scientific drone missions tested
KEY LARGO — Federal officials have been test-ing the use of drones for monitoring environmental conditions and wildlife in marine sanctuaries, includ-ing the one off the Florida Keys.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has been testing the small, remote-controlled aircraft for 18 months. Last week, officials tried out the drones in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary.
”“A well-developed sense of humor is the pole that adds bal-ance to your steps as you walk the tightrope of life.”
— William Arthur Ward, America’s most quoted writers of inspirational maxims
‘Breaking Bad,’ ‘Modern Family’ win bigLOS ANGELES
Breaking Bad,” the brutal, drug-fueled saga of an everyman’s ambition turned evil, captured its first best drama Emmy
Award on Sunday, denying the online series “House of Cards” a his-tory-making honor.
“I did not see this coming,” said “Breaking Bad” creator Vince Gilligan, tipping his hat to Netflix’s political thriller “House of Cards,” the first digital contender for top Emmy honors.
Attention and acclaim for the AMC cable channel’s “Breaking Bad” has built as it nears the end of its five-season run next Sunday, with the final eight-episode arc eligible for next year’s Emmys.
“Modern Family” won its fourth consecutive trophy for top comedy series even though its oft-honored cast was shut out this time.
Jeff Daniels won the Emmy for best drama series actor for his por-trayal of an idealistic TV anchorman in “The Newsroom,” with Claire Danes capturing top actress hon-ors for her troubled CIA agent in “Homeland.”
Daniels noted that he’d also received an age 50-plus acting honor from AARP, which represents the interests of older Americans.
“With all due respect to the AARP, this is even better,” Daniels said.
Pompeo: ‘The Emmys felt so dated to me’
NEW YORK — Ellen Pompeo wasn’t a fan of this year’s Emmy Awards show.
The 43-year-old actress said she “was really disappointed” by Sunday’s telecast.
“I didn’t see any diversity in the Emmys at all. The Emmys felt so dated to me,” she said in an inter-view Monday. “... That dance num-
ber was embarrassing. Did you see one person of color in that dance number?”
“Grey’s Anatomy” is one of the more diverse shows on television, which Pompeo said is one of her favorite things about the series.
“I’m extremely proud of our very, very diverse cast which represents the world that I walk around in every day,” she said.
“Grey’s Anatomy” is now in its 10th season on ABC. The new sea-son will premiere Thursday.
‘Prisoners’ tops box office with $21.4 million
NEW YORK — The more adult-oriented fall moviegoing season got off to a strong start over the
weekend, as the Hugh Jackman kid-napping drama “Prisoners” opened with a box office-leading $21.4 mil-lion, according to studio estimates Sunday.
The Warner Bros. thriller, which also stars Jake Gyllenhaal, is among the first fall films with Oscar aspira-tions to open in theaters. It was a strong debut for a serious, R-rated drama that cost about $46 million to make.
Following the robust business for “Lee Daniels’ The Butler” (now up to $106.5 million in six weeks for the Weinstein Co.), the large audiences turning out for adult fare bodes well for Hollywood’s coming awards sea-son.
Sunday:9-13-15-18-26
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Under constructionConstruction crews are seen at work on a structure along U.S. Highway 441.
COURTESY
Epiphany shows its appreciationEpiphany Catholic School students thank Potash Corp. White Springs for their donation that allowed the school to purchase new computers for the Media Center. From left: Isabella Fernandes, Luis Barrera, Markenzie Lewis, Dean Moffitt, Bradee McCray, Richard Jones and Kayleena McKinley.
Daily Scripture
“Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.”
— Romans 5:3-4
Saturday:8-32-35-46-47-52
x5
Authority and Shands Lake Shore Regional Medical Center, which is currently owned by HMA, requires the Hospital Authority Board to provide HMA funds equivalent to 1.5 mills tax in Columbia County. Last year the Hospital Authority used reserve funds to help reach the 1.5 mills requirement and apparently will follow the same path during the upcoming fiscal year.
With the .962 tax levy, the Lake Shore Hospital Authority will generate approximately $2,136,427 in ad valorem revenue.
The Authority Board also unanimously adopted its $9,205,527 fiscal budget.
By going with the .962 tax levy the Hospital Authority Board plans to take $200,000 from its hospital services reserves, $900,000 from its clinical services reserves and $100,000 from its capital improvement reserves. The Hospital Authority will have approximately $3.5 million remaining in its reserves.
During the public hear-ing on the budget, two resi-dents asked the Authority Board to forgo levying the 1.5 millage rate and instead go with the lower tax rate.
Hospital Authority board member Koby Adams, who was not present at the previ-ous meeting, asked about giving the equivalent of the 1.5 tax millage rate levy for the agreement. Hospital Authority legal counsel Marlin Feagle said if the board could raise the funds from other sources to meet the requirements of the agreement that would be acceptable.
Adams then made a motion to adopt the .962 tax levy and for the Hospital Authority Board to use some
of its reserves to make up the difference to meet the requirements of the agree-ment with Shands HMA.
By using the .962 tax levy, the Hospital Authority plans to pull approximately $1.2 million from its reserves.
“I would behoove the rest of you guys to go with the .962 rate,’ Adams said. “It’s not much back into the peo-ple’s pockets, but it is some. With the management we have, we’re going to be fine for another year — at least.”
Authority Board member Marc Vann noted that the Hospital Authority Board has used its reserves to make up the equivalent for the past few years when no other local taxing authority was willing to dip into their reserves.
Vann noted that the Lake Shore Hospital Authority Board has saved local tax-payers about $4 million in
property taxes over the last three years.
Tim Murphy, the Hospital Authority’s newest board member, said the economic downturn is not over, but noted that Gov. Rick Scott has complimented the Hospital Authority sound fiscal practices over the past few years.
Murphy them followed Adam’s lead for the .962 millage rate.
“We don’t have any major capital outlay projects fac-ing us where we need these reserves,” he said.
Murphy also questioned the 5 percent raises that were given to employees at the last meeting and said he was not in favor of the sal-ary increases in the budget. He said he plans to address the matter at the next meet-ing after he learned that line item budget amendments could be made.
put our energy into what matters most, rather than placing additional burdens on our schools.”
According to Terry Huddleston, Columbia County School Superintendent, the PARCC assessment had not been completed, required exten-sive amounts of time for testing and was entirely computer-based. The test would have increased the amount of bandwidth the district needed to purchase in order to fully assess all of its students.
Statewide, school super-intendents recommended Scott drop PARCC, but suggested Florida turn to a “off-the-shelf” test — or one already completed — instead of creating its own.
“There has to be account-ability,” Huddleston said. “It is my understanding from the superintendents meeting that there are off-the-shelf tests that can be adapted to fit our present standards. ... The PARCC assessment was not well thought out and was rushed, rather than having confidence in a solid assess-ment already in existence. That’s what concerned all of us superintendents.”
Scott, in an executive order and letters to top state education officials, said he remains in favor of the “highest academic stan-dards,” but wants to make sure there isn’t any “federal intrusion” into education policy.
The Republican gover-nor called on Education Commissioner Pam Stewart and the State Board of Education to issue a bid to determine what tests should be used to replace the current test, the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test.
Columbia County Assistant Superintendent for Cur riculum, A s s e s s m e n t , Accountability, Technology and Professional Development Kitty
McElhaney said the move away from PARCC will not affect local students because the state has yet to implement the test.
However, the district now has to wait for the state to announce testing measures for the 2014-15 school year. Local schools will continue to teach courses with the current standards — some are Next Generation State Standards and some are Common Core — until a recommendation from state to make an alteration, McElhaney said.
“What Floridians need to know is not our leaders are ‘for Common Core’ or ‘against Common Core,’” Scott wrote in a letter to State Board of Education Chairman Gary Chartrand.
He added that as gov-ernor, “I support Florida’s high academic standards and strongly reject over-reach into those standards and other areas of our edu-cation system by the fed-eral government.”
Scott is taking these steps amid a growing rift in his own party about educa-tion policy. His moves also come just one day after former Gov. Charlie Crist — a likely challenger to Scott — wrote a critical opinion piece in the Tampa Bay Times about Scott’s handling of education and said he was capitulating to tea party members.
“This is a nonsensical reason to reject them,” Crist wrote. “Scott needs to stand with Florida students and no one else. This is not a time for rank partisan-ship.”
Scott initially backed Common Core standards, which set uniform bench-marks for reading, writing and math. But in recent weeks he refused to come out strongly in favor of Florida’s transition to the new standards, which have been adopted by 45 states and the District of Columbia, as opposition has mounted among local
Republican Party organiza-tions.
The standards are a result of an initiative sponsored by the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers. Opponents see them as the nationalization of education policy and stan-dards, something they say should be left to the states.
The new standards are backed by former Gov. Jeb Bush, who helped create the state’s current A-to-F grading system while in office from 1999 to 2007. It would be a huge defeat to Bush’s potential presi-dential campaign if his own home state suddenly changed directions on edu-cation, an area where he is seen as a leader.
Bush has championed the standards as a way of raising expectations for students who may not be ready for college or careers.
The appointed board that oversees Florida’s public schools has already adopted the new standards and the state is moving ahead to implement them. Elementary schools are already using the stan-dards and the plan is to fully implement them dur-ing the 2014-15 school year.
But now Scott wants the board to hold public hear-ings and possibly revisit and alter the standards afterward.
The Associated Press con-tributed to this story.
Page Editor: Robert Bridges, 754-0428 LAKE CITY REPORTER LOCAL TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013 3A
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PARCC: Local officials applaud Scott’s moveContinued From Page 1A
at the medical center. According to the report, Higgins refused to coop-erate with medical staff and law enforcement, say-ing “I’m gonna get you all when I get my boys at 904.”
When Troiano attempt-ed to arrest Higgins, he kicked the officer in the genitals, the report stated. Neither Officer Joe Moody nor Troiano was able to restrain the suspect. Officer Larry Thomas then informed Higgins sev-eral times that he would be tased if he did not stop resisting. Higgins ignored him.
At that time, Thomas used his X26 Taser twice. Higgins continued to resist
after the first five-second cycle. After the second use, Troiano handcuffed Higgins — who continued to pull and jerk away from the officers while walking to the patrol vehicle, the report said.
On the way to the Columbia County Detention Facility, Higgins told Troiano he was going to shoot all four of the officers involved when he bonded out. At the time, his bond was set at $12,000.
“I’m going to shoot you and the other cops once I’m out,” Higgins stated, according to the report. “I’ll get ya off duty too.”
Higgins has since been released from jail.
BRAWL: Leads to jailContinued From Page 1A
LSHA: Changes course on tax rateContinued From Page 1A
grounds, skills and occupations,” LCPD Community Relations Coordinator Audré Washington said. “A lot of retired law enforcement, retired educators and housewives. ... It’s close to the training that our actual officers go through, but it’s more fun.”
Mayor Stephen Witt, City Manager Wendell Johnson and Chief Gilmore greeted the group. Following the intro-ductions, several graduates told stories about their experience with the program. The ceremony ended with guest speaker Judge Julian Collins.
“For us to preserve our strength as a nation, our workplaces have to be secure, our institutions strong and our society, ever vigilant, ever vigilant about our core values,” Collins said. “I hope that, among the things you learned over
the past two or three months, your mind has been reaffirmed about the continu-ing need for that vigilance and for your appreciation to those who maintain that vigilance in our community.”
Lake City resident Dorcas Gruel want-ed to see firsthand the daily activities of the police officers in Lake City. She felt it was great to get to know the officers.
But her favorite part was meeting the canine unit, the furry companions of the
officers that put their lives on the line to assist their human counterparts.
She highly recommends that every-one take the course.
Sandra Smith, also a Lake City resident, decided to take the class after hearing other library volunteers talk about it.
“I always wanted to see law enforce-ment from the inside,” she said. “I was married to an officer at one time, and I’ve been a victim many times.”
After two ride-alongs, Smith feels like she has seen a side of Lake City she didn’t know existed. The officer patrolled parts of the community she had never been to, places she called “a different culture.”
With empty time to fill and a curiosity about how the police interact with the
public, Denis Lawton was drawn to the pro-gram.
“I was looking for something to use my time up, but it turned out to be much more than that,” he said. “I realized it was really important for me to take the class. .. I enjoyed the crime scene part. It gave me a chance to practice being in CSI.”
As of right now, the 24 graduates are associate members of the CPA. On October 10, CPA will welcome them as full members with another cer-emony. The Academy helps raise money to support the local police department
through fundraisers. According to President Paul Twing, the current proj-ect of the CPA is to support the canine unit of the LCPD.
But Monday night, the graduates were just excited to finish their class and enjoy the company of their fellow CPA members.
“Congratulations, graduates,” Washington said. “We are proud to serve you.”
LCPD: Citizens Police Academy Continued From Page 1A
JASON MATTHEW WALKER/Lake City Reporter
Guest speaker Third Judicial Circuit Judge Julian Collins tells how Lake City Police officers responded to a burglary at his residence, and reinforced how much law enforcement sacrifice while fulfilling their duty.
According to a new Gallup poll, 55 percent of Americans say they have little to no confi-dence that they can rely
on mass media to report the news “fully, accurately and fairly.”
Forty-six percent say the media is too liberal and just 13 percent think it’s too conservative.
Justification for this public senti-ment is evident as the budget and debt-ceiling issues heat up and the press can hardly restrain its disdain for Tea Party Republicans and the idea that our nation may really be in crisis.
New York Times columnist David Brooks does a regular political com-mentary feature along with Mark Shields on the “PBS NewsHour.” It’s hard to believe that this feature is supposed to be balanced, with Brooks the alleged conservative and Shields the liberal. But for PBS, like The New York Times where Brooks writes his column, anyone not on the far left is a conservative.
In a recent “NewsHour” seg-ment about the budget debate, Brooks talked about “the rise of Ted Cruzism.”
According to Brooks, the Republican freshman senator from Texas is not a “normal” senator who sees himself in Congress to form alliances and pass legislation. Rather, per Brooks, Cruz is more a “media protest person.”
The same thing is happening in the House, says Brooks. House Republicans are “not normal. ... They just want to obstruct.”
My organization, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education, held an event in Washington two weeks ago titled “Reversing the Urban Plight.”
About 100 black pastors and community leaders from around the country listened as black conservatives such as Dr. Ben Carson, economist Walter Williams, Louisiana State Sen. Elbert Guillory and CURE chairman and Family Research Council senior fellow Ken Blackwell talked about how free-dom and conservative principles hold the key to resolving our urban crises.
At dinner, Cruz dropped by.In stark contrast to what the
PBS viewing audience heard from Brooks, this audience heard remarks from Cruz that everyone in the room found refreshingly nor-mal.
Cruz had a crisp, clear message about getting America back on track and about what it will take to save our low-income urban com-munities.
He talked about the importance of school choice and personal retirement accounts for low-income Americans.
Only in Washington is it consid-ered abnormal and obstructionist for a member of Congress to ring the alarm about the loss of free-dom in America, to take a stand to restore it, and suggest that Americans, particularly low-income Americans, should be able to decide what kind of school they send their
child to and to keep and save more of their hard-earned income.
In Cruz, the black pastors heard someone who wants to liberate, not obstruct. They understood that the obstructionists, whose agenda is holding onto and expanding their own power, come from the political class in Washington.
While the median American fam-ily income dropped 6.6 percent from 2000 to 2012, median family income in Washington, D.C., grew 23.3 percent -- by far the highest in the nation, new Census Bureau data show.
Let’s recall that the tea party movement got going when it was clear in 2009 that America’s new president saw more government rather than less as the answer to America’s crisis.
The 2010 health care reform com-monly called “Obamacare,” which passed without a single Republican vote, has only gotten more unpopu-lar. A USA Today/Pew Research Center poll this week shows 53 percent of Americans disapprove of the new law and 42 percent approve. Forty one percent strongly disapprove and 26 percent strongly approve.
It’s Washington that is abnor-mal, not Ted Cruz and tea party Republicans.
Only a left-wing press can con-clude that the abnormal obstruc-tionists are those taking a stand for freedom in a country that is sup-posed to be free.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s warning about the deadly threat of antibiotic-resistant infections the other day should prompt widespread reforms.
But we suspect the report that found more than 2 million people in the United States are afflicted with drug-resistant infections a year — 23,000 cases are fatal — is likely to be met with the same inaction that followed other warnings of about deadly “superbugs.”
The promiscuous use of antibiotics, in medical treat-ment and food production, is the likely blame for much of the problem.
But Washington has been reluctant to exert tighter control, given the opposition of the agricultural indus-try and other influential interests.
As the CDC report further documents, infectious diseases are becoming more difficult to treat.
Already, once readily treatable illnesses such as strep throat have become resistant to antibiotics. The CDC earlier this year reported drug-resistant gonor-rhea was increasing.
The latest report estimates antibiotic resistant infec-tions cost the nation about $20 billion in unnecessary health care costs each year and perhaps as much as an additional $35 million in lost productivity.
Antibiotics are wonder drugs that have saved count-less lives, but widespread and often indiscriminate use has resulted in many germs becoming more tolerant of the treatment.
A few years ago an Associated Press investigative series found that the nation used more than 35 mil-lion pounds of antibiotics a year, and 70 percent of the drugs were given to “pigs, chickens and cows.” The practice enables bacteria that may be transmitted to humans to adapt to the drugs.
Much of the agricultural use of antibiotics is nec-essary to ensure the health of animals in livestock facilities. But the drugs are also given to promote growth. This is understandable given that extra weight increases profit margins, but it hardly seems to justify compromising the effectiveness of essential drugs.
Agricultural use is hardly the only culprit. Patients frequently misuse the drugs. They often stop using the antibiotics once they begin to feel better, rather than taking them for the prescribed length of time. This increases the odds of germs becoming drug tolerant. Some patients seek antibiotics for colds and other ill-nesses where they have little effect.
The latest CDC report estimates that as many of 50 percent of antibiotics are prescribed incorrectly or to patients who do not need them.
The AP investigation found that Norway impressive-ly reduced the rate of infectious disease by reducing the medical use of antibiotics.
Yet the United States, despite alarming evidence, has done little.
It’s time Congress and the Food and Drug Administration treat this as the growing crisis that it is.
As CDC director Thomas Frieden aptly warned, “If we are not careful, we’ll go the medicine cabinet, and it will be empty.”
President Barack Obama has been criticized fairly for dithering over critical decisions and then not fighting hard for them.
Circumstances have conspired to make one of the most important decisions of Obama’s second term for him. Thankfully, it’s the right one, and the president may not even have to fight hard for its approval.
On Sunday, Larry Summers – Obama’s first choice to lead the Federal Reserve Board, one of the most powerful jobs in Washington – withdrew from consideration....
Summers would have been a hard sell to the Senate. He’s bril-liant, knows it and doesn’t mind letting others know it. He has a combative personality combined with a knack for unfortunate phrasing, as when he suggested there might be inherent gender reasons for the disparity between men and women in the sciences. That, and his awkward attempts to explain his way out of the situ-ation, cost him his job as presi-dent of Harvard.
Moreover, Summers was
opposed for the job by a hand-ful of Democratic senators on the left, who thought he was too averse to financial regulation. Obama seemed disinclined to bring them around.
Summers’ withdrawal puts Janet Yellen at the head of the line for the Fed chairmanship. Vice chair of the central bank, she has more experi-ence there than the last three chair-men did when they were named. Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein recently described her as being “the most qualified Fed chair in memory.” And prescient, too. Recently declassified transcripts of Fed meetings from February 2007 show she foresaw the coming reces-sion when many of her fellow board
members did not.Yellen is also one of the
board’s strongest voices for fighting unemployment, a too-often-forgotten element of the Fed’s mandate.
For whatever reason, she gets lukewarm support from the White House, which recently floated the name of former Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. He has emphatically said he doesn’t want the job.
However, support for Yellen is strong outside the White House, in Congress and the financial community. She would not only be the first woman to hold the Fed job, she would be the first Democrat since 1987.
Obama has known since at least June that current chairman Ben Bernanke plans to leave when his second term expires in January. It’s now September and time for the White House to get moving.
Presidents don’t often get easy choices. This is an easy one.
OPINIONTuesday, September 24, 2013 www.lakecityreporter.com 4A
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Killing our wonder drugs
Yellen natural choice to lead Fed
■ Tampa Tribune
Ted Cruz isn’t abnormal;Washington is
■ Dale McFeatters is editorial writer for Scripps Howard News Service.
Dale [email protected]
Star [email protected]
■ Star Parker is president of CURE, Coalition on Urban Renewal and Education (www.urbancure.org) and author of three books.
4AOPINION
(Lula) Pearl Jordan Sellers Frahs
(Lula) Pearl Jordan Sell-ers Frahs, 94, of Lake City, FL, passed away on Septem-ber 21, 2013 in Lake City, FLPearl was born in Alamo, Ga., to the late Daniel and Lula Jordan on December 10, 1918, the old-est of nine children. She went to school in Wheeler county, Ga. She married Henry Clarendon Sellers on November 23, 1940 in Wheeler County. She was an Army wife and followed Sellers all over the world. They had one daughter, Betty. After Sellers died in 1968, Pearl worked at Pic N Save for sixteen years and raised her granddaughter, Colleen, in Jacksonville. on October 12, 1984, she married Lloyd Frahs in Folkston, Ga. She was wid-owed again in 1987. She moved to Lake City in 2006. She attend-ed Sovereign Grace Fellowship.She is preceded in death by her husbands; her parents; her sisters: Ruby, Lillie Mae, and Stella Mae; and her broth-ers: Bill, James, and Hubert.She is survived by two broth-ers; Robert and Earl Jordan, her daughter; Betty Parrish; grand-daughters, Colleen (David) Finley and Charlene (Dale) At-wood, great grandsons: Jonathan (Molly) Finley, Jordan (Ami) Finley, Jacob and Joshua Finley, and friends, McKinley How-ard and Terri (David) Barber.Funeral services will be held 11 am, Wednesday, September 25, 2103 at the chapel of Gateway-Forest Lawn Funeral Home. Interment will be at 3:30 pm at Greenlawn Cemetery in Jackson-ville, Fl. Visitation will be held 6-8 pm Tuesday, September 24, 2013 at the funeral home. The family of pearl Frahs wishes to extend our sincere thanks to Dr. Hayden, LCMC, Willowbrook and Haven Hospice. Arrange-ments are under the direction of GATEWAY-FOREST LAWN FUNERAL HOME, 3596 S. U.S. Hwy 441, Lake City, FL 32025 (386) 752-1954. Please leave word of love and comfort to the family at www.gatewayforestlawn.com
Larry Ray Huddleston
Larry Ray Huddleston, 60, for-merly of Lake City, passed away September 21, 2013, in Semi-nole, Florida of cancer.S u r v i v o r s include his wife, Mary H u d d l e s t o n of Seminole, son Zach of Los Angeles, daughter Amy of Jacksonville and parents Frank and Wyanona Huddleston of Las Animas, Colo-rado. He was preceded in death by his sister Brenda Birks of Denver.
He graduated from Adams State College in Alamosa, Colorado. He was an avid golfer and former member of Quail Heights Country Club.A Celebration of Life will be held at Moss Feaster Funeral Home in Largo, Florida, on Tuesday, September 24, at 2 p.m. Attend-ees are encouraged to wear lip lops. Additional services will be held in Las Animas, Colorado, at a future date. In lieu of lowers, the family requests donations to Suncoast Hospice Foundation, Purple Team, 5771 Roosevelt Blvd., Clearwater, FL 33760.
George L. Green
George L. Green, 65, of Lake City passed away on Thursday, September 19,2 013 at the Su-wannee Valley Care Center (Ha-ven Hospice). He was born in Columbia Coun-ty to Febbie D. Green and the late George Z. Green. He gradu-ated from Columbia County High School, Class of 1966 and in 1967 he joined the United States Air Force, he trained in Biloxi, Mississippi, and then married his high school sweet-heart, Melanie (Germany) Green in June of 1968. They started on an adventure of life together in Tachikawa, AFB, Japan. At most of the bases he was stationed at, he gained a reputation for being able to cook an outstanding slab of ribs and top them off with his special Bar BQ sauce. He went on to retire from the Air Force as a SMSGT Air Trafic Con-troller and afterwards he retired from the Department of correc-tions after working there for 15 years. He was a loving husband, father, and grandfather who en-joyed ishing, building things, and family togetherness so he could put his cooking talents to work. He was a very driver person, when he wanted to cre-ate something unique to eat or a special piece of furniture. He strived to do his best in all things and was loved and respected for it, by his family and friends.Survivors include his devot-ed wife of 45 years, Melanie Green, his two sons, that he was especially proud of and loved early, Travis D. Green of Lake City, FL, & Dustin G. (Jennifer) Green of Jackson-ville, FL; a proud grandpa of Xoe Rain Green and ear brother to his sister, Linda F. Green of Lake City, FL and his devoted Dachshunds, Max and Simon.Memorial services will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Friday, Septem-ber 27, 2013 in the chapel of Gateway Forest Lawn Funeral Home with Pastor Arthur Peter-son oficiating. In lieu of lowers the family asks that donations in his memory be made to the Su-wannee Valley Care Center (Ha-ven Hospice) at 6037 U.S. Hwy
90 West, Lake City, FL 32055. GATEWAY-FOREST LAWN FUNERAL HOME, 3596 South U.S. Hwy 441, Lake City, FL 32025. Please leave words of comfort for the family online at www.gatewyaforestlawn.com
Obituaries are paid advertise-ments. For details, call the Lake City Reporter’s classified department at 752-1293.
Sept. 24
FFA orientationColumbia High School
Future Farmers of America will have an orientation meeting at 6:30 p.m in the CHS cafeteria . Any stu-dent considering joining FFA is encouraged to bring their family and learn more about the FFA program. A free meal will be served. Questions can be directed to columbiaf [email protected].
On the ConstitutionThe John Birch Society
has a new series of DVDs for you to learn how the Constitution was intended to secure rights, not to enable the federal govern-ment to infringe on those rights.
You’re invited to attend an ongoing six-part work-shop based on these DVDs that will provide you with a practical, common sense understanding of how the Constitution was intended to limit the government, not the citizens. This understanding will equip you to work with others to solve many of the problems Americans face every day that were created by Big Government.
Each class will include a DVD presentation and group discussion. Topics include:
Part 1: The Dangers of Democracy (Sept. 3)
Part 2: Enumerated vs. Unlimited Power (Sept. 10)
Part 3: Constitutional Economics, Constitutional Money (Sept. 17)
Part 4: Constitutional War Powers and the Enemy Within (Sept. 24)
Part 5: Exposing the
Enemies of Freedom (Oct. 1)
Part 6: Restoring the Constitution (Oct. 8)
Where: Lake City Baptist Temple, 3061 SR 47, Lake City.
When: Beginning Tuesday, September 3 at 7:00 pm and every Tuesday after for 5 weeks. More Information: Contact Sharon Higgins by phone (386-935-0821) or email ([email protected])
Dale Carnegie courseAn eight-week Dale
Carnegie training course
will be begin at the Fairfield Inn and Suites from 6 to 9:30 p.m. For more informa-tion, contact Bob Ganzak at (229) 506-1387.
Plant clinicUniversity of Florida
Master Gardeners are available every Tuesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon at the Columbia County Extension Office’s new location, 971 W. Duval St. (U.S. 90), Suite 170, to answer questions about lawns and plants. Bring samples for free diagno-sis or solutions. For more information, call 752-5384.
Support groupAnother Way Inc. pro-
vides a domestic violence support group every Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. If you are a current or former survivor of domestic vio-lence, call (386) 719-2702 for meeting location and an intake appointment. All services are free and con-fidential.
Sept. 25Plant clinic
University of Florida Master Gardeners are available every Wednesday from 1 to 4 p.m. at the
Fort White Public Library on Route 47 to answer questions about lawns and plants. Bring samples for free diagnosis or solutions. For more information, call 752-5384.
Soil testingColumbia County Master
Gardeners will do free soil pH testing each Wednesday at at the Columbia County Extension Office’s new location, 971 W. Duval St. (U.S. 90), Suite 170. Drop off soil samples at the office any week day during business hours. For more information, call 752-5384.
Men’s Bible studyOur Redeemer Lutheran
Church will have a men’s breakfast and Bible study from 7 to 8 a.m. each Wednesday at the church, 5056 SW State Road 47, one mile south of Interstate 75. For more information, con-tact Pastor Bruce Alkire at (386) 755-4299.
Sept. 26Driver Safety Course
Location: Columbia County Lifestyle Enrichment Center, 628 SE Allison Court, Lake City.
Date/Time: Thursday September 26, 9 am – 3:30 pm.Please bring a sack lunch or you may request a lunch at LEC on the day of the class. Cost: $12 for AARP members, $ 14 for non-membersThe Certificate of Completion is valid for a dis-count on your automobile insurance for 3 years.
Registration is required. Please call (352) 333-3036.
Page Editor: Robert Bridges, 754-0428 LAKE CITY REPORTER LOCAL TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013 5A
5A
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR■ Submit Community Calendar announcements by mail or drop off at the Reporter office located at 180 E. Duval St., via fax to (386) 752-9400 or e-mail [email protected].
Photos by AMANDA WILLIAMSON/Lake City Reporter
More scenes from BBQ festivalLEFT: Budmeister competition team leader Thomas Henry plates 10 ribs to deliver to the judges at the Smokin’ Pig BBQ Fest Saturday at the Columbia County Fairgrounds. ABOVE: Lake City resident Shannon Alexander auditons for the Suwannee River Jam Saturday. Three finalists would get the chance to move onto the finals, a step away from standing on stage at the river jam.
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COURTESY
Attic Store Manager Sharon Jackson, left, Haven Hospice Volunteer Jocelyn Bouffard and pet volunteer Sassie welcome Attic customers and Celebration attendees at the recent Haven Hospice Lake City Attic Expansion Celebration.
Haven celebrates renovationsFrom staff reports
The Haven Hospice Attic, located in Lake City, has just completed a sig-nificant renovation, almost doubling in size from 2,800 to 5,600 square feet, allowing the upscale resale store to offer more clothing, housewares, and furniture to the Suwannee Valley, say Haven Hospice officials.
To celebrate the expansion and the refreshed look of the Attic Resale Store on 1077 U.S. Hwy 90 West in Lake City, Haven Hospice had an
Expansion Celebration at the store on Saturday, Sept. 14 from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. with refreshments, fun and children’s activities.
“The Attic Resale Store added 3,000 square feet of addition-al space,” said Haven Hospice Facilities Manager Mark Willard. “We knocked down the walls, updated the whole store with new paint and carpet, and relocated the checkout counter to allow for more merchandise and to enhance the customer experience.”
“In addition to having doubled the space for housewares and cloth-ing racks, the Attic will expand our book section and now have space for large furniture items like bedroom sets and dining room tables,” said Lake City Attic Manager Sharon Jackson.
All sales from the Attic Resale Store support Haven Hospice’s unre-imbursed programs and services in the Suwannee Valley. Donations are accepted Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
COURTESY
Disc Jam 8 is set for Sept. 27-29 at the Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak.
Disc Jam 8 is comingFrom staff reports
LIVE OAK–It’s the Suwannee Disc Jam 8 Sept. 27-29 at The Spirit of the Suwannee Music Park in Live Oak, also with music galore in the Amphitheatre. Never heard of disc golf? It’s become one of the most popular games in the world with the object to throw a disc into a chain basket with the fewest tries.
There will be music as well. Featured groups include Roosevelt Collier & Friends, Applebutter Express, Catfish Alliance, Savi Fernandez Band, Royal Tinfoil, Yankee Slickers, Green Sunshine, Future Vintage w/ the Tropic Thunder Horns, Reverend DeBruhl, Nook n’ Cranny and Beartoe.
Signup under wayfor local Boys Club
The Boys Club of Columbia County is now registering for the fall session, which runs Aug. 19 through Dec. 1 All boys and girls ages 6 to 14 are eligible. The club picks up children from elementary, middle and
high schools. The fee is $200 per child, which includes transportation. The club offers indoor and outdoor sports, game room, homework help, a computer lab and other activities. For more infor-mation, call 752-4184.
Housing assistance available
The Greater Lake City Community Development Corp. Inc. provides servic-es to area resident want-ing to become homeown-ers. CDC offers financial literacy training, credit review, pre- and post-own-
ership counseling and homeownership education by professional instructors and credit counselors. For more, call (386) 752-9785, email [email protected] or visit great-erlakecitycdc.com.
Covenant Community School held its annual Grandparents
Day program Sept. 13. Students and teachers took time out of their day to entertain and honor their grandparents, as well as the grandparents in our com-munity, nation, and world.
The school held a pro-gram that included a song by the Kindergarten-6th grade students and a skit from the drama team. Students also read poems and stories that spoke of the role a grandparent plays in a child’s life and of memories of time spent with their grandparents. “I
think it honored the grand-parents well and made us laugh,” said Debbie Crews, a grandparent in atten-dance. It was considered a success by all who attend-ed and were involved.
Covenant Community School would like to thank everyone who sup-ported our Yankee Candle Fundraiser! All proceeds will benefit technology fund.
From September 30 trough October 4th, we will have a Spirit Week. Students will follow these spirit filled themes each day as a free dress down:
• Monday- Sports Day• Tuesday- Decade Day
(50’s-90’s) • Wednesday- Waky
Taky Day • Thursday- Hat,
Sunglasses, Flip-Flops day.
• Friday- CCS Spirit Day (School Colors)
CLASS NOTES
■ To leave an anonymous call on a possible
dangerous situation concerning Columbia
County schools, call toll-free, (866) 295-7303.
■ To leave an anonymous call on a possible
truancy problem in Columbia County schools,
call 758-4947.
■ Items for the school page should be dropped
off or mailed to: Leanne Tyo, Lake City Reporter,
180 E. Duval St., Lake City, FL 32055; faxed to
(386) 752-9400; or e-mailed to
[email protected] by 5 p.m. Thursdays.
■ L
BulletinBoardN E W S A B O U T O U R S C H O O L S
7ASCHOOL
234 SW Main Blvd. • 752-5866
For Life InsuranceGo With
Someone You Know
Your savings federally insured to at least $250,000and backed by the full faith and credit of the United States Government
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CLASS NOTES
■ To leave an anonymous message on a possible
dangerous situation concerning Columbia
County schools, call toll-free, (866) 295-7303.
■ To leave an anonymous message on a pos-
sible truancy problem in Columbia County
schools, call 758-4947.
■ Items for the school page should be dropped
off or mailed to: Jim Barr, Lake City Reporter,
180 E. Duval St., Lake City, FL 32055; faxed to
(386) 752-9400; or e-mailed to
[email protected] by 5 p.m. Thursdays.
BulletinBoardN E W S A B O U T O U R S C H O O L S
COURTESY
Grandparents Day at Covenant Community School.
CALENDAR
7a LAKECITYREPORTERSCHOOLSTuEsDAY,sEPTEMBER24,2013 Page Editor: RobertBridges,754-0428
Tuesday ELEMENTARY PRINCIPALS - Meeting @ CCSD
Administrative Complex, room 227 - 8:30 a.m.ALL PRINCIPALS - Meeting @ CCSD Administrative
Complex, room 227 - 10:00 a.m.LCMS - Spirit Week "Camo Day"; Falcon Cross Country
Bradford MS 3K XC Invitational @ Bradford Middle School; Falcon Football vs Hamilton - 7:00 p.m. - Away; Falcon Volleyball vs Suwannee - 5:00/6:00 p.m. - Home; Falcon Football vs Hamilton - 7:00 p.m. - Away
FWMS - Indian Football vs PK Yonge - 6:00 p.m.- Home
COLUMBIA COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD - Meeting @ Fort White Middle School cafeteria - 7:00 p.m.
CCE - Health Screenings for Kindergarten, 1st & 3rd grades; Cub Scout registration in cafeteria - 7:00 - 8:30 p.m.
WednesdayFIVE POINTS ELEMENTARY - "See You at the
Flagpole" in front of music room - 7:20 - 7:40 a.m.; Professional Development "PD360", All Teachers - 2:30 - 3:30 p.m.
PINEMOUNT ELEMENTARY - 2nd graders to VITAL @ VA Hospital - 10:00 a.m.
FORT WHITE ELEMENTARY - Boy Scouts visit class-rooms - 12:30 p.m.
WESTSIDE ELEMENTARY - Principal's Challenge recipients pizza lunch during their lunch times; Card sale ends
LCMS - Spirit Week "Nerd Day"NIBLACK ELEMENTARY - Faculty meeting in Media
Center - 2:15 p.m.CCE - Bellamy Beaver to visit - 1st grade, 8:30 a.m.;
Kindergarten, 9:00 - 10:00 a.m.
ThursdayRMS - Wolf Volleyball vs LCMS - 5:00 p.m. - Away; Wolf
Football vs Suwannee - 7:00 p.m. - AwayFWHS - Indian JV Football vs Union County - 7:00 p.m.
- AwayLCMS - Picture Day in gym lobby; Falcon Volleyball vs
RMS - 5:00 p.m. - HomeFORT WHITE ELEMENTARY - Open House for grades
3, 4 & 5 - 6:00 - 7:30 p.m.; Boys Scout in cafeteria - 7:00 p.m.
WESTSIDE ELEMENTARY - School Advisory Council (SAC) meeting - 5:30 p.m.
FridayINSTRUCTIONAL COACHES - Meeting @ CCSD
Administrative Complex, room 227 - 8:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.CHS - Tiger Football vs Englewood - 7:00 p.m. - AwayLCMS - Spirit Week "Champion Week"FIVE POINTS ELEMENTARY - Student Council elec-
tions in cafeteria with Liz Horne - 8:30 - 9:30 a.m.9/28 - LCMS - Falcon Cross Country Florida Runners
MS 2 Mile Invitational @ Titusville; Chorus All-State Test 1& 2 in Orlando
9/28 - WESTSIDE ELEMENTARY - Wildcat Community "Falling for Education" Festival & Fun Run -3:00- 7:00 p.m
9/28 - NATIONAL GOOD NEIGHBOR DAY.
Special day at Covenant Community
Fewer school districts promoting junk foodBy MIKE STOBBEAP Medical Writer
ATLANTA — There’s been a big shift in how many school districts take money from soda com-panies and ban junk food from vending machines, health officials say.
A government survey found 44 percent of school districts banned junk food from vending machines last year, up from 30 per-cent in 2006.
It also found drops in how many districts took a cut of soft drink sales, received donations from soda companies, or allowed soda company advertising.
Those are considered positive steps in help-ing the nation reduce the number of children who are overweight and obese.
But it’s not clear to how much impact the changes are having. The overall proportion of U.S. chil-dren who are overweight or obese has been holding steady at around 17 per-cent, according to govern-ment statistics.
Experts say that diet and exercise at home are at least as important as what kids are exposed to in school.
“There are lots and lots of factors that go into obesity rates,” said Nancy Brener, lead author of the government report on the study. She is a health scientist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The findings come from
a detailed government survey last year of more than 800 U.S. school dis-tricts. The CDC does the study every six years.
The CDC released the latest findings Monday. It found:
• The proportion of school districts that allowed soda companies to advertise soft drinks on school grounds — through posters, score-board placards or other ways — dropped from 47 percent to about 34 per-cent.
• Of districts that allowed schools to sell soft drinks, the percent-age that received a por-tion of sales receipts fell from 82 percent in 2006 to 69 percent in 2012.
• Of districts that allowed soda sales, the amount that received cash awards, equipment dona-tions or other incentives from soda companies fell from 52 percent to 34 per-cent.
• The percentage that required physical educa-tion class in elementary schools stayed flat, at about 94 percent.
That’s pretty high, so it’s not surprising there wasn’t much change there, Brener said.
She noted that the study measured school district policies, which is differ-ent than asking what was actually going on at indi-vidual schools. Sometimes there’s a difference, but CDC doesn’t have infor-mation on how often that happens.
YOUNG WRITERS OF THE MONTH
COURTESY
Eastside Elementary School’s Young Writers of the Month for October are (front row, from left) Makayla Jocelyn Ryker, grade 3; Emma Geiger, grade 1; Kyleigha Taylor, grade 5; Cayden Feagle, grade 2; Jessie Taylor, grade 4; (back row) 94.3 Morning Host Scott Berns. The Young Writers of the Month program is a joint venture of the Columbia County School District and Sunstate Federal Credit Union, Mix 94.3 and Burger King of Lake City.
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By BRANDON FINLEY
Columbia High goes on the road for only the second time this season when it travels to Jacksonville’s Englewood High at 7 p.m. on Friday.
The Tigers will take an undefeated record with them against a team that many will say Columbia simply outmatches.
But head coach Brian Allen isn’t concerned with predictions or how teams have looked in the past. He wants to make sure the Tigers are focused on their task each week.
“Talking to the group last week, we probably had the best week of practice this season,” Allen said. “The kids have bought into the whole understand-ing that it doesn’t matter who we’re playing, but we’re trying to accomplish what we’re trying to do as a team. We’re going out to try to accomplish our goals. The focus, the mind-set, the emotion, it’s all still there, even if we’re playing a lesser opponent.”
Allen isn’t about embar-
rassing any team, but he said the Tigers have to find ways to motivate themselves no matter the opponent.
“We don’t just go out there and try to beat them, but let people understand we’re a team that needs to be reckoned with,” Allen said. “We came out flat against Buchholz. It’s not that they had a chance to win, but we came out differently than we did against Lincoln. The iden-tity doesn’t change from week to week. If that’s who we are, we have to know that we’re going to come out the same every week. They came out and had a great week of practice competing like they were supposed.”
Despite a 63-13 win against Terry Parker High on Friday, Allen still knows the Tigers have flawed areas.
One of the team’s big-gest areas of pride is criti-cally analyzing their mis-takes no matter the score.
An area of concern for the Tigers after the win against the Braves was special teams after allow-ing a kickoff return for a touchdown and having their own return called back due to a penalty.
“The kickoff return, I
wasn’t happy with that,” Allen said. “That was a good football play being executed. The return unit is off chasing the fake guy. With the kicker, we have to get the ball out of the middle. We coach that up every day. We can’t kick the ball in the middle, because that hurts our unit. We have to get those things fixed. If we aren’t critically analyzing, we start believ-ing we’re (too) good. We have things called back, and there are things we have to fix with that unit. If the kick is in the mid-dle, we have to adjust our lanes, because we have a six-man side expecting it to be kicked one way.”
But it wasn’t just the special teams. Allen knows that the other units weren’t perfect either.
“We had mistakes
By TIM KIRBY
FORT WHITE — Fort White High football has an open date this week, one that was planned when the schedule was announced.
The Indians also are open on Oct. 11, when homecoming was originally planned for Faith Baptist Christian High before the school dropped football.
Chiles High had to step in as Friday’s homecoming
opponent and the Indians dispatched the Class 7A school, 35-14.
Chiles (0-3) hosts Marianna High this week.
Oct. 4 is a district date for 2-4A and Fort White will travel to Fernandina Beach High.
The Pirates improved to 3-1 with a 33-3 road win at Episcopal School. Tyreke Hubbard rushed for 170 yards and scored two touchdowns.
Fernandina Beach plays at Menendez High this week.
Madison County High dropped its third straight game, losing at home to
Trinity Christian Academy, 6-3, when the Conquerors scored on a fumble return with 28 seconds left in the game.
Madison County (1-3) brings Pace High to Boot Hill this week.
Fort White plays the Cowboys on Oct. 18.
Taylor County High scored 14 points in the fourth quarter, but fell to Class 5A powerhouse Wakulla High at home, 20-14. The Bulldogs (1-3) are off this week to prepare for their district opener against Madison County.
Lake City Reporter
SPORTSTuesday, September 24, 2013 www.lakecityreporter.com Section B
Story ideas?
ContactTim KirbySports Editor
1BSPORTS
CHS continued on 8B
Columbia makes its second road trip on Friday.
INDIANS continued on 8B
Indians travel to Fernandina Beach on Oct. 4.
COURTESY
Fort White High senior varsity cheerleaders are Danielle Wooley (from left), Amanda Kesead, Emily Williams, Ashley Welder, Whitney Law, Latoddra Mason and Vakayla Woodbury.
COURTESY
Fort White High junior varsity cheerleaders for 2013-14 are mascot Jacovya Major in front. First row (from left) are Haneko Marvel, Tyrah Jackson and Brooke Romaine. Second row (from left) are Delaine’ Riley, Carla Pentolino, Brooke Dilmore, Gina D’ Antonio and Selena Sullivan. Third row (from left) are co-captain Megan Nobles, Tessa Coe, captain Jordyn Wentworth, Madison Davis and Deanna Cordero.
JASON MATTHEW WALKER/Lake City Reporter
Fort White High’s Edward Garrison (26) appears to come up with the ball against Chiles High on Friday, but possession went back to the Timberwolves. Joe Chatman (50) comes to help.
Fort White takes a
break after 3-0 start
Class 6ATeamRecordPts Prv
1.MiamiCentral(16)3-1 184 1
2. Columbia (1) 4-0 161 3
3.Armwood(2) 4-0 159 2
4.Jefferson 3-0 131 4
5.Mainland 4-0 119 5
6.Heritage 4-0 82 7
7.Largo 3-1 57 8
8.Venice 3-1 4410
9.Hallandale 4-0 23NR
10.LakeGibson 1-1 21 9
Tigers take focus to Englewood
SCOREBOARD
TELEVISION
TV sports
Today
No live events scheduled
BASEBALL
AL standings
East Division
W L Pct GB
x-Boston 95 62 .605 —
Tampa Bay 86 69 .555 8
New York 82 74 .526 12½
Baltimore 81 74 .523 13
Toronto 71 84 .458 23
Central Division
W L Pct GB
Detroit 91 65 .583 —
Cleveland 86 70 .551 5
Kansas City 82 73 .529 8½
Minnesota 65 90 .419 25½
Chicago 61 94 .394 29½
West Division
W L Pct GB
x-Oakland 93 63 .596 —
Texas 84 71 .542 8½
Los Angeles 76 79 .490 16½
Seattle 68 88 .436 25
Houston 51 105 .327 42
x-clinched division
Today’s Games
Chicago White Sox (H.Santiago 4-9)
at Cleveland (U.Jimenez 12-9), 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (M.Moore 15-4) at N.Y.
Yankees (Kuroda 11-12), 7:05 p.m.
Toronto (Redmond 4-2) at Baltimore
(Tillman 16-7), 7:05 p.m.
Houston (Peacock 5-5) at Texas
(Darvish 13-9), 8:05 p.m.
Detroit (Fister 13-9) at Minnesota
(Diamond 6-11), 8:10 p.m.
Boston (Peavy 11-5) at Colorado
(Chatwood 7-5), 8:40 p.m.
Oakland (Griffin 14-9) at L.A. Angels
(Vargas 8-7), 10:05 p.m.
Kansas City (B.Chen 8-3) at Seattle
(Paxton 2-0), 10:10 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
Oakland at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Cleveland,
7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Toronto at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
Houston at Texas, 8:05 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Boston at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Kansas City at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
NL standings
East Division
W L Pct GB
x-Atlanta 92 63 .594 —
Washington 84 72 .538 8½
New York 71 84 .458 21
Philadelphia 71 84 .458 21
Miami 57 99 .365 35½
Central Division
W L Pct GB
z-St. Louis 91 65 .583 —
Cincinnati 89 67 .571 2
Pittsburgh 89 67 .571 2
Milwaukee 69 86 .445 21½
Chicago 65 91 .417 26
West Division
W L Pct GB
x-Los Angeles 90 66 .577 —
Arizona 79 76 .510 10½
San Diego 72 83 .465 17½
San Francisco 72 84 .462 18
Colorado 71 86 .452 19½
z-clinched playoff berth
x-clinched division
Today’s Games
Milwaukee (Thornburg 3-1) at Atlanta
(F.Garcia 1-2), 7:10 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Niese 7-8) at Cincinnati
(Leake 14-6), 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia (Miner 0-1) at Miami
(H.Alvarez 4-5), 7:10 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Cole 9-7) at Chicago Cubs
(Rusin 2-5), 8:05 p.m.
Washington (G.Gonzalez 11-7) at St.
Louis (Wacha 3-1), 8:15 p.m.
Boston (Peavy 11-5) at Colorado
(Chatwood 7-5), 8:40 p.m.
Arizona (Miley 10-10) at San Diego
(T.Ross 3-8), 10:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 13-7) at San
Francisco (M.Cain 8-9), 10:15 p.m.
Wednesday’s Games
N.Y. Mets at Cincinnati, 12:35 p.m.
Washington at St. Louis, 1:45 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Milwaukee at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
Philadelphia at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
Boston at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.
Arizona at San Diego, 10:10 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco,
10:15 p.m.
FOOTBALL
NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
New England 3 0 0 1.000 59 34
Miami 3 0 0 1.000 74 53
N.Y. Jets 2 1 0 .667 55 50
Buffalo 1 2 0 .333 65 73
South
W L T Pct PF PA
Houston 2 1 0 .667 70 82
Indianapolis 2 1 0 .667 68 48
Tennessee 2 1 0 .667 60 56
Jacksonville 0 3 0 .000 28 92
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Cincinnati 2 1 0 .667 75 64
Baltimore 2 1 0 .667 71 64
Cleveland 1 2 0 .333 47 64
Pittsburgh 0 3 0 .000 42 76
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Kansas City 3 0 0 1.000 71 34
Denver 2 0 0 1.000 90 50
Oakland 1 1 0 .500 36 30
San Diego 1 2 0 .333 78 81
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct PF PA
Dallas 2 1 0 .667 83 55
Philadelphia 1 2 0 .333 79 86
N.Y. Giants 0 3 0 .000 54 115
Washington 0 3 0 .000 67 98
South
W L T Pct PF PA
New Orleans 3 0 0 1.000 70 38
Carolina 1 2 0 .333 68 36
Atlanta 1 2 0 .333 71 74
Tampa Bay 0 3 0 .000 34 57
North
W L T Pct PF PA
Chicago 3 0 0 1.000 95 74
Detroit 2 1 0 .667 82 69
Green Bay 1 2 0 .333 96 88
Minnesota 0 3 0 .000 81 96
West
W L T Pct PF PA
Seattle 3 0 0 1.000 86 27
St. Louis 1 2 0 .333 58 86
San Francisco 1 2 0 .333 44 84
Arizona 1 2 0 .333 56 79
Thursday’s Game
Kansas City 26, Philadelphia 16
Sunday’s Games
Tennessee 20, San Diego 17
New Orleans 31, Arizona 7
Dallas 31, St. Louis 7
Cleveland 31, Minnesota 27
Baltimore 30, Houston 9
Carolina 38, N.Y. Giants 0
Detroit 27, Washington 20
New England 23, Tampa Bay 3
Cincinnati 34, Green Bay 30
Miami 27, Atlanta 23
Indianapolis 27, San Francisco 7
Seattle 45, Jacksonville 17
N.Y. Jets 27, Buffalo 20
Chicago 40, Pittsburgh 23
Monday’s Game
Oakland at Denver (n)
Thursday, Sep. 26
San Francisco at St. Louis, 8:25 p.m.
Sunday, Sep. 29
N.Y. Giants at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Seattle at Houston, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Arizona at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Chicago at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh vs. Minnesota at London,
1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Tennessee, 4:05 p.m.
Washington at Oakland, 4:25 p.m.
Dallas at San Diego, 4:25 p.m.
Philadelphia at Denver, 4:25 p.m.
New England at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, Sep. 30
Miami at New Orleans, 8:40 p.m.
Open: Carolina, Green Bay
AP Top 25
The Top 25 teams in The Associated
Press college football poll, with first-place
votes in parentheses, records through
Sept. 21, total points based on 25 points
for a first-place vote through one point
for a 25th-place vote, and previous
ranking:
Record Pts Pv
1. Alabama (56) 3-0 1,496 1
2. Oregon (4) 3-0 1,418 2
3. Clemson 3-0 1,340 3
4. Ohio St. 4-0 1,320 4
5. Stanford 3-0 1,270 5
6. LSU 4-0 1,167 6
7. Louisville 4-0 1,088 7
8. Florida St. 3-0 1,049 8
9. Georgia 2-1 1,029 9
10. Texas A&M 3-1 1,011 10
11. Oklahoma St. 3-0 849 11
12. South Carolina 2-1 828 12
13. UCLA 3-0 798 13
14. Oklahoma 3-0 689 14
15. Miami 3-0 687 16
16. Washington 3-0 559 17
17. Northwestern 4-0 477 18
18. Michigan 4-0 450 15
19. Baylor 3-0 441 20
20. Florida 2-1 414 19
21. Mississippi 3-0 342 21
22. Notre Dame 3-1 256 22
23. Wisconsin 3-1 130 24
24. Texas Tech 4-0 127 25
25. Fresno St. 3-0 110 NR
Others receiving votes: Arizona St.
41, Georgia Tech 30, Maryland 24, UCF
19, Nebraska 13, N. Illinois 9, Arizona 8,
Virginia Tech 4, Michigan St. 3, Missouri 2,
Navy 1, Rutgers 1.
AP Top 25 results
No. 1 Alabama (3-0) beat Colorado
State 31-6. Next: vs. No. 21 Mississippi,
Saturday.
No. 2 Oregon (3-0) did not play. Next:
vs. California, Saturday.
No. 3 Clemson (3-0) beat N.C. State
26-14, Thursday. Next: vs. Wake Forest,
Saturday.
No. 4 Ohio State (4-0) beat
Florida A&M 76-0. Next: vs. No. 24
Wisconsin, Saturday.
No. 5 Stanford (3-0) beat No. 23
Arizona State 42-28. Next: at Washington
State, Saturday.
No. 6 LSU (4-0) beat Auburn 35-21.
Next: at No. 9 Georgia, Saturday.
No. 7 Louisville (4-0) beat Florida
International 72-0. Next: at Temple,
Saturday, Oct. 5.
No. 8 Florida State (3-0) beat
Bethune-Cookman 54-6. Next: at
Boston College, Saturday.
No. 9 Georgia (2-1) beat North Texas
45-21. Next: vs. No. 6 LSU, Saturday.
No. 10 Texas A&M (3-1) beat SMU
42-13. Next: at Arkansas, Saturday.
No. 11 Oklahoma State (3-0) did not
play. Next: at West Virginia, Saturday.
No. 12 South Carolina (2-1) did not
play. Next: at UCF, Saturday.
No. 13 UCLA (3-0) beat New Mexico
State 59-13. Next: at Utah, Thursday,
Oct. 3.
No. 14 Oklahoma (3-0) did not play.
Next: at No. 22 Notre Dame, Saturday.
No. 15 Michigan (4-0) beat UConn
24-21. Next: vs. Minnesota, Saturday,
Oct. 5.
No. 16 Miami (3-0) beat Savannah
State 77-7. Next: at South Florida,
Saturday.
No. 17 Washington (3-0) beat Idaho
State 56-0. Next: vs. Arizona, Saturday.
No. 18 Northwestern (4-0) beat
Maine 35-21. Next: vs. No. 4 Ohio State,
Saturday, Oct. 5.
No. 19 Florida (2-1) beat
Tennessee 31-17. Next: at Kentucky,
Saturday.
No. 20 Baylor (3-0) beat Louisiana-
Monroe 70-7. Next: vs. West Virginia,
Saturday, Oct. 5.
No. 21 Mississippi (3-0) did not play.
Next: at No. 1 Alabama, Saturday.
No. 22 Notre Dame (3-1) beat
Michigan State 17-13. Next: vs. No. 14
Oklahoma, Saturday.
No. 23 Arizona State (2-1) lost to
No. 5 Stanford 42-28. Next: vs. Southern
Cal, Saturday.
No. 24 Wisconsin (3-1) beat Purdue
41-10. Next: at No. 4 Ohio State,
Saturday.
No. 25 Texas Tech (4-0) beat Texas
State 33-7. Next: at Kansas, Saturday,
Oct. 5.
USA Today Top 25
The USA Today Top 25 football coach-
es poll, with first-place votes in parenthe-
ses, records through Sept. 21, total points
based on 25 points for first place through
one point for 25th, and previous ranking:
Record Pts Pvs
1. Alabama (59) 3-0 1,547 1
2. Oregon (3) 3-0 1,480 2
3. Ohio St. 4-0 1,399 3
4. Clemson 3-0 1,332 4
5. Stanford 3-0 1,312 5
6. LSU 4-0 1,161 7
7. Louisville 4-0 1,140 6
8. Florida St. 3-0 1,121 8
9. Texas A&M 3-1 1,044 9
10. Georgia 2-1 1,020 10
11. Oklahoma St. 3-0 909 11
12. Oklahoma 3-0 863 12
13. South Carolina 2-1 825 13
14. UCLA 3-0 731 15
15. Miami 3-0 613 17
16. Northwestern 4-0 560 16
17. Michigan 4-0 534 14
18. Baylor 3-0 465 19
19. Florida 2-1 449 18
20. Washington 3-0 427 20
21. Mississippi 3-0 331 22
22. Notre Dame 3-1 317 21
23. Fresno St. 3-0 156 25
24. Wisconsin 3-1 98 NR
25. Texas Tech 4-0 92 NR
Others Receiving Votes: Georgia Tech
47; UCF 35; Nebraska 34; Arizona 33;
Northern Illinois 21; Arizona State 19;
Maryland 11; Michigan State 8; Rutgers
5; Texas 4; Virginia Tech 3; Missouri 2;
Minnesota 1; Utah 1.
AUTO RACING
Sylvania 300
At New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Loudon, N.H.
Sunday
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (9) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 300 laps,
141.5 rating, 48 points, $262,066.
2. (12) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 300, 112.7,
42, $210,143.
3. (10) Greg Biffle, Ford, 300, 97.3, 41,
$146,585.
4. (11) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 300,
116.7, 41, $160,796.
5. (23) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet,
300, 94.2, 39, $142,005.
6. (17) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
300, 103, 39, $115,835.
7. (29) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 300, 91.1,
0, $105,235.
8. (25) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 300,
91.7, 36, $102,535.
9. (26) Carl Edwards, Ford, 300, 86.1,
35, $127,360.
10. (5) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 300,
120.7, 35, $135,060.
11. (20) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 300,
102.1, 34, $140,826.
12. (14) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 300,
93.6, 32, $105,785.
13. (4) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 300,
81.8, 31, $115,830.
14. (6) Joey Logano, Ford, 300, 90.5,
31, $115,668.
15. (3) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 300,
105.7, 30, $131,696.
16. (1) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 300,
82.8, 29, $128,693.
17. (16) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 300,
76.9, 28, $124,793.
18. (22) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 300,
69.9, 26, $112,874.
19. (15) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet,
300, 67.5, 25, $112,574.
20. (8) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 300,
73.9, 24, $130,046.
21. (13) Aric Almirola, Ford, 300, 67.7,
23, $121,746.
22. (7) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 300,
70.4, 22, $114,451.
23. (18) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, 300,
64.4, 21, $127,660.
24. (31) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 300,
62, 20, $130,471.
25. (34) Casey Mears, Ford, 300, 57.7,
19, $110,443.
26. (35) David Reutimann, Toyota, 300,
55.8, 18, $99,593.
27. (21) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet,
300, 57.1, 17, $83,110.
28. (30) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 300, 51.9,
16, $104,968.
29. (19) David Ragan, Ford, 299, 54.6,
15, $102,193.
30. (27) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet,
297, 43.4, 14, $100,832.
31. (38) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 297,
41, 13, $79,085.
32. (43) Josh Wise, Ford, 297, 39.4,
0, $78,810.
33. (37) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 296, 44.8,
12, $78,585.
34. (32) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet,
296, 43, 0, $78,385.
35. (36) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 296,
33.7, 0, $78,185.
36. (42) Timmy Hill, Ford, 293, 27.4,
8, $77,955.
37. (2) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 278,
97.6, 8, $103,241.
38. (33) Kevin Swindell, Toyota, 244,
32.1, 0, $72,675.
39. (24) David Gilliland, Ford, accident,
239, 38.6, 5, $68,675.
40. (28) Bobby Labonte, Toyota,
accident, 161, 37.2, 4, $72,675.
41. (39) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, brakes,
128, 29, 0, $60,675.
42. (41) Johnny Sauter, Ford, brakes,
103, 31.4, 0, $56,675.
43. (40) Scott Riggs, Ford, brakes, 92,
25.8, 1, $53,175.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner:
107.573 mph.
Time of Race: 2 hours, 57 minutes,
2 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 0.533 seconds.
Caution Flags: 7 for 37 laps.
Lead Changes: 19 among 11 drivers.
———
Top 12 in Points: 1. M.Kenseth, 2,111;
2. Ky.Busch, 2,097; 3. J.Johnson, 2,093;
4. C.Edwards, 2,075; 5. G.Biffle, 2,073;
6. K.Harvick, 2,072; 7. Ku.Busch, 2,071;
8. J.Gordon, 2,069; 9. R.Newman, 2,064;
10. C.Bowyer, 2,063; 11. D.Earnhardt Jr.,
2,049; 12. J.Logano, 2,042.
GOLF
PGA money leaders
Through Sunday
Rank Player Trn Money
1. Tiger Woods 16 $8,553,439
2. Henrik Stenson 18 $6,388,230
3. Matt Kuchar 23 $5,616,808
4. Phil Mickelson 21 $5,495,793
5. Brandt Snedeker 23 $5,318,087
6. Adam Scott 16 $4,892,611
7. Steve Stricker 13 $4,440,532
8. Justin Rose 17 $4,146,148
9. Zach Johnson 24 $4,044,509
10. Jordan Spieth 23 $3,879,820
11. Keegan Bradley 25 $3,636,813
12. Jason Day 21 $3,625,030
13. Billy Horschel 26 $3,501,703
14. Bill Haas 25 $3,475,563
15. Jim Furyk 22 $3,204,779
16. Jason Dufner 22 $3,132,268
17. Kevin Streelman 25 $3,088,284
18. Hunter Mahan 25 $3,036,164
19. Dustin Johnson 22 $2,963,214
20. Webb Simpson 25 $2,957,582
BASKETBALL
WNBA playoffs
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
Saturday
Atlanta 63, Washington 45
Los Angeles 82, Phoenix 73
Sunday
Indiana 79, Chicago 57, Indiana wins
series 2-0
Minnesota 58, Seattle 55, Minnesota
wins series 2-0
Monday
Washington at Atlanta (n)
Phoenix at Los Angeles (n)
2B LAKECITYREPORTERSPORTSTUESDAY,SEPTEMBER24,2013 Page Editor: TimKirby,754-0421
2BAGATE
TUESDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 24, 2013 Comcast Dish DirecTV 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 3-ABC 3 - - TV20 News ABC World News Entertainment Ton. Inside Edition (N) Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. “Pilot” The Goldbergs (:31) Trophy Wife Lucky 7 “Pilot” (Series Premiere) (N) News at 11 Jimmy Kimmel Live
4-IND 4 4 4 Chann 4 News Chann 4 News Entertainment Ton. Inside Edition (N) Love-Raymond Rules/Engagement Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory The 10 O’Clock News (N) Å Chann 4 News Arsenio Hall
5-PBS 5 - - Journal Nightly Business PBS NewsHour (N) Å Latino Americans Latino Americans serve in World War II. (N) Å (DVS) Frontline Assisted living company. To Be Announced Tavis Smiley (N)
7-CBS 7 47 47 Action News Jax CBS Evening News Judge Judy Å Two and Half Men NCIS “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot” NCIS: Los Angeles “Ascension” Person of Interest “Liberty” Å Action News Jax Letterman
9-CW 9 17 17 Meet the Browns Meet the Browns House of Payne House of Payne Whose Line Is It? Whose Line Is It? Capture “Sabotage!” (N) TMZ (N) Å Access Hollywood The Offi ce Å The Offi ce Å 10-FOX 10 30 30 Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Modern Family The Simpsons Dads (N) Brooklyn Nine-Nine New Girl “Nerd” The Mindy Project News Action News Jax Modern Family Two and Half Men
12-NBC 12 12 12 News NBC Nightly News Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) The Voice “The Blind Auditions, Part 2” As blind auditions continue. (N) Å (:01) Chicago Fire “A Problem House” News Jay Leno
CSPAN 14 210 350 (5:00) Public Affairs Capitol Hill Hearings
WGN-A 16 239 307 America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos ›››‡ “Insomnia” (2002) Al Pacino. A guilt-ridden cop hunts a killer who knows his secret. Å How I Met/Mother How I Met/Mother Rules/Engagement
TVLAND 17 106 304 M*A*S*H Å M*A*S*H Å Boston Legal Å Boston Legal Å Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King of Queens
OWN 18 189 279 Beverly’s Full House Å Beverly’s Full House “I Do or I Don’t” The Haves and the Have Nots Å The Haves and the Have Nots Å The Haves and the Have Nots Å The Haves and the Have Nots Å A&E 19 118 265 Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Barter Kings “Tazed and Confused” (:01) Barter Kings “Puppy Love” Å HALL 20 185 312 Little House on the Prairie Å Little House on the Prairie Å “Puppy Love” (2012, Romance) Candace Cameron Bure, Victor Webster. Å Frasier Å Frasier Å Frasier Å Frasier Å FX 22 136 248 How I Met/Mother How I Met/Mother Two and Half Men Two and Half Men ›› “Colombiana” (2011, Action) Zoe Saldana, Jordi Mollà, Lennie James. Sons of Anarchy “Poenitentia” (N) (:11) Sons of Anarchy “Poenitentia”
CNN 24 200 202 Situation Room (:28) Crossfi re (N) Erin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Å Piers Morgan Live (N) (Live) AC 360 Later (N) Erin Burnett OutFront
TNT 25 138 245 Castle “An Embarrassment of Bitches” Castle “The Blue Butterfl y” Rizzoli & Isles “In Over Your Head” Rizzoli & Isles “But I Am a Good Girl” Cold Justice “Hit and Run” (N) Å The Mentalist “Red Menace” Å NIK 26 170 299 SpongeBob SpongeBob Victorious Å Drake & Josh News W/Linda Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å The Nanny Å The Nanny Å Friends Å (:33) Friends Å SPIKE 28 168 241 Ink Master Allies become enemies. Ink Master “Baby Don’t Go” Å Ink Master “Skulls and Villains” Å Ink Master Eyelid tattoos. Å Ink Master “Heroes & Heads” (N) Tattoo Nightmares Tattoo Nightmares
MY-TV 29 32 - The Rifl eman The Rifl eman M*A*S*H Å M*A*S*H Å House “It’s a Wonderful Lie” Paralysis. House “Frozen” Å Seinfeld Å Taxi Å The Twilight Zone Perry Mason Å DISN 31 172 290 Good Luck Charlie Jessie Å A.N.T. Farm Å Austin & Ally Å Liv & Maddie Dog With a Blog A.N.T. Farm Å Good Luck Charlie A.N.T. Farm Å Austin & Ally Å Good Luck Charlie A.N.T. Farm Å LIFE 32 108 252 Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition Abby’s Ultimate Dance Competition (N) Double Divas Double Divas (:01) Double Divas (:31) Double Divas
USA 33 105 242 (5:30) ››› “Bridesmaids” (2011) Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph. Å (DVS) Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Modern Family Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
BET 34 124 329 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live “Top 10 Countdown” (N) ›› “Diary of a Mad Black Woman” (2005) Kimberly Elise. A woman starts over after her husband leaves her. Å Lavell Crawford: Can a Brother Get Some Love? Å ESPN 35 140 206 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å E:60 (N) SEC Storied (N) 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event. From Las Vegas. SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å ESPN2 36 144 209 Around the Horn Interruption d WNBA Basketball: Eastern Conference Semifi nal -- Fever at Sky NFL Live (N) Å Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Å Olbermann (N) (Live)
SUNSP 37 - - Inside the Rays Rays Live! (N) a MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at New York Yankees. From Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, N.Y. (N) Rays Live! (N) Inside the Rays FOX Sports Live (N) (Live)
DISCV 38 182 278 Amish Mafi a “Brother’s Keeper” Å Amish Mafi a “The Last Supper” Å Amish Mafi a: The Devil’s Cut (N) Å Amish Mafi a “Judgment Day” (N) Å Tickle (N) Å Tickle: Unfi ltered Amish Mafi a “Judgment Day” Å TBS 39 139 247 Seinfeld Å Seinfeld Å Seinfeld Å Cleveland Show Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Conan (N) Å HLN 40 202 204 (5:00) Evening Express Jane Velez-Mitchell (N) Nancy Grace (N) Dr. Drew on Call (N) HLN After Dark (N) Showbiz Tonight
FNC 41 205 360 Special Report With Bret Baier (N) The FOX Report With Shepard Smith The O’Reilly Factor (N) Å Hannity (N) On the Record W/Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Å E! 45 114 236 Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News (N) Fashion Police E! Entertainment Special True Hollywood Story “CeeLo Green” Chelsea Lately (N) E! News
TRAVEL 46 196 277 Bizarre Foods With Andrew Zimmern Man v. Food Å Man v. Food Å Bizarre Foods America Å Extreme RVs (Season Premiere) (N) Extreme RVs Å Extreme RVs Å HGTV 47 112 229 Income Property “Mike & Vita” Å Hunters Int’l House Hunters Property Virgins Property Virgins Income Property “Michael & Karen” (N) House Hunters (N) Hunters Int’l Income Property “Mary & Bridge”
TLC 48 183 280 Toddlers & Tiaras “Glitzy Divas” Å The Little Couple The Little Couple 19 Kids and Counting “Big Changes” 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids-Count The Little Couple The Little Couple 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids-Count
HIST 49 120 269 Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Counting Cars Top Gear “America’s Biggest Cars” (N) Counting Cars (:31) Counting Cars (:02) Top Gear “Off Road Racing”
ANPL 50 184 282 To Be Announced Frozen Planet “Winter” Å Frozen Planet Å Frozen Planet “Summer” Å Frozen Planet “On Thin Ice” Å Frozen Planet Å FOOD 51 110 231 Chopped “My Froggy Clementine” Donut Showdown Donut Showdown Chopped Licorice in the fi rst basket. Chopped “Stacking Up” Chopped “Count Your Chickens” (N) Cutthroat Kitchen
TBN 52 260 372 (5:00) Praise the Lord Å Way of the Master The Potter’s Touch Behind the Scenes Joyce Meyer Joseph Prince Rod Parsley The 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Movement
FSN-FL 56 - - UFC Insider Marlins Live! (N) a MLB Baseball Philadelphia Phillies at Miami Marlins. From Marlins Park in Miami. (N) Marlins Live! (N) UFC Insider FOX Sports Live (N) (Live)
SYFY 58 122 244 (5:30) ›‡ “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra” (2009) Channing Tatum, Dennis Quaid. Face Off A gag element must be added. Face Off “Living Art” (N) Fangasm “Beam Me Up, Stan” Face Off “Living Art”
AMC 60 130 254 (5:00) ›› “Bad Boys II” (2003) Martin Lawrence, Will Smith. Premiere. Å ›››› “Pulp Fiction” (1994) John Travolta. Criminals cross paths in three interlocked tales of mayhem. Å (:01) ›››‡ “The Departed” (2006)
COM 62 107 249 (5:52) South Park (:23) Tosh.0 Å The Colbert Report Daily Show (7:56) Workaholics (:27) Tosh.0 Å (8:58) Tosh.0 Å (:29) Tosh.0 Å Tosh.0 (N) Å Brickleberry (N) Daily Show The Colbert Report
CMT 63 166 327 Reba Å Reba “Pilot” Å Reba Å Reba Å ››› “A League of Their Own” (1992) Tom Hanks. A women’s professional baseball league debuts in 1943. Å Cops Reloaded Cops Reloaded
NGWILD 108 190 283 Dog Whisperer “Expecting Trouble” Ultimate Animal Countdown America the Wild “Night of the Grizzly” The Incredible Dr. Pol The Incredible Dr. Pol America the Wild “Night of the Grizzly”
NGC 109 186 276 Doomsday Castle Doomsday Preppers Snake Salvation Snake Salvation Snake Salvation Snake Salvation Doomsday Castle (N) Snake Salvation Snake Salvation
SCIENCE 110 193 284 How-Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made Species of Mass Destruction (N) Å How It’s Made How It’s Made
ID 111 192 285 Homicide Hunter: Lt. Joe Kenda Å Homicide Hunter: Lt. Joe Kenda Å Surviving Evil Two women fall prey. On Death Row “Douglas Feldman” (N) I Evil (N) Å Evil, I Å Surviving Evil Two women fall prey.
HBO 302 300 501 (5:45) ››‡ “The Day After Tomorrow” (2004) Dennis Quaid. ‘PG-13’ Å Real Time With Bill Maher Å ››‡ “Hitchcock” (2012) Anthony Hopkins. ‘PG-13’ Å Face Off, Max Boardwalk Empire Å MAX 320 310 515 ››› “The Five-Year Engagement” (2012) Jason Segel, Emily Blunt. ‘R’ Å (:05) ››› “Pitch Perfect” (2012, Musical Comedy) Anna Kendrick. ‘PG-13’ Å ›› “Taken 2” (2012, Action) Liam Neeson. ‘NR’ Å Girl’s Guide
SHOW 340 318 545 ››‡ “Mandela and de Klerk” (1997, Docudrama) Sidney Poitier. ‘PG-13’ Å LT: The Life and Times ››› “Richard Pryor: Omit the Logic” (2013) ‘NR’ Å Web Therapy (N) Dexter Å
BOWLING
League reportsLake City Bowl league results:
HIT & MISS
Team standings: 1. Ten In The
Pit (15-5); 2. Strike 3 (14-6); 3. Silver
Ladies (14-6).
High team handicap game:
1. Legal Ladies 822; 2. High Five
806; 3. Git Up & Bowl 755.
High team handicap series:
1. Strike 3 2,331; 2. Ten In The Pit
2,308; 3. Silver Ladies 2,246.
High handicap game: 1. Linda
Herndon 223; 2. (tie) Karen Gardner,
Sandra Peterson 211
High handicap series: 1. Sharon
Tuning 653; 2. Judy Daniels 585;
3. Cythe Shiver 579.
(Results from Sept. 17)
GOLDEN ROLLERS
Team standings: 1. You’r Up;
2. Quirky Quad; 3. WGASA.
High team scratch game: 1. Wild
Things 668; 2. Gamblers’ 653; 2. Jo’s
Crew 636.
High team scratch series:
1. Senior Moment 1,955; 2. Knock
em Down 1,940; 3. You’r Up 1,840.
High team handicap game:
1. Wild Things 887; 2. Power E.N.D.S.
828; 3. Ups & Downs 816.
High team handicap series:
1. Knock em Down 2,396; 2. Jo’s
Crew 2,377; 3. Senior Moment
2,348.
High scratch game: 1. Debbie
Walters 188; 2. Betty Carmichael
187; 3. Barbara Griner 179. 1. David
Duncan 235; 2. Bill Price 195; 3. Bill
Dolly 193.
High scratch series: 1. DeDe
Young 483; 2. Joanne Denton 466;
3. Judy Johnson 465. 1. Bill Duncan
660; 2. Mike Murray 556; 3. Tom
Young 536.
(Results from Sept. 12)
TUESDAY NITE MIXED
High team handicap game: 1.
10 In The Pitt 874; 2. O 2 Cool 861;
3. Scooby Doo 834.
High team handicap series: 1. 10
In The Pitt 2,502; 2. O 2 Cool 2,481;
3. Wolf Pack 2,442.
High scratch game: 1. Mary
Lobaugh 182; 2. Joyce Hooper 179;
3. Julie Bell 174. 1. George Walters
223; 2. Steven Hayes 215; 3. Jim
Lobaugh 205.
High scratch series: 1. Mary
Lobaugh 505; 2. Julie Bell 485;
3. Linda Oliver 483. 1. Jim Lobaugh
576; 2. Steven Hayes 573; 3. George
Walters 566.
High handicap game: 1. Debbie
Walters 239; 2. Julie Bell 233;
3. Cathey Creel 230. 1. George
Walters 259; 2. Steven Hayes 254;
3. Art Gordon 240.
High handicap series: 1. Linda
Oliver 669; 2. Julie Bell 662; 3. Chris
Travis 629. 1. Steven Hayes 690;
3. George Walters 674; 3. Dess
Fennell 652.
High average: Mary Lobaugh 171;
Jim Lobaugh 182.
(Results from Sept. 17)
SEXY SENIORS
Team standings: 1. Handicappers
(18-6, 7,103 handicap pins); 2. Jo’s
Crew (18-6, 7,040 handicap pins);
3. Pin Busters (18-6, 6,888 handicap
pins).
High team handicap game:
1. Awesome Four 867;
2. Handicappers 826; 3. Outcasts
783.
High team handicap series:
1. Jo’s Crew 2,397; 2. Spoilers 2,354;
3. Pin Busters 2,292.
(Results from Sept. 3)
By ALAN PIERCE
Fishing can sometimes be famine, but on the days when it is feast, it’s
important to know your bag limit, aka the number of fish you can keep and take home for dinner. These limits are a useful tool in helping protect our recreationally important species. There are several types of bag limits and, sometimes more than one type applies. Some even vary by region (spotted seatrout, red drum, weak-fish and bay scallops).
“Bag limit” is defined as the number of a particular species that an individual angler can harvest and possess in a given day.
For example, the recreational bag limit for red drum in the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s northeast and northwest management zones is two fish per person, per day. This means that a licensed (or exempt) angler can harvest two red drum in a given day. This does not mean that you have to stop fishing after you have put two fish in the box. You can enjoy catch-and-release fishing for the rest of the day.
Another common term is “vessel limit,” which is the maximum number of a particular species that can be possessed on a vessel at any given time. Vessel limits are always used in addition to individual bag limits and do not exempt any single angler from the individual limits.
One question that always comes up is, “Can
one angler share his or her fish to help fill a bag limit for another angler?” The answer is no. Bag limits are individual even when an overlapping vessel limit applies.
This keeps folks from taking, for example, their infant nephew fishing just so they can keep two more fish. If an officer’s observations, inspection or investigation reveals you have caught more than your individual daily bag limit, you could be subject to fines.
A third type of bag limit that you will see in FWC rules is an aggregate bag limit. Like your basic bag limit, this type applies to individual anglers but instead of applying to only one species, it applies to several closely related species. Snappers and groupers are currently managed with aggregate limits in Florida waters.
For red drum, no more than six fish per person can be transported by vehicle on land. If one of my buddies is traveling with me to my house, we can take all eight fish.
This limit helps deter attempts to sell red drum, which can only be harvested for recreational purposes.
Page Editor: Tim Kirby, 754-0421 LAKE CITY REPORTER SPORTS TuEsDAY, sEPTEMBER 24, 2013 3B
3BSPORTS
BRIEFS
OUTDOORSGAMES
Todayn Columbia High girls
golf vs. Branford High at Quail Heights Country Club, 4 p.m.n Columbia High boys
golf vs. Gainesville High at The Country Club at Lake City, 4 p.m.n Fort White High
volleyball vs. Bradford High, 6 p.m. (JV-5)
Thursdayn Columbia High
swimming vs. Ridgeview High, Baker County High, 4:30 p.m.n Fort White High
volleyball at Lafayette High, 6 p.m. (JV-5)n Columbia High
volleyball vs. Orange Park High, 6:30 p.m. (JV-5:30)n Columbia High JV
football vs. Suwannee High, 7 p.m.n Fort White High JV
football at Union County High, 7 p.m.
Fridayn Columbia High
volleyball in Varsity Elite Tournament at Oak Hall School, TBAn Columbia High
football at Englewood High, 7 p.m.
Saturdayn Columbia High
volleyball in Varsity Elite Tournament at Oak Hall School, TBA
CHS WRESTLING
Tryouts set to begin today
Columbia High wrestling tryouts begin at 3:30 p.m. (until 5:15 p.m.) today at the field house. Columbia wrestling is hosting a Ken Chertow wrestling camp on Oct. 12-13. Columbia and Suwannee county wrestlers will be offered a special rate. All proceeds from the camp go to support the Tigers. This is the second year Columbia has offered the camp.
For details, call head coach Kevin Warner at (352) 281-0549 or coach Allen Worley at 965-7025, or e-mail monsta [email protected].
CHS TIGERETTES
Team raffle for Yeti Cooler
The CHS Tigerette Dance Team is selling tickets for a drawing on a 64-quart Yeti Cooler, a $398 value, which will be given away at the Robert E. Lee High game on Oct. 25. Tickets are $2 or three for $5 and will be on sell at varsity and junior varsity home games.
For details or tickets, call Teresa Feagle at 365-5241 or Tammy Williams at 288-6563.
RUNNING
Breast cancer 5K on Oct. 5
The Suwannee River Breast Cancer Awareness 5K run/walk is Oct. 5 at Olustee Park in Lake City. Donation is $25. The Website is www.suwanneeawareness.com.
For details, call 365-1191 or e-mail donnie-feagle@ windstream.net.
YOUTH SOFTBALL
Southern Pride seeks players
Southern Pride, a 12U softball travel team out of Valdosta, Ga., is looking for two position players and a seasoned pitcher for the remainder of its 2013-14 season. Southern Pride has a college coach and college facilities, and practices twice a week. The team plays ASA and USSSA competition.
For details, contact [email protected].
n From staff reports
From staff reports
Lake City Middle School runners, competing under the Eye of the Tiger banner, placed first and third in the Alligator Lake Invitational 3k on Saturday.
The girls won, paced by Bridget Morse (2nd-12:15.41), Cassie Pierron (3rd-12:32.85), Jillian Morse (5th-12:58.98),
Savannah Amparo (12th-14:37.74) and Kassady McLean (20th-15:58.02).
Victoria Napolitano (16:37), Kersha Andre (17:11), Jessica Jewett (17:56), Delaney Williams (18:06), Ashtyn Lizotte (19:48) and Megan Staten (21:28) also ran.
The boys were led by Seth Ziegaus (6th-12:32.30), Burch Greene
(15th-13:06.59), Charlie Deplato (16th-13:09.99), Findley Tucker (21st-13:27.28) and Chase Martin (24th-13:47.66). Joseph Creeley (14:59) and Max Bavar (15:45) also ran.
The race was a super qualifier for the middle school state meet in Lakeland on Nov. 2. Both teams qualified.
Lake City Middle School runners place first, third at Alligator Lake
COURTESY
Members of the Lake City Middle School track team show a sponsorship check from First Federal. Other sponsorships have come from PCS Phosphate, Step Fitness, Morse Chiropractice and Peloni’s Pumping. Team members are (front row, from left) Kyler McLean, Findley Tucker, Charlie Deplato, Jessica Jewett, Cassie Pierron and Bridget Morse. Second row (from left) are Ashton Lizotte, Max Bavar, Sander Tucker, Savannah Amparo, Megan Staten, Delaney Williams, Kassady McLean and Burch Greene. Back row (from left) are coach April Morse, Kersha Andre, Joseph Creeley, Irene Castillo, Chase Martin, Grace Kolovitz, Luke Griffin, Jillian Morse and coach Edward Morse.
From staff reports
Cross country runners from Columbia High and Fort White High compet-ed in the Alligator Lake Invitational on Saturday. The schools ran in the High School Green Division.
Gainesville High won the girls’ competition, fol-lowed by Episcopal School and Lowdnes County (Ga.) High. Ashton McMurray of Chiles High was top run-ner for the 5k in 19:46.72.
Columbia placed sixth and Fort White placed 17th in the 18-school field.
Lady Tiger runners were: Ashley Jones, 11th place-21:29.68; Bernita Brown, 21st-22:38.23;
Alexandra Faulstich, 32nd-23:26.14; Sydni Jones, 41st-23:42.52; Dimple Desai, 66th-25:47.63; Caroline Cribbs, 83rd-27:33.95.
Lady Indian runners were: Sheridan Plasencia, 33rd-23:30.05; Katrina Patillo, 81st-27:23.81; Isabelle Hair, 97th-29:39.47; Amanda Bradbury, 99th-29:48.53; Kamry Morgan, 101st-29:57.82.
Ridgeview High won for the boys, with North Florida Christian School and Chiles. Rutherford Griffin of NFC won the event in 16:19.20.
Fort White (17/19) run-ners were: Richard Moreno-Rodriguez, 15th-17:52.15; Jeremie Thompson, 102nd-
22:32.86; Jesus Moreno-Rodriguez, 115th-25:39.30; John Reid, 118th-26:29.74; Jordan Hair, 122nd-26:58.59.
Columbia had four run-ners: Cody Bass (19:20.79), Chris Sellers (19:55.30), Noah Henderson (19:56.98) and Michael Perez (21:59.37).
Running junior varsity for Columbia were Valerie Enriguez (28:25.90), Kayle Nelson (30:48.09), Katylee Brannon (32:13.63), Zachary Smith (23:05.26), Brandon Wine (27:41.03), Elijah Henderson (28:03.15) and Latony Warren (29:17.07).
CHS’s next meet is at Buchholz High on Oct. 5.
Tigers, Indians compete at Alligator Lake Invitational
COURTESY
First bow harvestJacob Feagle, 11, of Lake City shows off a deer he killed on the first weekend of bow season. Feagle has taken deer with a firearm, but this was his first with a bow. He is the son of Cline and Shelia Feagle.
Understanding about recreational bag limits
4B LAKECITYREPORTERSPORTSTuEsDAY,sEPTEMBER24,2013
4BSPORTS
C O N T E S T R U L E S
2013FOOTBALLCONTEST
DEADLINE
Every Thursday, 5:00 pm
______________________
NAME
_______________________
ADDRESS
_______________________
PHONE
_______
AGE
WIN $25in Spending Bucks
Weekly
2013
On Tuesday selected games will be sponsored in each of the ads of the participating
merchants. Indicate which team you think will win by writing the team name beside the
sponsoring merchant’s name in the entry blank. Entries may be mailed or dropped off at
the Lake City Reporter at 180 E. Duval St., Lake City, FL 32055 or fax to 386-752-9400.
Entries must be received by 5:00pm on Thursday following the contest. Prize will be
awarded weekly on the basis of most games selected correctly. In case of a tie, the
winner will be determined by the most accurate guess on the Tie-Breaker (score
required). You must be 18 years of age to enter; one entry per person. Participating
sponsors and their families, employees of the Lake City Reporter and their families are
not eligible to enter.
J.W. Weaponry & Outdoors
Florida Grass Masters
Lake City Animal Hospital
Olympic Health Chiropractor
Ronsonet Buick GMC Trucks
Mikell’s Power Equipment
Lewis Insurance
State Farm Insurance
CMS Pro Staffing
Peoples State Bank
Baker’s Communication
Vann Carpet One
Wholesale Sleep/Furniture Showplace
20
13
FO
OT
BA
LL
CO
NT
ES
T |
CE
LE
BR
ITY
PIC
KE
RS
CHRIS SAMSONCMS PRO STAFFING
SOUTH CAROLINA
LSU
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
MISSISSIPPI
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
EAST CAROLINA
NC STATE
BRIAN LEWISLEWIS INSURANCE
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
TIE BREAKER: (SCORES)
Columbia @ Englewood
This week’s reader winner: SHERYL DALTON
JOHN BURNS AND JOHN KASAKSTATE FARM INSURANCE
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
DAVID POTTER AND CHRIS CONERONSONET BUICK GMC TRUCKS
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
COV WOODLEY AND JOHN WOODLEYJ.W. WEAPONRY & OUTDOORS
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
VIRGINIA
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
CORY DEPRATTERFLORIDA GRASS MASTERS
SOUTH CAROLINA
LSU
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
DR. BRADY PRATT AND DR. KEVIN HAWTHORNELAKE CITY ANIMAL HOSPITAL
UCF
GEORGIA
KENTUCKY
UAB
ARKANSAS STATE
MISSISSIPPI
PITTSBURGH
TROY
BOSTON COLLEGE
WAKE FOREST
SOUTH FLORIDA
EAST CAROLINA
CENTRAL MICHIGAN
DR. JIMBO HALEYOLYMPIC HEALTH CHIROPRACTOR
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
SHIRLEY MIKELLMIKELL’S POWER EQUIPMENT
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
CHRIS DAMPIER AND ROBIN GREENPEOPLES STATE BANK
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
JANA HURST AND BEVERLY BASSBAKER’S COMMUNICATION
SOUTH CAROLINA
LSU
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
ARKANSAS STATE
ALABAMA
VIRGINIA
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
MATT VANN AND MARC VANNVANN CARPET ONE
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
VIRGINIA
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
CHRIS POTTLEWHOLESALE SLEEP/FURNITURE SHOWPLACE
SOUTH CAROLINA
GEORGIA
FLORIDA
VANDERBILT
MISSOURI
ALABAMA
PITTSBURGH
DUKE
FLORIDA STATE
CLEMSON
MIAMI
NORTH CAROLINA
NC STATE
44-8 43-9
45-7 42-10 43-9
44-8
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41-11
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42-10 42-10
DEAR ABBY: I’m a 23-year-old woman who still lives at home. I have been working for the last five years and have saved enough to live comfortably on my own. Unfortunately, my parents have forbidden me to do it because they think I’m being manipulat-ed into it by my boyfriend, that I just want to “do whatever I want” and be out until late (although I’m rarely up past 9 p.m. and they know it), and because I “can’t stand them” any-more.
I have no privacy! My mail is opened “mistak-enly” and my calls are listened in on even when I politely -- and sometimes angrily -- ask them not to. They have even imposed a rule that I must show them my bank balance weekly.
They have told me I will not leave the house without being married first. I would like to live on my own before I actually marry so I can experience what it’s like. This is some-thing I have always wanted to do. If I do move out, they say I’ll “bring shame and embarrassment” to the family.
There seems to be a double standard going on here because my older brother has his girlfriend sleep over. How can I accommodate my parents without being disowned? -- FEELING HELPLESS IN ILLINOIS
DEAR FEELING HELPLESS: Your parents have chosen to ignore that you are an adult, self-sup-porting and entitled to make your own choices. They may be well-mean-ing, but they are extremely heavy-handed. Their hyper-vigilance -- opening your mail, eavesdropping on your phone calls and insisting on checking your bank balance weekly -- is over the top. They would like you to be “safely” mar-ried before you leave their protection.
Is their problem that they disapprove of your boyfriend? If you get a place of your own, do you plan on moving him in? If that’s not the case, there is no reason why your liv-ing independently might shame or embarrass them.
Not knowing your par-ents, I can’t judge whether their threat to disown you is serious or not. However, if it is, realize it’s a form of blackmail, and you will have to decide which is more important -- your freedom or their support.
** ** **DEAR ABBY: “Lights
Out in Federal Way, Wash.” (Aug. 13) asked if it was a “sign” that her deceased parents were watching over her when streetlights would go out as she drove under them on her way home.
I understand your desire to give encouragement to someone who has lost her loved ones, but don’t you know that many street-lights are light-activated so that after headlights hit them in just the right way they will turn off? After you pass under them, it becomes dark enough again and they will turn back on within a few min-utes.
While I’m sure that given the opportunity this girl’s parents would watch over her, the streetlights she described have noth-ing to do with the paranor-mal but have a scientific and logical explanation. -- SOMEONE’S WATCHING IN GUILFORD, MO.
DEAR WATCHING: While many readers shared similar experi-ences, the majority had a logical explanation as you did. However, I still feel that if what she’s experi-encing brings her comfort, the important thing is what she chooses to believe.
DILBERT
BABY BLUES
HOROSCOPES
DEAR ABBY
ARIES (March 21-April 19): An unlikely partner-ship will bring about changes to the way you live. A change will do you good and must be incor-porated quickly before the window of opportunity closes. Think fast, take action quickly and don’t look back. ★★★★
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don’t race through everything or you will fall short and face criticism. A job you are considering will not be as exciting as it sounds. Find out exactly what’s being offered and get promises in writing. Don’t argue; be nice. ★★★
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You’ll have some good suggestions, but don’t cross the line or you will be blamed for meddling. Tables will turn quickly if your facts aren’t right. Instead, put more into your home and improving your standard of living. ★★★
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Use your imagination and you will come up with interesting ways to social-ize, make new acquain-tances and find romantic settings that will enhance your life. A growing inter-est should not be ignored. Pursue what draws you with a passion. ★★★
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Change your surround-
ings. Staying at home will result in conflict. Take time to think about a personal problem you face before you confront the situation. Time is on your side and will help alleviate making a wrong assumption. ★★
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Head out in search of a little adventure. You need a change of scenery or men-tal and physical stimulation that will perk your interest and motivate you to get involved with something exciting and satisfying. Work to straighten out any emotional mix-ups. ★★
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Taking an emotional trip down memory lane will help you clear up pending issues that have been standing between you and a decision you need to make. Truth will be the deciding factor when it comes to personal relationships. ★★★★★
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You may want to make some noteworthy alterations at home, but consider the cost involved. Consider innovative ways to get what you want for less. Your ingenuity will be impressive and result in raising your profile and your confidence. ★★★
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): A proactive approach will get the job done no matter what it is you are trying to accom-plish, but expect to experi-ence some opposition and emotional mind games along the way. Don’t hesitate; make your voice heard and put your plans into motion. ★★★
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Someone with a hidden agenda will charm you. Don’t count on any-thing or anyone. It’s impor-tant to take control of any situation you face that can influence your reputation or status. Change isn’t the answer -- consistency and fair play is. ★★★
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Put more into your sur-roundings. What you do to feel more at home or com-fortable will lift your spirits and help you put a greater distance between you and someone who has limited you in the past. ★★★★★
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Check over paperwork that can make a difference in the way you do business or make investments. The choices you make regard-ing your health and finan-cial well-being will bring about other opportunities to pursue something or someone that interests you. ★★
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Abigail Van Burenwww.dearabby.com
BLONDIE
BEETLE BAILEY
B.C.
FRANK & ERNEST
FOR BETTER OR WORSE
ZITS
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
SNUFFY SMITH
GARFIELD
THE LAST WORDEugenia Last
Overprotective parents are driving daughter out door
■ Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com orP.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
CLASSIC PEANUTS
Page Editor: Emogene Graham, 754-0415 LAKE CITY REPORTER ADVICE & COMICS TuEsDAY, sEPTEMBER 24, 2013 5B
LAKE CITY REPORTER CLASSIFIED TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013Classified Department: 755-54406B
Legal
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDAPROBATE DIVISIONFILE NO. 13000197CPAXMXIN RE: ESTATE OF DORIS MAE FARDEN LING, a/k/a DORIS MAE LING, a/k/a DORIS M. LING,Deceased.NOTICE TO CREDITORSThe administration of the estate of DORIS MAE FARDEN LING, a/k/a DORIS MAE LING, a/k/a DORIS M. LING, deceased, whose date of death was August 2, 2013; File Number 13000197CPAXMX pend-ing in the Circuit Court for Columbia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 173 NE Her-nando Avenue, Lake City, Florida 32055. the names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, on whom a copy of this notice is re-quired to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BE-FORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRSTPUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICA-TION OF THIS NOTICE.ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITH-IN THE TIME PERIODS SETFORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.The date of first publication of this notice is: Sept. 12, 2013/s/ Donald Reese Ling, Jr.DONALD REESE LING, JR.Personal Representative 15 North Indian River Drive, Unit 701Cocoa, FL 32922/s/ Steven C. AllenderSTEVEN C. ALLENDERAttorney for Personal RepresentativeEmail: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Bar No. 0428302Titusville, FL 32796Telephone: (321) 269-1511Fax: (321) 864-767613-206-AK
05540908September 17, 24, 2013
We will sell the following tenants units at Community Self Storage 814 SW State Road 247/Branford Hwy., Friday, October 11, 2013 at 1:00PM. WE SELL FOR CASH ONLY. 386-961-9926.
CHRISTINE GLENN Furniture & Household Goods
BRENDA FLEMINGHousehold Goods
PATRICIA KING (2 units)Furniture & Household Goods
VALERIE BLUNTHousehold Goods
CANDICE MACKFurniture & Household Goods
MELISSA STEWARTHousehold Goods
MARSY SIERRAFurniture & Household Goods
TONI SUGGSFurniture & Household Goods
LESLIE CREELEYFurniture & Household Goods
ASHLEY VANRIELFurniture & Household Goods
MICHAEL GATESFurniture & Household Goods
WILMER JORDAN1996 Chevy Pickup 1500VIN# 1GCEC19M3TE107172Lienholder: Sunbelt Credit Corp of Florida
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO REFUSE ALL BIDS.Cash only, 10% Buyers premium, Jerry Duncan #AU527.
05540899September 24, 2013October 1, 2013
Legal
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA JUVENILE DIVISIONIN THE INTEREST OF:CASE NO. 2012-30-DPG. W. J-S DOB: 2/26/2009MINOR CHILD.SUMMONS AND NOTICE OF AD-VISORY HEARING FOR TERMI-NATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS AND GUARDIANSHIPSTATE OF FLORIDA:TO: Gene Robert Sims
(address unknown)
WHEREAS a Petition for Termina-tion of Parental Rights under oath has been filed in this Court regarding the above-referenced child(ren), a copy of which is on file with the Clerk of the Court,YOU ARE HEREBY COMMAND-ED TO APPEAR before the Honora-ble Wesley R. Douglas, Circuit Judge, at the Columbia County Courthouse, Lake City, Florida, on OCTOBER 9, 2013, AT 10:20 A.M., for a Termination of Parental Rights Advisory Hearing.YOU MUST APPEAR ON THE DATE AND AT THE TIME SPECI-FIED HEREIN.******FAILURE TO PERSONAL-LY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORYHEARING CONSTITUTES CON-SENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TO THIS CHILD (OR CHILDREN). IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD (OR CHILDREN) NAMED IN THE PETITION ON FILE WITH THE CLERK OF THE COURT******Pursuant to Sections 39.802(4)(d) and 63.082(6)(g), Florida Statutes, you are hereby informed of the avail-ability of private placement with an adoption entity, as defined in Section 63.032(3),WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court at Lake City, Columbia Coun-ty, Florida, on the __ day of _____ 2013.P. DEWITT CASONClerk of Circuit Court(SEAL)By: /s/ Deputy ClerkErin Londraville, Esq.Florida Bar No. 91816Children’s Legal Services1389 West US Highway 90, Suite 110Lake City, FL 32055(386) 243-6037IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILI-TIES ACT, if you are a person with a disability who needs any accom-modation 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 Administra-tion, 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Room 408, Lake City, Florida 32055, Telephone (386) 758-2163, at least seven (7) days before your scheduled court appearance or imme-diately upon receiving this notifica-tion if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than seven (7) days. If you are hearing impaired or voice impaired, call 711.
05540843September 10, 17, 24, 2013October 1, 2013
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Con-servation Commission (FWC) an-nounce a PUBLIC HEARING for the FWC Lead Managed Portions of Suwannee Ridge Wildlife and Envi-ronmental Area located in Hamilton County, Florida.7:00 P.M. Thursday, October 3, 2013Hamilton County Commission Chambers207 NE 1st St Jasper, FL 32052PURPOSE: To receive public com-ment regarding considerations for FWC’s ten-year Management Plan for the FWC Lead Managed Portions of Suwannee Ridge Wildlife and En-vironmental Area (SRWEA).This hearing is being held EXCLU-SIVELY for discussion of the DRAFT Suwannee Ridge WEAManagement Plan. This meeting is not being held to discuss area hunt-ing or fishing regulations. For more information on the process for FWC rule and regulation development go online to: myfwc.com/about/rules-regulations/rule-changes/ or call (850) 487-1764.A Management Prospectus for Su-wannee Ridge WEA and copy of the agenda is available upon request from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Land Conservation and Planning Group, 620 South Meridian Street, Tallahas-see, Florida 32399-1600. Telephone: (850) 487-7063 or by e-mail at [email protected].
05540772September 24, 2013
Legal
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR COLUM-BIA COUNTY GENERAL JURIS-DICTION DIVISIONCASE NO. 2010CA000565BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.Plaintiff,vs.ROGER W. HAIRSTON, ET AL.,Defendants.NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pur-suant to a Final Judgment of Foreclo-sure filed June 27, 2103 entered in Civil Case No. 2010CA000565 of the Circuit Court of the THIRD Judi-cial Circuit in and for Columbia County, Lake City, Florida, wherein BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. is Plaintiff and, MARIA W HAIR-STON A/K/A MARIA HAIRSTON, ROGER W. HAIRSTON A/K/AROGER HAIRSTON, MARIAHAIRSTON, are Defendants, the Clerk of Court will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at Columbia County Courthouse, 173 Northeast Hernando Ave. 3rd Floor, Lake City, FL. 32055 in accordance with Chap-ter 45, Florida Statues on the 2nd day of October, 2013 at 11:00 AM on the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to-wit:LOT 4, FOXBORO, ACCORDING TO THE MAP OR PLAT THERE-OF PLAT BOOK 6, PAGE(S) 207, PUBLIC RECORDS OF COLUM-BIA COUNTY, FLORIDA TO-GETHER WITH A 2003 DOUBLE-WIDE MOBILE HOME WITH VIN'S PH0914268AFL AND PH0914268BFLAny person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, oth-er than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens, must file a claim within 60 days after the sale.Dated this 19 day of August, 2013.CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURTAs Clerk of the CourtBY: /s/ B. ScippioDeputy ClerkSEALIf you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceed-ing, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assis-tance. Persons with a disability who need any accommodation to partici-pate should call the ADA Coordina-tor, Jacquetta Bradey, P.O. Box 1569, Lake City, FL 32056, 386-719-7428, within two (2) working days of your receipt of this notice; if you are hearing impaired call (800) 955-8771; if you are voice impaired call (800) 955-8770.
05540953September 17, 24, 2013
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDACASE N.: 12-2012-CA-000046BANK OF AMERICA, NA, SUC-CESSOR BY MERGER TO BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, LP, FKA COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS SERVICE, LPPlaintiff,v.LAURA HAGGERTY; KEVIN HAGGERTY; ANY AND ALL UN-KNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UNDER, AND AGAINST THE HEREIN NAMED INDIVIDUAL DEFENDANT(S) WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWN PARTIES MAYCLAIM AN INTEREST AS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIM-ANTSDefendant(s).NOTICE OF SALENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pur-suant to an Order of Final Summary Judgment of Foreclosure dated Au-gust 30, 2013, entered in Civil Case No. 12-2012-CA-000046 of the Cir-cuit Court of the Third Judicial Cir-cuit in and for Columbia County, Florida, wherein the Clerk of the Cir-cuit Court will sell to the highest bid-der for cash on 2nd day of October, 2013, at 11:00 a.m. on the Third Floor of the Columbia County Court-house, 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Lake City, Florida 32055, in accord-ance with Chapter 45 Florida Stat-utes, relative to the following descri-bed property as set forth in the Final Judgment, to wit:LOT 17, BLOCK 5, OAK HILL ES-TATES REPLAT, ACCORDING TO THE MAP OR PLAT THERE-OF AS RECORDED IN PLATBOOK 3, PAGE 52, OF THE PUB-LIC RECORDS OF COLUMBIACOUNTY, FLORIDA.Property Address: 130 SOUTH-EAST CALOB COURT, LAKE CITY, FL 32025Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, oth-er than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale.ATTENTION: PERSONS WITH DISABILITIESIf you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceed-ing, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assis-tance. Please contact: ADA Coordi-nator, 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Room 408, Lake City, FL 32055 Phone: (386) 719-7428
Legal
DATED AT LAKE CITY, FLORI-DA THIS 3RD DAY OF SEPTEM-BER, 2013-s- B. ScippioP. DEWITT CASONCLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURTCOLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDASEAL
05540880September 17, 24, 2013
100 JobOpportunities
05539276
Lake City ReporterAd Designer Position
Candidates must be proficient in all Adobe CS print production programs.
Send resume and digital work samples to:Dave Kimler at
[email protected] to follow for qualifying applicants.
Competitive salary and benefits plan available.
05540816
NOW HIRING Cashiers and baggers. High Springs fruit &
gift stores. Benefits avail: health, dental, & vacation Apply in person: Florida Citrus Center (Chevron) 18603 NW CR 236, High Springs (exit 404 & I-75)
05540891
Customer Service Representative
The Lake City Reporter seeksa dynamic individual for
Customer Service Represent-ative. Written, verbal, and oral communication skills a must. Candidate must have advance
typing skills with minimalerrors. This full time job will
require multi-tasking with some sales.
To apply please send resume to:
Theresa Westberry, Advertising Director
180 E Duval StLake City, Fl 32055
or email:[email protected]
05541098
The Lake City Reporter, a daily newspaper seeks
Independent ContractorNewspaper Carrier for the
Fort White / Ellisville route.Apply in person during normal
business hoursMonday - Friday 8am - 5pm
NO PHONE CALLS
05541101
Accountant - Auditor position open in local CPA Firm.
Accounting or related degree and experience required.
A career position, competative salary and benefits.
Send resume to: [email protected]
Book Keeping Need one person who can do AP/AR plus inventory
control for returns and credits person must be able to understand
basic accounting principles forinventory and AP/AR must be
able to learn UNIX base operating system. Apply in Person at
3631 US Hwy 90 EastLake City, FL., or email
resume to [email protected]
CNC Programmer NeededHiring a machinist who is familiar
with G code, Master Cam, and ACAD position is to supervise 3-5 machinist and make programs and
be responsible for production schedules as well run machines
as needed, shop has 3CNC lathes, 2CNC mills, 2 manual lathes,
3 manual drill presses 2 broach machines. Apply in Person at
3631 US Hwy 90 east Lake City FL or email resume to [email protected]
Experienced Welder needed. Must be able to read and
understand assembly paperwork and drawings. Must be able to pass
a measurement comprehension test. Apply in person at Grizzly Manufacturing 174 NE Cortez
Ter. Lake City Fl.
Whack - A -Do now hiring Stylist. Full time/Part time Hourly pay + commission. No Clientel neededFull Service or Just Hair Cuts.
Contact Darlene. 386-984-6738
100 JobOpportunities
F/T Assistant to PR/Client Services needed. Excel, Word,
and Sales/Marketing experience a must. A minimum 2 year College
degree, drivers’ license, drug screening, and Level II
background screening required. Apply at LEC 628 SE Allison Ct,
32025 (386) 755-0235 EOE
MECHANIC NEEDED withtools and experience. Southern Specialized Truck & Trailer.
386-752-9754
NOW HIRING: In Live Oak, FL
Store ManagerGoody’s offers competitive wages and great benefits.
Send resumes to:Howard Wright, District Manager
Sales Help at Florida VisitorsCenter. Benefits, hourly wage plus commission. Excellent opportunity with National
company. Westgate Resorts.Call Ed 904-540-2314 or email [email protected]
120 MedicalEmployment
P/T LPN needed for medical practice. 2-3 days a week.
Send resume to [email protected].
Patient Advocate - Lake CityMEDS, patient advocacy
leader, seeks candidate to assist clients with Medicaid and charity
programs. Hours: Wednesday-Sunday 10am-6:30pm. Social
work background and bilingual skills are +s. Competitive pay
and benefits. Resumes to: [email protected]
EOE
130 Part Time
P/T Child care worker needed for church services on Wednesdays & Sundays. Contact 386-755-5553
for additional information
Terri’s Sweet Tweets is looking for energetic part time hot dog/sandwich person. Experience
Needed. Apply in person 3-5pm No Phone Calls.
3525 NW Bascom Norris Drive.
240 Schools &Education
05540620
INTERESTED in a Medical Career?
Express Training offers courses for beginners & exp
• Nursing Assistant, $479next class- 9/30 /2013
• Phlebotomy national certifica-tion, $800 next class- 10/7/2013
• LPN APRIL 2014
Fees incl. books, supplies, exam fees. Call 386-755-4401 or
expresstrainingservices.com
310 Pets & Supplies
PUBLISHER'S NOTEFlorida 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 wild-life must be licensed by Florida
Fish and Wildlife. If you are unsure, contact the local office for information.
408 Furniture
Hospital style bed, electric powered. Single bed. Twin motors
for multiple positions, like new condition $350, 758-2408
430 Garage Sales
PUBLISHER'S NOTEAll Yard Sale Ads Must be Pre-Paid.
440 Miscellaneous
BROTHERS SEWINGMACHINE, Basic Sewing, with many accessories, like new $70,
386-752-5969
440 Miscellaneous
CRAFTSMAN TABLE SAW10” w/Leg Set, 2.5 hp, 13 amp,
still in box $75386-752-5969
FREE OAK Firewood2 foot sections, you haulContact 386-961-9377
GENERATORVanguard Black Max, 5000 watts,
portable elect. Excellent cond. $400, 386-752-5969
RYOBI CIRCULAR SAW KITSaw, drill driver work light &
sander, Like New, $250 386-752-5969
SET OF 4 - F150 Platinum - 20” polished wheels
$400 OBO Call 755-3667 or 623-5219
YAMAHA 2 hp BOAT MOTORGreat for trolling or just plain slow
riding! $250386-752-5969
520 Boats for Sale
1992 17’ Wahoo, center console, Yamaha 150 hp, one owner, well maintained, $6,700. 755-2235,
397-3500 or 752-0442
SMOKER CRAFT1232 John Boat 12ft
$450Contact 386-497-4643
630 Mobile Homesfor Rent
2 & 3 BR MH. $400 - $700. mo. Plus Deposit. Water & Sewer
Furnished. Cannon Creek MHP & other locations 386-752-6422
2 BR/2 BA SW, Completlyfurnished, carport, shed, located on
41st Dr., $600 mo.,+ Util. $300 Dep. 935-2461
2/1 W/ screened porch, Lg. lot, in very nice, clean, well maintained,
safe, small park, no pets, really nice place to live, with long term tenants, $475 mo., $475 sec. dep. 386-719-9169 or 386-965-3003.
3BR/2BA DWMH on 1 acreprivate lot, 1st+last+dep required
located in Ellisville. No pets.Contact 352-870-5144
640 Mobile Homesfor Sale
05540877
DISPLAY HOMECLEARANCE SALE
1ST COME 1ST SERVE!GOVERNMENT LOANS FOR
MOBILE HOMES!YOUR $700 RENT
PAYMENT = A NEW HOME!CALL CLAYTON HOMES
TODAY!904-772-8031
ATTENTION !We buy used mobile homes!
Singles or Doublewides .Call Rusty at North Pointe Homes
352-872-5566
MLS 83336 - 3/2 MH with vaulted ceilings and lots of extras. New
updated AC & plumbing. $65,900 Century 21-Darby Rogers.
Heather Craig 386-466-9223
Well maintained 3/2 on .27 acres w/ split floor plan. 2 car garage &
storage out back MLS# 84297Results Realty $74,000. Brittany
Stoeckert 386-397-3473
3/2 Mobile Home on 1/2 ac. Needs TLC, great investment, located in
Glenn St. Mary. MLS# 82570, Results Realty $45,000. Brittany
Stoeckert 386-397-3473
Mobile home on 4 acres that needs some TLC. Large square footage and very private. MLS# 84500
Results Realty $35,000. BrittanyStoeckert 386-397-3473
3/2 DWMH on 1 acre in the quainttown of Mayo. Split floor plan w/
FP. Pristine condition. $95,000Nelda Hatcher 386-688-8067
Poole Realty MLS# 84597
Well maintained 3/2 DWMH & .51 ac fenced, out building, close
to Lake City $57,000 William Golightly 386-590-6681
Poole Realty MLS#83909
NEW 28X52 3/2 JacobsenOnly 1 Left $45,900 incl
del-set-ac-skirting and steps.No Gimmics! North Pointe
Homes-Gainesville 352-872-5566 Free Credit by Phone till 9 PM or
www.northpointemobilehomesales.com
North Pointe Homes in Gainesville has the largest selection of New
Jacobsen Homes in Florida. All at Factory Outlet Prices! We also
have 10 display models being sold at cost. North Pointe Hwy 441 N,
Gainesville-352-872-5566
Published Monthly by the
Lake City Reporter
LAKE CITY REPORTER CLASSIFIED TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2013 7BClassified Department: 755-5440
650 Mobile Home& Land
MLS 84478 - Beautiful new home in Woodborough S/D. security system, irrigation, front & back
covered porch. $239,500 Century21 Darby Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84832 - This DW features a nice fenced yard, 2 car garage & workshop area, split floor plan,
gallery kitchen $47,900 Century21 Darby Rogers 752-6575
710 Unfurnished Apt.For Rent
2 BR/1.5 BA w/garage5 minutes from VA hospital and
Timco. Call for details. 386-365-5150
2/1 -1300 sqft,Good Clean Condition duplex w/ gargage.
W/D hook up, CH/A, Lease Req.386-965-2407 or 386-758-5881
2BR/1 BA, 1 car garage, W/D hook up, $535 month,
no pets 1 month sec, 386-961-8075
2br/1ba Apt. CH/A$475. mo $475 dep.
No pets 386-697-4814
Amberwood Hills Apts. Private Patio area. Beautiful yard. Washer/dryer hkup. Free water & sewer. 1/1, 2/1. Move in special.
386-754-1800. wwwmyflapts.com
Great area West of I-75, deluxe 2br apts, some w/garage. W/D hookups & patio. $625-$750
plus SEC. 386-438-4600
Greentree TownhouseMove In Madness. 2/1, 2/1.5. Free water & sewer. Balcony & patio.
Laundry. Behind Kens on Hwy 90. 386-754-1800 wwwmyflapts.com
Ready now - 2/1 $515 mth & $515 dep. No pets.Contact 386-697-4814Redwine Apartments
Pets welcome. with 5 complexes, we have a home for you.
386-754-1800.www.myflapts.com
UPDATED APT,w/tile floors/fresh paint.
Great area.386-752-9626
Windsor Arms Apartments. Move in! 2/1, 2/1.5, 2/2. Pet
Friendy. Free 200 ch. Dish. Wash-er/dryer hkup.386-754-1800.
www.myflapts.com
720 Furnished Apts.For Rent
ROOMS FOR Rent. Hillcrest, Sands, Columbia. All furnished.
Electric, cable, fridge, microwave. Weekly or monthly rates. 1 person
$135, 2 persons $150. weekly 386-752-5808
730 UnfurnishedHome For Rent
2br/1 & 1/2 ba Townhouse.Very Clean. W/D
$875 a month & $875 depositCall 386-288-8401
3/1 neat, clean. Just completely re-done inside Eadie Street
(In Town) $785 mth & $800 dep.386-752-4663 or 386-854-0686
3BR/1BA CH/A, all apliances new carpet $675/mo. 1st, Last, &
Sec. 141 NE Montrose Ave386-697-8893 or 305-962-2666
3br/2ba Mobile Home and 2/1 ba apt. No Pets.Avail now. Very clean!
386-497-1116.
3br/2ba W/D, References Req. Not Pets. $875 mth & $875 Dep. Only serious inquires. 386-397-
3500, 755-2235 or 752-0442
Taking applications for 3bd/1ba Just renovated, FR, carport, shed.
279 SE Eloise Ave. $800 mth, First & Sec.. Call 386-466-2266
750 Business &Office Rentals
05541069
17,000 SQ FT + WAREHOUSE7 Acres of Land Rent $1,500 mo.Tom Eagle, GRI
(386) 961-1086 DCA Realtor
055410992700 sqft Absolutely Beautiful Office Suite. Security camera’s and phone system provided. Computer network ready. In the heart of Lake City. Call Vicki 386-935-2832
4,000SQFT WAREHOUSE forlease.Edge of town on a paved
street. Contact Wayne 386-365-0637 or 386-752-0330
805 Lots for Sale
Eastside Village Realty, Inc.MLS #76668 - $32,000,
Buildable lot for site built homes only. In Forest Country.
Call Denise Bose 752-5290
PUBLISHER'S NOTEAll 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 nation-al 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 chil-dren under the age of 18. This newspaper will not knowingly
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tised in this newspaper are availa-ble on an equal opportunity basis.To complain of discrimination call HUD toll free at 1-800-669-9777,
the toll freetelephone number to the hearing
impaired is 1-800-927-9275.
810 Home for Sale
Coldwell Banker Bishop Realty4br/3b, 3-car garage, carport, big kitchen & utility room, new roof.
Elaine K. Tolar $189,900 386-365-1548 MLS #83159
Beautiful 3/2, 2,500 sqft brick home on 15 wooded acres, large bedrooms, $252,000
David Mincey 386-590-0157Poole Realty MLS# 84388
Remax- Pam Beauchamp 386-303-2505, Suwannee River-front Getaway, 2br/1ba, 1200sf,
.65 ac, screened porch overlooking river. #83706 $159,900
Remax- Pam Beauchamp 386-303-2505, Great Location! 4offices, Great location for many tupoes of professional services.
#84111 $239,000
Remax- Pam Beauchamp 386-303-2505, Gorgeous Canal-Front Pool, 3br/2ba2 half baths, 3212 st, 2 story, 1.7 ac., 3 FPs
#84592 $239,000
$55,000 - 3/1 CH&A w/d hook up, 1100ft Concrete Block Home
priced to Sell. Downtown LC 386-752-9736 between 9am-9pm
2bd/1ba brick home, close in, Available approx.. 10/15/13
$69,900 7 days 7-7 A Bar Sales, Inc.386-752-5035 ext. 3210
4BR 2BA brick home on 1.6beautiful acres, pole barn and
workshop $99,000 Rob Edwards386-965-0763 Hallmark Real
Estate MLS#78656
Remax- Pam Beauchamp 386-303-2505, Swift Creek runs
thru this 31 ac featuring lot of hik-ing rails, 2br/2ba, 2370sf, tri-level
home. #83186 $224,900
810 Home for Sale
Remax- Pam Beauchamp 386-303-2505, 1320sf home
converted into business located Downtown Lake City on corner
lot #84805 $78,000
Expansive 4BR 3BA family POOLhome on 11 acres, gorgeous! Ad-joining 13 acres avail. $298,000 Janet Creel 386-719-0382 Hall-mark Real Estate MLS#84905
Eastside Village Realty, Inc.MLS #81958 - $115,000. Must be 55+, 3br/2ba, Site Built w/ lots of
room, split plan mstr suite, FL. Rm. Call Denise Bose 752-5290
Coldwell Banker Bishop Realty3br/2b new doors, wood laminate
floors, granite countertops & more. Mary Brown Whitehurst $132,000
386-965-0887 MLS #84108
Coldwell Banker Bishop Realty3br/2b Screened back porch.
Insulated garage with window a/c. Elaine K. Tolar $134,900386-365-1548 MLS #84141
Beautiful home with: Pool, detach-ed garage, tile carpet and hickory flooring. Remax Professionals 386-344-0433 Sandy Kishton
$246,500 MLS #84384
Coldwell Banker Bishop Realty3br/2b on a corner, lot spacious rooms, close to Timco & FGC
Mary Brown Whitehurst $124,900 386-365-1548 MLS #84613
Large pool home, Florida room, eat in kitchen, outdoor 12x12 shedw/ electric & a/c Remax Profes-
sionals 386-344-0433 SandyKishton $219,900 MLS #84771
MLS 3710 - Custom built home w/trey ceilings, split floor plan,
above ground pool w/deck. $65,900 Century 21-Darby Rog-ers. Heather Craig 386-466-9223
Coldwell Banker Bishop Realty2 story 1895 Victorian house w/ electrical upgrades, double -deck porches, MLS 71594 $149,900.
Patti Taylor 386-623-6896
MLS 80678 - Immaculate2br/2ba with a well maintained yard located in Eastside Village
$115,000 Century 21-Darby Rog-ers. Heather Craig 386-466-9223
Spacious 4br home with split floor plan. Back yard is fenced with above ground pool MLS 81472
$237,000 Missy Zecher 623-0237Remax Professionals
2br/2ba with soaring ceilings, granite tops, buck stove all on Santa Fe riverfront. $320,000Jo Lytte MLS 81537 RemaxProfessionals 386-365-2821
Beautiful home in Louise Estate that sits on two lots w/ large cov-
ered porches and lake views. MLS 82236 $299,900 Missy Zecher
623-0237 Remax Professionals
3bd/3ba 2152 sq ft on 1 acre. Front & back porches Owner
Financing Avail. 20% down. PattiTaylor Coldwell Banker Bishop
Realty $69,900 MLS 83483
Stunning lake front home w/ an updated kitchen, 12’ ceilings, and outside living area. MLS 83521
$549,000 Missy Zecher 623-0237Remax Professionals
3bd/3ba custom home fenced with a paved drive way located in desir-
able community. MLS 83598 $247,000 Missy Zecher 623-0237
REMAX PROFESSIONALS
22.9 acre Estate and horse farm lo-cated in Wellborn fenced and cross
fenced. MLS 83730 $475,000 Missy Zecher 623-0237Remax Professionals
4bd/3ba remodeled home on four acres w/ lots of privacy yet not far from town. MLS 84687 $168,000
Missy Zecher 623-0237Remax Professionals
3br/2ba farmhouse on 25 acresin Live Oak.workshop, fenced and cross fenced. $175,000Jo Lytte MLS 83768 RemaxProfessionals 386-365-2821
810 Home for Sale
MLS 84532- Immaculate and gorgeous home with walk in
closets, large front & back porch-es. $132,900 Century 21 Darby
Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84561 - Custom built home, open floor plan, 44x14 ft screened
in back porch, custom outdoor kitchen. $219,000 Century 21
Darby Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84659 -Spacious split floor plan and office in the front located in peaceful subdivision. Move in
ready. $144,900 Century 21 Darby Rogers 752-6575
3br/2ba custom home. Built in shelves, gun closet and desk, wrap
around front porch. $159,900Jo Lytte MLS 84673 RemaxProfessionals 386-365-2821
MLS 84683 - Recently remodeledtri-level 2 master suites. Down-
stairs grand master Suite, w/ mas-ter bath. $215,000 Century 21
Darby Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84713 -Split bedroom, kitch-en & baths have granite counter
tops. large detached shed, fenced. $162,500 Century 21 Darby
Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84747 - Very large home w/ 6.38 acres in city limits. Beautiful
heart of pine flooring and walls. $154, 900 Century 21
Darby Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84772 -Nice maintained brick home remodeled and not far
from town. New roof in 2004. $87,888 Century 21
Darby Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84793 -Move in ready spacious split floor plan and office a great place to take long walks.
$33,500 Century 21 Darby Rogers 752-6575
Coldwell Banker Bishop RealtyBrand new 3br/2b in cul-de-sac,
lots of tile, versatile colors!Elaine K. Tolar $171,900
386-365-1548 MLS #83413
3/2 well maintained 2,400+ sqft brick home, beautiful atrium
garden w/waterfall. $162,000Sylvia Newell 386-590-2498Poole Realty MLS# 84086
Large & spacious 4bd/ 2b home clost to all ammenities, storage
area off garage Remax Professio-nals 386-344-0433 Sandy
Kishton $125,900 MLS #84479
Well built 3/2 CBS home w/ extra large game room on 1 acre in Fox-
boro s/d close to Live Oak box, $179,000 David Mincey 386-590-0157 Poole Realty MLS# 84534
Traditional Two Story Southern Home w/3,000+ sqft. Built in 1937. Great shape, $325,000 Ronnie Poole 386-208-3175Poole Realty MLS# 84538
4/2 brick, remodeled kitchen, sun room, mud room, FP all on
10 ac., no restrictions. $99,900Glenda McCall 386-208-5244
MLS# 84622 Poole Realty
POOL HOME 3BR 2.5BA family brick home in town priced right!
$109,000 Kay Priest386-365-8888 Hallmark Real
Estate MLS#83767
Private secluded 3/3.5 home on 35 acres, 3 car garage, full basement
2 large barns $400,000 DavidMincey 386-590-0157 Poole
Realty MLS# 82968
Remax- Pam Beauchamp 386-303-2505, 3br/2ba, 1445 sf, h/w flooring in fam rm, kitchen
has eat-at bar, detached home of-fice. #84610 $169,900
START OUT or start over in this 3BR/2BA home in town, handicap access $47,900 Teresa Spradley386-365-8343 Hallmark Real
Estate MLS#8383
Well built 3/2 CBS home w/ extra large game room on 1 acre in Fox-
boro s/d close to Live Oak box, $179,000 David Mincey 386-590-0157 Poole Realty MLS# 84534
820 Farms &Acreage
10 acres with w/ss/pp. Ownerfinanced, low down paymentDeas Bullard/BKL Properties
386-752-4339 www.landnfl.com
4 1/2 acre lot. Lake Jeffery Road. Gorgeous Oaks!Paved Rd
Owner Financing! NO DOWN! $59,900. $525mo 352-215-1018. www.LandOwnerFinancing.com
Coldwell Banker Bishop Realty43.64 acres wooded acreage in N.Columbia County. Scenic & Private. MLS 74429 $89,900.
Patti Taylor 386-623-6896
MLS 84681 - Cedar home with wood burning fireplace, huge
master suite, split plan on 13 acres. $189,900 Century 21
Darby Rogers 752-6575
MLS 84741 - Cozy hideaway near all totally fenced on cul-de-sac w/
screened gazebo, many newer upgrades. $49,500 Century 21
Darby Rogers 752-6575
Coldwell Banker Bishop RealtySWMH and 40 acres! Fencing, a/c
2008, Several out buildings.Elaine K. Tolar $169,900
386-365-1548 MLS #81703
110 acres of beautiful pasture with many wooded homesites. Create
your own ranch w/this one. $275,000 Ronnie Poole 386-208-3175 Poole Realty MLS# 84538
830 CommercialProperty
REDUCED! Perfect home-office on SW Main Blvd., many other
uses, 1,900 sf $89,500 Janet Creel386-719-0382 Hallmark Real
Estate MLS#81207
SW MAIN BLVD 11,000+ heated sf building, highly visible, many
uses! $495,000 Nate Sweat 386-628-1552 Hallmark Real
Estate MLS#83018
180 East Duval St.Lake City, FLorida 32055
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By MARK LONGAssociated Press
GAINESVILLE — Florida never really recruited Tyler Murphy.
The junior quarterback from Wethersfield, Conn., had scholarship offers from Connecticut, Syracuse and Temple in 2009 when he decided to send his high school highlights about 1,000 miles south to Gainesville.
It turned out to be a good move — although it took four years, Jacoby Brissett’s transfer and Jeff Driskel’s season-ending injury for Murphy to land the start-ing quarterback job.
In between, Murphy had people questioning whether he should change positions and/or schools.
“It was tough,” Murphy said. “Sitting on the side-lines is never fun. But some-times you have to be patient when you come to a big football school like this.”
Murphy’s wait ended in the first quarter of Saturday’s 31-17 victory against Tennessee.
Driskel broke a bone in his lower right leg against the Volunteers. Murphy took over and performed better than anyone could have predicted.
Sure, there were a few hiccups. But Murphy gave the 20th-ranked Gators (2-1, 1-0) hope that their goals are still within reach.
He completed 8 of 14 passes for 134 yards and a touchdown. He also ran for 84 yards and a score as Florida extended its win-ning streak in the series to nine.
It was a solid debut for a career backup who had thrown just one pass in four years — and it didn’t even count in the statis-tics because it came on a 2-point conversion.
“It was always in the back of my mind I might never play, but I just kept working hard and just kept fighting, kept faith in myself and kept praying for an opportunity,” Murphy said. “Luckily, I was able to get it. It wasn’t the way I wanted it, you know, but an opportunity is an opportu-nity. You’ve got to make the best of it.”
Murphy will make his first career start Saturday night at Kentucky, which has dropped 26 in a row in the series.
How did Murphy get to this point? Well, it was mostly about fortitude and fortune.
Murphy wasn’t highly recruited coming out of Wethersfield High School. He had verbally committed to Temple, but also could see what was going on at Florida. Former coach Urban Meyer led the Gators to the 2008 national cham-pionship, the program’s second in three years, and quarterback Tim Tebow
had become a star running the spread-option offense.
John Brantley was wait-ing to take over for Tebow, but the pocket passer hard-ly fit Meyer’s scheme.
So Murphy sent some game tape to the Gators. A few weeks later, he got a call from offensive coor-dinator Steve Addazio, and then another from Meyer. Murphy scheduled a visit, got a scholarship offer and accepted on the spot.
Florida desperately need-ed a backup, but coaches felt Murphy wasn’t ready as a freshman. He redshirted in 2010, watching as tight end Jordan Reed and ver-satile receiver Trey Burton shared quarterback snaps alongside Brantley.
Things got worse for Murphy after Meyer and Addazio left. Driskel and Brissett signed with Florida in 2011, and both immedi-ately jumped Murphy on the depth chart.
Murphy went from fourth team in 2011 to third-string quarterback in 2012.
Some friends and family members advised him to transfer. Others suggested he switch positions.
“I just didn’t want to give up,” he said. “I felt like if I changed positions, I would have gave up on myself and I probably wouldn’t have been able to live with myself.”
Murphy got significant work with the first-team offense early in fall practice, while Driskel recovered from an appendectomy.
Most believed the Gators would be doomed if Driskel got hurt, and it remains to be seen how Murphy will play against better competi-tion. But the poise and pres-ence he showed against the Vols were promising signs.
“One man’s misfortune is another man’s oppor-tunity,” Florida coach Will Muschamp said. “Everybody wants it now. He’s a guy that’s worked extremely hard and cashed in on his opportunity, and I look forward to seeing him play the rest of the year.”
8b LAKECITYREPORTERSPORTSTuEsDAY,sEPTEMBER24,2013 Page Editor: TimKirby,754-0421
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CHS: No. 2 in Class 6A Continued From Page 1B
INDIANS: Return Oct. 4 Continued From Page 1B
Fort White plays Taylor County on Nov. 1.
Suwannee High lost a District 5-5A game at North Marion High, 27-14. The Bulldogs (2-1, 1-1) are off this week.
Fort White plays Suwannee on Oct. 25.
Hamilton County High notched its first win, beat-ing host Maclay School 25-10. The Trojans (1-2) bring in Union County High (No. 1 in Class 1A) this week.
Fort White’s season-opening game at Hamilton County was canceled.
Bradford High bounced back from the loss to Fort White for its first win, a 25-8 District 4-4A decision at home over The Villages
High. Bradford (1-2) hosts
Palatka High this week.Buchholz High lost
at Fleming Island High, 42-20, in a District 3-7A game. Quinlan Washington scored two touchdowns for the Bobcats (2-2), who have an open date this week.
Fort White closes out the regular season against Buchholz on Nov. 8.
Newberry High opened District 7-1A play and was roughed up by Chiefland High, 34-0. Chiefland’s 305 yards rushing was three short of Fort White’s total in its win over the Panthers. Newberry (2-2) plays at Keystone Heights this week.
JASON MATTHEW WALKER/Lake City Reporter
Florida quarterback Tyler Murphy (3) is stalked by Tennessee’s Corey Miller while attempting to score a touchdown during a game on Saturday. Starting quarterback Jeff Driskel is out for the year due to a broken right tibia. Florida beat Tennessee 31-17.
Florida turns to Murphy
offensively and defensive-ly,” Allen said. “We didn’t punt all night long, but when you watch tape, you find mistakes. We’ll be all over them about the small
things and get them fixed. As the games get more competitive against Orange Park, Ed White or whoever it may be, we can’t make those mistakes.”
Miami expects to get Morris backAssociated Press
CORAL GABLES — Miami expects Stephen Morris to play when the 15th-ranked Hurricanes visit winless South Florida on Saturday.
Morris was knocked out of Miami’s 77-7 win over Savannah State in the first quarter with a lower right leg injury. It was originally thought to be a sprained ankle, though coach Al Golden said Sunday that it subsequently was diag-nosed as a bone bruise.
Morris was in Miami’s training room on Sunday for treatment. Golden says he “absolutely” thinks Morris will play this weekend.
Golden expects that Morris may be limited at Miami (3-0) practice on Monday, though is hoping to have him fully ready by today’s workout.
Morris’ backups, Ryan Williams and Gray Crow, completed 17 of 19 passes for 231 yards and three touchdowns in the Savannah State win.