Putnam County High School Football CRESCENT CITY RAIDERS 61 INTERLACHEN RAMS PIERSON TAYLOR WILDCATS 10 THE VILLAGES BUFFALOES 56 35 PALATKA PANTHERS PONTE VEDRA SHARKS PENIEL BAPTIST WARRIORS GENEVA CLASSICAL KNIGHTS 7 44 32 58 www.mypdn.com PALATKA DAILY NEWS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2014 Reset clocks at 2 a.m. Sunday In CURRENTS EVENSONG Presenting an Anglican tradition in a nondenominational program of classical music on Sunday at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Palatka. Bondi makes campaign stop in Palatka BY PETE SKIBA Palatka Daily News Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi threw energy into over gear as she spoke to about 100 supporters on a campaign visit in Palatka. After a brief introduction by Dona Holt, chairwoman of the Republican Party of Putnam County, at Beef ‘O’ Brady’s, Bondi got down to her role in Florida’s government. “We are going to re-elect Rick Scott,” Bondi said, “and I’m going to continue doing what I’m doing for the next four years.” Bondi pledged to continue her efforts in fighting drugs, human trafficking and inter- ference from the federal government. Applause greeted Bondi’s talk of her role in removing Florida’s pill mills that sold painkillers known as Oxy to anyone with the money to buy. “Of the top 100 Oxy dispensers in the country – these are doctors – 98 were in Florida,” Bondi said. “We were a mockery of the country, and we should have been. We were called the Oxy Express.” Shocked by having parents bring pictures of their dead children to her, Bondi said she took action. With her help, Bondi said, the legislature passed some of the toughest legislation in the country to shut down pill mills. Those 98 doctors no longer live in or practice in Florida, she added. It was teamwork between her office and law enforcement such as the agencies in Palatka and Putnam County that prevailed. “They are talking about Florida all over the country as what to be regarding prescription drugs,” Bondi said. “We are the role model.” Pumping up her credentials as a Republican, Bondi said, “What we do good in Florida as Republicans, we partner with our good businesses, and there is nothing wrong with that. We should be proud of that.” See BONDI, Page 5A CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi spoke to about 100 supporters Friday at Palatka’s Beef ‘O’ Brady’s during a campaign stop. Bluegrass music star anticipating festival Haunted Downtown Candidates reaching final countdown With Election Day on Tuesday, Rick Scott’s and Charlie Crist’s campaigns continue to travel across the state in the hopes of bringing voters to the polls. BY BRANDON D. OLIVER Palatka Daily News See Page 3A Scott Crist Sunny 0% rain chance 61 | 40 For details, see 2A $1 CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News A trick-or-treater dressed in a mask from the movie “Scream” digs into a bowl of candy from one of about 50 businesses along St. Johns Avenue Friday during Boo on the Avenue, which was hosted by Downtown Palatka Inc. Shops, organizations and government offices participated in the event that both allowed children to get treats from safe locations and promoted businesses downtown. One of bluegrass music’s most popular singers is looking forward to not only performing in the upcoming local music festival, but she is also anticipating the fellowship that comes with it. Starting Thursday and ending on Nov. 8, the seventh annual Fall Palatka Bluegrass Festival will bring to the Rodeheaver Boys Ranch some of the genre’s most notable acts. A crowd favorite over the years, Rhonda Vincent & the Rage will perform Thursday at 3:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. The group has become a staple at both spring and fall festivals at the ranch, having performed there at almost every event. “I cannot remember a time when we were not there,” Vincent said. “I travel with this world class band. I don’t go See BLUEGRASS, Page 5A INDEX Advice ............................. 6B Briefing ........................... 2A Classified/Legals ............ 7A Comics............................ 6B Horoscope ...................... 6B Lottery............................. 2C Obituaries ....................... 8A Opinions ......................... 4A Sports ............................. 1C Sudoku ........................... 7A CRESCENT CITY HOMECOMING ROYALTY BY ASIA AIKINS Palatka Daily News The Voice of Putnam County since 1885 VOL. 126 • NO. 214 PALATKA, FLA. Public Notices on Page 7C By mail, 3 sections 110114a1.indd 1 New weapon in cancer battle CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News Crescent City Junior-Senior High School Homecoming King and Queen John Jacob Cruz and Noemi Serrano-Lopez were crowned Friday during halftime at the home game. Breast Cancer Awareness Month is officially over, but the fight continues for area patients and health care professionals. This year, local health care professionals will continue treatment with a new device called the BioZorb Tissue Marker. “It’s a huge step forward for mankind,” said Dr. Anand Kuruvilla of the Cancer Center of Putnam. Since 2011, Kuruvilla See CANCER, Page 5A CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News Candyce Herrera, lead radiation therapist at Cancer Center of Putnam works with new radiation therapy technology the center will use in the fight against breast cancer. 10/31/14 10:47 PM 2 A PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 P utnam AM PALATKA Railroad society to host museum open house court records show 104 Waldo police tickets were dismissed between Sept. 1 and Thursday. While the city no longer has its own officers, Waldo will still receive money from tickets written by sheriff’s deputies within city limits. The Palatka Railroad Preservation Society will sponsor a ST. PETERSBURG museum open house and running of Woman awakens from the Palatka Layout and Rail Rodeo trains from 1-4 p.m. Sunday at the 2-week coma, gives birth Palatka Union Depot, 222 N. 11th A Tampa woman who was in a St. coma for several weeks after being Details: 328-0305. hit by a truck in St. Petersburg has given birth to a healthy baby girl. Players will bring The Tampa Tribune reports ‘Earnest’ to the stage 36-year-old Jenny Quiles recently awoke from the coma and on The River City Player Community Wednesday gave birth by C-section Theatre presents “The Importance to 6-pound Angel. Obstetrician o f B e i n g E a r n e s t ” a t 7 p . m . Jennifer Gilby says Quiles remains Wednesday through Nov. 8 and 2 in intensive care. p.m. on Nov. 8-9 at the Scarlett-Hill Police say Quiles was hit by a tow Theatre, Larimer Arts Center, 216 truck driver as she crossed a St. Reid St. Petersburg street on Oct. 15. An Details and reservations, (904) investigation is underway but they 377-5044. say the driver will likely be issued a citation. Gilby says new father Angel Quiles optimistic and that the Technical college hosting baby hasisgiven the family a sense of garden workshop comfort. The Tribune reports Jenny Quiles The First Coast Technical College was heading to a doctor’s appointCommunity Enrichment Program ment when she was hit. will host a succulent container garden workshop from 5:30-7:30 p.m., Thursday at FCTC, 146 Comfort Road. Cost is $40 and includes all supplies. Taught by Robert King. Preregistration required: 326-9000. Felony Arrests Oct. 29 Bluegrass artists, fans coming to Palatka Justin Thomas Bassett, 27, Crescent City: fraud – illegal use of credit cards. Tiffianie Dawn Currie, 19, Interlachen: fraud; larceny. Raymond Earl Denson, 49, Palatka: possession of cocaine. Steven Taylor Sawyer, 18, Satsuma: possession of cocaine. Leon Cody Thomas, 21, Palatka: four counts sexual assault. The seventh annual Fall Palatka Bluegrass Festival will be held from Nov. 6-8 at Rodeheaver Boys Ranch, 380 Boys Ranch Road – rain or shine. Bring lawn chairs, but no highback or lounge chairs allowed. No alcoholic beverages, smoking or bets allowed in concert area. General admission is $30 in advance or $35 at the gate for a day; Oct. 30 $75 in advance or $85 at the gate for the weekend; $40 for children ages Duran Justin Asohn Green, 26, 6-13 in advance or $45 at the gate for the weekend. Children under 6 are Palatka: burglary; larceny. free with parent. Prices do not include camping. Call Rodeheaver Boys Ranch at 3281281 for camping. Dow Jones Tickets are not mailed. Order Industrials +195.10 tickets online at adamsbluegrass. 17,390.52 com; by mail at Adams Bluegrass LLC, P.O. Box 98, Dahlonega, GA Nasdaq 30533; or by phone at (706) 864Composite 7203. +64.60 Special to the Daily News Two workshops for crafting pine needle baskets are coming to the Melrose Public Library. These workshops will benefit the Melrose Library Association and will be held Friday from 10 a.m. to noon and Nov. 8 from 1:30-3:30 p.m. Jan Beckenbach, pictured, will be the instructor and will demonstrate several methods to start and complete your pine needle baskets. Bring your own lunch or snacks. All the materials for crafting as well as drinks will be provided by the Melrose Library Association. For those who would like to join the MLA or donate to its cause, more information will be available during the event. The MLA sponsors a variety of fun, engaging and educational library events for families and people of all ages, according to a news release. To sign up for the event, call or visit the Melrose Public Library, which is located at 312 Wynnwood Ave., behind the post office. For details, call the library at (352) 475-1237. Group promises to disclose voting info Associated Press BRADENTON — An Orlandobased political action committee supporting Republican candidates has sent some Manatee voters a mailer in which it promises to reveal whether they and their neighbors vote in next week’s election. The Bradenton Herald reported Friday that in the mailer, Citizens for a Better Florida Inc. identifies whether the recipient’s neighbors, by name, have voted in general elections dating back to 2010, with a promise to send a follow-up mailer after Tuesday’s election identifying neighbors who did not vote. “Every year, thousands of your neighbors failed to vote,” the mailer states. “We think it’s too important. This year, we are providing the names of your neighbors and their voting record. The next time we send Markets 4,630.74 BOSTWICK Friends of library looking for ways to lend support The Friends of Bostwick Library will meet at 1 p.m. Tuesday at 125 Tillman St. to discuss ways to support the library. Visit bostwicklibraryfriends.org. Details: 326-2750. State WALDO Judge dismisses town’s final 3 speeding tickets A judge in north Florida has dismissed the last three speeding tickets written by police officers from a small town with a notorious reputation as a speed trap. The move came after officials in Waldo on Oct. 1 disbanded its small police force after the state launched an investigation into ticket quotas and other issues. The Alachua County Sheriff’s Office has taken over policing the town between Jacksonville and Gainesville, and says deputies will still pull over anyone caught speeding. The Gainesville Sun reports that PALATKA DAILY NEWS www.palatkadailynews.com 1825 St. Johns Ave., Palatka FL 32177 MAIL: P.O. Box 777, Palatka, FL 32178 ISSAN 418-500 USPS 418-500 Periodicals postage paid at Palatka, FL, Palatka Daily News, est. 1885, is published mornings except Sunday and Monday by the Palatka Daily News, Inc., POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Palatka Daily News, P.O. Box 777, Palatka FL 32178 110114a2.indd 1 Standard & Poor 500 2,018.05 Florida Gas Average +23.40 Stock Report October 31 Name Close Change APPLE AFLAC ALCATEL AT&T BAXTER CHEVRON COCA-COLA CISCO COMCAST CORNING CSX DELTA AIR DUNKIN NEXTERA GEN ELEC GLAXOSMITH HOME DEPOT J.C.PENNY LIFEPOINT LOWE"S LSI MANULIFE MICROSOFT PLUM CREEK PFIZER TRACT SUP VULCAN WALMART WALT DISNEY 108.00 59.73 3.00 34.84 70.14 119.95 41.88 24.47 55.35 20.43 35.63 40.23 45.48 100.22 25.81 45.49 97.52 7.61 70.00 57.20 11.14 18.97 46.95 41.01 29.95 73.22 61.71 76.27 91.38 1.02 -0.31 0.03 0.33 0.08 2.75 0.48 0.39 1.00 0.36 0.34 1.09 -0.45 0.31 0.14 0.35 0.00 -0.02 1.08 0.93 0.00 0.32 0.90 0.38 0.11 0.92 1.42 -0.18 1.16 No Paper? Please call (386) 312-5200 by 10 a.m. to report problems with the delivery of your paper. Circulation office hours are 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. If you leave a message, please give your name, 911 address and phone number. group was contributed by the Realtors Political Advocacy Committee, which has the same address as Citizens for a Better Florida, according to the Division of Elections. In the past month, the Realtors PAC collected almost $984,000 — of which $795,000 came from the National Association of Realtors, based in Chicago. When the Bradenton Herald attempted to contact Richard Darling, listed as chairman of Citizens for a Better Florida, the call connected to the offices of the Orlando-based Florida Realtors, which shares an address with the Realtors PAC and Citizens for a Better Florida. The voicemail stated, “We understand you may have received a mailer, please leave a message.” No one returned a request for comment as of Thursday night. PALATKA DAILY NEWS WEATHER REPORT 7-Day Local Forecast Saturday Sunday Precip Chance: 0% Precip Chance: 0% Sunny 61 / 40 Sunny 65 / 46 Local UV Index Monday Mostly Sunny 74 / 55 Precip Chance: 5% Tuesday Mostly Sunny 80 / 60 Precip Chance: 5% Wednesday Mostly Sunny 81 / 61 Precip Chance: 5% Thursday Mostly Sunny 81 / 59 Precip Chance: 20% In-Depth Local Forecast Friday Partly Cloudy 79 / 58 Precip Chance: 10% 0-2: Low, 3-5: Moderate, 6-7: High, 8-10: Very High, 11+: Extreme Exposure Today we will see sunny skies with a high temperature of 61º, humidity of 54%. Northwest wind 14 to 18 mph. The record high temperature for today is 90º set in 2003. Expect mostly clear skies tonight with a near record overnight low of 40º. Northwest wind 10 mph. The record low for tonight is 39º set in 1954. Sunday, skies will be sunny with a high temperature of 65º, humidity of 62%. North wind 7 to 9 mph. Skies will be mostly clear Sunday night with an overnight low of 46º. Sun & Moon Peak Fishing/Hunting Times This Week One Gallon Regular $2.98 this mailer, we will include information on who voted in this upcoming November election.” Manatee Elections Supervisor Mike Bennett said he’s received complaints about the fliers. Information on how a voter casts a ballot is not public record, but whether a voter exercises his or her individual right is. Callers to the elections office have assumed it was Bennett’s office providing the information, but Bennett said no one has contacted his office for the information. According to the Florida Division of Elections, Citizens for a Better Florida formed in 2008 and has raised more than $2 million. In October, the PAC raised $795,000 and spent all of it on “electioneering” and postage on behalf of Gov. Rick Scott and other statewide Republican candidates. All of that money collected by the 0 - 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11+ Peak Times Day AM PM Today 7:50-9:50 7:20-9:20 Sun 8:43-10:43 8:13-10:13 Mon 9:35-11:35 9:05-11:05 Tue 10:28-12:28 9:58-11:58 Sunrise today . . . . . . 7:40 a.m. Sunset tonight. . . . . . 6:39 p.m. Full 11/6 Last 11/14 New 11/22 State Cities First 11/29 Today City Hi/Lo Daytona Beach . . . 63/45 s Gainesville. . . . . . . 60/35 s Jacksonville. . . . . . 58/43 s Key West . . . . . . . . 76/64 s Miami . . . . . . . . . . 78/53 s Naples . . . . . . . . . . 73/49 s Orlando . . . . . . . . . 66/42 s Panama City . . . . . 59/41 s Pensacola. . . . . . . . 60/38 s Port Charlotte. . . . 69/43 s Tallahassee . . . . . . 58/37 s Tampa . . . . . . . . . . 66/45 s W. Palm Beach . . . 73/48 s Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly cloudy; mc/mostly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/ sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms Palatka Subscription rates Weather Trivia How high do thunderstorms reach? ? Answer: Most reach heights of more than 20,000 feet. Local Pine Needle Basket Workshop Set Date High 10/24 77 10/25 78 10/26 82 10/27 87 10/28 83 10/29 83 10/30 78 Peak Times Day AM PM Wed 11:21-1:21 10:51-12:51 Thu 11:30-1:30 11:00-1:00 Fri ---11:45-1:45 www.WhatsOurWeather.com Farmer's Growing Days Farmer's Growing Degree Days Date Degree Days Date Degree Days 10/24 11 10/28 18 10/25 12 10/29 20 10/26 14 10/30 18 10/27 20 Growing degree days are calculated by taking the average temperature for the day and subtracting the base temperature (50 degrees) from the average to assess how many growing days are attained. Local Almanac Last Week Low Normals 45 81/59 46 81/59 45 81/59 54 80/59 54 80/58 58 80/58 57 80/58 Precip 0.00" 0.00" 0.00" 0.00" 0.00" 0.00" 0.98" Precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.98" Normal precipitation . . . . . . . 0.58" Departure from normal . . . . +0.40" Average temperature . . . . . . . 66.2º Average normal temperature . 69.5º Departure from normal . . . . . . -3.3º St. Johns River Tides This Week Palmetto How to reach us Bluff Day High Low High Lownumber ..... 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Advertising fax..............312-5209 Newsroom fax..............312-5226 Low High Low PUBLISHER Wayne 312-5201 5:07 amKnuckles. 11:06............... pm 5:25 pm EDITOR 5:06 am 11:10 pm 5:31 pm Al6:03 Krombach...................... 312-5231 am None 6:34 pm Advertising Director 6:57 am 12:39 pm 7:32 pm Mary Kaye Wells................ 312-5210 7:49 am 1:32 pm 8:26 pm Press Plant Manager 8:38 am 2:22 pm 9:17 pm Keith Williams.................... 312-5249 9:25 am 3:10 pm 10:05 pm CIRCULATION Department... 312-5200 Website Mike Reynolds................... 312-5200 10/31/14 6:07 PM 3 A PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Ex-Union Carbide leader dead at 92 By Curt Anderson Associated Press MIAMI — Warren M. Anderson, who headed Union Carbide Corp. when a chemical leak killed thousands of people in Bhopal, India, in 1984, has died in Florida at 92. Anderson’s death was not announced by his family but was confirmed Friday by The Associated Press through public records. The records say Anderson died at a nursing home in Vero Beach, Florida, on Sept. 29. No cause of death was given. Anderson ran Union Carbide when, on the morning of Dec. 3, 1984, a pesticide plant run by one of its subsidiaries leaked about 40 tons of deadly methyl isocyanate gas into the air of the Indian city of Bhopal, killing about 4,000 people. Many more died in the following months, bringing the estimated death toll to 15,000. In all, at least 500,000 people were affected, with either direct injuries or birth defects blamed on the leak, the Indian government says. Just after the disaster, Anderson traveled to India, where he was briefly arrest- ed. He left the country while free on bail. But the disaster, and its lingering effects, remains an open wound in India, where many consider Union Carbide’s $470 million settlement with the Indian government an insult. Union Carbide is now a wholly owned subsidiary of the Dow Chemical Co. The Indian government made a renewed push to extradite Anderson, then 90, from the United States in 2011, but it never went anywhere. Prosecutors wanted to try him on culpable-homicide charges. In a 2009 interview with The Associated Press, his wife, Lillian, said: “He’s been haunted for many years” by the disaster. She said her husband was unfairly targeted. “Every time somebody wanted to sue the company there would be some kind of a thing that happened and they would be chasing after Warren, following him to the dump with our trash,” she said. “This is 25 years of unfair treatment, before CEOs were paid what they’re paid today.” Scott, Crist campaigns focus on turnout By Brendan Farrington and Gary Fineout Associated Press ST. PETERSBURG — Republican Gov. Rick Scott and former Republican Gov.turned-Democratic candidate Charlie Crist each began Friday at restaurants on opposite sides of the state, with opposite campaign styles. Crist’s first stop was Munch’s, a 62-year-old, cashonly classic Florida restaurant where he used to eat as a kid growing up in St. Petersburg. Scott stopped at Players Cafe, a restaurant in a Ponte Vedra Beach strip mall. After tens of millions of dollars spent and months of negative television ads, both men are spending the final days before Tuesday’s election trying to drive up turnout among supporters and are doing so with a style as different as the men themselves. Crist stopped at every table and spoke with diners, engaged in pleasant conversation and asked if they’ve already voted. He then popped into the kitchen unannounced and did the same thing. There were no speeches, no mentions of his opponent — just using his charm to win votes. “Tell everyone to vote!” Crist shouted out to a cook. “Your family! Your friends!” The cook shouted back, “We want you in!” That personal touch is one of the reasons John Barfield said he planned to vote for Crist later that day. “I feel he’s very honest. I feel he connects more and he answers questions unlike the other gentleman running for re-election,” said Barfield, a 55-year-old firefighter. “He feels like a regular person.” Scott appeared jovial and confident when he arrived in Ponte Vedra. He stopped at a couple of tables near the entrance, posed for photos and cracked jokes about Crist. Scott then went to the back of the room, where he stepped behind a lectern and microphone. Flanked by supporters with signs, Scott launched into a speech criticizing Crist and President Barack Obama. “So let’s think of where we’re going,” Scott said. “With Charlie Crist we have no idea. We have no idea. It won’t be good for us, but we have no idea where he’s going.” Donald Brown, a retired barber who chatted briefly with Scott at the restaurant’s counter, said he had already voted for the governor. “I voted for him because I don’t want the other guy to get in,” Brown said. “He’s already had his chance.” The candidates’ second stops also reflected on their differences. Scott, whose campaign slogan is “let’s keep working,” stopped at the offices of a Jacksonville real estate developer. Crist, who calls himself “the people’s governor,” walked through a New Port Richey retirement community and talked with people — again not mentioning his opponent, but rather asking residents about their background and histories. Scott continued his attacks on Crist, who left the Republican Party in 2010 and ran for Senate as an independent. “By the way,” Scott said near the beginning of his second speech. “Did you hear about the Republican, the independent and the Democrat that walked into a bar? The bartender said, ‘Hi, Charlie.’” As Crist walked through the New Port Richey neighborhood, a driver stopped in the middle of the street and shouted out to him, prompting him to walk over and say hello. The man said he is a Republican, but supporting Crist. “I’m praying the rosary for you. I hope you get in,” the man said before pulling away. As for the party changes and position switches that Scott keeps bashing Crist over, several people the former governor met said they actually liked him because he was able to change. “I hear all this ‘Flip-flop! Flipflop!’ It doesn’t matter. What matters is what’s right here,” 66-year-old Republican Lois Fricke told Crist as she placed her hand over her heart. She later added, “I vote my heart.” All Saints Day Evensong Sung worship at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church 200 Main Street Sunday, November 2 • 4 p.m. British Tea following in the Parish Hall For information: 386-328-1474 Suggested donation of $10.00 per ticket to benefit the Music Ministry What They’re NOT Telling You About So-Called “Energy Saving” Cooling Systems It turns out that all this “sealing in” of our homes to reduce energy bills has a sickening drawback: The American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology says we’re simply “recycling” the same bacteria over and over. This condition leads to “…up to 50% of allergic reactions are caused by polluted indoor air.” Is it worth all this to save a few dollars on energy? We didn’t think so, and did some research. Now, I’m happy to report finding something that many would call a breakthrough. We’d love to show you during a completely FREE, no-obligation Energy Survey. It’ll take a few minutes, but we promise to make it worth your time. This breakthrough can give you… ■ Mountain-Fresh Air Indoors. Headaches, asthma, coughing and other flu-like symptoms can be caused by indoor air pollution. ■ Guaranteed Energy Savings. We guarantee you’ll save at least 20% on your energy bill over the first year or we’ll 110114a3.indd 1 write you a check for the difference. ■ 10 Year Parts and Labor Guarantee. This new system is so reliable that we guarantee you can’t spend a penny on repairs for 10 solid years. “Why didn’t anyone think of this sooner?” Unfortunately, most contractors only know how to cool or heat the air, regardless of the health concerns… and to do it as cheaply as possible. We’ve taken a different approach that’s still economical, but far healthier. We’ll be glad to show you how you can cool your home for less money… and stay healthier too! You’ll breathe easier just knowing. Call us now. 386-325-5095 Your No Hassle Air Conditioning Experts License # CACO53843 Helping Our P alatka E volve My Focus Will Be On... • Promoting economic development in the City of Palatka • Building strong, safe neighorhoods • Removal of red light cameras • Investing in youth recreation, leadership and enrichment • Improving the working relationship with our county and state governments EDUCATION Palatka High School - 1990 Howard University - BA Business Administration, 1994 - Masters of Science, 1996 University of Florida - Levin College of Law - Juris Doctor, 1999 Opened Terrill L. Hill, P.A. Office in Palatka, 1999 National Bar Association: Top 40 lawyers under 40 - 2012 CIVIC INVOLVEMENT Greater Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church • M.I.N. Outreach Ministry Past President, Palatka Police Athletic League • Founder, Youth Explosion of Palatka Foundation Board of Directors, St. Johns River State College Palatka Code Enforcement Board • Former Member, Players Championship Boys and Girls Club Member, Putnam County Affordable Housing Commission Board Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. “Stand with Terrill, he is a fighter. We can trust him to deliver.” Anthony C. “Tony” Hill Retired Florida Senator POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT PAID FOR AND APPROVED BY TERRILL L. HILL FOR MAYOR, CITY OF PALATKA 10/31/14 9:45 PM 4 A PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Opinions PALATKA DAILY NEWS Today in History Today is Saturday, Nov. 1, the 305th day of 2014. There are 60 days left in the year. This is All Saints Day. A reminder: Daylight Saving Time ends at 2 a.m. local time Sunday. Clocks go back one hour. P r o u d t o s e r v e P u t n a m C o u n t y, F l o r i d a s i n c e 1 8 8 5 W AYNE K NU C K LES , P u b l i s h e r Al Krombach, Editor C o m m u n i t y N e ws pa p e r s , I n c . OUR MISSION: We believe that strong newspapers build strong communities. Newspapers get things done. Our primary goal is to publish distinguished and profitable community-oriented newspapers. This mission will be accomplished through the teamwork of professionals dedicated to truth, integrity, loyalty, quality and hard work. This day in putnam: In 1903, the population of Palatka was 3,301, Crescent City, 358, and Melrose, 267. In 1917, as part of a war revenue bill, postage rates were boosted to 3 cents for a first class letter and 2 cents for a postal card. These rates remained in effect until raised again for WWII. In 1939, the most famous name in baseball, Babe Ruth, announced he would hold a baseball school in Palatka’s new Azalea Bowl from February 20 to March 20 and expected 250 students to participate. TOM W OOD , C HA I RMAN D I N K NESM I TH , P RES I DENT OUR VIEWS “Our Views” is the editorial position of the Palatka Daily News. All other features on the Opinions page are the views of the writers or cartoonists and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Palatka Daily News. R Roses and thorns OSE: Putnam County suddenly finds itself on the must-visit list for state officials. Do they love us, or is it merely election season? While modestly downplaying their own races, some have insisted they’re really here only to encourage all of us to use the ballot box on Election Day. In the past several days, we’ve seen U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Jacksonville; Gov. Rick Scott; state Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater, with state Sen. John Thrasher, R-St. Augustine, and state Rep. Travis Hutson, R-Elkton, in tow. At the time of this writing, state Attorney General Pam Bondi was scheduled to appear at Beef ‘O’ Brady’s on Friday afternoon. Will they take some sense of Putnam County’s needs home with them? “We like to do this for our candidates when they come to town so they don’t forget about us when they go to Tallahassee,” Putnam County School Superintendent Phyllis Criswell noted, after Atwater mentioned he was not normally greeted by bands like the Interlachen High School Jazz Band as he was on Thursday. Everyone enjoyed their music, but school officials must tread carefully when it comes to backing up candidates at partisan campaign events. ROSE: St. Johns River State College used the occasion of its Fall Frolics to officially open its newly expanded and remodeled student center. Those alumni who recall St. Johns River Junior College’s original cafeteria that occupied the same space will be most impressed by the airy, spacious facility that now greets students, faculty and staff. ROSE: Friday marked the fifth and final issue of our Breast Cancer Awareness Month supplement, “Think Pink.” The publication not only related some inspiring stories of women who’ve triumphed over the disease, but helped to relay important information about detection, treatment and prevention. We thank those advertisers who stepped up to help us get out the message. THORN: State Sen. John Thrasher was in Palatka on Thursday, backing up the candidacy of state Chief Financial Officer Jeff Atwater rather than his own. Thrasher is running for re-election to Senate District 6, which includes Putnam County. He’s also the chairman of the state Republican Party and until recently was chairman of Gov. Rick Scott’s reelection campaign. He’s also been named president of Florida State University, subject to an automatic confirmation vote by the state Board of Governors ratifies his contract after the November election. His re-election to the Senate seat is likely; in order to assume the presidency of FSU, he’ll have to resign from the Senate, necessitating an expensive special election in the four-county district to refill the seat, and leaving many in District 6 without the candidate they’ve elected. ROSE: Gasoline prices have fallen steadily since July. A gallon of regular gas fell below $3 a gallon for the first time Friday when AAA posted a state average of $2.98. We noted one Putnam station advertising $2.99 early Friday. That price is encouraging, except for the fact that stations in neigboring counties are selling gasoline for 20 cents a gallon less. What a difference a few miles makes. 110114a4.indd 1 Truth about the enigmatic Florida, Georgia Crackers I see, per his column in Wednesday’s edition of the Daily News, that publisher Wayne Knuckles is running into some of Florida’s peculiar idioms. He has encountered the enigmatic Florida Cracker. When I first became a resident of Florida way back in 1946, someone introduced himself as a Florida Cracker. Upon my inquiry, he explained that was about like me being a Tennessee Hillbilly. I let him know that I was no hillbilly. My family had been elevated to Mountain Williams way back during the Great Depression years. I never quite understood what a Florida Cracker was, and then I heard a man use the term “Georgia Cracker.” Confusing, what? So, being the curious sort, I made a mental note to someday find the source of that phrase to decide if it was being used in a euphonic, or a pejorative, sense. One definition of a “cracker” was said to be from the cracking of whips of early cattle drivers. Yeah, like everyone in Florida went around herding cows. Another armchair authority opined that early settlers ate baked crackers because fresh bread molded in Florida’s weather. Yet another source claimed it was merely a term for an outdoors person before someone invented the word, “redneck.” Well, it seems they were all wrong! The phrase isn’t even American in origin. According to an informative book by Mary Helen Dohan, titled “The Making of the American Language,” the term goes back to Scotland where it referred to a boaster or braggart. OK! I’ll buy that! I have a friend who fits that mold, but he’s wealthy so I’ll have to call him a Ritz Cracker. Dohan’s book, originally titled, “Our Own Words,” was first published in 1974, but was later re-titled and re-issued. Basically, it relates how we Americans created our own unique language by adopting words from other languages as our frontiers merged and the need to understand each other arose. That is why we Southerners pronounce words a bit differently and use different words for everyday items. Take the simple word, “roof.” Northerners pronounce it “ruff”. Southerners say, “rooof.” Northerners say, “greasy.” Southerners say, On Nov. 1, 1954, Algerian nationalists began their successful 7-year rebellion against French rule. On this date: In 1512, Michelangelo’s justcompleted paintings on the ceiling of the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel “Greezy.” Northerners say were publicly unveiled by the art“hoTEL, Southerners say ist’s patron, Pope Julius II. “HOtel.” In 1604, William Shakespeare’s People living in the New tragedy “Othello” was presented England states held on to their at Whitehall Palace in London. Puritan heritage longer because In 1765, the Stamp Act went they remained isolated. In horse into effect, prompting stiff resisand buggy days, people didn’t move around tance from American colonists. much. But because most immigrants arrived in In 1861, during the Civil War, New York, words and terms from Yiddish, President Abraham Lincoln German, Italian and other nationalities began named Maj. Gen. George B. slipping into conversations. “Mama Mia!” McClellan General-in-Chief of the The Scots and Irish that inhabited the lower Union armies, succeeding Lt. Gen. Appalachian states retained pure English lon- Winfield Scott. ger because they probably remained for generIn 1870, the United States ations within a few miles of where their ances- Weather Bureau made its first tors hacked out a farm. As Knuckles wrote, you meteorological observations. can still hear words they brought over from the In 1936, in a speech in Milan, “old country.” My grandfather’s swear words Italy, Benito Mussolini described were “tarnation,” and “confound.” the alliance between his country There was no better place to notice the difand Nazi Germany as an “axis” ference in the pronunciation of words than running between Rome and when a lot of young people from different parts Berlin. of the country were thrown together in the milIn 1952, the United States itary during WWII, which elicited a lot of good- exploded the first hydrogen bomb, natured kidding. code-named “Ivy Mike,” at Even the Sears-Roebuck catalog had an Enewetak Atoll in the Marshall effect on language. It managed to change a Islands. “coal hod” to a “scuttle,” and caused some vacilIn 1989, East Germany lation between a window “shade” and a “blind.” reopened its border with They introduced the word “comforter” for a Czechoslovakia, prompting tens of “quilt.” Sears also introduced the “spider,” for a thousands of refugees to flee to particular type of cast-iron “skillet” because it the West. had lines in the casting that resembled a web. Ten years ago: In the South it was simply called a frying pan. U.N. nuclear agency chief In Tennessee, a facility where one might buy Mohamed ElBaradei urged Iran to beer and play a few country songs on a juke suspend uranium enrichment and box was called a “roadhouse,” mainly because the Baptists wouldn’t allow them in a town. In called on North Korea to dismanMississippi they were likely to be called a hon- tle its weapons program. ky-tonk, and farther west they changed into Five years ago: saloons. When the Mexican influence area was Lender CIT Group filed one of reached in this country’s western movement, the biggest Chapter 11 bankruptthey became cantinas. cy filings in U.S. corporate histoIn Florida, such dens of iniquity back then were called Jook-Joints and there were several ry. (CIT Group emerged from bankruptcy protection the followalong rural roads in Putnam County where ing month.) “good ole redneck cracker boys” might slip a quarter into a jukebox and get five Hank One year ago: Williams songs while they wet their whistles. A U.S. drone strike killed So I’ve been told, y’all. Hakimullah Mehsud, leader of the Jody Delzell is a former publisher of the Daily News. Pakistani Taliban. Jody Delzell [email protected] Spring forward, fall over The days are getting shorter. And so am I. I don’t think I’m gaining weight, I just think gravity is slowly squishing me into a planet-shaped thing. It’s doing to me what it’s done to the Earth and the moon and the Sun: making me dense, round and wrinkled. Or maybe the lack of light is just depressing me. They’re going to change the clocks soon, from daylight saving time back to standard. Instead of changing all the clocks, wouldn’t it be easier for all schools and businesses to simply open an hour later? Instead of working 9 to 5, in the winter we could work 10 to 6. The same amount of work would get done. Schools could open and close an hour later than usual. The children would hate it just as much. At one time, back when there was only one clock in the average home, it was probably easier to change the clock than it was to change an office or a factory’s hours. Who knew that one day, every appliance in the average home would have a clock? Every microwave, every TiVo, every phone, every thermostat, every treadmill, every coffeemaker, every radio, every toothbrush, every stovetop has a clock that must be changed. Want a fun way to waste a Today’s Highlight in History: the manual to remember how to set the clock. I never had to worry about this when I was a kid. The clock and the radio in my cars never worked. Neither did the car, most of the time. Now I drive cars day? Try getting your stovetop where the clock and the radio clock and your microwave both work, but who needs the clock to display the same exact clock? On the radio, practicaltime. One will always say 8:31 ly all they do is tell me what when the other says 8:32. The time it is. It’s the top of the way things are going, soon hour, it’s the bottom of the your sofa will come with a hour, it’s 22 past the hour, it’s built-in timer. the weather on the 8’s, it’s the Not to mention the actual traffic report on the 10’s. All as if I don’t already have a clocks that clutter our bedstands and hallways. Sue and I cellphone, a watch and a clock both have alarm clocks. I never on the dash that can tell me reset mine, because I never use the time. I’m sure somebody it to wake up. It’s only there so out there in radioland doesn’t I can tell Sue what time her cat know what time it is, but I sat on my head last night, and wouldn’t brag about him being long ago I realized that accura- a listener. He probably doesn’t cy in cat behavior is not a big know what day it is, either. deal with her. Certainly not Changing the clocks just something she wants to hear seems like such a bother for about at 3 or 4 a.m. An hour the little benefit we get out of one way or the other doesn’t it. Now, if we could change the seem to faze her. calendar, going from fall to Sue sets her alarm with spring and cutting out winter great care, always making it altogether, I could get behind exactly 15 minutes early so that in a big way. Wouldn’t it she’ll never be late. All winter be great to fall asleep on the long, she stews about my clock, last day of fall and wake up on because the first thing she sees the first day of spring? That’d when she wakes up is my clock be worth a little inconvetelling her she’s 45 minutes nience. behind schedule. I figure it Contact Jim Mullen at makes up for the cat thing. JimMullenBooks.com. In the car, I have to pull out jim mullen Today’s Birthdays: Actress Betsy Palmer is 88. Golfer Gary Player is 79. Country singer Bill Anderson is 77. Magazine publisher Larry Flynt is 72. Country singer-humorist Kinky Friedman is 70. Actress Jeannie Berlin is 65. Music producer David Foster is 65. Rhythmand-blues musician Ronald Khalis Bell (Kool and the Gang) is 63. Country singer-songwriter-producer Keith Stegall is 60. Country singer Lyle Lovett is 57. Actress Rachel Ticotin is 56. Rock musician Eddie MacDonald (The Alarm) is 55. Actress Helene Udy is 53. Rock singer Anthony Kiedis (Red Hot Chili Peppers) is 52. Rock musician Rick Allen (Def Leppard) is 51. Country singer “Big Kenny” Alphin (Big and Rich) is 51. Singer Sophie B. Hawkins is 50. Actress Toni Collette is 42. Actress-talk show host Jenny McCarthy is 42. Rock musician Andrew Gonzales is 42. Actor David Berman is 41. Rock singer Bo Bice is 39. Actor Matt Jones is 33. Actress Natalia Tena is 30. Actor Penn Badgley is 28. Actor Max Burkholder is 17. Actor-musician Alex Wolff is 17. Thought for Today: “Years ago my mother used to say to me, she’d say, ‘In this world, Elwood, you must be’ — she always called me Elwood — ‘In this world, you must be oh so smart, or oh so pleasant.’ Well, for years I was smart. I recommend pleasant. You may quote me.” — “Elwood P. Dowd” from the play “Harvey” by Mary Chase (19061981). 10/31/14 11:34 AM 5 A PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Cancer continued from PAge 1a and his staff have used a radiation therapy practice called AccuBoost, which boosts the tissue bed where a lump was recently removed with additional radiation. During the lumpectomy, a surgeon places markers in the breast so that the radiation therapists and doctors can better target the breast tissue that could possibly still hold cancer cells. “The BioZorb is an improvement of that,” Kuruvilla said. “We treat the entire breast to get rid of any cells wandering. Now, there is more focus to Bluegrass continued from PAge 1a anywhere without them.” Vincent and the band will be in the company of other bluegrass musical acts including The Little Roy & Lizzy Show, Flatt Lonesome, Roni & Donna Stoneman and Clinton Gregory Bluegrass Band. Like most musical acts, Vincent said, she and the band travel to numerous cities across the nation. But there is something about all of the location, including the boys ranch, that makes them so special. Each time the band members visit the ranch, there’s an abundance of people they recognize from previous shows, she said. And the audience members who frequent the bi-annual festival sometimes bring friends who have never before attended, Vincent said. “There’s people we see there the area where the tumor was removed.” The BioZorb, a product from Focal Therapeutics Inc., is a spiral device that has metallic markers attached to it. The device is implanted during the lumpectomy, in place of the tumor that is removed. “This also gives additional support in the breast, filling the cavity where the tumor was removed,” Kuruvilla said. “And the device is selfabsorbed by the body after some years.” Candyce Herrera, lead radiation therapist at Cancer Center of Putnam, said the markers are clearly seen in the patient’s mammogram images. “Most of our patients get AccuBoost,” she said. “And it results in great cosmesis (preserving the surrounding tissue from radiation damage).” Putnam Community Medical Center’s Director of Business Development, Janet Martin, said the hospital is the only hospital offering the BioZorb in Northeast Florida. She said the hospital surgical team implanted its first BioZorb device at the end of September. “I had heard we were one of six offering the BioZorb in the state,” she said. “So you really don’t have to leave town. If you’re in that condition, you don’t want to get in the car and drive 50 miles to get treatment.” that we don’t see anywhere else,” the singer said. “We love that we have new friends.” When the festival starts in less than a week, attendees will have access to three days of music, food, arts and crafts vendors, and other activities. The musical aspect is huge part of the event, but Vincent said the friendships and interactions between the artists and the fans makes bluegrass festivals different from other music shows. All of the artists at the Palatka Bluegrass Festival mingle with fans, whether meeting guests after performance, eating lunch on the grounds at the ranch or visiting the attendees who camp out in RVs, Vincent said. Communication with the fans occurs even when the festivals are not in session. Vincent said that through her Facebook page, she responds to people who request songs for upcoming events or just have nice comments to leave on her page. “In bluegrass, you also get to meet the artists,” she said. “I hear from fans; I get requests. It’s a continued communications. That’s why I love social media.” Vincent said she encourages her Facebook fans and all other bluegrass enthusiasts to visit the boys ranch next week to take part in the festival. The bluegrass festivals are some of the few forms of entertainment that are still appropriate for people of all ages, she said. “Bluegrass is family oriented,” Vincent said. “You can bring the baby and Grandma. Not everything is family oriented nowadays. “It’s just a really relaxed atmosphere,” she said. “Just come to the festival and enjoy yourself.” For more information about the festival or to purchase tickets, visit adamsbluegrass.com or call (706) 864-7203. To reserve an RV space, call the boys ranch at 328-1281. [email protected] CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News State Attorney General Pam Bondi talks with supporters before giving a speech during a campaign stop Friday. Bondi continued from PAge 1a One partnership Bondi mentioned related to the trucking industry and human trafficking. Because truck stops are places where children can wander without interference, Bondi said, truck drivers are now on the lookout for the girls. “I worked with the truckers association,” Bondi said. “Truck drivers are now calling in suspected human trafficking cases.” Bondi said the U.S. WINTER HAVEN — Police say a hidden camera inside an alarm clock captured images of two certified nursing assistants at Palm Garden of Winter Haven nursing home abusing a 76-year-old Alzheimer’s patient. The Ledger of Lakeland reports the man’s son put the camera inside the room after noticing unexplained bruises on his father’s arms and legs. Police found three incidents of abuse on Oct. 7, Oct. 16 and Oct. 24. On Wednesday night, police arrested 28-year-old Yashika Zenobiaha Jones on two Associated Press [email protected] CLEARWATER — A 52-year-old woman is accused of stealing almost $300,000 dollars from a Clearwater restaurant where she worked as a bookkeeper. The Tampa Bay Times reports Mary Catherine counts of felony battery on a B u f f a n o w a s a r r e s t e d person over 65. On Thursday, 35-year-old Rose Dorlean Blaise was arrested on one count of felony battery of a person over 65. Jones is jailed bail set at $100,000. Blaise is being held without bail. It wasn’t known whether they’ve hired attorneys. Thursday on charges of grand theft and scheming to defraud. Police say Buffano was in charge of making bank deposits for Frenchy’s but had been taking money from three separate restaurant accounts for years. They say she altered deposit balances to disguise the thefts. An arrest report says she’s Russell W. Nelligan, M.D. N. Patrick Hale, M.D. Elizabeth K. McLeod, M.D. Michael A. Dagostino, O.D. PALATKA • Mayor 2010-2014 • Commissioner 2007-2010 • Tourist Development Council Board Member REGIONAL • NE Florida Regional Council • NE Florida Regional Transportation Planning Commission. • League of Cities Northeast Florida BUSINESS • Putnam State Bank President, 1990-2006 • Dunkin Donuts/Baskin Robbins Owner, 1997-2013 • Chamber of Commerce Director, Treasurer • Putnam County Economic Development Council Todd S. Hockett, O.D. • Cataract & Lens Implant Surgery • Diabetic Eye Exams • Glaucoma/Retinal Disease • All Eye Laser Procedures • Ophthalmic Plastic Surgery • Optical Shop On Premises 1400 U.S. Highway 1 South Just North of Target in St. Augustine Best Vision Center 10 Years Call (904) 829-2286 Visit Us On The Web At www.eyecenterstaug.com ACCREDITED Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care DEPENDABLE EXPERIENCE School Board District 5 Jane Thomas Crawford When It Comes To Our Kids, Experience Matters! JANE THOMAS CRAWFORD ALLEN BAGGETT Education •AA - St. Johns River Junior College •BS - Florida State University Secondary English Education •M.Ed - University of North Florida School Counseling K-12 •AS - Valencia Community College Work Experience •32 years in the Putnam County School System 1. English teacher-Beasley Middle School and Palatka High School 2. Guidance counselor-Palatka High School •4 years at St. Johns River State College 1. Director of Testing and Academic Success 2. Part-time in Office of Student Services •29 years at St. Johns River Water Management District as full time Compliance Coordinator Community Service Active Member of: •Kiwanis of the Azalea City •Alpha Delta Kappa Teachers Sorority •Quota International •St. Johns River State College Athletic Association •Former Member - Board of Directors GP Community Federal Credit Union •Former Member - Board of Directors Palatka Babe Ruth Baseball Association •Former Member - School Advisory Council at PHS You Be The Judge. Make The Best Choice For Our Students and Teachers. Vote Jane Thomas Crawford For School Board District 5. All information obtained from Supervisor of Elections Website Political Advertisement paid for and approved by Jane T. Crawford, non-partisan, for Putnam County School Board, District 5 110114a5.indd 1 WHY VERNON MYERS? A PROVEN LEADER THE EYE SURGERY CENTER OF ST. AUGUSTINE Todd P. Thompson, M.D. accused of stealing $292,187. Police found $48,000 in cash in a closet at Buffano’s Palm Harbor home when they arrested her. She was taken to the Pinellas County Jail where she was later released on $100,000 bail. It’s not known whether she’s hired an attorney. LET’S CONTINUE THE WORK THAT WE HAVE STARTED EYE CENTER OF ST. AUGUSTINE Paul W. Hund, III, M.D. in life. No one stopped her, the only Republican attorney general in the country. She added, “The glass ceiling is broken.” Reiterating her support of Mitt Romney in the last presidential election and her disdain for President Obama, Bondi hoped to get out the vote for the “important” midterm election to re-elect Scott. Judging from the enthusiasm at the meeting, the people attending were right behind her. “She is great. She fought human trafficking, and made war on the pill mills,” said Alice Bentien, of East Palatka. “What she had done makes us Cops say employee stole $290K 2 accused of abuse against seniors Associated Press Environmental Protection Agency overstepped its boundaries and she will oppose it. Bondi said she stands with the Bill of Rights and its Amendment 10, which states the federal government can only use those powers delegated to it by the states or the people. “I’ll take on the EPA when they try to hold Florida to higher water standards than any state in the country,” Bondi said. “None of us want dirty water. I’ll tell the DEP we can manage our own house, and that’s what we are doing in Florida.” Bondi encouraged the young women at the meeting to achieve whatever they chose Re-Elect MYERS Vernon for Mayor, City of Palatka • Knowledge & expertise in finances, personnel, planning & public concerns with over 25 years as a community bank president. • Promotion & Involvement in Youth Programs. • Palatka Police Pension Fund Chairman COMMUNITY COMMITMENT • Mainstreet Palatka Program, Chairman. • Putnam Habitat for Humanity, President and House Sponsor. • March of Dimes, Chairman. • Lee Conlee Domestic Abuse Shelter, Director. • United Way of Putnam County, President. • Whitney Laboratory, Trustee University of Florida. • Palatka Sunrise Rotary Club, Director & Treasurer. • First Presbyterian Church of Palatka, Elder. “ I will continue to make the tough decisions required for Palatka’s future, including investing in our children, and developing our neighborhoods while promoting sound economic growth for Palatka.” ~Mayor Vernon Myers I need your support & vote November 4th WORKING TOGETHER FOR PALATKA! Paid political advertisement paid for and approved by Vernon Myers, non-partisan, for Palatka City Mayor. 10/31/14 9:44 PM 6 A PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 For soldiers or civilians returning from West Africa, protocols not the same By Jim Kuhnhenn and Robert Burns Associated Press WASHINGTON — A U.S. soldier returning from an Ebola response mission in West Africa would have to spend 21 days being monitored, isolated in a military facility away from family and the broader population. A returning civilian doctor or nurse who directly treated Ebola patients? Depends. The Pentagon has put in place the most stringent Ebola security measures yet, going beyond even the toughest measures adopted by states such as New York, New Jersey and Maine and much further than the guidance set by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for travelers returning from the afflicted region. “I have one responsibility and that is the security of this country,” Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Thursday. “And that means the security of our men and women and their families.” He called the Pentagon’s step a “smart, wise, prudent, disciplined, science-oriented decision.” Yet, the policy far surpasses federal government standards. The CDC recommends that only people at the highest risk — those who’ve had direct contact with an Ebola patient’s body fluids, for example — avoid commercial travel or large public gatherings for 21 days. Anyone who develops symptoms would be hospitalized immediately. The differences are partly a function of the military’s unique role, the constitutional authorities granted to individual states and the federal government’s desire not to discourage health care workers from volunteering to help confront the deadly Ebola virus at its source in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. But the varying approaches have raised questions about whether and how different levels and agencies of government are coordinating the response to Ebola in the United States. For now, the questions are mostly academic. Only one Ebola patient has died in the U.S. and he contracted the disease in Liberia. Two nurses who were infected by that patient have recovered and have been declared Ebola-free. One doctor who recently returned from treating Ebola patients in West Africa has been diagnosed with the virus and is being treated at a hospital in New York. WHAT ARE THE VARIOUS PROTOCOLS? n The Pentagon: Returning troops would have to undergo a 21-day quarantine even though their jobs do not require them to be in contact with Ebola victims. The military facilities could be in the U.S. or overseas. Already a group of 42 returning soldiers, including a two-star Army general, are in supervised isolation at a military base in Vicenza, Italy. n The states: Not all have developed responses, but among those who have New York, New Jersey, California, Illinois, Georgia, Florida and Maine are imposing 21-day quarantines for health care workers and other travelers from West Africa who had direct contact with people with the Ebola virus but show no symptoms of the disease. n The federal government: The CDC recommends 21-day isolation and monitoring for people who show no symptoms but who have had direct contact with an Ebola patient’s bodily fluids, either through exposure or a needle prick, for instance. For those who have been in close contact with patients but have not been directly exposed to a patient’s fluids, the CDC recommends daily self-monitoring for 21 days. Those recommendations are supposed to serve as guidelines for state policies. WHY IS THE PENTAGON STRICTER? Defense officials maintain that the Pentagon rules are necessary because even through troops will not treat Ebola patients, they will spend more time in the Ebola hot zone than health Medicare bought meds for dead people By Ricardo AlonsoZaldivar Associated Press WASHINGTON — Call it drugs for the departed: Medicare’s prescription program kept paying for costly medications even after patients were dead. The problem was traced back to a head-scratching bureaucratic rule that’s now getting a second look. A report coming out Friday from the Health and Human Services Department’s inspector general says the Medicare rule allows payment for prescriptions filled up to 32 days after a patient’s death — at odds with the program’s basic principles, not to mention common sense. “Drugs for deceased beneficiaries are clearly not medically indicated, which is a requirement for (Medicare) coverage,” the IG report said. It urged immediate changes to eliminate or restrict the payment policy. Medicare said it’s working on a fix. Investigators examined claims from 2012 for a tiny sliver of Medicare drugs — medications to treat HIV, the virus that causes AIDS — and then cross-referenced them with death records. They found that the program paid for drugs for 158 beneficiaries after they were already dead. The cost to taxpayers: $292,381, an average of $1,850 have been diverted to the underground market for prefor each beneficiary. Medicare’s “current practic- scription medicines. es allowed most of these payments to occur,” the report Helping Meet With said. Our Of 348 prescriptions dis- Terrill P alatka pensed for the dead beneficiaE volve ries, nearly half were filled more than a week after the FREE patient died. Sometimes mul- FOR MAYOR, CITY OF PALATKA FOOD tiple prescriptions were filled Saturday, Nov. 1 on behalf of a single dead per12 - 6 p.m. son. Investigators don’t know at Booker Turner Park what happened to the medica322 N. 10th Street, Palatka tions obtained on behalf of Political Advertisement Paid For and Approved By Terrill L. Hill For Mayor, City of Palatka dead people, but some may HILL In Memory of Wallace LeVeille Our family chain has been broken, little did we know that God would take you so soon that morn. That all your family was there for you. You did not go alone - it broke our hearts as you will be missed greatly. A part of each of us went with you, Sunrise 4-22-28 mainly our love. You left Sunset: 11-01-07 us on our oldest Son’s Birthday. It reminds us that life can be short for all of us. You are greatly missed and will be in my thoughts for the rest of my life. You have gone to a better place where you are free of pain. The morning you left us the chimes were ringing music as a new life had been born. The Lord was calling you home to be with your family and the Angels. With loving memories. Betty (Wife) Fred, Sharon, Kenny, Wally, Jenne and Richard, Your children; also Grandchildren and Great-Grandchildren care workers. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the U.S. troops comprise the largest portion of the U.S. contingent in Liberia and will be staying there for six months at a time, compared with the 30-day to 60-day stays for U.S. civilian health care workers. Pentagon officials also note that the troop presence in West Africa will likely grow to up to 4,000 over time. “Being in the hot zone is like being in a war zone; the longer you’re there the greater the chances of being injured or killed,” said James G. Hodge Jr., a professor of public health law at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University. WHY NOT THE SAME FOR CIVILIANS? It’s a question some military spouses are certainly asking. Rebekah Sanderlin, a board member of the Military Family Advisory Network, said she hasn’t heard complaints about the 21-day policy for service members. But, she added: “There is a lot of confusion over the quarantine policy because the military and civilian guidelines do not match. I do think if a quarantine period is justified for one group, it is justified for all.” Hodge, who is western director of the Network for Public Health Law, notes that service members, unlike civilians, can have their liberties curtailed. As White House spokesman Josh Earnest noted this week, “There might be some members of the military who think that the haircut that’s required may not be their best, but that’s a haircut that they get every couple of weeks because it is in the best interest of their unit and it maintains unit cohesion, and that is a policy of the military.” President Barack Obama has urged states to consider how their policies will affect the willingness of civilian doctors and nurses to volunteer for Ebola work in West Africa. Unlike those civilians, Obama said this week, the troops are not there voluntarily. “It’s part of their mission that’s been assigned to them by their commanders and ultimately by me, the commander in chief,” he said. HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE AFFECTED? The biggest Pentagon deployment is in Liberia with 1,000 troops. There are about 120 in Senegal, where they operate a staging base for operations in Liberia. Dempsey said Thursday that the troop presence is intended to grow to about 4,000. As for civilians, since the CDC began tracking travel from West Africa, it has detected fewer than 100 people a day entering the United States, most of them U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents, according to CDC Director Thomas Frieden. St. James United Methodist 35 Annual Bazaar th November 6 & 7, 2014 Thursday, 9 a.m.-7 p.m. • Friday, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Plant Booth • Bakery Booth • Book Booth Handcrafted Items • Country Store - NEW THIS YEAR Art Gallery • Pet Booth • Antique Booth Mission Donations Drawing for Beautiful Prizes St. James Famous Chicken Dinner Thursday • 5 p.m.-7 p.m. TICKETS AVAILABLE ~ CALL 328-1461 Come and see your friends Soup & Sandwich Lunch - Thursday & Friday 11 a.m.-1 p.m. All Proceeds Benefit the Missions Outreach of the United Methodist Women 386-328-1461 400 Reid Street • Palatka (across from the Putnam County Courthouse) Remembering Mama on her Birthdate, Nov. 1st Serving Putnam County Since 1977 WE PACK IT! WE SHIP IT! 1608 Reid St. Palatka 325-5942 Open Mon. - Fri. 8:30 a.m to 5:30 p.m. Pet of the Day KELLEY Nelma Lee Douglas We thought of her with love and tears today, but that is nothing new. We did the same yesterday, each day and night before that too. We think of her in silence, we often cry out her name. We have things she loved, and her picture in a frame. But Mama's memory is our keepsake, Lord, from it may we never part. For You have her in Your keeping, we only have her memory in our hearts. Many times we have wanted her, for the sound of her voice, we long, If only love could have saved her, She never would have gone. Hi I’m Kelley, a 1 year old female hound mix. I’m a friendly dog hoping that this homeless thing is just temporary. I would love a family who will be as loyal to me as I will be to them, and if they have a fenced yard where we could play that would be great! All of our animals are spayed/neutered, microchipped and current on their age appropriate vaccinations. If you can give this pet a home, contact the Humane Society at 325-1587 or visit the shelter at 112 Norma St. in Hollister. The Humane Society of Northeast Florida is run entirely on donations. Ad Brought To You As A Service Of The Palatka Daily News 110114a6.indd 1 It broke our hearts to lose her, But she did not go alone, For a part of us went with her.... The day the Lord called our Mama home. So missed, so loved by her children, Linda, Geary, and gail “Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?” ~ John 11:25-26 10/31/14 12:09 PM WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT'S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. CRETE MONUMENT SET ON THE NORTHERLY LINE OF ROSELLE AVENUE AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID LOT 27, THENCE RUN WEST ALONG THE NORTH LINE OF ROSELLE AVENUE 57.0 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. Palatka Daily News Classifieds 312-5200 100 ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT Driver DRIVER TRAINEES! GET PAID CDL TRAINING NOW! Learn to drive for Stevens Transport. NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! New Drivers earn $900/wk + Benefits! Carrier covers cost! Be trained & based locally! Now Offering New Regional Routes in FL! 1-877-214-3624 Needed: Class B CDL driver/laborer. MUST pass criminal bkgd check. no felonies. Must pass drug screen & MUST have clean Driver License. Please apply in person at 1046 Air Park Rd., Green Cove Springs, Fl. 32043 EOE Drivers: $5,000 Sign-On Bonus! Great Pay! Consistent Freight, Great Miles on this Regional Account. Werner Enterprises: 1-855-975-4527 Drivers, CDL-A: Home EVERY Weekend! ALL Loaded/Empty Miles Paid! Dedicated Southeast! Or Walk Away Lease, No Money Down. For more info – Corporate: 1-855-971-8523 Jacksonville: 855-979-4508 Dental Dental Assistant Submit resume to: S. Wilbur DMD 800 Zeagler Dr., Ste. 420, Palatka. Medical PT Medical Assistant needed w/2 yrs exp. Good salary, great hrs. Fax resume: 326-8436 Wanted: Registered Nurse in Pomona Park. PT/Flex Time. Call 407-277-5694/929-4030 General Apartment Maintenance St. Johns River Apts Palatka. jobs@flynn management.com Call for appt.: 386-325-7662 BEHAVIORAL HEALTH TECHNICIAN - Daisy Adams Center is seeking a BHT to run daily groups for intellectually and behaviorally challenged adults. Bachelorʼs degree w/ major in social sciences field required. Schedule is 8am4:30pm, M-F. FT w/ benefits. Apply in person MF at 1735 State Road 16, St. Augustine, FL 32084, between 9am & 4pm. Drug-Free Workplace. Chemical Operator, exp. in carpentry & vacuum pumps. Must be dependable & have own transportation. Call 325-5504 10am-3pm only. SATURDAY.indd 1 HOUSEPARENTS Singles and Couples needed to care for behaviorally challenged boys at St. Augustine Youth Services. FT, live-in position, 3 1/2 days per week. Must stay on campus day and night throughout entire shift. HS diploma or GED, FL driver's license with safe record, background screening and 2 years experience working with children required. Good pay and benefits. Must be available for in-person interview. Fax resume to (904) 825-0604, email to [email protected], or visit www.sayskids.org for online application. EOE/DFWP. Rewarding Career Do you want to make a difference in someoneʼs life every day working for a top-rated agency? Do you have a strong mind & body? Do you want a career, not just a job? Come to 1735 SR 16, St. Augustine, FL 32084 to start your new career caring for intellectually challenged adults. Apply in person between 9am & 4pm, M-F. Driverʼs license required; drug free workplace. The City of Palatka Waste Water Treatment Plant is accepting applications for Operator Trainee. Applicant must have a high school diploma or equivalent. Knowledge of pumps & electrical systems helpful. Must possess a valid Florida driver's license, & have normal color vision. Must be able to lift up to 50lbs, able to work overtime & shift schedules. An applicant must be able to pass a pre-employment physical, drug screen & background check. Pay rate is $9.73/hr. Position is open until filled. Applications are available at City of Palatka City Hall, 201 N. 2nd St. Palatka. EOE/DFWP FINANCIAL CASE NO. 14-0356-CP Div: 53 IN RE: THE ESTATE OF DEVERE DALE MILLS, Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of DEVERE DALE MILLS, deceased, File Number 2013-CP, is pending in the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 410 St. Johns Avenue, P.O. Box 758, Palatka, Florida 32178. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate, including unmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, on whom a copy of this notice is served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate, including u nmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT'S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this Notice is October 25, 2014. Attorney for Personal Representative: By: /s/ George A. Young Florida Bar No. 0051728 222 North Third Street Palatka, FL 32177 (386) 328-1111 Personal Representative: By: /s/ Debra LeNell Hessler 1406 Button Lane San Antonio, Texas 78232 10/25/14, 11/1/14 Legal No. 00028194 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR PUTNAM COUNTY, FLORIDA. CASE NO. 2009CA000679 BANK OF AMERICA, PLAINTIFF, MARK KIRKLAND, ET AL. DEFENDANT(S). Legal Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 7TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR PUTNAM COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 14-259 CP AXMX IN RE: ESTATE OF JAMES MITCHELL JR., Deceased. NOTICE TO CREDITORS The administration of the estate of JAMES MITCHELL JR., Deceased, whose date of death was January 30, 2014, is pending in the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 410 St. Johns Ave., Palatka, FL 32177. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT'S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is November 1, 2014. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: ST. JOHNS AUTO BODY INC. gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 11/13/2014, 12:00pm at 1609 ST JOHNS AVE PALATKA, FL 32177-4438, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. ST. JOHNS AUTO BODY INC. reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids 1J4GZ58S6VC501742 1997 JEEP 11/1/14 Legal No. 00027961 The Putnam County Animal Services Advisory Committee will meet on Thursday, November 6, 2014 in the Administration Conference Room, 2509 Crill Avenue, Suite 200 at 8:30 a.m. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS PUTNAM COUNTY, FLORIDA Tabitha Lassiter Executive Assistant to the County Administrator 11/1/14 Legal No. 00028411 MERCHANDISE ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. VS. LEGALS 11/1/14, 11/8/14 Legal No. 00028313 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to the Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated October 27, 2014, in the above action, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash at Putnam County, Florida, on December 2, 2014, at 11:00AM, at South door of courthouse - 410 St. Johns Ave., Palatka, FL 32177 for the following described property: LOT 26, BLOCK 8, 5POINTS SUBDIVISION, AS PER PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 4, PAGE 2, PUBLIC RECORDS OF PUTNAM COUNTY, FLORIDA. SAID LAND BEING ALSO DESCRIBED AS BEGINNING AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF LOT 25 OF BLOCK 8 OF SAID SUBDIVISION, AND RUNNING THENCE NORTH 129.8 FEET TO THE ORIGINAL CONCRETE MONUMENT AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF LOT 25, THENCE EAST 112.3 FEET TO THE ORIGINAL CONCRETE MONUMENT SET AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF LOT 27, BLOCK 8 OF SAID SUBDIVISION, THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY 141.8 FEET TO THE ORIGINAL CONCRETE MONUMENT SET ON THE NORTHERLY LINE OF ROSELLE AVENUE AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID LOT 27, THENCE RUN WEST ALONG THE NORTH LINE OF ROSELLE AVENUE 57.0 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim within sixty (60) days after the sale. The Court, in its discretion, may enlarge the time of the sale. Notice of the changed time of sale shall be published as provided herein. Fri & Sat 8am-? 2524 Gulf Dr., Name brand clothing & shoes, What knots, Hshld & Misc Fri & Sat 8am-? 6105 W. 4th Manor. Nikon Cool Pix L120, Bill Wesling framed print Bobwhite quail & wagon wheel, Brother sewing machine CF6000i NIB, Keyboard bench NIB, Dept. 56 Snow Village, Christmas items, collectible glassware & pottery, hshld items, misc. Fri & Sat 9a-1p 117 Moody Ln. Palatka. Corner of Silver Lake & Moody Rd. Follow signs. Interlachen Area VFD Sat. 9a-2p, 202 Commonwealth Ave. Booths available 386-972-5059 Moving Sale Fri & Sat 8a-4p 112 Dogwood St. Interl. Furn., sewing notions, jewelry, tools, freezer, lots of misc. No Need to go to Pomona Park! 3 family sale, 208 Husson Ave. Sat., 8a-2p Good Prices Palatka Church of God 3704 Crill Ave, Fri & Sat 7a-3p, All proceed benefit the Women's Mininstry Pomona Park Annual Everybody's Having a Yard Sale! Nov. 1st 386-649-9293 60 gallon gas water heater, $150 OBO. 386-684-6223 Building Materials Three sliding windows, white vinyl, 48x54, $100 for all. 386-328-9383 Fruits & Vegetables Variety of Greens starting @ $5/bag, $3.50/bunch. Plus lots of other vegetables. Sunshine Produce, corner of Hwy 207 & Louis Broer Rd. E. Palatka. Fuel Oil & Firewood R&J Wood Service Blackjack Oak, Oak, $75/load delivered. 386-684-3116 Furniture & Upholstery 2 dk brown swivel rockers, NEW CONDITION! Paid $350 ea., sacrifice for $175 ea. 328-4118 Dark maple antique table w/2 pullout leafs & 4 chairs, sits 4-6, $150. 386-328-9383 Mattresses: Thick plush pillow-top or tight-top, all sizes. Cheapest prices! Pomona Park 336-1544 Garage Sales *1123 So. SR19 (crn of Horseman Club Rd & SR19) Sat., 9-1, dryer, sm freezer, drill press, bikes, misc hshld & more 2-Family, Sat. Only 8-12 LOTS of Toys, Baby items, Books, Hshld & Misc. 103 W Mockingbird (Underwoood Estates) Palatka. No early birds please. 9a-5p Fri & Sat 333 Lake Como Dr, Pomona Park, Wheelchairs, misc. hshld & much more Estate Sale Fri & Sat 8-3 109 & 110 Carolyn Ct. off Lake St. Pomona Park. Too much to list! Drop spreader, works goo,d big wheels and spreader settings, $25. 386-684-2529 Firearm engraving tapes, $500 value, only asking $25 for all 7 tapes. 386-698-2226 Janette Oke books Love Comes Softly & A Prairie Legacy, box sets. All for $15. 386-328-6383 Large television, works with converter box, $25. 386-467-7020 Annual Yard Sale Sat 8-? 415 Washington St. 1st Congregational Church Call Lou: 386-684-9309 HUGE Yard Sale! Fri & Sat 8a-? 108 Michener Ave., Satsuma. 937-1799 for directions. Thurs, Fri & Sat 9a-3p, 114 Musket Dr. Satsuma, off Rt. 309. Machinery & Tools '08 Kubota Tractor w/ front end loader B2320HSD 4WD w/ bucket only 270 hrs, $9200 904-697-8558 7ft scraper blade, $350. 3 gang rip saw w/rubber covered power table PTO driven, $1,250. 6ft tandem 1-way Taylor way disk w/2 tired hyd. lift, heavy duty, $1,250. 9ft Tye no-till seeder, hyd. lift, 2 seed boxes, good cond., $4,800. Approx. 300 gallon molasses transport tank w/metal 12ft trailer, $650. 386-328-7481 Miscellaneous Blue bath set: tub, toilet, 2 sinks. All for $75. 386-325-5591 Camping Equip. Portable 15x15 grill 8 -1lb tanks $35, 15" fan on stand $25, Coleman cooler/warmer 5.5lt 120v to 12v converter $35, 386-325-4118 Garden tub, $100. 386-684-6223 Medical office space for lease. Exc. location near PCMC. 1st month's rent free. $12-$13 per sqft based on lease period. Approx. 1500sqft. 386-328-1117 Homes 3BR/2BA, approx. 1900 sqft, CH/A, lots of extras, lg lot. $800/m + Dep. George's Lake area. 386-659-2791 Palatka 2/2 remodeled, tiled floors, gas firepl, fenced, conv. to river, $650+Dep 386-328-3956 Scanner, USB like new in box, software included, $25. 386-684-2529 Mobile Homes Sharp microwave, works good, $15. 386-325-4118 Student size desk with 4 drawers, $25. 386-325-5591 Two 5-6ft Japanese Plums (Loquats), both for $25. 386-325-7649 Sporting Goods Deer corn, whole cob, $50/Bobcat scoop, $6/50lb bag. Bulls Hit Ranch & Farm M-F 7-5 3BR/2BA MH w/river access in E. Palatka, $750/m + 1st, last & sec. dep. 904-697-8558 8 chickens, large rabbit pen & two small cages, All FREE. 386-546-1215 Hay for sale in Pomona Park, starting @ $40. 386-649-0867 Goatman accepts your surplus pumpkins for animal feed after Halloween. 1665 S. Hwy 19. Yorkshire Boar, 1.5 years old, approximately 200lbs, $150 negotiable. 386-328-6694 Free Animals FREE 6 mo/old black lab mix to good home. Playful, good w/ other dogs. 386-972-9740 Free kittens to good homes. 386-624-5075 Lost & Found Animals FREE Kittens to good Home, Spayed & Neutered, Please call 386-336-1955 If you've LOST a Pet. check out the Dogs & Cats being held at Putnam County Animal Services @ http://animal.pcso.us 386-329-0396 FOR RENT REAL ESTATE Price Reduced! Canal-Front CB Home, straight to the St. Johns River. 2 or 3BR/2BA, total remodel. New bulkhead, dock, boathouse w/lift. New appliances, A/C, doors, windows, tile & wood floors. New electrical, custom cabinets & more! Call for details & pics, $198K OBO. Some owner fin. 352-278-4644 Private 2/1 SW w/ boat dock, ramp. Rent $450/m or sell $25K. Possible owner fin. 352-817-8525 Orange Springs area. RECREATIONAL Boats & Accessories '02 18ft Tahoe pontoon boat, '02 50HP 4-stroke Honda, '04 Magic Tilt trailer, $5,200. 329-5584 FOR SALE 14' John Boat, 60" beam, 25hp lec. start 4 stroke Mercury trolling motor, battery, trailer, $2,500. 386-325-1740 REAL ESTATE Exceptional Canal Lot to Dunns Creek bulkhead. Paved Rd. Cleared, surveyed, fenced, $36.5K. 386-325-2576 Homes Livestock Waterfront Interlachen near Post Office: 3/2 central AC $525/m + deposit. 386-546-5335 Acreage / Lots LIVESTOCK & SUPPLIES Interlachen, Satsuma, Owner fin., low down pymt. Starting @ $25K, 386-559-0660 2BR/1BA Cooper Lake, Interlachen area, fenced yard, deck, CH/A, $495/m, 352-317-5880 PETS & SUPPLIES Sat. 9a-5p 112 Acosta Creek Dr. Satsuma. Cleaned Grandma's attic. Antiques & much more! 4 Family Sat., 8am-12, 819 N Hwy 17, 2 mi past W. River Rd, Pal., Baby items, Lots of Everything Comm. space for rent: 2417 Crill Ave. 1200SF CH/A. Available 11/1. $500/m 904-742-9761 Maytag stackable washer & dryer. Dryer works, washer doesn't drain. $25 for both. 916-7955 Sat 11/1. 8a-3p @ Hi Level, 3821 Reid St. Vendors welcome. Bring your own table. Sat. 8a-? Multi-Family 270 Peniel Church Rd. Furniture to toys & everything in between! Appliances Crab trap, $15. 386-328-6383 2BR/1BA on Cooper Lake, Interlachen area off Hwy 20. RENT: $550/m or SELL: $49K possible owner finance. 352-317-5880 800 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR PUTNAM COUNTY, FLORIDA Fri & Sat 8a-2p 113 Rogers Ln. off Pine Tree @ Stokes Landing off Hwy 19 S. Too much to list! Business / Commercial Mobile Home With Land 2 or 3BR/1BA CH/A, 1200sf, alarm sys., storage shed, 120 E. Oakhill Dr. $82K. 386-336-2649 FREE LIST Foreclosures, Short Sales, & Great Deals! Starting @ $18K & up. Call Sunstate Realty, 386-916-8328 2005 Pontoon Boat 18' w/trailer & Yamaha 60HP motor, full covers w/many extras. Runs great! $7,500. Call 386-986-9091 to see! Outboard motors & parts for sale, many sizes, good prices. We trade! Pomona Park 336-1544 Campers / Travel Trailers Dutchman 2008 29ft w/ slideout, like new, $9600 904-697-8558 Motorcycles / ATV / Accessories '07 Yamaha 1854cc, blue, front shield, garage-kept, $6,300. 904-697-8558 lv msg 2006 Suzuki Boulevard 800, C50T, 25K miles, asking $3,800. 386-649-8453 Hastings, Harris St. Spacious 6BR/2BA Home, 2078SF, Fixer Upper. Lease To Own, $1K DN, $473/m, $55K. 855-664-8357 Homes for sale Palatka, E. Palatka, Owner fin., low dn pymt. Starting @ $40K, 386-559-0660 3/2 House, CBS, Interlachen. 1 fenced acre, Rent $600/m Sale $100K. Serv. animals only. 561-502-1531 Investment Property, sold as is 814 N. 20th St. Pal. 3Br/1Ba, 2 porches. $7K cash. 386-336-1845 Mobile Homes Affordable living, quiet, Senior park, $3,500$8,500, 386-698-3648 lakecrescentflorida.com For Sale or Rent 2/1 $450/m + $450 sec or $13.9K 904-687-7212 FREE LIST Foreclosures, Short Sales, & Great Deals! Starting @ $14K & up. Call Sunstate Realty, 386-916-8328 2007 Honda 1300 VTX, 36K miles, 1 owner, runs great, just cleaned & serviced. Extras: Leather Mustang seats; fiberglass saddlebags; foot boards; windshield. $3,295 OBO. 386-467-9290/546-1879 TRANSPORTATION 900 The Classifieds bring together buyers and sellers every day. 1 yr old teacher needed for childcare facility. 40hrs a plus. Apply @ 405 Pine St. Fax resume to 386-326-1612. 11/5/14, 11/12/14 Legal No. 00028417 If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact Court Administration at 386-2576096, 125 E. Orange Avenue, Suite 300, Daytona Beach, FL 32114 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. Corona portable kerosene heater & 5-gallon gas can, $25 for both. 386-325-7459 Barrington Apts Offering Specials on 2BRs. 386-325-0512 www.barrington apartments.org 700 STUFF? No phone calls, please. 11/1/14, 11/8/14 Legal No. By: /s/ Kelly Purcell Deputy Clerk of the Court Black computer desk, 43 1/4 long x 19 1/2 wide x 30 1/4 tall, $25. 386-546-7000 Apartments 550 NEED Apply in person: Circulation Dept. Palatka Daily News 1825 St. Johns Ave. 300 STUFF? Contracted position, Tuesday thru Saturday, approximately 2:00am-6:00am. Need reliable, economic transportation, current drivers license & insurance. 350 GOT TAKING APPLICATIONS NOW! Personal Representative: Cavonna Mitchell DATED: October 27, 2014 Fri & Sat 8-? 222Round Lake Rd. Safe, jewelry, lamps, Christmas villages, Christmas items, knives, too much to list! 50 new & used red & mix color building bricks, $25 for all. 386-325-7649 560 PART-TIME NEWSPAPER DELIVERY INTERLACHEN Attorney for Personal Representative: Scott R. Bugay, Esquire Florida Bar No. 5207 Citicentre, Suite P600 290 NW 165th Street Miami, FL 33169 Telephone: (305) 956-9040 Fax: (305) 945-2905 P r i m a r y E m a i l : [email protected] Secondary Email: [email protected] Everyone's Having A Yard Sale & So Are We! Saturday, 237 E. Main St. Pomona Park. Furn., collectibles, jewelry & more! Call Scott: 386-983-2763 600 GREAT WAY TO EARN SOME EXTRA CASH! The date of first publication of this notice is November 1, 2014. Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim within sixty (60) days after the sale. The Court, in its discretion, may enlarge the time of the sale. Notice of the changed time of sale shall be published as provided herein. 400 Experienced Granite counter top installers & fabricators. Palatka. 904-838-6030 200 CALL CLASSIFIEDS TODAY • 312-5200 7 A C L A S S I F I E D S • PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Day Laborer needed: George's Lake area. Yard work & maintenance. Own transportation req'd. 386-659-2791 Trucks & Accessories '02 Chevy S10 reg. cab, 4cyl auto, cold A/C, AM/FM CD, exc. cond., asking $3,495 OBO. '03 GMC Sonoma ext. cab, 3rd door, AM/FM CD, cold A/C, exc. cond., $3,695 OBO. 386-684-6397/972-9860 All fiberglass toolbox for small truck, $150. 386-325-4118 For Sale: 2008 Isuzu I290 extended cab pickup, low mileage. Call 386-336-6666 Items $25 or Less 16 hunting tapes, $10 for all. 386-698-2226 20" TV, works good, $15. 386-325-4118 25" TV, $25. 386-227-4028 DATED: October 27, 2014 By: /s/ Kelly Purcell Deputy Clerk of the Court If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact Court Administration at 386-2576096, 125 E. Orange Avenue, Suite 300, Daytona Beach, FL 32114 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711. 11/1/14, 11/8/14 Legal No. 00028313 203 S. Highway 17 East Palatka, FL 32131 Call 386.325.9888 10/31/14 3:54 PM Suspect’s capture brings relief 8 A PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 By Kathy Matheson and Michael Rubinkam Associated Press MILFORD, Pa. — For 48 days, Eric Frein was everywhere and nowhere, supposedly sighted again and again, only to melt back into the woods in a dangerous game of cat-and-mouse. So on Friday, as state police paraded the gaunt and battered-looking former fugitive in front of a courthouse, residents were relieved to see him in the flesh. It was proof that the harrowing seven-week manhunt in the Pocono Mountains for the suspected cop-killer was finally over, and things could start getting back to normal. “It’s just been nerve-wracking, not knowing where he was, what his next step was, what he was going to do,” said Jody Welsh. Onlookers shouted “Are you sorry?” and “Why did you do it?” as the survivalist and marksman was led from court the morning after his capture near an abandoned hangar. Hundreds of local, state and federal law officers had taken part in the manhunt. Frein, 31, had a gash on the bridge of his nose and a scrape over his left eye as he listened to charges that he killed Cpl. Bryon Dickson and critically wounded Trooper Alex Douglass in a sniper attack outside their state police barracks Sept. 12. U.S. marshals who took him into custody said he suffered the injuries while they had him down on the pavement. He did not have a lawyer and was not asked to enter a plea to first-degree murder and other charges, including possession of two pipe bombs discovered during the search. He remained jailed without bail. A preliminary hearing was set for Nov. 12. Pike County District Attorney Raymond Tonkin, who said he would seek the death penalty, told reporters that Frein’s capture Thursday evening brought a measure of comfort to the region after an “unimaginable loss of unspeakable proportions.” “We have now started to find the answers that the community desired in this case,” Tonkin said. Troopers questioned Frein, but authorities would not disclose what he told them or discuss a possible motive. Authorities have said Frein had expressed anti-law enforcement views online and to people who knew him. Joe Fagan was the first in line to enter the courtroom. “To be honest, I just wanted to see what evil looked like,” he said. “He had zero emotion.” Until his capture, Frein had some people beginning to wonder if law enforcement was up to the task, given the rugged terrain and the evident skill with which he eluded dogs, thermal-imaging cameras and teams of heavily armed officers. Sporadic sightings of the fugitive kept entire communities on edge: A woman claimed to have seen him outside a high school. A local cop spotted a mysterious man in green, prompting an intensive search that came up empty. There were other sightings in which Frein supposedly made himself visible to law enforcement, then vanished. “To see him just walk past me was just a sigh of relief that he’s not in the woods,” said Welsh, who made sure she was on hand Friday as state police led Frein from his arraignment. “That everybody can continue on with their lives.” In fact, with Frein behind bars, plans for trick-or-treating in Barrett Township were back on, and hunting and trapping were given the goahead to resume. A team of federal marshals stumbled across Frein during a sweep about 30 miles from the barracks where he allegedly opened fire, authorities said. He had no gun on him, but had weapons stashed in the hangar, state police said. The marshals who captured Frein said he had a “defeated” look on his face when they took him into custody. A three-man team had spotted Frein and sneaked up on him, taking him by surprise. Scott Malkowski, who helped make the arrest, said Frein made no attempt to flee and didn’t put up a fight. “He had nowhere to go. There is nothing he could’ve done,” Malkowski said, adding: “From what I saw, he felt defeated because we’d won. We’d defeated him.” After the marshals turned him over to state police, Frein was placed in Dickson’s handcuffs and driven in Dickson’s squad car to the Blooming Grove barracks. Authorities said they were trying to reconstruct his time on the run. They believe Frein broke into cabins and other places for food and shelter, and he evidently found time to shave — he had a neatly trimmed goatee when he was caught. State police Lt. Col George Bivens put the cost of the manhunt at about $10 million. Rep lends support to colleague Associated Press KALAMAZOO, Mich. — South Florida U.S. Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart is lending support in the final campaign days to fellow Republican and immigration reform backer U.S. Rep. Fred Upton. Upton represents Kalamazoo and is facing a surprisingly tight race. DiazBalart joined Upton and local Kalamazoo leaders Thursday for a bipartisan immigration round-table. Diaz-Balart’s heavily Republican district is considered safe. It stretches from the western edges of Miami to Naples, including a swath of the Everglades. Diaz-Balart told Michigan voters he is grateful for allies like Upton who have worked to fix what he termed as the nation’s broken immigration system. The two congressmen were among 11 GOP House members who voted against a measure last August to end an Obama administration pro- protection to certain youth in gram giving temporary legal the country illegally. Safe Touch Consultant VOTE Terrill Helping Our P alatka E volve FOR MAYOR, CITY OF PALATKA Removal of Red Light Cameras VOTE TODAY! 386-546-0626 Death Notices Frankie R. Kemp Frankie R. Kemp, 90, of Orlando, passed on Friday, Oct. 24, 2014. Frankie was born on March 12, 1924, in Frostproof, Fla. to the late Rueben and Anna Raulerson. Frankie loved to read and could sew and crochet with the best of them. Survivors are her daughters, Esther N. Plummer and husband, Wallace, of Orlando, Fla. and Doranna Kemp of Texas; and grandchildren, Michael and Kevin Plummer of Orlando. Graveside was held at Palatka Memorial Gardens. Frances “Peaches” Williams Frances Lee “Peaches” Williams, 60, of Palatka, longtime Putnam County Sheriff’s Office corrections deputy and program coordinator, peacefully reached the eternal shores on Thursday, Oct. 30, 2014 at Haven Hospice Roberts Care Center following a brief illness. Arrangements are entrusted to Karl N. Flagg Serenity Memorial Chapel. Re-Elect Allegra Kitchens K K K K K K K K K K K K •Life-long Palatka resident •Palatka Commissioner, Group 2, 2006 to present •Worked 36 years for Putnam County Property Appraiser’s Office “I Do My Homework and Represent You!” Political Advertisement Paid For and Approved By Orlando;Southern Air;B27550;5.25x10.5-4c (14Fa-Early) Terrill L. Hill For Mayor, City of Palatka Paid for and approved by Allegra Kitchens, Non-Partisan, For City Commission Group 2 VISIT US AT LIKE US SAFETOUCH.COM Dr. Larisa Malykh Primary Care Board Certified in Internal Medicine Accepts Medicare, BCBS, UHC, Humana, Tricare and most other commercial insurance plans. NEW PATIENTS WELCOME! Larisa Malykh, M.D. Appointments 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. daily 6100 St. Johns Ave., Suite 4-D • Palatka, FL 32177 L 386-329-3939 Schedule online at: www.individualizedmed.com RE-ELECT PHIL EARY PALATKA CITY COMMISSION, GROUP 4 Experienced Leadership for Palatka’s Future GOALS: • Completion of Riverfront Redevelopment • Enhanced Police and Fire Protection • REDUCTION in property taxes • Revitialized Neighborhoods ACCOMPLISHMENTS: • Instrumental in Riverfront Redevelopment Grants • New City Fire Truck • Airport Expansion • New Downtown Hampton Inn • Riverfront Environmental Center (Groundbreaking coming soon!) • Golf Course Improvement Grants All of the above accomplishments provide jobs for Palatka! TRUST. IT’S MORE THAN A WORD TO US. IT’S OUR WORD TO YOU. Let us earn your trust today — call Southern Air. RECEIVE UP TO A 1,700 REBATE $ * with the purchase of a qualifying Lennox® home comfort system. OR SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE QUALIFICATIONS: SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. • 28 years experience in public policy planning and land use for local, state government and private sector. • 15 years lobbying state legislature and congress • 18 years a division and department administrator • Endorsed by Palatka Professional Firefighters MEMBERSHIP: • American Institute of Certified Planners • Florida and American Planning Associations • Board of Directors, Florida 4-H Foundation • Former Member of Rodeheaver Boys Ranch, Board of Directors • St. Mark’s Episcopal Church EDUCATION - GRADUATE: Palatka South High School • St. Johns River Community College University of Florida Political advertisement paid for and approved by Phil Leary, non-partisan for City Commission, Group 4. (386) 328-3212 www.southernair.net 3849 Reid Street, Palatka, FL 32177 CAC058634 OFFER EXPIRES 11/28/2014. *System rebate offers range from $300 to $1,700. See your local Lennox dealer for details. © 2014 Lennox Industries Inc. Lennox dealers include independently owned and operated businesses. One offer available per qualifying purchase. Dealer-Trust-14Fa-4c-Early.indd 64 110114a8.indd 1 Obituaries are paid advertising written by funeral homes based upon information provided by families. Death notices are brief announcements published at no charge. Memories and condolences may be shared with Frankie’s family at www.wattsfuneralhomes.com. Watts Funeral Home and Cremation Center was entrusted to the arrangements. Palatka City Commission Group 2 HILL Abe Alexander Obituaries 8/6/14 4:43 PM 10/31/14 9:44 PM Middleton-Burney School plans to honor veterans I t’s such a nice gesture to see people take the time to recognize our veterans by holding a special ceremony in their honor. That’s what’s happening at Middleton-Burney Elementary School on Monday, Nov. 10. I received an email Wednesday from music specialist Phyllis Stoneman from the school asking that the newspaper put the word out inviting area veterans to participate. For those who can attend, they invite them to dress to represent their branch of the military if possible. All veterans their families are invited to participate. According to a news release from the school, the first program will begin at 2:30 p.m. with a parade of veterans through the school hallways, followed by a multi-media musical performance by the third-grade students.” The school is asking participating veterans to arrive at the school by 2:15 p.m. They also ask that veterans who plan to attend to call the school in advance by Thursday to let them know they are coming to help them better prepare for the program. The school is at 1020 Huntington Road, Crescent City. For details or to confirm attendance, call 698-1238. The celebration will not stop with the afternoon program, but instead will have a second celebration beginning at 6 p.m. in the school cafeteria. The release said there would be a short informational meeting for parents at 6 p.m. followed by the musical revue, “Let’s Sing America.” The evening program is open to the public and admission is free. “This music program is the same as the daytime performance and will provide another opportunity for our parents and the public to attend,” Stoneman said. Stoneman also added that the program has a two-fold effect for the school’s students. “These events provide an educational opportunity for our students while honoring our veterans,” she said. [email protected] CURRENTS LILLIAN BROWN TRISHA MURPHY LIFE Styles SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2014 PAGE 1B WEST PUTNAM ‘An Evening With The Authors’ was a success I t was a moving and delightful “An Evening With The Authors,” which I had the privilege to attend. Hosted by the GFWC Woman’s Club of Palatka and Stephen Crowley of “One Book One Putnam,” as well as Putnam County Library System, the presentation of authors was an evening that will remain in my heart and mind forever. First in the thank you department goes to Bob Lee, who did such a superb job in organizing and guiding the event to such a success. Kudos! And deepest thanks go to Harry and Andrea Gillean, who escorted and made the evening a delightful success for me. Their dedication to their assignment was above and beyond the call of duty for a volunteer. Meeting all the talented authors who attended was another point of great interest for all who attended: Heather Ashby, Kate Barnes, CS Bennett, Mary Chudzcynski, Jody Delzell, Mark Lane, Robert Maticoa, Patrick Mathews, Nancy Quatrano, Sky Taylor, Jack Owens and Jerry Teske, shared the floor and were kept busy by the energized crowd who came to spend an “Evening With The Authors.” It was a delight and pleasure to reunite with many readers whom I had not seen in years and still read this column and make new friends who will be readers for life. Writers need readers and it was a great pleasure to meet you all. Thanks to all the volunteers who worked so hard to make the “Evening With the Authors” such a huge success and lead the way to another evening in the future. Keep reading and keep writing. Thanks again to all the readers who came and writers and volunteers who made this evening so memorable. Hope to see you all again next time. Photos by CHRIS DEVITO / Palatka Daily News Director of music and organist Mitchell Stecker at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Palatka plays one of the classical music songs that will be part of Sunday’s All Saints Evensong at the church at 200 Main St. The event will include a British tea fellowship. A $10 donation is requested at the door to benefit the church’s music program. All Saints EVENSONG Anglican tradition is a non-denominational program of classical music emphasizing Christ the light of the world BY TRISHA MURPHY A Please see BROWN, Page 5B s the sun sets and daylight changes to dusk on Sunday, sounds of classical music and chants will ring through the rafters of one historic church on the north side of Palatka. St. Mark’s Episcopal Church will present its All Saints Evensong celebration beginning at 4 p.m. followed by a British tea with scones stuffed with edibles and biscuits and coffee. Director of music and organist, Mitchell Stecker, will be in charge of the program. At 22, Stecker is in his fifth year in his studies at the University of Florida, and is considered to be the youngest choirmaster locally and in the Episcopal Diocese of Florida. He will graduate in December with his bachelor of art degree in linguistics and his bachelor of music degree in music (organ and carillon). “Evensong is a longstanding service in the Anglican tradition and it is something that – while not always celebrated often, at least in the United States – is very special and moving,” Stecker said. “The mixture of dimly lit church, plainchant, congregational song and language that has been used in the church for a very long time creates something that is very ethereal and very spiritual.” The church’s pastor agrees. “The classical music touches a mystical part of our souls as many who have heard Gregorian chant will attest,” said Father Bob Marsh. “It is an unusual offering for our city so we want to make it available.” The event is open to the public with a suggested $10 donation that will benefit the church’s music program. Stecker has built bridges from the church to the vocal program at Florida School of the Arts. Before coming to St. Mark’s, he was the organ scholar at Holy Trinity Episcopal Church in Gainesville. He grew up in Orange Park and moved to Gainesville in 2010. “In an effort to grow and develop our choral program, I contacted Stephanie Masterson at FloArts, asking if she had any students who would be interested in getting some experience working in a church setting,” he said. “She recommended two students, Katelyn Patterson, a soprano, and Kelsey Martin, an alto. They have now been singing with us for several months and the Progam is Sunday at 4 p.m. followed by British tea. Suggested $10 donation at the door at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church THANKSGIVING: A HISTORIC AMERICAN HOLIDAY Thanksgiving is a historic holiday celebrated in the United States on the fourth Thursday in November. Most Americans believe the first Thanksgiving is the one that Palatka Daily News Mitchell Stecker, 22, is in his fifth year in his studies at the University of Florida, and is considered to be the youngest choirmaster locally and in the Episcopal Diocese of Florida. Please see EVENSONG, Page 5B The Palatka Art League’s 19th Annual Holiday House GALA NIGHT November 14, 2014 • 5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Join us at the Tilghman House 324 River Street, Palatka Hors d’oeuvres; Music by “Usual Suspects” Wine tasting with Tangled Oaks Vineyard 110114b1-8.indd 1 10/30/14 2:23 PM 2 B PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 With November comes library closure dates locally N ovember is a two-holiday month. The Putnam County libraries will be closed for Veterans Day on Tuesday, Nov. 11. All libraries will reopen according to their regular schedules. The library staff will celebrate the Thanksgiving holidays Thursday through Saturday, Nov. 27-29. The Headquarters Library will reopen on Monday, Dec. 1, and the branch libraries will reopen on Tuesday, Dec. 2. Please be safe and give thanks on Thanksgiving. ANGEL BOOK TREE The five Putnam County libraries and the Edgar Johnson Senior Center have their Angel Trees up and decorated with those special angels. We are adding almost 250 more angels and books this year to our totals. We have offered Angel Trees since 2006. I am proud to say that everyone The deadline for the community calendar is noon Tuesday. The following is a partial listing of area events: SATURDAY FISH DINNER, 6-8 p.m. and karaoke with Carla and Johnny, 8 p.m. to midnight, Palatka Moose Lodge 184, 3875 Reid St. Members and guests. VFW 10164 COMMANDER’S STEAK NIGHT, first Saturdays, 1034 State Road 20, Interlachen. Orders taken 5 p.m.; serving starts, 6 p.m. Cost is $11. Details: 684-0839. GEORGE’S LAKE COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION BREAKFAST, 8-9:30 a.m., first Saturdays, 114 Sarasota St., Florahome. Cost is $4.50 for adults and $2.50 for children. who has participated through the years have helped 1,919 children have a happier Christmas because of the beautiful books given with such love. We will add a about 150 more happy children this year. If this is the first you’ve heard of the Angel Tree, here’s the information about it. The angels include the name, age, gender and a suggestion of what book might be appreciated listed on it. Please take your angel or three to your favorite bookstore and buy it and the name on the angel a new book for Christmas. The names the angels wear is the same as the children living in protective management, foster care or at the Lee Conlee House. The books and angels with the children’s names are then returned to your favorite library where I’ll make sure we have books for all the angels. The caseworkers from Community Partnership for Children and the Lee Conlee House will make sure that the children receive their books before Christmas. Thank you to all who have taken angels shopping in the past, and to all of you shopping with the angels for the first time. It is a great feeling, isn’t it? DARLENE WALKER CRESCENT CITY QUILT The Crescent City Friends of the Library have a beautiful quilt to be given away in a drawing at the January book sale. I don’t have any C O M M U N I T Y CALENDAR details other that the quilt has county blues and browns as the major colors. The center is a nine patch with sashes and small squares in the corner. I have already put my purchase order in for tickets. Check with Miss Aida or a member of the Friends to purchase your tickets. The library’s telephone number is 6982600. LUCKY WEDNESDAYS AT HEADQUARTERS The Putnam County Headquarters Library hosts Bingo on the first and third Wednesday of the month. Join us from 2-3 p.m. on those Wednesdays for Bingo-4-Books, Bingo-4- Surprise and Bingo with Friends. For more information about Lucky Wednesdays, contact Robin Bellamy at 329-0126. PINE NEEDLE BASKET WORKSHOP Local Melrose artisan, Jan Beckenbach, offers two workshops in making pine needle baskets on Friday, Nov. 7, from 10 a.m. to noon and Saturday, Nov. 8, from 1:30-3:30 p.m. Ms. Beckenbach demonstrates several methods to start and complete your pine needle baskets. Bring your own lunch or snacks. All materials for your project, as well as drinks, will be provided. The Melrose Library Association is providing the basket materials and drinks. If you are interested in joining the MLA, or donating to their programs, more information will be provided. To sign up for these events, please call the Melrose Branch Library at (352) 475-1237. The library is at 312 Wynnwood Ave., behind the post 0ffice. Darlene Walker is the Putnam County archivist for the Putnam County Library System. Call 329-0126, [email protected] Rockefeller, LMHC. Based on the book “Understanding Your Grief,” by Alan D. Wolfelt, PhD. Program is free and open to the public. Registration required. Details: 530-4600. corner of Commonwealth and Boyleston streets, Interlachen. Taught by Nicole, certified instructor. Details: Nicole at 5466554 or e-mail moveandstretch@ yahoo.com AMERICAN LEGION POST 45 LUNCHES, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays, 316 Osceola St., Palatka. Subs, sandwiches, salads and milkshakes available. Prices range from $1-7. Free Delivery. Details: 328-6976. LINE DANCING, 9:30-10:45 a.m.; low impact aerobics with Terri for $3 per person, 11 a.m.; scrapbooking, 11 a.m.; can class, 1 p.m.; and photography club, 2-3 p.m., Tuesdays, Edgar Johnson Senior Center, 1215 Westover Dr., Palatka. 329-0469. FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES 4355, Darts, 7 p.m., Mondays, 110 Shrine Club Road, Lake Como. Details: 649-5033. ZUMBA, led by Carlynn Roberts, 3:15-4:15 p.m., Tuesdays, Putnam Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. Cost is $5 for nonmembers and $3 for members who do not have a “plus membership.” 649-8784. MATINEE BINGO, U.S VETERANS POST 104, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Mondays; kitchen open 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., 1050 State Road 19, Palatka. 12-STEP CHRISTIAN RECOVERY GROUP MEET, 11:30 a.m., every Tuesday, 419 PALATKA DUPLICATE BRIDGE St. Johns Ave., Palatka. Details: FAMILY NIGHT, West Putnam CLUB meeting, 10 a.m., 546-1943. Volunteer Fire Department, 7:30 Mondays, 521 S. 13th St., p.m., first Saturdays, 104 Race Palatka. Open stratified games. PAWS TO READ, 3:30 p.m., St., Hawthorne. Details: (352) Participants should bring a lunch. Tuesdays, Bostwick Library, 125 481-3211. Details: 328-0263. Tillman St. Children can read to “Miss” Betsy and her golden PANCAKE BREAKFAST, 7-10 retriever, Gabe, who loves to a.m. first Saturdays, Interlachen TUESDAY hear stories. Open to all ages. Lions Den, 200 Prospect St. Cost Details: 326-2750. is $4. The public is invited. NEW BEGINNINGS is a support Proceeds benefit sight and group for caregivers who’ve lost SENIORS VS CRIME, walk-in hearing impaired and education spouses, loved ones or friends. assistance, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., about glaucoma and diabetes. The Palatka group meets at 5 Tuesday, Sheriff’s complex, 130 p.m., first Tuesdays, Orie Griffin Blvd., Palatka. Assists A CAR WASH/INDOOR YARD Musselwhite’s, 125 N Hwy 17, seniors who have been victims of SALE, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. first East Palatka. Have Hospice does con artists, scams, fraud, or Photo submitted by Suzy Massey Saturdays, American Legion Post not cover the cost of dinner. The deceptive business practices. Suzy Massey of Palatka spotted this momma and baby donkey about two weeks old 293, Interlachen. group is offered as a service so Volunteers needed. Details: 326feeding in an area pasture. there is no cost to attend. Details: 2839 or e-mail putnam@ ––––––– ZUMBA, led by Carlynn Roberts, Haven Hospice at 328-7100. svcproject.org or Barry Schnoor, 9-10 a.m., Saturdays, Putnam project manager, barry.schnoor@ READERS: SUBMIT PHOTOS for the Community Calendar page to tmurphy@palatkadaiFamily Fitness Center, 213 Perry ORANGE SPRINGS CIVIC svcproject.org. lynews.com or drop them by the Daily News, 1825 St. Johns Ave., Palatka, between 8 a.m. and 5 St., Pomona Park. Cost is $5 for CLUB MEETING, 6:30 p.m. first p.m. Monday through Friday. Be sure to include a contact name and phone number. nonmembers and $3 for Tuesdays, Club House in Orange FRATERNAL ORDER OF members who do not have a Springs. They meet every month EAGLES 4355, Pinochle, 1 p.m.; “plus membership.” 649-8784. except June, July, and August. Ship, Captain, Crew dice game, JAM SESSION, 7-10 p.m., Geneva Anderson at 328-7310. FREE POOL, Mondays, Palatka There will be a covered dish 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Surprise Bingo, YARNING ON SATURDAYS, supper, business meeting with a 5:30-8:30 p.m.; regular bingo, Sundays, Crescent City Moose Moose Lodge 184, 38575 Reid 10:30 a.m., Bostwick Library, 125 Family Center. Shuffleboard, 3 guest speaker. Dues are $15 per 6:30 p.m., Tuesdays, 110 Shrine “FROM ONE MOTHER TO St., Palatka. For members and Tillman St. All are welcome, from p.m. Members and guests. person, per year. Details: Joe at ANOTHER” WOMEN’S guests. Club Road, Lake Como. Details: beginners to the experienced. (352) 546-3403 or Elsie at (352) SUPPORT GROUP, first 649-5033. Bring crochet or knitting projects 546-3674. COMMUNITY BINGO, 1 p.m., Mondays, 6:30 p.m., Putnam POMONA PARK SENIOR or come and get ideas. Details: Sundays, Hermits Cove County Library, 601 College ACRYLIC PAINTING CLASS AZALEA CITY KIWANIS CLUB, 326-2750. PROGRESSIVE WOMEN’S Community Club, Hermits Cove, Road, Palatka. Renewal for the with Bob Grothaus, 9 a.m. to noon, Tuesdays, Florida National LUNCHEON, noon, first Satsuma. Food and drinks spirit, mind, and body. Details: noon, Mondays, Community Guard Armory, 1301 Moseley CREATIVE STORY HOUR, Tuesdays, Beef O’Brady’s, 201 available for purchase. Bring Donna Taylor at 937-1995 or Center, 200 E. Main St. Class is Ave., Palatka. 10-11 a.m., Saturdays, Crescent family and friends. Theresa Odom at 972-0207. $3 per person. Details: 325-0634. N. 1st St., Palatka. Details: 467City Library, 610 N. Summit St., 3003. TOPS FL 93, PALATKA, Crescent City. Stories, songs, SHIP, CAPTAIN, CREW DICE PALATKA LION’S CLUB meet, TAI CHI, 9:30-10:30 a.m., Bingo, Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m., College poems, games, and crafts for A LADIES AROUND THE LAKE Park Baptist Church, 3435 Crill GAME, Fraternal Order of Eagles 7 p.m., first and third Mondays, 1-3 p.m., and open activities, children 6-12. Details: 698-2600. 4355, 2-4 p.m. and Trivia, 5 p.m., 318 Osceola St., Palatka. Dinner 3-4:30 p.m., Mondays, Edgar meeting, 10 a.m. first and third Ave., Palatka, down from Burger Tuesdays, George’s Lake Sundays, 110 Shrine Club Road, is served on third Mondays for Johnson Senior Center, 1215 King on left. Details: 530-0114. FUN FILMS, 11 a.m., Saturdays, Lake Como. Details: 649-5033. Community Association, 114 $10 per person. The public is Westover Dr., Palatka. Details: Crescent City Library, 610 N. Sarasota St., Florahome. Crafts invited. Details: Lion Brian Carroll 329-0469. ASSISTANCE FOR FLORIDA Summit St., Crescent City. Family and a covered dish lunch. at 325-1674 or Lion Darlene SERVICES provided 10 a.m. to 2 MONDAY friendly movies to be shown. Laibl-Crowe at325-0218. (NO TOPS WEIGHT LOSS CLASS p.m. Tuesdays, Trinity Episcopal Details: 698-2600. INTERLACHEN LIONS CLUB MEETING FIRST MONDAY) (SUPPORT GROUP) meet, 6 Church, 204 State Road 26, PUTNAM BLUEWAYS AND meets 7-8:30 p.m. every first, p.m., Mondays, St. Andrew’s Melrose. Help with applying for TRAILS board meet, 6-8 p.m., KARAOKE, FRATERNAL third and fifth Tuesdays, 200 INTERLACHEN SENIORS, Episcopal Church, 111 Francis food stamps, Medicaid and more. Monday, Nov. 3, Edgar Johnson ORDER OF EAGLES 4355, 8 Prospect St. The first Tuesday is Details: (352) 475-2177. 11:30 a.m., first and third St., Interlachen. Senior Center, 1215 Westover p.m. to midnight, Saturdays, 110 a business meeting; snacks. Mondays, United Methodist Drive, Palatka. Open to the Shrine Club Road, Lake Como. Church Hall, 200 E. Boyleston ZUMBA, led by Carlynn Roberts, Open to public. Third and fifth U.S. VETERANS POST 104, public; pizza for $1.50 a slice, Tuesday meetings include buffet State Road 19, Palatka, will have St., Interlachen. Bring place3:15-4:15 p.m., Mondays, bring own drink. U.S. VETERANS POST 104, dinner and speaker. Details: Lion a steel-tip dart league at 7:30 setting and dish to share and Putnam Family Fitness Center, State Road 19, Palatka, will have Maria at 684-3673 or leave a learn what’s going on in the 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. p.m., Tuesdays. Signing up Euchre at 1 p.m. and karaoke, 8 PUTNAM COUNTY FAITHmessage at 684-2188. community. Cost is $5 for nonmembers and people to join. Details: Rick at BASED HIV/AIDS COALITION p.m., Saturdays. $3 for members who do not have 530-1637. INC. is a non-for-profit COOK’S CHOICE DINNER, AMERICAN LEGION POST 293 a “plus membership.” 649-8784. organization within the AMERICAN LEGION POST 45, 4:30-6 p.m., first, third, and fifth MEMBERSHIP MEETINGS, VFW POST 3349 BINGO, 6-9:30 community that offers free Palatka, all you can eat Tuesdays, Crescent City Moose 6:30 p.m. first Mondays; dinner MORNING AEROBICS, 8:45p.m., every Tuesday, 3201 Reid classes for adults and youth breakfast, Saturday, 8-11 a.m. Family Center. Karaoke, 6-10 meetings, 6:30 p.m. third 9:45 a.m., Mondays, Putnam St., Palatka. Details: 328-2863. pertaining to HIV Education and Cost is $6. Mondays, post in Interlachen. Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry p.m. Prevention and Healthy Bring side dish or $2. No St., Pomona Park. 649-8784. FRATERNAL ORDER OF Relationships. The organization 7 smoking. ANCIENT CITY CAMERA CLUB EAGLES, INTERLACHEN, SUNDAY p.m., first Monday, James A. will meet at 7 p.m., first and SILVERSNEAKERS, exercise bingo 7 p.m. Tuesdays, 823 Long Center. In addition to the fourth Tuesdays, Pineland Lodge, State Road 20. Hamburgers sold, CHICKEN DINNER, 4:30-6 p.m., program for person 55 and older, WOMEN OF THE MOOSE classes, free confidential HIV 190 E. Peniel Road, Palatka. first and third Mondays, Crescent 10:15-11 a.m., Monday through BREAKFAST, 8-11 a.m., first 5-6:30 p.m. Details: 684-3252. testing is offered. 916-0809. Details: (904) 797-2141. City Moose Family Center. Fifth Friday, Putnam Family Fitness Sundays, Crescent City Moose Mondays are cook’s choice. Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Family Center. INTERLACHEN AREA WEDNESDAY CREATE A LIFE YOU LOVE, Park. Details: 649-8784. VOLUNTEER FIRE LIFE COACHING CLASSES, WELLNESS WORKSHOP, 5:30 ABATE OF FLORIDA, DEPARTMENT, STATION 4, 7 INTERLACHEN COMMUNITY p.m. first and fifth Mondays at SILVERSNEAKERS STRETCH 7:30-9 p.m., Tuesdays until PUTNAM CHAPTER meetings, p.m., first Mondays, 202 AND BUSINESS ASSOCIATION Thanksgiving, Hammock Hall, Monahan Chiropractic Medical YOGA, 11:15 a.m. to noon, first Sundays, Cheyenne Commonwealth Ave., Clinics, 905 St. Johns Ave. The Monday through Friday, Putnam 429 Kirby St., Palatka. Taught by meet, 5 p.m., first Wednesdays, Saloon, 337 U.S. 17 South, Interlachen. Meet the first Brush Store, 201 Commonwealth workshop is free. Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry Auretha Callison, cost is $10. East Palatka. Board meets at responders, tour the facilities, get Ave., Interlachen. Meetings are St., Pomona Park. Program of 10 a.m., followed by chapter up to date fire services open to all merchants, SENIOR FRIENDS AT PUTNAM PUTNAM COMMUNITY BAND seated and standing yoga meeting at noon. information. Refreshment served. meet, 7-8:30 p.m., Mondays, community organizations and COMMUNITY MEDICAL exercise postures created for Details: 684-0103. individuals in Interlachen. Dues CENTER Bingo, 2-4 p.m., Palatka High School Band room, older people. Details: 649-8784. AUXILIARY BREAKFAST, are $5 per month. Details: Robin Tuesdays, Butler Building, 611 302 Mellon Road. Musicians of Fraternal Order of Eagles 3822, PUTNAM COUNTY PARKS at 904-742-5732. Zeagler Dr., Palatka. One-year all ages and abilities invited. FRATERNAL ORDER OF 8:30-11 a.m. first Sundays and AND RECREATION Advisory membership: $15. 328-3986. Details: 328-3923; putnamband. EAGLES 3822 OF third Sundays, 823 State Road Board Meeting, first Monday, 4 SENIOR FRIENDS AT PUTNAM blogspot.com. INTERLACHEN, bowling league, 20, Interlachen. Choice of p.m., 120 Carter Rd., Palatka. COMMUNITY MEDICAL 7 p.m., every Monday. 684-3252. MOVE AND STRETCH YOGA pancakes or French Toast. Details: 329-1268. CENTER, Card Games, 1-4 CLASS, 9:30-10:30 a.m., SENIOR FRIENDS AT PUTNAM Details: 684-3252. p.m., Wednesdays, Butler Tuesdays, Interlachen Library, COMMUNITY MEDICAL 10 TOUCHSTONES FOR EAST PALATKA AWARENESS CENTER, yoga, 11 a.m. to noon GRIEF, 4-5:30 p.m. Mondays, 133N. County Road 315. Bring a Building, 611 Zeagler Dr., Palatka. One-year membership: BAR GAMES, 5:30 p.m., meeting, 5:45 p.m., first mat or blanket and water. and Bridge, 1-4 p.m., Mondays, Hospice of the Nature coast $15. Details: 328-3986. Sundays, Palatka Moose Lodge Mondays, Morning Star Baptist Butler Building, 611 Zeagler Dr., Wings Education Center, 6721 184, 3875 Reid St. For Church Annex, the corner of 100 Palatka. One-year membership: YOGA CLASSES, 9-10 a.m., Crill Ave., Palatka. Facilitated by Please see CALENDAR, Page 5B members and guests. Fifth Street and Louis Broer. Tuesdays, Old Brush Store, $15. Details: 328-3986. Grief Services Manager, Mary 110114b1-8.indd 2 10/30/14 2:25 PM 3 B PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Weekday Morning Week of November 1, 2014 - November 7, 2014 Sunday Morning 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 BROADCAST CHANNELS Good Morning America Live With Kelly Wendy Williams Show The View WJXX 9 2 Good Morning Good Morning America The Doctors ThisMinute ThisMinute The View WCJB 4 3 News The Morning Show The Morning Show The Morning Show The Dr. Oz Show Meredith Vieira WJXT $ 4 Chann 4 News Tiger Sesame Street Dinosaur Dinosaur WUFT % 5 Caillou Martha Wild Kratts Wild Kratts Curious Curious Tiger Steve Harvey WAWS > 6 Action News at 6:00am Action News at 7:00am Action News at 8:00am ThisMinute ThisMinute The Doctors Tiger Sesame Street Dinosaur Dinosaur WJCT _ 7 Thomas Martha Wild Kratts Wild Kratts Curious Curious Tiger Rachael Ray Let’s Make a Deal The Price Is Right WJAX O 10 Action News at 6:00am CBS This Morning Good Day Orlando Good Day Orlando Good Day Orlando Good Day Orlando Live With Kelly The People’s Court WOGX S The Willow Varied The People’s Court The 700 Club Judge Mathis Maury WCWJ 1 11 The Daily Buzz Today First Coast Living WTLV , 12 Good Morning K. Shook Walk J. Meyer Creflo Doll J. Hagee Prince Your Day Copeland Varied WJEB [ 13 Enjoying Wommack Varied Live With Kelly Today Today WESH ^ 23 WESH 2 News Sunrise Today CABLE CHANNELS Dog Dog Dog Criminal Minds Criminal Minds A&E 55 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Parking Parking Dog AMC 45 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Stooges Varied Programs Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City BRAV 14 The People’s Couch Varied Programs Colbert South Park South Park Movie COM 28 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Half Hour Daily DISC 38 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. J. Meyer Paid Prog. Varied Programs First Take ESP2 49 Mike & Mike SportCtr Varied SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter ESPN 48 SportsCenter ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show ’70s Show Middle 700 Club The 700 Club Gilmore Girls FAM 43 J. Meyer Varied Varied World Poker In Magic Varied Finsiders Varied Sports Varied Programs FSN 51 Poker Varied Programs Movie FX 31 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Movie HGTV 21 Paid Prog. Varied Programs HIST 59 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Varied Programs LIFE 18 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Balancing Unsolved Mysteries Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie PLEX 149 Movie Varied Programs SPIKE 40 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Movie Dateline HEAT Live! HEAT Live! Varied Programs SUN 50 Varied Programs Movie SYFY 8 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Twi. Zone Varied Programs Married Married King King Movie Funniest Home Videos TBS 17 Full House Rules Couple Couple 19 Kids 19 Kids Varied Programs Hoarding: Buried Alive Gypsy Wedding TLC 39 Secret Princes Charmed Charmed Charmed Supernatural Supernatural TNT 46 Smallville TVL 44 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Hillbillies Hillbillies Griffith Griffith Griffith Griffith USA 27 Varied Programs Weekday Afternoon BROADCAST CHANNELS General Hospital The Chat Judge Divorce News News WJXX 9 2 Divorce Paid Prog. The Chew Millionaire The Chew General Hospital Meredith Vieira Dr. Phil Millionaire News WCJB 4 3 News Justice Court Varied Programs Queen Latifah The Dr. Oz Show News4JAX News4JAX WJXT $ 4 News4JAX Varied Peg Super Why Thomas Sesame Cat in the Curious Curious Arthur WordGirl News News WUFT % 5 Peg Jerry Springer Steve Wilkos Show Paternity Paternity Jdg Judy Hot Bench FamFeud Millionaire WAWS > 6 The Real Super Why Varied Programs Sid Curious Clifford Arthur Arthur Wild Kratts WJCT _ 7 Peg Young & Restless Bold The Talk Steve Harvey Dr. Phil News News WJAX O 10 News Divorce Divorce The People’s Court TMZ Live Wendy Williams Show The Real FOX 35 News at 5 WOGX S Bill Cunningham Maury The People’s Court WCWJ 1 11 Law & Order: SVU Justice Justice Judge Mathis Extra Days of our Lives First Coast Living The Chat Ellen DeGeneres Show News News WTLV , 12 News Life Today Bless Lord The 700 Club J. Hagee Varied Programs WJEB [ 13 Varied Programs Paid Prog. Days of our Lives Meredith Vieira Ellen DeGeneres Show WESH 2 News at 4:00 WESH 2 News at 5 PM WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS CSI: Miami Criminal Minds Criminal Minds The First 48 The First 48 A&E 55 CSI: Miami Varied Programs AMC 45 Movie Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. BRAV 14 Housewives/Atl. Varied Programs Futurama Futurama Futurama Futurama COM 28 Movie DISC 38 Varied Programs Varied Programs SportsNation Question You Herd Olbermann Outside ESP2 49 Numbers Never Lie First Take SportsCenter SportCtr Football Insiders Varied NFL Live Around Pardon ESPN 48 SportsCenter Middle Middle Reba Reba Reba Reba Boy/World Boy/World Boy/World Boy/World FAM 43 Gilmore Girls The Finsiders FSN 51 Varied Programs Varied Programs How I Met How I Met How I Met Varied Anger Two Men Two Men Varied FX 31 Movie HGTV 21 Hunters Hunt Intl Varied Programs HIST 59 Varied Programs Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Charmed Charmed LIFE 18 How I Met How I Met Grey’s Anatomy Varied Programs Movie Movie PLEX 149 Movie Varied Programs Cops Varied SPIKE 40 Movie SUN 50 Basketball Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie Varied Programs Movie SYFY 8 Movie TBS 17 Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Chicken Childrens Friends Friends Friends Friends 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids 19 Kids Medium Medium Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes TLC 39 Four Weddings Bones Bones Bones Castle Castle TNT 46 Supernatural Bonanza Walker, Texas Ranger Walker, Texas Ranger Walker, Texas Ranger TVL 44 Walker, Texas Ranger Gunsmoke Law & Order: SVU USA 27 Varied Programs Saturday Morning BROADCAST CHANNELS Good Morning America Church Church This Week Shiloh No Raking WJXX 9 2 Midnight Church Morning News West. Baptist Good Morning America This Week Paid Prog. Rescue Paid Prog. Paid Prog. WCJB 4 3 Paid Prog. Derm The Morning Show (CC) This Week Harvest Paid Prog. Church Gus Brdly The Ever WJXT $ 4 In Touch Peg Curious Curious Tiger Tiger Sesame Dinosaur Kitchen Hubert Moveable Greener WUFT % 5 Sid Action Action WAWS > 6 Action News at 6:00am Action News at 7:00am Sports Live Life Coolest Career Fox News Sunday Wild Kratts Wild Kratts Curious Curious Arthur (EI) WordGirl Real Sch’l Nature (CC) (DVS) NOVA (N) WJCT _ 7 WordWrld Sid CBS News Sunday Morning (N) Face the Nation (N) Action WJAX O 10 Church Northside Evangel Changers Van Impe News Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. 21 DAY Paid Prog. Fox News Sunday Methodist Paid Prog. Not Your Whacked WOGX S First Paid Prog. Rejoice Popoff Church YourJax WCWJ 1 11 Church Tomorrow Evangel Heritage Ministries Paxon WTLV , 12 Ministries Paid Prog. In Search Baptist Baptist Christian Meet the Press (N) J. Osteen First Baptist Church Sub-D Passion Touching Franklin Turning Walk Win Walk Prince Redempt. WJEB [ 13 Bless Lord M Lucado Falwell Urban Today (N) (CC) Meet the Press (N) On Money Poppy Cat Noodle Kids News WESH ^ 23 WESH 2 News Sunrise Weekend CABLE CHANNELS Criminal Minds A&E 55 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds Mad Men (CC) Mad Men (CC) Flightplan (2005) ›› (Jodie Foster) (PG-13) (CC) Cujo (1983) ››› (R) AMC 45 Mad Men (CC) The People’s Couch Manzo’d Manzo’d Manzo’d Manzo’d Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ BRAV 14 Housewives/NJ COM 28 SHARK! Paid Prog. Turkey BodyBeast Comedy Beverly Hills Cop (1984) ››› (Eddie Murphy) (R) Beverly Hills Cop II (1987) ›› (R) Gold Rush (CC) Edge of Alaska (CC) Last Frontier DISC 38 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. To Be Announced ESP2 49 e College Football Outside Reporters e Colin’s Football Show 2014 TCS New York City Marathon N (CC) (Live) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter N (CC) SportsCenter N (CC) e Sunday NFL Countdown N (CC) (Live) ESPN 48 Football NFL Daddy Sixteen Candles (1984) ›› (Molly Ringwald) (PG) Liar Liar (1997, Comedy) ›› (Jim Carrey) (PG-13) Miss Cong FAM 43 Sexy In 3 Mass Darts World Poker World Poker ShipShape Triathlon Game 365 Golf Life FSN 51 Sports Unlimited FX 31 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Big Miracle (2012) ››› (John Krasinski) (PG) Night-Smithsonian HGTV 21 Paid Prog. Skincare Buying and Selling Buying and Selling Buying and Selling Buying and Selling Buying and Selling America’s Book America’s Book America’s Book America’s Book HIST 59 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. America’s Book Amazing Jeremiah J. Osteen Skincare Unsolved Mysteries Her Only Child ›› (NR) LIFE 18 Grill-Pro Paid Prog. In Touch Robin of Locksley (1996) ›› (PG) P.U.N.K.S. (1999) ›› (Tim Redwine) (PG) (CC) Marco Polo: Return to Xanadu (NR) PLEX 149 Trail-P.Panther TCopper Paid Prog. Shaun T’s SHARK! Off Road Engine Truck Muscle Troy (2004) ››› (R) SPIKE 40 Bosley Clean! SUN 50 Paid Prog. Stop Pain Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Cooker e College Football Teams TBA. (T) Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Psychosis (2010) ›› (Charisma Carpenter) (R) House of Bones (2009) SYFY 8 Paid Prog. Cooking Body King Friends Friends Friends Friends Paul Blart: Mall Cop (2009) ›› (Kevin James) Dupree TBS 17 Married King Diets 2.0 To Be Announced TLC 39 Clean! Law & Order “Untitled” Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order “Stiff” Law & Order TNT 46 Law & Order Cosby The Cosby Show Cosby Cosby FamFeud FamFeud Family Feud (CC) FamFeud FamFeud TVL 44 Cosby USA 27 House “Frozen” (CC) Paid Prog. Jeremiah P. Chris J. Osteen Faster (2010, Action) ›› (Dwayne Johnson) (R) Quantum of Solace ›› Week of November 1, 2014 - November 7, 2014 Sunday Afternoon 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM 2:30 3 PM 3:30 4 PM 4:30 5 PM 5:30 November 2, 2014 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM 2:30 3 PM 3:30 4 PM 4:30 5 PM 5:30 BROADCAST CHANNELS No 2 Old For the Love of Music World of X Games N 2014 TCS New York City Marathon (CC) WJXX 9 2 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Derm WCJB 4 3 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Facing Fl. Cars.TV For the Love of Music World of X Games N 2014 TCS New York City Marathon (CC) WJXT $ 4 WHAD Animals Into Wild Adven. Aqua Kids Animal Election 2014: Straight Better H20 Middle Entertainment Tonight WUFT % 5 McL’ghlin Capitol Moyers Silverman Masterpiece Classic “Downton Abbey” (CC) Masterpiece Classic “Downton Abbey” (CC) McCarver Street League Skateboarding e NFL Football: Rams at 49ers WAWS > 6 e FOX NFL Sunday N Leverage (CC) Masterpiece Classic “Downton Abbey” (CC) Masterpiece Classic WJCT _ 7 NOVA (N) How We Got to Now Finding Your Roots Feel e NFL Football: Broncos at Patriots WJAX O 10 e The NFL Today N (Live) e NFL Football Jacksonville Jaguars at Cincinnati Bengals. N (CC) (Live) e FOX NFL Sunday N e NFL Football Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Cleveland Browns. N (CC) (Live) The OT N Street League Skateboarding WOGX S Basic Instinct (1992) ››› (Michael Douglas) (NR) WCWJ 1 11 Into the Blue (2005) ›› (Paul Walker) (PG-13) The Recruit (2003) ›› (Al Pacino) (PG-13) F1 h Formula One Racing United States Grand Prix. h F1 Post Race N (CC) WTLV , 12 Paid Prog. Cooking j Figure Skating Christ Jesse J. Hagee Marriage Bal. Living G. Dickow WJEB [ 13 Liberate In Touch PowerPnt. Is Written B. Conley Super Paid Prog. j Figure Skating F1 h Formula One Racing United States Grand Prix. h F1 Post Race N (CC) WESH ^ 23 House CABLE CHANNELS Shipping Shipping Shipping Shipping Storage Storage A&E 55 Apollo 13 (1995, Historical Drama) ››› (Tom Hanks) (PG) (CC) AMC 45 Cujo (1983) ››› (R) Survival of the Dead (2009, Horror) ›› (R) (CC) Land of the Dead (2005) ›› (Simon Baker) (R) Lake Placid (1999) ›› Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. BRAV 14 Housewives/NJ COM 28 Beverly II Coming to America (1988, Comedy) ››› (Eddie Murphy) (R) (CC) Couples Retreat (2009) ›› (Vince Vaughn) (PG-13) (CC) Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier DISC 38 Last Frontier Poker World/Poker World/Poker World/Poker ESP2 49 Marathon Football h NHRA Drag Racing SportsCenter N (CC) h NASCAR Count- h NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: AAA Texas 500. N (Live) ESPN 48 e NFL Countdwn FAM 43 Miss Congeniality (2000) ›› (Sandra Bullock) The Wedding Planner (2001) ›› (Jennifer Lopez) (PG-13) Bruce Almighty (2003) ›› (PG-13) 8 Snowboarding World Extreme Games Sports Unlimited N Darts Table Tennis FSN 51 World Poker Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009) ›› (PG) FX 31 Night at the Museum: Smithsonian We Bought a Zoo (2011) ›› (Matt Damon) (PG) HGTV 21 Buying and Selling House Hunters Reno House Hunters Reno House Hunters Reno House Hunters Reno House Hunters Reno America Unearthed America Unearthed America Unearthed America Unearthed America Unearthed HIST 59 America’s Book Movie LIFE 18 Her Only Child ›› (NR) Glass House: The Good Mother (2006) › (R) (CC) Movie PLEX 149 Life Stinks (1991) ›› (Mel Brooks) Top Secret! (1984) ›› (Val Kilmer) Whiskers (1997) ›› (Brent Carver) Robin of Locksley (1996) ›› (PG) Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue SPIKE 40 Troy (2004, Adventure) ››› (Brad Pitt) (R) Sport ShipShape Sportsman Florida Inside HEAT Live! SUN 50 Muschamp P1 AquaX Women’s College Volleyball SYFY 8 House of Bones (2009) The Uninvited (2009) ›› (Elizabeth Banks) Birth (2004, Drama) ›› (Nicole Kidman) (R) Finders Keepers (2014) TBS 17 You, Me and Dupree (2006) ›› Hall Pass (2011) ›› (Owen Wilson) (R) (DVS) The Heartbreak Kid (2007, Comedy) ›› (Ben Stiller) (R) TLC 39 To Be Announced Diary of a Mad Black Woman (2005) ›› (Kimberly Elise) Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself (2009) ›› (PG-13) TNT 46 Law & Order Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Cosby Cosby Cosby Cosby TVL 44 FamFeud FamFeud Family Feud (CC) USA 27 Quantum of Solace ›› Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU November 1, 2014 Saturday Evening 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 November 2, 2014 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 November 1, 2014 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 BROADCAST CHANNELS Old House Didiayer Good Morning America Hanna Ocean Rescue Wildlife Outback Explore WJXX 9 2 LatiNation Derm WCJB 4 3 Paid Prog. Larry King Think Big Into Wild Good Morning America OcalaTV DragonFly Dog Tales Kids News Career Icons The Morning Show (CC) Home Connect TV WJXT $ 4 Paid Prog. Look Tiger Sesame Dinosaur Kitchen Cook Sara’s Lidia WUFT % 5 Barney Angelina Curious Curious Tiger WAWS > 6 Action News at 6:00am Action News at 7:00am Action News at 8:00am Pets.TV Eco Co. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. GED GED Biz Kid$ Curious George-Boo Paint Victory Garden Burt Wolf Hometime W’dwright WJCT _ 7 GED Hall CBS This Morning: Saturday (N) (CC) Lucky Dog Dr. Chris Recipe Innovation All In Football WJAX O 10 Light Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Planet Space Earth 2050 Animal Sci Biz Kid$ Winning Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. WOGX S WCWJ 1 11 Pain Free Paid Prog. Dog Whis Dog Whis Dr. Pol Dr. Pol B. Barr B. Barr Expedition Expedition Rock-Park Reluc Astroblast Chica Tree Fu LazyTown WTLV , 12 Kids News Today New York City Marathon; Nik Wallenda. Good Morning Jacksonville WJEB [ 13 Wonder The Lads Veggie Penguins! Kids Club Storykeep RocKids Auto B. Gd Penguins! Veggie Monster Hopkins Today New York City Marathon; Nik Wallenda. Astroblast Chica Tree Fu LazyTown WESH ^ 23 WESH 2 News Sunrise Weekend CABLE CHANNELS Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds “P911” Criminal Minds (CC) A&E 55 Paid Prog. Sub-D AMC 45 Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rifleman Million Dollar LA Top Chef (CC) Manzo’d Euros The People’s Couch Below Deck BRAV 14 Million Dollar LA COM 28 Zombie Grill-Pro Bod. Beast Smoothies Comedy Jeff Dunham: Minding Vampires Suck (2010) › (Matt Lanter) (PG-13) Beverly Paid Prog. Cooker Bod. Beast Paid Prog. BodyBeast Fast N’ Loud (CC) Fast N’ Loud (CC) Fast N’ Loud (CC) DISC 38 Sleep NFL SportsCenter N (CC) (Live) ESP2 49 x Bassmasters (CC) Nation e NFL Live (CC) ESPN 48 SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter (CC) SportsCenter N (CC) e College GameDay From Morgantown, W.Va. N (CC) (Live) FAM 43 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Casper (1995, Fantasy) ››› (Christina Ricci) (PG) The Flintstones (1994) ›› (John Goodman) (PG) Sixteen Candles ›› UFC Golf Life World Poker SportsMo. ShipShape e The Finsiders Under Hurricane FSN 51 Game 365 UEFA Anger Two Men Two Men Two Men Two Men Big Miracle (2012) ››› FX 31 Paid Prog. BATMAN Buffy, Vampire Slayer Anger Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Hse Crash Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or HGTV 21 Big Belly? Clean! White House: Behind Closed Doors Warrior HIST 59 Paid Prog. Paid Prog. American Operation Reagan (2011, Documentary) (NR) (CC) LIFE 18 Turkey Paid Prog. Kitchen Paid Prog. WEN Hair Tummy Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Skincare Unsolved Mysteries PLEX 149 Canadian Bacon (1995) ›› (Alan Alda) (PG) (CC) Scorched (2002) ›› (PG-13) (CC) Mask (1985) ››› (Eric Stoltz) (PG-13) (CC) BabyBoom Turkey Focus T25 BodyBeast Clean! Bod. Beast Ink Master (CC) Ink Master (CC) Ink Master (CC) SPIKE 40 Free e ACC Gridiron Live ACC C-USA SUN 50 Paid Prog. Pain Free Headlines Boat Show Extreme Outside e Cllege Football Kitchen Paid Prog. Turkey SHARK! Twi. Zone Z Nation “Zunami” Wrong Turn 5: Bloodlines (2012) (R) SYFY 8 Paid Prog. Free King King Journey to the Center of the Earth Prince-Persia TBS 17 Married Married Married Married King Paid Prog. Airbrush Paid Prog. Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes TLC 39 Kitchen 21 DAY Clean! Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order “Panic” Law & Order “Entitled” Law & Order TNT 46 Law & Order The Nanny The Nanny Cleveland Cleveland Hot in Cleveland (CC) Cleveland Cleveland TVL 44 The Nanny The Nanny The Nanny (CC) USA 27 Partners Partners Paid Prog. Paid Prog. Paid Prog. SHARK! Chrisley Benched Chrisley Benched NCIS “Berlin” BROADCAST CHANNELS Hollywood e College Football Regional Coverage. N (CC) (Live) News WJXX 9 2 e College Football News News WCJB 4 3 e College Football Entertainment Tonight e College Football Regional Coverage. N (CC) (Live) Blue Bloods (CC) Big Bang Big Bang News Gus Brdly News4JAX Church WJXT $ 4 News4JAX Paid Prog. Insider Rules Antiques Roadshow Doc Martin (CC) Keep Up Gone Moone Bl’k Adder Austin City Limits WUFT % 5 Lawrence Welk News Animation WAWS > 6 Pirates e FOX College Pregame e College Football Stanford at Oregon. N (Live) As Time... As Time... Call the Midwife (CC) Globe Trekker WJCT _ 7 Classic Gospel (CC) Antiques Roadshow Keeping Up Sports Two Men WJAX O 10 e College Football Postgame Special e College Football Navy vs. Notre Dame. N (CC) (Live) Whacked e FOX College Pregame e College Football Stanford at Oregon. N (Live) FOX 35 News at 10 (N) WOGX S Mike Football Dolphins Stories I Know Anger Anger First Coast Rollergirl WCWJ 1 11 Raising Raising Mike NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! l 2014 Breeders’ Cup N Law & Order: SVU Saturday Night Live News SNL WTLV , 12 News Hour Of Power Graham Classic The Beautiful Beast WJEB [ 13 Angel in Future Precious Memories In Touch NBC News Entertainment Tonight l 2014 Breeders’ Cup N Law & Order: SVU Saturday Night Live News SNL WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds A&E 55 Criminal Minds AMC 45 Rambo III (1988, Action) ›› (R) (CC) First Blood (1982) ››› (Sylvester Stallone) (R) Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985) ›› (R) (CC) Rambo III Pit Bulls and Parolees Animal Cops Houston ANP 41 To Be Announced To Be Announced My Cat From Hell (N) America’s Cutest BET 57 Lottery Ticket (2010) ›› (Bow Wow) (PG-13) Little Man (2006, Comedy) ›› (Shawn Wayans) (PG-13) (CC) Meet the Browns (2008) ›› (PG-13) Movie BRAV 14 American Pie 2 (2001) ›› (Jason Biggs) (R) Movie COM 28 Couples Retreat ›› Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay (2008) ›› Superbad (2007, Comedy) ››› (Jonah Hill) (NR) (CC) Airplane Repo Skyscraper: Road to Chicago (N) (CC) DISC 38 Moonshiners (CC) Airplane Repo (CC) Airplane Repo Dog Austin Girl Meets Liv-Mad. Dog Lab Rats Kickin’ It Liv-Mad. Dog DISN 22 Jessie Jessie Dog Bridesmaids (2011, Comedy) ››› (Kristen Wiig) (NR) E! 34 Botched No Strings Attached (2011) ›› (Natalie Portman) (R) Score e College Football ESP2 49 Football Score e College Football Arkansas at Mississippi State. N (CC) (Live) Score e College Football Arizona at UCLA. ESPN 48 SportsCenter N (CC) e College Football Auburn at Mississippi. N (CC) (Live) Wedding FAM 43 Liar Liar (1997) ›› Bruce Almighty (2003) ›› (Jim Carrey) (PG-13) The Proposal (2009) ›› (Sandra Bullock) (PG-13) e College Football FS1 53 e College Football Kansas at Baylor. e College Football Texas at Texas Tech. N (CC) (Live) In Magic d Inside the Magic Running FSN 51 Football Magic d NBA Basketball Toronto Raptors at Orlando Magic. (Live) Magic Mike Mike Mike Mike FX 31 Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009) ›› (PG) Ice Age: Continental Drift (2012) ›› (PG) HALL 137 A Bride for Christmas (2012) (Arielle Kebbel) One Starry Christmas (2014) (Sarah Carter) (NR) A Boyfriend for Christmas (2004) ››› Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers House Hunters Reno Hunters Hunt Intl HGTV 21 Vacation House Pawn Pawn Pawn Hidden White House 10 Things About 10 Things About Lost History HIST 59 Pawn Hocus Pocus (1993) ›› (Bette Midler) (PG) (CC) Hocus Pocus (1993) ›› (Bette Midler) (PG) (CC) LIFE 18 Movie Lockup Lockup “Inside L.A. County” Lockup Lockup “Riverbend” MSN 185 Lockup Henry Henry Nicky Thunder Hathaways Awesome Prince Friends Friends NICK 42 Thunder Thunder Henry OXY 123 Fever Pitch (2005) ›› (Drew Barrymore) (PG-13) The Princess Diaries (2001) ›› (Julie Andrews) The Princess Diaries (2001) ›› (Julie Andrews) Merlin (Part 2 of 2) (CC) Baby Boom (1987) ››› (Diane Keaton) (PG) (CC) Mask (1985) ››› (Eric Stoltz) (PG-13) (CC) PLEX 149 Merlin Cops Cops Cops Cops (N) Cops Auction Thrift Cops Cops Cops Cops SPIKE 40 Cops Driven SportsMo. SUN 50 Football HEAT Live! d NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Philadelphia 76ers. (Live) HEAT Live! d Inside the Heat Resident Evil: Extinction (2007, Horror) ›› (R) Apocalypse L.A. (2014, Horror) (Justin Ray) (NR) Resident Evil 8 Starve (2014) (NR) 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM 2:30 3 PM 3:30 4 PM 4:30 5 PM 5:30 SYFY TBS 17 Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Deal With Fake Off BROADCAST CHANNELS Murder Most Foul (1964) ››› (NR) NorthNW TCM 169 Point Blank (1967) ››› (Lee Marvin) (NR) (CC) To Be or Not to Be (1942) ››› (NR) (CC) Football e College Football Regional Coverage. N (Live) WJXX 9 2 To Be Announced TLC 39 Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Untold Stories of ER Untold Stories of ER Sex Sent Me to the Sex Sent Me to the e College Football Regional Coverage. N (Live) WCJB 4 3 ACC Blitz e College Football North Carolina at Miami. N (Live) Transporter Transporter 46 Collateral (2004) ››› Fast & Furious (2009) ›› (Vin Diesel) (PG-13) Transporter In Game Sub-D Rules Election 2014: Straight TNT WJXT $ 4 ACC Blitz e College Football North Carolina at Miami. N (Live) Dynamite Fam. Guy Attack TOON 124 Shrek (2001) ››› (Voices of Mike Myers) (PG) King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Boon WUFT % 5 The Chefs Victory Old House Old House Old House Hometime W’dwright MotorWk Cooking Martha History Detectives 126 Ghost Adventures: Ireland’s Celtic Demons Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files (N) The Dead Files (CC) Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) ›› (PG-13) TRVL WAWS > 6 James Brown: Man... Pollock (2000, Drama) ››› (Ed Harris) (R) FamFeud Raymond Raymond Friends Friends King King TVL 44 FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud Family Feud (CC) Cook Kitchen Cooking Martha Sara’s WJCT _ 7 Old House Old House Antiques Roadshow Steves Mexican Taste Do the Right Thing (1989, Drama) ››› (Danny Aiello) (R) Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Chrisley USA 27 NCIS “Alibi” Football e College Football Florida vs. Georgia. N (CC) (Live) WJAX O 10 e College Football Air Force at Army. N (CC) (Live) Pretty Woman (1990) ››› (R) WE 117 Sleepless in Seattle (1993) ››› (Tom Hanks) Pretty Woman (1990) ››› (Richard Gere) (R) 21 DAY Paid Prog. Access Hollywood (N) Big Bang Big Bang Working Girl (1988) ››› (Melanie Griffith) (R) Fox 35 News at 5 (N) WOGX S WCWJ 1 11 Working Girl (1988) ››› (Melanie Griffith) (R) A Dangerous Place (2012) (Kristen Dalton) Around the World in 80 Days (2004) ›› (PG) WTLV , 12 Poppy Cat Noodle h Formula One Racing United States Grand Prix, Qualifying. N Rugby U.S. Eagles vs. New Zealand All Blacks. N (CC) (Live) Inspir. Paws/Tails Veggie Heroes & Legends Cameron News Angel in the House (PG) WJEB [ 13 Lassie (EI) Goliath Ishine WESH ^ 23 Raw Trav. Paid Prog. h Formula One Racing United States Grand Prix, Qualifying. N Rugby U.S. Eagles vs. New Zealand All Blacks. N (CC) (Live) CABLE CHANNELS A&E 55 Criminal Minds (CC) The Firm (1993) ››› (Tom Cruise) (R) (CC) Black Hawk Down (2001, War) ››› (Josh Hartnett) (R) (CC) AMC 45 Rifleman Rifleman First Blood (1982) ››› (Sylvester Stallone) (R) Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985) ›› (R) (CC) Rambo III (1988) ›› (R) “We deliver local life daily!” Below Deck Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules BRAV 14 Below Deck COM 28 Beverly Hills Cop (1984) ››› (Eddie Murphy) (R) Coming to America (1988) ››› (Eddie Murphy) (R) (CC) Couples Retreat (2009) ›› (PG-13) Misfit Garage (CC) Misfit Garage (CC) Moonshiners (CC) Moonshiners (CC) Moonshiners (CC) DISC 38 Fast N’ Loud (CC) Score e College Football ESP2 49 e College Football Maryland at Penn State. N (Live) Score h NASCAR Racing ESPN 48 e College Football Wisconsin at Rutgers. N (Live) FAM 43 Sixteen Candles ›› Billy Madison (1995) › (Adam Sandler) (PG-13) Miss Congeniality (2000) ›› (Sandra Bullock) Liar Liar (1997) ›› Subscribe Today and Stay In The Loop. Running Future World Poker e College Football North Carolina State at Syracuse. N (Live) FSN 51 Sports Unlimited FX 31 Big Miracle (2012) ››› Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009) ›› We Bought a Zoo (2011) ›› (Matt Damon) (PG) Great Deal For Your Money! Flip or Flip or Flip or Vacation House Vacation House Vacation House Vacation House HGTV 21 Flip or First Invasion: The War of 1812 (CC) The President’s Book of Secrets (CC) Pawn HIST 59 Washington the Warrior (CC) LIFE 18 The Good Sister (2014) (Sonya Walger) (NR) (CC) Sorority Surrogate (2014) (Cassie Steele) (NR) A Sister’s Nightmare (2013) (Kelly Rutherford) PLEX 149 Baby Boom (1987) ››› (PG) (CC) My Kid Could Paint That ››› (CC) P.U.N.K.S. (1999) ›› (Tim Redwine) (PG) (CC) Merlin (Part 1 of 2) Ink Master (CC) Cops Cops Cops Jail (CC) Cops Cops Cops Jail (CC) SPIKE 40 Ink Master (CC) $7.00 per month. Save time, save postage, save money. e College Football Western Kentucky at Louisiana Tech. N (Live) SUN 50 Seminoles Boxing 30 s Boxing SYFY 8 Wrong 5 Night of the Demons (2009) ›› (Monica Keena) Hostel Part II (2007) ›› (Lauren German) (R) Starve (2014) (Bobby Campo) (NR) Spider-Man (2002, Action) ››› (Tobey Maguire) (PG-13) Friends Friends Friends Friends TBS 17 Prince of Persia: Sands TLC 39 Say Yes Say Yes Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Dateline: Real Life Collateral (2004) ››› TNT 46 Training Day (2001) ››› (Denzel Washington) (R) (CC) (DVS) The Italian Job (2003) ››› (Mark Wahlberg) (PG-13) All home delivery subscription rates include a separate daily delivery fee of $0.21 and 7% State and local Sales Tax. If you wish to avoid the delivery fee you may pick up your paper at 1825 Saint Johns Avenue, Palatka, Florida between 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 a.m. Or you may have it mailed at our Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Roseanne Family Feud (CC) FamFeud FamFeud TVL 44 Cleveland Cleveland Roseanne (CC) postal rate. NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS (CC) (DVS) NCIS “Once a Crook” NCIS “Better Angels” USA 27 NCIS (CC) (DVS) Saturday Afternoon November 1, 2014 Palatka Daily News Your Community, Your Newspaper... EZ Pay - Our Best Rate on Any Subscription Call Today at 386-312-5200 110114b1-8.indd 3 10/29/14 4:43 PM 4 B PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Sunday Evening November 2, 2014 Wednesday Evening 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 BROADCAST CHANNELS Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time (N) Resurrection (N) (CC) Revenge “Damage” News First Coast WJXX 9 2 ABC News News ABC News Funniest Home Videos Once Upon a Time (N) Resurrection (N) (CC) Revenge “Damage” News Inside Ed. WCJB 4 3 News News Zone News4JAX Cougar WJXT $ 4 News4JAX Inside Ed. Big Bang Big Bang The Good Wife (CC) Scandal (CC) The Innovators (N) Masterpiece Classic Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) Craft in America (CC) Austin City WUFT % 5 Keep Up Gone Simpsons Burgers Simpsons Brooklyn Fam. Guy Mulaney News Sports Mod Fam Mod Fam WAWS > 6 e NFL Football Secrets of Chatsworth DCI Banks WJCT _ 7 Masterpiece Classic Lark Rise-Candleford Masterpiece Classic Masterpiece Mystery! (CC) Sports WJAX O 10 e NFL Football: Broncos at Patriots 60 Minutes (N) (CC) Madam Secretary (N) The Good Wife (N) CSI: Crime Scene Big Bang Big Bang Simpsons Burgers Simpsons Brooklyn Fam. Guy Mulaney FOX 35 News at 10 (N) TMZ (N) (CC) WOGX S Mike Rollergirl Rollergirl Medium Haunts Anger Anger The Office The Office WCWJ 1 11 I Know Music 4 U Mike NBC News e Football Night in America N (CC) e NFL Football Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers. N (CC) (Live) News WTLV , 12 News WJEB [ 13 T.D. Jakes J. Meyer Lead Way Blessed J. Osteen K. Shook Copeland Creflo Doll The Story of Ruth (1960) ›› (Elana Eden) (NR) NBC News e Football Night in America N (CC) e NFL Football Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers. N (CC) (Live) News WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS A&E 55 Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Shipping Shipping AMC 45 Lake Placid (1999) ›› The Walking Dead The Walking Dead The Walking Dead (N) Talking Dead (N) (CC) The Walking Dead ANP 41 To Be Announced To Be Announced North Woods Law (N) North Woods Law (N) Cold River Cash (CC) North Woods Law Why Did I Get Married? (2007) ›› (Tyler Perry) (PG-13) (CC) BET 57 Little Man Meet the Browns (2008) ›› (Tyler Perry) (PG-13) (CC) Housewives/Atl. Housewives/Atl. Housewives/NJ Manzo’d Manzo’d Happens Jersey BRAV 14 Housewives/Atl. Tosh.0 South Park Brickle. COM 28 Date and Switch (2014) (Nicholas Braun) (R) (CC) Superbad (2007, Comedy) ››› (Jonah Hill) (NR) (CC) Skyscraper Live With Nik Wallenda (N) (Live) (CC) Last Frontier Skyscraper Live With Nik Wallenda DISC 38 Skyscraper Good Luck Liv-Mad. DISN 22 Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. Austin Austin Liv-Mad. I Didn’t Austin Girl Meets Jessie Dog Take the Hamptons House of DVF (N) Take the Hamptons E! 34 Bridesmaids (2011, Comedy) ››› (Kristen Wiig) (NR) f MLS Soccer f ESPN FC N (Live) ESP2 49 h NHRA Drag Racing Toyota Nationals. From Las Vegas. (CC) Who’s In? World/Poker World/Poker SportsCenter N (CC) ESPN 48 h NASCAR Racing SportsCenter N (CC) (Live) The Proposal (2009) ›› (Sandra Bullock) (PG-13) What to Expect When You’re Expecting (2012) ›› (PG-13) Young FAM 43 Bruce NASCAR Big East Preview The Ultimate Fighter FOX Sports Live N FS1 53 Red Bull s Boxing World Poker UFC Unleashed N World Poker World Poker FSN 51 Marlins Game 365 World Poker Dr. Seuss’ the Lorax (2012, Fantasy) ›› (PG) Dr. Seuss’ the Lorax (2012, Fantasy) ›› (PG) FX 31 Ice Age: Continental Drift (2012) ›› (PG) HALL 137 The Christmas Ornament (2013) (Kellie Martin) Angels Sing (2013) ›› (Harry Connick Jr.) (PG) Fir Crazy (2013) (Sarah Lancaster) (NR) Beach Alaska Alaska Hunters Hunt Intl HGTV 21 House Hunters Reno House Hunters Reno Hawaii Hawaii Beach The Curse of The Curse of The Curse of The Curse of HIST 59 America Unearthed The Curse of Movie What Happens in Vegas (2008) › (PG-13) (CC) Movie LIFE 18 Movie Deadly Game Sex Slaves: Motor City Sex Slaves: Teens Lockup “Miami-Dade” Lockup “New Mexico” MSN 185 Sex Slaves: Teen Nicky Thunder Hathaways Full House Full House Full House Full House Prince Prince Friends Friends NICK 42 Henry Snapped Snapped Snapped: Killer Snapped: Killer Snapped: Killer OXY 123 Snapped Trail of the Pink Panther (1982) › Top Secret! (1984) ›› (Val Kilmer) Life Stinks (1991) ›› (Mel Brooks) Boeing, Boeing ›› (NR) PLEX 149 Robin Bar Rescue Bar Rescue Bar Rescue (N) Catch a Contractor (N) Bar Rescue SPIKE 40 Bar Rescue Fishing Extreme Saltwater Into Fish Flats SUN 50 d NBA Basketball Toronto Raptors at Miami Heat. (Live) HEAT Live! Inside SYFY 8 Finders Keepers (2014) Thirteen Ghosts (2001) › (Tony Shalhoub) (R) The Apparition (2012) › (Ashley Greene) (PG-13) Haunting in CT TBS 17 Meet the Fockers (2004) ›› (Robert De Niro) Crazy, Stupid, Love. (2011) ››› (Steve Carell) (PG-13) (DVS) Crazy, Stupid, Love. (2011) ››› TCM 169 Pat and Mike (1952) ››› (Spencer Tracy) (NR) The Jazz Singer (1953) ››› (Danny Thomas) Pete Kelly’s Blues (1955) ›› (Jack Webb) (NR) TLC 39 To Be Announced To Be Announced The Help (2011) ››› TNT 46 Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail (2009) ›› The Help (2011, Drama) ››› (Viola Davis) (PG-13) (CC) (DVS) Clarence Gumball Regular King of Hill King of Hill Burgers Burgers Rick Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Pickles TOON 124 Teen TRVL 126 Food Paradise (CC) Food Paradise (CC) Hotel Impossible (CC) Extreme Hotels (N) Extreme Hotels (N) Extreme Hotels (N) Cosby Cosby The King of Queens King King King King King King King TVL 44 Cosby USA 27 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam CSI: Miami “Recoil” CSI: Miami (CC) CSI: Miami “Whacked” CSI: Miami “10-7” CSI: Miami (CC) WE 117 CSI: Miami (CC) Monday Evening 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 Tuesday Evening BROADCAST CHANNELS ABC News News Extra (N) Selfie (N) Selfie (N) Marvel: 75 Years, From 2014: Your Voice, Your News J. Kimmel WJXX 9 2 News ABC News Ent Let’s Ask Selfie (N) Selfie (N) Marvel: 75 Years, From 2014: Your Voice, Your News J. Kimmel WCJB 4 3 News Inside Ed. Election 2014: Your Vote Counts The 10 O’Clock News News4JAX Insider WJXT $ 4 News4JAX News4JAX Ent Frontline (CC) Election T. Smiley WUFT % 5 News at 6 Business PBS NewsHour (N) Finding Your Roots Makers (N) (CC) New Girl Mindy News News Mod Fam Two Men WAWS > 6 Millionaire Celebrity Mod Fam Two Men MasterChef Frontline (CC) Election NOVA (N) WJCT _ 7 Wild Kratts Business PBS NewsHour (N) Finding Your Roots Makers (N) (CC) CBS News Jdg Judy FamFeud NCIS: New Orleans NCIS (CC) (DVS) Election Coverage News Letterman WJAX O 10 News TMZ (N) Simpsons Big Bang Big Bang MasterChef New Girl Mindy FOX 35 News at 10 (N) TMZ (CC) Access H. WOGX S Payne Mike Mike The Flash (CC) Supernatural (CC) Anger Anger TMZ (N) Access H. WCWJ 1 11 Payne NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! The Voice (N) (CC) Marry Me About-Boy NBC News Dec News J. Fallon WTLV , 12 News Supernat. Potters Bless Lord J. Meyer Prince S. Furtick Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) WJEB [ 13 Love Finds Praise NBC News Ent Access H. The Voice (N) (CC) Marry Me About-Boy NBC News Dec News J. Fallon WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS A&E 55 Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Jurassic Park ››› AMC 45 The Da Vinci Code (2006) ›› (Tom Hanks) (CC) Jurassic Park (1993, Adventure) ››› (Sam Neill) (PG-13) (CC) Wild Russia “Siberia” Wild Russia (CC) Monsters Behind the Iron Curtain Wild Russia (CC) ANP 41 Wild Russia (CC) Husbands Little Man (2005, Documentary) ›› (NR) (CC) Husbands Husbands Husbands Husbands BET 57 The Real (N) (CC) Below Deck Below Deck “Reunion” The People’s Couch Below Deck “Reunion” BRAV 14 Vanderpump Rules Below Deck South Park Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 Tosh.0 (N) Brickle. Daily Colbert COM 28 Colbert Daily Moonshiners (CC) DISC 38 Moonshiners (CC) Moonshiners (CC) Moonshiners (CC) Moonshiners (CC) Billy Bob’s Gags Liv-Mad. DISN 22 I Didn’t I Didn’t I Didn’t Austin Ella Enchanted (2004) ›› (PG) (CC) Mickey Good Luck ANT Farm Dog Live from Worst Botched (Part 1 of 2) Botched The doctors talk about Season 1. E! 34 Take the Hamptons E! News (N) e College Football Bowling Green at Akron. N (CC) (Live) 30 for 30 N ESP2 49 Around Pardon a Gold Glove Top 25 E:60 N 30 for 30 N SportsCenter N (CC) (Live) ESPN 48 SportsCenter N (CC) (Live) Grease 2 (1982, Musical Comedy) ›› (Maxwell Caulfield) (PG) The 700 Club (CC) FAM 43 Grease (1978, Musical) ››› (John Travolta) (PG) FS1 53 h NASCAR Race Hub N d College Basketball Northwood at Villanova. N Mission October N Moments NFL Films FOX Sports Live N FSN 51 Marlins Gators In Magic Magic d NBA Basketball Orlando Magic at Chicago Bulls. (Live) Magic e Football Mike Mike Total Recall (2012, Science Fiction) ›› (Colin Farrell) (PG-13) Sons of Anarchy The club deals with heartache. FX 31 Mike Debbie Macomber’s Trading Christmas ››› HALL 137 Debbie Macomber’s Mrs. Miracle (2009) ››› Debbie Macomber’s Call Me Mrs. Miracle Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Flip or Hunters Hunt Intl Flip or Flip or HGTV 21 Fixer Upper (CC) The Curse of The Curse of The Curse of Search for the The Curse of HIST 59 The Curse of True Tori (CC) True Tori (N) (CC) Prison Wives Club (N) True Tori (CC) LIFE 18 True Tori Tori reflects. True Tori (CC) Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Hayes Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All In With Chris Hayes MSN 185 PoliticsNation (N) iCarly Thunder Max Full House Full House Full House Full House Prince Prince Friends (CC) NICK 42 Nicky My Love Bad Girls Club Bad Girls OXY 123 My Wife My Wife BGC: Redemption BGC: Redemption Nail’d It (N) PLEX 149 Hercules Fun in Acapulco (1963) ›› (PG) (CC) Crusoe (1988) ››› (Aidan Quinn) Ground Control (1998) ›› (Kiefer Sutherland) Elvis Ink Master (CC) Ink Master (CC) Ink Master (CC) Ink Master (N) (CC) Tat; Miami Tat; Miami SPIKE 40 Ink Master (CC) HEAT Live! d NBA Basketball Houston Rockets at Miami Heat. (Live) HEAT Live! Inside e Cllege Football SUN 50 how to Do Inside Z Nation Z Nation Z Nation “Zunami” Ghost Hunters Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum. SYFY 8 Z Nation TBS 17 Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) TCM 169 Ada (1961) ››› (Susan Hayward) Playing The Cat and the Canary ››› (NR) My Favorite Blonde (1942) ››› (NR) My Favorite Brunette TLC 39 19 Kids and Counting 19 Kids and Counting “Jill’s Wedding” (CC) 19 Kids and Counting 19 Kids and Counting 19 Kids and Counting Bones (CC) Bones (CC) Bones (CC) CSI: NY (CC) CSI: NY (CC) TNT 46 Bones (CC) Clarence Garden Regular King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy TOON 124 Teen Man, Food Man, Food Hotel Impossible (CC) Hotel Impossible (N) Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods TRVL 126 Bizarre Foods TVL 44 Heroes Heroes Heroes Heroes FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Friends Friends Cleveland The Exes USA 27 Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Chrisley Benched Chrisley Benched Law & Order (CC) Law & Order (CC) Law & Order “Virtue” Law & Order (CC) Law & Order (CC) WE 117 Law & Order (CC) November 6, 2014 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 BROADCAST CHANNELS ABC News News Extra (N) Grey’s Anatomy (N) Scandal (N) (CC) Get Away With Murder News J. Kimmel WJXX 9 2 News ABC News Ent Let’s Ask Grey’s Anatomy (N) Scandal (N) (CC) Get Away With Murder News J. Kimmel WCJB 4 3 News Inside Ed. Cleveland Rules Big Bang Big Bang The 10 O’Clock News News4JAX Insider WJXT $ 4 News4JAX News4JAX Ent MI-5 (CC) BBC World T. Smiley WUFT % 5 News at 6 Business PBS NewsHour (N) This Old House Hr Doc Martin (CC) Gracepoint (N) News News Mod Fam Two Men WAWS > 6 Millionaire Celebrity Mod Fam Two Men Bones (N) (PA) Ellen DeGeneres-Mark WJCT _ 7 Wild Kratts Business PBS NewsHour (N) Antiques Roadshow Masterpiece Mystery! CBS News Jdg Judy FamFeud Big Bang Mom (N) Two Men McCarthys Elementary (N) (CC) News Letterman WJAX O 10 News TMZ (N) Simpsons Big Bang Big Bang Bones (N) (PA) Gracepoint (N) FOX 35 News at 10 (N) TMZ (CC) Access H. WOGX S Payne Mike Mike The Vampire Diaries Reign “Three Queens” Anger Anger TMZ (N) Access H. WCWJ 1 11 Payne NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! The Biggest Loser (N) Bad Judge A to Z (N) Parenthood (N) News J. Fallon WTLV , 12 News Potters Trinity J. Osteen Prince Hillsong Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) WJEB [ 13 Praise the Lord (CC) Good NBC News Ent Access H. The Biggest Loser (N) Bad Judge A to Z (N) Parenthood (N) News J. Fallon WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) The First 48 (CC) A&E 55 The First 48 (CC) AMC 45 Ghostbusters II (1989) ›› (Bill Murray) (PG) Jurassic Park III (2001) ›› (Sam Neill) (PG-13) Jurassic Park III (2001) ›› (Sam Neill) (PG-13) ANP 41 Monsters Inside Me Monsters Inside Me Monsters Inside Me Monsters Inside Me Monsters Inside Me Fatal Attractions Lottery Ticket (2010, Comedy) ›› (Bow Wow) (PG-13) (CC) Husbands Husbands Husbands- Ho. Husbands BET 57 The Real (N) (CC) Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Happens Jersey BRAV 14 Housewives/NJ South Park Tosh.0 South Park Key Happy Gilmore (1996) ›› (Adam Sandler) (PG-13) Daily Colbert COM 28 Colbert Daily Last Frontier Last Frontier Last Frontier The Science of Inter DISC 38 Edge of Alaska (CC) Last Frontier Liv-Mad. DISN 22 Camp Rock (2008) ››› (Joe Jonas) (NR) (CC) So Raven So Raven So Raven So Raven Good Luck ANT Farm Dog Evan Almighty (2007) ›› (Steve Carell) (PG) Kourtney & Khloé Take the Hamptons E! 34 Vanderpump Rules E! News (N) ESP2 49 Around Pardon SportsCenter N (CC) 2014 CrossFit Games 2014 CrossFit Games 2014 CrossFit Games SportsCenter Featured SportsCenter N (CC) (Live) ESPN 48 SportsCenter N (CC) Football e College Football Clemson at Wake Forest. N (Live) The 700 Club (CC) FAM 43 Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory ››› (G) Hook (1991, Fantasy) ››› (Dustin Hoffman) (PG) UFC Reloaded “UFC 172: Jones vs. Teixeira” (N) (CC) FOX Sports Live N FS1 53 America’s Pregame N Fntsy Ftbl UFC Fame k NHL Hockey Florida Panthers at Philadelphia Flyers. (Live) Panthers Sports Unlimited World Poker FSN 51 ACC Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Mike Pineapple Express (2008) ›› (Seth Rogen) (R) FX 31 Mike HALL 137 Snow Bride (2013, Drama) (Katrina Law) (NR) One Starry Christmas (2014) (Sarah Carter) (NR) The Christmas Spirit (2013) (Nicollette Sheridan) Rehab Rehab Rehab Hunters Hunt Intl Fixer Upper (CC) HGTV 21 House Hunters Reno House Hunters Reno Rehab Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn. Pawn. Search for the HIST 59 Pawn Project Runway Project Runway: Thr. Project Runway: Thr. LIFE 18 Project Runway (CC) Project Runway (CC) Project Runway Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Hayes Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All In With Chris Hayes MSN 185 PoliticsNation (N) iCarly Thunder Max Instant See Dad Full House Full House Prince Prince Friends Friends NICK 42 Nicky White Chicks (2004) ›› (Shawn Wayans) (PG-13) White Chicks (2004) ›› (Shawn Wayans) (PG-13) My Wife OXY 123 BGC: Redemption BGC PLEX 149 That Touch of Mink (1962) ›› (Cary Grant) (NR) Baby Boom (1987) ››› (Diane Keaton) (PG) (CC) Love Songs (1999, Drama) (CC) Last Patr Jail (CC) Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops SPIKE 40 Cops C-USA Sport ShipShape Sportsman Florida Fish Flats Fishing Extreme Lightning Powerboat Boat Show SUN 50 Big 12 Spartacus: War Saw: The Final Chapter (2010) › (Tobin Bell) (R) The Johnsons SYFY 8 Bait (2012, Action) (R) Spartacus: War TBS 17 Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) TCM 169 The Green Berets (1968) ››› (John Wayne) (G) Meet John Doe (1941) ››› (Gary Cooper) (NR) Bullitt (1968) ››› (Steve McQueen) (PG) (CC) TLC 39 Say Yes to the Dress 90 Day Fiance (CC) 90 Day Fiance (CC) Breaking Amish (CC) Breaking Amish (N) Breaking Amish (CC) TNT 46 Castle “The Limey” Castle “Headhunters” d NBA Basketball San Antonio Spurs at Houston Rockets. N d NBA Basketball Clarence Garden Regular King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Jesus Fam. Guy TOON 124 Teen Man, Food Man, Food The Layover The Layover No Reservations (N) No Reservation TRVL 126 Bizarre Foods King TVL 44 Heroes Heroes Heroes Heroes FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Friends Friends King Covert Affairs (N) Vanderbilt Mds USA 27 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU White Collar (CC) Tamar & Vince Tamar & Vince Tamar & Vince Tamar & Vince (N) Tamar & Vince WE 117 Tamar & Vince November 4, 2014 Friday Evening 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 110114b1-8.indd 4 BROADCAST CHANNELS ABC News News Extra (N) The 48th Annual CMA Awards (N) (Live) (CC) News J. Kimmel WJXX 9 2 News ABC News Ent Let’s Ask The 48th Annual CMA Awards (N) (Live) (CC) News J. Kimmel WCJB 4 3 News Inside Ed. Cleveland Rules Big Bang Big Bang The 10 O’Clock News News4JAX Insider WJXT $ 4 News4JAX News4JAX Ent NOVA (N) How We Got to Now BBC News T. Smiley WUFT % 5 News at 6 Business PBS NewsHour (N) Nature (N) (CC) Red Band Society (N) News News Mod Fam Two Men WAWS > 6 Millionaire Celebrity Mod Fam Two Men Hell’s Kitchen NOVA (N) How We Got to Now Nature (CC) WJCT _ 7 Wild Kratts Business PBS NewsHour (N) Nature (N) (CC) CBS News Jdg Judy FamFeud Survivor (N) (CC) Criminal Minds (N) Stalker (N) (CC) News Letterman WJAX O 10 News TMZ (N) Simpsons Big Bang Big Bang Hell’s Kitchen Red Band Society (N) FOX 35 News at 10 (N) TMZ (CC) Access H. WOGX S Payne Mike Mike Arrow (N) (CC) The 100 (N) (CC) Anger Anger TMZ (N) Access H. WCWJ 1 11 Payne NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! Myst-Laura Law & Order: SVU Chicago PD (N) News J. Fallon WTLV , 12 News IBA News Graham Classic Trinity Turning Prince By Faith Praise the Lord (N) (Live) (CC) WJEB [ 13 Stage NBC News Ent Access H. Myst-Laura Law & Order: SVU Chicago PD (N) News J. Fallon WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS A&E 55 Storage Storage Duck D. Duck D. Duck Dynasty (CC) Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D. AMC 45 Godzilla (1998) ›› (Matthew Broderick) (PG-13) The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) ›› (Jeff Goldblum) (PG-13) (CC) Lost World-Jurassic River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters River Monsters ANP 41 River Monsters This Christmas (2007) ›› (Delroy Lindo) (PG-13) (CC) Husbands The Cookout (2004) › (Ja Rule) (PG-13) (CC) BET 57 The Real (N) (CC) Million Dollar LA Million Dollar LA Top Chef (N) (CC) Happens Top Chef BRAV 14 The People’s Couch Million Dollar LA South Park Tosh.0 Key Key South Park South Park South Park Key Daily Colbert COM 28 Colbert Daily DISC 38 Naked and Afraid “Blood in the Water” (CC) Dude, You’re Screwed Dude, You’re Screwed “African Ambush” (N) Dude, You’re Screwed Liv-Mad. DISN 22 Liv-Mad. Liv-Mad. I Didn’t Austin Camp Rock (2008) ››› (Joe Jonas) Mickey Good Luck ANT Farm Dog E! News (N) Live from Live from Take the Hamptons The Soup The Soup With actor Will Arnett. E! 34 House of DVF SportsCenter N (CC) ESP2 49 Around Pardon Profile SportCtr e College Football Northern Illinois at Ball State. N (CC) (Live) NBA d NBA Basketball Indiana Pacers at Washington Wizards. N d NBA Basketball ESPN 48 SportsCenter N (CC) (Live) FAM 43 Boy/World Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) ›››› (PG) Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971) ››› (G) The 700 Club (CC) FS1 53 h NASCAR Race Hub N UFC Unleashed (CC) UFC Tonight N (CC) The Ultimate Fighter The Ultimate Fighter N FOX Sports Live N FSN 51 Game 365 Magic d NBA Basketball Orlando Magic at Philadelphia 76ers. (Live) Magic d Inside the Magic World Poker Mike Mike Immortals (2011, Adventure) ›› (Henry Cavill) (R) American Horror Story American Horror Story FX 31 Mike HALL 137 Debbie Macomber’s Trading Christmas ››› Single Santa Seeks Mrs. Claus (2004) ››› Meet the Santas (2005) ››› (Steve Guttenberg) HGTV 21 Property Brothers Property Brothers Property Brothers Buying and Selling (N) Hunters Hunt Intl Property Brothers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers (N) Pawn. Pawn. Pawn. Pawn. HIST 59 American Pickers 13 Going on 30 (2004) ››› (Jennifer Garner) Made of Honor (2008) ›› (Patrick Dempsey) LIFE 18 Movie Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Hayes Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All In With Chris Hayes MSN 185 PoliticsNation (N) Thunder Max Full House Full House Full House Full House Prince Prince Friends Friends NICK 42 Sam & Cat iCarly Preachers of L.A. (N) Fix My Choir (N) Madea’s Family OXY 123 Madea’s Family Reunion (2006) ›› (Tyler Perry) Preachers of L.A. Mask (1985) ››› (Eric Stoltz) (PG-13) (CC) Tart (2001) ›› (Dominique Swain) (R) Great PLEX 149 Earthstorm The Yearling (1994) ›› (CC) Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops iMPACT Wrestling N (CC) The One (2001) › SPIKE 40 Cops SUN 50 Powerboat HEAT Live! d NBA Basketball Miami Heat at Charlotte Hornets. (Live) HEAT Live! e ACC Gridiron Live d Inside the Heat The Johnsons SYFY 8 Piranhaconda (2012) Piranha (2010, Horror) ›› (Elisabeth Shue) (R) Bait (2012, Action) (Xavier Samuel) (R) TBS 17 Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) Anastasia (1956) ›››› TCM 169 Foreign Correspondent (1940) ››› (NR) (CC) Nicholas and Alexandra (1971) ››› (Michael Jayston) (GP) 911 Extreme Extreme TLC 39 Addiction Addiction My Strange Addiction Extreme Extreme Extreme Extreme 911 Castle (CC) (DVS) Inglourious Basterds (2009, War) ››› (Brad Pitt) (R) (CC) (DVS) Menu TNT 46 Castle “Linchpin” Clarence Garden Regular King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy TOON 124 Teen Man, Food Man, Food Bizarre Foods America Extreme RVs (CC) Extreme RVs (CC) Mega RV Countdown TRVL 126 Bizarre Foods TVL 44 Heroes Heroes Heroes Heroes FamFeud FamFeud Friends Friends Cleveland The Exes Cleveland The Exes USA 27 The Ugly Truth (2009) › (Katherine Heigl) (R) Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Law & Order (CC) Law & Order (CC) Law & Order (CC) Law & Order (CC) Law & Order (CC) WE 117 Law & Order (CC) November 3, 2014 Thursday Evening BROADCAST CHANNELS ABC News News Extra (N) Dancing With the Stars (N) (Live) (CC) CMA News J. Kimmel WJXX 9 2 News ABC News Ent Let’s Ask Dancing With the Stars (N) (Live) (CC) CMA News J. Kimmel WCJB 4 3 News WJXT $ 4 News4JAX News4JAX Jaguars Inside Ed. Election 2014:Battle Big Bang Big Bang The 10 O’Clock News News4JAX Ent WUFT % 5 News at 6 Business PBS NewsHour (N) Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Independent Lens (N) BBC World T. Smiley Sleepy Hollow (N) News News Mod Fam Two Men WAWS > 6 Millionaire Celebrity Mod Fam Two Men Gotham (N) Queen & Country WJCT _ 7 Wild Kratts Business PBS NewsHour (N) Antiques Roadshow Antiques Roadshow Queen & Country CBS News Jdg Judy FamFeud Broke Girl Millers Scorpion (N) (CC) NCIS: Los Angeles (N) News Letterman WJAX O 10 News TMZ (N) Simpsons Big Bang Big Bang Gotham (N) Sleepy Hollow (N) FOX 35 News at 10 (N) TMZ (CC) Access H. WOGX S Payne Mike Mike The Originals (N) (CC) Jane the Virgin (N) Anger Anger Huddle TMZ (N) WCWJ 1 11 Payne NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! The Voice The knockout rounds continue. (N) The Blacklist (N) (CC) News J. Fallon WTLV , 12 News Rodriguez Potters Trinity K. Shook Franklin Duplantis Love Finds a Home (2009) ›››› Praise WJEB [ 13 Angel in Praise NBC News Ent Access H. The Voice The knockout rounds continue. (N) The Blacklist (N) (CC) News J. Fallon WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS A&E 55 Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Gangsters: Most Evil Ghost ››› AMC 45 Van Helsing (2004) ›› (Hugh Jackman) (PG-13) The Da Vinci Code (2006, Mystery) ›› (Tom Hanks) (PG-13) (CC) Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot Finding Bigfoot “Biggest Search Yet” Finding Bigfoot ANP 41 Finding Bigfoot Barbershop (2002, Comedy) ›› (Ice Cube) (PG-13) (CC) Barbershop 2: Back in Business (2004) ››› (Ice Cube) (CC) BET 57 The Real (N) (CC) BRAV 14 Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules Vanderpump Rules Euros of Hollywood Happens Vander South Park Tosh.0 Key Key South Park South Park South Park South Park Daily Colbert COM 28 Colbert Daily Fast N’ Loud (CC) Fast N’ Loud Fast N’ Loud Delivering a 1976 Chevy C-10. (N) Fast N’ Loud (CC) DISC 38 Fast N’ Loud (CC) DISN 22 Jessie Jessie I Didn’t Austin How to Build a Better Boy (2014) Mickey Good Luck ANT Farm Liv-Mad. Dog Live from The Soup Take the Hamptons House of DVF “Fashion 101” E! 34 Botched (Part 2 of 2) E! News (N) World/Poker World/Poker e College Football Final ESP2 49 SportsCenter N (CC) Around Pardon World/Poker ESPN 48 e Monday Night Countdown N (CC) (Live) e NFL Football Indianapolis Colts at New York Giants. N Subject to Blackout (Live) SportCtr The 700 Club (CC) FAM 43 What to Expect When You’re Expecting (2012) ›› (PG-13) Grease (1978, Musical) ››› (John Travolta) (PG) UFC UFC UFC UFC FOX Sports Live N FS1 53 America’s Pregame N Red Bull Cliff Diving Big East Preview World Poker World Poker FSN 51 Triathlon ShipShape e College Football Stanford at Oregon. (T) The Five-Year Engagement (2012) ››› (Jason Segel) (R) Anger Anger Five Engage FX 31 Forget Sarah Naughty or Nice (2012, Fantasy) (Hilarie Burton) Window Wonderland (2013) (Chyler Leigh) (NR) HALL 137 Fir Crazy (2013) (Sarah Lancaster) (NR) HGTV 21 Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (N) Hunters Hunt Intl Love It or List It (CC) Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn. Pawn. Pawn. HIST 59 Pawn High School Possession (2014) (Jennifer Stone) The Assault (2014) (Makenzie Vega) (NR) (CC) LIFE 18 Movie Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Hayes Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word All In With Chris Hayes MSN 185 PoliticsNation (N) iCarly Thunder Max Full House Full House Full House Full House Prince Prince Friends Friends NICK 42 Henry OXY 123 My Wife My Wife My Wife My Wife My Wife My Wife My Wife My Wife My Wife My Wife Housewives/Atl. PLEX 149 Papa’s Down to You (2000) › (PG-13) (CC) King Ralph (1991) ›› (PG) (CC) Bird on a Wire (1990) ›› (Mel Gibson) (PG-13) Bird Wild Hogs SPIKE 40 Wild Hogs (2007, Comedy) › (Tim Allen) (PG-13) Casino Royale (2006, Action) ››› (Daniel Craig) (PG-13) 18 Holes Saltwater Cowboys The Florida Keys: Real e Jimbo Fisher Show SUN 50 Golf Amer. Golf Dest. Gators Playing Swing Paul (2011, Comedy) ›› (Simon Pegg) (R) Wild Wild West (1999, Action) › (Will Smith) (PG-13) Paul ›› (R) SYFY 8 Destination Truth TBS 17 Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) (CC) The Poor Little Rich Girl (1917) (NR) It (1927) ››› (Clara Bow) (NR) Sadie Thompson ››› TCM 169 Impact (1949) ›› (Brian Donlevy) (NR) TLC 39 Say Yes Say Yes 19 Kids and Counting 19 Kids and Counting 19 Kids and Counting “Jill’s Wedding” (CC) 19 Kids and Counting Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Castle (CC) (DVS) Transporter Transporter TNT 46 Castle “Cuffed” Clarence Garden Regular King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Rick Fam. Guy Fam. Guy TOON 124 Teen Man, Food Man, Food Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods Bizarre Foods America Bizarre Foods America TRVL 126 Bizarre Foods King TVL 44 Heroes Heroes Heroes Heroes FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Friends Friends King NCIS “Devil’s Triangle” WWE Monday Night RAW N (CC) (Live) Chrisley Benched USA 27 NCIS “Thirst” CSI: Miami (CC) CSI: Miami (CC) CSI: Miami “L.A.” CSI: Miami (CC) CSI: Miami “Dishonor” WE 117 CSI: Miami (CC) November 5, 2014 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 November 7, 2014 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 BROADCAST CHANNELS ABC News News Extra (N) Last Man Cristela Shark Tank (N) 20/20 (N) (CC) News J. Kimmel WJXX 9 2 News ABC News Ent Let’s Ask Last Man Cristela Shark Tank (N) 20/20 (N) (CC) News J. Kimmel WCJB 4 3 News Inside Ed. Cleveland Rules Big Bang Big Bang News Football News4JAX Insider WJXT $ 4 News4JAX News4JAX Ent Charlie In Performance... Art in the Twenty-First BBC World T. Smiley WUFT % 5 News at 6 Business PBS NewsHour (N) Wash Gotham (CC) (DVS) News Action Mod Fam Two Men WAWS > 6 Millionaire Celebrity Mod Fam Two Men Utopia (N) (CC) Charlie In Performance... Johnny Carson: American Masters (CC) WJCT _ 7 Wild Kratts Business PBS NewsHour (N) Wash CBS News Jdg Judy FamFeud The Amazing Race (N) Hawaii Five-0 (N) Blue Bloods (N) (CC) Action Letterman WJAX O 10 News TMZ (N) Simpsons Big Bang Big Bang Utopia (N) (CC) Gotham (CC) (DVS) FOX 35 News at 10 (N) TMZ (CC) Access H. WOGX S Payne Mike Mike Whose? Whose? America’s Next Model Anger Anger TMZ (N) Access H. WCWJ 1 11 Payne NBC News Wheel Jeopardy! Dateline NBC (N) (CC) Grimm “Last Fight” (N) Constantine (N) (CC) News J. Fallon WTLV , 12 News Potters My Hope H. Lindsey Harvest P. Stone Billy Graham 96th Birthday Special WJEB [ 13 Praise the Lord (CC) Super NBC News Ent Access H. Dateline NBC (N) (CC) Grimm “Last Fight” (N) Constantine (N) (CC) News J. Fallon WESH ^ 23 News CABLE CHANNELS Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds (CC) Criminal Minds “100” A&E 55 The First 48 (CC) AMC 45 Ghost Ship Déjà Vu (2006) ››› (Denzel Washington) (PG-13) (CC) Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003) ››› (R) (CC) Walk:Dead Tanked Tanked (N) Tanked ANP 41 Finding Bigfoot “Bigfoot the Friendly Ghost” Tanked Any Given Sunday (1999, Drama) ››› (Al Pacino) (R) (CC) Scandal (CC) Scandal (CC) BET 57 The Real (N) (CC) Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days (2003) ›› (Kate Hudson) How Lose BRAV 14 Housewives/Atl. South Park Happy Gilmore (1996) ›› (Adam Sandler) (PG-13) Dumb & Dumber (1994, Comedy) ››› (Jim Carrey) (PG-13) COM 28 Colbert Daily Gold Rush (CC) Gold Rush: Pay Dirt (N) Gold Rush (N) (CC) Edge of Alaska (N) Gold Rush (CC) DISC 38 Gold Rush (CC) Dog Despicable Me (2010, Comedy) ››› (PG) (CC) Rebels Rebels I Didn’t Liv-Mad. Jessie Good Luck DISN 22 Dog Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City House of DVF “Fashion 101” E! 34 Evan Almighty ›› (PG) E! News (N) e College Football Utah State at Wyoming. N (CC) (Live) SportsCenter N (CC) ESP2 49 Pardon h NASCAR Racing d NBA Basketball: Grizzlies at Thunder d NBA Basketball ESPN 48 SportsCenter N (CC) Becoming NBA Matilda (1996, Comedy) ››› (Mara Wilson) (PG) The 700 Club (CC) FAM 43 Hook ››› Jumanji (1995, Fantasy) ›› (Robin Williams) (PG) Setup h NASCAR Racing Camping World Truck Series: Phoenix. N FOX Sports Live N FS1 53 America’s Pregame N (CC) (Live) UEFA UFC World Poker FSN 51 Gators Magic d NBA Basketball Minnesota Timberwolves at Orlando Magic. Magic Star Trek (2009) ››› FX 31 Live Free or Die Hard (2007) ››› (Bruce Willis) Star Trek (2009, Science Fiction) ››› (Chris Pine) (PG-13) HALL 137 The Thanksgiving House (2013) (Emily Rose) Let It Snow (2013) (Candace Cameron Bure) (NR) Angels Sing (2013) ›› (Harry Connick Jr.) (PG) HGTV 21 Love It or List It, Too Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Love It or List It (CC) Hunters Hunt Intl Hunters Hunt Intl American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers The Curse of HIST 59 American Pickers Movie Girl Fight (2011) (Anne Heche) (NR) (CC) LIFE 18 Movie Hardball Matthews All In With Chris Hayes Rachel Maddow Show Lockup Lockup MSN 185 PoliticsNation (N) iCarly Thunder Thunder Turtles Turtles Full House Full House Prince Prince Friends Friends NICK 42 Henry Snapped Snapped OXY 123 Top Model Ocean’s Twelve (2004) ››› (George Clooney) (PG-13) Snapped PLEX 149 AnotherPr Zeus and Roxanne (1997) ›› (PG) Peggy Sue Got Married (1986) ››› Hannah and Her Sisters (1986) ›››› (PG-13) Huck Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops GLORY 18: Return to Glory N (Live) Cops Academy SPIKE 40 Cops Future s Boxing SUN 50 Florida Prep Zone e High School Football Haven “Morbidity” WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (CC) Z Nation Haven “Morbidity” SYFY 8 Saw-Final Chp TBS 17 Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Deal With The Hangover (2009) ››› (Bradley Cooper) (R) Deal With TCM 169 The Bad Seed (1956) ››› (Nancy Kelly) (NR) Detour (1945) ›› (NR) The Hitch-Hiker (1953) ››› (NR) Gun Crazy (1950) ››› (NR) (CC) TLC 39 Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes 19 Kids and Counting Say Yes Say Yes Borrowed Borrowed Say Yes Say Yes Castle (CC) (DVS) On the Menu (N) (CC) Limitless (2011) ›› (Bradley Cooper) (PG-13) On the Menu (CC) TNT 46 Castle (CC) Clarence Garden Regular King of Hill King of Hill Cleveland Cleveland Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy Fam. Guy TOON 124 Teen Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum TRVL 126 Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum Mysteries-Museum White House King TVL 44 Heroes Heroes Heroes Heroes FamFeud FamFeud Raymond Raymond Friends Friends King USA 27 Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam Mod Fam WE 117 Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra Kendra 10/29/14 4:44 PM 5 B PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Calendar Palatka. Includes salad, potatoes, soup, dessert and tea. Music and karaoke beginning at 8 p.m. ‘Jumpstart Read for the Record’ continued from PAge 2B WINGS, 6-8 p.m., Wednesdays, Crescent City Moose Family Center. Different flavors to choose from. ACRYLIC PAINTING, 8-11 a.m.; crochet class, 11 a.m.; bingo, 1-3 p.m.; and ceramics, 3-4:30 p.m., Wednesdays, Edgar Johnson Senior Center, 1215 Westover Dr., Palatka. Details: 329-0469. ZUMBA, led by Carlynn Roberts, 3:15-4:15 p.m., Wednesdays, Putnam Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. Cost is $5 for nonmembers and $3 for members who do not have a “plus membership.” 649-8784. MORNING AEROBICS, 8:459:45 a.m., Wednesdays, Putnam Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. 649-8784. LINE DANCING, 6-7:30 p.m., Wednesdays, Community Center in Pomona Park, 1775 U.S. 17. Offered by Putnam Family Fitness Center. 649-8784. 12-STEP CHRISTIAN RECOVERY GROUP MEET, 6 p.m., every Wednesday, 419 St. Johns Ave., Palatka. 546-1943. DARTS, FOOD, DRINKS, AND MUSIC, 6 p.m., Wednesdays, Putnam County Shrine Club, Yelvington Road, East Palatka. BINGO, VFW POST 10164 INTERLACHEN, State Road 20, beginning at 6 p.m., Wednesdays. Cost is $1 per game with big money and door prizes. Refreshments available for purchase. Full-course dinner for $5. Public welcome. Details: 684-0839. Submitted photo Dana Gornto’s pre-kindergarten students at Kelley Smith Elementary School recently took part in “Jumpstart Read for the Record,” a nationwide program to get as many people reading together across the country as possible. Cost is $18 per person and includes lunch. Reservations by Oct. 29. Details: Kathi Rivenburg, (352) 854-8585. THE PUTNAM COUNTY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY MEETING, 7 p.m. first Thursdays, Palatka Public Library. The public is invited. HASTINGS DEMOCRATIC CLUB meets the first Thursdays, Gethsemane Missionary Baptist Church, 317 Daniels St., Hastings. Social/fellowship begins at 6:30 p.m.; business meeting begins at 7 p.m. Details: Carol D. Holtz at 546-1997 or (904) 692-1668. WILLIAM BARTRAM CHAPTER OF THE NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION meet, 11:30 a.m., first Thursdays, October through May at Beef O’Brady’s, 201 N. 1st St., Palatka. Meeting in January will be on the second Thursday. Donna Rogero, 325-5230. ANCIENT CITY CAMERA CLUB SHOW, meets the first and second Thursdays, 7 p.m. at St. Augustine Record Building, corners of State Road 207 and County Road 312, St. Augustine. Group is open to beginners to professional photographers. Details: (904) 797-2141. FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES 4355, Pinochle 1 p.m.; tacos 5-7 p.m., Wednesdays, 110 CHILDBIRTH AND Shrine Club Road, Lake Como. BREASTFEEDING Details: 649-5033. EDUCATION, 5:30 p.m., first and third Thursdays, AB Conference U.S. VETERANS POST 104, Room, Putnam Community State Road 19, Palatka, free Medical Center, 611 Zeagler Dr., pool, and dance lessons at 7:30 Palatka. Free and open to the p.m., Wednesdays. public. Details: Rhonda at 326PALATKA DUPLICATE BRIDGE 7820 or e-mail Midwife111rd@ yahoo.com. CLUB meeting, 10 a.m., Wednesdays, 521 S. 13th St., DART LEAGUE, 7 p.m., Palatka. Open stratified games. Participants should bring a lunch. Thursdays, Palatka Moose Lodge 184, 3875 Reid St. For Details: 328-0263. members and guests. VFW POST 3349 VETERAN’S EVERY CHILD TO READ, 0-2 ROUND TABLE, 1-3 p.m., years old, 10-10:30 a.m. and 3-5 Wednesdays, 3201 Reid St., years old, 10:30-11:15 a.m., Palatka. The public is invited. Thursdays, Interlachen Library, Details: 328-2863. 133 N. County Road 315. There will be songs, stories, playtime, AMERICAN LEGION POST and more. 293, INTERLACHEN BINGO, noon, Wednesdays, County EVERY CHILD READY TO Road 315. Lunch available 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Bingo at 12:30 READ (ECRR), 10 a.m., Thursdays, Crescent City Library, p.m. 610 N. Summit St. For ages 0-2 years and their caregiver. Ages THURSDAY 3-5 and their caregiver begins at 11 a.m. There will be stories, BURGER NIGHT, 6-8 p.m. and songs, finger plays, rhymes and karaoke with Jess, 7-11 p.m., other early literacy activities. Thursday, Palatka Moose Lodge Details: 698-2600. 184, 3875 Reid St. Members and guests. 10 TOUCHSTONES FOR GRIEF, 10:30 a.m., Thursday, RETIRED PUBLIC Hospice of the Nature coast EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION Wings Education Center, 6721 (RPEA) membership meet, 9 Crill Ave., Palatka. Facilitated by a.m. to 3 p.m., Thursday, Holiday Grief Services Manager, Mary Inn, 3600 SW 38th Ave., Ocala. Rockefeller, LMHC. Based on Brown continued from PAge 1B took place in October 1621 in New England, one year after the Pilgrims first landed on Plymouth Rock. But that first fest the Pilgrims shared with the Indians was an Indian Harvest celebration going back to the ancient Greeks. Sarah Hale, an editor of a women’s magazine, worked to get Thanksgiving named as a national holiday and petitioned presidents and government officials for 20 years to proclaim a national day of Thanksgiving. On Oct. 3, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln finally proclaimed the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day. President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved it up a week during his 110114b1-8.indd 5 continued from PAge 1B symbiosis they have achieved with the church members in the choir has developed very well.” During the program, guests will hear organ and choral KARAOKE U.S. VETERANS works by Pergolesi, J.S. Bach, POST 104, 1050 State Road 19, C. Hylton Stewart, Richard Palatka, 8 p.m. Fridays. There Farrant and others. The St. will also be a pool tournament/ Mark’s choir and three FloArts three ball games at 8 p.m. choral scholars, Martin, Patterson and Kevin Beckham, FRATERNAL ORDER OF will perform. Other choir memEAGLES 4355, Steak and bers include Martha Preston, Seafood, 5-7 p.m., Fridays, 110 Carol Lester, Sandy Ford, Linda Shrine Club Road, Lake Como. Coons, Kelsey Martin, Brendan Details: 649-5033. Fogarty and Jim Coons. According to Stecker, St. VFW POST 3349 DINNER, 6-8 p.m., Fridays. Details: 328-2863. Mark’s offers a style of both worship and theology that he thinks may not be easily found INTERLACHEN LAKES elsewhere in Palatka. ESTATES STATION 17 VFD “It will be both a quiet and BINGO, Fridays, 217 Kennedy contemplative service, as well as Ave. Early birds, 6:30 p.m.; one filled with joy and exultaregular games, 7 p.m. tion at times,” he said. “I hope Refreshments at 5:30 p.m. that guests will realize the REUNIONS breadth of what St. Mark’s offers – namely, the splendor of CENTRAL ACADEMY HIGH traditional Anglican worship in SCHOOL CLASS OF 1967 a welcoming and affirming comREUNION, Dec. 27. In search of munity, all within a church that all classmates: names, has been an integral part of the addresses, phone numbers, and fabric of the history of Palatka e-mail addresses. There will be a and Putnam County since the memorial ceremony to pay tribute 1850s.” and acknowledge those When Stecker graduates next classmates that have passed month, he plans to travel to away. Family members are Belgium for a semester studyasked to contact: Gwen ing at the Royal Carillon School Robinson at 325-2326; Sonny “Jef Denyn” in Belgium. From McCoy at 325-0236; or Wanda there he will attend grad school Williams at 385-3843. he said possibly at the UF working toward a masters in musiCOMING EVENTS cology degree with a concentration in sacred music. COOL-SEASON VEGGIES AND “Of course, I hope he takes FLOWERS WORKSHOP, 10:30 the UF route,” said Father a.m., Friday, Nov. 14, Putnam Marsh. “He’s a really talented, County Ag Center, 111 Yelvington energetic and young and we Road, East Palatka. need all of those things at St. Learn about cool-season Mark’s. We knew he would go vegetables – brussell sprouts, study abroad. We are really in collards and lettuce along with hopes he will come back.” flowering annuals to keep yards Stecker was named a 2013colorful this winter. 2014 University Scholar in the Registration must be completed Department of Linguistics in through Eventbrite: www. the spring 2013. He is also a eventbrite.com/e/cool-seasonmember of the University of veggies-and-flowerstickets-1382515440. No walk ins. Florida Organ Studio and has served as organist and choirFee is $6 and includes snacks master at St. Mark’s since and materials. Computer November 2013. available at extension office to As a composer, three of register. Stecker’s compositions for carilDetails: Prissy at 329-0324 or lon were published in 2014, e-mail [email protected]. including Spiraculum Vitae, CAREER FAIR, 9 a.m. to noon, which was awarded first prize of Wednesday, Nov. 19, St. Johns the 2014 Composition River State College, St. Competition of the Festival Augustine campus. Register Musique Sacree of Perpignan, online: www.surveymonkey. France. He traveled to France to com/s/November2014Fair. attend the public debut of his composition on the carillon NOTABLES there. In his free time, he enjoys discovering and collecting world REDUCED ADOPTION FEES music, following UF athletics, for all dogs and cats ages 2 reading and studying foreign years old and up, Humane languages. Society of Northeast Florida Inc. Stecker invites the public to Adoption fees for dogs are $25; attend the special celebration on cats are $12.50 and include Sunday or for those interested spay/neuter, age appropriate to join the choir. vaccinations and microchip. “All are welcome,” he said. Details: 325-1587 or www.hsnefl. “Regardless of previous musical org to see adoptable pets. experience.” The church is at 200 Main CANNED FOOD DRIVE, 8 a.m. St., Palatka. For details on the to 5:30 p.m., Nov. 24 until Dec. event or the choir, contact 15, Ravine Gardens State Park, Stecker through the church 1600 Twigg St., Palatka. office at 328-1474. Consider dropping off a nonMarsh said although the perishable food item to donate to the local community during these Sunday’s service is certainly part of the Anglican tradition, it days. Details: 329-3721. is not denominational specific and should appeal to anyone SPRING SEMESTER who enjoys classical music. REGISTRATION at St. Johns River State College. All new “It is also a candlelight serstudents are required to attend vice beginning at the setting of orientation before registering for the sun and daylight changes to classes. Students are dusk,” he said. “We may not encouraged to avoid the yearhave the timing just exactly end rush and reserve their seat. right for the sunset, but the Registration time tickets will be Celebration of All Saints assigned during November Evensong emphasizes Christ orientation, allowing most the light of the world and that students to register for classes all are to become part of that during orientation. Registration light.” for returning students begins Nov. 5. Spring classes begin Jan. [email protected] 7. 312-4200; SJRstate.edu. BINGO, VFW POST 10164 INTERLACHEN, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Fridays on State Road 20. Light lunch available for small charge. Details: 684-0839. HANDMADE CARD MAKING with Judith Horton, noon to 3 p.m., Wednesdays, 200 E. Main St., Pomona Park. Cost is $5 per class and all supplies are included. Details: 983-0370. ADULT AND CHILDREN’S TAEKWON-DO, 6:15-7 p.m., Wednesdays, Putnam Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. Instructed by Master Jim Weller, Taekwon-Do is a Korean martial art that combines combat and selfdefense techniques with sport and exercise. Details: 649-8784. Evensong the book “Understanding Your Grief,” by Alan D. Wolfelt, PhD. Program is free and open to the public. Registration required. Details: 530-4600. SMOKE FREE BINGO, 10:30 a.m., Thursdays, Crescent City Moose Family Center. Open to the public. CHAIR AEROBICS WITH LORI for $3 per person, 9:30 a.m.; quilting class with Janelle, 10 a.m.; ping pong and games, 1 p.m., Thursdays, Edgar Johnson Senior Center, 1215 Westover Dr., Palatka. Details: 329-0469. ZUMBA, led by Carlynn Roberts, 3:15-4:15 p.m., Thursdays, Putnam Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. Cost is $5 for nonmembers and $3 for members who do not have a “plus membership.” 649-8784. FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES DARTS, 7 p.m., Thursdays, 823 State Road 20, Interlachen. Details: 684-3252. SENIORS VS CRIME, walk-in assistance, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Thursdays, Sheriff’s complex, 130 Orie Griffin Blvd., Palatka. Assists seniors who have been victims of con artists, scams, fraud, or deceptive business practices. Volunteers are needed. Details: 326-2839 or e-mail [email protected]; or Barry Schnoor, project manager, barry. [email protected]. FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES 4355, Surprise Bingo, 5:30-8:30 p.m.; regular bingo, 6:30 p.m., Thursdays, 110 Shrine Club Road, Lake Como. Details: 649-5033. PALATKA KIWANIS CLUB, every Thursday, noon to 1 p.m., Sleep Inn & Suites meeting room, State Road 100. Visitors/ potential members welcome for lunch. Open to public. www. palatkakiwanis.org. U.S. VETERANS POST 104 bingo, 6-9 p.m. Thursdays; kitchen open 6-7:15 p.m., State Road 19, Palatka. FRIDAY [email protected]. SENIOR PROGRAM, 9 a.m. to noon, first Fridays, Pomona Park Community Center, 200 E. Main St., Pomona Park. There will be bingo, checkers, cards, conversation with neighbors, or just relax and read one of over 150 books on the shelf or take home to read. Suggestion and ideas are welcome. Refreshments will be served. Joyce Svingala at 649-9293. FISH FRY, 5-7 p.m. first Fridays, Fraternal Order of Eagles, 823 State Road 20, Interlachen. 6843252. SENIOR FRIENDS AT PUTNAM COMMUNITY MEDICAL CENTER, Bingo, 1-3 p.m., Fridays, Butler Building, 611 Zeagler Dr., Palatka. First Fridays, Fun Fridays, 1-3 p.m. One-year membership: $15. Details: 328-3986. DART TOURNAMENT, 8 p.m., Fridays, Palatka Moose Lodge 184, 3875 Reid St. For members and guests. FRIDAY DINNERS, 5-7 p.m., Crescent City Moose Family Center. First Friday is prime rib; second, third, and fourth Fridays are cook’s choice. Music or karaoke, 7 p.m. Members and guests. POMONA PARK SENIOR PLASTIC CANVAS CRAFT CLASS with Sue Brunson, 2-4 p.m., Fridays, Community Center, 1775 US 17. Cost is $3 per person and includes all supplies. POWER YOGA, 8:30 a.m.; paint Fridays, 9 a.m.; low impact aerobics with Terri for $3 per person, 9:45 a.m.; Zumba Gold, 11 a.m.; Pickin and Grinnin, 1 p.m.; and happy hour, 2 p.m., Fridays, Edgar Johnson Senior Center, 1215 Westover Dr., Palatka. Details: 329-0469. ZUMBA, led by Carlynn Roberts, 6-7 p.m., Fridays, Putnam Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. Cost is $5 for nonmembers and $3 for members who do not have a “plus membership.” 649-8784. HAM DINNER, 6-8 p.m. and Karaoke with Jess, 8 p.m. to midnight, Palatka Moose Lodge 184, 3875 Reid St. Members and guests. MORNING AEROBICS, 8:459:45 a.m., Fridays, Putnam Family Fitness Center, 213 Perry St., Pomona Park. Details: 6498784. CAREGIVER RESOURCE FAIR, hosted by VA Health Care, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Friday, American Legion Bert Hodge Post 45, 316 Osceola St., Palatka. Promote health and well-being of family caregivers who care for veterans through education, resources, support, and services. Details: Bina Patel, (352) 376-1611, ext. 4751 or WEE LOVE READING, 11 a.m., Fridays, Bostwick Library, 125 Tillman St. Reading program is for adults and kids of all ages who love to read, tell stories, sing songs, and play games. Details: 326-2750. administration to allow more time for Christmas shopping, but the change created an uproar and finally Congress ruled in 1941 that the fourth Thursday in November would be a legal federal holiday. Have a Happy Thanksgiving! My favorite holiday greeting is “”I wish I were there to help kick the stuffing out of your turkey!” WEST PUTNAM HAPPENINGS: n The Interlachen Holiday Craft Show will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and Sunday and again Nov. 7-9 at the Orange Blossom CB Club on County Road 315 South in Interlachen. Featured items include jewelry, crocheted fashions, wood carvings, quilting, pottery, felted fashions, stained glass, breast cancer awareness, March of Dimes and baked goods. The “Craft Corner” features free beading for ages 5-13 years from STEAK NIGHT, 6-8 p.m., Fridays, Putnam County Shrine Club, Yelvington Road, East 10:30-11:30 a.m. on Saturdays. n Jim and Carol MacDonald will lead a three-mile nature stroll along Greenway Trail off County Road 310 from 9-11 a.m. today. Lunch will follow at Backwoods Barbecue. For details, visit www. putnambluewaysandtrails.org. n The Interlachen Rookies Relay for Life team will host a bake sale beginning at 7 a.m. today at Hitchcock’s on State Road 20, Interlachen. All proceeds go to the American Cancer Society. For details, call Viv Bly at 684-2490 n Nancy Luca of Gainesville will be in concert from at Chiappini’s store on the corner of State Roads 26 and 21 in Melrose today. The concert is free; guests should bring a chair. If parking lot is full, park next to Williamson’s Supermarket around the corner. WEDNESDAYS: n Artisans’’ Way “Naborhood” Coffee Talk happens every Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and includes a different musician every week. Coffee and homemade goodies will be available. Admission is free. The show will be live from the Historic Hilton House, 5910 Hampton St., Melrose. NOV. 7 – 8 n Trinity Episcopal Church will host its fall bazaar from 2-7 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 8, at 204 State Road 26, Melrose. The chili supper on Friday begins at 3 p.m. Pulled pork lunch on Saturday will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The event includes a bake sale, jams, jellies, art, antiques and collectibles, vintage furniture, estate silver, plants, house wares, Christmas, hand knit and crocheted items, quilt drawing, jewelry and more. n Artisans’ Way will sponsor an Edible Art Silent Auction from 6-8:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 7, at the Historic Hilton House, 5910 Hampton St., Melrose. To enter, reserve by email: info@artisansway. org. Entries must be delivered by 5 p.m. Nov. 7. n Woodlawn Baptist Church will host a community wide fall festival from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 8, at 818 County Road 20A, Hawthorne. Highlights include hayrides, games, hotdogs, popcorn, and more. The event is free and open to the public. For details, call (352) 481-3652. ––––– Keep the emails and phone calls coming to [email protected] or (386) 916-9175. I love hearing from you. Lillian Brown is the West Putnam orrespondent fot Palatka Daily News 10/30/14 2:26 PM 6 B PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 ADVICE BY HARRIETTE COLE CROSSWORD ACROSS 1 Seance noises 5 Listen! 9 British rule in India 12 Toast topper 13 Flu symptom 14 Caviar 15 Dry riverbed 16 Left in a hurry 18 Rare 20 Coup de — 21 “Fish Magic” artist 22 Gleeful shout 23 Crept sidewise 26 Indent keys 30 Big laugh 33 Blarney Stone locale 34 Place of exile 35 Get real! (2 wds.) 37 Splits 39 Deli units 40 Cafe handout 41 Wyoming range 43 Stadium cry 45 Pack member 48Knight’ssuit 51 Attack 53 Threshold 56 At rest 57 58 59 60 61 62 29 Airline to Stockholm 30 Candied item 31 Draw on 32 Nieces and cousins 36 Turmoil 38Piglets’ mothers 42 More meddlesome 44Firechief’s suspicion Blow away Buys Shade trees Prior to Leaf juncture Sack out DOWN 1 Garden plantings 2 Alas partner 3 Organ feature 4 Evening gala 5 Possess 6 Turkish title 7 Sugarcane product 8 Retirement account 9 Diva — Ponselle 10 With, to monsieur 11 Green hue 17 Address the crowd 19 Yield territory 22 Skilled 24 Distance around 25 Great Lake 27 Each and every 28 Consumer org. For Saturday, November 1, 2014 Take control of your life. You can’t accomplish everything all at once, so make a commitment, and plan your time accordingly. If you take on more than you realistically can handle, you won’t know which way to turn and are likely to end up disappointed. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Provide stability to loved ones. Don’t be afraid to leap into action and set budgets and a strategy that will ensure greater security and peace of mind. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) People from other cultural backgrounds have different ways of looking at life. If you listen and observe, you will be inspired to utilize some of what you discover. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Make the most of your options. Utilize every opportunity to push your ideas forward. If you network, a job offer will give you a chance to show others what you can do. 46 Punch server 47 Thin coatings 48 Carpentry tool 49 Ocean sound 50 Sulk 51 Nave neighbor 52 In case 54 Pair 55 Finale HOROSCOPE AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) A change of plans will point you in a fascinating direction. Unleash your creativity and pay attention to your hunches. It’s time to incorporate your strengths. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Lucrative financial deals are within reach. Legal or governmental matters will move ahead faster than anticipated. An elderly relative will offer sound advice. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Let down your guard and be more outgoing. If you are approachable, you will have more opportunities to meet inspiring individuals. Broaden your horizons by participating in inspiring endeavors. Reader shares truth about event Yesterday’s Answer best to increase your knowledge. Stay in tune with what is going on around you and in your chosen field. CANCER LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Live up to your word. Broken promises will lead to problems. Don’t damage your reputation by saying one thing and doing another. Do your best and be gracious and humble. VIRGO TAURUS GEMINI (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Life will be hectic. Take a little personal time to rejuvenate and ease your stress. A day trip or spa visit will help you set priorities and put things into perspective. (May 21-June 20) Keep an open mind and do your LIBRA was it right to tell her what I really thought? — Heads Up, Brooklyn, New York Dear Heads Up: Congratulations on your tactful honesty. I agree that it may not have been your place to say anything if you had to be the one to bring it up. After all, you said you do not know this woman. But since she reached out to you, it must have been for a reason. While she may have been looking for affirmation of the success of her event, she got what she probably needed — honest, constructive feedback that she can use — if she is smart — to strengthen a similar event in the future. You did well. Dear Harriette: I have a friend who calls, and I can’t help myself — I always answer. It doesn’t matter if I am in a meeting, asleep, whatever. I answer for him. He stirs me like that. I know it sounds crazy, but it’s true. The thing is, he doesn’t really do the same for me. I didn’t notice it at first, but it’s true. He is respon- sive, but there have been plenty of times when I have not been able to reach him, and it has taken a long time for him to call me back. That hurts my feelings. How can I manage this relationship better? I fear that I am the problem, even though I often feel like it’s him. — Unresponsive, Detroit Dear Unresponsive: You seem to be willing to put this man before yourself. That’s not smart. There is a certain healthiness in putting yourself first. It allows you to tend to your basic needs and desires. When you push your personal needs to the back burner, out of either love or infatuation with another, you are starving that other side of you. If this man is worthy of your affection, he will surely not disappear if he has to wait for your response. Further, if he tends to be lackadaisical about responding to you, let him get a taste of his own medicine. It may help him see what it feels like to be ignored. BRIDGE (June 21-July 22) If you want to have a bright future, you should prepare a solid financial plan. Counting on a sudden windfall will prevent you from seeing your situation clearly. (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Don’t leave anything to chance. Go over agreements and contracts thoroughly, and make sure you get everything in writing. If you are conscientious, you will get additional perks. (April 20-May 20) Don’t hold grudges. If you stew over a real or imagined slight from your past, you will stir up trouble that is best ignored. Move forward, and let success be your revenge. Dear Harriette: I went to an event that was hosted by a woman I met through a professional contact. I thought the event was horrible. It was poorly produced. People came late, primarily because it started too early — smack in the middle of rush hour. And it seemed really disorganized. Because I came out of respect to my contact, I sat through it, but I was none too happy. I chalked it up to a not-sogreat experience until the host cold-called me for feedback. I hedged around my thoughts at first, but she kept asking, so I told her. What I said was measured, but I did let her know that I was not particularly pleased. I think I said it in a way that wasn’t offensive. I don’t tend to volunteer my thoughts, especially if they are questionable, but I actually didn’t volunteer. She asked me. She seemed to take it pretty well, too, but I’m second-guessing myself now. Should I have just made nice on the phone, or Saki, a Scottish short-story author who died in 1916, said, “I think she must have been very strictly brought up, she’s so desperately anxious to do the wrong thing correctly.” This week we have had a series of deals in which the bidding has not been either clear-cut or accurate. And on some, the opening lead has been weird. Here is one more in which the right final contract was not reached. How should the auction have gone? North might have rebid three clubs with such a strong suit and seven playing tricks. South’s sensible two-diamond rebid was forcing for one round. Note also that this guaranteed at least five spades and denied four hearts; with 5-4-4-0 distribution, he would have rebid two hearts — we love majors and dislike minors. Then maybe North should have continued with two hearts (hoping partner could bid no-trump) or two no-trump (hop- ing it would not wrongside the contract). However, when North bid two spades, South should not have jumped to four spades. He should have bid three no-trump to offer a choice of games. Here, North would have passed, but if he had held three spades, he would have corrected back to four spades. As you will have seen, there are 10 top tricks in no-trump: one spade, two hearts, one diamond and six clubs. But four spades had no chance. And even if spades had been 3-3, careful defense could have defeated that game. Always try to keep your options open. And remember that partner will not forget your earlier bids and their meanings. COMICS HAGAR THE HORRIBLE Chris Browne HI AND LOIS Mort Walker DILBERT BEETLE BAILEY Robb Armstrong FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE JUMPSTART BLONDIE Dean Young & John Marshall THE BORN LOSER BABY BLUES Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman FLEA MARKET The St. Augustine JOIN US THIS WEEKEND! Enjoy fun foods while you shop for bargains & treasures 110114b1-8.indd 6 GARFIELD Chance Browne Scott Adams Lynn Johnston Chip Sansom Jim Davis Hoagies Philly Cheesesteaks Tacos & Quesadillas Saturday & Sunday ATM Specialty Dogs Kettle Corn Fresh Boiled Peanuts 9 a.m. Dried Fruit, Nuts and Candies Gourmet Donuts SR 207 & I-95, exit 311 Cold Sodas Hawaiian Shaved Ice Fruit Smoothies (904) 824-4210 Ice Cream Keg Root Beer Slush Puppies www.StAugustineFleaMarket.com Ice Cold Beer Live Music 10/29/14 4:44 PM 7 B PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 To nts: ty reside Coun Putnam ognize re to rec anding u s a le p It is my re for his outst n ing star! ilgo Jacob K e is truly a shin as already prove and a dependle h H service. 7 years old, he r, very responsib eds to be done. 1 e ne At just ard work any task that updating our h a e b o le t himself n, ready to tack helpful to us in rs and techso r ute e ially p le ab en espec rking with comp , he is also duale b s a h ation Jacob ys wo senior s he enjo home-schooled ege. After gradu ree in a , e it s b a oll we eg urrently earn a d r State C nology. C t St. Johns Rive ucation there to a d nenrolled o continue his e time volu f o t lo t a s pends L’s an he plan networking. FM, he s projects like FP many r e e t p o u p H t m a co ith other helping e does so Besides is church and w en asked why h ople and want pe th Wh teering a er to Care Day. “I enjoy helping , w id o sa ults nual P s, Jacob my community.” students and ad g in h t e e and of thes nce in unger a differe l example to yo a stellar attitud volune k a m o t onderfu b on our ad such He is a w h more people h ful to have Jaco wis ank alike. I heart. We’re th . s M u F genero 1.3 Hope 9 t a m a teer te ope FM 2177 • 91.3 H 3 obinson Robin R Manager • WHIF Palatka, Florida obin General Palm Avenue • -0934 fax m/radior o .c k o o b h 5 t 201 Sou 334 ph • 386-32 .org • www.face if -3 386-325 if.org • www.wh h w @ robin und o f s i e p e ho wher ... The following is a partial list of area nonprofit organizations: LEE CONLEE HOUSE DOMESTIC/ SEXUAL VIOLENCE SHELTER SUPPORT GROUP SERVICES DV/ SA HELPLINE 325-3141 or (800) 500-1119 TDD users may call through Florida Relay Service at (800) 955-8771 or 711. AT&T Language Line. A shelter dedicated to the fight against family violence in Putnam County. Call us. We can help. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY 328-6224 600 Zeagler Drive, Palatka. Committed to fighting cancer through balanced programs of research, education, patient service, advocacy and cancer information. AMERICAN RED CROSS, NORTHEAST FLORIDA CHAPTER PALATKA BRANCH 326-4603 / (888) 733-2771 523 South 13th St. Community education in disaster preparedness and training in first aid, CPR, aquatics, babysitting and more. This branch also provides disaster response and financial assistance to families affected by disasters such as fires, flood, hurricanes or tornadoes. ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION (904) 353-5770, (800) 578-7183 Northeast Region, 314 Palmetto St., Jacksonville, FL 32202 info.fl.b2@ arthritis.org, www.arthritis.org. Volunteer opportunities available, from office help to special events. Contact Erin Pauls. A WOMEN’S RESOURCE CENTER 328-9394 A pregnancy resource center assisting men and women with unplanned pregnancies. All services are free and confidential. Offers free pregnancy tests. BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA (904) 388-0591 The nation’s foremost youth program of character development and valuesbased leadership training for boys ages 6-21. Boy Scouts offers quality programs with fun and adventure. Instills values, citizenship, service and leadership. Local information can be found on the district website at www. nfcscouting.org. THE CARING CENTER 328-1088 or 325-3417 Provides temporary emergency shelter, clothes and food. CENTER FOR THE VISUALLY IMPAIRED INC. (386) 253-8879 To promote independence by providing the legally blind, elderly residents of Flagler, Putnam, Brevard and Volusia counties with necessary skills. THE CIVIL AIR PATROL CADET PROGRAM (352) 475-3319 A civilian auxiliary with the U.S. Air Force for ages 12-18. There is also a program for ages 18-plus. CONSUMER CREDIT COUNSELING SERVICE OF MID-FLORIDA INC. 312-0805, 1-800-245-1865 Budget and credit counseling, a debt repayment plan to creditors and education regarding responsible credit use and capable money management. REAL NEEDS FOR REAL PEOPLE Volunteers play a big part in organizing and planning events in the Putnam County area as well as in assisting nonprofit groups in their weekly activities in serving the community. Here is a volunteer opportunity locally. LIBRARY ASSISTANT Return books to shelves, design displays, sort information. We use your special skills! For example, if you are an artist, you might teach an art class. Needed in Palatka, Interlachen, Melrose, Bostwick, and Crescent City. Putnam County Libraries. 329-0126 EARLY LEARNING COALITION OF NORTH FLORIDA (904) 342-2267 Recruiting volunteer reading pals to read to children once a week in local pre-school centers. For details, call or e-mail [email protected]. ELDER OPTIONS/MID FLORIDA AREA AGENCY ON AGING (352) 692-5219 or (800) 963-5337 or (352) 378-6649 Volunteers needed for Living Healthy Leaders who will facilitate workshops for older adults with diabetes, arthritis, high blood pressure, heart disease, anxiety or any other ongoing health condition. Volunteers needed for “A Matter of Balance” Coaches. This award-winning program is designed to benefit community-dwelling older adults who are concerned about falls; have sustained a fall in the past; restrict activities because of concerns about falling; are interested in improving flexibility, balance and strength. Call Betty Flagg at (352) 692-5219 or e-mail [email protected]. EXPERIENCE WORKS 329-3724 ext. 2818 Promotes the employment and training of persons 55 and older. FLORIDA’S LONG-TERM CARE OMBUDSMAN PROGRAM (888) 831-0404 or (352) 955-5015 Volunteers needed to join its corps of advocates who protect the rights of elders residing in nursing homes, assisted living facilities and adult family care homes. The program is comprised of 17 local councils throughout the state. Visit www.ombudsman.myflorida. com. PALATKA PULP AND PAPER OPERATIONS 110114b1-8.indd 7 Jacob Kilgore GIRL SCOUTS OF GATEWAY COUNCIL (800) 347-2688 or (904) 388-4653 Gainesville offices - (352) 376-3004 or (866) 868-6307. An informal education program for girls ages 5-17. Provides opportunities to explore their potential, develop values, make friends and to become happy, resourceful citizens. Volunteers needed Nonprofit, Roberts Care Center. Greeters, office help and patient volunteers needed now. Call Becky Slobodian at 328-7100 or visit www.havenhospice.org/volunteer GUARDIAN AD LITEM PROGRAM 329-0884 or (800) 826-1437 or (386) 239-7803 The Seventh Judicial Circuit program is in need of volunteers to speak for the best interests of abused and neglected children. LIFESOUTH COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTERS 328-7299 Nonprofit, volunteer blood center that provides blood components and services to more than 110 medical facilities in Alabama, Georgia and Florida. MT. CARMEL COMMUNITY RESOURCE CENTER INC. 937-2447 or 916-9556 Provides temporary food weekly and occasionally gives out clothing and learning books. (Houses the ACCESS FL Program) (apply for food stamps, cash assistance or medicaid). Hours: Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, begins at 10 a.m. Volunteers are welcome. Donations of nonperishable food and money are accepted. U.S.D.A. assisted program. U.S.D.A. is an equal opportunity provider and employer. MAKE A WISH FOUNDATION (888) 874-9474 Grants the wishes of children with life-threatening illnesses. Volunteers are needed for Northeast Florida. MARCH OF DIMES 326-7267 / (352) 359-1880 marchofdimes.com Volunteer opportunities include March for Babies. Call also to learn about having a healthy pregnancy and preventing premature birth. PALATKA CHRISTIAN SERVICE CENTER 328-0984 820 Reid St. Applications accepted from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. MondayFriday. Fax: 328-0984. Serving Putnam County through meeting emergency needs such as prescriptions, utilities, rent, clothes and food. HUMANE SOCIETY OF NORTHEAST FLORIDA 325-1587 Volunteers with office and/or animal skills are needed. PALATKA HOUSING AUTHORITY YOUTH PROGRAMS Adult volunteers are needed. Call 329-0177 or 937-7361. INTERLACHEN LIONS CLUB 684-2188 Prospect and Boyleston streets. The group meets at 7 p.m. on the first and third Tuesday of the month. PALATKA LIONS CLUB 325-1674 Answers the needs that challenge the communities of the world. Tackles tough problems like blindness, drug abuse prevention and diabetes awareness. KEEP PUTNAM BEAUTIFUL 325-9598 www.keepputnambeautiful.org A nonprofit education organization designed to address the needs for grass roots solutions to critical and costly solid waste and littering issues. PEOPLE ADJUSTING TO LIMITED SIGHT 684-6825 Helps people who are blind or visually impaired achieve independence and self-sufficiency, and to lead lives of dignity through vocational rehabilitation, medical and social services and talking book library. PUTNAM COMMUNITY MEDICAL CENTER VOLUNTEER Provides service and support to patients and their families, hospital staff, guests and medical staff and the community. PUTNAM COUNTY COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS 328-8875 Program helps reconnect youths to their schools and community. PUTNAM COUNTY ENVIRONMENTAL COUNCIL INC. (855) 268-8084 Environmental activists dedica1ted to protecting and preserving Putnam County’s natural resources and heritage. PCEC works with other groups and agencies to conserve important wildlife corridors, encourage nature-based tourism, and to create environmental education centers. For details, visit the Web site www. pcecweb.org. PUTNAM HABITAT FOR HUMANITY 325-5862 A nonprofit, ecumenical Christian organization building decent, affordable houses for low-income families. All levels of construction experience is acceptable. Volunteers are needed at the construction site every Thursday and Saturday. Youth groups are always welcome. Call the office to sign up or visit www.putnamhabitat.org. PUTNAM COUNTY JUVENILE JUSTICE COUNCIL 329-1231 Meets at 3 p.m. the second Tuesday of each month at the Juvenile Crime Prevention Office, 142 Ferry Road, East Palatka. PUTNAM COUNTY LIBRARY 329-0126 - (800) 826-1437 Serves the citizens of Putnam County through five facilities. The system is automated, providing Internet access to the Web and a variety of online databases. Programs for all ages are offered. PUTNAM LITERACY SERVICES 329-0126 Offers one-on-one tutoring, small group instructions, uses volunteer tutors to promote literacy to anyone age 16 or older not attending school. Putnam County Medical Reserve Corp Florida Department of Health in Putnam County 326-3279 Volunteers needed to serve Putnam County by enhancing public health emergency response and increasing community awareness of public health issues. Volunteers assist Florida Department of Health staff in times of a declared disaster or large scale public health emergencies, promote public health initiatives and educate community members on the importance of preparedness. We accept medical and non-medical volunteers and training is provided. Potential MRC volunteers can go to www.servfl.com to register for their local MRC unit. SALUTES Great-People MAKING Great-Progress 10/30/14 2:27 PM 8 B PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 GOOD SEASONS The range of colors in Phalaenopsis orchids is great with many hybrids available. Easy to grow, the moth orchid is one of the most popular orchids and for good reason. Healthy Phalaenopsis foliage is firm, bright green and upright. Photos by LYNETTE L. WALTHER / Palatka Daily News gardening correspondent This “bargain” orchid from a sale table had finished blooming when purchased. But within a month or two it sprouted more buds and bloomed again. Do not cut the bloom spike from a Phalaenopsis orchid because it is often where the next set of blooms develop. Phalaenopsis Primer: C hances are good that in the coming weeks someone will present you with a plant. Perhaps it will be a hostess gift when you put on that Thanksgiving dinner. Or maybe it will be the one that houseguests bring when they arrive for a weekend (or weeklong) visit. Or it might simply be a special occasion or a holiday gift. It is also likely you might just “treat” yourself with something pretty and growing to brighten up the indoors. Chances are also good that the plant in question will be one of those omni-present orchids, the Phalaenopsis — “everyman’s orchid.” You may know this one as a moth orchid, the one with graceful sprays of flat blooms that come in colors from pure white to pale yellows to pinks and purples with a host of colored spots, stripes, bars or blotches. Phalaenopsis orchids are everywhere, and for good reason. They are easy to grow and their showy blooms last for weeks. That said, Phalaenopsis orchids are also easy to kill. But wait! That’s a contradiction. How can they be easy to grow and easy to kill? The problem might just lie in the fact that these tough little orchids can hide serious problems until it is too late. I know you’ve seen on someone’s desk that plucky little Phalaenopsis that is beginning to look a bit droopy. Might as well chuck that puppy in the trash. The writing is on the wall once those big green leaves begin to droop. The reasons for that “droop” could be one or a combination of many factors — too much sun exposure, too little light, too much water, too little water, too cold, too hot… We could go on, but you get the idea. The thing is, these plants are so simple to grow that sometimes folks tend to freak out when faced with an orchid. They simply go overboard. Then there are those who do nothing — the deer-in-theheadlights approach. Relax, people. It’s just a plant, and every plant requires a certain combination of air, water and light. When you realize that every plant on the face of this earth is native to somewhere, all you have to do is figure out where that is, and then give that plant an environment as close as possible to its native one. It’s easy! While most folks tend to think orchid, and then equate that to the actual Equator where it is wet and hot, 24 hours a day and 365 days a year. Fact is, there are orchids growing above the Arctic Circle. Some are found at elevations of 10,000 feet and others at sea level. Some orchids grow with their roots dangling in the thin air, while others are anchored in rich soils. Some orchids have pseudobulbs and others do not. Orchids and their habitats are indeed varied. There are some 20,000 to 30,000 species of orchids in over 800 genera. Orchids can be found growing wild on every continent on the globe, save that of Antarctica. So throw out that notion of all orchids needing a sauna to survive. But we are concentrating on Phalaenopsis here, and this particular orchid is native to southern China, northern Indian and northern Australia. There are some 80 Phalaenopsis species in the genus that ranges from miniatures to large, and most display multiple blooms at one time. For simplicity’s sake, we’ll confine our discussion to those most commonly found for sale here, those seen offered for sale from big-box nurseries to grocery stores. I’m going to let you in on the secrets to successfully growing a Phalaenopsis orchid. In fact if you follow my guidelines, not only will you be able to keep that orchid alive, you will be blessed with repeat blooms, over and over again! (Remember you are trying to replicate this orchid’s native environment.) 1. Light: Bright light, preferably in an east-facing window is best. Obviously the corner of a desk in a dimly-lit office is not a good choice, but then neither is a west-facing window where the plant bakes in the afternoon Growing ‘everyman’s orchid’ LYNETTE WALTHER L Orchids at Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania pulsate with color with dozens of varieties there. There are tens of thousands of different orchids. Some are easier to grow than others. sun. Avoid direct sun, but provide the plant with plenty of bright light — all day, not just a couple hours. 2. Water: This is where a lot of folks fail. The roots of the Phalaenopsis must not be allowed to dry out completely. Moist is the key. On the other hand they do not want to be soaking wet all day and night. Often these plants come from the store or nursery in a sphagnum moss medium, which is good. However this medium will break down and compost, requiring repotting every year to avoid rotting out the roots. Keep that in mind and be prepared to repot in a year. A bark/clay pebble growing medium tends to allow the roots to get too dry unless closely monitored. In warm and dry conditions a Phalaenopsis might need watering every other day, while during cooler months it might only need watering once a week or longer. Moist not soggy is what this plant needs, and no it does not need any ice cubes. When the plant’s leaves are bright green and stand up stiffly you know you have mastered the watering issue. If they droop and flop and turn a dull green or yellow, it could be too little water or too much. RE-ELECT PHIL EARY 3. Temperature: This is another problem area that can cause failure. Phalaenopsis is a tropical plant and cannot tolerate temperatures below 55 to 60 degrees, although a few nights of temperatures at 55 degrees can help spur flower development. On the other hand very high temperatures can stress the plant, as well as require more humidity and air movement. In short, avoid abrupt and severe temperature changes. Most Phalaenopsis will be happy at the same temperatures that you are, except that they prefer a good deal more humidity than you do. When it is hot and dry, think of spritzing the plant with room-temperature water occasionally. That’s pretty much it to successfully growing a Phalaenopsis orchid. But there are a couple more points I’d like to make. One has to do with the bloom spikes. Yes, it is good to gently remove the spent blooms as they fade and dry out to keep the plant neat looking. But do not cut the bloom spike. This is where new buds will often form to provide another round of flo- ral delight, often several rounds. Fertilizing is one way to keep your Phalaenopsis healthy and happy. When it is warm, the days are long and the plants are growing is the time to fertilize. This can be done every time you water the plant, with a mild halfstrength dilution of fish emulsion. I often submerge the entire plant, pot, leaves and all for a few minutes in a bucket of the mild mixture until I am sure it is well-soaked. This gives the leaves an opportunity to soak up some of the fertilizer mixture. Then I set the pot out where it can drain thoroughly. Never leave a Phalaenopsis sitting in a saucer of water. Water your orchids early in the day to allow the foliage plenty of time to drain and dry to avoid disease problems. Once you’ve brought your Phalaenopsis through a couple bloom cycles you will be an old pro, and all this will come as second nature to you and your plant. Here’s to a long and happy relationship. Lynette L. Walther is the recipient of the Garden Writers Association’s Silver Award of Achievement, and she is the author of “Florida Gardening on the Go.” Her gardens are on the banks of the St. Johns River. Got questions, or comments? Visit her blog, and join in the conversation at: gardeningonthego.wordpress.com <http://gardeningonthego.wordpress. com> or ”friend” her on Facebook to see what’s new in the garden day-by-day. Get Real auto insurance that comes with a real Agent. Get real answers about your auto insurance from a real, local agent. Call today for a free, no obligation quote on your Auto, Home and Life coverage. (386) 325-5822 Trina Wilkinson John Mericle [email protected] [email protected] www.FloridaFarmBureau.com 147 Hwy 17 South • E. Palatka, FL 32131 Picture Auto • Home • Life ® Brought to you by Day of the PALATKA CITY COMMISSION, GROUP 4 latka Local 2992 efighters of Pa Professional Fir a 322177 rid Flo , ka lat P.O. Box 337, Pa Experienced Leadership for Palatka’s Future 92, IAFF, are Palatka, Local 29 ioner, l Firefighters of ka City Commiss al The Professiona lat Pa for ry Lea Phil d addition proud to endorse we have obtaine s, ort eff r you ist ass our Group 4. Through r safety and to equipment for ou rating. We also .O. I.S 2, firefighters and ss Cla h obtaining a ghters Pension department wit our Palatka Firefi work you do for appreciate the e. Plan as a truste . you in the future to working with rd We look forwa Sincerely, Chad Branford 2992 President, Local Political advertisement paid for and approved by Phil Leary, non-partisan for City Commission, Group 4. 110114b1-8.indd 8 Photograph By DEBBIE GROSS A tall branch from my beautiful Crepe Myrtle reaching towards he sky. Notice the green bee amongst it! How to submit your photo for Picture of the Day We encourage people to submit photos for this feature to show off the natural beauty and fascinating people of Putnam County. Emailed pictures should be saved as .jpeg at 200 DPI and sent to [email protected]. Please include caption information for the picture as well as information about the photographer. All pictures must have been taken in Putnam County. Prints can be mailed or taken to Palatka Daily News, 1825 St. Johns Ave., Palatka, FL 32177 and marked ATTN: Picture of the Day. 10/30/14 2:28 PM SIDELINES MARK BLUMENTHAL Revisiting moment of glory R ecently, Jeremy Criscione went jogging in Gainesville, where he lives now. It was about 5 in the morning when that memory from 10 years ago popped into his head. “It was funny that it had just popped into my head,” he said. “I was just thinking about things that happened and how it all played out from the start of that season with really bad circumstances to finishing out the way it did. It was a kind of a cool ending to it.” That ending proved to be one that will never be forgotten by those who were there on that 79-degree night at Tampa’s Ed Radice Park on Saturday, Nov. 6, 2004. A sixthplace finisher the year before at the FHSAA 2A championship meet on the same course, Criscione, a senior for Interlachen High School, put it all together in a memorable race that saw him capture the state title in a then-best for a 3.1-mile race of 15:02. The culmination of the season came after Criscione’s head cross country coach, Dwayne Cox, had died on Aug. 9. Criscione’s motivation was honoring Cox’s memory. “I can still remember coming down the final part of the race and somebody saying, ‘Do it for Coach Cox,’” he said of his most vivid memory of that night. “That was the little bit I needed to carry me.” Criscione beat his rival, Tampa Jesuit’s Andrew Biladeau, who won the title the year before, by seven seconds. Those who were there for that emotional night remember. But so much happened to Criscione after that night. Based on what he had done through his junior year and his academic standing (he graduated 11th in a class of around 170 at IHS), Criscione was being looked at by a number of schools – Kentucky, Georgia, Florida State, Cornell and the school he eventually chose, the University of Florida. “Before the season, I wasn’t really decided on where I wanted to go,” he remembered. “I did take all the visits to all the schools. Some of Florida’s guys were at the race. After the season, Florida said they wanted to make it where it wouldn’t cost me any money to come there between academics and athletics. That was the turning point in choosing Florida.” And in four years with the Gators, Criscione would make it to the NCAA championship race all four years, his best finish 20th in his senior year. It was there he not only built a reputation as a top-notch runner, but he also built plenty of friendships as well. And it’s also where he met his future wife, Bessie. They live together with their son, Damian, who will be 3 in February. These days, Criscione is working as a project engineer for a construction management business in Gainesville, no more than a couple of miles from where he lives. It’s a job he’s had since August. But his running days are far from over. He has said he will attempt once again to try out for a marathon berth in the 2016 Olympics in Brazil. The trial for that race will be in February in Los Angeles. These days, his sponsors are the Saucony Hurricanes, a running team that takes their name from the shoes the company makes, and Power Bar. Criscione admits a lot of what he’s had in successes has come from both hard work and that night 10 years See BLUMENTHAL, Page 2C INSIDE Scoreboard Briefs 2C 2C ANDY HALL Sports Editor 312-5239 [email protected] 110114c1.indd 1 www.palatkadailynews.com SPORTS SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2014 C SECTION Raiders trample Taylor en route to title Beasley clears 1,000 yards passing for year By Mark Blumenthal Palatka Daily News CRESCENT CITY – Ryne Beasley won’t forget this game for a long time. Neither will his coach, Al Smith. Neither will the homecoming opponent, for that matter. Beasley completed 10 of 12 passes for 258 yards and three touchdowns, going over the 1,000-yard passing mark for the season, and Crescent City Junior-Senior High School’s football team won its second straight District 8-1A championship Friday night, jumping out to a 53-3 halftime lead and coasting to the 61-10 win over Pierson Taylor. The Raiders put up 479 yards of offense against the Wildcats to improve to 7-2 overall and 2-0 in the postseason, the second straight at home, on Nov. 14. Meanwhile, Taylor (4-5, 1-1), going to the postseason for the first time in 12 years, will travel to District 7-1A champion Dixie County on Nov. 14. But after Friday night’s game, Pierson Taylor players and assistant coaches refused to shake hands with the Raiders. Only head coach Antuarn Williams shook hands with Raiders coach Smith and his assistants. “He apologized and told me his guys weren’t all there,” Smith said. “We played with sportsmanship the whole game. I don’t know why they didn’t want to shake our hands. I know if it was me, I wouldn’t have tolerated that from my guys afterward.” CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News Beasley, who has guided the Crescent City defenders swarm Taylor quarterback Matt Henry. Raiders, was prepared to hand the ball off for a good amount of the night, something he said he would the district with one more game assured themselves they will face off have been fine with. against Orlando First Academy at with District 7-1A runnerup Union See RAIDERS, Page 3C home Friday night. The Raiders County for the third straight year in Palatka 56, Ponte Vedra 35 Muschamp gets shot at Bulldogs It could well be the last for the Gator head coach By Mark Long Associated Press Palatka’s Ja’Twan Honor fights forward against Ponte Vedra defenders. LORI CRISCIONE / Special to the Daily News Playoff Bound Panthers near 600 all-purpose yards to survive Sharks T By Andy Hall Palatka Daily News hree hours, 1,002 yards, 66 passes and 20 penalties later, the Palatka Panthers are in the state playoffs. The Panthers passed a test of wills and withstood the nonstop passing of Ponte Vedra on an ideal Halloween night at Veterans Memorial Stadium, claiming the runnerup spot in District 4-5A in a 56-35 shootout with the Sharks that was every bit as wild as the score indicated. More than an hour after Menendez had opened the door for PHS with its 21-16 victory at Orange Park Ridgeview, Palatka completed a 573-yard night (309 rushing, 145 passing, 119 returns) to push its record to 4-4 overall and 2-2 in the district. Menendez also finished 2-2 in the district, but the Panthers owned the tiebreaker thanks to their 17-16 win over the Falcons back on Oct. 3. De’Abrie Smith passed for two touchdowns and ran for two, Ja’Twan Honor ran for three scores and a season-high 118 yards and Tareke Lewis caught two passes for 81 yards and tied a school record with three interceptions for Palatka. It took all that to offset the work of Ponte Vedra sophomore Nick Tronti, who completed 26 of 48 passes for 344 yards and four touchdowns, two to Quint Boyd, who also had a touchdown run. Just when it appeared the Panthers had driven a stake through the Sharks with Smith’s 41-yard touchdown strike to Ka’ven Berry with 54 seconds left in the first half – and Palatka due to receive the second half kickoff with a 42-21 lead – Tronti led Ponte Vedra to two touchdowns that made it a one-touchdown game at the 5:14 mark of the third quarter. Moments later – the Menendez-Ridgeview final having just been announced – Honor burst over right side for 32 yards and a touchdown as the Panthers extended their lead to 49-35. See PANTHERS, Page 3C JACKSONVILLE — Will Muschamp has been on the losing end of the Florida-Georgia series his entire career. He went 0-4 against the Gators as a defensive back for the Bulldogs in the 1990s, and he’s winless in three games against Georgia as Florida’s head coach. His eighth try, without question, TODAY is the biggest of Florida them all. vs. Georgia, Muschamp likely needs a vicCBS, 3:30 tory against No. 9 Georgia today to have any chance of saving his job. He knows it. His players know it. Anyone who has seen the Gators fall from Southeastern Conference and national prominence the last two years knows it, too. “We need to get a win. That’s the first thing,” Muschamp said when asked what the rivalry means to him. “The importance of the game to both universities is very special. So it’s obviously very important.” Florida (3-3, 2-3 SEC) has lost 10 of its last 13 games, including an embarrassing, turnover-filled, 42-13 drubbing against Missouri at home and on homecoming. Athletic director Jeremy Foley could have made the move after that loss, but decided to give Muschamp a final chance to turn things around. Another loss to Georgia (6-1, 4-1) probably would seal Muschamp’s fate. “We’ve got to go play our best for him,” running back Kelvin Taylor said. “Coach will be fine. We’re just worried about winning this game and everything else will be fine.” Georgia coach Mark Richt seemingly saved his job in Jacksonville in 2011. Coming off consecutive disappointing seasons, including a losing record in 2010, the Bulldogs dropped their first two games of the year, and given that Florida had won eight of 10 See GATORS, Page 3C Rams start fast, only to find playoff hopes dashed Special to the Daily News THE VILLAGES — The Interlachen football team scored first but then allowed 44 unanswered points as The Villages defeated the Rams, 44-7, in a District 4-4A in their final game of the 2014 season at The Villages High School. Interlachen completed a thirdstraight 1-9 season, but entered the game with hope of a postseason berth had it defeated the Buffalo and Keystone Heights defeated Bradford on Friday night. And while the Indians were taking care of business by beating the Tornadoes, 16-0, the Rams never recovered after the Buffalo stampeded them with 44 straight points. The Rams offense looked sharp on the opening possession of the game. Interlachen marched 65 yards on six plays with senior Anthony Brown scoring on a 32-yard touchdown run to give the Rams an early 7-0 lead. But Interlachen (1-9 overall, 1-3 in the district) would turn the ball over five times and twice failed to score after advancing the ball into the red zone. The Villages (7-2) clinched second place in the district behind Umatilla and a playoff berth. The Buffalo took a 10-7 lead by the end of the first quarter and were ahead 27-7 by halftime. The Villages extended the lead to 37-7 in the third quarter. Most of the damage was done by The Villages’ sophomore running back, Jabari Jiles, who rushed for 297 yards on 38 carries and three touchdowns. Quarterback Kole Harris added a rushing touchdown and Gunnar Pettus kicked three field goals. T.J. Strickland led the Rams in rushing with 75 yards on 11 carries, while Brown had 42 yards on four carries. 11/1/14 2:13 AM 2 C • PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 SCOREBOARD CALENDAR NOTE: Schedules are submitted by schools, leagues and recreation departments and are subject to change without notice. SATURDAY, November 1 No events scheduled. MONDAY, November 3 HIGH SCHOOL Girls Soccer Middleburg at Palatka, 7:15 p.m. Boys Soccer Crescent City at DeLand, 7 p.m. Palatka at Nease, 7:20 p.m. TIDES Today Nov. 2 Nov. 3 Nov. 4 Palatka City Dock High Low 11:10A,11:42P 6:09A,6:27P 11:18A,11:46P 7:08A,6:33P ---------,12:19P 7:05A,7:36P 12:44A,1:16P 7:59A,8:34P Today Nov. 2 Nov. 3 Nov. 4 St. Augustine Beach High Low 3:07A,3:46P 9:30A,10:10P 3:02A,3:50P 9:35A,10:07P 4:19A,4:50P 10:37A,11:02P 5:18A,5:45P 11:37A,11:55P LOCAL BOWLING FUNTIME SENIORS 9-PIN NO-TAP LEAGUE At Putnam Lanes October 15 Standings: Old Timers, 9-3; Pin Pushers, 9-3; Gamblers, 9-3; Bowl Movement, 7-5; Satsuma 4, 7-5; Pin Pals, 7-5; Odd Balls, 6-6; Oldies But Goodies, 6-6; Unbowlievable, 4-8; Aces, 4-8; Pin Chasers, 2-10. High scratch game, team: Pin Pushers, 618; Satsuma 4, 606; Old Timers, 592. High handicap game, team: Old Timers, 910; Bowl Movement, 814; Unbowlievable, 813. High scratch series, team: Old Timers, 2,005; Pin Pushers, 1,733; Gamblers, 1,730. High handicap series, team: Old Timers, 2,533; Aces, 2,423; Satsuma 4, 2,414. High scratch game, men: Tom Brown, 225; Sim Suter, 202; Mike Howland, 201. High handicap game, men: Tom Brown, 259; Chet Cowan, 254; Andy Garrison, 247. High scratch series, men: Tom Brown, 555; Mike Howland, 531; Sim Suter, 525. High handicap series, men: Tom Brown, 657; Andy Garrison, 656; Elvin Wilson, 645. High scratch game, women: Marj Pulley, 177; Joan Holley, 171; Joyce Kilby, 170. High handicap game, women: Joan Holley, 242; Marj Pulley, 240; Joyce Kilby, 237. High scratch series, women: Jean Brewer, 486; Joan Holley, 470; Marj Pulley, 459. High handicap series, women: Joan Holley, 683; Joyce Kilby, 658; Joyce Cowan, 649. Splits converted: Jay Crowe, 2-5-7; Nick Straniero, 3-10; Chet Cowan, 3-10; Nancy Suter, 3-10; Leonard Strong, 3-10; Teresa Gray, 3-10, 2-7; Wesley Vaughn, 2-7; Margie Meyer, 2-7. COLLEGE AP Top 25 Men’s Basketball The top 25 teams in The Associated Press’ preseason 2014-15 college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, 2013-14 records, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote and last year’s final ranking: Record PtsPrv 1. Kentucky (52) 29-11 1,604 — 33-5 1,518 4 2. Arizona (5) 3. Wisconsin (8) 30-8 1,483 12 26-9 1,415 8 4. Duke 5. Kansas 25-10 1,346 10 6. North Carolina 24-10 1,274 19 7. Florida 36-3 1,153 1 31-6 1,114 5 8. Louisville 9. Virginia 30-7 1,090 3 24-11 1,061 — 10. Texas 11. Wichita St. 35-1 1,027 2 29-5 885 6 12. Villanova 13. Gonzaga 29-7 840 — 28-8 781 9 14. Iowa St. 15. VCU 26-9 574 24 16. San Diego St. 31-5 560 13 17. UConn 32-8 552 18 29-9 521 11 18. Michigan St. 19. Oklahoma 23-10 426 21 SATURDAY 11 a.m. Fox Sports 1 1 p.m. NBC 3:30 p.m. ESPN 3 a.m. ESPN (tape) WEEKEND TELEVISION 10:30 p.m. AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup practice for AAA Texas 500, at Fort Worth Formula One qualifying for U.S. Grand Prix, at Austin, Texas NASCAR Nationwide O’Reilly Auto Parks Challenge, at Fort Worth NHRA qualifying for Toyota Nationals, at Las Vegas COLLEGE FOOTBALL 11:30 a.m. CBS Air Force at Army Noon ESPN Wisconsin at Rutgers Noon ESPN2 Maryland at Penn State Noon ESPNews East Carolina at Temple Noon ESPNU Duke at Pittsburgh Noon Fox Sports 1 Oklahoma at Iowa State Noon SEC Network Louisiana-Monroe at Texas A&M 12:30 p.m. WJXT-Channel 4 North Carolina at Miami 3 p.m. FS Florida North Carolina State at Syracuse 3 p.m. Sun Sports Western Kentucky at Louisiana Tech 3:30 p.m. ABC TCU at West Virginia 3:30 p.m. CBS Florida vs. Georgia, at Jacksonville 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 Purdue at Nebraska 3:30 p.m. ESPNU Virginia at Georgia Tech 4 p.m. ESPNews Houston at South Florida 4 p.m. Fox Sports 1 Kansas at Baylor 4 p.m. SEC Network Kentucky at Missouri 7 p.m. ESPN Auburn at Mississippi 7 p.m. ESPN2 Arkansas at Mississippi State 7 p.m. ESPNU Old Dominion at Vanderbilt 7:30 p.m. FOX Stanford at Oregon 7:30 p.m. Fox Sports Texas at Texas Tech 7:30 p.m. SEC Network Tennessee at South Carolina 8 p .m. CBS Notre Dame vs. Navy, at Landover, Md. 8:05 p.m. ABC Illinois at Ohio State 10:30 p.m. ESPN Arizona at UCLA 10:45 p.m. ESPN2 Wyoming at Fresno State 11 p.m. Fox Sports 1 Utah at Arizona State 6 a.m. Golf Channel 4:30 p.m. Golf Channel 11 p.m. Golf Channel 2 a.m. Golf Channel Bengals’ defense tries for 2 in row GOLF European PGA BMW Masters, third round, at Shanghai (tape) Champions Charles Schwab Cup Championship, third round, at Scottsdale, Ariz. PGA CIMB Classic, final round, at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia LPGA Taiwan Championship, final round, at Taipei (tape) HORSE RACING 3:30 p.m. NBC Sports Breeders’ Cup World Champion ship undercard, at Arcadia, Calif. 8 p.m. NBC Breeders’ Cup Classic, at Arcadia, Calif. NBC Sports Islanders at Sharks RUGBY U.S. Eagles vs. New Zealand All Blacks, at Chicago 3:30 p.m. NBC 8:45 a.m. 10:55 a.m. PREMIER LEAGUE SOCCER NBC Sports Liverpool at Newcastle NBC Sports Queens Park at Chelsea MLS SOCCER PLAYOFFS NBC Sports Western Conference semifinals, 8 p.m. first leg, Real Salt Lake at Los Angeles 3 p.m. ESPN 3 p.m. NBC 6 p.m. ESPN2 SUNDAY AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup AAA Texas 500, at Fort Worth Formula One U.S. Grand Prix, at Austin, Texas NHRA Toyota Nationals, at Las Vegas (tape) 6 a.m. Golf Channel 3:30 p.m. Golf Channel 1 p.m. 1 p.m. 4:25 p.m. 8:15 p.m. CBS FOX CBS NBC 9 a.m. 4 p.m. ESPN2 ABC (tape) GOLF European PGA BMW Masters, final round, at Shanghai (tape) Champions Charles Schwab Cup Championship, final round, at Scottsdale, Ariz. NFL Jaguars at Bengals Cardinals at Cowboys Broncos at Patriots Ravens at Steelers RUNNING New York City Marathon PREMIER LEAGUE SOCCER 8:25 a.m. NBC Sports Manchester United at Manchester City 10:55 a.m. NBC Sports Tottenham at Aston Villa MLS SOCCER PLAYOFFS 9 p.m. ESPN2 Western Conference semifinals, first leg, Dallas at Seattle 2 p.m. WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL FS Florida Hiram at Mount St. Joseph 1 p.m. WOMEN’S COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL Sun Sports Miami at North Carolina State MONDAY 7 p.m. 9 p.m. FS Florida WGN NBA Raptors at Magic Bulls at Timberwolves 8:15 p.m. ESPN 7 p.m. Sun Sports NHL Capitals at Lightning 2:55 p.m. PREMIER LEAGUE SOCCER NBC Sports Sunderland at Crystal Palace 20. Ohio St. 25-10 340 22 21. Nebraska 19-13 309 — 22. SMU 27-10 285 — 23. Syracuse 28-6 178 14 28-9 167 7 24. Michigan 25. Harvard 27-5 98 — 21-12 98 — 25. Utah Others receiving votes: Stanford 71, Iowa 58, Colorado 57, UCLA 35, Minnesota 34, Kansas St. 27, Arkansas 21, Pittsburgh 20, Memphis 15, NC State 14, Louisiana Tech 9, Cincinnati 8, LSU 8, George Washington 7, Dayton 6, Notre Dame 6, Oklahoma St. 6, Florida St. 5, Georgetown 5, Illinois 3, Maryland 3, BYU 2, UNLV 2, Baylor 1, Stephen F. Austin 1, UTEP 1, West Virginia 1. NFL AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W LT Pct PFPA New England 6 2 0 .750 238177 Buffalo 5 3 0 .625 178165 Miami 4 3 0 .571 174151 N.Y. Jets 1 7 0 .125 144228 South W LT Pct PFPA Indianapolis 5 3 0 .625 250187 Houston 4 4 0 .500 185166 Tennessee 2 6 0 .250 137202 Jacksonville 1 7 0 .125 118218 North W LT Pct PFPA Cincinnati 4 2 1 .643 161164 Baltimore 5 3 0 .625 217131 Pittsburgh 5 3 0 .625 205196 4 3 0 .571 163152 Cleveland West W LT Pct PFPA Denver 6 1 0 .857 224142 San Diego 5 3 0 .625 205149 4 3 0 .571 176128 Kansas City Oakland 0 7 0 .000 105181 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W LT Pct PFPA Dallas 6 2 0 .750 213167 5 2 0 .714 203156 Philadelphia N.Y. Giants 3 4 0 .429 154169 3 5 0 .375 171200 Washington South W LT Pct PFPA New Orleans 4 4 0 .500 227198 Carolina 3 5 1 .389 177236 Atlanta 2 6 0 .250 192221 1 6 0 .143 133223 Tampa Bay North W LT Pct PFPA Detroit 6 2 0 .750 162126 Green Bay 5 3 0 .625 222191 Chicago 3 5 0 .375 180222 3 5 0 .375 139173 Minnesota West W LT Pct PFPA 6 1 0 .857 164139 Arizona San Francisco 4 3 0 .571 158165 4 3 0 .571 172150 Seattle 2 5 0 .286 136210 St. Louis Thursday’s Game New Orleans 28, Carolina 10 Sunday’s Games Arizona at Dallas, 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Houston, 1 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Washington at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Cleveland, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. San Diego at Miami, 1 p.m. St. Louis at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 4:25 p.m. Denver at New England, 4:25 p.m. Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 8:30 p.m. Open: Atlanta, Buffalo, Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, Tennessee Monday’s Game Indianapolis at N.Y. Giants, 8:30 p.m. NHL EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GPW LOTPtsGFGA Montreal 11 8 2 1172929 Tampa Bay 11 7 3 1153829 10 6 2 2142721 Detroit 9 5 2 2122622 Ottawa Boston 12 6 6 0123230 10 5 4 1112926 Toronto Florida 83239 12 17 112815 13 36 Buffalo Metropolitan Division GPW LOTPtsGFGA Pittsburgh 9 6 2 1133622 N.Y. Islanders10 6 4 0123536 New Jersey 10 5 3 2123034 N.Y. Rangers 9 5 4 0102730 Washington 9 4 3 2102723 Philadelphia 10 4 4 2103236 Columbus 104608 26 34 80622 15 33 Carolina WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GPW LOTPtsGFGA Nashville 10 6 2 2142621 10 6 3 1132719 Chicago Minnesota 9 6 3 0123117 NFL Colts at Giants Dallas 10 4 2 4123335 St. Louis 9 5 3 1 11 22 18 Colorado 11 3 4 4102732 20 26 Winnipeg 104519 Pacific Division GPW LOTPtsGFGA Anaheim 12 9 3 0183322 Vancouver 10 7 3 0143429 Los Angeles 11 6 3 2142623 12 6 4 2143127 Calgary San Jose 12 6 4 2143834 27 36 Edmonton 104519 Arizona 93517 22 34 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Thursday’s Games New Jersey 2, Winnipeg 1, SO Chicago 5, Ottawa 4, SO Minnesota 4, San Jose 3, SO Boston 3, Buffalo 2, OT Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles 0 Tampa Bay 4, Philadelphia 3 Florida 2, Arizona 1 St. Louis 2, Anaheim 0 Colorado 5, N.Y. Islanders 0 Vancouver 3, Montreal 2, OT Friday’s Games Toronto 4, Columbus 1 Detroit 5, Los Angeles 2 Anaheim 2, Dallas 1, OT Calgary 4, Nashville 3 Saturday’s Games Ottawa at Boston, 7 p.m. Chicago at Toronto, 7 p.m. Washington at Tampa Bay, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Florida, 7 p.m. Columbus at New Jersey, 7 p.m. Winnipeg at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Arizona at Carolina, 7 p.m. Colorado at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Edmonton, 10 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at San Jose, 10:30 p.m. NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division WL PctGB Boston 1 01.000 — Toronto 1 01.000 — 1 1 .500 ½ New York Brooklyn 01 .000 1 02 .000 1½ Philadelphia Southeast Division WL PctGB Miami 1 01.000 — 1 01.000 — Charlotte Washington 11 .500 ½ Atlanta 01 .000 1 02 .000 1½ Orlando Central Division WL PctGB Cleveland 11 .500 — 11 .500 — Indiana Milwaukee 11 .500 — Chicago 11 .500 — 02 .000 1 Detroit WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division WL PctGB 2 01.000 — Houston Memphis 2 01.000 — 1 0 1.000 ½ San Antonio New Orleans 1 0 1.000 ½ 11 .500 1 Dallas Northwest Division WL PctGB Portland 1 01.000 — 1 01.000 — Denver Minnesota 11 .500 ½ 02 .000 1½ Utah Oklahoma City 0 2 .000 1½ Pacific Division WL PctGB 1 0 1.000 — Golden State Phoenix 1 01.000 — 1 0 1.000 — L.A. Clippers Sacramento 01 .000 1 0 2 .000 1½ L.A. Lakers Thursday’s Games Washington 105, Orlando 98 Minnesota 97, Detroit 91 New York 95, Cleveland 90 Dallas 120, Utah 102 L.A. Clippers 93, Oklahoma City 90 Friday’s Games Memphis 97, Indiana 89 Cleveland 114, Chicago 108, OT Milwaukee 93, Philadelphia 81 San Antonio at Phoenix, 10 p.m. Portland at Sacramento, 10 p.m. L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Dallas at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Washington, 7 p.m. Toronto at Orlando, 7 p.m. Memphis at Charlotte, 7 p.m. Indiana at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Denver at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. Boston at Houston, 8 p.m. Chicago at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Phoenix at Utah, 9 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Golden State, 10:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA BASKETBALL Gators unlikely to repeat last year’s feats By Mark Long Associated Press GAINESVILLE — Florida’s record-setting run through the Southeastern Conference and the NCAA tournament last season will be difficult, maybe even impossible, to top. The Gators won a program-best 30 consecutive games, set another mark with 32 straight home wins, became the first team to go 18-0 in the SEC’s regular season, swept the league tournament and earned the top overall seed in the NCAA tournament for the second time. And after losing in a regional final the previous three years, Florida finally made it to the Final Four. The trip ended with a disappointing, 63-53 loss to eventual national champion Connecticut. Repeating the feat seems unlikely. Then again, coach Billy Donovan has one of his more athletic teams, with point guard Kasey Hill, sharp-shooter Michael Frazier II, forward Dorian Finney-Smith and big man Chris Walker returning in bigger roles. How everyone around them progresses might be the key to Florida putting together another successful season. “We’ve got a lot of talent, a lot of individual talent, but we’ve got to come together as a team,” FinneySmith said. “I don’t think we’re a team yet.” The Gators (36-3) were the consummate team in 2013-14. They shared the ball and the spotlight, and played for each other from the season opener through the finale. “Last year’s team worked really, really hard, and the results that we got were extraordinary,” Donovan said. “We weren’t the most talented team in the country. But they were investing in one another, sacrificing for one another, caring for one another, wanting to play the game for the right reasons for one another. Blumenthal CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C ago. It brought him to two men who helped shape him at UF, cross country coach Jeff Pigg and track coach Mike Holloway. He still remembers all the friends and family who were there that night to see his moment of glory. He remembers getting congratulated by then-IHS athletic director Doug Feltner. “That stands out because he had come down from Interlachen just for that race,” Criscione said. “I still keep in touch with the people that were there that night.” As well as remembering the things he learned from Cox in his first three years with the IHS cross country team. That moment was named the best prep moment or game of FLORIDA LOTTERY FRIDAY 110114c2.indd 1 That was really rewarding to me because I could not sit here a year ago and say I was really 100 percent sure that could happen.” Donovan surely won’t predict it happening again. Florida lost forward Casey Prather, point guard Scottie Wilbekin, forward Will Yeguete and center Patric Young to graduation. The four seniors accounted for 61 percent of the team’s points, 53 percent of the team’s rebounds and 51 percent of the team’s assists last season. Hill, Frazier, Finney-Smith and Walker should be able to pick up some of the slack. But how quickly former Michigan center Jon Horford, freshmen guards Devin Robinson and Chris Chiozza, and injured holdovers Eli Carter and Dillon Graham catch on could have a significant impact on the season. “I think we’ll be more athletic,” Walker said. “All we’ve got to do is get joined and get connected like we were last year. I feel like if we can do that, the sky is the limit.” Here are a few things to know about Florida heading into the season: MISSING TIME: Walker will miss an exhibition and the first two games of the regular season for violating team rules. Freshman guard Brandone Francis will miss the entire season because of NCAA academic issues. Guard DeVon Walker also won’t play after tearing a ligament in his right knee in July. And former Duke forward Alex Murphy will miss the fall semester because of NCAA transfer rules. HOLDING PATTERN: The Gators also are unlikely to get highly touted center John Egbunu on the court this season. The 6-foot-11 Egbunu transferred from South Florida in the offseason, and Florida has petitioned the NCAA to get him immediate eligibility. “We’re going to exhaust all of our avenues and see where it leads us,” Donovan said. the 2000 decade by the Daily News in January 2010. “It’s kind of crazy that I thought about that race jogging the other day,” he said. What’s not to forget about a moment of glory like that? Mark Blumenthal is a writer for the Palatka Daily News. [email protected] By Joe Kay Associated Press CINCINNATI — After three straight horrid games, Bengals coordinator Paul Guenther let his defense have it. He raised his voice, chewed them out, let them know that SUNDAY what was happening was unacceptable. Jaguars “Sometimes you’ve got to at Bengals, take that approach,” the firstCBS, 1 p.m. year coordinator said. “In this case, that’s what was needed.” It worked. For one week, anyway. The Bengals (4-2-1) got back to stopping the run and getting pressure on the quarterback, resulting in a 27-24 victory over Baltimore last Sunday that moved Cincinnati back into first place in the AFC North. They’d given up 505, 431 and 506 yards in the previous three games, resulting in two losses and a tie. After Guenther scolded them, they held the Ravens under 300 yards and limited Joe Flacco to a passer rating of 43.1. They looked a lot more like the defense that finished No. 3 in the league last year. “Obviously not winning for about a month, guys started second-guessing themselves,” safety George Iloka said. “But I was happy with the way we came out there against Baltimore. We came out there like we started the year.” They want to keep it going against the young Jacksonville Jaguars (1-7) and rookie quarterback Blake Bortles, who has thrown 12 interceptions in 5½ games. He’s on pace to tie Peyton Manning’s NFL rookie record for interceptions (28) set in 1998. Bortles threw two interceptions that were returned for touchdowns and lost a fumble during a 27-13 loss in Miami last week. “I will continue to learn from the things I do wrong and try and improve and do more of the right things,” Bortles said. “I think, like you said, it’s part of it. Guys are going to struggle at some point in their career, whether it’s their first year or tenth year.” SPORTS BRIEFS HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL FACA honors Raiders, Panthers Crescent City’s Al Smith was named class 1A football coach of year, running back Dadrian Ellis class 1A player of the year in voting Monday night by District 6 of the Florida Athletic Coaches Association. Raider lineman Larry Blue joined Ellis on the alldistrict team. Defensive tackle Bryan Williams was all-district for Palatka. Raiders receiving honorable mention were Stephen Simmons, Dantavious Kelly, Ryne Beasley and Domonic Owens. Panthers receiving honorable mention were De’Abrie Smith, Ben Myles, Lutrell Smith, Tareke Lewis, Jason Shaw, Ja’Twan Honor and Paul Mast. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Kentucky tops preseason AP poll Kentucky was the runaway No. 1 in The Associated Press preseason Top 25 released Friday, becoming the fourth program to earn the honor in consecutive seasons. Arizona is ranked No. 2 and received five firstplace votes. Wisconsin, which returns most of last season’s Final Four team, has its highest preseason ranking ever at No. 3. No. 4 Duke added a strong recruiting class headed by Jahlil Okafor. Reloaded Kansas is No. 5, with North Carolina, Florida, Louisville, Virginia and Texas rounding out the top 10. Virginia is in the preseason top 10 for the first time since Ralph Sampson’s senior season in 1982-83, when it was No. 1. NFL Jags’ Joeckel expected to play JACKSONVILLE – The Jacksonville Jaguars expect to have left tackle Luke Joeckel available for Sunday’s game at Cincinnati. Joeckel missed the second half of last week’s loss to Miami with a concussion. The second-year player did not practice Wednesday, but got in limited work Thursday and was full go Friday. He was listed as probable on Friday’s injury report. Jaguars coach Gus Bradley says he “would be shocked” if Joeckel didn’t play against the Bengals. Joeckel went through the NFL’s concussion protocol this week and hasn’t had any symptoms since Tuesday. COLLEGE ATHLETICS Brandon resigns as Michigan AD ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Dave Brandon took over Michigan’s athletic department four years ago with so many of the right qualifications: success as a businessman, experience as a university regent – and he’d played football for Bo Schembechler, too. That football program is the barometer of sporting success at Michigan, but the Wolverines have fallen on hard times recently. Those struggles – and the handful of other problems they helped magnify – led to the end of Brandon’s tenure as athletic director. “Dave feels that it would be in the best interest of our student-athletes, the athletic department and the university community if he moved on to other challenges and allowed the important work of the department and the university to continue without daily distractions,” school President Mark Schlissel said. “I agree with this decision.” – Staff, wire reports MIDDAY CASH 3 5-8-7 MIDDAY PLAY 4 2-0-8-2 FANTASY 5 6-11-16-18-19 LUCKY MONEY 7-13-16-46 BALL 16 EVENING CASH 3 3-2-5 EVENING PLAY 4 0-4-5-0 MEGA MILLIONS 11-29-36-58-67 BALL 15 x 2 11/1/14 1:06 AM 3 C • PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 8-MAN FOOTBALL Geneva flattens Peniel Baptist, 58-32 By Paul Henkemeyer Daily News Correspondent There were some new and different Halloween costumes in the stands behind the Peniel Baptist Academy eight-man football team bench at the the Theobold Sports Complex Friday night. On the field, though, it was pretty much the same as the Warrior football players “played their hearts out,” but lost a shootout with the Geneva Knights of Lakeland, 58-32. Peniel fans left on a positive not, however, as eighth-grader Blake Comer scored on a 55-yard pass play on the 80-yard field as the game ended. The game was the last home game for the Warriors and left them at 2-7. Geneva, like Peniel in its first year of eight-man ball, improved to 3-6. “We played our hearts out,” Peniel coach Jason Morris said. “We had a little glitch there in the second quarter and gave them three quick touchdowns. I think that was the game.” Morris said he inserted David Dennan in for two crucial plays midway in the fourth quarter because starting quarterback Gage Tibbs got “a little dinged up.” Morris noted Dennan, an eighth grader, threw a touchdown pass the week before and then threw another as the game ended. The visitors were paced by junior quarterback Maravelle Jackson, who ran for two touchdowns and passed for a third. Geneva got two running scores from Nathan Brown, a 71-yard TD kickoff return and a 20-yard scoring run from Luke Yates and short touchdown runs from Andrew Reynolds and Reagan Ames. Austin Langston, Peniel’s all purpose sophomore, got the Warriors’ first score on a 32-yard run that made it 6-6 with less than a minute to go in the first quarter. He scored on a 36-yard pass from Tibbs with 59 seconds left in the half and a 27-yarder from Tibbs early in the third period. Franklyn Batchelor, a center-defensive lineman who was the only senior suited up for Peniel, ran for a two-point conversion following the second Tibbs-toLangston TD pass. Geneva and Penniel both turned the ball over on downs on their first possessions. Geneva got on the scoreboard first when Brown swung left from the 1-yard line, ending a drive that started on the Knights’ 27. Peniel bounced back with Langston’s 32-yard scoring run less than one miniute later. Neither was able to move the ball until Rerynolds scored on his 44-yarder with 6:21 to go in the second quarter. Four minutes later, Jackson cashed in on a 23-yard run. Langston wasn’t far behind, scoring on a 36-yard pass from Tibbs. But the Knights put it away with Yates’ 71-yard kickoff return and Jackson’s 23-yarder with only seconds to go until intermission and Geneva up 30-12. It took Geneva less that five minutes to add to their lead with Michael Baker running 30 yards untouched down the Peniel sideline with a pass from Jackson, making it 38-12. Langston’s catch of another Tibbs scoring pass and Batchelor’s two-point conversion run pulled Peniel to within 38-20 but the Knights’ Ames and Yates wrapped TD runs around Langston’s 70-yard scoring dash off a fake punt, leaving it at 52-26. Geneva’s Brown’s 23-yard run and Comer’s 55-yard catch and run closed out the game. Peniel winds up the season Friday at Hernando Christian. Panthers CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C “I don’t recall a third quarter that lasted that long,” said a proud but exasperated Palatka coach Randy Hedstrom. “We talked about coming out in the second half and not being flat, treating it like a 0-0 game, and there we went. But Ponte Vedra’s a good team. That quarterback’s got a good arm.” District runnerup for the second year in a row, Palatka will open the playoffs Nov. 14 in Jacksonville against the District 3-5A champion – Ribault, Westside (formerly Forrest) or Bishop Kenny, who will play a tiebreaker on Monday. The Panthers host 8-1 St. Augustine in the traditional regular-season finale next week. The Yellow Jackets beat Palm Coast Matanzas 29-6 on Friday. “How about that?” said Hedstrom of making a playoff berth that appeared unlikely after the Panthers blew a 12-0 lead in a 20-19 loss at Ridgeview back on Sept. 19. “I hope this is enough to spring us into the playoffs and make a good showing. “This was a great effort by our kids. We were going back and forth, but then we were able to get a two-touchdown lead. With this quarterback, you don’t want them within a touchdown.” The Sharks (3-6, 1-3) and Panthers traded blows in the first quarter. Palatka broke on top at the 8:35 mark when Smith fired over the middle to Lewis, who spun at midfield and outran the secondary for LORI CRISCIONE / Special to the Daily News Palatka’s Travis Williams tackles Ponte Vedra’s Quint Boyd. 66 yards and a touchdown. Cristian Cedeno kicked the first of his six extra points (another try was blocked) and it was 7-0. Boyd’s 1-yard run knotted the game for the Sharks at the 4:09 mark, but Lewis’ 35-yard kickoff return set the stage for a 33-yard touchdown run by Honor, who sidestepped two defenders at the 10 as Palatka regained the lead at 13-7. Tronti went to Boyd on a screen for 59 yards and a score three plays after the kickoff and Connor Federico’s kick gave the Sharks their only lead at 14-13. “The screen killed us. Our linebackers have got to do a better job picking it up,” Hedstrom said. An unsuccessful onside kick gave the Panthers a short field for their next touchdown drive, which ended with Ben Myles’ 15-yard run on an option pitch with 3:26 left in the first period. Smith ran for two points and a 21-14 lead as Palatka went ahead to stay. Jamyd Floyd’s fumble recovery had the Panthers back in business for a scoring series that carried into the second quarter, producing Smith’s 5-yard run at the 11:07 mark. That made it 28-14, but Ponte Vedra answered on a 13-yard touchdown pass from Tronti to Zach Wawryzniak with 8:23 left in the half. Palatka drove 62 yards in nine plays, finishing with Smith’s second touchdown to Raiders CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C “To be honest, I figured we would run it down the field more than throw it,” he said. “But once we got rolling and the line was doing a great job of protecting, we changed it up and went more with the pass.” Needing 181 yards going into the game for 1,000 for the season, Beasley got 165 of that in the first half on 7-of-8 passing, including a pair of 35-yard touchdown passes to Eugene Harris and Max Jackson. Then playing with the running clock and right after the Wildcats had gotten their lone touchdown of the game when quarterback Matthew Henry hit Freddy Galvan with a 3-yard scoring strike, Beasley went to work. He eclipsed the 1,000-yard mark on a perfect down-and-out strike to Dillon Dunnigan for 27 yards to the Raider 42. He wasn’t done though. He hit Jackson (four catches, 103 yards) with a 34-yard strike and two plays later, finished the night with a 32-yard pass to Harris (four catches, 95 yards). “Getting 1,000 yards means a lot,” Beasley said. “It means I’ve got the best offensive line in front of me blocking. They allow me the time to do bigger and better things. Right now, we have momentum with us. It may not be my best game, but it’s definitely one of the best I’ve ever had.” Smith said he knew his team was ready just from the week of practice. “I had to stop practice on Tuesday because they were banging each other so hard,” Smith said. “Then on Wednesday, I had to do it again. I knew they were ready.” On their way to their 11th straight victory against the Wildcats, the Raiders 110114c3.indd 1 CHRIS DeVITTO / Palatka Daily News Crescent City’s Eugene Harris hauls a pass in ahead of Pierson Taylor’s Chadwick Peterson during Friday’s game scored on their opening drive for the seventh time in nine games this season, running the ball behind Dominic Owens (seven carries, 73 yards) and Dunnigan (eight carries, 83 yards). Dunnigan, a senior who had his best rushing game of the season, finished the 48-yard, fiveplay drive with a 20-yard scamper for a touchdown. The Raiders added a twopoint conversion to make it 8-0 just 96 seconds into the game. After forcing a punt on the Wildcats’ first drive, the Raiders went 83 yards on seven plays, the highlight being a 29-yard pass from Beasley to Harris. Dunnigan finished it out with a 13-yard run to make it 15-0 after Abner Brito’s extra-point kick. On the first play after the score from scrimmage, Taylor’s Jamie Knox had the ball stripped from him on a run by Dadrian Ellis, who dashed 33 yards for the score with the fumble to make it 21-0 with 5:11 left in the first quarter. And it only got worse. Ellis then scored on a 3-yard run with 37 seconds left before half to finish a 54-yard, six-play drive highlighted by a go up 35-21 with five minute to go in the half. The Sharks had another good series going before Lewis came up with his second interception. Smith ran for 41 yards on the next play, the big gainer in a drive capped by his 35-yard zinger over the middle to Berry on fourth and 21 with less than a minute to go in the half. The Sharks down 42-21 at halftime, Tronti keep firing, bringing his team within 42-35 with touchdown passes of 5 yards to Boyd and 16 yards to Hal Swan. A perfectly executed onside kick set up the hookup with Swan as Ponte Vedra got within 42-35. The Menendez-Ridgeview final was announced moments before the kickoff, which Berry returned 38 yards to the Ponte Vedra 32. Honor took it from there and at 49-35, the Panthers had the breathing room they needed. Lewis made his third pick, a drive-killer in the end zone on the next-to-last play of the third period. He tied a record shared by two other Panthers, most recently Trevis Coley. “He was all over the place,” said Hedstrom of Lewis. For insurance, Hedstrom called for a fourth-and-eight fake from the Palatka 22 three plays into the fourth quarter. Punter Demarae Givens took off, weaving his way for 58 yards to the Ponte Vedra. Honor scored from 3 yards out four plays later. “Our offense did a good job of keeping them off the field in the fourth quarter,” Hedstrom said. “The offensive line did an excellent job giving (Smith) protection and opening holes for those running backs.” 33-yard pass from Beasley to Owens. Ellis scored his 23rd touchdown of the season on a 7-yard run after a Wildcats defender was detected for taunting Ellis after he took him down for a 1-yard gain. Bad mistake by that player. The Raiders made the Wildcats pay by scoring four touchdowns on the next seven plays, beginning with the Ellis score. Galvan kicked a 38-yard field goal with 2:27 to go to get Taylor on the scoreboard, but a 30-yard pass from Beasley to Jackson was followed by a 35-yard pass from Beasley to Harris with 1:56 left before halftime to make it 40-3. Then Henry was stripped of the ball by Caleb Williams, who took the ball back to the Wildcat 35 and one play later, Beasley hit Jackson with a 35-yard scoring strike to make it 46-3. No Wildcat touched the pooch kickoff along the Raiders sideline and Dontavious Kelly dove on the ball at the Wildcat 27 with 1:02 to go. Owens and Dunnigan ran for 17 and 8 yards, respectively, before Ellis (12 carries, 65 yards) plowed in with his fourth touchdown of the night from the 2 with five seconds to go to finish out a 53-3 halftime lead. Off the opening score by the Raiders, Beasley handed off to lineman Cameron Milledge, who ran right and threw a 2-point conversion pass to Jackson. It was a play not devised by Smith, according to the coach. “That play is called ‘The Higginbotham,’” Smith joked. “We were in practice and our principal, Mechelle Higginbotham, came by and told me about this play she saw a highlight from on ESPN. It involved (an Arkansas) lineman getting a handoff, then throwing the ball to one of our receivers. I saw the play, too, so we had the opportunity after the first touchdown.” Another lineman, Larry Blue, also had a hand in a two-point conversion, scoring after the final Raiders’ touchdown. Prep Football Scoreboard Palatka 56, Ponte Vedra 35 Ponte Vedra 14 7 14 0–35 Palatka 21 21 7 7–56 First quarter PHS – Lewis 66 pass from Smith (Cedeno kick), 8:54 PV – Boyd 1 run (Federico kick), 4:09 PHS – Honor 33 run (kick blocked), 3:45 PV – Boyd 59 pass front Tronti (Federico kick), 2:39 PHS – Myles 15 run (Smith run), 0:37 Second quarter PHS – Smith 5 run (Cedeno kick), 11:07 PV – Wawryzniak 13 pass from Tronti (Federico kick), 8:23 PHS – Smith 8 run (Cedeno kick), 5:00 PHS – Berry 41 pass from Smith (Cedeno kick), 0:54 Third quarter PV – Boyd 5 pass from Tronti (Federico kick), 7:13 PV – Swan 16 pass from Tronti (Federico kick), 5:14 PHS – Honor 32 run (Cedeno kick), 4:56 Fourth quarter PHS – Honor 3 run (Cedeno kick), 8:58 PVPHS First downs 21 13 Rushes-yards 19-2028-309 Passing yards 364 145 28-54-37-12-0 Passes Return yards 45 119 Fumbles-lost 1-12-2 Punts 3-402-15.5 Penalties 9-6511-102 Individual statistics Rushing – PV: Bell 2-18, Boyd 8-9, Swan 1-1, Tronti 8-(-8). PHS: Honor 12-118, Givens 2-58, Smith 7-50, Brown 7-47, Myles 9-36. Passing – PV: Tronti 26-48-3, 344; Bell 2-5-0, 20; Wawryzniak 0-1-0. PHS: Smith 7-12-0, 145. Receiving – PV: Wawryzniak 6-101, Reyes 6-57, Boyd 5-108, Russi 5-66, Swan 2-20, Macri 1-10, Jorgenson 1-3, Few 1-0, Oczpok 1-(-1). PHS: Berry 4-63, Lewis 2-81. Crescent City 61, Pierson Taylor 10 Pierson Taylor 0 3 0 7–10 Crescent City 27 26 0 8–61 First quarter CC–Dunnigan 20 run (Jackson pass from Milledge), 10:24. CC–Dunnigan 13 run (Brito kick), 5:33. CC–Ellis 33 fumble return (kick failed), 5:11. CC–Ellis 3 run (kick failed), :37. Second quarter CC–Ellis 7 run (Brito kick), 8:59. PT–Galvan 38 field goal, 2:27. CC–Harris 35 pass from Beasley (run failed), 1:56. CC–Jackson 35 pass from Beasley (run failed), 1:10. CC-Ellis 2 run (Brito kick), :05. Fourth quarter PT–Galvan 3 pass from Matthew Henry (Galvan kick), 5:48. CC–Harris 32 pass from Beasley (Blue run), 2:16. PTCC First downs 7 20 Rushes-yards 25-6128-221 Passing yards 84 258 Passes 5-13-010-12-0 Return yards 120 84 Fumbles-lost 5-31-0 Punts-avg.3-33.30 3-227-60 Penalties INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING – Pierson Taylor: Matthew Henry 11-40, Knox 7-18, T. Rodriguez 3-8, Mason Henry 2-(-7), Dillard 1-2, Williams 1-0. Crescent City: Ellis 12-65, Dunnigan 8-83, Owens 7-73, Beasley 1-0. PASSING – Pierson Taylor: Matthew Henry 5-13-0-84. Crescent City: Beasley 10-12-0-258. RECEIVING – Pierson Taylor: Galvan 2-0, Williams 1-32, Mason Henry 1-30, L. Rodriguez 1-22. Crescent City: Jackson 4-103, Harris 4-95, Owens 1-33, Dunnigan 1-27. The Villages 44, Interlachen 7 IHS 7 0 0 0 — 7 Villages 10 17 10 7 — 44 First quarter I — Brown 32 run (Lennartz kick), 9:34. V — Jiles 2 run (Pettus kick), 6:05. V — Pettus 34 field goal, 3:11. Second quarter V — Harris 6 run (Pettus kick), 9:33. V — Pettus 33 field goal (7:10). V — Jiles 6 run (Pettus kick), 1:38. Third quarter V — Pettus 31 field goal, 6:46. V — Jiles 3 run (Pettus kick), 4:32. Fourth quarter V — Jiles 20 run (Pettus kick), 11:55. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING: I — Strickland 11-75; Brown 5-42; Foshee 9-9; Mitchell 1-4; McClendon 1-(-2). V — Jiles 38-297; Harris 3-15; Lane 2-4; McCormic 1-7. PASSING: I – Foshee 2-12-3-0, 24; Ricks 0-1-0-0, 0. V — Noe 0-4-1-0, 0; Leiva 1-10-0, 37; Harris 0-1-0-0, 0. RECEIVING: I — McGruder 1-13; Mitchell 1-11. V — Liner 1-37. State scores Apopka 43, Olympia 0 Armwood 43, Chamberlain 0 Atlantic Community 33, Lake Worth 14 Avon Park 70, Lake Placid 35 Baker School 35, Northview 27 Bartram Trail 14, Nease 0 Bell 33, Hawthorne 12 Bishop Kenny 35, Baker County 14 Bishop Moore 52, Eustis 6 Bolles School 48, West Nassau County 14 Booker 20, Southeast 14 Braden River 38, Palmetto 14 Calvary Christian-Clearwater 35, St. Petersburg Catholic 14 Cape Coral 42, Mariner 7 Cardinal Mooney 44, Bishop Verot 6 Charlotte 26, Port Charlotte 14 Gators CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1C meetings against the Richt-led Bulldogs, there was strong belief that his job would be in jeopardy without a victory against the Gators. Georgia won 24-20, and Richt said afterward: “I know it was just a ballgame, but it seemed like a lot more than that.” Florida has had chances to win the last three in the series. The Gators were driving in a four-point game in 2011 before getting sacked on a fourth-down play. They kept it close the following year despite six turnovers and had a chance to tie the game when Jordan Reed fumbled on the Georgia 5-yard line. Florida rallied from a 20-0 deficit last year and made it a three-point game in the fourth, but the Bulldogs sealed the win with an eight-plus minute drive that was aided by a personal foul penalty that negated a third-down stop. “We’ve had three games that have come down to the last Chipley 44, Holmes County 14 Choctawhatchee 45, Ft. Walton Beach 3 Clearwater 25, Seminole 21 Clewiston 50, LaBelle 14 Cocoa 40, Jones 0 Columbia 62, Middleburg 3 Coral Springs 35, Douglas 21 Cornerstone Charter 21, Citrus Park Christian 9 Cypress Bay 35, McArthur 0 DeLand 47, Lake Brantley 28 Deltona 63, Pine Ridge 0 Dixie County 40, Chiefland 6 Dr. Phillips 35, Orlando Freedom 3 Dunnellon 17, Lecanto 7 Durant 28, East Bay 7 Duval Charter 35, Harvest Community School 0 Eagle’s View 56, Christ’s Church 14 East Lake 49, St. Petersburg Northeast 14 East River 25, Lake Howell 20 Eau Gallie 48, Cocoa Beach 0 Episcopal 31, Hilliard 13 Escambia 40, Pensacola Washington 14 First Baptist 36, Marco Island 6 Flanagan 40, Western 6 Florida 48, Marianna 21 Fort Myers 49, Riverdale 0 Fort Pierce Central 53, Treasure Coast 7 Fort White 42, Taylor County 14 Foundation Academy 32, Agape Christian 14 Frostproof 21, Berkeley Prep 19 Gaither 18, George Steinbrenner 15 Gateway 35, Celebration 3 Gibbs 24, Dunedin 16 Godby 35, New Smyrna Beach 0 Graceville 28, Cottondale 18 Gulf 36, Wesley Chapel 19 Gulliver Prep 22, Monsignor Pace 0 Haines City 30, George Jenkins 16 Hallandale 38, Boynton Beach 36 Hamilton County 28, Jefferson County 6 Heritage 56, Bayside 7 Hernando 29, Brooksville Central 6 Hialeah-Miami Lakes 41, Goleman 34 Hillsborough 18, Robinson 2 Hudson 35, Anclote 21 IMG Academy 50, Clearwater Central Catholic 21 Indian Rocks 56, Tampa Catholic 21 Jay 44, Freeport 41 Jefferson 17, Blake 6 Jensen Beach 42, Okeechobee 0 Jesuit 39, Middleton 0 Jupiter Christian 24, Boca Raton Christian 7 Key West 69, Coral Glades 0 Keys Gate 24, Somerset AcademyPembroke Pines 13 Keystone Heights 16, Bradford 0 King 28, Leto 7 Kissimmee Osceola 49, St. Cloud 17 Lafayette 48, Branford 0 Lake Gibson 28, Sebring 6 Lake Highland 42, Halifax Academy 6 Lake Mary 41, University (Orange City) 27 Lake Minneola 49, Leesburg 13 Lake Nona 53, Harmony 7 Lake Wales 42, Tenoroc 6 Lake Weir 21, Citrus 14 Lakeland Christian 21, Fort Meade 14 Lakeland 21, Kathleen 2 Lakewood Ranch 33, Sarasota 14 Largo 55, Dixie Hollins 41 Lely 28, Immokalee 7 Lemon Bay 42, Cypress Lake 12 Leon 45, Chiles 0 Liberty County 19, Port St. Joe 14 Lincoln 23, Gainesville 6 Maclay 22, P.K. Yonge 14 Madison County 51, Fernandina Beach 0 Mainland 26, Seabreeze 9 Manatee 35, Palm Harbor University 0 Melbourne 44, Sebastian River 14 Melbourne Central Catholic 51, Holy Trinity Episcopal 0 Menendez 21, Ridgeview 16 Merritt Island 40, Rockledge 6 Miami Central 45, Miami Jackson 0 Miami Ferguson 16, Belen Jesuit 13 Moore Haven 27, St. John Neumann 17 Mosley 29, Bay 20 Mount Dora 57, Tavares 39 Naples 43, Barron Collier 0 Nature Coast Tech 58, Weeki Wachee 7 Navarre 49, Dothan, Ala. 24 Newsome 48, Riverview 14 Niceville 34, Crestview 10 North Florida Christian 28, FAMU Developmental Research 13 North Marion 47, Belleview 0 North Miami 42, Miami Krop 21 Northside Christian 32, Carrollwood Day 14 Oakleaf 28, Fletcher 7 Ocala Trinity Catholic 58, Father Lopez Catholic 13 Ocala Vanguard 31, Ocala Forest 14 Ocoee 28, East Ridge 16 Orlando University 31, Hagerty 25, OT Oviedo 28, Timber Creek 21 Pace 47, Milton 7 Pahokee 33, Village Academy 7 Palm Bay 48, Satellite 27 Palmetto Ridge 49, Estero 14 Pasco 35, Zephyrhills 34, OT Pinellas Park 10, Countryside 6 Plant City 20, Brandon 14 Plant 35, Alonso 7 Plantation American Heritage 50, Cardinal Gibbons 0 River Ridge 42, Ridgewood 14 Rocky Bayou Christian 40, Aucilla Christian 16 Royal Palm Beach 42, Palm Beach Lakes 7 Santa Fe 49, Eastside 20 Seminole Ridge 22, Jupiter 0 Seven Rivers Christian 35, Santa Fe Catholic 24 Spruce Creek 19, Lyman 17 St. Augustine 29, Matanzas 6 St. Johns Country Day 23, Beacon of Hope Christian 0 St. Petersburg 38, Sarasota Riverview 7 St. Thomas Aquinas 51, Plantation 0 Stranahan 20, Coconut Creek 14 Suwannee 42, Crystal River 20 Tampa Freedom 28, Wiregrass Ranch 20 Tarpon Springs 27, Boca Ciega 12 Titusville 21, Astronaut 16 Trenton 38, Bronson 8 Trinity Prep 20, Orangewood Christian 13 Union County 41, Williston 12 University Christian 53, Cedar Creek Christian 6 Venice 42, Seminole Osceola 8 Vernon 38, Sneads 8 Vero Beach 35, St. Lucie Centennial 0 Victory Christian 45, Out-of-Door Academy 0 drive, and we need to coach and play better in those situations,” Muschamp said. “Credit their team and what they’ve been able to do. We certainly had our opportunities.” Here are things to know about Florida and Georgia heading into the game: HARRIS STARTS: Florida freshman quarterback Treon Harris will make his first career start, replacing ineffective junior Jeff Driskel. Driskel had 12 turnovers in the last four games. Harris has completed 12 of 18 passes for 263 yards, with three touchdowns and an interception this season. Florida’s message to Harris: Don’t turn the ball over. UNIQUE UNIFORMS: Florida and Georgia will both wear dark jerseys, with the Gators in blue and the Bulldogs in red. It will mark the first time both teams wore dark uniforms in the rivalry game since 1970. “We all felt it was enough of a contrast,” Richt said. “I’m hoping our guys don’t think blue is red, and the QB starts throwing to their guys. I don’t think it will be an issue.” 11/1/14 2:10 AM 4 C • PA L AT K A DA I LY N E W S • S AT U R DAY, N OV E M B E R 1 , 2 0 1 4 Cubs fire Renteria, put Maddon in charge Girls Soccer 2014-15 By Andrew Seligman and Jay Cohen Associated Press Interlachen’s Makayla Gingras (12) drives for one of her goals against Crescent City Thursday. CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News Former star takes charge Two-time player of the year Larsen leading Interlachen By Mark Blumenthal Palatka Daily News F or the first time, a former star has become as head coach of the Putnam County girls soccer team for which she once played. And though she won’t turn 22 years old until Nov. 24, Jacqueline Fraga Larsen has been groomed for this moment, taking on a travel team that involved a number of the current Interlachen High School players last summer. “For the most part, we have established a family,” Larsen said. “If I have to pick one thing I’m most happy about, I have a young team and 18 girls who are wanting to learn. They’re eager to learn. They are all excited.” And so Larsen, the Daily News Player of the Year in the 2009-10 and 2010-11 seasons, grabs the reins from the most successful coach in county history, Mike Stevens, who led the Rams to 82 victories in 10 years. The following is a look at the three county girls soccer teams. INTERLACHEN Larsen is doing without an assistant coach, getting help from her husband, Michael, also an IHS graduate who she said is acting more as a manager of the team. “I had never seen any of these girls beforehand,” she said. “But I came to find out that all of them knew who I was. We’ve got some freshman skill players on this team and my entire back line (Dominique Aponte, Wendy Wear and Deniea Fisher) is seniors. They may not be young, but everyone ahead of them on the field is.” Larsen does have junior Makayla Gingras, who last season broke the county record for single-season goals –boy or girl – with 54 and was 2013-14 player of the year. Gingras came into the season with 80 career goals, just three behind Larsen for second on the all-time goal scoring list at IHS and 42 behind the county’s all-time leader, Larsen’s classmate and twotime player of the year herself, Alana Christian. One of the big problems the Rams had last year was that Gingras scored 70 percent of the team’s goals. For the Rams to be successful, this just can’t happen again. And so freshman Amanda Quinby, junior Allison Ray, both front-line players, and center-midfielder Samantha Pearson, another two-time AllCounty player, must be a part of the mix. Also new is junior Ariel Lucas, who must follow in a long line of goalkeeping standouts such as Jennifer Roberts, Terri Tompson and Rachel Smith. “First and foremost for goals, I want to come together as a team,” Larsen said. “I want us to play as one, not as two or three people. I have 18 girls on my team, maybe one more coming in. The 19 of us and I make 20. I want the 20 of us to be one complete person. We want to play as team to the best of our ability.” PALATKA Last season, the Panthers hit reality hard. A year removed from a record 17-win season in the 2012-13 campaign, Palatka was hit with the cruel fact it was going back to the St. Johnsand Clay County-dominated District 4-3A. It took a toll on the Panthers, who went 3-17-1. Dominic Piscitello, now the dean of girls soccer coaches in his ninth season, is taking a more realistic approach. “My whole idea is to develop a stronger mentality-type team,” he said. “The losses aren’t as important as building L a team is. I’m hoping to build a team bond. We brought some new people in that I hope will make a difference.” Two of those players are freshman Emily Sherwood, a midfielder and Jasmine Segovia, a midfielder and striker. Another is new goalkeeper Courtney Mikell, a sophomore who established herself last spring as a freshman varsity softball player. “The two freshmen have the basic fundamentals to play this game where in years past, you had to teach them those before you played them,” he said. “It’s a natural thing they have and that’s good. And Courtney is an amazing athlete. She has the mechanics to be the best goalie this county has ever seen. And that’s the exciting part. She’s never played organized soccer and she’s gone right into the fire with the St. Johns County teams and hung in there, even saving a penalty kick.” Of course, the Panthers have veterans from that ‘12-13 season back to lead the way like defensive midfielder Lauren Futch and center back Addie Tilton, both seniors. Baylee Buchanan, a fullback, Haley Ridenour, a fullback and forward, and McKinsey Browning, a striker, are juniors who also made some kind of an impact two years ago. “We’re going to win some games,” said Piscitello, just three victories away from becoming the second coach in the county’s history to win 50 career games. “But that’s not our goal. There’s a lot of diamonds in the rough on this team that we hope to expose this season.” CRESCENT CITY The Raiders are young this year and lost their two main goal scorers, All-County standouts Tabatha Ross and Maria Caro, to graduation. They scored a combined 30 goals. Lucie Valdivia-Sanchez, who RE-ELECT PHIL EARY PALATKA CITY COMMISSION, GROUP 4 latka Local 2992 efighters of Pa Professional Fir a 322177 rid Flo , ka lat P.O. Box 337, Pa Experienced Leadership for Palatka’s Future 92, IAFF, are Palatka, Local 29 ioner, l Firefighters of ka City Commiss al The Professiona lat Pa for ry Lea Phil d addition proud to endorse we have obtaine s, ort eff r you ist ass our Group 4. Through r safety and to equipment for ou rating. We also .O. I.S 2, firefighters and ss Cla h obtaining a ghters Pension department wit our Palatka Firefi work you do for appreciate the e. Plan as a truste . you in the future to working with rd We look forwa begins her sixth season in charge, said she is looking to her younger players to step up, saying they she “saw lots of potential.” Mya Rios, Samantha Carbajal and Abby Cuevas are three players she is looking to help fill in the scoring spots. Defensively, Valdivia-Sanchez will be fairly strong with returnees Laura Cruz, Kaitlyn Jackson and Jordyn Smith. This team will be a work in progress in a tough District 5-2A that includes Interlachen, Keystone Heights, Gainesville P.K. Yonge, Gainesville Eastside and Alachua Santa Fe. “In the past two seasons, we’ve ended right around the middle of the pack in the district,” Valdivia-Sanchez said. “My goal with this team is not to be average. I told the girls it’s a hard goal to have, especially it being a young team and most of the girls are new. But however young we are, we don’t want to be just average.” CHICAGO — Right after Joe Maddon opted out of his contract with Tampa Bay, the Chicago Cubs were mentioned as a possible landing spot for one of baseball’s best managers. Flush with prospects and ready to make a splash in free agency, the Cubs already had a manager in Rick Renteria. But they just couldn’t resist the lure of Maddon’s sudden availability. Looking for a turnaround after five consecutive losing seasons, the Cubs announced Friday that they had hired Maddon to replace Renteria after just one year on the job. The move pairs the respected Maddon with a promising roster and a franchise with far more resources than he ever enjoyed with the smallmarket Rays. Renteria was fired after leading Chicago to a 73-89 record in his only season as a major league manager. It was a seven-win improvement from 2013, the last of Dale Sveum’s two years in charge, but not close to reaching the playoffs or putting the Cubs in position to win their first World Series title since 1908. “Maddon — who may be as well suited as anyone in the industry to manage the challenges that lie ahead of us — had become a free agent,” Cubs President Theo Epstein said in a statement. “We saw it as a unique opportunity and faced a clear dilemma: be loyal to Rick or be loyal to the organization. In this business of trying to win a world championship for the first time in 107 years, the organization has priority over any one individual. We decided to pursue Joe.” Epstein said the Cubs were “transparent” at all times with Renteria once Maddon became available two weeks ago. INTERLACHEN Head coach: Jacqueline Fraga Larsen, first year (career record: 0-0). Last season: 8-12-3. Assistant coach: Michael Larsen (volunteer). Roster: Dominique Aponte (senior fullback), Wendy Wear (sr. center back), Deniea Fisher (senior center back), Allison Ray (junior striker), Samantha Pearson (jr. centermidfielder), Makayla Gingras (jr. striker), Leximary Zapata (jr. midfield wing), Brianna Spurgeon (jr. sweeper), Ariel Lucas (jr. goalkeeper), Meagan Smith (jr. stopper), Holly Gregor (sophomore midfield wing), Janasiear Perry (so. fullback), Amanda Quinby (freshman midfield wing), Kloe Harrier (fr. midfield wing), Katie Moore (fr. midfield wing), Emily Hughes (fr. fullback), Lacie White (fr. sweeper), Cory Lloyd (fr. midfield wing). PALATKA Head coach: Dominic Piscitello, ninth year (career record: 47-117-20). Last season: 3-17-1. Assistant coaches: Tracy Piscitello (varsity), Doug Schwall (JV). Roster: Lauren Futch (sr. defensive midfield), Addie Tilton (sr. center back), Kaylee Vinson (sr. forward wing), Baylee Buchanan (jr. fullback), Haley Ridenour (jr. fullback-forward), Haley Nunley (jr. center-midfielder), McKinsey Browning (jr. striker), Michelle Dampier (jr. left midfielder), Emma Norris (jr. fullback), Genisha Wilson (jr. striker), Osteria Williams (jr. midfielder), Jordan Nearing (so. right wing-midfielder), Olivia Harris (so. midfielder), Courtney Mikel (so. goalkeeper), Micallah Parker (so. midfielder), Taylor Thomas (so. striker), Jasmine Segovia (fr. midfielder-striker), Emily Sherwood (fr. midfielder). CRESCENT CITY Head coach: Lucie Valdivia-Sanchez, sixth year (career record: 28-58-2). Last season: 5-16-1. Assistant coach: Joanna Aguilar (varsity). Roster: Alexis Price (sr. midfielder); Jordyn Smith (sr. defender); Manuela Torres (sr. midfielder-defender); Ashanti Clemmons (sr. midfielder); Ramona Baumann (jr. midfielder); Yaneli Cruz (jr. defender); Carolina Reholova (jr. midfielder-defender); Leslie Wiedmann (jr. midfielder); Laura Cruz (so. defender); Kaitlyn Jackson (so. defender); Rhonda Martinez (so. midfielder-defender); Vanessa Vargas (so. midfielder); Lizette Aboytes (fr. goalkeeper); Marisela Agreda (so. midfielder); Anayeli Baltazar (fr. forward); Samantha Carbajal (so. forward); Barbie Guerrero (fr. defender); Anayeli Jaramillo (fr. midfielder-forward); Mya Rios (fr. forward); Joana Aragon (8th grade goalkeeper); Gaby Cruz (8th grade midfielder); Abigail Cuevas (8th grade forward); Yesenia Perez (8th grade midfielder-defender); Jennifer Galvan (7th grade forward); Andrea Gomez (7th grade midfielder). Bring the family for a day of fun! Saturday, Nov. 8th 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Putnam Community Medical Center Front Lawn es s u o cy H Boun Game Volunteers’ Gift Shop s Open inside 10am-2pm Face Painti ng s g o D t o H Find Us On Facebook www.facebook.com/pcmcfl Sincerely, Chad Branford 2992 President, Local Political advertisement paid for and approved by Phil Leary, non-partisan for City Commission, Group 4. 110114c4.indd 1 Making Our Communities Healthier 611 Zeagler Drive, Palatka • 386-328-5711 • www.pcmcfl.com 10/31/14 6:15 PM
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