Principal suspended for three days

Transcription

Principal suspended for three days
Chris Bosh
The Florida Keys’ Only Daily Newspaper, Est. 1876
Heat, Celtics look to go up, 3-2 — Page 1B
Wednesday
June 6, 2012 ◆ Vol. 136 ◆ No. 158 ◆ 14 pages
50 Cents
Principal suspended for three days
WEATHER
But behavior did not meet legal definitions of harassment, hostile workplace
creating a hostile work
environment.
“However,
we
believe that he needs
to address management decisions” in
several areas including
Gracy
appreciating “thoughtful dissent,” administrator Theresa
Axford wrote in her final report.
The brief suspension and an order
BY GWEN FILOSA
Citizen Staff
Charles Winters, third grade
Gerald Adams Elementary
Superintendent Jesus Jara on
Tuesday suspended Marathon
Middle/High School Principal
Hammond Gracy for three days without pay, but agreed with an administrative report that Gracy’s workplace
conduct did not rise to the legal
definition of sexual harassment or
Sunrise: 6:38 a.m.
Sunset: 8:14 p.m.
Today: Some rain in spots
High 87
Tonight: Partly cloudy
Low 80
Complete forecast on Page 2A
that Gracy complete “professional
development” training is for “concerns” that Jara had after reviewing an
investigation that included 28 interviews with other school employees.
In response to the written complaint, lodged last month, the School
District came up with four charges
against Gracy: sexual harassment,
hostile work environment, and mishandling an investigation into an
employee, which led to endangering
a child.
Jara’s decision Tuesday clears Gracy
of all four formal complaints.
Back on the job
Gracy was immediately returned to
the $105,509 job on Tuesday, almost
See PRINCIPAL, Page 5A
KEY WEST
SKEETER HUNT
CELEBRATE
KEY WEST
PRIDE
Island
may
slow
down
JUNE 6-10
SPRAY ALERT
The Florida Keys Mosquito
Control District will conduct aerial
spraying from 6:30 to 8:30 this
morning over the Upper Keys,
weather permitting.
Airplanes will treat Middle Key
Largo, Upper Key Largo and Ocean
Reef, Mile Markers 98 to 107, as
well as Upper Matecumbe, Windley
and Plantation keys, and Lower Key
Largo, Mile Markers 80 to 98.
Helicopters will treat Lower
Matecumbe Key. They will spread
Dibrom, an adulticide applied at
0.75 ounces per acre, whose active
ingredient is naled, which the district has used for almost 30 years.
BY JOHN DESANTIS
Citizen Staff
order Bethel back to prison to serve the
remainder of his three-year sentence.
Assistant Public Defender Christopher
Bridger is asking for a reduced sentence.
Bridger’s motion for a reduced sentence cites five key reasons: Bethel
has been sufficiently punished; he has
shown he will comply with probation by
completing a 12-month probation in an
Key West city commissioners took a first step Tuesday
toward slowing down traffic in
residential areas from 25 mph
to 20 mph.
The ordinance on which
they voted was expanded from
a previous version that would
have covered only Old Town
residential
streets, except
for those under
state or county
jurisdiction.
Tu e s d a y ’s
action
was
Weekley
taken on a first
presentation of
the ordinance. Another reading
will take place in two weeks,
and if it is passed then, it will
become law.
“This was a request from a
number of people in my district who travel mostly by
bicycle and who walk,” said
Commissioner Jimmy Weekley,
who proposed the ordinance.
“As the bumper sticker says,
‘Slow down, this ain’t the mainland.’ That could be the second
See SENTENCE, Page 8A
See SLOW DOWN, Page 8A
ROADWORK
KEY WEST: Lanes will
be closed and detours offered on
Truman Avenue between Georgia
Street and Eisenhower Drive for
the next three weeks, according to the Florida Department of
Transportation.
A new sewer main and transmission pipes will be installed starting
today, according to North Roosevelt
Boulevard reconstruction project
spokesman Dean Walters. Plan
on using White, Georgia, Virginia,
Albury, Florida and Pearl streets as
alternate routes during this time.
MIKE HENTZ/The Citizen
Florida Keys Mosquito Control District Inspector Scott Estevez checks standing water behind a hotel Tuesday. Agency Director Michael
Doyle said larvae of the dengue-carrying Aedes aegypti mosquito are on the rise, prompting the weekly use of aerial spray. With the
rainy season in full swing, it’s important for everyone to eliminate standing water around homes and businesses.
KEY WEST
Trap robber seeks reduced sentence
BY ADAM LINHARDT
ON THE RADIO
Rick Knabb
is the new
National
Hurricane
Center director.
Citizen Staff
Harry Bethel Jr. will ask a judge today
to reduce his three-year prison sentence
for pulling another fisherman’s lobster
trap near Sugarloaf Key in 2007.
Bethel, 50, has been free on $1,000 bond
while his appeal played out, but prosecutors now want him back in court — and
back in state prison, where Bethel served
less than 8½ months of his sentence.
Knabb
Also on today’s show:
• Judd Wise, KWHS coach
• Bob Peryam, county sheriff
• Roman Gastesi,
county administrator
• Donie Lee, KWPD
• Steve Miller,
Lower Keys Chamber
• Liz Young, Arts Council
The 3rd District Court
of Appeal upheld circuit
Judge David Audlin’s
ruling in April. Bethel
had sought to have his
conviction overturned,
claiming the jury lacked
Bethel Jr.
sufficient evidence to
convict him, and that his
sentence was “vindictive.”
Assistant State Attorney Val Winter is
asking county Judge Wayne Miller to
KEY WEST
Sewer backup closes waterfront bar
BY MANDY MILES
LOCAL NEWS
US1 Radio 104.1 FM:
7:30 and 8:30 a.m., noon, 5 and 6 p.m.
98.7 FM Conch Country:
7, 8 and 9 a.m. and 3, 4, 5 and 6 p.m.
Citizen Staff
A plumbing problem that
occurred during a health inspection at Schooner Wharf
Bar Tuesday morning forced
the land mark waterfront
watering hole to close for the
day.
Health and sanitation
inspectors from the Florida
Department of Business and
Professional Regulation were
scheduled to return early
today to verify that the violation was corrected, and determine whether the bar and restaurant is allowed to reopen.
“The health inspectors
came right at the same time
that we had a sewer backup in the restroom,” owner
Evalena Worthington told The
Citizen Tuesday afternoon.
“The plumbers got here right
away, and had it fixed and
working perfectly within the
ROB O’NEAL/The Citizen
See SCHOONER, Page 5A The Schooner Wharf Bar is seen in this February 2008 file photo.
374561
INDEX
◆
CLASSIFIED ADS – 4-6 B
COMICS – 6 A
KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIEDS ◆ keysnews.com/classifieds
CRIME REPORT – 2A
CROSSWORD – 5 B
KEYS CALENDAR – 2A
OPINION – 4A
SPORTS – 1B
FOR CLASSIFIEDS ◆ 305-292-7777, Option 4
2A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
• Mobile Outreach fundraiser
A Belmont fundraiser for the Mobile
Citizens’ Voice
The Key West Sail & Power Squadron
is offering America’s Boating Course at
5205 College Road, Stock Island. The
two-day session covers boat handling,
elementary seamanship, navigation
aids and more. Completion satisfies
Florida state boating certification
requirements. The course will be 7 to
9 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday, June 18, 21,
25, 27 and July 2. The $55 fee covers
• LVA seeks volunteers
the cost of materials; a reduced rate
The local chapter of the Literacy
is available for family members who
Volunteers of America is seeking volshare materials. The registration fee
unteers to work in its office from noon also includes an optional introductory
to 4 p.m. Mondays and Tuesdays,
six-month Power Squadron memberand also to tutor students in reading, ship. To register online, visit www.
writing and English as a second lanusps.org/localusps/keywest. For more
guage. Interested parties should call
information, call 925-366-8206 or
305-294-4352 or 305-304-0578, or 305-304-7247.
email [email protected].
Editor’s note: To have your event listed in Around the Keys, e-mail
the who, what, where and when to [email protected].
session per child. Kids can enroll in all • Helpline volunteers sought
five Art is Cool sessions for $115. Call Helpline in Key West needs volunteers
305-296-0458.
to respond to crisis calls, Alcoholics
Anonymous and Al-Anon calls, and
• Hometown PAC rally
calls for social services information.
Hometown PAC will have a candidate
Volunteer opportunities are available
meet-and-greet from 5 to 8 p.m. Frifrom 8 a.m. to noon, from noon to 4
day at the Conch Flyer Restaurant,
p.m., and from 4 to 8 p.m. Mondays
on the second floor of the Key
through Fridays. Training will be proWest International Airport, 3491 S.
vided. Volunteer hours can count as
Roosevelt Blvd. All candidates for the
community service hours. For more
upcoming primary and general elecinformation, call 305-292-8445.
tions will be presented. Free food will
be served and a cash bar will be availTuesdays. Children may sign up for as able. All are welcome. For information, • Oldest House needs docents
The Oldest House Museum is looking
many or as few classes as they like,
email [email protected].
for volunteer docents to show visitors
for both programs. The cost is $25 per
TODAY IN KEYS HISTORY
“Citizens’ Voice’’ is a
forum for you to
tell us what’s
on your mind.
Call the “Voice’’
at (305) 293-7900
or e-mail to [email protected].
Some of the comments will be published daily.
• Boating course
its slice of old Key West. Volunteers
meet visitors from all over the world
and tell them about the early days.
The museum is air-conditioned and
open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily,
except for Sundays and Wednesdays.
Docent hours are flexible. For more
information, call 305-294-9501,
email [email protected] or visit
www.oirf.org.
AROUND THE KEYS
294-4494
Interesting
Facts
A thirteen-year-old boy named Benny Benson in 1927 designed the state flag of Key West
Alaska. He was the winner of an American Legion sponsored national competition
to come up with a design for the new territory.
743-0494
•••
Marathon
Brought To You
Daily
365231
Outreach Project will take place from
4 to 7 p.m. Saturday at JDL’s Big
• Coral Camp 2012
Ten Pub, 920 Caroline St., Key West.
The nonprofit Reef Relief’s Coral
The event will feature drink and food
Camp, for kids ages 6 to 12, runs
specials, horse pools, a 50/50 and
from Monday through Aug. 17.
more. For more information, call 305Reservations are now being accepted. 600-7624.
Activities include science and art
projects, field trips around Key West
• Summer art classes
and more. A limited number of schol- The Studios of Key West is now taking
arships are available. Camp will run
enrollments for summer art classes
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays for kids. Art is Cool, from 10 a.m.
through Fridays. Fees are $215 per
to noon Saturdays in June, teaches
week or $370 for two or more weeks. different art techniques from some
To register, or for more information,
of the island’s best artists. A second
call 305-294-3100 or email reefreprogram that starts Saturday, Painting
[email protected]. Applications may also Boot Camp for Kids, will be taught by
be downloaded at www.reefrelief.org/ well-known local artist Rick Worth from
homepage/coral-camp-2012/
9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Mondays and
IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST
PAGE 2
And here's another interesting fact; Keys Insurance is a full line
insurance agency waiting to service you! Call us today at . . .
By Derek Martin-Vegue,
President
Keys Insurance Services
453-1445
Key Largo
KEY WEST 5-DAY FORECAST
TODAY
TONIGHT
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
A shower or
t-storm in spots
Partly
cloudy
Periods of sun
with a t-storm
A thunderstorm
possible
Some sun,
maybe a t-storm
A t-storm
possible
87
80
87/80
87/79
88/80
88/80
“Commissioner Tony Yaniz is no
Joe Balbontin. Joe Balbontin didn’t
act like a little kid. He was a great
commissioner.”
“God is as real as the Easter
Bunny or Santa Claus. Of course
it looks ridiculous for grown
people, who should know better, to
embrace this silliness, especially
in public.”
“I’m trying to sit outside my
house and read the Sunday paper,
but I can’t because the mosquitoes
are so bad they are eating me alive.
I’ve had dengue fever once already.
I am not going to vote for any of
the people who are on the board
of Mosquito Control. And to the
person who was complaining about
the hybrid mosquitoes, please go
and live somewhere else, and leave
us with our hybrid mosquitoes.”
Monroe General Hospital
20 YEARS AGO
A charter boat captain was arrested for selling off a portion of
a bale of marijuana he found at sea. He told police he lost a large
portion of the bale to a burglar he could not report.
Three men charged with importing cocaine changed their plea
to guilty after a cocaine airdrop was shown on video.
“The Swirl Girls in Solares Hill
is ridiculous. You can’t find any of
these wines anywhere in Key West.
Why don’t you recommend wines
you can actually buy here?”
“I can’t believe you’re honoring
Bob Graham in Solares Hill. That
guy sold us down the river in the
mid-1970s.”
“Stop bashing teachers. Unless
you want to live in a country of truly
stupid, uneducated, people. Oh
yeah ....”
“Court clerks don’t wear uniforms
and ask people for identification,
bailiffs do.”
“Thirty-two years ago I was a
cashier at Fast Buck’s. At that time
there was law in Key West men
had to wear shirts on Duval Street.
Calvin Klein had just bought his
house on Eaton and was shirtless
on Duval, hassled by the cops and
he came into the store to buy a
T-shirt. My brush with fame at Fast
Bucks, R.I.P., end of an era.”
“What makes you assume that I
did not call for help, and you do
realize that there is a police presence at Higgs? But my first and
only concern is for the children.
They do not have a choice of the
environment we are putting them
in.”
“Contrary to Einstein’s Law of
Relativity, when the florescent overhead lights go up in a retail space
on Duval, they rarely come down.”
“The runner’s dog did not die
from ‘lack of a pack,’ but from
excessive body heat. I lost my two
Labs while jogging on a sultry day
in June, one in front of my house,
the other an hour later. The vet said
their body heat was higher than his
thermometer would register. It’s too
hot to run your dog.”
“In all likelihood, the only weakness your chow had was his/her
love and loyalty to you. Running
a dog on a hot and sunny day is
a death sentence for them. They
cannot sweat like we do, and a
perfectly healthy dog will die very
quickly; they literally cook from the
inside out. Please, pet owners, in
this hot weather, remember they
are wearing fur coats. Keep them
cool.”
6/8
6/10
Airman 3rd Class Gary W. Hall was assigned to the Tactical
Air Command at Stewart Air Force Base in Tennessee. He was a
graduate of Key West High School.
A 55-gallon drum containing metallic sodium, a violent explosive, washed ashore on Sugarloaf Key. Navy demolition experts
destroyed the drum that may have fallen from a passing ship.
The Monroe County Commission voted to put a special act
on the November ballot that would create a governing board for
Monroe General Hospital.
6/11
6/12
Lows
4:51 AM
6:29 PM
5:46 AM
7:18 PM
6:45 AM
8:05 PM
7:50 AM
8:52 PM
9:04 AM
9:39 PM
10:22 AM
10:26 PM
11:37 AM
11:13 PM
Jacksonville
86/69
Marathon
Highs
12:26 AM
11:41 AM
1:12 AM
12:33 PM
1:59 AM
1:25 PM
2:46 AM
2:21 PM
3:35 AM
3:21 PM
4:25 AM
4:30 PM
5:15 AM
5:50 PM
Lows
7:53 AM
9:09 PM
8:44 AM
9:54 PM
9:40 AM
10:40 PM
10:41 AM
11:28 PM
11:49 AM
———
12:17 AM
1:07 PM
1:08 AM
4:26 PM
Highs
5:46 AM
3:06 PM
6:26 AM
3:57 PM
7:03 AM
4:46 PM
7:38 AM
5:35 PM
8:08 AM
6:25 PM
8:21 AM
7:19 PM
8:06 AM
10:47 PM
Gainesville
86/71
Daytona Beach
89/72
Orlando
90/74
Tampa
87/76
St. Petersburg
87/77
West Palm Beach
87/77
Fort Myers
86/75
MARINE WEATHER FORECAST
Miami
89/78
NATIONAL WEATHER
Key West
87/80
A fleet of Navy ships was in port due to the political unrest in
neighboring Cuba.
Sunrise today................... 6:38 AM
Sunset today.................... 8:14 PM
Moonrise today ................ 9:42 PM
Moonset today ................. 8:51 AM
CRIME REPORT
CITIZEN STAFF
KEY WEST — A moldy bun
sent a drunken customer at a
New Town diner into a rage
early Sunday, according to a
police incident report.
There were no reported
arrests and the case remains
open.
According to the report,
a regular at the Waffle House
on North Roosevelt Boulevard
ordered a hamburger at 6:07
a.m. He was described as a tattooed, Duval Street bar bouncer and appeared drunk to the
diner employee who called
police.
The man apparently took
issue with a moldy hamburger bun and began yelling and
screaming profanities at the
employee, but then reportedly
sat back down and remained
calm for the next 90 minutes.
When he got up to leave,
however, he allegedly went
behind the counter and threatened and pushed the employee
before paying for his meal and
leaving.
Reports did not indicate the
fate of the alleged moldy burger
bun. The employee told police
he wanted to press charges.
Information in the Crime
Report is obtained from reports
provided by area law enforcement agencies.
If you have information that
could help solve a crime in the
Keys, call Crime Stoppers, (800)
346-TIPS.
CORRECTION
A Tuesday story on
local political campaigns included
the wrong photo for
Monroe County Tax
Collector Danise
Henriquez, who
is running unopposed.
The Key West Citizen corrects all
errors of fact. If you find an error
in fact in The Citizen call Tom Tuell
at (305) 292-7777, ext. 205. He
can also be reached at [email protected].
Henriquez
Best deal in the Keys.
Subscribe to The Citizen.
Call (305) 292-7777.
Key Largo
87/79
Marathon
88/79
SUN AND MOON
Photo and text compiled by Tom and Lynda Hambright, Monroe County Library.
Visit www.keywestmaritime.org for more rich maritime history of Key West and the Keys.
Reported moldy bun
sends man into rage
Ft. Lauderdale
88/78
Southeast to south winds 10 to 15 knots. Seas 2 to 3 feet.
Scattered showers and isolated thunderstorms.
100 YEARS AGO
“If the freedom of Americans is so
precious, why do we have such pitiful representation in Washington?”
“John DeSantis is a blessing.
Congratulations to all at The Key
West Citizen.”
6/6
6/9
50 YEARS AGO
“Jose Marti didn’t like the United
States, nor was he a friend to the
United States. He feared the U.S.
would take over Cuba and make
it a state. When we see Jose Marti
monuments, I’d like to know why.”
WEEKLY TIDES
Key West
6/7
Linda Swift was installed as president of Zonta at the installation banquet held in the ballroom of the Casa Marina Resort.
Tallahassee
87/69
Pensacola
87/74
June 4
ROADWORK
• Key West
Lane closures with detours will take
place Monday through Friday along
North Roosevelt Boulevard/Truman
Avenue, from Georgia Street to
Eisenhower Drive.
• Duck Key
The westbound lane on Duck Key
Drive at Mile Marker 61 will be
closed from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
June 11
June 19
June 26
HOW TO REACH US
To reach us at The Citizen, come to
our offices at 3420 Northside Drive;
fax us at 294-0768; or e-mail to
[email protected]. You can also
call (305) 292-7777.
To reach our weekly newspapers:
Islamorada Free Press: (305) 853-7277
Solares Hill: (305) 294-3602
SUBSCRIPTIONS
• Information
For real-time traffic information, con• Boca Chica Key
One northbound lane and one south- sult 511 or 305-797-0962 or www.
fl511.com.
bound lane from Mile Marker 6 to
6.5 will be closed from 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. June 4-8.
IN PORT
TODAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Fascination
Pier B
7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Majesty
Pier B
9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
No ships
Florida Keys
One month ........................................ $12
Three months .................................... $30
Six months ........................................ $54
One year ......................................... $102
Electronic edition (pdf)
One month ........................................ $12
Three months .................................... $30
Six months ........................................ $48
One year ........................................... $90
Two year ......................................... $150
By mail (All U.S. Locations)
Three months .................................... $60
Six months ...................................... $120
One year .......................................... $240
By mail (weekend only) and Outside U.S.
Please call for rates.
Ecstasy
Outer Mole
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Cruise ship information is provided by the city of Key West. For updated
information, call 305-809-3790.
DEPARTMENTS
The Citizen is published daily by Cooke
Communications, 3420 Northside Dr., Key West,
FL. Second class postage paid by The Citizen.
(USPS 294-240) Postmaster: Send address
changes to The Citizen, P.O. Box 1800, Key West,
FL 33041.
This newspaper is made using renewable wood
fiber from sustainably managed forests that are
independently certified to meet globally recognized sustainable forest management standards.
This newspaper is recyclable.
PAUL A. CLARIN/PUBLISHER
TOM TUELL/EDITOR
RANDY ERICKSON/VICE PRESIDENT OF OPERATIONS & PRODUCTION
TOMMY TODD/ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
Everyone is looking
in The Citizen for
the perfect
property.
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS
Call 292-7777
speak with an account rep
and place your listing today!
The Citizen assumes no financial responsibility for
typographical errors in advertisements, but, when
notified promptly will reprint that part of the advertisement in which the typographical error appears.
All advertising in this publication is subject to the
approval of the publisher. The Citizen reserves the
right to correctly edit or delete any objectionable
wording or reject the advertisement in its entirety
at any time prior to scheduled publication in the
event it is determined that the advertisement or
any part thereof is contrary to its general standard
of advertising acceptance.
Phone: (305) 292-7777, Monday though Friday,
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
3A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
MILE MARKERS
BIG PINE KEY
FLORIDA KEYS
MONROE COUNTY
KEY WEST
Summer camps offered at refuge
Senior fitness classes offered
Speaker series rescheduled
Five-day, free Junior Refuge Ranger summer day camps are offered at the National
Key Deer Refuge. They include hands-on
activities such as investigating animal and
plant adaptations, conducting biological
surveys, nature photography, geo-caching
and more.
The June 25-29 session is for kids who
just finished fourth or fifth grade; July 913 is for those who just completed sixth
or seventh grade. Both run from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and 9
a.m. to noon on Friday. Space is limited to
12 students per session; advance reservations and a registration packet required.
Call 305-304-9625 or stop by the Key
Deer Refuge Visitor Center in the WinnDixie Shopping Plaza.
The Enhance Fitness Program for
Monroe County seniors is $25 a month.
It’s an hour, thrice weekly.
On Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday: 9:30
a.m. at Key Largo Civic Club, Ocean Bay
Drive, and at Big Pine United Methodist
Church, Key Deer Boulevard; 8 a.m.
at Founders Park, and at Key Colony
Beach City Hall.
Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 9:10
a.m. at Pirate Wellness Center, Mile
Marker 21.4; 10 a.m. at Keys Senior
Citizen Plaza, 1400 Kennedy Drive; 1
p.m. at Stay-Fit Studio, 804 White St.,
both in Key West.
Call the Florida Keys Area Health
Education Center at 305-743-7111, ext.
208.
The Monroe County Democrats’
Candidate Speaker Series has been
rescheduled to next week so as not to conflict with tonight’s opening of Pridefest.
The series now will kick off 5:30 to 7:30
p.m. June 13 at Shanna Key Irish Pub &
Grill, 1900 Flagler Ave.
Each meeting will begin with a halfhour social and then showcase a different
office and a Democratic candidate. The
first candidate to be featured will be Joyce
Griffin, who is running for the Supervisor
of Elections office. She’s been with the
office for 28 years and in her present role
as assistant supervisor for 19 years.
For more information, email kimberly.
[email protected] or visit floridakeysdemocrats.com.
Photo courtesy of Andy Newman
The annual Hurricane Preparedness Workshop for the Tourism
Industry, hosted on May 29 by the Lodging Association of the Florida Keys and Key West, drew more than 100 attendees who learned
about the evolution of tropical cyclone forecasting and tips about
preparation for the 2012 Atlantic basin hurricane season that
began Sunday. Conference presenters included, from left, Jon Rizzo,
Irene Toner, Fred Johnson, Heather Carruthers, Bill Read, Diane
Schmidt, Jodi Weinhofer, Rebecca Jetton and Dean Walters.
OBITUARIES
Amazing
Grace M. Chacon Haskins
Rodriguez,
97, a lifelong
parishioner
of St. Mary’s
Rodriguez
and dedicated
matriarch of the
Haskins family took her place
among the angels peacefully on
Wednesday, May 30, 2012, with
her family by her side. Grace
was born in Key West on Oct.
15, 1914, where she lived all her
life, to the late Santiago and
Jaunita Milian Chacon. She and
her sister Gloria Chacon Herce
struggled through the early part
of their life even though you
wouldn’t know it by how they
raised their families and treated
everyone they knew. Although
Grace grew up with few material things, she bestowed on her
family many things that could
never be given with the greatest
amount of money. She embodied the phrase, “Great things
come in small packages.” Grace
used to say that she and her
sister were so short because
their father ran out of mate-
MICHAEL B. WILSON
Michael
“Mike”
B.
Wilson lived
life to the fullest until his
sudden death
on Sunday,
Wilson
June 3, 2012.
Mike
was
born in New London, Conn.,
on May 12, 1946, but as the
son of a Navy captain, within
the year, his family moved to
Key West, which became his
lifelong and beloved home.
Mike was a smart, go-to
guy, especially when it came
to boating. He loved the ocean
and his boat, The Caribe. He
always had a helping hand
extended and a quick and
often hilarious comeback
to just about any comment.
While he did not have any
biological children, he was
known as “Uncle Mike” to
more than a few of Key West’s
younger generation. And
while he called so many on
our island a friend, his best
friend since childhood was
Edward “Brother” Toppino.
Mike recently retired from
the business he owned, Key
West Watersports, after operating it for 30 years at the
rial. Small as Grace was in body,
her spirit was larger than life.
Although she worked at the Key
West Aquarium, her greatest
contributions to the community were her family and how
she raised them. She often credited the size of her family to
the lack of television. Anyone
that met Amazing Grace will
miss her and be grateful for the
time they spent with her, but
none as much as the large family that she piloted over the past
97 years.
Amazing Grace is now in
heaven amongst those who proceeded her: parents, Santiago
and Juanita Chacon; husband
and father of her six children,
James W Haskins; husband,
Armando (GI) Rodriguez; sister
and best friend, Gloria Chacon
Herce; brother-in-law, Anthony
Herce; son, Henry Vincent
Haskins Sr.; son-in-law, Merrill
“Tuffy” Roberts; and granddaughter, Dori Lynn Haskins.
Amazing Grace has left many
heavy hearts to carry on her
everlasting love and devotion
to all: her eldest daughter, Ida A.
Roberts, wife of the late Merrill
“Tuffy” Roberts; daughter-inlaw, Linda R. Haskins, wife of
the late Henry V. Haskins Sr.;
Waldorf Astoria Casa Marina
Resort.
Mike is survived by his wife,
Joanne Tarantino Wilson;
and two loving stepchildren, Michael and Rebecca
Tarantino, who he adored.
He is also the first of his
seven brothers and sisters
to die. He is survived by his
brother, Kenneth Wilson and
his son, Daniel; his brother,
Peter (Vicky) Wilson and their
son, Mac (Kara); his sister,
Ann Dedek, and her children,
Kenny and Meredith; his sister, Judy Gaston, and her children, Anna and Mary Frances;
his brother, Joe Wilson; his
sister, Mary Weech, and her
children, Audrey, Sara and
Jeffery; and his brother, Andy
Wilson. Mike was predeceased by his mother, Mary
“Toby” Wilson.
Mike will be cremated and
returned to “Mother, mother ocean.” A celebration of
Mike’s life will be held at 10:30
a.m. Saturday, June 9, 2012,
Fort Zachary Taylor, followed
by a reception at the Key West
Club.
Mike has one last wish to
all: Thanks to whomever took
the trash out. That was his
job.
ROSALEE WILLIAMS VIDAL
Rosalee Williams Vidal,
lifelong resident of Key West
until she and family moved to
Fanning Springs, Fla., in 1991,
joined her parents, Charlie and
Margaret Williams, siblings
and other family members on
Friday, May 18, 2012, only a
week after her 88th birthday on
May 11, 2012, at Shands hospital in Gainesville, Fla., with her
loving family members present.
She was preceded in death by
her late husband, Charles Vidal;
Anna E. Haskins, George (Toni)
Haskins, Fred (Kathy) Haskins,
Lillian (Kenneth) Waite; nephew, Tony (Patsy) Herce; niece,
Sandra, wife of the late Barry
Barroso Sr.; and their families,
including: Alan (Kathy) Roberts,
Gail (Jim) Roberts, Carol (Kurt)
Stephens, Marcus Arce, Merrill
(Elizabeth) Roberts, Emma
Roberts, Graciela Roberts,
Nathaniel Roberts, Brent
McDonald, Kara Stephens,
Kevin Stephens, Tammy (Scott)
Saunders, HV (Derek) Haskins
JR, Jimmy Haskins, Brooks
Saunders, Morgan Saunders,
Jimmy Haskins Jr, Trey Haskins,
Jaxon Haskins, Donna (Tommy)
Stone, Bill (Glenda) Haskins,
Chris Haskins, Tyler Stone,
Amber Stone, Lauren Stone, TJ
Stone, Jordan Haskins, Devin
Haskins, Freddy (Christy)
Haskins JR., MSGT, USMC (Ret),
Tommy (Brenda Lynn) Haskins,
Anna (Dennis) Haskins, Ricky
(Mike) Haskins, Michael
(Emily) Haskins, SGT, USMC,
Allison Haskins, Corinne
Haskins, Thomas Frazier,
Aaron Frazier, Victoria Haskins,
Samantha Haskins, Thomas
Haskins Jr., Lori (Tony) Skiles,
Kenny (Gloria) Waite, AJ Skiles,
Wesley Skiles, Amanda Waite,
JW (Britney) Waite, Chelsea
Waite, Kim (Michael) Knowles,
Todd (Dani) Herce, Monica
(LuAnn) Herce, Barry (Ieva)
Barroso Jr., Christy Martin,
Gregory (JoLynn) Barroso,
Brian (Colette) Barroso, Jason
(Jessica) Barroso; and many
more great-great-grandchildren and friends.
Amazing Grace always put
her family first. She didn’t
even get her driver’s license or
learn how to swim until she
was 55. We are all grateful that
Amazing Grace can watch over
us now and we can only imagine Grace and Gloria sitting
around with the family that has
gone before her and laughing
about the outhouse story. We
love you and miss you already,
but know that you will forever
be in our hearts and minds.
Welcome home!
The celebration Mass will be
held at 11 a.m. Friday, June 8,
2012, at The Basilica of St. Mary
Star of the Sea. Burial will be
in the Catholic section of the
Key West Cemetery. The family
welcomes visitation from 6 to
8 p.m. Thursday, June 7, 2012,
with a rosary at 7 p.m. at the
Dean Lopez Funeral Home, 418
Simonton St.
THOMAS ‘TOMMY’ R.
PERKINS JR.
Thomas
“Tommy” R.
Perkins Jr., age
58, died on
We d n e s d a y,
May 30, 2012,
at his home in
Perkins
Key Largo, Fla.
He was born
in Boston, Mass., on Aug. 28,
1953.
He grew up in Rhinebeck,
N.Y., and Hyde Park, N.Y.,
graduating in 1971 from
Our Lady of Lourdes High
School, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
He earned degrees from
Dutchess Community College,
Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and from
Maine Maritime Academy,
Castine, Maine. While at Maine
Maritime, he also earned his
Coast Guard master 100-ton
near coastal license.
He became a city of
Poughkeepsie police officer in 1974 and retired after
20 years. While on the Police
Department, he served as
crime scene technician, senior
firearms instructor, senior officer in charge of Street Narcotics
Group, and personal aide to
the chief of police. His citations
include Police Department
Medal of Honor, two Combat
Awards, five Excellent Police
Duty Awards, and four LifeSaving Awards.
After retiring from the police
force, Tommy obtained his
degree from Maine Maritime
and began a new career in
Florida as a boat captain at
Biscayne National Park. He
also operated private charters
in the Florida Keys featuring sport fishing, snorkeling,
scuba diving, and environmental tours in Florida Bay.
Tommy is survived by
his son, Colin A. Perkins of
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.; his mother, Kathleen Flaherty Ehlers
of Gainesville, Va.; his father,
Thomas R. Perkins Sr., and
wife, Lenore of Charlestown,
R.I.; one brother, Jerome F.
Perkins, and wife, Darlene
of Bolton, Mass.; sisters,
Kathleen A. Boehmer and husband, Stewart, of Gainesville,
Va., Erin M. Perkins and husband, Christopher Barboza of
Georgetown, Mass., Robin E.
Perkins and husband, Clifford
Selbert of Malibu, Calif.; nephew, Michael Perkins; nieces,
Megan Perkins, Caleigh
Perkins, Devin Boehmer, Jade
Boehmer and Galen SelbertPerkins. Tommy is also survived by his faithful and constant companion, his yellow
Labrador, Lois. He also leaves
behind numerous and loving
aunts, uncles, cousins, colleagues and friends.
Funeral arrangements are
being made by Burnett &
White Funeral Home, 91 E.
Market St., Rhinebeck, N.Y.,
and will be announced at a
later date.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to the Upper
Keys Animal Shelter, 105951
Overseas Highway, Key Largo,
FL 33037.
For directions, or to sign the
online guest book, please visit
www.Burnett-White.com.
CITIZEN OF THE DAY
TIMOTHY D BREHLER
Timothy D Brehler, formerly
of Lakeport and Port Huron, died
unexpectedly at his home in Key
West on Friday, May 18, 2012.
He was a 1979 graduate of Port
Huron North High School, followed by three years in the Army.
He was preceded in death by
his father, Robert L. Brehler.
He is survived by his loving
companion, Rebecca Atkins;
mother, Dorothy (Toni) Brehler;
grandmother, Dora L. Galloway;
sister Lee Ann Brehler; and
brother-in-law, Murray Vrooman; sister and brother-in-law
two sisters, Marjorie Collins
and Mary Charlow; and brother
Charles “Boy” Williams Jr.
She is survived by her two
daughters, Marguerite Lones
Gates and Cynthia Freeman;
grandsons, Shain Cormack and
Brooks Freeman; and greatgrandsons, Richard Cormack
and Shain Cormack Jr.
She is also survived by her
brother Donald Williams and
wife Myrna; brother-in-law,
J.W. Collins of Fanning Springs;
and numerous nieces and
nephews.
There was a eulogy and celebration of life presented by
cousin Donnie Williams at the
home of Donald and Myrna
Williams in Fanning Springs on
Saturday, June 2, 2012, attended
by 58 family members and dear
friends. Rosalee would have
been proud of the outpouring
of love and best wishes from all
her friends.
The family would like to
extend their heartfelt appreciation for all the many prayers,
Masses, cards and well-wishes.
We love you all!!
Carol and Jeff Nickles; three
nieces and three nephews.
A memorial service will be
held at 11 a.m. June 23, 2012,
at Central Lakeport United
Methodist Church. Pastor Ralph
Barteld will officiate. Cremation
has occurred and interment will
be at the Burtchville Township
Cemetery with a private service. A celebration of his life
will take place in Key West, to
be announced at a later date.
Memorials are suggested to
the Key West SPCA. The DeanLopez Home was entrusted with
all funeral arrangements.
JOSEPH P. FAY
Joseph Patrick Fay, 72, of
Sugarloaf Key passed away on
Friday, June 1, 2012, at Lower
Keys Medical Center. Memorial
services will be held at a later
date. The Dean-Lopez Funeral
Home is entrusted with all
funeral arrangements.
Key West
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AMAZING GRACE M.
CHACON HASKINS
RODRIGUEZ
TERRI BRENTNALL/The Citizen
Sirena Powell left Cuba seven years ago to relax and enjoy
the people in Key West. When she’s not working as a sales
associate at Fairvilla, Powell likes to go inline skating and
swimming.
OBITUARY POLICY
Paid obituaries are published once
unless the family or funeral home is
willing to pay for reruns. Obituaries up to
six inches are $65; $75 with a photo.
Those more than six inches will be
charged $10 an inch. Free death notices
list only the name of the person who
died and where services will be held.
Obituaries may be edited to conform
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submissions are preferred. Send them to
[email protected].
4A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
EDITORIAL BOARD
OPINION
PAUL A. CLARIN/PUBLISHER
TOM TUELL/EDITOR
RALPH MORROW/SPORTS EDITOR
ED BLOCK
CHARLIE BRADFORD
KEN DOMANSKI
SHIRLEY FREEMAN
TODD GERMAN
Don’t waste more time
on Edwards’ betrayal
I
n the end, America knows
just as much now as it did
three weeks ago about
whom John Edwards betrayed.
The former North Carolina senator and presidential candidate
had an affair while campaigning, fathered a child with his
mistress and tried to hide it all.
The victims, as always, were his
wife and family.
But for 17 days, a jury of eight
men and four women sifted
through campaign finance laws,
testimony and more than 500
exhibits to determine if anyone
else was aggrieved in the case
of Johnny Reid Edwards. They
never should have been asked
to do so. The verdict of one
count not guilty and five undecided may have been unsatisfying to a public ready for closure,
but the result was unsurprising.
The prosecution brought
forth a case that was built not
only on a flawed star witness,
but also uncertainty about the
laws the defendant was charged
with violating. From that, the
jury was tasked with a difficult
calculation: Did candidate
Edwards deceive the government by taking close to $1 million from campaign supporters
for personal use, or did husband
John accept personal gifts in
Editorial
order to hide his infidelity? In
simpler terms: Did he betray
only his family, or all of us?
Legality aside, we should be
long past the point where we
can be betrayed by the personal
flaws of our public officials.
Edwards stands in a long line of
cads who asked for our votes,
then made us regret giving
them. ...
Despite all this, we retain a
curious expectation that our
elected officials — especially
presidents — come with 1950s
packaging: married and with
smiling children, churchgoing and all-around pleasant.
Any deviations from that are
trumpeted by opponents and
media as cautionary — a landscape that allows for infidelity
to become part of the outsized
theater of public outrage, rather
than the detestable but personal
tragedy it is. ...
... In the end, we know what
we did three weeks ago about
John Edwards’ arrogance and
betrayal. Prosecutors shouldn’t
waste our time again trying to
pursue more.
— The Charlotte
(N.C.) Observer
Still something to prove
M
itt Romney officially
sewed up the Republican
presidential nomination with
his victory in Texas.
But on a day when the attention should have been focused
on him, it was deflected — by
Romney’s own fault — to the
flaky Donald Trump, who flirted
with a campaign for the presidency himself before it became
evident that few outside the
billionaire’s sycophants took his
candidacy seriously.
Trump — aptly dubbed a
“bloviating ignoramus” by
conservative columnist George
Will — has kept his name in the
political headlines by attaching
himself to Romney’s campaign
and by perpetuating the completely discredited claim that
President Barack Obama was
not born in the United States
and thus is serving in office
illegally.
Trump’s ignorance, though,
is not the issue here. The issue
is what Romney’s reluctance
to disassociate himself from
Trump says about the GOP candidate.
Romney, it is becoming clear,
is cautious to a fault. He is so
skittish about alienating any segment of the GOP base — even
the far-right “birthers” — that he
constantly straddles the fence
not only on serious issues but on
non-serious ones, such as this
persistent nonsense about the
president’s place of birth. ...
Romney may believe that
Trump’s value in fundraising
and in clout in the swing state
of Nevada is worth the downside of his wackiness. That is a
poor calculation. ...
Whatever Trump brings to
the table in wooing skeptical
conservatives and their dollars
to Romney’s side is more than
outweighed by how much he
turns off independents and
moderates, who will decide the
November election.
A president has to be a diplomat who can bring factions
together to get something
accomplished. But he also must
be a leader, someone who is
willing to take a stand for what’s
right even when he knows it
won’t sit well with everyone.
Romney has something to
prove on that second score.
— The Greenwood (Miss.)
Commonwealth
Letters to the editor
Do health-care costs
create a Catch-22?
It irks me that health insurance costs more than I have
ever paid for rent or mortgage,
and if or when my health fails,
if I don’t have health insurance, I will lose my home
paying off the medical costs.
Many people do.
With The Obamacare, by
2014, everyone will have to
buy health insurance.
The Supreme Court has said
a business can use money to
support a politician. It’s their
First Amendment right. So,
money equals free speech.
However, my withholding
money as a protest against the
high cost of medical care has
not even been considered as
free speech.
The government cannot
tell the doctors what they
can charge for medical care.
This is considered socialism,
and we have to let the free
market set the price. This is
the American way! But what
do you call it when there is
a restriction on the number
of doctors or any other business? How can the free market set the price if the government controls how many
businesses are in any mar-
ket? Is this also the American
way?
Never having had health
insurance, I believe I have
been charged less than what
the doctors would have
charged an insurance company because they knew I
couldn’t afford what the insurance companies would pay.
And it makes me wonder if
the insurance companies pay
the doctors more, so what the
doctors charge is so high you
can’t afford to pay the doctors
without insurance.
Archie Miller
Key West
City candidate would
have been a perfect fit
I’m glad the search for a
new city manager [is complete], but I must respond,
however belatedly, to the
reason given for eliminating candidate Susan Stanton
from consideration in the first
round: reports that she is contentious, disruptive.
Stanton is the transgender
administrator whose evaluations were reportedly excellent until she announced that
she was transitioning from
male to female. That fact was
apparently very disruptive to
bigoted people without an
understanding of the situation
— so disruptive, in fact, that,
without finding fault with her
professional performance,
they fired her. It was only
when she protested the firing
that she was portrayed in the
media as disruptive. That was
several years ago. She seemed
to be doing fine in her new
position. Whose reports, I
wonder, were our search committee relying upon?
“We have 29 states that do
not outlaw discrimination on
the basis of sexual orientation,” according to the Rev.
Mel White, gay activist and
founder — with his husband
and partner of 30 years, Gary
Nixon — of the nonviolent,
resistance-based, national
organization Soulforce. More
to the point, “Transgender
Americans are invariably the
worst victims of discrimination and violence. And yet
there are 44 states that do not
outlaw discrimination on the
basis of gender identity,” he
notes.
Key West does outlaw such
discrimination. I would have
thought that Stanton and Key
West might be the perfect fit.
Constance Gilbert
Key West
Let’s work to make
waterfront park green
In such a contentious election year, where the difference
of agendas is sizzling on the
griddle like your basted eggs in
the morning, I have to inquire
about a most pressing issue.
I have some potted trees that
I would like to donate to the
cause of “greening” the Truman
Waterfront park. I have a banyan, although considered nonnative, that would love to be
freed from its 55-gallon plastic
drum that at one time held
juice concentrate, and would
provide shade like banyans are
designed for. I have avocado
trees, several years old, in pots;
champion mangoes, a nice
Norfolk pine, many Christmas
palms and others.
I am hoping that by writing this letter, those powerful
Key West garden and butterfly club women and men will
take this project under their
butterfly wings.
Let us all donate to make
the Truman Waterfront park a
verdant green oasis in our selfmade tropical jungle.
Robin, Rosie, what do you
say?
Matt Lynch
Key West
LETTERS POLICY: The Key West Citizen welcomes your letters to the editor, and asks that readers follow these guidelines for letter submission. • Only original letters
addressed to The Citizen will be published; open letters are not accepted. • Letters must include the writer’s name, address and a daytime telephone number. Pseudonyms
are not knowingly accepted. • Maximum length for letters is 350 words. • We do not publish poetry, letters anonymously written, third-party letters, political endorsement
letters or letters praising or criticizing a local business. • Letters of thanks to individuals will be considered; but not letters recognizing sponsors or supporters of organizations or their events. • Writers are limited to one letter every two weeks. • Letters can be submitted via e-mail at [email protected], by fax at 305-295-8005, or by mail
addressed to: Letters to the editor, Key West Citizen, P.O. Box 1800, Key West, FL 33041. • The publisher has final authority on publication of submitted material.
The enigma beside Edwards — a supporting player in the courtroom
fascinating tangle of
emotions.
The New York Times
What was Cate
Edwards
thinking?
y the end of John
What went through
Edwards’ trial, we’d all
her mind and heart as
heard more than we
she walked with her
ever wanted to about the sad
characters in this sordid melo- father into court every
drama: the politician himself, morning, took a place
in the row behind his,
whose ego trumps Trump’s;
his onetime aide, who mistook listened to fresh accounts of
his treacheries and her moth“Single White Female” for an
er’s torment, nervously twisted
instruction manual; the New
Age mistress, who complained her long hair, and then walked
with him back out of court,
when a love nest lacked the
proper feng shui. Regrettably, day after queasy-making day?
Was she propelled by selfshe has a memoir due out
soon. Proper feng shui dictates lessness, forgiveness and an
its placement in the remainder extraordinary strength that
enabled her to look hard at the
bin.
grievous hurt John Edwards
But there’s a figure from
caused and yet look past it?
the trial I can’t stop thinking
about, someone on the fringes Or was she just repressing it
in order to do what she herself
of the melodrama but in the
center of Edwards’ courtroom needed to do: cling to, and
believe in, the only parent she
retinue, the kind of steadhad left?
fast supporting player every
With her mother gone,
political sex scandal seems to
Cate, a 30-year-old lawyer,
demand, the archetype with
was the woman confronted
the least accessible but most
BY FRANK BRUNI
B
with the choice to
stand (or not) by
her man, and in her
there were echoes
of Hillary Clinton,
Silda Spitzer, Huma
Abedin: of all the
enigmas who have
weighed the wrong
done to them and
the options available to them
and arrived at accommodations that no one on the
outside of a given marriage
or family can ever fully understand.
Cate’s situation was different — and sadder. Although
she wasn’t directly betrayed,
her whole family was devastated, all the more so because
both of her parents ended up
being publicly savaged, her
mother’s tirades becoming
legend. Elizabeth Edwards
spent the years before her
death in late 2010 not only
battling cancer but also raging against her husband’s
infidelity, lies and squandered
promise, even though there
was no benefit in that for Cate
and her two younger siblings,
now 12 and 14. Cate’s as close
to a mother as those children
have left.
She’s practiced at heartache.
An older brother, Wade, died
in a car accident in 1996, when
he was 16 and she only 14; for
two years afterward, she slept
in her parents’ bedroom, on
two chairs pushed together.
Like Dad and Mom both,
she became a lawyer, heading
to Harvard for her law degree
after undergraduate work at
Princeton. At the Democratic
National Convention in 2004,
where her father was the party’s vice presidential nominee
and her mother spoke, Cate
took the stage briefly to introduce her.
“I am the proud child,”
she said, “of two people who
have made our home a place
of hope.” How much of that
sentiment was true up until
then, and genuinely felt? How
much could she hold on to,
or recover, over the torturous
years to come?
During the trial she fielded
many requests for interviews,
but didn’t grant any substantive ones. In an era when so
many people thrill to and
preen for the spotlight, no
matter why it’s there, she
showed up for court in unfashionable tops and skirts, ballet
flats and chipped nail polish.
She wasn’t there to perform. If
she intends to join the lengthening list of political daughters
who have converted their
surnames into television exposure, she hasn’t shown it.
And yet. She had her wedding last fall photographed for
— and written up in — People
magazine. In a less flashy vein,
she wrote a moving Mother’s
Day essay for Southern Living
last month.
Could these have been
public relations moves made
with her father in mind, and
timed to coincide with his
trial? She often seemed to leap
past mere support for him to
active help, scribbling charts
and notations during the juryselection phase.
Elizabeth Edwards, in the
weeks before she died, seemingly made a sort of peace with
John and no doubt wanted
the family to stay strong. That
would have been a whole lot
tougher to pull off if he’d gone
to prison or if he’d stood by
himself in that courtroom,
lonely proof of a family
unstitched.
So maybe Cate marched
alongside him not out of any
particular mercy or meekness
but just because she, more
than anyone else in the family,
held the needle and thread,
and because what she said
on a stage eight years ago still
rings at least slightly true. In
the Edwards home, despite
everything that’s happened,
there’s hope.
Frank Bruni is a columnist
with The New York Times.
5A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
Principal
Continued from Page 1A
four weeks after Jara reassigned
him to the School District’s
main office in Key West until
an inquiry played out.
The suspension will take
place after the last day of the
school year for teachers —
Thursday — allowing Gracy to
take part in Marathon High’s
graduation ceremony, Jara
decided.
“It’s important that as principal of Marathon High School,
he takes part in graduation,”
Jara said Tuesday.
Both the accuser, school counselor Kristen Butcher, and Gracy
will continue to work together at
the Marathon school.
Allegations now public
With the investigation complete into the four-part complaint, Jara opened the full file
to the public Tuesday.
Axford and fellow administrator Michael Kinneer interviewed 28 people over the
complaint made by Butcher.
She as well as her boyfriend,
John Briggs, were among those
interviewed.
The same set of questions
were posed to each person
interviewed, asking specifically if Gracy had ever flirted,
touched or sent emails “of a
sexual nature.”
Of the 28 interviews, 10 people backed up Butcher’s accusations that Gracy behaved
inappropriately while running
the Marathon school, but none
said the principal had touched
anyone.
Some staff critical
for Gracy while he was reas- Facebook page that he says
“He’s an ogler,” said school signed to Trumbo Road, was show her as a “heavy drinker” and someone apt to wear
employee Regina Ryan, accord- not interviewed.
revealing clothing in public.
ing to the answer sheet filed
The photos show Butcher on
under her name by Axford.
Counter accusations
vacation in Italy and dressed
Ryan said she has seen the
principal “watching (women)
Gracy defended himself, in a Daisy Duke-type costume
as they left,” and “staring at depicting Butcher as a mali- during Fantasy Fest, but in all
women in an inappropriate cious gossip worried about los- she is fully clothed.
Gracy mentions that he does
way.”
ing her job amid the School
not have a Facebook page, but
Employee Robin Lynne District’s deep budget cuts.
reported that Gracy is “acting
“She raised it because she instructed his attorney to check
like a seventh-grade boy who feared her job was in jeopardy,” out Butcher’s.
Butcher and her boyfriend,
has a crush on (Butcher), fall- Gracy wrote in response to the
Briggs, told Axford that Gracy
ing all over himself.”
allegations.
Michelle Costello said her
“Let me make this clear. I is the one with the drinking
experience has been “two years have never engaged in any sex- problem.
Butcher’s 18-page long written
of a hostile environment.”
ually offensive behavior in the
complaint recounts an evening
Costello said, “I am getting workplace.”
out of teaching,” and described
Gracy also notes that he has she and Briggs spent in Key West
the school as a place where been married for more than 30 with Gracy on June 11, 2011, in
“males can do what they want; years, while Butcher has “been which she says the principal
females can’t.”
married and divorced” four drunkenly talked of women’s
body parts and asked her repeatAssistant Principal Liz Logan times.
said Gracy was routinely “flirt“I find it ironic that a woman edly to take off her top.
“I like cold women and hot
ing with Ms. Butcher,” and who cannot maintain personal
always in her office.
relationships has seen fit to beer,” Gracy told the couple,
“We can’t get him out of diagnose me with a personality according to both of their interviews.
there,” Logan told administra- disorder,” Gracy wrote.
“I like women 18 to 80, I like
tors.
“In light of the allegations, it
would be appropriate to con- them all.”
Most support principal sider the conduct of my accus- The couple said they ended
up ditching Gracy at the Old
er, Ms. Butcher.”
Town clothing-optional rooftop
Gracy’s
34-year
career,
as
Yet the majority of interviews
turned up no accusations of it is recounted in his public bar called Garden of Eden, and
employee records, contains no then asked each other what it
inappropriate behavior.
would be like when Butcher
“Mr. Gracy is a gentleman,” prior disciplinary reports.
He spent 32 years rising returned to work.
said Cheryl Doll. “I’ve never
through the ranks at Duval
seen him act any other way.”
Joe Rayhill said Gracy was County schools before taking Whistle-blower outed
“one of the most professional the Marathon principal job a
administrators I have worked year ago.
Butcher also accused Gracy
Gracy will return this fall at of harassing her at school by
with.”
Several of the 18 interviews Marathon, having already had constantly coming into her
that clear Gracy chalk up the his contract renewed.
office to talk.
investigation to rumors and
A couple of months ago,
gossip. Two people describe Facebook photos
Butcher reported to Gracy that a
Gracy as “socially awkward.”
former after-school coordinator
Wendy McPherson, the assisGracy included seven pho- was accused of inappropriate
tant principal who took over tographs taken from Butcher’s behavior with a 14-year-old girl.
earlier tomorrow, before we’re scheduled
to open,” Worthington said, adding that
the sewer problem was the only critical
violation that prompted the emergency
closure.
“An emergency closure is not a disciplinary action, but rather an action taken to
mitigate conditions that pose an elevated
risk to the health, safety or welfare of the
public or the establishment’s employees,”
according to the state agency’s website.
“The licensee is closed until the conditions
are corrected. Examples of conditions war-
Schooner
Continued from Page 1A
hour while the inspector was still here,
but by then it was too late and we still
had to close for the day.”
Worthington said the backup coincided
with an extremely high tide that affects
water pressure in some low-lying waterfront properties.
“The inspectors came around 10 a.m.
[Tuesday] and said they would come back
ranting immediate closure include: lack of
approved utilities or hot water, sewage
backups or overflows, fire damage, pest
infestation or inadequate refrigeration.”
Worthington said she fully expected it
to be business as usual today, once the
inspectors ensure that the restrooms are
functioning properly.
For more information about Florida
hotel and restaurant inspections, visit
myfloridalicense.com/dbpr/hr/inspections.html.
[email protected]
Butcher said Gracy endangered her by exposing that she
was the whistle-blower to both
the accused teacher and the
student.
Gracy denied that he outed
Butcher as the complainant
and, disagreeing with Butcher’s
criticism of how he handled the
conflict, said he had no duty to
report the man to the police.
The investigation also drew
some complaints from employees that Gracy has an anger
problem.
Gracy denied these reports,
including Butcher’s allegation that he purposely tried to
upset a cat lover in the office
by using the phrase, “You can’t
swing a dead cat ...” in conversation.
Gracy said he has used the
phrase, but he never directed it
at a cat fan.
“In hindsight, it may have
been an insensitive thing to say
to cat lovers, but I certainly
meant no harm by this.”
[email protected]
NOW ON
TOP WEB STORIES
1
2
3
4
5
KEYS VOICES
DR. DOUG MADER
County rejects
big-box store plan
TO YOUR PET’S HEALTH
‘Rodent ulcers’ can
be much more or less
than the name
Jara in final 5
Flurry of graduation
activity starts
KEYS VOICES
Charter captain, mate
cited for small dolphin
JOHN DESANTIS
KEYSTROKES
Captain-lawyer
pitching in for vets
School Board preps
for interviews
PREVIOUS EDITORIALS
• Summer break doesn’t have to be lazy days
• It takes a community effort to stop bullying
• Maybe now the county will take clerk’s advice
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THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
COMICS
ROSE IS ROSE
PEANUTS
DILBERT
GARFIELD
Pat Brady
Charles M. Schulz
Scott Adams
MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM
SHOE
KIT & CARLYLE
BORN LOSER
Jeff MacNelly
Larry Wright
MODERATELY CONFUSED
Jim Unger
MARMADUKE Brad Anderson
Mort Walker
Art & Chip Sanson
ARLO & JANIS
FRANK & ERNEST
J. Stahler
Jim Davis
HERMAN
BEETLE BAILEY
Mike Peters
Jimmy Johnson
Bob Thaves
SUDOKU
Complete the grid so that
every row, column and 3x3 box
contains every digit from 1 to 9
inclusively.
THE GRIZZWELLS
MONTY
Bill Schorr
Jim Meddick
THE WORLD ALMANAC
WEDNESDAY, June 6, 2012
BIG NATE
Lincoln Peirce
Today is the 158th day
of 2012 and the 79th day of
spring.
TODAY'S
HISTORY:
In 1844, the Young Men's
Christian Association (YMCA)
was founded in London.
In 1944, the D-Day invasion of Europe began as Allied
forces landed in continental
Europe at Normandy, France.
In 1982, Israel invaded
Lebanon.
In 2002, President George
W. Bush proposed consolidating 22 federal agencies
under a single, Cabinet-level
Department of Homeland
Security.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS:
Diego Velazquez (1599-1660),
painter; Alexander Pushkin
(1799-1837), poet; Thomas
Mann (1875-1955), novelist; Harvey Fierstein (1952- ),
actor; Bjorn Borg (1956- ),
tennis player; Paul Giamatti
(1967- ), actor; Natalie Morales
(1972- ), TV journalist.
TODAY'S SPORTS: In
1892, President Benjamin
Harrison became the first sitting president to attend a Major
League Baseball game.
TODAY'S
FACT:
Basketball, racquetball and
volleyball were all invented at
YMCA facilities.
TODAY'S
QUOTE:
"America will never seek a
permission slip to defend the
security of our people." -George W. Bush
TODAY'S
NUMBER:
$46.9 billion -- estimated
amount in the U.S. federal budget devoted to the Department
of Homeland Security in 2012.
TODAY'S
MOON:
Between full moon (June 4)
and last quarter moon (June
11).
Find Today's Horoscope, Crossword Puzzle, Celebrity Cipher, Bridge
Tips and Dear Abby in the Citizen Keyswide Classified Section.
7A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
NATION
WASHINGTON
KITTERY, MAINE
LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA.
NEW YORK
$400M to repair sub
Equal pay bill blocked in Senate
Need an underground bunker?
An early estimate from the
Navy puts the price tag for repairs
of a fire-damaged submarine
in the range of about $400 million, a figure that suggests the
nuclear-powered USS Miami will
be repaired instead of scrapped,
U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree said
Tuesday.
Pingree, a member of the
Housed
Armed
Services
Committee, released the estimate a day after becoming the
first member of Congress to
see the damage inside the USS
Miami, which was in dry dock at
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard for
an overhaul when the fire broke
out on May 23.
Senate Republicans have blocked a bill
that calls for equal pay in the workplace.
As expected, the vote Tuesday fell short of
the 60 votes needed to advance the legislation. President Obama and his Democratic
allies argue that the legislation is needed
to protect people who try to find out how
their pay stacks up against their co-workers.
Republicans said it puts too much burden
on employers.
The vote was the latest effort by Democrats
to protect their lead among critical women
voters this presidential and congressional
election year. Republicans are focusing on
the No. 1 concern for all voters: jobs and the
economy.
Obama strongly supports the bill.
Republican presidential hopeful Mitt
Romney has not taken a stand.
The Spike television network is airing a
competition this fall to award a fortified bunker to a family that believes the end of the
world is near.
Seriously.
The network said Tuesday that its six-episode series called “Last Family on Earth” will
feature survivalists competing to show how
tough and resourceful they are. The winner
gets an underground bunker in an undisclosed location.
Sharon Levy, executive vice president of
original programming at Spike, said the series
doesn’t necessarily coincide with the theory
that the ancient Mayan civilization predicted
the end of the world will arrive in December
2012. Levy said polls show that many people
believe that there will be a catastrophic event
that threatens civilization.
JOHN RAOUX/The Associated Press
Visitors stroll along Main Street at Walt Disney World on Tuesday
in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. Disney announced Tuesday that its programming will no longer be sponsored by junk food.
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
✬✬✬✬✬
NEW YORK — Sheryl Crow
revealed that she has a benign
brain tumor, but her rep says
it’s nothing to be alarmed
about.
The 50year-old told
an audience
about her
condition at
a recent concert, but her
Crow
representative, Christine
Wolff, said it’s very common.
The tumor is a meningioma,
and it’s typically benign and
develops from the protective
linings of the brain and spinal
cord.
Wolff said that Crow is doing
great and is healthy and happy.
Crow battled breast cancer
several years back. She’s currently on a nationwide tour.
✬✬✬✬✬
LOS ANGELES — For all
its glamour, Hollywood also
has its hardship. Hundreds of
industry workers struggle with
tough times each year and for
90 years, the Motion Picture
& Television Fund has been
there to help. Now, a celebrity
couple is giving some sizable
help back to the fund.
MPTF board member
George Clooney announced
Tuesday that the family
foundation of media titan
Barry Diller and his wife,
fashion designer Diane von
Furstenberg, has donated $30
million to the MPTF.
“Seems impossible to me to
have had success in the entertainment industry and not
strongly support the MPTF,”
Diller said in a statement.
Besides providing health
and social services, the fund
operates its historic Woodland
Hills, Calif., retirement home,
where Mary Astor, Hattie
McDaniel, Johnny Weismuller
and other stars of Hollywood’s
golden past once resided.
NEW YORK — New York
City police say the underage daughter of Demi Moore
and Bruce Willis was caught
drinking in public and carrying fake identification.
The New York Police
Department said Tuesday
that officers found 20-yearold Scout Willis sipping a
beer Monday evening in
Union Square in violation
of an open-container law.
Police say she also showed
them a fake ID — a misdemeanor.
Willis was
arrested and
taken to a
local police
station and
released
with a ticket
ordering her
Willis
to appear in
court on July 21.
Her parents’ representatives didn’t immediately
✬✬✬✬✬
respond to requests for
comment.
Scout is the second of
Moore and Willis’ three
daughters together. The couple divorced in 2000.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Senate
began consideration Tuesday of
a farm and food bill that would
bring fundamental changes
to how the government protects food growers during hard
times, including putting an end
to paying farmers regardless of
whether they plant a crop.
The Senate is expected to
spend several weeks on the
five-year bill as lawmakers
thrash out differences between
Northern and Southern farmers over safety net programs
and address the costs of the
federal food stamp program,
which makes up about 80
percent of the $100 billion in
annual spending under the legislation.
The current farm act expires
at the end of September, and
getting a new plan in place by
then will likely require tough
negotiations between the
Senate and the House, which
is taking a different approach
to farm protection programs
and seeks deeper cuts than the
$23 billion over 10 years envisioned in the Senate bill. The
House Agriculture Committee
is expected to take up its version later this month.
Senate Agriculture Committee chairman Debbie Stabenow,
D-Mich., who crafted the
bill with the panel’s ranking Republican Pat Roberts of
Kansas, said it represented “the
most significant reform in agriculture policy in decades.”
She said she was confident
she had the 60 votes to formally begin debate on the bill if
opponents tried to block it.
The measure ends direct
payments to farmers who
may or may not actually plant
crops, saving some $5 billion
a year. That’s replaced with a
greater emphasis on federally
subsidized crop insurance and
a new program that compensates farmers for “shallow losses” in revenues as measured
over a five-year average.
“We’re not going to be paying farmers for crops they
don’t grow. We’re not going to
be paying farmers when they
are already doing very well,”
Stabenow said.
The new Agriculture Risk
Coverage program has the
backing of most major farm
groups, but faces resistance
from Southern rice and peanut
growers who say it hurts their
bottom lines. They are seeking
the retention of some kind of
target pricing to protect their
crops.
The Congressional Budget
Office estimates that the
Senate bill would save about
$8.5 billion over five years
by ending direct payments
as well as other commodity
support payments, and moving to the new ARC program
and save another $1.8 billion
by streamlining conservation
programs. It says $1.7 billion over five years and $4.5
billion over 10 years will be
✬✬✬✬✬
LOS ANGELES — Michael
Jackson’s daughter, Paris, is
WASHINGTON — Michelle talking to Oprah Winfrey for a
show airing Sunday.
Obama headed back to the
The OWN
“Late Show” with David
channel says
Letterman.
the interview
The first lady delivered the
with 14-yearTop Ten list on Letterman’s
old Paris
CBS show Tuesday. The netJackson will
work says Mrs. Obama’s list
be featured
was related to her new book,
on “Oprah’s
“American Grown: The Story
Jackson
Next Chapter.”
of the White House Kitchen
Winfrey and
Garden and Gardens Across
Jackson will discuss how the
America.”
teenager is faring three years
The first lady last appeared
after the death of her pop star
on the Letterman show in
father, OWN said Tuesday.
March. She has been making
The show, which also will
the rounds of other talk shows
include an interview with
in recent weeks to promote
Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, will
her book.
air at 9 p.m. EDT Sunday on
Mrs. Obama’s turn in the
OWN.
spotlight comes as her hus-
✬✬✬✬✬
Senate takes up farm bill that changes safety net
BY JIM ABRAMS
band’s campaign seeks to use
the first lady’s popularity to
help President Barack Obama
get re-elected.
saved through changes to
the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, or food
stamps, mainly by ending an
automatic qualification for
food stamps for households
receiving less than $10 a year in
the federal low-income heating assistance program. Some
46 million Americans are now
receiving food stamps.
House Republicans are seeking far greater cuts to food
stamps, while Sen. Kirsten
Gillibrand, D-N.Y., says she will
offer an amendment to restore
that $4.5 billion, paying for it
by reducing federal subsidies
for crop insurance companies.
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Remembering
John David Bosco
June 6, 1961-December 28, 2010
LOS ANGELES — A judge
has denied a motion by the
makers of “Happy Days” to
dismiss claims by several former cast members that they
are owed royalties on DVD
sales.
Superior Court Judge
Elizabeth Allen White’s ruling
Tuesday clears the way for a
trial on whether actors Anson
Williams, Marion Ross, Don
Most, Erin Moran and the
widow of Tom Bosley may still
be owed royalties on the use of
their images in DVD packaging.
CBS Studios and Paramount
Pictures sought to have their
claims dismissed, arguing the
group was properly paid.
Attorney Jon Pfeiffer says the
group has received payments
for several other types of merchandise since they sued in
April 2011. He says the unpaid
royalties are worth an estimated $250,000 to $500,000.
NOTICE OF MEETING
Key West Bight Management District Board Meeting
Wednesday, June 13, 2012 at 9:00 A.M.
Old City Hall Chambers, 510 Greene Street
ADA Assistance: It is the policy of the City of Key West
to comply with all requirements of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA). Please call the TTY number at
305-809-1000 or the ADA Coordinator at 305-809-3951
at least five business days in advance for sign language
interpreters, assistive listening devices, or materials in
accessible format.
June 6, 2012 Key West Citizen
375175
IS HERE.
OIL SPILL
CLAIMS PROCESS
A new oil spill claims process and claimantfriendly methodology is being administered
under the direction of the United States District
Court. You may now be eligible for an oil spill
claim under the Court’s new methodology – even
if your claim was previously denied or ineligible.
You’re Invited
CRI Town Hall Meeting
Wed., June 13, 2012
Thurs., June 14, 2012
7:00 p.m.– 8:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.– 8:00 p.m.
Hawks Cay Resort
61 Hawks Cay Blvd.
Duck Key, FL 33050
Key West Marriott
Beachside Hotel
3841 North Roosevelt Blvd.
Key West, FL 33040
There is absolutely no cost or obligation to attend
these meetings.
We miss you every day and celebrate
your birthday by remembering all of
the good times and all that you are to us!
Your love lives within us and you
are always in our hearts.
Alissa, Briana, Amber, Barbara, Danny,
Mary Lou, Linda, Dan and Lori,
and all of your family and friends.
To RSVP, call (855) 339-3248
or e-mail [email protected].
500 Grand Boulevard, Suite 210 | Miramar Beach, FL 32550 | (850) 837-3141
CRIcpa.com | blog.cricpa.com
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8A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
STATE
MIAMI
MIAMI
PANAMA CITY
Speeding officers punished
Executive acquitted in wife’s death
SpaceX capsule back on land
Miami’s police chief is cracking
down on officers who speed while
off duty.
Chief Manuel Orosa announced
Monday that he’s taking action
against 36 officers.
The South Florida Sun Sentinel
reports that the first wave of disciplinary action includes Officer
Fausto Lopez, who made headlines
after leading a state trooper on a
high-speed chase through Broward
County in October. Lopez is being
suspended for a month and will lose
his take-home car for three months.
Other officers face punishments
that include formal reprimands,
suspensions and loss of vehicle
privileges.
Miami-Dade jurors have acquitted a South
Florida real estate executive accused of strangling his wife.
Deliberations began Tuesday morning, and
jurors had a verdict in Adam Kaufman’s second-degree murder trial by that evening.
The Miami-Herald reports that Kaufman called
911 in November 2007, saying he found his wife
collapsed on the bathroom floor. Paramedics
rushed Eleonora Kaufman to a nearby hospital,
where she was pronounced dead.
Prosecutors said Adam Kaufman strangled
his wife, leaving pronounced markings on
her neck, burst blood vessels in her eyes and
bruises on her body. No evidence for a motive
was presented.
Defense attorneys said evidence was overlooked by the homicide detective and medical
examiner.
The history-making Dragon spacecraft is back on solid ground.
The SpaceX capsule arrived by barge
at the Port of Los Angeles on Tuesday.
The unmanned supply ship splashed
into the Pacific, west of Baja California,
last Thursday following an unprecedented trip to the International Space
Station.
A SpaceX spokeswoman says the
Dragon is now headed to the company’s rocket factory in McGregor, Texas,
for unloading. Space station astronauts
filled the capsule with 1,400 pounds of
old equipment.
The California-based SpaceX is the
first private business to send a cargo
ship to the space station. It hopes to
launch another in September.
ROBERT COOPER/The Associated Press
Layni Akins, 6, a kindergarten student at Northside Elementary School
in Panama City, waits for her ride Tuesday on the last day of school.
Gov. Scott requests review of 3 justices
The Associated Press
TALLAHASSEE — Three veteran Florida
Supreme Court justices could possibly face
a criminal investigation and legal action
over the handling of their campaigns to
remain on the bench.
Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican who has
been critical of some of the court’s past
rulings, on Tuesday asked a state lawenforcement agency to decide whether
to investigate the justices over their use
of state employees to help finish electionrelated paperwork.
Meanwhile, a conservative legal group
is raising questions about whether the justices may be violating ethics rules because
they are raising money and urging voters
to keep them on the bench.
“No man is above the law, particularly those charged with enforcing the
law,” said Shannon Gosseling, executive director of the Southeastern Legal
Foundation.
Voters this fall will decide whether
Justices Fred Lewis, Barbara Pariente and
Peggy Quince deserve new six-year terms.
Two of the justices were appointed by
the late Democratic Gov. Lawton Chiles;
Quince was jointly appointed by Chiles
and then-incoming-Gov. Jeb Bush.
The three justices nearly missed the
deadline to qualify for the ballot in April.
The seven-member court abruptly put a
hearing on hold for more than an hour to
allow the justices to finish their paperwork
and turn it in to state elections officials
with just minutes to spare.
The justices wound up using court
employees to notarize the paperwork. A
state law prohibits candidates for office from using
state employees to help
their campaign during
working hours, although
it is unclear if that law
applies to judges. A violation of the law is a misdeLewis
meanor.
A Republican state lawmaker asked Scott to order
an investigation, but the
governor stated in a letter
that he lacks the authority to order one. Instead
he asked the Florida
Pariente
Department
of
Law
Enforcement — which
reports to Scott and three
other Republican officials
— to independently decide
if an investigation is warranted.
“I believe it is imporQuince
tant for the people of
Florida to have full faith and confidence
in all government officials,” Scott wrote
Rep. Scott Plakon, R-Longwood. “....
Thus a full accounting of the events at
issue ought to be provided, whereupon
entities with appropriate jurisdiction ...
can take any necessary and warranted
action.”
Dan Stengle, the legal counsel for the
three justices’ retention campaigns, has
said they did nothing wrong and that what
state workers did was routine. Election
records from 2010 show that four justices on the ballot that year also had their
paperwork notarized by court employees.
Gretl Plessinger, a spokeswoman for
FDLE, said the agency is reviewing Scott’s
request and would make a decision later
this week.
In Florida, appeals judges and supreme
court justices are appointed by the governor. But instead of running for re-election,
they are subject to an up or down merit
retention vote.
In 2010, the state Supreme Court
removed from the ballot three constitutional amendments pushed by the GOPcontrolled Legislature including a “health
care freedom” amendment sponsored by
Plakon that would have made it illegal in
Florida to have a health insurance mandate.
Legislators in 2011 reworked the amendment and placed it on this year’s ballot.
The Southeastern Legal Foundation
— the same group that pushed to have
President Bill Clinton lose his law license
— contends that under the state’s judicial
ethics rules, the justices can’t raise money
or actively campaign unless they have
organized opposition.
Stengle contends that a group known
as Restore Justice 2012 is mounting an
opposition campaign, so the campaigning is legal. He brushed aside any talk of a
potential lawsuit from the foundation.
Stand. “I think it is time to do
something ... . And it is not going
to be a financial burden.”
Continued from Page 1A
Not yet addressed was the
question
of how signs mandatofficial philosophy of the city.”
Key West’s first official philos- ing new speed limits would be
ophy is “One Human Family.” paid for or ordered.
Several members of that
family — citizens of the island New city manager
— spoke on behalf of slowing
vehicles down. Nobody spoke
While seeking to slow down
in favor of leaving the speed traffic, commissioners are hoplimit as-is.
ing to fast-track negotiations
“I think it is time to do some- with their new city manager.
thing to shake off the onus of A draft contract between Key
being one of the worst cities for West and the man offered the
bicycles in terms of injuries,” job could be ready by the end
said Mark Songer, president of of this week.
the environmental and goodCity Attorney Shawn Smith
government organization Last told the City Commission that
he spoke at length with Bob
Vitas, who was offered the
job Monday night. Smith said
he hoped to have a “working document” of a proposed
contract for review by commissioners at the end of this
week.
The city has said it is offering
between $160,000 to $180,000
to its new chief executive,
although negotiations are
expected to be on the lower side
of that. Outgoing City Manager
Jim Scholl drew $180,000 per
year, but did not utilize health
benefit options.
“We would like to have a
rough working document by
the end of the week and have
Bethel Sr., a former Key West
city commissioner, was convicted of felony trap molestation in June 2010, along with
Shamus Davis and Lawrence
Pinder. It was Bethel’s second
trial on the charge — jurors
could not reach a decision
in a trial five months earlier,
prompting a mistrial.
His two mates received 30-
day jail sentences and five
years’ probation. All three men
are banned from saltwater fishing in Florida — both recreational and commercial.
Bethel retired from Keys
Energy Services after 25 years,
and had worked as a commercial fisherman for the past 10
years.
[email protected]
Slow down
Sentence
Continued from Page 1A
in an unrelated arson case; he
must work to support his family; his three-year prison sentence is too harsh for a nonviolent, first-time offender;
and he should receive a lesser
sentence because of his longstanding local attachments to
the community
“If the defendant’s sentence is
not mitigated and he is required
to return to prison, the consequences for his family would be
devastating,” Bridger states in
the motion. “... He understands
the significance of the offense,
has learned a lesson and is sufficiently punished.”
Winters disagrees.
“The state intends to oppose
the defense motion and
believes the sentence previously handed down was fair
and just in light of all the circumstances,” he said Tuesday.
Bethel, the son of Harry
Company suing Florida over
ties to Cuba and Syria law
BY CURT ANDERSON
The Associated Press
MIAMI — A Florida law that
bans state and local governments from doing business
with firms with economic
links to Cuba and Syria is
unconstitutional, according
to a lawsuit by a Coral Gablesbased subsidiary of a Brazilian
engineering conglomerate.
Odebrecht Construction
Inc., which has been involved
in more than $3.9 billion in
state and local government
contracts since 1990, contends
in the lawsuit that the power
to set U.S. foreign policy rests
with the federal government,
not individual states. The
something before you at your
next meeting,” Smith said.
The commissioners will next
meet June 19.
Vitas, who currently lives in
Lake Zurich, Ill., said he is looking forward to working with
Scholl as soon as possible on
the transition. Scholl leaves in
July.
City Commissioner Teri
Johnston said she wants Smith
to look into the question of
relocation expenses for Vitas.
[email protected]
Unique Gift Idea!
Father’s Day Expressions
Dads, Grandpas and Uncles are all special everyday, but once a year
we celebrate how much we love and appreciate them. Show him how
much you care and place a Father’s Day Expressions ad in The Citizen.
This special will run on Father’s Day, Sunday, June 17, 2012.
Choose one of the following convenient ways to contact the citizen:
Phone: 292-7777 ext. 213 Email: [email protected]
In person: 3420 Northside Drive, Key West
Deadline for copy is Thurs., June 14th at 3 pm
All photos submitted must be crisp and clear.
$3
0
Parents and Grads,
Mon., June 4th is your last chance to
show your graduate how proud you are.
Place your grad’s picture and message
in the Key West Citizen’s Special
Section on June 8th.
Black and White Ad - $60.00
Color Ad - $125.00
For more information call Misty
at 305-292-7777 ext 213 or
Email: [email protected]
365690
measure was signed into law
last month by Gov. Rick Scott
and takes effect July 1.
The lawsuit, filed Monday
in Miami federal court, also
contends that the Floridabased Odebrecht subsidiary
is “remote and distant” from
another subsidiary working
on a project to expand Cuba’s
port of Mariel. Under the law,
that project could jeopardize
Odebrecht’s work in Florida.
The law applies to projects
worth $1 million or more.
The Florida company and
the one doing work in Cuba
are subsidiaries of Brazil’s
Odebrecht S.A., which does
engineering, construction and
other work around the world.
374532
BY GARY FINEOUT
CAPE CANAVERAL
Dad,
e the
Your ar
t!
greates you xoxo
We love
Day,
Father’s
y
p
p
a
H
Robby
Kate &
5
$4 oto
Ph
w/
Happy
Father
’s
Day
Love,
Jonatha
n
365704
SPORTS
Novak
Djokovic
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
1B
UPSETS AT ROLAND GARROS?
NOT QUITE, BUT PLENTY OF EXCITEMENT, 3B
SPORTS SHORTS
,
NBA: CELTICS 94, HEAT 90
ON THE ROAD
Boston goes
home with
3-2 lead
BY TIM REYNOLDS
The Associated Press
JANET BLACKMON MORGAN/The Associated Press
Deuce takes the basket to the umpire but
snatches it back before leaving the balls
during a Tuesday Single-A game at Myrtle
Beach, S.C.
Florida Keys Soccer Club
schedules tryouts
MARATHON — The Florida Keys Soccer Club
is holding tryouts for boys and girls ages 8
and older for the upcoming season. Tryouts will
be held on Thursday at Founder’s Park, Mile
Marker 87.
Boys and girls, ages 8-13, will try out at 6
p.m. and ages 14-17 will try out starting at
7:30 p.m. If players are new to the FKSC, they
will need a copy of their birth certificate.
Last year, players were from Key West,
Marathon, Tavernier and Key Largo. High
School-aged players play from August until
October and then February until April. Under
10 to Under 14 seasons are late October until
February.
All teams are trained by USSF certified
coaches with experience at college level soccer
or above.
Academy training is held now and throughout the summer. For more information, contact
FKSC Director of Coaching Pat Fazio at 305
394-2273, President Chris Bull at 305 731
3082 or visit www.floridakeyssoccer.org.
KEYS CALENDAR
TODAY ON TV
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
ESPN — World Series, finals, game 3,
Oklahoma vs. Alabama, at Oklahoma
City (if necessary), 8 p.m.
CYCLING
NBCSN — Criterium du Dauphine, stage 3,
Givors to La Clayette, France (same-day tape),
4 p.m.
GOLF
TGC — European PGA Tour, Nordea Masters,
first round, at Stockholm, 9 a.m.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
ESPN2, SUN — Tampa Bay at N.Y.
Yankees, 7 p.m.
FSN — Atlanta at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE
FINALS
TNT — Game 6, San Antonio at
Oklahoma City, 9 p.m.
MIAMI — Paul Pierce watched the shot sail
just over LeBron James’ outstretched arm. And
when it swished, he turned toward the Boston
bench, shaking his head.
The biggest shot of the night, for certain.
And it put the Miami Heat in big trouble in
these Eastern Conference finals.
Kevin Garnett finished with 26 points and
11 rebounds, Pierce scored 19 and the Celtics
moved one win away from the East title by beating the Heat, 94-90, on Tuesday night, taking a
3-2 lead in the series.
James finished with 30 points and 13 rebounds
for Miami, though he went 8 minutes without scoring in the final quarter. Dwyane Wade
scored 27 for the Heat, who got no more than
nine from anyone else. Chris Bosh scored 9.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
The Key West U-8 Girls’ Softball Travel Team finished second in their bracket over the weekend in the
Endless Summer Shootout at Cape Coral and Ft. Myers. Front row: Cassadee Wellings, Hannah Gardner,
Isabella Perez, Talyah Teate and Mia Story. Second row: Sabrina Ramirez, Meisha Hernandez, Breanna
Allen, Coral Geide, Marina Goins, Kelsey Shumate and Laila Jones. Back row: Coaches J.C. Ramirez,
Xavier Perez and Amber Gates. Not pictured: Madison Gonzalez who was could not make the tournament
but is very much part of the team. For action photos by The Citizen’s Ron Cooke and a complete roundup
of scores, see Friday’s Citizen.
COED SOFTBALL
Dispenza cups big bat for Vagabonds
COMPILED BY RON COOKE
Citizen Staff Writer
KEY WEST — Rain preempted the
Wednesday night league from playing last week, and no games were
scheduled for Memorial Day leaving a whole lot of Tuesday night
action in the Key West Coed Softball
League played at none other than
Pepe Hernandez Field in beautiful
Bayview Park.
According to the stats maintained
weekly by league CEO Bob Maun,
Old Town Fitness leads Tuesday
night action with a 7-1 record. The
fitness freaks have a two-game lead
on Shanna Key at 5-3.
In the Monday night league, T&W
Chevron leads Mr. Z’s by a game and
a half, sporting a 7-1 mark, as the
Philly makers are 4-1.
The Stone Crab is perfect in the
Wednesday league at 7-0 as Century
21 and Westin Warriors are second
and third, respectively, both with two
wins.
MLB: BRAVES 11,
MARLINS 0
Uggla homers
as Atlanta
crushes Miami
BY STEVEN WINE
The Associated Press
RON COOKE/The Citizen
T&W Chevron first base Sharon Wiley stretches to make the play on F.O.D.T. base
runner Amber Davis. Monday night.
pushing Vagabonds with the sticks. Tarzan
Hanak, Joe Vain, Linda Kruszka, Michelle
Citon, Dave Campos and Stan Adamcik
banged one single apiece.
Nick Hogen doubled as part of his 3for-3 performance for Key West Hammock.
SHANNA KEY VAGABONDS 4,
Marlon Manresa and Chelsea Storr each
KEY WEST HAMMOCK 3
ripped a two-base hit and a base hit, Tyler
Ken “Paper Cup” Dispenza — oops, wrong
Schell slammed a two-bagger and Bridget
league — homered inside-the-park and
Woods and Laura Garcia both gapped a
stroked a two-base hit, Vincent Kukal and
base hit.
Julia Gonzales hammered two hits apiece
OLD TOWN FITNESS 16,
NHL STANLEY CUP FINALS
NBCSN — Game 4, New Jersey at
Los Angeles, 8 p.m.
BAREFOOT BILLY’S WATERSPORTS 0
Old Town Fitness pumped some iron,
stroking 24 base hits led by Scott Greenlaw
with a 4-for-4 showing. Will Worthington tripled and singled twice, Danny Rose drove in
three runs on a pair of doubles and a base
hit, Brittany Price tripled twice and singled,
Clinton Storr slashed a three-base hit and
two base hits, Brittany Burgess singled three
times as Joe Vain and Jason Roma curled
a base hit.
Lauren Wells and Bobby Lopez were freestyling with two hits apiece for the watersports crew as Leto Lopez, Dona Rosado,
Carlos Sanchez and Kelly Lukens each
surfed their way to a single.
BOBALU’S HOT MESS 9,
STICK & STEIN 4
TENNIS
ESPN2 — French Open, quarterfinals, at Paris,
8 a.m.
FLORIDA LOTTERY
See: http://www.flalottery.com
RON COOKE/The Citizen
Four Orange Vodka Drinking Team shortstop J.W. Cooke, on ground, makes a diving stop and flips the ball to second baseman Charlie Bishop albeit too late to
get the force on Lauren Pazo, right.
Donny Barrios and Isaac Helener delivered Bobalu’s bats with three singles each.
Brandi Mulligan doubled, but her big shot
was a homer into Virginia Street, plating five
total runs. Tina Godfrey doubled and drilled
a base hit, Pichuli Vega singled twice, Becki
Balcer hammered a two-base hit and Eric
Whitten and Bobcat Mathews both steamed
a single.
Robert Randall, Brittany Burgess, Shia
Marzetti and James Knowles each racked
up a pair of singles and Johnny Sweeting,
Janessa Barrios, Drew Pajaro and Steve
Christian slammed one hit apiece.
[email protected]
MIAMI — Dan Uggla hit two
homers in his first game at
Marlins Park, including a tapemeasure blow off the homerun sculpture, and Tim Hudson
pitched a five-hitter for his 13th
career shutout Tuesday night
to help the Atlanta Braves beat
Miami, 11-0.
Uggla hit a solo homer in the
fourth inning, and he scored
a direct hit on the middle of
the sculpture with a two-run
homer in the ninth, estimated
at 432 feet. That sent a thud
reverberating throughout the
ballpark and increased his
homer total to 10 this season
and 200 for his career.
Uggla also doubled and
scored before hitting a tworun single to finish with four
hits and five RBI, both season
highs. He spent his first five
seasons with the Marlins and
hit 78 home runs in their former home, the most by any
player.
Hudson (4-2) struck out
three, walked three and
allowed only one runner to
reach third base en route to
his 25th complete game. He
contributed a sacrifice fly and
a run-scoring single for his
first RBI this year.
The Marlins again mustered little support for Anibal
Sanchez (3-4), who allowed a
season-high seven runs in 62⁄3
innings. Miami has scored only
18 runs this season while he’s in
the game.
KEYSNEWS.COM — AND SPORTS TOO
Black and White Ad - $60.00
Color Ad - $125.00
For more information call Misty at
305-292-7777 ext 213 or
Email: [email protected]
Monday is your last chance to show your
graduate how proud you are. Place your
grad’s picture and message in the Key West
Citizen’s Special Section on June 8th.
365711
2B
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
SPORTS: Scoreboard
East Division
GLANTZ-CULVER
Major League Baseball
National League
FAVORITE
LINE
San Francisco
-120
at Philadelphia
-120
at Washington
-155
at Miami
-160
at Cincinnati
-185
St. Louis
-120
at Milwaukee
-210
at Arizona
-145
American League
at New York
-135
at Detroit
-160
at Boston
-155
Toronto
-110
at Kansas City
-165
Texas
-140
at Los Angeles
-165
UNDERDOG
at San Diego
Los Angeles
New York
Atlanta
Pittsburgh
at Houston
Chicago
Colorado
LINE
+110
+110
+145
+150
+175
+110
+190
+135
Tampa Bay
Cleveland
Baltimore
at Chicago
Minnesota
at Oakland
Seattle
+125
+150
+145
+100
+155
+130
+155
NBA Playoffs
FAVORITE
LINE O/U
at Oklahoma City 5
(20112⁄
NHL Playoffs
FAVORITE
at Los Angeles
UNDERDOG
San Antonio
LINE UNDERDOG
-180 New Jersey
LINE
+160
ML BASEBALL
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Baltimore
Tampa Bay
New York
Toronto
Boston
Central Division
Chicago
Cleveland
Detroit
Kansas City
Minnesota
West Division
Texas
Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
29. Texas, Lewis Brinson, OF, Coral Springs HS
(Fla.)
30. New York Yankees, Ty Hensley, RHP, Santa Fe
W
L Pct GB
HS (Okla.)
Washington
30 22 .577
—
1
31. Boston (Papelbon-Philadelphia), Brian
2⁄
Miami
31 24 .564
1
Johnson, LHP, Florida
New York
31 24 .564
2⁄
COMPENSATION ROUND A
Atlanta
30 25 .545 112⁄
32. Minnesota (Cuddyer-Colorado), Jose Berrios,
Philadelphia
28 29 .491 412⁄
RHP, Papa Juan XXII HS (Puerto Rico)
Central Division
33. San Diego (Bell-Miami), Zach Eflin, RHP,
W
L Pct GB
Hagerty HS (Fla.)
Cincinnati
30 24 .556
—
34. Oakland (Willingham-Minnesota), Daniel
Pittsburgh
28 26 .519
2
1
Robertson, SS, Upland HS (Calif.)
St. Louis
28 27 .509 2 2⁄
35. New York Mets (Reyes-Miami), Kevin Plawecki,
Milwaukee
24 31 .436 612⁄
010 200 404 —11 16 1 C, Purdue
Houston
23 31 .426
7 Atlanta
1
Miami
000 000 000 — 0 5 0 36. St. Louis (Pujols-LA Angels), Stephen Piscotty,
Chicago
19 36 .345 11 2⁄
3B, Stanford
West Division
W
L Pct GB a-struck out for Da.Jennings in the 8th. b-reached 37. Boston (Papelbon-Philadelphia), Pat Light, RHP,
Monmouth, N.J.
Los Angeles
35 21 .625
— on error for H.Ramirez in the 9th. c-singled for
1
Stanton in the 9th.
38. Milwaukee (Fielder-Detroit), Mitch Haniger, OF,
San Francisco
31 24 .564 3 2⁄
E—Prado (3). LOB—Atlanta 7, Miami 7. 2B—Uggla
Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo
Arizona
25 30 .455 912⁄
39. Texas (Wilson-LA Angels), Joey Gallo, 3B,
Colorado
24 30 .444 10 (13), Heyward (8). 3B—Simmons (1). HR—Uggla
1
(9), off A.Sanchez; Uggla (10), off Gaudin.
Bishop Gorman HS (Nev.)
San Diego
18 37 .327 16 2⁄
RBIs—Uggla 5 (37), Heyward (26), Simmons 3 (3), 40. Philadelphia Phillies (Madson-Cincinnati),
T.Hudson 2 (2). S—A.Sanchez. SF—T.Hudson.
Shane Watson, RHP, Lakewood HS (Calif.)
Sunday’s Games
Runners left in scoring position—Atlanta 5
41. Houston (Barmes-Pittsburgh), Lance McCullers,
Atlanta 3, Washington 2
(T.Hudson 2, F.Freeman, Constanza 2); Miami 3
RHP, Jesuit HS (Fla.)
Miami 5, Philadelphia 1
(Infante, J.Buck 2). RISP—Atlanta 4 for 12; Miami
42. Minnesota (Kubel-Arizona), Luke Bard, RHP,
Houston 5, Cincinnati 3
0 for 4.
Georgia Tech
Pittsburgh 6, Milwaukee 5
Runners moved up—F.Freeman, Heyward, Simmons, 43. Chicago Cubs (Ramirez-Milwaukee), Pierce
Colorado 3, L.A. Dodgers 2
Petersen. GIDP—Petersen, Coghlan.
Johnson, RHP, Missouri State
San Francisco 2, Chicago Cubs 0
DP—Atlanta 2 (F.Freeman, Simmons), (Simmons,
44. San Diego (Harang-LA Dodgers), Travis
Arizona 6, San Diego 0
F.Freeman).
Jankowski, OF, Stony Brook
N.Y. Mets 6, St. Louis 1
45. Pittsburgh (Doumit-Minnesota), Barrett Barnes,
Atlanta
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA OT, Texas Tech
Monday’s Games
T.Hudson W, 4-2 9 5 0 0 3 3 108 3.83 46. Colorado (Ellis-LA Dodgers), Eddie Butler, RHP,
St. Louis 5, N.Y. Mets 4
Miami
IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Radford
San Francisco 3, Chicago Cubs 2
A.Sanchez L, 3-4 623⁄ 8 7 7 1 5 111 3.19 47. Oakland (DeJesus-Chicago Cubs), Matt Olson,
L.A. Dodgers 4, Philadelphia 3
1
Da.Jennings
1 3⁄ 2 0 0 1 0 25 0.00 1B, Parkview HS (Ga.)
Colorado 4, Arizona 0
Gaudin
1 6 4 4 0 2 39 4.79 48. Chicago White Sox (Buehrle-Mimai), Keon
Barnum, 1B, King HS (Fla.)
Tuesday’s Games
Inherited runners-scored—Da.Jennings 2-2.
49. Cincinnati (R. Hernandez-Colorado), Jesse
L.A. Dodgers 2, Philadelphia 1
Umpires—Home, Gary Cederstrom; First, Lance
Winker, OF, Olympia HS (Fla.)
N.Y. Mets at Washington, late
Barksdale; Second, Fieldin Culbreth; Third, Adrian
50. Toronto (Francisco-NY Mets), Matt Smoral, LHP,
Atlanta 11, Miami 0
Johnson.
Solon HS (Ohio)
Pittsburgh 8, Cincinnati 4
T—2:36. A—25,432 (37,442).
51. Los Angeles Dodgers (Barajas-Pittsburgh),
St. Louis at Houston, late
Jesmuel Valentin, SS, Puerto Rico Baseball
Chicago Cubs 10, Milwaukee 0
BASEBALL DRAFT SELECTIONS
Academy
Colorado at Arizona, late
June 4-6
52. St. Louis (Dotel-Detroit), Patrick Wisdom, 3B,
San Francisco at San Diego, late
Monday (First Day)
St. Mary’s, Calif.
FIRST ROUND
53. Texas (Oliver-Toronto), Collin Wiles, RHP, Blue
Tonight’s Games
1. Houston, Carlos Correa, SS, Puerto Rico
Valley West HS (Kan.)
San Francisco (Bumgarner 6-4) at San Diego
Baseball Academy
54. Philadelphia Phillies (Ibanez-NY Yankees),
(Richard 2-6), 6:35 p.m.
2. Minnesota, Byron Buxton, OF, Appling County
Mitch Gueller, RHP, W F West HS (Wash.)
L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 7-2) at Philadelphia
HS (Ga.)
55. San Diego (Austin-unsigned), Walker Weickel,
(K.Kendrick 2-4), 7:05 p.m.
3. Seattle, Mike Zunino, C, Florida
RHP, Olympia HS (Fla.)
N.Y. Mets (Hefner 1-2) at Washington (E.Jackson
4. Baltimore, Kevin Gausman, RHP, LSU
56. Chicago Cubs (Pena-Tampa Bay), Paul
1-3), 7:05 p.m.
5. Kansas City, Kyle Zimmer, RHP, San Francisco
Blackburn, RHP, Heritage HS (Calif.)
Atlanta (Delgado 3-5) at Miami (Jo.Johnson 3-3),
6. Chicago Cubs, Albert Almora, OF, Mater Academy 57. Cincinnati (Cordero-Toronto), Jeff Gelalich,
7:10 p.m.
(Fla.)
OF, UCLA
Pittsburgh (Lincoln 3-0) at Cincinnati (Cueto 5-3),
7. San Diego, Max Fried, LHP, Harvard-Westlake
58. Toronto (Rauch-NY Mets), Mitch Nay, 3B,
7:10 p.m.
HS (Calif.)
Hamilton HS (Ariz.)
St. Louis (Wainwright 4-6) at Houston (Norris 5-2),
8. Pittsburgh, Mark Appel, RHP, Stanford
59. St. Louis (E. Jackson-Washington), Steve Bean,
8:05 p.m.
9. Miami, Andrew Heaney, LHP, Oklahoma State
C, Rockwall HS (Texas)
Chicago Cubs (Maholm 4-4) at Milwaukee
10. Colorado, David Dahl, OF, Oak Mountain HS
60. Toronto (Molina-Tampa Bay), Tyler Gonzalez,
(Greinke 6-2), 8:10 p.m.
(Ala.)
RHP, Jackson Madison HS (Texas)
Colorado (Outman 0-1) at Arizona (Miley 6-2),
11. Oakland, Addison Russell, SS, Pace HS (Fla.)
9:40 p.m.
12. New York Mets, Gavin Cecchini, SS, Barbe
ALL-STAR GAME VOTING
HS (La.)
July 10 at Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City
Thursday’s Games
13. Chicago White Sox, Courtney Hawkins, OF,
Voting released Tuesday
L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia, 1:05 p.m.
Carroll HS (Texas)
American League
N.Y. Mets at Washington, 1:05 p.m.
14. Cincinnati, Nick Travieso, RHP, Archbishop
FIRST BASE — 1, Prince Fielder, Tigers, 1,027,070.
Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.
McCarthy HS (Fla.)
2, Mark Teixeira, Yankees, 697,602. 3, Paul
San Francisco at San Diego, 3:35 p.m.
15. Cleveland, Tyler Naquin, OF, Texas A&M
Konerko, White Sox, 671,430. 4, Mitch Moreland,
Atlanta at Miami, 7:10 p.m.
16. Washington, Lucas Giolito, RHP, HarvardRangers, 618,226. 5, Albert Pujols, Angels,
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.
Westlake HS (Calif.)
478,020.
St. Louis at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
17. Toronto, D.J. Davis, OF, Stone County HS (Miss.) SECOND BASE — 1, Ian Kinsler, Rangers,
18. Los Angeles Dodgers, Corey Seager, SS,
1,447,171. 2, Robinson Cano, Yankees,
BRAVES 11, MARLINS 0
1,167,448. 3, Dustin Pedroia, Red Sox, 699,422.
Atlanta
AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Northwest Cabarrus HS (NC)
4, Robert Andino, Orioles, 317,434. 5, Chris Getz,
Bourn cf
5 1 1 0 0 3 .298 19. St. Louis (Pujols-LA Angels), Michael Wacha,
Royals, 278,585.
Prado 3b
5 2 2 0 0 0 .328 RHP, Texas A&M
McCann c
4 0 0 0 1 1 .242 20. San Francisco, Chris Stratton, RHP, Mississippi SHORTSTOP — 1, Derek Jeter, Yankees, 1,698,777.
2, Elvis Andrus, Rangers, 1,033,986. 3, J.J. Hardy,
Uggla 2b
5 3 4 5 0 0 .276 State
F.Freeman 1b
5 2 2 0 0 0 .250 21. Atlanta, Lucas Sims, RHP, Brookwood HS (Ga.) Orioles, 489,941. 4, Alcides Escobar, Royals,
392,195. 5, Asdrubal Cabrera, Indians, 344,065.
Heyward rf
4 2 3 1 1 0 .246 22. Toronto (Beede-unsigned), Marcus Stroman,
THIRD BASE — 1, Adrian Beltre, Rangers,
Simmons ss
5 1 3 3 0 0 .333 RHP, Duke
1,179,864. 2, Miguel Cabrera, Tigers, 886,365. 3,
T.Hudson p
4 0 1 2 0 1 .111 23. St. Louis, James Ramsey, OF, Florida State
Evan Longoria, Rays, 789,434. 4, Alex Rodriguez,
Constanza lf
5 0 0 0 0 2 .316 24. Boston, Deven Marrero, SS, Arizona State
25. Tampa Bay, Richie Shaffer, 3B, Clemson
Yankees, 657,315. 5, Mike Moustakas, Royals,
Totals
42 11 16 11 2 7
26. Arizona, Stryker Trahan, C, Acadiana HS (La.)
432,379.
OUTFIELD — 1, Josh Hamilton, Rangers,
Miami
AB R H BI BB SO Avg. 27. Milwaukee (Fielder-Detroit), Clint Coulter, C,
2,587,991. 2, Curtis Granderson, Yankees,
Reyes ss
3 0 1 0 1 0 .279 Union HS (Wash.)
1,406,128. 3, Nelson Cruz, Rangers, 992,992.
Infante 2b
4 0 1 0 0 0 .309 28. Milwaukee, Victor Roache, OF, Georgia
Southern
4, Jose Bautista, Blue Jays, 930,814. 5, Adam
Jones, Orioles, 857,543. 6, David Murphy, Rangers,
652,379. 7, Nick Swisher, Yankees, 465,984. 8,
Brett Gardner, Yankees, 437,126. 9, Ichiro Suzuki,
Mariners, 433,899. 10, Jeff Francoeur, Royals,
422,304. 11, Austin Jackson, Tigers, 389,664. 12,
Nick Markakis, Orioles, 384,390. 13, Alex Gordon,
Royals, 378,459. 14, Jacoby Ellsbury, Red Sox,
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
346,774. 15, Yoenis Cespedes, Athletics, 344,279.
Anthony Cordova from Miami
CATCHER — 1, Mike Napoli, Rangers, 1,224,565.
brought in this 17-pound mutton
2, Matt Wieters, Orioles, 713,469. 3, Joe Mauer,
Twins, 637,364. 4, Russell Martin, Yankees,
snapper while fishing the reef with
431,435. 5, A.J. Pierzynski, White Sox, 424,646.
Capt. Kevin Wilson of Knee Deep
DESIGNATED HITTER — 1, David Ortiz, Red Sox,
Charters out of Geiger Key Marina.
1,204,904. 2, Michael Young, Rangers, 1,049,170.
3, Raul Ibanez, Yankees, 492,183. 4, Billy Butler,
He and his brother Mike also
Royals, 477,257. 5, Edwin Encarnacion, Blue Jays,
limited out on yellowtail snapper
391,131.
H.Ramirez 3b
3
b-D.Solano ph 1
Stanton rf
3
c-Ruggiano ph 1
Morrison 1b
4
Petersen cf
3
J.Buck c
3
Coghlan lf
3
A.Sanchez p
1
Da.Jennings p 0
a-Do.Murphy ph 1
Gaudin p
0
Totals
30
NATIONAL LEAGUE
SPREADS
W
31
31
30
29
28
L
24
24
24
26
27
Pct
.564
.564
.556
.527
.509
GB
—
—
1
2⁄
2
3
W
31
29
25
24
21
L
24
25
30
30
34
Pct
.564
.537
.455
.444
.382
GB
—
1
1 2⁄
6
1
6 2⁄
10
W
32
28
25
24
L
23
28
32
31
Pct
.582
.500
.439
.436
GB
—
1
4 2⁄
8
8
Monday’s Games
Minnesota 10, Kansas City 7
Seattle 8, L.A. Angels 6
Oakland 12, Texas 1
Tuesday’s Games
Cleveland 4, Detroit 2
N.Y. Yankees 7, Tampa Bay 0
Baltimore 8, Boston 6, 10 innings
Kansas City 1, Minnesota 0
Toronto 9, Chicago White Sox 5
Seattle at L.A. Angels, late
Texas at Oakland, late
Tonight’s Games
Cleveland (J.Gomez 3-4) at Detroit (Scherzer 5-3),
7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Cobb 2-1) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 6-2),
7:05 p.m.
Baltimore (W.Chen 4-2) at Boston (Beckett 4-5),
7:10 p.m.
Minnesota (Blackburn 1-4) at Kansas City
(F.Paulino 3-1), 8:10 p.m.
Toronto (Morrow 6-3) at Chicago White Sox
(Quintana 1-0), 8:10 p.m.
Seattle (Noesi 2-6) at L.A. Angels (Williams 6-2),
10:05 p.m.
Texas (Lewis 4-4) at Oakland (Colon 4-6), 10:05
p.m.
Thursday’s Games
Cleveland at Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
Texas at Oakland, 3:35 p.m.
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Toronto at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
5
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
3
.272
.500
.296
.444
.225
.200
.168
.163
.100
.000
.146
.000
ON THE WATER
and enjoyed a fresh fish sandwich
for lunch.
Marine News:
Islamorada All-Fly Gold Cup Invitational
Tarpon Tournament set for June 18-22
ISLAMORADA — For 25
tenacious fly-rod anglers, the
hot 2012 tarpon fishing season is expected to get even
hotter at the prestigious
Gold Cup Invitational Tarpon
Tournament, scheduled June
18-22 in Islamorada.
Created in 1964 as a spin,
plug and fly tournament, the
Gold Cup Invitational Tarpon
Tournament changed to the
current all-fly format in 1972.
One of its founders was baseball great and avid fly-fisherman Ted Williams.
An elite group of 25 experienced tournament anglers
and novices test their
strength, finesse, endurance
and technique in this allrelease four-day fishing event
that limits fly tippets to 16-
pound test.
The challenge kicks off
Sunday, June 17, with a
welcome party and anglers
meeting at 6 p.m. at Uncle’s
Restaurant, Mile Marker 80.9
oceanside in Islamorada.
Each fishing morning,
anglers are to be served
breakfast from 5-6 a.m.
at the Lorelei, MM 82 bayside in Islamorada. Fishing
begins with staggered starts
at 5:45 a.m. and continues
through lines-out at 3 p.m.
daily. Dockside cocktails and
hors d’oeuvres will be served
between 3:30 and 5 p.m. at
the Lorelei.
Scoring is based on points
awarded for either release or
weight fish. Release fish must
measure at least 48 inches
long, while weight fish must
exceed 70 pounds.
Awards are to be presented
at 5 p.m., Friday, June 22, at a
dockside party at the Lorelei.
The grand champion’s
name is to be engraved
on the tournament’s perpetual trophy, on display at
the World Wide Sportsman
store, MM 81.5 bayside in
Islamorada.
Entry fee is $1,250 per
angler, which includes all
social functions for the angler
and guide. Guide fees are the
angler’s responsibility.
Proceeds from the event
benefit children’s support
groups in the Florida Keys.
For more tournament
information, see www.goldcuptt.com/
All Aboard:
Weekly Tides:
If you have an outstanding catch or fishing news to
report:
• Fax: 305-295-8016
• Write: Daily Fishing Report, P.O. Box 1800, Key West,
FL 33041
• Drop it off at The Key West Citizen building
• Email: [email protected]
See the map, Page 2A
National League
FIRST BASE — 1, Joey Votto, Reds, 1,314,516. 2,
Lance Berkman, Cardinals, 634,473. 3, Freddie
Freeman, Braves, 576,255. 4, Bryan LaHair, Cubs,
391,497. 5, Adam LaRoche Nationals 331,772.
SECOND BASE — 1, Dan Uggla, Braves, 872,136.
2, Brandon Phillips, Reds, 586,835. 3, Omar
Infante, Marlins, 512,049. 4, Rickie Weeks,
Brewers, 512,021. 5, Jose Altuve, Astros, 472,292.
SHORTSTOP — 1, Troy Tulowitzki, Rockies, 823,708.
2, Rafael Furcal, Cardinals, 803,254. 3, Starlin
Castro, Cubs, 526,811. 4, Jose Reyes, Marlins,
425,682. 5, Alex Gonzalez, Brewers, 399,218.
THIRD BASE — 1, David Wright, Mets, 856,887.
2, David Freese, Cardinals, 824,801. 3, Chipper
Jones, Braves, 727,719. 4, Pablo Sandoval, Giants,
648,303. 5, Aramis Ramirez, Brewers, 386,013.
OUTFIELD — 1, Matt Kemp, Dodgers, 1,952,910.
2, Carlos Beltran, Cardinals, 1,212,030. 3, Ryan
Braun, Brewers, 1,112,971. 4, Andre Ethier,
Dodgers, 827,262. 5, Melky Cabrera, Giants,
714,642. 6, Matt Holliday, Cardinals, 667,544.
7, Jason Heyward, Braves, 515,340. 8, Michael
Bourn, Braves, 498,070. 9, Jay Bruce, Reds,
460,853. 10, Andrew McCutchen, Pirates,
457,223. 11, Hunter Pence, Phillies, 446,460.
12, Corey Hart, Brewers, 417,929. 13, Carlos
Gonzalez, Rockies, 386,860. 14, Jon Jay, Cardinals,
373,833. 15, Shane Victorino, Phillies, 373,034.
CATCHER — 1, Yadier Molina, Cardinals,
1,100,048. 2, Buster Posey, Giants, 1,072,464.
3, Brian McCann, Braves, 707,508. 4, Carlos Ruiz,
Phillies, 562,021. 5, Jonathan Lucroy, Brewers,
457,590.
NHL PLAYOFFS
STANLEY CUP FINALS
Bob and Mike Bryan (2), United States, def. Oliver
Marach, Austria, and Horacio Zeballos, Argentina,
6-1, 4-6, 6-4.
Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, and Jean-Julien Rojer
(10), Netherlands, def. Michael Llodra, France, and
Nenad Zimonjic (3), Serbia, 6-4, 2-1, retired.
Women Quarterfinals
Maria Kirilenko and Nadia Petrova (7), Russia, def.
Vania King, United States, and Yaroslava Shvedova
(3), Kazakhstan, 6-3, 6-4.
Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka (5), Czech
Republic, def. Kveta Peschke, Czech Republic, and
Katarina Srebotnik (2), Slovenia, 6-1, 5-7, 7-6 (4).
NBA PLAYOFFS
CONFERENCE FINALS
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Boston 3, Miami 2
Monday, May 28: Miami 93, Boston 79
Wednesday, May 30: Miami 115, Boston 111, OT
Friday, June 1: Boston 101, Miami 91
Sunday, June 3: Boston 93, Miami 91, OT
Tuesday’s Game: Boston 94, Miami 90
x-Thursday, June 7: Miami at Boston, 8:30 p.m.
x-Saturday, June 9: Boston at Miami, 8:30 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Oklahoma City 3, San Antonio 2
Sunday, May 27: San Antonio 101, Oklahoma
City 98
Tuesday, May 29: San Antonio 120, Oklahoma
City 111
Thursday, May 31: Oklahoma City 102, San
Antonio 82
Saturday, June 2: Oklahoma City 109, San Antonio
103
Monday: June 4: Oklahoma City 108, San Antonio
103
Tonight’s Game: San Antonio at Oklahoma
City, 9 p.m.
x-Friday, June 8: Oklahoma City at San Antonio,
9 p.m.
CELTICS 94, HEAT 90
FG FT Reb
BOSTON Min M-A M-A O-T A
Pierce
43:01 6-19 5-5 0-4 4
Bass
29:44 4-8 2-2 1-4 0
Garnett 35:36 11-20 4-6 3-11 2
Rondo 44:19 3-15 1-2 3-6 13
Allen
40:03 2-9 8-8 0-7 0
Stiemsma 8:28 1-1 1-2 1-4 0
Pietrus 27:05 5-8 1-2 1-3 0
Dooling 8:47 1-1 0-0 0-0 0
Daniels 2:57 0-0 0-0 0-0 0
Totals
240 33-81 22-27 9-39
PF PTS
5
19
1
10
4
26
3
7
3
13
0
3
4
13
1
3
0
0
19 21 94
Percentages: FG .407, FT .815.
3-Point Goals: 6-15, .400 (Pietrus 2-4, Pierce 2-5,
Dooling 1-1, Allen 1-4, Rondo 0-1).
Team Rebounds: 10. Team Turnovers: 13 (15 PTS).
Blocked Shots: 4 (Garnett 2, Allen, Bass).
Turnovers: 12 (Rondo 5, Pierce 2, Pietrus 2, Allen,
Bass, Garnett).
Steals: 13 (Rondo 4, Bass 2, Pierce 2, Pietrus 2,
Allen, Garnett, Stiemsma).
Technical Fouls: Defensive three second, 6:43
second; Bass, 3:37 third.
FG FT Reb
MIAMI Min M-A M-A O-T A PF PTS
James
45:20 11-25 6-8 3-13 2 1
30
Battier 32:05 2-4 0-0 0-2 2 3
5
Haslem 33:24 1-5 1-2 2-14 1 5
3
Chalmers 35:39 3-7 2-3 0-4 3 2
9
Wade
39:28 10-22 6-8 1-6 3 3
27
Bosh
14:23 3-8 3-3 6-7 0 1
9
Miller
10:33 1-3 0-0 0-2 0 3
3
Jones
16:47 1-4 1-1 0-1 0 1
4
Cole
12:21 0-4 0-0 0-0 2 2
0
Totals 240 32-82 19-25 12-49 13 21 90
Percentages: FG .390, FT .760.
3-Point Goals: 7-26, .269 (James 2-6, Battier 1-3,
Jones 1-3, Miller 1-3, Wade 1-3, Chalmers 1-5,
Bosh 0-1, Cole 0-2).
Team Rebounds: 11. Team Turnovers: 15 (13 PTS).
Blocked Shots: 3 (Battier, James, Wade).
Turnovers: 15 (Chalmers 3, James 3, Wade 3,
Haslem 2, Battier, Bosh, Cole, Jones).
Steals: 6 (Cole 2, James 2, Chalmers, Jones).
Technical Fouls: Chalmers, 2:54 fourth.
Boston
Miami
16 24 25 29
24 18 18 30
— 94
— 90
A—20,021 (19,600). T—2:43.
Officials—Monty McCutchen, Ron Garretson,
Derrick Stafford.
WNBA
SOCCER
MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER
EASTERN CONFERENCE
W
D.C.
8
New York
8
Sporting Kansas City 8
Columbus
5
Chicago
5
New England
5
Houston
4
Montreal
3
Philadelphia
2
Toronto FC
1
L
4
3
3
4
5
7
3
7
7
9
T
3
2
1
3
3
1
4
3
2
0
Pts
27
26
25
18
18
16
16
12
8
3
GF GA
28 19
26 18
17 10
13 13
15 17
18 18
12 12
15 21
8 14
8 21
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Real Salt Lake
9 3 2 29 22 14
San Jose
8 3 3 27 27 17
Seattle
7 3 3 24 16 9
Colorado
6 6 1 19 20 18
Vancouver
5 3 4 19 13 14
Chivas USA
4 6 3 15 9 14
Portland
3 5 4 13 12 15
FC Dallas
3 8 4 13 15 24
Los Angeles
3 8 2 11 15 21
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Saturday’s Game
New England 2, Chicago 0
Sunday, June 10
Houston at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
TUES.’S INTERNATIONAL SCORES
(Home nations listed first)
World Cup Qualifying Oceania
Second Round Group A
At Honiara, Solomon Islands
New Caledonia 9, Samoa 0
Tahiti 4, Vanuatu 1
Exhibition
Armenia 3, Kazakhstan 0
Austria 0, Romania 0
France 4, Estonia 0
GOLF
PGA TOUR
ST. JUDE CLASSIC
Site: Memphis, Tenn.
Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.
Course: TPC Southwind (7,239 yards, par 70).
Purse: $5.6 million. Winner’s share: $1,008,000.
Television: Golf Channel (Thursday-Friday, 3-6
p.m., 8:30-11:30 p.m.) and CBS (SaturdaySunday, 3-6 p.m.).
Last year: Harrison Frazar won his first PGA
Tour title.
Last week: Tiger Woods rallied to win the
Memorial to match tournament host Jack Nicklaus
for second place on the PGA Tour career victory
list with 73.
Notes: The U.S. Open is next week at The Olympic
Club in San Francisco...
Online: http://www.pgatour.com
LPGA TOUR
LPGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Site: Pittsford, N.Y.
Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.
Course: Locust Hill Country Club (6,506 yards,
par 72).
Purse: $2.5 million. Winner’s share: $375,000.
Television: Golf Channel (Thursday, noon-2:30
p.m.; Friday, 2:30-4:30 a.m., noon-2:30 p.m.;
Saturday, 2:30-4:30 a.m., 2-7 p.m., 9:30-12:30
a.m.; Sunday, 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., 2-7 p.m.,
9:30-12:30 a.m.).
Last year: Yani Tseng won by 10 strokes.
Last week: Stacy Lewis won the ShopRite LPGA
Classic in Galloway, N.J., for her second victory
in her last three starts. The former Arkansas star
jumped from seventh to third in the world to
replace Cristie Kerr as the top-ranked U.S. player.
Notes: The major tournament moved to Locust
Hill, a longtime regular LPGA Tour stop, in 2010
after five years at Bulle Rock...
Online: http://www.lpga.com
CHAMPIONS TOUR
REGIONS TRADITION
Site: Birmingham, Ala.
Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.
Course: Shoal Creek (7,197 yards, par 72).
Purse: $2.2 million. Winner’s share: $330,000.
Television: Golf Channel (Thursday, 6:30-8:30
p.m.; Friday, 12:30-2:30 a.m., 6:30-8:30 p.m.;
Saturday, 12:30-2:30 a.m., 7:30-9:30 p.m.;
Sunday, 1-3 a.m., 7:30-9:30 p.m.; Monday, 1-3
a.m.).
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Chicago
Connecticut
Indiana
Atlanta
New York
Washington
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Minnesota
Los Angeles
San Antonio
Phoenix
Seattle
Tulsa
W
4
4
4
2
2
1
L
1
1
1
4
5
4
Pct
.800
.800
.800
.333
.286
.200
GB
—
—
—
1
2 2⁄
3
3
W
7
5
2
2
1
0
L
0
1
3
4
4
6
Pct
1.000
.833
.400
.333
.200
.000
GB
—
1
1 2⁄
4
1
4 2⁄
5
1
6 2⁄
Monday’s Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday’s Games
New York 79, Atlanta 74
Tonight’s Games
Seattle at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
EUROPEAN TOUR
NORDEA MASTERS
Site: Stockholm.
Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.
Course: Bro Hof Slott Golf Club (7,607 yards,
par 72).
Purse: $1.87 million. Winner’s share: $311,875.
Television: Golf Channel (Thursday-Friday, 9
a.m.-noon; Saturday-Sunday, 7:30-11:30 a.m.).
NATIONWIDE TOUR
Mexico Open
Site: Leon, Mexico.
Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.
Course: El Bosque Country Club (7,701 yards,
par 72).
Purse: $625,000. Winner’s share: $112,500.
Television: None.
Last year: Two-time heart transplant recipient
Erik Compton of Miami won his first professional
title, closing with a 7-under 65 for a two-stroke
victory. He went on to finish 13th on the money list
to earn a PGA Tour card.
CAL RIPKIN LEAGUE
CONCH BASEBALL
ACADEMY
Instructors:
Miguel Menendez,
Key West High School Baseball Head Coach
797-7031
Peter Fraga,
Key West High School Baseball Assistant Coach
797-5531
Los Angeles 3, New Jersey 0
Wednesday, May 30: Los Angeles 2, New Jersey
1, OT
Saturday, June 2: Los Angeles 2, New Jersey 1, OT
Monday, June 4: Los Angeles 4, New Jersey 0
Tonight’s Game: New Jersey at Los Angeles,
8 p.m.
x-Saturday, June 9: Los Angeles at New Jersey,
8 p.m.
x-Monday, June 11: New Jersey at Los Angeles,
8 p.m.
x-Wednesday, June 13: Los Angeles at New Jersey,
8 p.m.
* Please contact either coach to arrange payment*
AGES 6-12
TENNIS
Time: 8 am - 11:30 am
FRENCH OPEN RESULTS
Tuesday’s Results
At Stade Roland Garros, Paris
Purse: $23.47 million (Grand Slam)
Surface: Clay-Outdoor
Men’s Singles
Quarterfinals
Roger Federer (3), Switzerland, def. Juan Martin del
Potro (9), Argentina, 3-6, 6-7 (4), 6-2, 6-0, 6-3.
Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Jo-Wilfried Tsonga
(5), France, 6-1, 5-7, 5-7, 7-6 (6), 6-1.
Women Quarterfinals
Sam Stosur (6), Australia, def. Dominika Cibulkova
(15), Slovakia, 6-4, 6-1.
Sara Errani (21), Italy, def. Angelique Kerber (10),
Germany, 6-3, 7-6 (2).
Men’s Doubles Quarterfinals
Session 1: June 11th - 15th Pitching Defense
Session 2: June 18th - 22nd Hitting and
Base Running
Location: Clayton Sterling Baseball Complex
Cost: $100 for week 1; $100 for week 2; $150 for both
weeks. Make check payable to Little Conch Baseball,
payment due in full
(camp space is limited)
Be sure to wear or bring baseball pants, cleats,
sneakers, hat, bat/batting gloves, fielding gloves,
sunscreen and water bottles.
Please label ALL equipment!
374463
3B
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
SPORTS
NHL
MLB DRAFT
MLB
Canadiens hire Therrien
as their coach again
Astros pick another
SS to lead off 2nd day
Tommy Lasorda has
‘mild’ heart attack
9 jurors picked for
Sandusky abuse case
MONTREAL — Michel
Therrien is coach of the
Montreal Canadiens again, a
home-grown product who
rejoins a storied franchise that
fell to last place this season and
angered many Francophone
fans across Quebec over a previous coaching hire.
Therrien, a Montreal native,
succeeds Randy Cunneyworth.
He coached the Canadiens
from 2000 until he was replaced
by Claude Julien in 2003.
The announcement Tuesday
ended weeks of speculation.
NEW YORK — The
Houston Astros led off the
second day of the baseball
draft by selecting another
big-time shortstop.
With the initial pick of the
second round Tuesday, the
Astros took University of
Florida slick-fielding shortstop Nolan Fontana after
picking Carlos Correa of
Puerto Rico on Monday.
The team expects Correa
to play shortstop — but
acknowledged that he could
ultimately move to third.
NEW YORK — Hall of Fame
manager Tom Lasorda was
hospitalized in stable condition Tuesday, a day after having a “mild” heart attack while
representing the Los Angeles
Dodgers at the Major League
Baseball draft.
The Dodgers said doctors
inserted a stent to repair a
blocked artery in Lasorda’s
heart. The energetic, enthusiastic 84-year-old was resting comfortably and there
was a chance he could return
to California today.
BELLEFONTE, Pa. —
Connections to Penn State
weren’t necessarily keeping prospective jurors from
being chosen Tuesday to
decide former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky’s
fate on child sexual abuse
charges.
After nine of the 12 main
jurors were seated, their
ranks included a longtime
football season ticket holder,
a rising senior in the university, and a man with bachelor’s and master’s degrees.
COLLEGE SOFTBALL WS
SUE OGROCKI/The Associated Press
Alabama players cheer in the dugout in the first inning of
Tuesday’s second game of the NCAA Women’s College World Series
softball finals against Oklahoma in Oklahoma City. Oklahoma won
Monday’s opening contest of the best-of-three series, 4-1.
TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN
NHL: STANLEY CUP
Devils keep faith
despite 0-3 deficit
Djokovic, Federer
each have to rally
to set rematch
BY HOWARD FENDRICH
The Associated Press
PARIS — As the chilly evening air swirled, and raindrops
fell, and the thousands of spectators pulling for his opponent
hushed, Novak Djokovic stood
a single point from exiting the
French Open.
A single point from losing to
France’s Jo-Wilfried Tsonga in the
quarterfinals at Roland Garros.
A single point from losing
the chance to pursue a fourth
consecutive Grand Slam title,
something no man has done in
43 years.
Steeling himself with so
much at stake, Djokovic came
through, taking that crucial
point thanks to an overhead
that skimmed off the baseline
to set up a putaway volley.
Seconds later, he faced the same
predicament — one point from
defeat — and came through
again, this time with a leaping
forehand that barely landed in.
All told, Djokovic faced four
match points against Tsonga
and won each one, extending
the contest until seizing control for good.
Djokovic won his 26th Grand
Slam match in a row Tuesday,
coming back and beating the
fifth-seeded Tsonga, 6-1, 5-7, 57, 7-6 (6), 6-1, to set up a French
Open rematch against 16-time
major champion Roger Federer.
A year ago in the semifinals at
Roland Garros, Federer ended
Djokovic’s 43-match winning
streak, the last time the Serb
lost at one of tennis’ four most
important tournaments.
“Tennis is very mental. Lots
of emotions,” said the No. 1ranked Djokovic, who won
Wimbledon last July, the U.S.
Open last September, and the
Australian Open in January. “If
you’re playing a top player, a
home favorite, and you have a
crowd that’s supporting him,
you have to face these things.
Physically, we’re all fit, all hit-
IN COURT
BY GREG BEACHAM
The Associated Press
EL
SEGUNDO,
Calif.
— Although Martin Brodeur
seems likely to return next
season with the New Jersey
Devils, the 40-year-old goalie
also isn’t convinced their current season is over just yet.
While Brodeur acknowledges the enormity of New
Jersey’s plight in the Stanley
Cup finals, the three-time NHL
champion has been in plenty
of tight spots with teams playing a whole lot worse than
the Devils, who must beat the
Los Angeles Kings in Game 4
tonight to avoid elimination.
“When you know you’re playCHRISTOPHE ENA/The Associated Press
Novak Djokovic celebrates winning his quarter final match against JoWilfried Tsonga Tuesday. Djokovic won in five sets, 6-1, 5-7, 5-7, 7-6, 6-1.
ting the ball well. But mentally,
it’s just a matter of a point here,
a point there. That’s sport. The
one that mentally pushes more
in some moments — and gets a
bit lucky — gets the win.”
Federer also fashioned a
come-from-behind victory, and
while he never was confronted
with a match point, he did drop
the first two sets before getting past No. 9 Juan Martin del
Potro of Argentina, 3-6, 6-7 (4),
6-2, 6-0, 6-3.
NBA: PLAYOFFS
Thunder a win shy
of going to finals
BY JEFF LATZKE
The Associated Press
MLB: ROUNDUP
Martin hits slam,
Pettitte dominant
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — Go ahead,
call it what you want. It doesn’t
matter to Yankees manager Joe
Girardi. He’s pleased with his
team’s recent play however it’s
categorized.
Russell Martin hit a grand
slam to help stop the Yankees’
struggles with the bases loaded
and Andy Pettitte was dominant again at home, leading
New York to a 7-0 victory over
the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday
night.
Nick Swisher hit an RBI
double after Raul Ibanez was
walked intentionally and the
Yankees treated Rays starter
James Shields to another drubbing in the Bronx. Pettitte (3-2)
pitched two-hit ball for 7 1/3
innings, striking out 10 in New
York’s ninth win in 12 games.
“Whether it’s a streak or
it’s not a streak, I just like it,”
Girardi said of his team’s run
that has helped the Yankees
SETH WENIG/The Associated Press
move a season-high six games New York Yankees starting pitcher Andy Pettitte pumps his fist as
over .500.
he leaves the game during the eighth inning Tuesday night against
Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium.
ORIOLES 8, RED SOX 6 (10)
BOSTON — Ronny Paulino ended
a hitless night with an RBI single in
the 10th inning to drive in the goahead run and Baltimore hung on
over Boston.
The Orioles recovered from Jim
Johnson’s first blown save opportunity of the season when Jarrod
Saltalammachia hit a two-run homer
ing well and the results aren’t
there, it’s hard,” Brodeur said
after the Devils’ brief practice
Tuesday at the Kings’ training complex. “We’ve got these
breaks along the way to get
where we are, but even though
we’re working hard, we’re not
getting the breaks now.”
New Jersey faces the prospect of becoming the first
team swept out of the Cup
finals since 1998, but the
Eastern Conference champions realize how close this
series has been. Coach Peter
DeBoer echoes Brodeur’s feeling about New Jersey’s 0-3
deficit to the Kings, who could
win their franchise’s first title
on home ice in Game 4.
with two outs in the bottom of the
ninth to tie it 6-all and force extra
innings.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
PIRATES 8, REDS 4
CINCINNATI — Clint Barmes had
three hits and drove in three runs,
and Pittsburgh extended its home-
run tear by hitting three more for a
victory over Cincinnati .
Neil Walker hit a two-run homer,
and Casey McGehee and Alex Presley
had solo shots, giving the Pirates
seven homers in their last two
games.
A.J. Burnett (5-2) won his fourth
straight start.
OKLAHOMA CITY — Down
and nearly out less than a
week ago, the Oklahoma City
Thunder are riding a momentum shift to the brink of the
NBA finals.
With three straight wins, the
Thunder have changed the
conversation from how anyone can stop the San Antonio
Spurs’ record-setting 20game winning streak to how
Oklahoma City needs just
one win on its home court in
Game 6 tonight to play for the
NBA title.
Hundreds of fans waited in
the middle of the night for the
Thunder’s plane to land after
Game 5, and thousands more
will pack Chesapeake Energy
Arena to cheer Oklahoma City
on. Yet, coach Scott Brooks
urged Tuesday that riding the
momentum isn’t enough to
get the job done.
“We have a great opportunity, we’re on our home floor but
that doesn’t guarantee automatic victory,” Brooks said
during a day off at the team’s
practice facility. “They’re not
going to give us the game.”
WNBA
Pondexter leads Liberty
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEWARK, N.J. — Cappie
Pondexter scored 26 points
and Leilani Mitchell added 18
to help the New York Liberty to
a 79-74 victory over the Atlanta
Dream on Tuesday night.
The victory was the second
straight for the Liberty (2-5),
who started off the WNBA season with five straight losses.
Atlanta dropped to 2-4 after
losing its second straight.
HORSE RACING: THE BELMONT STAKES
I’ll Have Another’s jockey hits the heights in New York
BY BETH HARRIS
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Taking in the
Manhattan skyline from atop the
Empire State Building, Mario Gutierrez
was a long way from his small hometown near Veracruz, Mexico.
The 25-year-old jockey checked out
the view on a sunny Tuesday morning
in his first trip to the Big Apple. He’d
already visited the ride that got him
here, having stopped by Belmont Park
earlier to check on I’ll Have Another.
Gutierrez and the colt will try to win
the Triple Crown for the first time in
34 years on Saturday in the Belmont
RICHARD DREW/The Associated Press
Mario Gutierrez, jockey for Kentucky
Derby and Preakness winner I’ll Have
Another, looks over Manhattan from the
observation deck of New York’s Empire
State Building, Tuesday.
Stakes.
Standing 86 stories above the bustling city, Gutierrez smiled as a knot
of photographers closed tightly in on
him. “Mario, over here,” they shouted.
“Turn this way.” He happily obliged as
tourists craned their necks to see the
short guy who is the poised to become
the toast of the racing world.
Later, Gutierrez told trainer Doug
O’Neill about his adventure, admitting that he felt dizzy and joking
that the historic building was “2 or
3 inches higher” than the roof at
Pimlico where he won the Preakness
on May 19.
“I’m not huge on heights,” said
O’Neill, who skipped the photo op
and met up with his jockey on a rooftop overlooking Rockefeller Center.
“You get a little nervous hearing about
it.”
Gutierrez has been unflappable
since being thrust into the spotlight
with I’ll Have Another’s comeback win
in the Kentucky Derby on May 5.
“He’s handled the pressure well and
he knows his horse well,” former jockey Richard Migliore said. “He and the
horse both have a lot of confidence in
each other and that’s something that’s
critical to their success.”
Migliore plans to walk Belmont’s
11⁄2-mile course with Gutierrez on
Thursday, pointing out its sweeping
turns and long stretch that make the
layout different than the mile tracks
where most jockeys ride. Gutierrez is
scheduled to ride some races Friday
to get used to the conditions before
laying it on the line Saturday.
“Learn the poles, they’re very important,” said John Velazquez, who will be
aboard Union Rags in the Belmont.
“When you run in the Belmont, you
got to know where you are.”
Migliore said he’ll caution Gutierrez
not to be tricked into starting his
final drive too early or else I’ll Have
Another might not have enough left to
get through the 1,097-yard stretch.
4B
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED
HOROSCOPES for today
WEDNESDAY, June 6, 2012
In the year ahead, you’re likely
to sharpen your skills and take a
more active interest in a social
activity, sport or hobby. This won’t
be a frivolous pursuit, because
there’s a good chance it will be
linked in some manner to prosperity and/or popularity.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - You should guard against an
inclination to be too possessive or too demanding of your
loved ones. This type of behavior
usually has a tendency to push
others away, instead of drawing
them to you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Neither you nor your mate
should make any major decision
without first discussing it with the
other. If either of you take action
independently, it will only cause
problems.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Someone you dislike for no
particular reason doesn’t feel the
same way about you. Instead of
holding fast to this bias, give the
BRIDGE TIPS
person the benefit of the doubt
and get to know him or her better.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - If you give in to urges to take
a risk on an exciting someone,
there’s a good chance you could
back the wrong horse. It’s what’s
deep within this person that really counts, and chances are it
stinks.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -The possibilities for the kind of
independent operation you like
are very slim, mostly because
you’re likely to allow others to
make demands on your time. Try
to make some time for yourself,
as well.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
-- Don’t permit a past infraction
by another to totally distort your
thinking about him or her. Be
on guard, but allow this person
a second chance, just in case it
was one rare moment of indiscretion.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) -- A friend of yours who has
yet to return something that he
or she borrowed will put the bite
on you for another loan. Before
you accede, establish some strict
ground rules.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- Striving to make your mark
in the world is admirable, but not
if it’s done at the expense of others. Know the difference between
climbing and clawing your way
up to the top.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
-- Be careful about offering any
advice to others, even if asked.
If what you say is misunderstood
or misinterpreted, you could be
blamed for the asking party’s
failure.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -There is a negative situation that
you’ve had ample opportunity to
change but that you haven’t done
anything about. Unfortunately,
this opens the door for another
to walk in and alter it to his or her
liking.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- If an alliance that you established in the past didn’t work
out, think twice before getting
involved once again. Ask: was
it the team or the objective that
was at fault?
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
-- Just because a co-worker isn’t
in accord with your way of doing
things doesn’t mean you can’t
succeed. Don’t allow a disagreement between you to shut the
production down.
THETRICKS
WERE SQUASHED
TOGETHER
By Phillip Alder
Actress Cameron Diaz
said, “I can spend hours
in a grocery store. I get so
excited when I see food; I go
crazy. I spend hours arranging my baskets so that everything fits in and nothing gets
squashed.”
That’s weird! At the
bridge table, though, sometimes tricks get squashed.
In this deal, for example,
South, in four hearts, seemed
destined to lose two hearts,
one diamond and two clubs.
But bridge can be strange at
times. How did South get
home after West led the diamond king?
West used the Unusual
No-trump to show his minor
two-suiter. (After a strengthshowing
two-over-one
response by South, it would
have been illogical for West’s
overcall to show a strong
balanced hand, because
East would then have had
a Yarborough and two notrump doubled would have
gone down several tricks.)
Then West was right to pass,
especially given the unfavorable vulnerability. Here, five
diamonds (and five clubs)
doubled can be defeated by
three tricks, costing 800.
South won trick one with
his diamond ace and cashed
the ace and king of hearts.
With the 4-1 break
revealed, it was time to
score tricks with declarer’s
low trumps. South cashed
dummy’s top spades, ruffed
a spade, and led a diamond.
West took his queen and
could not do better than lead
another diamond. Declarer
ruffed on the board, trumped
another spade, played a club
to the ace, and ruffed the last
spade. South had taken two
spades, two hearts, one diamond, one club, three ruffs
in his hand and one ruff on
the board for 10 tricks.
KEYSWIDE
CLASSIFIEDS
000
®
230..............Help Wanted Middle Keys
240.................Help Wanted Upper Keys
ANNOUNCEMENTS
010....................................Public Notices
020............................Volunteers Wanted
030...............................................Travel
040.........................................Personals
050....................................Lost & Found
060..........................................Pets Found
100
SERVICES
110..............................Child/Adult Care
112...................................Money To Lend
120............................Private Instruction
130................................Mortgage Broker
200
EMPLOYMENT
210........................................Jobs Wanted
220...............Help Wanted Lower Keys
010 PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO
ADVERTISERS
In case of errors,
please check your ad
the first day it appears.
In the event of an error,
we are responsible for
the first incorrect insertion of an ad. The Citizen does not assume
responsibility for any
reason beyond the cost
of the ad itself.
CANCELLATIONS
All word ad rates are
placement fees and
non-refundable (for frequency days canceled).
Ads may be removed
from publication with
placement fee remaining.
CHANGES
Once an ad has been
placed only acceptable
minor changes can be
made to the ad.
300
400
RENTALS
MERCHANDISE
305......................................................Pets
310..................................Sporting Goods
315...............................................Bicycles
320..............................Household Goods
321...........................................Furniture
325...................................Miscellaneous
327...............................................Jewelry
329.....................................Yard Sale Map
330.......................Yard Sales Lower Keys
331.....................Yard Sales Middle Keys
332.......................Yard Sales Upper Keys
335...........................................Antiques
337....................................................Art
338...............................................Fine Art
340.........................Musical Instruments
345.........................................Appliances
350...............................Office Equipment
351.........................................Electronics
355....................................Wanted to Buy
402.......................................Roommates
404............................Rooms Lower Keys
406..........................Rooms Middle Keys
408............................Rooms Upper Keys
410...............Mobile Homes Lower Keys
412.............Mobile Homes Middle Keys
414...............Mobile Homes Upper Keys
416........Furnished Condos Lower Keys
417....Unfurnished Condos Lower Keys
418........................Condos Middle Keys
420..........................Condos Upper Keys
422............Furnished Apts. Lower Keys
424...........Furnished Apts. Middle Keys
426............Furnished Apts. Upper Keys
428................Unfurn. Apts. Lower Keys
430...............Unfurn. Apts. Middle Keys
432................Unfurn. Apts. Upper Keys
434.................Furn. Houses Lower Keys
436................Furn. Houses Middle Keys
438................Furn.. Houses Upper Keys
440.............Unfurn. Houses Lower Keys
442...........Unfurn. Houses Middle Keys
444.............Unfurn. Houses Upper Keys
446..............Wanted To Rent Lower Keys
448............Wanted To Rent Middle Keys
450..............Wanted To Rent Upper Keys
451.....................Mobile Home/RV Sites
452............Vacation Rentals Lower Keys
454..........Vacation Rentals Middle Keys
456............Vacation Rentals Upper Keys
458..............Vacation Rentals Elsewhere
460..........................Commercial Rentals
462.......................................Office Space
464...............................................Storage
513........................................Timeshares
514..........................Condos Lower Keys
516.........................Condos Middle Keys
518..........................Condos Upper Keys
520...........................Homes Lower Keys
522..........................Homes Middle Keys
524...........................Homes Upper Keys
Commercial
526......................Business Opportunity
528...............................Business Wanted
530.......................................Investments
532................................Income Property
534.......................Commercial Property
Other Real Estate
536...............Lots & Acreage Lower Keys
538.............Lots & Acreage Middle Keys
REAL ESTATE
540...............Lots & Acreage Upper Keys
542...............................Realty Elsewhere
Mobile Homes
502........................................ Lower Keys 544...................................Realty Wanted
504.......................................Middle Keys
506........................................Upper Keys
AUTOS/
508................................ Lots Lower Keys
510............................... Lots Middle Keys TRANSPORTATION
512................................ Lots Upper Keys Autos/Trucks
610................................................Trucks
Homes For Sale
500
600
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
sume either electronically
to [email protected] or
by mail to The President
of the Board, AIDS Help,
PO Box 4374, Key West,
FL 33041-4374, postmarked no later than
June 14. AIDS Help is an
Equal Opportunity Employer and drug free
workplace offering excellent employee benefits.
A-PLUS ROOFING
Help Wanted
Drivers License required
296-2568.
Busy Electrical
Contracting Company
Seeking an experienced
* Electrician and
* Electrician Helper
Applicant must have a
minimum of 5 years experience in residential
electrical wiring and service work, as well as reliable
transportation.
Please call 305-745-1551
FT RESERVATIONIST
Wed-Sun 9am-5pm. Individual must have an outgoing personality, with
good typing skills. Organizational skills and great
communication skills a
must. Spanish a plus but
not required. Apply in
person 219 Simonton
Street. Previous applicants need not apply.
FULL TIME - RETAIL
Days, Nights, Weekends,
Holidays
Souvenir Gift Shop
2 weeks paid vacation
Benefits available.
$10.00 hr plus
commission.
INN AT KEY WEST
MAINTENANCE
MANAGER
Must be CPO Certified.
Must
speak
English.
Flexible hours. Apply in
person 3420 North Roosevelt Blvd.
PLEASE APPLY IN
PERSON
207 Simonton St.
Apply Mon.-Fri. 8:30am
to 4:00pm
LOCAL APPLICANTS
ONLY, PLEASE
EOE/DFW
GALLEON RESORT
A gold crown timeshare
resort is seeking a high
energy customer friendly
Front Desk Agent for a
fulltime position. Weekends are a must. English
speaking,
experience
preferred. Salary determined by experience. Excellent
paid
medical
benefit package plus vacation. Please apply in
person to Galleon Resort, 617 Front St. Key
West, Fl. 33040.
INSURANCE
Local Insurance Agency
looking for a Customer
Service Rep. to assist
clients. Experience with
insurance needed. 440
License preferred. Email
resume to:
[email protected]
AQUA BEACHWEAR
(714 Duval St.) Hiring
exp. energetic, professional Sales Associates.
Must be available
days, eves, weekends.
Call Rose 292-9300.
BOAT CAPTAIN
White Knuckle Jet Boats.
Masters Captain’s
license required. Call after 1pm. (305)797-0459
CABINET SHOP
Looking
for
cabinet
maker and helper. Young
energetic,
hardworker.
AIDS HELP
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR Drug Free Workplace.
Applicants must have Call 305-393-0707.
Masters Degree in related field and a miniCarpet, Tile and
mum of 5 years experiUpholstery Cleaner
ence in senior manageneeded for busy comment position. Profespany. Must be flexible,
sional experience in senmust be 21 with good
ior management position
driving record, experimay be substituted for
ence preferred. Call
the Masters degree. If
305-879-1563
you have the required
skills and education then
CONCH FLYER
download the application
RESTAURANT
Accepting applications
from:
for all positions. Apply in
aidshelp.cc/employment.html
person at KW Airport.
and submit with a re220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
Front Desk Agents
Bell/Valet Attendant
Great pay and benefits.
KW’s friendliest staff and working environment.
Apply in person at Zero Duval.
374349
LEARN THE KEYS INSIDE OUT!
Home Delivery Manager
The Key West Citizen has an opening for the
Home Delivery Manager position. The ideal
candidate will have proven management and
leadership skills, strong communication and
customer service skills, experience with
Microsoft Office and possess reliable
transportation. Applicants should also have
a flexible schedule as some nights and
weekends are required.
Primary Responsibilities:
*Interact with customers and carriers to
ensure paper delivery
*Develop promotional programs to
increase circulation
*Track and improve carrier performance
Circulation is a fun, fast-paced, customer
oriented department with many facets to
keep the job interesting. The Citizen offers
a competitive compensation package, 401k
and health insurance available for full-time
employees.
Applications available at The Key West Citizen,
3420 Northside Dr. or Email resume to:
[email protected]
375140
CONCH TOUR TRAIN
is now looking for positive and dependable people to sell Conch Tour
Train tickets .We offer a
401-K Plan, medical/dental/life insurance, paid
vacation and sales incentives. Apply in person at
1805 Staples Ave., Suite
#101 Monday through
Friday between the hours
of 9:00 a.m. & 3:30 p.m.
E.O.E. and Drug Free
Workplace
CROWNE PLAZA
Key West - La Concha
*Southernmost House
Mansion Innkeeper
Customer friendly and
detail oriented. Previous
Supervisory B&B/Front
Desk experience required. Preferred experience with Room Master.
*Staff Accountant
Excel Exp. Required.
Previous accounting experience necessary.
*Starbucks Barista
Previous Starbucks experience preferred. Must
be able to communicate
in English and willing to
work all shifts.
*Bartender
Experience preferred,
must be available for all
shifts.
*Maintenance
Must be able to work all
shifts, previous maintenance experience preferred. MUST be able to
communicate in English.
*Room Attendants
Experience is preferred,
must be able to handle
high volume
*Houseaide
Experience is preferred,
must be able to handle
high volume, full time.
Apply in person at:
430 Duval St.
M-F, 10am-3pm
EOE/M/F/V/D
Drug Free Workplace
Experienced
Carpenters &
Construction Workers
Needed for stilt home installation in Cudjoe Key.
Must have own transportation. (305)401-0372
F/T Reservations Agent
Pier House Resort is
looking for a Reservations Agent. Detail orientated and computer skills
a must. Current, strong,
stable, verifiable exp. required. English Fluency
a must. Excellent benefits package, meal &
parking available.
EOE, M/F/D/V.
Drug Free Workplace.
Apply:
H/R Dept. One Duval St.
M-F, 10am to 4pm.
HOME DELIVERY
CARRIER
The Key West Citizen is
currently accepting
applications for a
Home Delivery Carriers
in Key West. This is an
Independent Contractor
position where contractor
will be required to deliver
papers before 6am 7
days a week to all home
delivery subscribers on
the assigned route. All
routes take approx. 4
hours to complete. Pay
rate is per paper delivered and contractors are
paid weekly. Contractor
is responsible for providing own transportation
and must have valid driver’s license and insurance. Contractor is
responsible for
all expenses.
Please apply in person at
3420 Northside Drive,
Key West, FL 33040
or email:
[email protected]
HOUSEKEEPER
Premier Boutique Hotel is
seeking
experience
Housekeeper to join our
team. Successful candidates must have Extreme
attention to detail and
positive attitude. Excellent starting salary and
benefits plus generous
tips. We expect the best
to provide our guest the
best in service and cleanest. English speaking
only. Apply in person
11am till 2pm The Gardens Hotel, 526 Angela.
KEY WEST
ORTHOPEDICS
is looking for experienced
persons for Front Desk,
Physical Therapy Assistant, and MA/Phlebotomist. Must have strong
people skills and Spanish
speaking a plus. Please
call Linda 305-295-9797
or fax resume 305-9796.
MAINTENANCE
Full time position available at Old Town Trolley
of Key West. Applicants
must be reliable and mechanically inclined, and
have a valid driver's license. Position will include general cleaning
and maintenance. Apply
in person at 122 Simonton St, Key West. EOE &
Drug Free Workplace.
MONROE COUNTY
SHERIFF’S OFFICE
Maintenance
Supervisor
Monroe County Sheriff’s
Office is accepting applications for a Maintenance Supervisor. 4 yr
technical
degree
or
equivalent and/or experience in Facility or maintenance mgt. w/supervisory experience. Pre applications must be completed and received by
June 20, 2012. Applicants may apply online at
www.keysso.net or contact Suzanne Alexander
at
[email protected]
or 292-7044. EEO/AAP.
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
615..................................Auto Financing
620....................................Autos For Sale
622.....................................SUVs For Sale
625.....................................Classic Autos
630....................................Autos Wanted
640..........................................Auto Parts
645.............................Heavy Equipment
Recreation
650.............................................Scooters
652.......................................Motorcycles
654....................................Travel Trailers
656............................................Campers
658...........................RVs/Motor Homes
660....................................Marine Needs
661....................................Marine Parts
662.......................................Powerboats
664............................................Sailboats
665.......................................Houseboats
667.........................................Misc. Boats
669.............................Dockage/Storage
670.............................................Aviation
900
LEGALS
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
MEDICAL OFFICE
MAINTENANCE
TRAINEES NEEDED!
PERSON
Train to become a
Fulltime position. Must
work weekends, plumb- Medical Office Assistant!
ing, electrical, HVAC ex- No Experience needed!
Job Training & Local
perience
necessary.
Placement assistance
Must be able to read and
thru SC Training.
write English. Prior expeHS Diploma/GED &
rienced and hospitality a
PC/Internet needed!
plus. Apply in person
1-888-778-0456
1500 Alberta St. Key
West.
ROOSTICA WOOD
FIRED PIZZERIA
OFFICE ASSISTANT
F/T position, strong MS is now accepting appliWord & Excel required. cations for the following
Experienced
Self-starter
able
to positions:
multi-task in a fast paced bartenders, wait staff,
environment
required. host, line cook, pizza
Duties include respond- maker,dishwashers, bus
Scheduled to
ing to visitors on phone, person.
in person, & general of- open July 1st. All applifice skills. Opportunity for cants must be experian experienced individual enced and have referwho is organized, de- ences. Download applipendable, articulate, and cation at Roostica.com
e-mail
to
enthusiastic.
Apply in and
person:
Key
West [email protected],
Chamber of Commerce, or apply in person at
510 Greene Street 1st 5620 MacDonald Avenue, Stock Island, FlorFloor.
ida. For additional inforPAINTERS NEEDED
mation
call
Experience
preferred. 305-296-4999.
Must have car/truck. Call
Technical Maintenance
305-360-2137.
Position
Full time position availPOSITIONS
able. Must have knowlAVAILABLE
edge
in
commercial,
at
and
kitchen
*WESTIN KEY WEST* laundry
equipment.
Apply
at
*SUNSET KEY*
*WEATHER STATION* Southernmost Hotel Collection, 1319 Duval St.
*AND BANANA BAY*
Westin
*Front Desk Agent
*Painter
*Security Guard
Overnight Shift
*Boat Captain Overnight
Shift
Weatherstation Inn
*Room Attendant
+ Previous applicants
need not apply again.
+ Application hours are
from 9am to 3:30pm.
+Can also apply on-line
to:
TGI Friday's Is Under
New Management
And Hiring Experienced
FOH and BOH Staff. Apply in Person Only 9Am
to 11Am Or 3PM to 5PM
Monday
Thru
Friday
2710 N. Roosevelt Blvd.
The Inn At Key West
is currently accepting
applications for the
following positions:
* Room Attendent
* Station Cook
* Pool Server
* Restaurant Server
[email protected]
Drug Free Work Place An Equal Opportunity
Employer
Apply in Person
245 Front Street,
Key West, FL 33040
Tel: 305-294-4000
Fax: 305-292-4348
Retail Sales Position
Experienced retail sales
person needed, hourly
wage plus commission,
apply in person.
719 Duval Street.
RON JON SURF SHOP
Key West
Seeking Sales Associates with flexible schedule, willing & able to work
nights & weekends.
Previous Sales Associate
& Customer service skills
helpful!
Full benefits offered
To apply please visit
www.ronjonsurfshop.com
or send resume to
[email protected]
DFWP/EOE
Must speak English
Please Apply
in person 3420 N.
Roosevelt Blvd.
EOE
TIMMY TUXEDO’S
Looking for Assistant.
Apply in person
812 Fleming St.
POSITION FILLED
WYLAND GALLERIES
102 DUVAL
Looking for
2 Experienced Sales
Person willing to work
and earn what they are
worth. We offer:
* Health benefits
* 401 K
* Paid vacation
* $500 sign on bonus
*Commissions up to 15%
* Cash Spiff
* Advancement
Opportunities
Come in and apply
mornings. Ask for Andy
305-294-5240
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
LANDSCAPER
Fulltime position. Must
work weekends. Prior experience in landscaping a
plus. Apply in person
1500 Alberta St., Key
West.
321 FURNITURE
5 PIECED FREE
STANDING
BOOKSHELVES
Center console w/storage
$400. 3 captain chairs,
wood and wrought iron,
cushion seat and back
$125 piece. 1 buffet all
wood $200, 1 antique tea
table wood
$150.
305-393-5675.
325 MISCELLANEOUS
Red Power Chair From
The Scooter Store. Perfect
condition,
never
used, Easy to operate
with charger. $999. Call
295-8303.
402 ROOMMATES
FURNISHED ROOM,
NEW TOWN .
$900/mo 305-923-9945
404 ROOMS
LOWER KEYS
Clean Old Town
Rooms
$230 to $320 /wk.
Roommate $135 AA/NA
pref. 1 wk dep. 4 wk min.
Own entrance, own bath,
double or single bed,
a/c, cable TV, W/D,
WIFI. Sec. cam, No
drugs, alcohol. Sorry no
pets. 305-395-8731
716 DUVAL ST.
HEARTBREAK HOTEL
Stay in the heart of Old
Town. Beautifully furnished, immaculately
clean, full kitchens, tile
baths, cable TV &
cold A/C. Starting at
$349/week + tax or
$99/night - 2 night min.
305-296-5558
www.heartbreakhotel.org
410 MOBILE HOMES
LOWER KEYS
$1000 MOVES YOU IN
$900/mo. 1BR-Lakefront
Pool,
laundry. MM19
Dave 305-797-5184
2BR/1BA
Stock Island , very clean,
$1,250 month plus util.
(305)797-0360.
416 FURN CONDOS
LOWER KEYS
SMATHERS BEACH
1 & 2 bedroom fully furnished condos on 8
acres of gated seclusion,
2 pools & tennis courts.
All you need are clothes
and groceries. Available
for 6 to 9 month leases.
Monthly rates range from
$1,250 to $1,750. Utilities included.
Gale Shepard
305-294-6069
SUNSET MARINA
2/2 gated luxury waterfront condo, storage &
boat slip. Long term.
$2,800. Available now.
305-213-5457 or
305-785-7009
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
20 Likelihood
21 Prickly
seedcase
22 -- and cry
23 Pungent
bulb
26 Wild blue -29 Quaker
colonist
30 Voting
district
31 Tunnel
33 Double
curve
34 Klutz’s cry
35 Hornet kin
36 Pancake
orders
38 Titled ladies
39 Visualize
40 Yes, on the
ACROSS
Riviera
1 Doorframe 41 -- Hari
part
43 Wall Street
5 Question
denizen
starter
46 Very hungry
8 Shout of
48 Currier and
delight
-12 Mishmash
50 Old Crosby
13 Holm or
tune
Fleming
51 Med. plan
14 Teacup
52 Faint, with
handles
“over”
15 Expert
53 Spotted
16 Spring flower
animal
18 Dented
54 FICA
number
55 Memorial
Day race
ANSWER GRID FOR 6/5/2012 CROSSWORD
5B
KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED
DOWN
1 Work out
2 Grad
3 Actress -Sorvino
4 Kentucky
whiskey
5 More
sensible
6 Glove filler
7 Yoko -8 Kind of bliss
9 Like a rock
10 Winged god
11 Psychic
power
17 Injury
19 Kennel
feature
22 -- d’oeuvre
23 Unseal,
poetically
24 Loch -monster
25 Part of MIT
26 Barks shrilly
27 Red-waxed
cheese
28 Greet the
dawn
30 Heard the
alarm
32 All-purpose
MDs
34 Cruise
setting
35 Oahu beach
37 Behind, on
a ship
38 Twosome
40 Welles or
Bean
41 One of the
Three Bears
42 State openly
43 Mooches
44 Neck and
neck
45 Sax
mouthpiece
46 U.K. fliers
47 Mild
interjections
49 Cagey
WOMAN WHO’S HAPPILY SINGLE WANTS TO
KEEP IT THAT WAY
DEAR ABBY: I’m a 28-year-old,
newly single female who has never
been happier. I’ve had a couple of longterm relationships that didn’t turn out
well, so my quiet, uncomplicated life
is refreshing. All I’m looking for now is
to make new friends and enjoy
myself.
A few guys have asked me
for my phone number -- usually
through social networking -- and
have suggested getting together
for a couple of drinks. As nice
as that would be, the last thing I
want to do is lead anyone on or
give him the wrong impression.
When I do decide to start looking,
it will be for no one less than my
Prince Charming, and I don’t regard
any of these men as that. Going out
with girlfriends is hard because they’re
mostly married with children.
What and when is the best way
to tell guys that, as much as I enjoy
their company, I am looking only
for friendship at this time? I live in
a relatively small town, so going out
with different men on a regular basis
gives people the wrong idea about
me. -- WANTS ONLY FRIENDSHIP IN
MICHIGAN
DEARWANTS ONLY FRIENDSHIP:
I understand your feelings, but please
allow me to point out that meeting
Prince Charming can be an accident of
luck and timing. In addition to that, he
doesn’t always come dashing forth on
a white horse -- sometimes it’s an old
clunker.
If you announce to any man who
asks you out for a couple of drinks
that you’re interested only in friendship,
he will interpret it as rejection, so I
don’t advise you to make that your
lead sentence. A better retort might
be that rather than going out for
drinks, you’d prefer to start with coffee
and conversation. Who knows? The
longer he talks, the more attractive
he may become. Stranger things have
happened.
DEAR ABBY: My 20-year-old
daughter, “Roxanne,” is attending
college in a big city known for
its crime rate, unemployment
and despair. She lives alone in
an apartment just off campus.
She’s a smart girl, careful and
cautious, but I still worry about
her to the point of sleepless
nights and a general feeling of
“when” something will happen
-- not if.
Roxanne’s apartment was
broken into last Christmas. Thankfully,
she wasn’t there at the time. Since then,
my worry has intensified -- especially if
I don’t hear from her for a few hours. We
usually text or call each other at least
once a day. If I don’t hear from her, I
panic.
My husband calls me a professional
worrier and says I need to trust that our
daughter is safe. I don’t think I’ll ever
NOT worry about her, and the truth is
I really want her to move back home. I
realize this would be counterproductive
to her achieving success, but I don’t
know how to let go of the worry. I need
advice, Abby. Is this just a “mom thing”
or should I seek help? -- HALF-CRAZED
MOM IN MICHIGAN
DEAR MOM: It’s a “mom thing”
taken to the extreme. One of the reasons
that children go away to college is so
they -- and their parents -- can learn to
live independently from each other. For
you to expect your daughter to call or
text you at least once a day feeds your
dependence on her. It appears you suffer
from a case of parental hypervigilance
-- and yes, for both your sakes, you
should seek professional help.
416 FURN CONDOS
LOWER KEYS
428 UNFURNISHED
APTS. LOWER KEYS
428 UNFURNISHED
APTS. LOWER KEYS
440 UNFURN. HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
440 UNFURN. HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
440 UNFURN. HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
440 UNFURN. HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
440 UNFURN. HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
2BR/1BA CONDOS
Smathers Beach, Shipyard & Golf Club. Furnished or unfurnished.
$1500 to $1800 month.
All have pools & secured
parking. Gale Shepard,
Broker (305)294-6069
ON THE WATER
$975/ Month
1BR/1BA apt. Central
A/C, newly painted, balcony, overlooking the water, Big Coppitt Key,
$975 F/L/S utilities. No
dogs. Cabana Realty,
Inc. 294-6259.
Large 1BR, Old Town
2nd floor. A/C, ceiling
fans, wood floors.
Walk to grocery, quiet.
$1425/mo 305-294-3061
AT HOME KEY WEST
305-296-7975
Pictures and more
properties at
3/2 townhome w/
enclosed porch off
Master BR; new paint &
new carpet; pets considered; available NOW;
$2100/mo plus utilities.
Pets considered; Available Mid-June. $2400/mo
plus utilities
TOWNHOUSE
2BR/1.5BA
3222 EAGLE AVE
No pets, no smoking,
fenced yard, $1600 + util,
F/L/S 305-304-1654
Please leave message.
SUPER SPACIOUS
Large 4 bdrm house in
Little Torch Key. Available now. $2,100/mo +
sec.
deposit
Call
305-797-1663
3BR/2BA Waterfront
Half-Duplex
7 Diamond Dr., Big Coppitt. 1560 s.f., 60' dock.
Newer appliances and
mechanicals. $2,500/mo.
incl. elec., water/sewer.
Call 216-682-5047
All real estate advertising in this
newspaper
is
subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based
on race, color, religion, sex or
national origin, or an intention
to make any such preference
limitation or discrimination.”
This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising
for real estate which is in violation or the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all
dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis.
417 UNFURN.CONDOS
LOWER KEYS
LAS SALINAS 3/2
W/D, available now. F/S
$1,800/mo.
The Taporowski Team
Realty Executives
Florida Keys
305-292-1922
420 CONDOS
UPPER KEYS
PLANTATION BY
THE SEA CONDO
Apartment for rent.
$1,300 mo. Available
June 1st. F/L/S.
305-852-5097.
422 FURNISHED APTS.
LOWER KEYS
CLEAN 1BR
OLD TOWN KW
Mo. to mo., full kitchen,
W/D, $1,300 + util,
$1,300 deposit.
Sorry no pets, Avail 5/28.
305-295-9000.
LARGE 2BR/2BA
Central A/C, W/D, close
to
beaches, 6 or 12
month
lease. $2,200
6mo., $2,000 12 mo. Military
discount.
F/L/S.
394-1758.
1223 White Street
Deluxe 2br/2ba unit, with
central air, tile floors,
shared W/D $1650 + util.
Must qualify for KW
Workforce Income Caps.
Everett Watkins
Preferred Properties
305-304-4269
KEY WEST REALTY
Management Group
305-294-RENT (7368)
www.keywestrealty.com
CASA MARINA
Spacious 3/2 apt.
W/D, shared courtyard
$2175/mo. + utils. F/S/S
1 LARGE BEDROOM
W/D, A/C, on the water,.
Bay Point. $1,400 everything included. F/L and
$1,000 sec. dep.
305-797-8848,
305-748-8149.
PENTHOUSE APT.
DUVAL STREET
Luxury 2BR/2BA, approx
1500 sf with large
balcony overlooking
Duval St. $4500/mo.
Ralph, Century 21
(305)304-0090
509 WHITEHEAD
STREET
2/1, beautiful remodel, all
new appliances, W/D,
non smoking, pets ok.
$1700 mo. F/L/S.
305-294-8146
305-304-3787
2BR/1BA DUPLEX
Good for couple, quiet
neighborhood. No pets.
A/C, ceiling fans. $1,300,
$1,000 sec. 2515 Staples
Ave. rear. 296-6178.
434 FURNISHED HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
4/3 POOL, FURNISHED
Private compound
$4,500 mo. 12 mo. lease
Short term avail.
305-296-7686
http://home.allkw.com
for info.
SUMMER RENTALS
1 to 5 Bedrooms,
1 to 6 months.
$1,100--$5,000/mth
Call Historic Hideaways:
305.294.RENT
See all properties/prices
online @
www.HistoricHideaways.com
www.athomekeywest.com
OLD TOWN
2/2.5 updated home w/
pool; Central AC, w/d,
pets considered;
Available August;
$3000/mo + Utils & pool
1/1 upstairs apartment
Located in heart of Old
Town. Avail July
$1,200/ mo plus electric
MID TOWN
2/2 Single family home
w/ mother-in-law cottage,
Covered patio, pool,
OSP, central AC; Pets
considered; Avail June
$3,200/mo plus utilities,
yard & pool
2/2 condo with beach
access; Shared pool &
tennis. Pets considered;
Avail NOW
$2,300/mo plus utilities
NEW TOWN
2/1.5 townhome; central
AC; Pets considered;
available June;
$1850/month plus utilities
Furnished efficiency apt
w/ private entrance; No
pets. Suitable for one
person. Available August;
$895/mo. utils included
CANAL FRONT 2/2
Big Coppitt, fully furnished duplex. Sorry, no
pets. F/L/S $1,750/mo.
plus utilities.
KEY WEST GOLF CLUB
The Taporowski Team
2/2 townhome w/ central
Realty Executives
AC, w/d, pets
Florida Keys
considered; available
305-292-1922
June; $1800/mo + utils.
Large townhome w/ 2
master BR suites, W/D,
central air, private pool.
Pets Considered. Available NOW. $2200/month
plus utilities & pool
4/3 townhome w/ first
floor bedroom & bath;
Pets considered; available NOW. $2450/mo
Plus utilities.
Spacious 3/2.5
townhome w/ 1st flr den;
Private pool; large
screened deck; central
AC; W/D; pets
considered. Available
July; $2400/mo plus pool
and utilities.
3/2 townhome with 2
decks; central AC;
W/D; pets considered;
Available July;
$2300/mo plus utilities.
BIG COPPITT
Beautiful furnished canal
home w/ pool, central
AC, washer/ dryer, double lot. Pets considered.
Available NOW.
$2,950/mo + Utils & pool.
Roomy, 3/2 home on
canal w/ open Water
view; boat ramp,
Garage, w/d, Central air;
3/2 stilt home on canal w/
pool; Enclosed lower
level; covered parking,
Central AC; Pets Considered; Available June;
$2300/mo + pool & utils
3/2 canal home; covered
parking; central AC;
W/D; roof deck; screened
porches; workshop;
Pets considered;
Available July; $2150/mo
plus utils.
COMPASS REALTY
305-292-1480
Unfurnished Homes
See pictures & more
properties @
www.athomekeywest.com
AT HOME IN
KEY WEST
296-7975
3 BR 2 Bath stilt home
on Stock Island.
$1800/mo, plus utilities.
F/L/S. Avail. now. Call
Ken @ 305.393.9263.
SUMMERLAND
Unfurnished, 3BD, 2BA
$2,000, canal, FLS.
Cudjoe Furnished 2/2
canal, $1,800 FLS
Florida Keys Realty, Inc.
305-745-3717
OLD TOWN COTTAGE
Avail 7/1 great location,
nice living area, kitchen,
bath, and big sleep loft.
Share pool and laundry,
no pets. $1,275 includes
util. (305)304-2929.
Golf Club - Conch
townhome. 2b/2b $2000
available July
Long Term Only
Beach Condo 2b/2b
$2500. Water view. Available July, long term only.
Furnished Homes
Golf Club-Bungalow
townhome 2b/1.5b
$1800 available now,
long-term only
Golf Club-Conch
townhome 2b/2.5b
$1900 available now,
short-term
WET SLIPS AVAILABLE
FOR LONG-TERM
MONTHLY RENTAL
Call Compass Realty
for an appt. 292-1480
or 888-884-7368
www.compass-realty.com
318281
460 COMMERCIAL
RENTALS
PENTHOUSE OFFICE
DUVAL STREET
Luxury office approx.
1500 sf, with
large balcony overlooking
Duval St. $4500/mo.
Ralph, Century 21
(305)304-0090
462 OFFICE SPACE
SMALL OFFICES
FOR RENT
Starting at $600.
Conference room included. Rent the whole
building for $3,600.
305-296-7686
http://office.allkw.com
LEGAL NOTICES
CALL FOR BIDS
INVITATION FOR BID
FACIAS, SOFFITS, GUTTERS,
DOWNSPOUTS, AND TRIM
at George Allen Apartments
Procurement Number KWHA
12-B-054
The Key West Housing Authority
will receive sealed bids to remove
and replace; facias, soffits,
gutters,
and downspouts and install trim at
George Allen Apartments until
4:30 PM on June 29, 2012, at
1400 Kennedy Drive, Key West,
Florida, 33040. Applicants who
fail to submit by the deadline of
the
submission date will be deemed
non-responsive. Bid documents
are available at the Key West
Housing Authority, 1400 Kennedy
Drive, Key West, Florida. There
will be a pre-bid conference at the
site at 10:00 am on June 11, 2012.
Information concerning
preparation of your bid can be
obtained by contacting Larry Keys
at the Housing Authority, (305)
296-5621 or [email protected].
The Key West Housing Authority
reserves the right to reject any or
all bids or to waive any
informalities in the bidding, and to
award to any party considered to
be in the best interest of the Key
West Housing Authority.
BID GUARANTEE IS REQUIRED.
ASSURANCE OF COMPLETION
IS REQUIRED IF THE BID
EXCEEDS $100,000.00.
SEALED SUBMITTALS should be
addressed as follows:
CALL FOR BIDS
CALL FOR BIDS
INVITATION FOR BID FOR
EXTERIOR REPAIRS
GEORGE ALLEN APARTMENTS
BID # KWHA 12-B-054
ATTN: PROCURMENT DIVISION
CONTRACT: LAWN
MAINTENANCE SERVICES
Provide all labor, materials,
equipment, and services to
perform and complete lawn
maintenance for Marathon
Housing Authority properties in
accordance with the Specifications
for Lawn Maintenance.
If bids are delivered by courier
service, a SEALED OUTER
envelope marked “INVITATION
FOR BID FOR GEORGE ALLEN
APARTMENTS” is required.
By: J. Manuel Castillo, Sr.
Executive Director
The Key West Housing Authority
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY OWNER
June 6, 10, 14, 2012
INVITATION FOR BID
LAWN MAINTENANCE
SERVICES
No. MHA-12-B-001
The Marathon Housing
Associates, Marathon, Florida
(MHA) will receive sealed bids on
the following contract to perform
Lawn Maintenance Services until
12:00 Noon on June 20, 2012 at
240 Sombrero Beach Rd.
Marathon, FL 33050 at which time
and place, all bids will be publicly
opened and read. The initial
contract will be from August 01,
2012 through December 31, 2012
with the possibility of two
additional one year extensions.
Bids received after the submission
deadline will be deemed
non-responsive.
Proposed forms of bid documents
will be on file as of May 30, 2012
at the Eastwind Apartments
located at 240 Sombrero Beach
Rd. Marathon, FL 33050 and the
Housing Authority of the City of
Key West, Florida, 1400 Kennedy
Drive, Key West, Florida and may
be picked up from the front desk
between the hours of 8 am and 12
noon, and 1 pm and 5 pm.,
Monday through Friday or via
electronic mail ([email protected])
upon request. Any inquiries or
requests concerning
interpretation,
clarification, information
concerning access to the site, or
additional information pertaining to
the BID shall be made to William A
Sing, via e-mail at
[email protected].
CALL FOR BIDS
General Liability Insurance
Certificate to MHA in an amount
not less than $500,000, and the
following types of insurance's are
to be in force: Worker's
Compensation, Automobile
Liability for all Vehicles/Equipment
to be used in the work, and any
other types required when
performing work of this nature.
The contractor must have a
current occupational and trade
license required by local
ordinances.
The Marathon Housing
Associates, Marathon, Florida,
reserves the right to reject any or
all bids or to waive any
informalities in the bidding, and to
award to any party considered to
be in the best interest of the
Marathon Housing Associates.
Submittals should be addressed
as follows:
INVITATION FOR BID FOR
LAWN MAINTENANCE
SERVICES
BID # MHA-12-B-001
THE MARATHON HOUSING
ASSOCIATES, MARATHON,
FLORIDA
240 SOMBRERO BEACH RD,
MARATHON, FL 33050
Attention is called to the
provisions
for equal opportunity and payment
of not less than the minimum
salaries and wages, as set forth in
the bid documents, which must be
paid on this project.
If bids are submitted by courier
service, a sealed interior envelope
marked “INVITATION FOR BID
FOR LAWN MAINTENANCE
SERVICES” is required.
Prior to the start of the work, the
successful bidder must furnish a
No bid shall be withdrawn for a
period of forty-five (45) days
CALL FOR BIDS
subsequent to the opening of the
bids without the consent of the
Marathon Housing Associates,
Marathon, Florida 33050.
By: J. Manuel Castillo, Sr.
Executive Director
The Marathon Housing
Associates, Marathon,, Florida
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
May 30, June 2 & 6, 2012
FICTITIOUS NAMES
FICTITIOUS NAME
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
the undersigned desiring to
engage in a business under the
fictitious name Bike Man Bike
Rental located at 314 Peacon
Lane, Key West, Florida 33040,
intends to register the said name
with the Florida Department of
State, Tallahassee, Florida.
DATED this 1st day of June, 2012
Sole Owner:
Sobocycle LLC
65-1133705
June 6, 2012
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE
PURSUANT TO the provision of
Chapter 194.035(1) of the Florida
Statutes, the Clerk of the Value
Adjustment Board is now
accepting applications from
individuals who are willing and
qualified to serve as Special
Magistrate for the purpose of
PUBLIC NOTICE
taking testimony and making
recommendations to the Board.
“A special magistrate appointed
to hear issues of exemptions and
classifications shall be a member
of The Florida Bar with no less
than 5 years' experience in the
area of ad valorem taxation. A
special magistrate appointed to
hear issues regarding the
valuation of real estate shall be a
state certified real estate appraiser
with not less than 5 years'
experience in real property
valuation. A special magistrate
appointed to hear issues
regarding
the valuation of tangible personal
property shall be a designated
member of a nationally recognized
appraiser's organization with not
less than 5 years' experience in
tangible personal property
valuation.”
All applicants must complete
the
Florida Department of Revenue's
Value Adjustment Board Training
to qualify for serve.
Please forward resume to:
Danny L. Kolhage
Clerk to the Value
Adjustment Board
PO Box 1980
Key West FL 33041-1980
*Deadline for submission is
June 29, 2012
June 6 & 10, 2012
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 2012
KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED
59%
plan shopping or make purchasing
decisions in the past 7 days.
FloridaKeysCommercial.com
80% of newspaper readers report
looking at advertising when reading the paper.
2001 TOYOTA TUNDRA
All power, leather, runs
great. Good work truck.
$6,800.
Call (305)797-6900
610 TRUCKS
Scarborough Research 2008 • How America Shops and Spends/MORI Research 2009
If you are
NOT
Ask Terry
Shimp
how to catch the
advertising
attention of
in The Citizen Key West Citizen
it’s like fishing
readers.
without
bait!
Call
Te r r y at
292-7777x214
620 AUTOS FOR SALE
KEY WEST KIA
3424 N. Roosevelt Blvd.
Key West, FL 33040
620 AUTOS FOR SALE
2010 GMC Canyon
Regular cab, auto, a/c,
5K miles.
Take Over Payments.
2008 Chevrolet
Uplander LS
7 pass, dual a/c, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd
$13,995
2010 Ford Escape XLT
SUV with AWD, p/w, p/s,
am/fm/cd.
$17,875
2011 Nissan 370Z
Convertible
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l.
Only 1551 miles.
$34,995
2005 Mitsubishi Eclipse
GT
5 speed, a/c, leather,
sunroof, 90K miles.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2011 Dodge Nitro
Auto, a/c,
Only 5,777 miles
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2004 Dodge Ram
Regular cab, auto, a/c,
52K miles.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2001 Ford Explorer
Sport Trac
4 door, a/c, auto.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2006 Toyota Corolla LE
Auto, a/c, 74K miles.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2010 Toyota Camry
XLE
Fully loaded, 18K miles
Bank Repo,
Take Over Payments
2006 Nissan Sentra
Auto, a/c, 45K miles.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2008 Nissan Quest
Auto, a/c, DVD,
full power, 34K miles
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2008 Honda Pilot
Auto, a/c, 90K miles
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2011 Honda Pilot
Fully loaded, 15K miles.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2005 Honda Civic
Hybrid
Auto, a/c, 4 door.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2012 Kia Optima EX
Auto, a/c, leather,
9K miles.
Bank Repo
Take Over Payments
2009 Kia Optima LX
Auto, a/c, 32K miles.
Bank Repo
Take Over Payments
2010 Kia Soul
Auto, a/c,. 37K miles.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2008 Kia Sedona
Auto, a/c, 53K miles
$12,995 $15,995.
305-295-8646
*Manager Specials*
2003 Chevrolet Tahoe
Auto, a/c, 87K miles
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
2005 Chrysler PT
Cruiser
Auto, a/c, 63K miles.
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
FIND THE RIGHT
HOME FOR YOUR
FAMILY
Catch the Keys Homes &
Real Estate section every
Sunday and all week at
www.keysnews.com.
2006 Chevrolet
Silverado X-cab 2500
Leather, auto, a/c, p/w,
p/l, alloys, bedliner.
$15,995
Tax, tag and DOC fee
not included in sale price
(305)295-8646
Call us and
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
DUNCAN AUTO SALES
1618 N. Roosevelt Blvd.
305-294-5126
2006 Buick Rainier
Auto, a/c, leather, alloys,
cd.
$10,995
2011 Chevy Maibu LT
Auto, a/c, alloys,
p/w, p/l, cd
$16,995
2010 Chevrolet
Cobalt LT
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd
$13,995
-----
2008 Chevrolet
Silverado
Auto, a/c, alloys,
am/fm/cd
$13,995
2011 Chevrolet
Silverado 1500
Crew Cab
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l, alloys,
am/fm/cd
$24,995
2006 Chevrolet HHR
Auto, a/c, p/s, p/w, alloys,
leather, am/fm/cd.
$10,995
2010 Ford F150 SXT
Auto, a/c, p/s, p/w, p/l,
allloys.
$24,995
2005 Pontiac Aztek
Auto, a/c, p/w,p/l, alloys,
am/fm/cd
$7,995
2008 Ford F150
Crew Cab 4x4
King Ranch, auto, a/c,
p/w, p/l, navig, alloys.
$21,995
2010 Subaru Forester
Auto, AWD, a/c,
am/fm/cd, alloys
$19,995
2012 Ford Escape
Auto, a/c, p/s, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd, alloys.
$22,875
2006 Toyota Matrix
Auto, a/c, alloys, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd
$9,995
2012 Ford Flex
Auto, dual a/c, p/w, p/l,
p/seat.
$28,995
2005 Totota Prius
Hybrid
Auto. a/c, alloys, p/s, p/w,
am/fm/cd
$12,995
2011 Ford Escape XLS
SUV
$20,875
2009 Toyota Prius
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l, navig.
$17,995
2011 Hyundai Sonata
Auto, a/c, full power.
19,875
2010 Chrysler 300
Touring
Auto, a/c, leather,
p/w, p/l, alloys
$21,995
2002 Chrysler Sebring
Convertible LXi
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l, p/s,
am/fm/cd, alloys, leather.
$5,995
2010 Chrysler Sebring
Convertible
Touring, a/c, auto,
am/fm/cd, alloys.
$18,785
2010 Dodge Charger
Auto, a/c, alloys, p/w, p/l
$18,995
2006 Dodge Caravan
SE
Auto, a/c, am/fm/cd
$9,995
2007 Jeep Liberty Sport
Auto, a/c, alloys, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd
$12,995
2010 Dodge Challenger
SE
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd, alloys
$22,995
2011 Ford F350 15 Pass
Dual, a/c, p/w, p/l, cd
$24,995
2009 Ford Explorer XLT
Leather, sunroof, alloys,
CDisc
$19,995
2004 Ford Focus SE
Auto, a/c, am/fm-CDisc
$7,995
2008 Ford Focus 4Dr
$10,875
2008 Ford Focus SE5
Auto, a/c, alloys, p/s, p/w,
am/fm/cd
$10,995
2011 Ford Fusion SE
Auto, a/c, p/s, p/w,
am/fm/cd
$18,995
2011 Ford Focus
Auto, a/c
$15,875
2011 Ford Fiesta SEL
4Door, a/c. Sharp.
$17,875
2008 Toyota Sequoia
SR5
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l. alloys,
am/fm/cd
$29,995
2006 Jeep Wrangler
Rubicon
Auto, a/c, p/s, p/b,
am/fm/cd, alloys.
$18,995
2008 Toyota Sienna
XLT
$15,775
2008 Jeep Wrangler X
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/b,
am/fm-CDisc
$19,995
2008 Toyota Rav4
Full power.
$18,775
2011 Jeep Wrangler
Sport
Auto, a/c, p/w, 4x4
$25,995
Tax, Tag & Doc fees not
included.
DUNCAN BIG STORE
Over 130 cars and trucks
to select from 294-5126.
2010 Jeep Grand
Cherokee Laredo
Loaded, P/S,P/W,
alloy wheels.
$21,875
2005 Dodge Ram 1500
Quad Cab
Auto, a/c, alloys, p/s, p/w,
am/fm/cd
$13,995
2012 Dodge Grand
Caravan SXT
Auto, dual a/c, alloys,
am/fm/cd.
$21,995
2010 Toyota Prius
Hydrid
Auto, a/c, alloys, p/s, p/w,
am/fm/cd
$20,995
‘04 Pontiac Grand Prix,
Good cond, good a/c,
good tires. 139K miles,
$3,700 (305)295-7739
2012 Jeep Grand
Cherokee
Auto, a/c, alloys,
am/fm/cd.
$24,995
650 SCOOTERS
2006 Hyosung Sense,
18K mi, burgundy, $800
Call (305)393-361
2010 Jeep Compass
Limited
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l.
leather, alloys, amfm/cd.
$19,995
662 POWER BOATS
21' 1987 MANATEE
207VC runabout with
1993 Mercury 150, 8'
Bimini top, Lowrance
527c DF IGPS/GPS fish
finder combo and galvanized tandem axle trailer.
Water
ready
$3200,
Randy (305)896-5342
2011 Kia Rio
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd.
$11,995
2010 Lincoln MKT
Auto, dual a/c, leather,
sunroof, alloys,
navigation, DVD.
$32,995
1994 17’ COBIA FLATS
BOAT
Poling platform/pole. ‘09
Yamaha
90HP,
new
trailer, ready to fish. Call
(305)849-3131.
2005 Lincoln Town Car
Signature
Loaded.
$11,995
38 FT. SPORTFISHER
Set up for Charter. 86
Henriques 6 cyl. Volvo.
20 kt cruise. Turn Key
Operation, to many extras to list. Call 393-8076.
2003 Mercury Grand
Marquis LS
Auto, leather, alloys
$8,995
665 HOUSEBOATS
2002 Nissan Maxima SE
1962 GIBSON 32’X12’
A/C, alloys, sunroof,
Autaline
Houseboat.
leather, am/fm/cd.
$4,000
OBO.
Anchor on
$5,995
the hook in Sigsbee
2008 Nissan Xterra SE Base. 9’ dinghy included,
no motor. 813-832-4024.
Auto, a/c, p/s, p/l, p/w,
am/fm/cd, alloys.
669 DOCKAGE/
$18,995
STORAGE
LIVEABOARD
BOAT SLIP FOR SALE
Naples, FL. $49,000.
Seller financing.
Contact 239-289-3143.
2010 Nissan Altima
2.5S
Auto, a/c, p/w, p/l,
am/fm/cd, alloys.
$17,995
Service Directory - - - - New Residents Arriving Daily!
Make sure they know your business.
Advertise in the Citizen for just over $2.60 per day.
JUNE 6 – 12, 2012
CALL 292-7777 X3
COMPUTER
SERVICES
MARINE
PRINTING
MARINE DIESEL
of the FLORIDA KEYS INC.
Commercial Printing
on Quality Newsprint
Tabloids • Booklets
Newletters • Info Guides
• Web Site Design
• Internet Advertising
• Search Engine Marketing
• Google Certified Partner
305-292-1880
Authorized Diesel
Sales & Service, Installation
ATC Driving School
Kenneth Wells
SP 1259
PAINTING &
DECORATING
ROOFING
& Co.
Point Reduction Classes
Painting • Faux Finishes
305-890-6321
(305) 296-6985
GENERATORS
PAWN SHOPS
Keys Power
Sales Ser vice
Diesel & L.P.
292-9277
Key West
Trading Post, Inc.
We Pay the Most for
Gold & Silver in Key West
1508 Bertha St.
305-896-6747
Randy Erickson
Cooke Communications
[email protected]
305-292-7777 Ext. 203
305-292-2300
EDUCATION
Private Instruction &
374038
Did you know...
620 AUTOS FOR SALE
Tony’s
Roofing & Sheet Metal
RC0064676
RS0016738
Established 1953
Monroe County’s Oldest
Residential & Commercial
296-5932
318648
-Duval St. Pizzeria
30 seats, Net over
$200,000/yr. $375,000
-Sippin Coffee Shop &
Internet Cafe
Profitable, 24 seats.
SEEKING PARTNER
$225,000
WITH EXPERIENCE
DOWNTOWN
- 5 COP Liquor License
in education administraCOMMERCIAL
Former Bud
No Restictions
tion for new after school
STORAGE
Distributorship
$3000/mo/ $30,000 down
program. Program proLocated behind the ResFor Sale or Lease,
*INDUSTRIAL
taurant
Store,
large motes science education.
29,582 SF of state of the
Email:
-Rockland Key
fenced in open space
art warehouse space on
[email protected]
10,000 sf. Warehouse.
with open shed, with or
6 acres of US Hwy 1/ N.
$9,000/mos., NNN
without mobile office.
Roosevelt.
This
is
perfect
-Stock Island 6410 Fifth
Also closed in warehouse
534 COMMERCIAL
for any industrial or warePROPERTY
St. 2 acres 4,500sf,
with high ceilings and roll
house need, could possi$1,500,000
up doors. Call Steve at
Commercial For Sale
bly be converted to a big -Stock Island 5580 1st
304-5043.
Search All Key West and
Ave. 1/2 acre, 2,040sf.
box retail use.
FL Keys Commercial RE
Bldg. $899,000
518 CONDOS
UPPER KEYS
-Stock Island 5582 1st
and Businesses For Sale
Contact Claude J.
Ave. 12,500 sf. fenced
at www.KeysRealEstate.com
Gardner, Jr.
OCEAN REEF CLUB
lot. $420,000
305-766-3133
1BR/1.5BA plus den.
_Stock Island
3255 Flagler Ave.
Prudential Knight &
$85,000 plus equity or
6670 Maloney Ave.
Two commercial units to
Gardner Realty
$150,000 without equity.
1/2 acre, 4 units
choose
from
For
Sale.
# 1 in KEY WEST
Awesome porch, W/D,
Zoned URM. $750,000
Separate or Together.
Jacuzzi tub. Contact
commercial sales and
-Islamorada
Great visibility- 757 SF or
Constanza (Conti)
lease volume in 2011
86751 Old Hwy 1.
1514 SF
Rendic,, 305-451-7675 or
and for the last
2/3 acre, 2,284sf. Bldg.
PRICE JUST REDUCED
[email protected]
10 years combined.
$499,000
*Multi-Units
520 HOMES
Toppino Drive
-Stock Island Waterfront
Florida
Keys
LOWER KEYS
Former Sprint StoreTrailer Park $1,975,000
Commercial.com
1,250
SF Ample Parking
323 & 325 Petronia St.
OPEN WATER VIEW
and Great Visibility.
6 Units and parking lot.
*Bars/Restaurants
with concrete dock, boat
$1,100,000
-221 Duval St.
ramp 2,816 sf house,
-1301 Truman Ave
Duval St. Restaurant
150 seats NNN lease
3BR/1.5BA plus 2 bed8 apartments & pool
on 600 Block
$349,000
room, 1 bath mother in
$999,000.
-2338 N. Roosevelt Blvd
Popular Restaurant in
law. Fenced yard &
85 seats & drive thru. -1109-1113 Truman Ave
great location. Great
12x23 shop Geiger Key
5 Units fully leased, 8%
$7,900/mos. NNN
$675,000. 305-240-4508.
Opportunity to break
Cap rate $995,000.
-2308
N.
Roosevelt
Blvd
into the Key West Market
*Offices
Liquor Lic. & 2,357 sf.
526 BUSINESS
-Historic Harris School
OPPORTUNITY
Bldg. $999,000
Key Plaza
From 2,000 to 17,500sf.
-Cudjoe Key
Join K-Mart, $ Tree,
OFFICE BUILDING
$20 sf., NNN
Convenience store &
On Flagler, with 6 offices Publics and Office Max in
-1010 Kennedy Dr. #306
Deli. $899,000
one of KW's busiest
or a home + office. Many
900sf. $1,750/mo or
-1970 N. Roosevelt
centers. Space available
uses. $3,600 month
purchase $199,000
Blvd. Bank owned
305-296-7686 .For info
from 1,800 SF up to
*RETAIL
3,400sf. Bldg.
http://office.allkw.com
-3020
N.
Roosevelt
3,025
$799,000.
Blvd. Blockbuster Store
6,000 sf. & parking lot.
$28/sf NNN
Curtis Skomp, CCIM
Sr. Commercial Agent
Coldwell Banker
Commercial
of adults rank newspapers
Schmitt Real Estate Co.
292.7441- ofc
first as the media used to help
304.0084- cell
620 AUTOS FOR SALE
321834
Rare Multi-Unit
Property in Sugarloaf
Fully occupied
13 bedrooms/7baths.
Just Listed, Great
Investment Opportunity.
620 AUTOS FOR SALE
374037
OWN ATM
Or a free placement for
business. Call for appointment 850-259-4464.
534 COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY
349967
534 COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY
374036
STORAGE
Industrial Warehouses
Sizes vary.
Storage Containers
On our site or yours.
Call (305)294-0277
526 BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
374582
464 STORAGE
325928
6B