Keys eye sales tax for sewers - Receive the Entire Key West Citizen

Transcription

Keys eye sales tax for sewers - Receive the Entire Key West Citizen
The Florida Keys’ Only Daily Newspaper, Est. 1876
Masters ends with wild day — Page 1B
Charl Schwartzel
Monday
April 11, 2011 ◆ Vol. 135 ◆ No. 101 ◆ 14 pages
50 Cents
Keys eye sales tax for sewers
WEATHER
BY TIMOTHY O’HARA
Citizen Staff
Another year without state-promised wastewater funding once again
is forcing Florida Keys government
officials to come up with new ways
to raise sewer money locally.
At its April 20 meeting, the Monroe
County Commission will discuss
extending a one-cent sales tax sched-
Emely Ocampo-Dugall,
fourth grade
Gerald Adams Elementary School
Sunrise: 7:09 a.m.
Sunset: 7:47 p.m.
Today: Sunny and bright
High 85
Tonight: Clear
Low 75
uled to expire in 2018 and entering
into a private/public partnership
in which the county would allow a
private company to design, build
and operate a central sewer system
for Big Pine, Cudjoe, Summerland
and Lower Keys areas that need to
be connected to advanced wastewater treatment systems, County
Commissioner George Neugent said.
Local officials unsuccessfully lob-
bied state legislators to ask voters
to let the Keys use a second penny
of sales tax to fund wastewater projects, but simply extending the current one-penny tax for infrastructure
projects would not require approval
from the Legislature, only the voters.
Tapping sales taxes instead of
property taxes would shift the burden off property owners and split
it with tourists and others who buy
goods in the Keys. It also would allow
the Keys to bond wastewater and
stormwater projects.
“The money would have to be for
wastewater or stormwater, no affordable housing or other programs,”
said County Commissioner Sylvia
Murphy, who wants to put the issue
KEY WEST
AN ‘EGG’-CELENT TIME
Complete forecast on Page 2A
NATION
See WASTEWATER, Page 3A
City
Hall
debate
runs on
Obama to lay out
spending plan
WASHINGTON: One budget deal down, President
Barack Obama and Congress
began to pivot Sunday from
the painful standoff over this
year’s spending to a pair of
defining debates over the
nation’s borrowing limit and
the election-year budget.
Much will be revealed at
midweek, when the House
and Senate are expected to
vote on a budget for the rest
of this fiscal year. Page 7A
BY MANDY MILES
Citizen Staff
Key West’s mayor is circulating a new possibility for the
city’s Angela Street property
if City Hall is moved to Glynn
Archer Elementary School.
Mayor Craig Cates has long
championed the Glynn Archer
option for City Hall, and is
negotiating a shared-ownership arrangement with School
District officials for the White
Street school.
He now wants the public to
see what could be done on
Angela Street with the removal
of the City Hall building. Cates
WORLD
Ex-President Mubarek
denies abuse of powers
CAIRO: In the first remarks
since his ouster, former
Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak denied allegations
that he used his position
to amass wealth and property in a speech broadcast
Sunday, as hundreds of protesters occupying the heart of
Cairo shouted for him to be
brought to trial. Page 8A
See ANGELA, Page 3A
UPPER KEYS
MIKE HENTZ/The Citizen
UN, French retaliate
Tatiana Devonshire, 1, reaches for an Easter egg as her father, Luis Garcia, eggs her on during the annual Easter egg hunt Sunday at
the Monroe County Sheriff’s Animal Farm. More than 700 people showed up for the event that included photos with the Easter Bunny,
furry rabbits for the children to pet, face painting and other activities.
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast:
United Nations and French
helicopters fired rockets on
strongman Laurent Gbagbo’s
residence on Sunday in an
assault the U.N. said was to
retaliate for attacks by his
forces on U.N. headquarters
and civilians. Page 8A
BY ROBERT SILK
Citizen Staff
Government warns veterans about scam group
BY ADAM LINHARDT
Citizen Staff
The federal government is
asking military veterans living in the Florida Keys, and
elsewhere, to keep an eye
out for a scam that is targeting former service members.
ON THE RADIO
County Judge Wayne Miller,
president of the Florida County
Judges Conference, talks about
some of the pending legislation
in Tallahassee and how it could
affect the judicial system.
A fallacious group called
the Veterans Affairs Services
is claiming to provide benefits and general information by gathering personal
information on veterans, but
the group is not affiliated
with the official government
agency, the Department of
Veteran Affairs, according
to a Veterans Affairs press
release.
There is a website, at www.
vaservices.org, related to the
fake group, but all official
Department of Veterans
Affairs websites end in .gov,
spokesman and Department
of Veterans Affairs attorney
Michael Daughtery wrote in
the press release.
There have been no local
complaints in the Keys concerning the group, according
to Key West Council of the
Navy League President Stan
Rzad and Navy Criminal
Investigative Service (NCIS)
Assistant State Attorney Ali
Kadir will leave the Monroe
County State Attorney’s Office
at the end of the month to
work for a property insurance
defense firm in Palm Beach
County.
His departure leaves the
Upper Keys office short two of
its four prosecutor positions,
See VETERANS, Page 3A
See LAWYER, Page 3A
KEY WEST
Children’s nonprofit struggling to pay rent
Also on today’s show:
• Angel Torres,
Bone Island Pirates
• Jim Callahan, county fire chief
• Capt. Pat DeQuattro,
Coast Guard
• Roger Hernstadt,
Marathon city manager
• Bobby Dube, FWC
• Bruce Neff, Art Car
BY MANDY MILES
Citizen Staff
LOCAL NEWS
US1 Radio 104.1 FM:
7:30 and 8:30 a.m., noon, 5 and 6 p.m.
MIKE HENTZ/The Citizen
Boys & Girls Clubs Academic Director Heather Kenyon
does schoolwork with C.J. Harris at the nonprofit’s
rented space at Glynn Archer Elementary School.
98.7 FM Conch Country:
7, 8 and 9 a.m. and 3, 4, 5 and 6 p.m.
INDEX
State loses
6th lawyer
in 27 mos.
◆
CLASSIFIED ADS – 4-6 B
THE CITIZEN ONLINE ◆ keysnews.com
COMICS – 6 A
As many landlords in these tough economic times,
the Monroe County School District is having trouble
collecting rent from at least one of its tenants.
The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Keys Area Bayview
Park moved into rental space at Glynn Archer
Elementary School in August, but has yet to make
any rent payments.
The club, which provides after-school tutoring
and supervision for 40 to 60 school-aged children
every day, is supposed to pay $4,125 annually, which
CRIME REPORT – 2 A
CROSSWORD – 5 B
KEYS CALENDAR – 2 A
translates to about $343 per month. Those payments
have not been made since the club moved its headquarters from May Sands School to Glynn Archer,
Executive Director Dan Dombroski acknowledged
Thursday.
“We are behind in our rent and had gotten into a
cash-flow situation,” he said. “But we’re catching up
and have no intention of not paying.”
The Key West Woman’s Club recently hosted a
concert that raised about $15,000 to benefit the
club, he said.
See CLUBS, Page 5A
OPINION – 4 A
SPORTS/LOTTERY – 1 B
FOR HOME DELIVERY ◆ (305) 292-7777
2A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
PAGE 2
IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST
• Test-drive fundraiser
The Key West High School Band will
hold a fundraiser from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Saturday in the parking lot of
the school, 2100 Flagler Ave. Ford
representatives will offer test drives
of the new cars, donating $20 for
each test drive to the band program.
All test drivers will have a chance to
win a $100 Best Buy gift card. Food
will be offered, too. For more information, call 305-433-1567.
Citizens’ Voice
• ADA celebration meeting
The Florida Keys Council for People
with Disabilities will meet noon to 2
Editor’s note: To have your event listed in Around the Keys, e-mail
p.m. Tuesday at the Marathon public
the who, what, where and when to [email protected].
library, 3251 Overseas Highway.
Preparations for the 21st anniversary • Library computer classes
• Royal candidates sought
of the Americans with Disabilities Act The Monroe County Public Library’s
The Royal Investiture Party to elect a
will be organized. For more informa- Key West branch will offer free com- royal family for the Conch Republic
tion, call 305-292-4591.
puter classes from 9:45 to 11:30
will be at 8 p.m. April 23 at the
a.m. Thursday and April 28. The first
Green Parrot Bar, 601 Whitehead St.,
• Operation Smile tickets available class will be about library websites; Key West. To request an application
the second will cover legal resources for candidacy, email lissette.cuervo@
The Key West Woman’s Club continon the Web. No library card is neces- welseyhouse.org, call 305-809-5000
ues to offer “Operation Smile” raffle
or go to www.wesleyhouse.org.
tickets for purchase. The drawing for sary to sign up. Stop by the refera $20,000 prize takes place April 16. ence desk at 700 Fleming St. or call
For information, call 305-304-1809. 305-292-3595. Seating is limited.
AROUND THE KEYS
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.
“The cab drivers in town need
to be taught how to drive, and
learn that they’re supposed to stop
behind the white lines at intersections.”
Prison inmates mingle in the overpopulated Monroe County jail in
this 1970s photo.
20 YEARS AGO
The new cap on the number of inmates that could be held in
the Monroe County jail meant some felons might be released.
The American Civil Liberties Union was suing the Monroe
County Sheriff’s Office over strip searches of college students by
the Wackenhut Corrections Corp., which operated the jail.
“City Commissioner Jimmy Weekley needs to be quiet. Most of the
guesthouses rent their extra rooms
without transient licenses. Why
doesn’t he do something about
that?”
Frank Holtsberg died at the age of 91. He was a resident of Key
West for 75 years and was the last of the founders of the B’nai
Zion Congregation. He had operated a men’s store on the corner
of Duval and Southard streets.
“Sounds like the middle school
has become a ‘high’ school.”
Key West High School baseball defeated South Dade for its
11th straight win, led by home runs by Carl Taylor and Robert
“Cuban” Santana.
“After getting up off the floor
having falling into a dead faint, I
wanted to call you and hope you’ve
identified the evil, right-wing, racist,
homophobic person at your paper
who allowed a column by Charles
Krauthammer to appear.”
“I’m tired of seeing pictures of
minnows in the catch of the day.”
“Thank you for adding Dr. Krauthammer’s column to your editorial
page. As distressful as world news
is today, it is still refreshing to read
his witty, intelligent commentary.
A good balance to the New York
Times’ far-left viewpoint.”
“Yes to House Bill 883 and yes to
Senate Bill 476. Rent, baby, rent.”
“Key West should be a place for
children of all ages. Even the big
ones who come here without their
parents.”
“I remember Love 22 at Mallory
Square. He had a great schtick.”
MEMBER FDIC
The state of Florida filed a counterclaim against Monroe
County in a lawsuit over trimming mangroves at Key West
International Airport.
100 YEARS AGO
Capt. A.G. Clark, representing the war department, inspected
the Key West Guard at the Armory. Clark stated that the company
was superior to any other company in the state.
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.
329726
Mainly clear
Nice with
sunshine
Partly sunny
85
75
84/74
82/73
highs
4/11 5:09 a.m.
3:59 p.m.
4/12 6:14 a.m.
5:27 p.m.
4/13 7:04 a.m.
6:52 p.m.
4/14 7:46 a.m.
8:04 p.m.
4/15 8:24 a.m.
9:07 p.m.
4/16 9:02 a.m.
10:03 p.m.
4/17 9:41 a.m.
10:56 p.m.
Woman arrives home
to indecent exposure
CITIZEN STAFF
Clean break-in
KEY WEST — A woman
entered her apartment early
Wednesday to find someone
had broken in and left pornographic pictures scattered
throughout, according to a
police incident report.
There were no arrests in the
case. The woman told police
whoever left the pornographic
pictures also tore up family
photos in the house.
She explained that she had
recently discovered that her
husband was having an affair
and she had kicked him out of
the apartment shortly thereafter, but she didn’t believe he
was responsible for the breakin, because she said he wouldn’t
destroy pictures of his children,
according to the report.
She arrived at 1 a.m. to find
the mess in her apartment.
The report does not indicate
any suspects.
Someone reportedly stole
some Heavenly Soft paper
towels from Charlie’s Grocery
sometime Tuesday night or
Wednesday morning by reaching through security bars and
an open window, according to
an incident report.
The suspect took five rolls of
paper towels from the convenience store on William Street,
but reportedly did not take
anything else. Police noted the
suspect wiped clean any fingerprints from any areas he or
she might have touched. The
report does not state if the stolen paper towels were used to
clean the crime scene.
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.
PAUL A. CLARIN/PUBLISHER
TOM TUELL/EDITOR
RANDY ERICKSON/VICE PRESIDENT OF OPERATIONS & PRODUCTION
DAVID SINGLETON/ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
TONI CICALESE/ADVERTISING COMPOSITION & GRAPHIC SERVICES MANAGER
lows
highs
83/73
84/75
Through 5 p.m. Sunday.
High .............................................. 84°
Low ............................................... 76°
Mean Temperature .................... 80.0°
Precipitation
DAYTONA
BEACH
86/64
24 hrs. ending 5 p.m. Sun. ........
Month to date ............................
Normal month to date ...............
Year to date ...............................
Normal year to date ..................
ORLANDO
90/66
Wind southeast 8-16 knots today.
Waves 2-4 feet. Visibility clear.
Water Temp 78°
MARATHON
88/75
0.00”
0.30”
0.60”
3.21”
6.19”
Sun and Moon:
lows
1:10 a.m.
4:54 p.m.
2:11 a.m.
2:08 p.m.
3:10 a.m.
3:24 p.m.
4:03 a.m.
4:29 p.m.
4:50 a.m.
5:26 p.m.
5:32 a.m.
6:17 p.m.
6:13 a.m.
7:06 p.m.
MARINE FORECAST
KEY WEST
85/75
Sunny
Temperature
JACKSONVILLE
87/65
Marathon
9:12 a.m. 4:05 p.m.
11:15 p.m. 7:46 p.m.
10:43 a.m. 12:05 p.m.
none 8:49 p.m.
12:14 a.m. 12:36 p.m.
12:06 p.m. 10:37 p.m.
1:04 a.m. 1:04 p.m.
1:16 p.m.
none
1:49 a.m. 1:01 a.m.
2:17 p.m. 1:28 p.m.
2:30 a.m. 2:13 a.m.
3:12 p.m. 1:45 p.m.
3:10 a.m. 3:14 a.m.
4:05 p.m. 1:52 p.m.
Mostly sunny
KEY WEST ALMANAC
GAINESVILLE
Key West
Sunrise today ..................... 7:09 a.m.
Sunset today ....................... 7:47 p.m.
Moonrise today ................... 1:16 p.m.
Moonset today .................... 2:06 a.m.
TAMPA
88/70
ST. PETERSBURG
88/69
First
Full
Last
New
Apr 11
Apr 17
Apr 24
May 3
WEST PALM BEACH
85/71
FLORIDA CITIES FORECAST
FT. MYERS
90/69
FT. LAUDERDALE
85/74
MIAMI
88/72
City
Daytona Beach
Fort Lauderdale
Fort Myers
Gainesville
Jacksonville
Miami
Orlando
Pensacola
St. Petersburg
Sarasota
Tallahassee
Tampa
West Palm Beach
KEY LARGO
86/72
Forecasts and graphics
provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011
Tomorrow Wednesday
Hi Lo W Hi Lo W
80 60 t
75 60 s
86 71 s 83 72 pc
87 67 s 87 64 pc
81 54 t
81 52 s
74 54 t
76 54 s
87 71 s 86 70 pc
87 63 t
82 60 s
78 59 s 80 61 s
85 68 t
84 66 s
87 67 t
87 61 pc
81 49 t
81 53 s
82 65 t
85 62 s
85 68 s 84 69 pc
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,
c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,
r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
NATIONAL CITIES FORECAST TODAY’S NATIONAL FORECAST
City
Atlanta
Boston
Chicago
Denver
Detroit
Kansas City
Los Angeles
New Orleans
New York
San Francisco
Washington
Tomorrow Wednesday
Hi Lo W Hi Lo W
68 49 s 75 53 s
58 42 c 50 38 pc
60 41 s 62 46 pc
68 34 pc 64 33 c
57 40 pc 65 44 s
69 49 s 72 52 pc
67 52 pc 70 52 pc
80 62 s 82 65 s
62 46 c 56 44 pc
55 46 s 60 47 pc
64 45 t
68 46 s
Seattle
50/38
City
Berlin
Buenos Aires
Hong Kong
London
Mexico City
New Delhi
Paris
Rome
Sydney
Tokyo
Toronto
Today
Hi Lo W
67 49 pc
75 54 pc
84 72 pc
66 43 pc
77 50 t
95 72 pc
72 50 pc
66 55 s
71 57 pc
66 43 sh
65 44 t
Minneapolis
55/37
Billings
61/37
San Francisco
58/46
Detroit
68/37
Kansas City
64/41
Tuesday
Hi Lo W
56 35 sh
75 54 pc
78 69 pc
55 39 pc
76 50 sh
95 71 pc
57 37 s
64 52 s
71 56 s
57 41 pc
56 41 pc
Atlanta
82/54
El Paso
75/53
Houston
83/56
Miami
showers
88/72
t-storms
Cold Front
rain
flurries
Warm
Front
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
snow
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for today.
Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities. Stationary
ice
Front
ROADWORK
• Key West
Work continues on the South Roosevelt Bridge over Riviera Canal at
Mile Marker 2.5. Traffic lanes will be
closed intermittently.
New York
77/58
Washington
85/59
Chicago
62/39
Denver
64/35
Los Angeles
69/52
WORLD CITIES FORECAST
CRIME REPORT
DEPARTMENTS
Fee’d
Up?
Pleasantly
warm with bright
sunshine
WEEKLY TIDES
School architect William H. Merriam reported that the contractor for additions to Sigsbee, Douglass and Marathon schools
admitted some details in construction had been overlooked and
he had taken steps to correct them.
“As a regular visitor to Key West,
I would like to know if any Conch
flags are made in Key West.”
WEDNESDAY
89/64
“Nice to see so many bicyclists
using the heritage trail up and
down the Florida Keys. This will
definitely benefit the Keys.”
“Krauthammer in The Citizen?
What a change. At least I’ll enjoy
reading a few good words now.”
TUESDAY
PENSACOLA
83/60
50 YEARS AGO
“My barber yacks and yacks and
yacks and yacks, a constant diatribe about what’s wrong with Key
West. If he’d just shut up and listen
maybe he could learn something.
If he doesn’t want to shut up and
maintain a closed mind, maybe he
should shut his mouth as well.”
TONIGHT
TALLAHASSEE
86/61
“Hate speech is free speech.
Once we start prosecuting people
for saying things we don’t like, we
start to go down a slippery slope.
I’d rather have free speech than no
speech.”
“What’s the giant rabbit the
homeless feed doing for Easter? I’d
like to hire him out.”
TODAY
AccuWeather.com
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are
today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
“Comparsa Key West dance
troupe, you rock. Thanks for sharing
it with us.”
“Hey guys, everybody who’s driving up and down College Road,
please slow down. You’re killing the
wildlife off.”
KEY WEST 5-DAY FORECAST
TODAY’S STATE FORECAST
“To the person who returned our
doormat, thank you, thank you.
You’ve restored our faith in the One
Human Family.”
“Thank you, Chris Tittel, for saving Harry.”
• Taste of Key West
The 16th annual Taste of Key West,
which benefits AIDS Help, will be
• Easter Cantata
The Lower Keys Community Choir and from 6 to 9 p.m. April 18 at the
Truman Waterfront at the end of
Keys Chamber Orchestra will presSouthard Street. More than 50
ent “The Living Last Supper,” 7:30
local restaurants and 100 wineries
p.m. Tuesday at Venture Out Resort,
and vineyards will be represented.
on Cudjoe Key, and again at 7:30
Admission is free. Food and wine
p.m. Thursday at the Big Pine United
Methodist Church, 280 Key Deer Blvd., tickets are $1 each, with “tastes”
on Big Pine Key. This year’s production ranging from $3 to $8. The 2011
is directed by Wayne Hulting. Works by commemorative wine glasses sell
for $6 each. Glasses and tickets will
Handel, Mozart, Pachelbel and Rutter
will finish out the evening. A voluntary be sold starting at 5 p.m. For more
offering will be taken. For information, information, call 305-296-6196.
email [email protected].
UPCOMING PICKS
One northbound and southbound
lane from 12th Street to 29th
Street will be closed from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. Monday to Friday.
• Tom’s Harbor Bridge
Lanes will be shifted at Mile Marker
The public boat ramp at Key Haven/ 61 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. through FriCow Key Channel, Mile Marker 5.17, day. The speed limit is now 45 mph.
will be closed through May.
• Indian Key
• Geiger Key
Lanes will be shifted at Mile Marker
Alternating lanes on the Geiger
78 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily through
Creek Bridge are closed.
Friday. The speed limit is 35 mph.
• Sugarloaf Key
• Tavernier
One northbound and southbound
One northbound and southbound
lane at Mile Marker 18.75 will be
lane from Mile Marker 91.4 to 93.7
closed from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. daily
will be closed from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
through Thursday.
daily through Friday.
• Little Torch Key
One northbound lane from Mile
One northbound and southbound
Marker 93.7 to 96.2 will be closed
lane at Mile Marker 28.5 will be
from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily
closed from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. daily
through April 29.
through Thursday.
• Key Largo
• Marathon
One
northbound and southbound
Lanes will be shifted from Mile Marklane from Mile Marker 101.5 to
er 49 to 54 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
105.5 will be closed from 9 a.m. to
daily through Friday. The speed limit
4 p.m. daily through April 29.
is now 45 mph.
• Key Haven/Cow Key
IN PORT
TODAY
TUESDAY
No ships
Majesty
Pier B
7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Amadea
Mallory Pier
1 p.m. to 7 p.m.
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:
Marathon Free Press: (305) 743-8766
Islamorada Free Press: (305) 853-7277
Solares Hill: (305) 294-3602
SUBSCRIPTIONS
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 (no refunds) .................... $30
One year (no refunds) ....................... $54
Two year (no refunds) ...................... $102
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.
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.
WEDNESDAY
Fascination
Imagination
Pier B
Outer Mole
7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
7:30 a.m. 2 p.m.
Cruise ship information is provided by the city of Key West. For updated
information, call 305-809-3790.
CORRECTIONS
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].
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS
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. Classified Department open
Saturday 9 a.m. to noon.
3A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
MILE MARKERS
KEY WEST
KEY WEST
FKCC plans library week events
Drive one for high school
Florida Keys Community College will celebrate
National Library Week with a series of literary,
artistic, fundraising and outreach activities today
through April 19 at the Key West campus library.
Events include a weeklong silent auction, and
a book and DVD drive to build the college’s
library collection and to supply materials to the
nonprofit Books for Africa organization.
Local film critic, writer and former Marvel
Comics executive Shirrel Rhoades will give a
presentation on film in literature at 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday in the FKCC library.
FKCC library staff will be outside Publix in
Searstown from 3 to 6 p.m. Thursday to issue
community library cards.
All activities are free and open to the community. For more information, call 305-809-3194 or
email [email protected].
The Key West High School
Band will hold a fundraiser from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday in the
parking lot of Key West High
School, 2100 Flagler Ave.
Representatives of Ford will be
on hand to offer quick test drives
of their new cars, and to donate
$20 for each test drive to the
band program.
All test drivers will be put in
a drawing for a chance to win a
$100 Best Buy gift card.
Free hot dogs and drinks will
be served. Baked goods will be
available for sale. For more information, call 305-433-1567.
Continued from Page 1A
a situation that Chief Assistant
State Attorney Manny Madruga
said will be remedied soon. “We
have interviews scheduled this
week,” he said.
At least one replacement will
be hired before Kadir leaves,
Veterans
Continued from Page 1A
Special Agent Mark Barstow.
“We did get the information
from the national league
and have been spreading it
around,” Rzad said.
The Department of Veterans
Affairs is reminding current
and former military members that it does not randomly
call veterans, nor does it ask
Angela
Continued from Page 1A
asked architect Michael Miller
to design plans for a fire station, parking lot, public restroom, taxi stand and pocket
park at the Angela Street location.
“I think it looks great, and it
shows what is possible with all
that green space,” Cates said
on Friday.
Miller’s design includes 100
street-level parking spaces,
instead of a multi-story parking garage, which would be
required if the property was
also to house a City Hall facility. The fire station would be
built at the corner of Simonton
and Southard streets, at the site
of the Madeline Bean administration building, which is slated for demolition.
The station would be a
Wastewater
Continued from Page 1A
on the 2012 ballot.
Voters in 1998 approved the
use of the sales tax for five
years, then extended it for 15
years, Murphy said.
The sales tax also could be
used to secure a loan from
the state Department of
Environmental Protection’s
(DEP) Clean Water Revolving
Loan Program, according
to Florida Keys Aqueduct
Authority Executive Director
Jim Reynolds. Reynolds and
other staff from the county
and water utility have begun
to explore the idea.
The county, utility and Keys
municipalities could borrow
as much as $15 million a year
for wastewater projects, and
repay it with sales tax revenue
and fees for utility service
and wastewater connections,
Reynolds said
To apply for the loan, the
county would have to hold
public hearings to adopt a
facilities plan in May and send
it to the DEP for approval in
June. The DEP would decide
in August whether to loan the
Dunne was demoted and transferred in January.
Kadir, who has been with
the State Attorney’s Office for
just more than a year, said his
difficult decision to leave was
a financial one. In an effort
to keep him, State Attorney
Dennis Ward had offered him a
promotion to Dunne’s old posi-
tion.
“Emotionally I would have
stayed here,” he said, stressing
how much he enjoyed his job
and the Keys. “I didn’t want to
leave here. My family doesn’t
want to leave here.”
With his resignation, Kadir
becomes the sixth prosecutor
to leave the Upper Keys office
for information that it would
already have, such as Social
Security numbers.
“In particular, if you have
not dealt with the VA previously — in person — and all
of a sudden you receive a call
from someone saying they
are with the VA or something
similar, hang up the phone,”
the press release states.
The Department of Veterans
Affairs also does not conduct
any official business by email,
Daughtery wrote.
Department of Veterans
Affairs attorneys are working with the Department of
Defense to ascertain if the
fake group was able to gain
access to military members’
contact information, according to the press release.
“There are constantly people trying to take advantage
of veterans, those deployed
oversees or their families
here,” Barstow said. “NCIS is
aware of it, but we haven’t had
any local complaints yet.”
The
Department
of
Veterans Affairs asks that
military members or veterans who receive information
from the fake group to notify
the Key West Council of the
Navy League at nlkeywest@
keywestnavyleague.org or
the Department of Veterans
Affairs office in Washington at
800-827-1000.
[email protected]
“drive-through” style, “which
will avoid having to stop traffic on Simonton Street while
trucks back into the station,
as is the present case,” Miller
wrote.
The two-story fire station
would have garage bays to
accommodate two fire trucks
and an ambulance. The second floor would house dormitories, an exercise room,
offices, a garden grill and picnic table.
The plans also include “lowmaintenance green spaces, a
charging station for electric
cars, public toilets, attractive night lighting, public art,
fountains and a prominent
pick-up and drop-off point
for hotel shuttles, taxi stand
and bus stop,” according to
the “design concept survey”
released Friday.
Miller provided the design
at no cost to the city.
Cates said the parking lot
with its additional features
would cost an estimated
$900,000, plus the anticipated
$2.6 million for the fire station. He wants Miller to present his ideas at the May 3 City
Commission meeting, which
means the design plans will
be posted on the city’s website
with the commission agenda
on April 26.
Meanwhile, Cates will introduce a preliminary proposal
for the shared use of Glynn
Archer at the April 19 commission meeting.
“It will just be presented
at that time; we don’t have
to vote on it then, but if the
commission likes it, then we
can start getting more specific
prices and pinning down some
numbers,” he said.
Other
commissioners,
including Teri Johnston, continue to object to what could
be a costly renovation of a historic building for a City Hall.
Commissioner Barry Gibson
suggested last week that the
city consider buying Habana
Plaza shopping center on
Flagler Avenue and use it as a
City Hall. Gibson pointed out
that the city is already renting office space there while
it decides on a new City Hall.
He acknowledged that it does
not “look like a City Hall,” but
would represent a significant
cost savings in these economic
times.
Commissioner Mark Rossi
on Friday said he would entertain further discussion about
the Habana Plaza property,
while Commissioner Clayton
Lopez, whose district includes
much of Bahama Village and
Old Town, said he would never
support a City Hall that far
from the downtown residents.
[email protected]
money, and how much, he
said.
The Keys are under a state
mandate to have all properties
connected to advanced treatment systems by December
2015, a deadline Neugent
said “without equivocation
ain’t going to be met.” The
Legislature promised the Keys
$200 million in bond revenue
for wastewater projects in
2008, but has yet to allocate
the money.
With a grim state financial budget season ahead,
no one expects the money
to reach the Keys anytime
soon. The state pushed back
the deadline from 2010 to
2015. Without state funding,
property owners could face a
$20,000 connection fee.
“Here we are a year and a
half into this deadline and still
no designated funding for this
small community,” County
Mayor Heather Carruthers
said. “We need to find a way
of funding this ourselves.”
Carruthers and other Keys
leaders were in Tallahassee
late last month and received
another grim report on the
state’s budget.
Carruthers said she lobbied the governor’s chief aide
and others to let the Keys ask
voters to approve the use of
a second penny of sales tax
or the imposition of a toll
for motorists coming into
Monroe County, but received
no assurances. She’s still
awaiting the Federal Highway
Administration’s response to a
letter the County Commission
sent in January seeking permission to impose the toll.
The
commission
will
meet April 20 at the Harvey
Government Center in Key
West.
[email protected]
Reasonable
Rates to
Solve Your
Accounting &
Tax Issues
Individual &
Business
Key West Mayor
Craig Cates, right,
presents a proclamation declaring
April as Water
Conservation Month
to Tom Genovese,
the South Florida
Water Management
District’s Florida
Keys Service Center
director. The Keys
currently are under
water restrictions
for irrigation and
landscaping. For
more details on the
restrictions, visit
www.sfwmd.gov.
Full moon kayak trip
Capt. Bill Keogh and his crew
at Big Pine Kayak Adventures will
offer a sunset/moonrise kayak trip
on Sunday through the sponge flats,
grass beds and mangrove forests
of the Great White Heron National
Wildlife Refuge.
The two-hour trip costs $25 per
person, with proceeds going to benefit all four Florida Keys national wildlife refuges.
Kayakers will depart at 6 p.m. from
the Old Wooden Bridge Fishing Camp,
near the No Name Key Bridge, off Big
Pine Key. Bring your own flashlight.
To reserve a seat, call 305-872-7474.
For more information, go to www.
favorfloridakeys.com.
during Ward’s 27-month tenure.
Madruga said budget cuts
and moves by the Florida
Legislature to cut the benefits
of public employees are making it all the more difficult to
retain prosecutors. The Senate,
for example, is considering a
bill that would trim the pay of
public employees by 3 percent
to cover retirement benefits.
“People like to prosecute,
but when it comes down to
choosing to do what they like
to do or providing for their
families, most people are going
to provide for their families,”
Madruga said.
[email protected]
FIRST STATE BANK
Yard sale and car wash, 7 to 11
a.m. Saturday, branch at 3406 N.
Roosevelt Blvd.
COASTIES FOR A CURE
Relay For Life raises money for the
American Cancer Society. To start
or join a team, or to buy a luminaria, call 305-292-2333.
BARK FOR LIFE
Register your dog or volunteer to
work at Bark For Life at the Dog
Park on June 4. Call 305-2922333.
TEAM DINA
Stuffed bears/bunnies for sale.
$10. Call Dina at 305-293-1549
ext. 54352 or 305-923-5514.
LUMINARIAS
Donations accepted for white bags
and/or silver, gold and pink ribbon bags to honor loved ones at
a May 14 ceremony at Bayview
Park. Forms available via email
at [email protected] or
at the American Cancer Society,
1010 Kennedy Drive, Suite 306,
Key West.
UNITED WE CARE
Gordy Michael and Maj Johnson
in concert, 8 p.m. Friday, Key
West United Methodist Church,
600 Eaton St. Two teams will split
donations: the church and First
State Bank of the Florida Keys.
Rubber duck race, noon Saturday,
Coast Guard Sector Key West;
Grinnell Street entrance open
to public. 300 ducks will race
along Fleming Street canal to win
$1,400 prize package (three-day/
two-night stay at Hawks Cay Resort
and 50-minute couples massage.)
$10 apiece. Call Mo at 305-3045621.
TIB BANK
Party, 5 to 8 p.m. April 19, The
Lazy Gecko, 203 Duval St., Key
West. Guest bartenders, chance
drawings.
REBELS WITH A CAUSE
Party, 5 to 7 p.m. April 22,
Bobalu’s, 404 Southard St., Key
West. $1 pizza slices, silent auction, 50/50, live entertainment.
TEAM HART AND SOUL
Car wash, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. May
1, Chevron, 1126 Truman Ave., Key
West.
Yard sale, 8 a.m. to noon May 7,
3350 Flagler Ave., Key West.
Oysters and Margaritas party, 2
to 4 p.m. May 7, La Concha, 430
Duval St.
PRINCE AND PRINCESS
Kindergartners through fifth-graders can vie to be Relay For Life
prince or princess, sponsored by
Sarabeth’s. The boy or girl who
raises the most $1 “votes” will be
crowned during the May 14 opening ceremonies. Call Patsy Morrow
at 305-395-2551.
CITIZEN OF THE DAY
Thermage stimulates your body’s natural
renewal of collagen, which creates subtle,
natural results with little to no downtime.
MIKE HENTZ/The Citizen
• Tighter, Smoother Skin
• Softened Lines & Wrinkles
• Redefined Contours and Firmness
• Renewed Collagen
292-6366
3154 Northside Drive
suehildebrandt.net
27 Years In Business
BIG PINE KEY
Photo courtesy of Alyson Crean/city of Key West
said Madruga,
who
typically is based
in Key West
but has been
splitting his
time with the
Upper Keys
Kadir
office since
former office head Colleen
329751
Lawyer
KEY WEST
Skin of Key West
508 Southard St., Suite 103
329864
305-879-2465
Capt. David Barillas, shown here with his dogs, Tez and
Majuhaa, was born in Guatemala and has lived in Key West
for 20 years. Barillas, the captain of the boat Pescadora, said
he loves the water and people of Key West, which he says has
an all-around great environment.
340454
4A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
EDITORIAL BOARD
OPINION
PAUL A. CLARIN/PUBLISHER
TOM TUELL/EDITOR
RALPH MORROW/SPORTS EDITOR
ED BLOCK
CHARLIE BRADFORD
KEN DOMANSKI
SHIRLEY FREEMAN
TODD GERMAN
Assault on freedom of
speech is overreaction
W
e have enough overreaction already
to the reckless,
reprehensible actions of a
pair of self-promoting Florida
preachers who got it into their
heads to burn a Quran. We
don’t need Congress to add
to the fray by limiting free
speech.
For a while, it seemed as if
Pastors Terry Jones’ and Wayne
Sapp’s mock “trial” and burning of the Quran on March 20
at their church in Gainsville,
Fla., would get only minimal
media attention, and rightly
so. Anything more would only
feed Mr. Jones’ effort to raise
millions of dollars through
donations to his anti-Islamic
cause and Internet sales of
hats, T-shirts and coffee mugs
with his hateful message.
Other than a few small stories, the mainstream media
was largely ignoring Mr. Terry
after indulging him last fall in
his plan to burn Qurans on
Sept. 11, presumably to protest
a proposed Islamic center near
the site of the former World
Trade Center. He scrapped that
amid warnings from Defense
Secretary Robert Gates and
Gen. David Petraeus that the
likely reaction among Muslims
would harm the U.S. war
effort.
Of all people, it was Afghan
President Hamid Karzai who
seems to have saved Mr. Terry
from obscurity.
Four days after the book
burning, Mr. Karzai stoked
the issue by calling it a crime
against all Muslims and
demanding the United States
and the United Nations bring
the perpetrators to justice.
Imams carried the message
to prayers. Violent protests,
possibly fueled further by the
Taliban, ensued, claiming
the lives of seven U.N. work-
Editorial
ers, four demonstrators and
at least nine other people.
Yet rather than denounce the
violence, rather than explain
to his people that freedom of
speech in America does not
imply any agreement with
Mr. Terry’s views, Mr. Karzai
on Sunday asked Congress to
condemn one loopy preacher.
The worry is that some
in Congress will see things
even more radically than Mr.
Karzai. Sen. Majority Leader
Harry Reid, D-Nev., isn’t ruling out hearings, while Sen.
Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a
member of the Armed Services
Committee, suggests that
Congress should explore
the need to limit freedom of
speech:
“I wish we could find a way
to hold people accountable.
Free speech is a great idea, but
we’re in a war.”
A seemingly perpetual war,
that is, against terrorists. A war
that in 10 years has seen disturbing intrusions by government into Americans’ personal
lives, from monitoring their
emails and telephone calls to
virtually strip searching them
at airports.
Far more measured is the
response of President Barack
Obama, who appropriately
condemned both the burning
in Florida and the rioting in
Afghanistan.
In a less delicate situation
where diplomacy wasn’t necessary, Mr. Obama might well
have added Mr. Karzai to the
list of those who need to take
personal responsibility for
their words or deeds, and for
the collateral damage of their
opportunism.
— The (Albany, N.Y.)
Times Union
ON THE WEB:
Monroe County
www.monroecofl.virtualtownhall.net
Monroe County Property Appraiser
www.mcpafl.org
City of Key West
www.keywestcity.com
Monroe County Tax Collector
www.monroetaxcollector.com/index.html
City of Marathon
www.ci.marathon.fl.us
Monroe County Libraries
www.keyslibraries.org
Village of Islamorada
www.islamorada.fl.us
Florida Keys Aqueduct Authority
www.fkaa.com
City of Key Colony Beach
www.keycolonybeach.net
Keys Energy Services
www.keysenergy.com
Monroe County Sheriff’s Office
www.keysso.net
Florida Keys Electric Co-operative
www.fkec.com
Monroe County School District
www.keysschools.com
Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary
www.fknms.nos.noaa.gov
Monroe County Clerk
www.clerk-of-the-court.com
Florida state government
www.myflorida.com
Monroe County Supervisor of Elections
www.keys-elections.org
Online Sunshine (Florida legislature)
www.leg.state.fl.us
The big (military) taboo: Cutting the budget
peak of the Bush
administration.
The New York Times
“Republicans
think
banging the
e face wrenching
war drums wins
budget cutting in
them votes, and
the years ahead,
Democrats think
but there’s one huge area of
if they don’t chime
government spending that
in, they’ll lose votes,” said
Democrats and Republicans
Andrew Bacevich, an exalike have so far treated as
military officer who now is a
sacrosanct. It’s the military/
security world, and it’s time to historian at Boston University.
He is author of a thoughtful
bust that taboo. A few facts:
recent book, “Washington
• The U.S. spends nearly
Rules: America’s Path to
as much on military power
Permanent War.”
as every other country in the
The costs of excessive reliworld combined, according to
ance on military force are
the Stockholm International
not just financial, of course,
Peace Research Institute.
as Bacevich knows well. His
It says that we spend more
than six times as much as the son, Andrew Jr., an Army first
country with the next highest lieutenant, was killed in Iraq
in 2007.
budget, China.
Let me be clear: I’m a
• The U.S. maintains troops
believer in a robust military,
at more than 560 bases and
which is essential for backother sites abroad, many of
ing up diplomacy. But the
them a legacy of a world war
implication is that we need a
that ended 65 years ago. ...
• The intelligence commu- balanced tool chest of diplomatic and military tools alike.
nity is so vast that more people have “top secret” clearance Instead, we have a billionaire
than live in Washington, D.C. military and a pauper diplomacy. The U.S. military now
• The U.S. will spend more
has more people in its marchon the war in Afghanistan
ing bands than the State
this year, adjusting for inflaDepartment has in its foreign
tion, than we spent on the
Revolutionary War, the War of service — and that’s preposterous.
1812, the Mexican-American
What’s more, if you’re carryWar, the Civil War and the
ing an armload of hammers,
Spanish-American War comevery problem looks like a
bined.
nail. The truth is that military
This is the one area where
power often isn’t very effective
elections scarcely matter.
at solving modern problems,
President Barack Obama, a
like a nuclear North Korea or
Democrat who symbolized
an Iran that is on the nuclear
new directions, requested
path. Indeed, in an age of
about 6 percent more for the
nationalism, our military force
military this year than at the
BY NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
W
is often counterproductive.
After the first
gulf war, the U.S.
retained bases in
Saudi Arabia on
the assumption
that they would
enhance American security.
Instead, they appear to have
provoked fundamentalists
like Osama bin Laden into
attacking the U.S. In other
words, hugely expensive
bases undermined American
security (and we later closed
them anyway). ...
Paradoxically, it’s often
people with experience in the
military who lead the way in
warning against overinvestment in arms. It was President
Dwight Eisenhower who gave
the strongest warning: “Every
gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket
fired signifies, in the final
sense, a theft from those who
hunger and are not fed, those
who are cold and are not
clothed.” And in the Obama
administration, it is Defense
Secretary Robert Gates who
has argued that military
spending on things large and
small can and should expect
closer, harsher scrutiny; it is
Gates who has argued most
eloquently for more investment in diplomacy and development aid.
American troops in
Afghanistan are among the
strongest advocates of investing more in schools there
because they see firsthand
that education fights extremism far more effectively
than bombs. And here’s the
trade-off: For the cost of
one American soldier in
Afghanistan for one year, you
could build about 20 schools.
There are a few signs of hope
in the air. The SimpsonBowles deficit commission
proposes cutting money for
armaments, along with other
spending. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton unveiled a
signature project, the quadrennial diplomacy and
development review, which
calls for more emphasis on
aid and diplomacy in foreign
policy.
“Leading through civilian power saves lives and
money,” Clinton noted, and
she’s exactly right. The review
is a great document, but we’ll
see if it can be implemented
— especially because House
Republicans are proposing
cuts in the State Department
budget.
They should remind themselves that in the 21st century,
our government can protect
its citizens in many ways:
financing research against
disease, providing early childhood programs that reduce
crime later, boosting support for community colleges,
investing in diplomacy that
prevents costly wars.
As we cut budgets, let’s
remember that these steps
would, on balance, do far
more for the security of
Americans than a military
base in Germany.
Nicholas D. Kristof is a syndicated columnist with The
New York Times.
Ryan’s leap — is this bold budget plan a well-annotated suicide note?
And I hope so (we
will find out definiWashington Post Writers Group
tively in November
WASHINGTON — 2012).
The conventional
n 1983, the British Labor
line of attack on
Party under the hard-left
Michael Foot issued a 700- Ryan’s plan is already
page manifesto so radical that taking shape: It cuts
poverty programs and “privaone colleague called it “the
tizes” Medicare in order to cut
longest suicide note in history.” House Budget Committee taxes for the rich.
Major demagoguery on all
Chairman Paul Ryan has just
released a recklessly bold, 73- three counts.
(1) The reforms of the povpage, 10-year budget plan. At
erty programs are meant to
37 footnotes, it might be the
change an incentive structure
most annotated suicide note
that today perversely encourin history.
ages states to inflate the numThat depends on whether
(a) President Obama counters ber of dependents (because
with a deficit-reduction plan of the states then get more “free”
equal seriousness, rather than federal matching money) and
also encourages individuals
just demagoguing the Ryan
to stay on the dole. The 1996
plan till next Election Day,
welfare reform was simi(b) there are any Republicans
beyond the measured, super- larly designed to reverse that
entitlement’s powerful incenwonky Ryan who can explain
tives to dependency. Ryan’s
and defend a plan of such
daunting scope and complex- idea is to extend the same
ity, and (c) Americans are seri- logic of rewarding work to the
non-cash parts of the poverty
ous people.
program — from food stamps
My guesses: No. Not really.
BY CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
I
to public housing.
When you hear this
being denounced as
throwing the poor in
the snow, remember
these same charges
were hurled with equal
fury in 1996. President
Clinton’s own assistant health
and human services secretary,
Peter Edelman, resigned in
protest, predicting that abolishing welfare would throw
a million children into poverty. On the contrary. Within
five years child poverty had
declined by more than 2.5 million — one of the reasons the
1996 welfare reform is considered one of the social policy
successes of our time.
(2) Critics are describing Ryan’s Medicare reform
as privatization, a deliberately loaded term designed to
instantly discredit the idea. Yet
the idea is essentially to apply
to all of Medicare the system
under which Medicare Part
D has been such a success: a
guaranteed insurance subsidy.
Thus instead of paying the
health provider directly (feefor-service), Medicare would
give seniors about $15,000 of
“premium support,” letting
the recipient choose among
a menu of approved healthinsurance plans.
Call this privatization if you
like, but then would you call
the Part D prescription benefit
“privatized”? If so, there’s a lot
to be said for it. Part D is both
popular and successful. It actually beat its cost projections
— a near miraculous exception
to just about every health care
program known to man.
Under Ryan’s plan, everyone 55 and over is unaffected.
Younger workers get the
insurance subsidy starting in
2022. By eventually ending the
current fee-for-service system
that drives up demand and
therefore prices, this reform is
far more likely to ensure the
survival of Medicare than the
current near-insolvent system.
(3) The final charge — cutting taxes for the rich — is the
most scurrilous. That would be
the same as calling the Ronald
Reagan-Bill Bradley 1986 tax
reform “cutting taxes for the
rich.” In fact, it was designed
for revenue neutrality. It cut
rates — and for everyone — by
eliminating loopholes, including corrupt exemptions and
economically counterproductive tax expenditures, to yield
what is generally considered
by left and right an extraordinarily successful piece of economic legislation.
Ryan’s plan is classic tax
reform — which even Obama
says the country needs: It
broadens the tax base by
eliminating loopholes that, in
turn, provide the revenues for
reducing rates. Tax reform is
one of those rare public policies that produce social fairness and economic efficiency
at the same time. For both
corporate and individual taxes,
Ryan’s plan performs the desperately needed task of cleaning out the myriad of accumulated cutouts and loopholes
that have choked the tax code
since 1986.
Ryan’s overall plan tilts at
every windmill imaginable,
including corporate welfare
and agricultural subsidies. The
only thing left out is Social
Security. Which proves only
that Ryan is not completely
suicidal.
But the blueprint is brave and
profoundly forward-looking. It
seeks nothing less than to adapt
the currently unsustainable
welfare state to the demographic realities of the 21st century.
Will it survive the inevitable
barrage of mindless, electiondriven, 30-second attack ads
(see above)? Alternate question:
Does Obama have half of Ryan’s
courage?
I think not (on both counts).
But let’s hope so.
Charles Krauthammer is a
columnist with the Washington
Post Writers Group. His column
appears in The Citizen on
Mondays. His e-mail address is
letters@charleskrauthammer.
com.
5A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
STATE
TALLAHASSEE
HOMESTEAD
TAMPA
WEST PALM BEACH
Gov.’s team in ‘Twitter war’
Officer injured in struggle
Sergeant charged with fraud
Florida Gov. Rick Scott’s top spokesman is getting in the habit of defending
his boss from the media in 140 characters or less.
Scott’s communication’s director,
Brian Burgess, uses Twitter to contradict and argue with reporters and
criticize news sources. Shots have been
fired back and forth in what one former
reporter is calling a Twitter war between
Burgess and the media.
A former political reporter who runs
the Crowley Political Report blog said
arguments that used to take place over
the phone are becoming public. Burgess
said Scott has told his team to branch
out beyond traditional media in delivering a message and he’s used that challenge to be experimental on Twitter.
Tampa police say an undercover officer was injured during a struggle with a
suspect after a drug deal became violent.
Police spokeswoman Laura McElroy
said after officers bought drugs from
the suspect Saturday night, the suspect
rammed his vehicle into a police car
and several other vehicles before trying to run over an officer. The suspect
eventually bailed out of his car. McElroy
said the suspect was so combative that
several officers were needed to take him
into custody. One officer broke his hand
during the struggle.
The suspect’s name was not released.
McElroy said he was treated at a hospital
for a cut on his arm. Police say a gun and
cocaine were seized from the suspect’s
car.
A Broward Sheriff’s sergeant and
his wife are facing charges that they
engaged in oxycodone trafficking and
prescription fraud.
Authorities say Sgt. John Goodbread
filled more than 30 prescriptions for
oxycodone, OxyContin and hydrocodone between April 2009 and December
2010. They say his wife, Heather
Goodbread, also purchased painkillers
more than 30 times Between April 2009
and February 2011.
Three of the five doctors involved in
the case say they didn’t know other doctors were prescribing pills to the couple. Another had destroyed his medical records and the other is deceased.
Goodbread has been suspended with
pay as the investigation continues.
J PAT CARTER/The Associated Press
Daniella Aleala pours water over one of the Buddha statues at
Wat Miami in Homestead on Sunday, as the temple celebrates
Songkran, the Thai New Year. Thailand’s Songkran marks the beginning of a new solar year and is known for its water-splashing street
parties that symbolize cleansing and purification.
In Duval’s Teen Court, a second chance is costly
BY BRIDGET MURPHY
The Associated Press
JACKSONVILLE — They
admit guilt before ever stepping into this court.
And while a second chance
awaits young people who do,
it’s not something that comes
comfortably.
Instead of judging by an
adult in a black robe, peers
mete out consequences to
defendants in Duval County’s
Teen Court. If teens stick to
sentences, the crimes come
off their records. Sentences
for the mostly first-time misdemeanor offenders often
include community service,
essays, jail tours, counseling,
service as a program juror,
and public apologies to parents.
“You hope that one in however many kids will learn
something and straighten
up,” said Heather Solanka, a
civil litigation lawyer who volunteers as a Teen Court judge.
“The goal is that they go, ‘This
is not the path for me.’”
Teen Court started in
Jacksonville in 1998. Program
director Lawrence Hills Jr.
said he believes the program
— one of about 50 in Florida
— provides a lesson in civics
that schools don’t teach.
He said administrators usually pick teens who commit
crimes at school for the diversion program funded by a fee
adult offenders pay.
While petty theft was once
the most popular offense, now
60 percent of cases involve
marijuana possession. In the
last five years, about 1,800
defendants have been part
of the program. There are 18
teens who volunteer as peer
lawyers, plus some who serve
as jurors and bailiffs.
In a recent Monday night
court session, a 17-year-old
Englewood High School junior
was up first before Solanka.
Police busted the honor student after she skipped out
of school with cigarettes
and marijuana. She got on
the witness stand to answer
questions as a 15-year-old
prosecutor and an 18-yearold defense attorney put on
their cases.
“She had the opportunity to
say no, but she didn’t and she
went along with her friends,”
said Aaron Zeiler, a Stanton
High sophomore. “She had
the opportunity to stop, but
she kept running away.”
“My defendant is very sorry
for what she has done. She
told the police officer the
truth,” said Devin Clark, an
Arlington Country Day School
senior. “... Please return with
a fair and just sentence.”
Before the jury deliberated,
the girl’s father stood to say
how broken-hearted he was.
After six teen jurors decided
the defendant’s punishment,
it was time for her to face her
father for a public mea culpa.
She wiped her eyes, holding
her head in her hands before
standing up.
Clubs
Continued from Page 1A
“So as soon as we get that
money, we’ll be catching up,”
he said.
The club uses Glynn Archer
for office space and afterschool tutoring, and conducts
some after-school activities at
Bayview Park.
“Hi Dad,” she started, fidgeting with a jacket that sagged
off one shoulder. “I just want
to say how sorry I am. ...”
Not every teen is so contrite. Not every parent seems
to understand his or her child
could be facing adjudication
in a court that isn’t set up to
be a learning experience.
Later that night, the mother of a 16-year-old caught
with marijuana at Mandarin
High confronted Teen Court
officials about her son’s sentence.
It included 15 hours of community service, four jury duty
assignments, a 7 p.m. curfew,
a jail tour, a three-page essay
on the effects of marijuana, a
Fred Sims, the School
District’s facilities manager, said
he had spoken with Dombroski
about six months ago, and was
told the rent would get paid,
Sims said.
“He gets behind, but he does
eventually get us paid,” Sims
said, referring to Dombroski’s
previous tenancy at the district’s May Sands School.
[email protected]
two-page report on decisionmaking skills, and a courtordered visit to a homeless
shelter to talk to three people
about how they got there.
“This is everything on the
books. I’m a single mom and
I work,” the mother said. “...
He knows what he’s done ...
This is too much. I can’t do
this. I’m going to end up losing my job.”
Solanka never had seen any
parent react that way. Jurors
were wide-eyed. From the
gallery, Hills stood to address
the mother.
“The alternative is arrest
... I appreciate what you just
said,” he told her, “... but if
he were to exercise the other
options, likely he wouldn’t
have a choice.”
Soon it was time for the
16-year-old to give his courtordered apology.
“I want to say I’m sorry ...
You could lose your job,” he
told his mother. “I know it’s
crazy and ... I’m just sorry and
I’ll try to straighten up.”
Later that night, the woman
shook Hills’ hand on the way
out of the courthouse. Next to
her was a young man whose
eyes were red from crying.
Anthony jurors may be picked from Orlando
ORLANDO— The judge in the murder trial of a Florida
mother charged with killing her daughter said jurors may be
picked from the Orlando area if they can’t be found in another
location in Florida.
Circuit Judge Belvin Perry said at a hearing Friday that he
still planned to pick jurors outside the Orlando area for Casey
Anthony’s trial next month.
Jurors will be brought to central Florida, where they will be
sequestered for the trial. If jurors can’t be chosen in a week, the
judge said he will consider returning jury selection to Orlando.
The judge wants to use jurors outside of Orlando because of
the media attention the case has gotten.
Anthony has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.
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6A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
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 J. Stahler
Jim Unger
MARMADUKE Brad Anderson
Jim Davis
HERMAN
BEETLE BAILEY
Mike Peters
Mort Walker
Art & Chip Sanson
ARLO & JANIS
FRANK & ERNEST
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
Monday, April 11, 2011 after a stroke he had suffered was one of only two native
BIG NATE
Lincoln Peirce
Today is the 101st day of
2011 and the 23rd day of
spring.
TODAY’S HISTORY: In
1945, U.S. troops liberated
the Buchenwald concentration camp.
In 1951, President Harry
Truman relieved Gen. Douglas
MacArthur of his commands
in Asia.
In 1979, Ugandan dictator Idi
Amin was overthrown.
In 2006, Israeli Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon was declared
permanently incapacitated
months earlier left him in a
coma.
TODAY’S
BIRTHDAYS:
Dean Acheson (1893-1971),
diplomat/statesman; Oleg
Cassini (1913-2006), fashion
designer; Joel Grey (1932-),
actor; Louise Lasser (1939-),
actress; Jason Varitek (1972-),
baseball player; Mark Teixeira
(1980-), baseball player; Joss
Stone (1987-), singer.
TODAY’S SPORTS: In 1936,
the Detroit Red Wings defeated the Toronto Maple Leafs to
win their first Stanley Cup.
TODAY’S FACT: Idi Amin
officers in Uganda’s military
when the nation gained its
independence in 1962.
TODAY’S QUOTE: “If we
learn the art of yielding what
must be yielded to the changing present, we can save the
best of the past.” -- Dean
Acheson
TODAY’S NUMBER: 9.4 million -- number of mobile cellular-phone subscriptions in
Uganda in 2009, compared
to only 233,500 landlines.
TODAY’S MOON: First-quarter moon (April 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 ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
NATION
NEW YORK
CAMARILLO, CALIF.
MAPLETON, IOWA
NEW YORK
NYSE rejects bid to sell
Gas prices jump 19 cents a gallon
AP photographer located
The parent company of the New
York Stock Exchange said Sunday that
it rejected an $11.3 billion bid from
Nasdaq and IntercontinentalExchange
to buy the company.
NYSE Euronext said that its board
decided to turn down the offer, which
was submitted earlier this month,
because it was “highly conditional” and
would have caused unnecessary risk for
shareholders.
The company said it is sticking with
its plan to combine with German
exchange operator Deutsche Boerse
AG. NYSE agreed to that $10 billion
deal in February
The average U.S. price of a gallon of gasoline has jumped 19 cents over the past three
weeks.
The Lundberg Survey of fuel prices now
puts the average price for a gallon of regular
at $3.76.
Analyst Trilby Lundberg said Sunday that
price is 91 cents higher than it was this time
last year.
The national average for a gallon of midgrade is $3.90. For premium it’s $4.01 a gallon.
Lundberg said diesel prices rose 11 cents a
gallon over the past three weeks, to $4.09.
Tucson, Ariz., had the nation’s lowest average price for gas at $3.41. San Francisco had
the highest at $4.13.
An award-winning Associated Press
photographer covering the conflict in
Libya was located Sunday after being
missing for more than a day, the news
agency said.
Altaf Qadri was safe and unhurt,
and was on his way back to the AP
offices in Benghazi, according to John
Daniszewski, the agency’s senior managing editor for international news and
photos.
Qadri became separated from his colleagues near the eastern Libyan city of
Ajdabiya while on assignment Saturday,
according to the AP. “We’re very pleased
that he has emerged unharmed while
covering the violence in the area,”
Daniszewski said.
NATI HARNIK/The Associated Press
A resident carries a basket with belongings away from a destroyed
house in Mapleton, Iowa, on Sunday, after a large tornado flattened a grain elevator and destroyed homes and buildings on
its weekend rampage through this small western Iowa town.
Authorities reported no serious injuries.
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — And
to think they did it without any
help from Reuben Kincaid!
A mini-Partridge Family
reunion was held Saturday
in Atlantic City when David
Cassidy and Danny Bonaduce
played on a song onstage
together. They
say it was only
the second
time in 40
years they’ve
done so.
Bonaduce,
a Philadelphia
Cassidy
disc jockey,
was Cassidy’s
younger brother on the ’70s
TV hit, but lip synched and
only pretended to play the
bass guitar on the show. On
Saturday, after he did a stand-
up comedy routine to open
the show at Resorts Casino
Hotel, Cassidy got him to play
“Doesn’t Somebody Want To
Be Wanted.” Bonaduce learned
that song for real when they
played it together last October
in suburban Philadelphia.
“The Partridge Family” ran
on ABC from 1970 through
1974.
✬✬✬✬✬
HO CHI MINH CITY,
Vietnam — After nearly five
decades of singing about a
war that continues to haunt a
generation of Americans, legendary performer Bob Dylan
is finally getting his chance to
see Vietnam at peace.
The iconic American folk
singer and songwriter was set
to play a special concert in the
former Saigon on Sunday evening, where he’s expected to
belt out some
of his classic anti-war
tunes, nearly
36 years after
the Vietnam
War ended.
Dylan’s
Dylan
music during
that tumultuous era helped define a generation, touching thousands
of young people who took to
the streets demanding that
Washington stop the war in
Vietnam.
The concert’s promoter has
said that about half of the
8,000 seats at Ho Chi Minh
City’s RMIT University were
in 1962, he took the group in a
more political direction, playing and singing on five albums
until their 1964 breakup.
✬✬✬✬✬
Tim Robbins, star of “The
Shawshank Redemption”
LOS ANGELES — Gil
Robbins, a folk singer, guitarist and director of “Dead Man
and member of the early 1960s Walking,” issued a statement
calling him “a fantastic father
group the Highwaymen, has
and a great musician” with a
died.
“commitment to social jusTracey Jacobs, publicist
tice.”
for Robbins’ son, the actor
and director Tim Robbins,
✬✬✬✬✬
said in an email Saturday
NEW YORK — Tenor Juan
that Robbins died Tuesday in
Diego Florez has really delivEsteban Cantu, Mexico. He
ered: a host of high C’s to a
was 80.
worldwide audience of milShortly before Gil Robbins
lions — and minutes earlier,
joined the Highwaymen,
his own baby boy in New York
the group had a major hit
City.
with “Michael,” their version
Florez helped two midwives
of “Michael, Row the Boat
Ashore.” When Robbins joined in the birth of Leandro Florez
sold to a mix of young and old
fans, both Vietnamese and
Western.
at 12:25 p.m.
on Saturday.
The tenor had
stayed up all
night with
his wife in
labor at their
Manhattan
Florez
apartment.
While they
awaited the birth of their first
child, the world waited for the
Peruvian to sing the tenor lead
in Rossini’s comic opera “Le
Compte Ory” at the nearby
Metropolitan Opera — starting
at 1 p.m.
The baby got the cue: He
bawled first.
His daddy then rushed to
the Met and the show went on
— heard in movie theaters and
on radio around the globe.
White House: Obama to lay out spending plan
BY LAURIE KELLMAN
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — One budget deal
down, President Barack Obama and
Congress began to pivot Sunday from
the painful standoff over this year’s
spending to a pair of defining debates
over the nation’s borrowing limit and
the election-year budget.
Much will be revealed at midweek, when the House and Senate
are expected to vote on a budget for
the remainder of this fiscal year and
Obama reveals his plan to reduce
the deficit, in part by scaling back
programs for seniors and the poor.
Across the dial on Sunday, messengers from both parties framed the
series of spending fights as debates
over cuts — a thematic victory for
House Republicans swept to power by
a populist mandate for smaller, more
austere government.
“We’ve had to bring this president
kicking and screaming to the table to
cut spending,” said House Majority
Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., on “Fox
News Sunday.”
Presidential adviser David Plouffe
said Obama has long been committed to finding ways for the nation to
spend within its means. He confirmed
that the president would unveil more
specifics for deficit reduction with a
speech Wednesday that would reveal
plans to reduce the government’s
chief health programs for seniors and
the poor.
“You’re going to have to look at
Medicare and Medicaid and see what
kind of savings you can get,” Obama
adviser David Plouffe said Sunday on
NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
The presidential speech on
Wednesday is part of official
Washington’s shift from the standoff
over spending through September to
next year’s budget and beyond. Alone
and together, the prospects of raising
the debt ceiling and passing a 2012
spending plan are politically perilous, a knot that lawmakers will spend
the coming months trying to unravel.
That means competing plans to shore
up the nation’s long-term fiscal health
in a debate many predict will make
Friday’s nail-biter look minor.
For all the forward focus Sunday,
congressional officials still were analyzing Friday’s 348-70 vote to fund
the government through the week.
Operating under it, aides were putting to paper the longer-term bipartisan accord to fund the government
through September. It wasn’t clear
WILLIAM B. PLOWMAN/The Associated Press
White House Senior Adviser David Plouffe
is interviewed on NBC’s ‘Meet the Press’
in Washington on Sunday.
that the vote would remain the same
on the spending bill for the next six
months.
The late hour of Friday’s handshake
left lawmakers little time to react.
House members of both parties who
voted for the funding through the
week could not say on Sunday that
they’d vote for the plan to fund the
government through September.
Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., who
voted “yes” Friday to extend funding
this week while the final compromise
was written, said he was nonetheless
undecided on whether he’d vote for
the final deal. On ABC’s “This Week,”
he said he didn’t think the six-month
compromise would pass.
On the other side of the aisle, Rep.
Mike Pence, R-Ind., also a “yes” vote
on Friday, would not commit to voting for the six-month deal either.
Pence praised House Speaker John
Boehner for fighting “the good fight.”
“It sounds like John Boehner got a
good deal, probably not good enough
for me to support it, but a good deal
nonetheless,” Pence said on ABC.
Friday’s tally also offered a look at
Republicans likely to be the staunchest opponents of any compromises
on spending and policy.
Twenty-eight of the “no” votes were
cast by Republicans. Sixteen of those
are members of the 87-member freshman class. Also voting no: Tea Party
star and possible presidential candidate Michele Bachmann, R-Minn.
“This short-term was just ‘same
ol’, same ol’ ’ for Washington,” one
newcomer who voted “no,” Rep. Tim
Huelskamp of Kansas, wrote on his
Facebook page.
The $38.5 billion in cuts, Huelskamp
wrote, “barely make a dent” in years of
trillion-dollar deficits and the nation’s
$14 trillion debt. Additionally, the
measure lacked the policy riders he
sought, such as one to strip Planned
Parenthood of federal funding, though
by law no federal money goes to its
abortion services.
All told, Huelskamp wrote, the measure “ignores the fundamental reasons
I and my fellow freshmen members of
Congress were sent to Washington in
November of last year.”
Plouffe said the president understands the mandate to dramatically cut spending. On talk show after
talk show, he pointed to December’s
bipartisan deal on tax cuts with Friday
night’s agreement on this year’s budget as evidence that both parties can
govern together when they want to.
“Compromise is not a dirty word,”
Plouffe said on ABC.
The president, Plouffe said, would
address ways to reduce the deficit
and the long-term, $14 trillion debt.
He gave few specifics, but he said
the president believes taxes should go
up on higher-income Americans and
cuts to Medicare and Medicaid will be
necessary.
A month later, fervor of Wis. debate shifts to recall elections
The Associated Press
MADISON, Wis. — Nearly
a month after the Wisconsin
standoff over union rights
ended, some of the fervor from
that debate has shifted to recall
efforts targeting lawmakers in
both parties — Republicans
who voted to cut back collective bargaining and Democrats
who fled the state to try to stop
them.
Now that the law has passed,
organizers are focusing on signature-gathering efforts. But
of the 16 state senators who
were originally targeted, only
six appear likely to face an election threatening removal. And
before recall elections can be
held, supporters need to find
candidates to run against the
incumbents.
Still, voter outrage remains
high in many places, helping to
stir interest in the recalls.
“A lot of legislators are going
to be looking over their shoulders a little more in the future,”
said Michael Kraft, a professor of political science at the
University of Wisconsin at
Green Bay. “And if they are in
the middle of a recall effort,
they might be nervous about
that. They might moderate
what they say and how they
approach the budget.”
Last week, Democrats filed
their first petition to try to recall
a GOP senator who supported
Gov. Scott Walker’s law, which
eliminated collective bargaining for most public employees.
Sen. Dan Kapanke of
La Crosse represents a
Democratic-leaning district in
western Wisconsin. Two other
Republican senators and three
Democrats also face probable
recall elections.
At first, the recall efforts
were a sideshow to the larger
political battle unfolding in
Madison. But depending on
how many recall elections take
place and how many incumbents, if any, are kicked out,
the process could profoundly
affect Walker’s agenda.
If Republicans lose just three
seats, they would give up their
19-14 majority and with it the
power that allowed them to
aggressively push the legislation through despite ear-splitting protests that drew tens of
thousands of protesters to the
Capitol.
Walker signed the measure
March 11. It is being challenged
in court.
If a judge rules that the bill
was improperly passed, the
Senate could be forced to vote
on the law again. And if two
senators were to switch sides,
their votes (combined with
that of the sole dissenting
Republican), could defeat the
measure.
In another sign that Walker’s
union law is still on many
minds, a state Supreme Court
race exploded last week into
a hotly debated contest that
some people viewed as a referendum on Walker’s policies. A
little-known liberal challenger
tapped into voter anger in her
attempt to unseat a conservative incumbent.
On Friday, Justice David
Prosser had a lead of 7,500
votes out of 1.5 million ballots
cast, an unusually close vote
for a judicial race that he was
expected to win easily. JoAnne
Kloppenburg was considering
a recount.
Tate said the race energized
efforts to recall Republican
senators. Two liberal political
action groups — Progressive
Change Campaign Committee
and Democracy for America
— quickly announced that they
would pour another $125,000
into recall ads in Green Bay,
Milwaukee and Minneapolis.
In addition to the six most
endangered
lawmakers,
recall efforts are proceeding against five other senators
— two Democrats and three
Republicans. But those prospects get dimmer each day as the
filing deadline looms. And campaigns targeting two other GOP
senators and three Democrats
are long shots at best.
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8A
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
WORLD
TRIPOLI, LIBYA
GENEVA
CUZCO, PERU
LONDON
Libya accepts cease-fire plan
Free beer might be off the menu
Sailor charged with murder
South African President Jacob Zuma
said Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi
has accepted the African Union’s “road
map” for a cease-fire with rebels.
Zuma and other African leaders
traveled to Tripoli to meet Gadhafi on
Sunday and will be in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi on Monday to meet
leaders of the opposition.
The African Union’s road map calls
for an immediate cease-fire, opening
channels for humanitarian aid and
talks between the rebels and the government.
Gadhafi has ignored the cease-fire
he announced after international airstrikes were authorized last month, and
he rejects rebel demands that he step
down.
Free beer will reportedly be verboten
soon in Switzerland, if the government has
its way.
Swiss weekly Sonntag said the Cabinet
has drafted a plan to ban restaurateurs
from offering any free drinks to customers.
It cited the director of the Swiss Alcohol
Board on Sunday as saying an existing ban
on promotions involving other alcoholic
beverages would be extended to include
beer.
Alexandre Schmidt said publicans would
still be allowed to offer “spontaneous”
rounds to regulars.
The proposal has drawn strong opposition from the hospitality industry as
free beer promotions are common in
bars, restaurants and at public events in
Switzerland.
Police charged a Royal Navy sailor
on Sunday with murdering an officer
aboard a British nuclear-powered submarine.
Able Seaman Ryan Donovan, 22, is
also charged with the attempted murder of three other crew on HMS Astute.
Lt. Cmdr. Ian Molyneux, the sub’s
weapons engineer, was shot dead
Friday while the submarine was docked
in Southampton.
Another officer was seriously wounded before the gunman was disarmed by
fellow sailors and visiting dignitaries.
As well as the murder charge, Donovan
is charged with attempting to kill Lt.
Cmdr. Christopher Hodge, Petty Officer
Christopher Brown and Chief Petty
Officer David McCoy.
ERCK DANINO/The Associated Press
A voter wearing traditional Quechua indigenous clothing fills out
her ballot during general elections in Cuzco, Peru, on Sunday.
A former military officer was expected to win the most votes in
Sunday’s presidential elections but fall far short of the outright
majority needed to avoid a runoff, making the tight battle for second crucial.
Egypt’s ex-President Mubarak denies abuse of power
BY DIAA HADID
The Associated Press
CAIRO — In the first
remarks since his ouster, former Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak denied allegations
that he used his position to
amass wealth and property in
a speech broadcast Sunday, as
hundreds of protesters occupying the heart of Cairo shouted
for him to be brought to trial.
Mubarak, forced out of office
two months ago by a popular
uprising, said he was willing to
cooperate in any investigation
to prove that he did not own
property abroad or possessed
foreign bank accounts.
Shortly after Mubarak’s prerecorded speech was aired,
Egypt’s prosecutor general
told state TV he issued orders
Sunday summoning the expresident and his two sons for
questioning. The station quot-
ed a prosecution spokesman as
saying the scope of the investigation of Mubarak and his sons
would include the crackdown
on protesters that killed an
estimated 300 people as well as
the corruption allegations.
Holding Mubarak and top
officials in his government
accountable for the violence
is a central demand of antiMubarak movement.
The pan-Arab news channel
Al-Arabiya, which broadcast
the speech, said it was recorded
Saturday, a day after demonstrators gathered in huge numbers in Cairo to demand that
the military council that took
over from Mubarak launch an
investigation into his wealth.
There was no video image
accompanying the recording of
Mubarak’s voice.
The speech seemed to be
as much about preserving his
dignity as about denying the
accusations against him.
“I was hurt very much, and
I am still hurting — my family
and I — from the unjust campaigns against us and false allegations that aim to smear my
reputation, my integrity, my
(political) stances and my military history,” Mubarak said.
Egyptians fed up with poverty, corruption and political
repression forced Mubarak to
leave office on Feb. 11 after 18
days of mass demonstrations.
Friday’s protest in Cairo’s
Tahrir Square by tens of thousands was the biggest since
then. Despite constitutional
amendments to allow free elections and other steps toward
a freer political scene, many
of people in the anti-Mubarak
movement are growing impatient with the ruling military’s
transitional leadership and
AMR NABIL/The Associated Press
skeptical of its pledges to meet An Egyptian paints graffiti in opposition to a higher military council that rules Egypt at Tahrir Square in
all demands.
Cairo, Egypt, on Sunday.
Witnesses: 4 protesters killed in key Syrian city
BY BASSEM MROUE
The Associated Press
REBECCA BLACKWELL/The Associated Press
A soldier allied with Alassane Ouattara takes up a position as fighting moves closer to a checkpoint used as a republican forces operating base in the Youpougon neighborhood of Abidjan, Ivory Coast, on
Sunday.
BEIRUT — Syrian security
forces and pro-government
gunmen killed four protesters Sunday in the port city of
Banias after the army sealed
off the city as hundreds of protesters gathered, undaunted
by the regime’s use of deadly
force to quell more than three
weeks of unrest, witnesses said.
State TV reported that nine soldiers were killed in an ambush
near the city.
Details were sketchy because
telephone lines, Internet access
and electricity apparently were
cut to most parts of the city.
Army tanks and soldiers circled the city, preventing people
from entering.
But one witness, reached by
BY MARCO CHOWN OVED
The Associated Press
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast —
United Nations and French
helicopters fired rockets on
strongman Laurent Gbagbo’s
residence on Sunday in an
assault the U.N. said was to
retaliate for attacks by his forces on U.N. headquarters and
civilians.
Residents from nearby neighborhoods reported seeing two
U.N. Mi-24 attack helicopters
and a French helicopter open
fire on the residence, where
Gbagbo is holed up in a bunker. The residents couldn’t be
named for fear of reprisal.
An Associated Press reporter saw the helicopters take
off from the French military
base followed minutes later
by explosions coming from
the direction of the residence.
Successive waves of French
helicopters took off from the
base in the following hours
and additional bombardments
could be heard.
Gbagbo has been living in
a bunker in his residence in
Abidjan for nearly a week. After
a decade in power, he refuses
to step aside even though the
United Nations has ruled that
he lost the November presidential election to Alassane
Ouattara.
Forces loyal to Gbagbo were
encircled at the presidential
residence earlier this week
but broke out on Saturday,
ambushing a patrol of soldiers
loyal to his rival and advancing
downtown.
Pro-Gbagbo forces also
attacked U.N. headquarters on
Saturday and again on Sunday.
“This is in retaliation for a
series of attacks for the last three
or four days not only against
(the U.N.) but also against the
civilian population — often
with heavy weapons,” said U.N.
spokesman Hamadoun Toure.
Forces on both sides have
been accused by human rights
groups of killing hundreds of
civilians in recent weeks.
Toure said Sunday’s airstrikes
targeted the presidential palace
and Gbagbo’s residence, as well
as military bases where heavy
weapons had been identified.
Gbagbo has lost control of
virtually the entire country in
the last two weeks as forces
loyal to Ouattara have swept
down from the north and west
into the commercial capital.
under the control of the feared
security forces.
Protests erupted in Syria
more than three weeks ago and
have been growing steadily
every week, with tens of thousands of people calling for
sweeping reforms in President
Bashar Assad’s authoritarian
regime. More than 170 people
have been killed, according to
human rights groups.
Swedish think tank: Global arms spending slows
BY MALIN RISING
UN, French fire on Gbagbo
residence in Ivory Coast
telephone, said hundreds of
protesters had gathered near
the al-Rahman mosque when
security forces and armed men
in civilian clothes opened fire
on them. The names of the dead
were read out on loudspeakers.
He said dozens of people
were wounded, but most of
them asked to be treated at
a small clinic instead of at
the main hospital, which was
The Associated Press
STOCKHOLM — The world’s military spending grew by only 1.3 percent
in 2010, thanks to budget constraints
caused by the global financial crisis, with
the top three arms investors being the
United States, China and Britain, a think
tank said Monday.
South America was the region with the
largest military spending growth of 5.8
percent, with countries such as Brazil
seeking to increase its international influence, said the Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute.
The institution, known as SIPRI, said
global military spending in 2010 was the
lowest since 2001.
It said the United States topped the list
by spending $698 billion last year, followed
by China with $119 billion and the United
Kingdom with $59.6 billion.
SIPRI said the rise in spending in South
America was partly driven by increased
staff costs and internal security threats in
some countries, but that the change also
should be seen in light of the region’s strong
economic growth and relatively limited
exposure to the world financial crisis.
329930
NOTICE OF A MEETING OF THE MONROE COUNTY
PARKS AND RECREATION ADVISORY BOARD
NOTICE OF MEETING
PUBLIC NOTICE
THE CAROLINE STREET CORRIDOR
AND BAHAMA VILLAGE COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT
All interested parties are hereby notified that the Caroline Street Corridor and
Bahama Village Community Redevelopment Agency has filed with the City of
Key West, Florida, a copy of an annual report of its activities for the preceding
fiscal year, including certain financial matters required by law for the fiscal year
ending September 30, 2010. Copies of these documents may be examined after
March 31, 2011, in the Office of the City Clerk, City Hall, 525 Angela Street, 1st
Floor, Key West, Florida 33041-1409 or may be accessed after March 31, 2011
on the City’s website at http://www.keywestcity.com.
This notice is being published in compliance with the requirements of Section
163.356(3)(c), Florida Statutes, governing community redevelopment agencies.
Cheryl Smith, MMC, CPM
City Clerk, City of Key West
April 11, 2011 Key West Citizen
340397
A PARKS AND RECREATION ADVISORY BOARD
meeting will take place on Monday, April 11, 2011
at 6:00 PM at the Big Pine Key Community Park,
Sands Road. MM 31, Big Pine Key, Monroe County,
Florida.
This meeting is open to the public.
For more information please contact Rosa Washington at
(305) 292-4432 [email protected]
or Joan Sherry at (305) 292-4536 [email protected].
ADA ASSISTANCE: If you are a person with a disability who needs special
accommodations in order to participate in this proceeding, please contact
the County Administrator’s Office, by phoning (305) 292-4441, between
the hours of 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., no later than five (5) calendar days prior
to the scheduled meeting; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call “711”.
April 4, & April 11, 2011 Key West Citizen
330078
SPORTS
Marlins
manager
Edwin
Rodriguez
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY , APRIL 11, 2011
1B
HIGH AND AWAY
MLB ROUNDUP, 3B
GOLF: THE MASTERS
SPORTS SHORTS
Schwartzel wins after a wild day
BY DOUG FERGUSON
The Associated Press
CHUCK BURTON/The Associated Press
Charlotte Bobcats mascot Rufus goes up
to dunk over other team mascots during a
timeout in the first half of an NBA game
between the Bobcats and the Detroit
Pistons on Sunday in Charlotte, N.C.
Carl Lewis to announce his
‘political plans’ in NJ
MOUNT HOLLY, N.J. — Olympic gold medalist
Carl Lewis is planning to announce his “political plans” in New Jersey.
Lewis said Sunday night that he planned a
news conference today. He didn’t offer details,
but Democratic Assemblyman Herb Conaway
has told The Philadelphia Inquirer that Lewis
was in negotiations to run for the state Senate
in the Eighth District.
Lewis lives in the district. Republican Dawn
Addiego currently holds the seat.
Sterger to ABC News:
‘I’m not gold-digger’
NEW YORK — The former New York Jets game
hostess who allegedly received inappropriate
photos and phone messages from Brett Favre
says in an interview with ABC News’ George
Stephanopoulos that she isn’t a “gold-digger”
and hasn’t “made a dime” off the scandal.
In the interview that will air on “Good
Morning America” on Tuesday and Wednesday
and “Nightline” on Tuesday night, Jenn Sterger
says: “I haven’t made a dime off anything in
this whole situation. Not from the pictures.
Not from Favre. I never wanted to sue anyone.
That was never an intention of mine. I’m not a
gold-digger. The only way I wanted to make my
money this whole time was to just have a job.”
Masters officials apologize
to female reporter
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Masters officials have
apologized to sports columnist Tara Sullivan of
The Bergen (N.J.) Record after she was denied
entry to a locker room for a post-tournament
interview.
Augusta National spokesman Steve Ethun
says a security guard acted improperly in stopping Sullivan, since club policy is to provide
equal access to all reporters. Several female
reporters at the tournament confirmed they
had made numerous trips to the locker room
for interviews in the past.
Ethun says “it should not have happened”
and that Augusta National officials will work
“as hard as we can to make sure it does not
happen again.”
Sullivan was among a crowd of reporters following third-round leader Rory McIlroy from the
course into the clubhouse after his collapse in
the final round.
KEYS CALENDAR
TODAY ON TV
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
ESPN — Tampa Bay at Boston, 7
p.m.
NBA D-LEAGUE
VERSUS — Playoffs, first round, game 2, Utah
at Iowa, 8 p.m.
SOCCER
ESPN2 — Premier League, Manchester City at
Liverpool, 2:55 p.m.
WNBA BASKETBALL
ESPN — Draft, at Bristol, Conn., 3 p.m.
FLORIDA LOTTERY
Cash 3: Afternoon drawing: 2-1-4
Evening drawing: 3-3-8
Play 4: Afternoon drawing: 7-5-0-4
Evening drawing: 3-3-5-2
Fantasy 5: N/A
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Charl
Schwartzel gave this Masters a finish it deserved.
On an amazing Sunday at
Augusta National, where the roars
came from everywhere and for
everyone and didn’t stop until it
was over, Schwartzel emerged from
the madness by becoming the first
Masters champion to close with
four straight birdies.
His final putt from 20 feet curled
into the side of the cup for a 6under 66, the best closing round
at the Masters in 22 years. It gave
the 26-year-old South African a
two-shot victory over Australians
Adam Scott and Jason Day.
“Just an exciting day,” Schwartzel
said. “So many roars, and that
atmosphere out there was just
incredible. A phenomenal day.”
Indeed, this final round had it
all.
First came a fistpumping charge
by Tiger Woods,
who erased a
seven-shot deficit
in nine holes only
to go flat on the back
nine. Then came the
stunning collapse of
21-year-old Rory McIlroy,
who put his name in
Masters lore for all the wrong
reasons.
Still leading by one shot as he
headed to the back nine, McIlroy
hit a tee shot next to the cabins
left of the 10th fairway and twice
hit a tree to make triple bogey. He
three-putted from 7 feet for bogey
on the 11th, four-putted from
about 12 feet on the next hole and
buried his head into his forearm as
the shock began to settle in.
McIlroy shot 80, the highest final
round by the 54-hole leader since
Ken Venturi in 1956. Not since Jean
Van de Velde at Carnoustie had
someone blown at least a fourshot lead going into the last round
of the major.
So wild was this steamy afternoon that eight players had at least
a share of the
lead on some
p o i n t
d u r-
Charl
Schwartzel
H e
got upand-down
from behind
the 15th green
for birdie to
briefly tie for
the lead, only
for Scott to stuff
his tee shot into 2
feet up ahead on the
par-3 16th. Schwartzel
answered with a 15-foot
birdie to catch Scott atop
the leaderboard again.
See MASTERS, page 3B
NHL: FLORIDA
NBA: MIAMI 100, BOSTON 77
Panthers fire
Peter DeBoer
after 3 years
RUBBING ELBOWS
James’ 27 lifts Miami
past Boston in battle
for second seed in East
BY TIM REYNOLDS
The Associated Press
had been 1-13 against Boston since March 2007, and
the Celtics ended both the 2009-10 seasons for Wade
(in the first round) and James (in the second round).
Miami won for the 13th time in its last 16 games
and outrebounded Boston 42-26, the Celtics’ total a
season low.
Ray Allen scored 13 points for the Celtics. Rajon
Rondo was held to just seven points and five assists
on 3 for 8 shooting.
Miami’s role players were huge.
SUNRISE — Peter DeBoer took over
as coach of the Florida Panthers three
years ago with a sparkling resume from
junior hockey, fully expecting that he
could bring the downtrodden franchise
back to the playoffs.
He was wrong.
The Panthers fired
DeBoer on Sunday,
one day after the
team finished its
10th straight season without a playoff
appearance.
DeBoer
Florida’s 72 points
were worst in the
Eastern Conference and the third-fewest in the 30-team NHL.
“These decisions are always tough
to make, but we felt strongly that it
was the right time to make a change,”
Panthers general manager Dale Tallon
said.
See HEAT, page 3B
See PANTHERS, page 3B
BY TIM REYNOLDS
The Associated Press
MIAMI — If this was a preview of the Eastern
Conference semifinals, then the Miami Heat and
Boston Celtics showed exactly what to expect.
There will be few pleasantries.
There will be pushing and shoving.
And if there’s a Game 7, it may very well be in
Miami.
LeBron James scored 27 points, Dwyane Wade
added 14 and the Heat moved closer to wrapping
up the No. 2 seed in the East playoffs by beating the
sliding Celtics 100-77 on Sunday.
Miami moved a game ahead of Boston, and
trimmed its magic number to clinch the second
seed to two.
Chris Bosh added 13 points and eight rebounds
for Miami, which had been 0-3 against Boston this
season.
Paul Pierce scored 24 points and Kevin Garnett
added 21 for Boston, which lost for the 10th time in
its last 19 games.
The Heat finally solved the Boston hex, beating the
Celtics for the third time in the last 21 meetings. Bosh
ing the back nine. The
steady hand came from
Schwartzel, whose
only bogey came
on the fourth hole
as this Masters
was just getting
warmed up.
ALAN DIAZ/The Associated Press
Heat coach Erik Spoelstra, left, and Celtics guard Rajon
Rondo, right, hold back Miami’s Mario Chalmers, center,
during an altercation between the teams after Jermaine
O’Neal fouled LeBron James in the second quarter on
Sunday in Miami. The Heat won, 100-77.
PREP SPORTS: NOTEBOOK
Conchs have record-setting day on the track
BY WILLIS JACOBSON
AND J.W. COOKE
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
Citizen Staff
T
BRITTANY WAGONER
KW, SENIOR, TRACK & FIELD
he Key West High track and
field
teams
had a recordsetting day
in their final
meet of the
regular season
this past weekend at Dade
Christian.
The Conch
girls placed
fifth out of 16
teams, while
the boys were
ninth in the
Friday meet.
The girls set
a couple of
school marks
en route to their strong finish.
Wagoner
broke the
Key West
High school
record with
a 12-foot
pole vault
and
was
part of the 4x100 meter relay
team that also set a Conchs
record.
Honorable Mention
Joey Gonzalez (Mar, Jr., Baseball)
Gonzalez tossed six shutout innings
on Friday night and had one of three
Dolphins hits in Marathon’s 3-0 victory over Somerset.
Kelley Struyf (Mar, Sr., Softball)
Made several spectacular catches
and hit a home run in the Lady ’Fins
victory over rival Key West.
Brittany Wagoner broke the
school record with a 12-foot leap in
the pole vault and teamed up with
Courtnie Coleman, Jasmine Jones
and Caroline Talbott to run a time
of 52.57 seconds to top the school’s
previous best time in that event.
Wagoner now has at least a share of
the school record in all four events
– high jump, long jump, pole vault
and 4x100 meter relay – in which
she has competed over the last
three years.
In Friday’s meet at Dade
Christian, Wagoner earned firsts in
the pole vault and long jump (1711). The girls relay team finished
fourth.
A couple of Key West boys had
second-place finishes in the meet.
NaQuan McNeill took second in
the 100-meter dash (11.60) and
Eric Vinson was second in the pole
vault (11). Aeschton Tomita ran
to a third-place finish in the 3,200
meters (10:56.72).
KEYSNEWS.COM — AND SPORTS TOO
The teams will head up the Keys
to Coral Shores on Friday for the
District 16-2A championship meet.
• • •
The Marathon High baseball
team was able to claim one of the
two seeds they were hoping for in
the District 16-2A tournament. This
past week, the Dolphins, with help
from other district teams, earned
at least the No. 3 seed in the opening postseason tournament. That
means Marathon will face off against
Mater Lakes in the first round, missing defending 2A State Champion
Westminster Christian until at the
district finals.
Despite having lost, in a mistake
riddle game, to Mater Lakes earlier this season, Dolphins coach
Luis Leal said he likes his team’s
match up. The two squads will play
once more in the regular season on
Friday.
See NOTEBOOK, page 3B
2B
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
SPORTS: Scoreboard
Cleveland at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
Toronto at Seattle, 10:10 p.m.
SPREADS
GLANTZ-CULVER LINE
Major League Baseball
National League
FAVORITE
LINE
at New York
-110
Chicago
-125
at Arizona
-115
at San Diego
-120
Los Angeles
-115
American League
at Detroit
-140
at Boston
-160
at Chicago
-120
at Los Angeles -190
at Seattle
-180
NBA
FAVORITE
Boston
at Philadelphia
Miami
at New Jersey
at Detroit
at Milwaukee
at New Orleans
Dallas
at Denver
at Phoenix
Oklahoma City
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
UNDERDOG
Colorado
at Houston
St. Louis
Cincinnati
at San Francisco
LINE
+100
+115
+105
+110
+105
Philadelphia
Florida
New York
Washington
Atlanta
Central Division
Texas
Tampa Bay
Oakland
Cleveland
Toronto
+130
+150
+110
+180
+170
Cincinnati
Milwaukee
Pittsburgh
Chicago
St. Louis
Houston
West Division
LINE
8
1
6
1
1 2⁄
7
9
9
1
1 2⁄
9
10
1
4 2⁄
UNDERDOG
at Washington
Orlando
at Atlanta
Charlotte
Cleveland
Toronto
Utah
at Houston
Golden State
Minnesota
at Sacramento
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Baltimore
New York
Toronto
Boston
Tampa Bay
Central Division
Cleveland
Chicago
Kansas City
Detroit
Minnesota
West Division
Texas
Los Angeles
Oakland
Seattle
W
6
5
5
1
1
L
3
3
4
7
8
Pct
.667
.625
.556
.125
.111
GB
—
1
2⁄
1
1
4 2⁄
5
W
7
6
6
3
3
L
2
3
3
6
6
Pct
.778
.667
.667
.333
.333
GB
—
1
1
4
4
W
8
5
4
2
L
1
4
5
7
Pct
.889
.556
.444
.222
GB
—
3
4
6
Saturday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 9, Boston 4
Kansas City 3, Detroit 1
Chicago White Sox 4, Tampa Bay 2
Baltimore 5, Texas 0, 1st game
Oakland 1, Minnesota 0
Texas 13, Baltimore 1, 2nd game
L.A. Angels 6, Toronto 5, 14 innings
Cleveland 2, Seattle 1
Colorado
Los Angeles
Arizona
San Diego
San Francisco
W
7
5
4
4
4
L
2
4
5
5
6
Pct
.778
.556
.444
.444
.400
GB
—
2
3
3
1
3 2⁄
W
6
5
5
4
3
2
L
3
5
5
5
6
7
Pct
.667
.500
.500
.444
.333
.222
GB
—
1
1 2⁄
112⁄
2
3
4
W
6
5
4
4
4
L
2
4
4
4
5
Pct
.750
.556
.500
.500
.444
GB
—
1
1 2⁄
2
2
1
2 2⁄
Atlantic Division
W
y-Boston
55
x-New York
42
x-Philadelphia
41
New Jersey
24
Toronto
22
Southeast Division
W
y-Miami
56
x-Orlando
50
x-Atlanta
44
Charlotte
32
Washington
22
Central Division
W
z-Chicago
60
x-Indiana
37
Milwaukee
33
Detroit
29
Cleveland
17
Sunday’s Games
Washington 7, N.Y. Mets 3, 11 innings
Colorado 6, Pittsburgh 5
Philadelphia 3, Atlanta 0
Houston 7, Florida 1
Milwaukee 6, Chicago Cubs 5
San Diego 7, L.A. Dodgers 2
St. Louis 6, San Francisco 1
Arizona 10, Cincinnati 8
Tonight’s Games
Colorado (Hammel 1-0) at N.Y. Mets (Pelfrey 0-1),
7:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Dempster 0-2) at Houston
(Figueroa 0-1), 8:05 p.m.
St. Louis (McClellan 0-0) at Arizona (Enright 0-0),
9:40 p.m.
Cincinnati (Volquez 1-0) at San Diego (Latos 0-0),
10:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 1-1) at San Francisco
(Bumgarner 0-1), 10:15 p.m.
Today’s Games
Texas (Ogando 1-0) at Detroit (Verlander 1-0),
1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Hellickson 0-1) at Boston (Matsuzaka
0-1), 7:10 p.m.
Oakland (Braden 0-1) at Chicago White Sox
(Buehrle 1-0), 8:10 p.m.
Cleveland (Talbot 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Undecided),
10:05 p.m.
Toronto (Litsch 1-0) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 1-1),
10:10 p.m.
Tuesday’s Games
Texas at Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Boston, 7:10 p.m.
Kansas City at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.
Oakland at Chicago White Sox, 8:10 p.m.
Houston
ab
Coghlan cf 4
Infante 2b 3
Morrison lf 3
Stanton rf 3
G.Sanchez 1b3
J.Buck c
4
Helms 3b 3
Choate p
0
Mujica p
0
R.Webb p 0
Dobbs ph 1
Do.Murphy ss3
Ani.Sanchez p2
Sanches p 0
Bonifacio 3b 0
Totals
29
r
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
h
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4
Florida
Houston
100
100
bi
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
ab
Bourn cf 4
Sanchez ss 5
Pence rf 5
Ca.Lee lf 5
Wallace 1b 4
Hall 2b
3
M.Downs 3b4
Quintero c 3
Happ p
3
Melancon p 0
Inglett ph 1
Rodriguez p 0
Fulchino p 0
Totals
000
230
r
1
1
1
0
1
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
h
2
3
3
1
1
1
1
2
2
0
0
0
0
bi
0
0
1
1
0
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
0
37 7 16 6
000
10x
—
—
L
25
38
39
56
58
Pct
.688
.525
.513
.300
.275
GB
—
13
14
31
33
L
24
30
36
48
58
Pct
.700
.625
.550
.400
.275
GB
—
6
12
24
34
L
20
44
47
51
63
Pct
.750
.457
.413
.363
.213
GB
—
1
23 2⁄
27
31
43
L
19
25
34
34
38
Pct
.763
.688
.575
.575
.525
GB
—
6
15
15
19
L
26
31
33
43
63
Pct
.671
.613
.588
.463
.213
GB
—
1
4 2⁄
612⁄
1612⁄
3612⁄
L
24
42
44
50
56
Pct
.696
.475
.443
.383
.291
GB
—
1
17 2⁄
20
25
32
WESTERN CONFERENCE
MARLINS 7, ASTROS 5
Florida
NBA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Saturday’s Games
Philadelphia 10, Atlanta 2
L.A. Dodgers 4, San Diego 2, 11 innings, comp.
of susp. game
Colorado 6, Pittsburgh 4
Florida 7, Houston 5
Milwaukee 6, Chicago Cubs 0
N.Y. Mets 8, Washington 4
Cincinnati 6, Arizona 1
L.A. Dodgers 4, San Diego 0
San Francisco 3, St. Louis 2
Tuesday’s Games
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05 p.m.
Colorado at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m.
Florida at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Houston, 8:05 p.m.
St. Louis at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.
Cincinnati at San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m.
Sunday’s Games
Kansas City 9, Detroit 5
Texas 3, Baltimore 0
Oakland 5, Minnesota 3
Chicago White Sox 6, Tampa Bay 1
L.A. Angels 3, Toronto 1
Cleveland 6, Seattle 4
N.Y. Yankees at Boston, late
DP—Florida 2, Houston 1. LOB—Florida 7, Houston
9. 2B—Infante (2), J.Buck (3), Bourn 2 (4),
M.Downs (2), Quintero 2 (2), Happ (1). 3B—Hall
(1). SB—Bonifacio (1).
IP H R ER BB SO
Florida
Ani.Sanchez L,0-14 2-3 13 6
6 0
2
Sanches
1 1-3 1
0
0 1
1
Choate
1-3 0
0
0 0
1
Mujica
0
0
1
1 0
0
R.Webb
1 2-3 2
0
0 1
1
Houston
Happ W,1-1
7 2-3 4
1
1 4
5
Melancon
1-3 0
0
0 0
0
An.Rodriguez
0
0
0
0 0
0
Fulchino
1
0
0
0 0
2
An.Rodriguez pitched to 1 batter in the 9th.
Mujica pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
HBP—by Mujica (Hall), by Happ (Stanton), by
An.Rodriguez (G.Sanchez).
Umpires—Home, Jim Joyce; First, Ron Kulpa;
Second, Jim Wolf; Third, Derryl Cousins.
T—3:04. A—22,299 (40,963).
1
7
Southwest Division
W
z-San Antonio
61
x-Dallas
55
x-New Orleans
46
x-Memphis
46
Houston
42
Northwest Division
W
y-Oklahoma City 53
x-Denver
49
x-Portland
47
Utah
37
Minnesota
17
Pacific Division
W
y-L.A. Lakers
55
Phoenix
38
Golden State
35
L.A. Clippers
31
Sacramento
23
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
z-clinched conference
Tonight’s Games
Miami at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
Charlotte at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
Orlando at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
Boston at Washington, 7 p.m.
Cleveland at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Toronto at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
Utah at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
Dallas at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Golden State at Denver, 9 p.m.
Minnesota at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Oklahoma City at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
NASCAR SPRINT CUP
Tuesday’s Games
Chicago at New York, 8 p.m.
Memphis at Portland, 10 p.m.
San Antonio at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
HEAT 100, CELTICS 77
BOSTON (77)
Pierce 9-14 3-3 24, Garnett 9-15 2-4 21, J.O’Neal
0-2 0-0 0, Rondo 3-8 1-2 7, Allen 4-9 3-3 13,
Davis 3-11 0-0 6, West 0-1 0-0 0, Krstic 1-1 0-0
2, Green 0-1 4-4 4, Pavlovic 0-1 0-0 0, Murphy
0-0 0-0 0, Arroyo 0-1 0-0 0.
Totals 29-64 13-16 77.
MIAMI (100)
James 11-19 5-9 27, Bosh 5-8 3-5 13, Ilgauskas
4-7 0-0 8, Bibby 2-10 0-0 6, Wade 4-12 6-6
14, Howard 3-3 0-0 6, Anthony 3-5 1-2 7, Miller
1-1 0-0 3, Jones 1-1 2-3 5, Chalmers 3-8 1-1 9,
Magloire 1-1 0-0 2.
Totals 38-75 18-26 100.
Boston
Miami
22
21
18
26
19
27
18 — 77
26 — 100
3-Point Goals—Boston 6-13 (Pierce 3-5, Allen
2-5, Garnett 1-1, Davis 0-1, Rondo 0-1), Miami
6-18 (Chalmers 2-6, Bibby 2-7, Miller 1-1, Jones
1-1, Wade 0-1, James 0-2). Fouled Out—None.
Rebounds—Boston 31 (Davis, Pierce 7), Miami 52
(Anthony 10). Assists—Boston 16 (Rondo 5), Miami
24 (Wade 8). Total Fouls—Boston 18, Miami 17.
Technicals—Pierce, Boston defensive three second, Bosh, James, Wade. Flagrant Fouls—J.O’Neal.
A—19,766 (19,600).
NHL
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Saturday’s Games
Washington 115, Atlanta 83
Houston 99, L.A. Clippers 78
Milwaukee 108, Cleveland 101
San Antonio 111, Utah 102
Denver 130, Minnesota 106
Sunday’s Games
Chicago 102, Orlando 99
Miami 100, Boston 77
Memphis 111, New Orleans 89
Detroit 112, Charlotte 101
Toronto 99, New Jersey 92
New York 110, Indiana 109
Dallas 115, Phoenix 90
Sacramento at Golden State, late
Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, late
ON THE WATER
Atlantic Division
GP W
y-Philadelphia 82 47
x-Pittsburgh 82 49
x-N.Y. Rangers 82 44
New Jersey
82 38
N.Y. Islanders 82 30
Northeast Division
GP W
y-Boston
82 46
x-Montreal
82 44
x-Buffalo
82 43
Toronto
82 37
Ottawa
82 32
Southeast Division
GP W
y-Washington 82 48
x-Tampa Bay 82 46
Carolina
82 40
Atlanta
82 34
Florida
82 30
L
23
25
33
39
39
OT
12
8
5
5
13
Pts
106
106
93
81
73
GF
259
238
233
174
229
GA
223
199
198
209
264
L
25
30
29
34
40
OT
11
8
10
11
10
Pts
103
96
96
85
74
GF
246
216
245
218
192
GA
195
209
229
251
250
L
23
25
31
36
40
OT
11
11
11
12
12
Pts
107
103
91
80
72
GF
224
247
236
223
195
GA
197
240
239
269
229
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
y-Detroit
82 47 25 10 104 261 241
x-Nashville
82 44 27 11 99 219 194
x-Chicago
82 44 29 9 97 258 225
St. Louis
82 38 33 11 87 240 234
Columbus
82 34 35 13 81 215 258
Northwest Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
z-Vancouver 82 54 19 9 117 262 185
Calgary
82 41 29 12 94 250 237
Minnesota
82 39 35 8 86 206 233
Colorado
82 30 44 8 68 227 288
Edmonton
82 25 45 12 62 193 269
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA
y-San Jose
82 48 25 9 105 248 213
x-Anaheim
82 47 30 5 99 239 235
x-Phoenix
82 43 26 13 99 231 226
x-Los Angeles 82 46 30 6 98 219 198
Dallas
82 42 29 11 95 227 233
NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for OT loss.
x-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division
z-clinched conference
Saturday’s Games
N.Y. Rangers 5, New Jersey 2
Boston 3, Ottawa 1
Montreal 4, Toronto 1
Philadelphia 7, N.Y. Islanders 4
Tampa Bay 6, Carolina 2
Florida 1, Washington 0
Buffalo 5, Columbus 4
St. Louis 2, Nashville 0
Vancouver 3, Calgary 2, OT
Anaheim 3, Los Angeles 1
San Jose 3, Phoenix 1
Sunday’s Games
Detroit 4, Chicago 3
New Jersey 3, Boston 2
Pittsburgh 5, Atlanta 2
Colorado 4, Edmonton 3, OT
Minnesota 5, Dallas 3
End of Regular Season
AUTO RACING
IRL
We Want You:
Today’s Picture:
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Jaeme Adams is pictured during a great day
on the water recently with some fellow local
fisherman. They released this beautiful sailfish
just off Sand Key Light in 175 feet. They ended
the day by stopping in the Key West harbor and
landing a 100-plus pound tarpon.
If you have an outstanding catch or fishing news
to report:
• Fax: 305-295-8016
• Write: Daily Fishing Report, 3420 Northside Drive,
Key West, FL 33040
• Drop it off 24 hours a day through the slot in the
front of The Key West Citizen building
Email: wjacobson@keysnews. com
Today’s News:
Fishing tournaments coming up in the Keys
No matter what the season,
there’s always something to fish
for in the waters surrounding the
Florida Keys and Key West. Every
month there’s a choice of targets,
tackle and tactics that makes
the Keys one of the world’s truly
unique saltwater sport-fishing
locations.
The diverse fishing opportunities are reflected in an abundance of tournaments. While
the calendar here lists select
tournament highlights, a comprehensive schedule of Keys angling
challenges can be found at www.
fla-keys.com/fishing.
March 11 - Nov. 30: Key
West Fishing Tournament. Key
West. More than 40 species of
fish are targeted over the course
of 8.5 months, with divisions for
men, women, junior anglers (ages
10 to 14) and Pee Wees (under
10 years old). Contact Doris
Harris at 305-295-6601 or visit
www.keywestfishingtournament.
com.
April 12-16: World Sailfish
Championship. Key West. With
a guaranteed first prize of
$100,000, the prestigious sailfish challenge draws top teams
and benefits the Don Shula
Foundation for Breast Cancer
Research, Camp Boggy Creek
for youngsters with chronic and
life-threatening illnesses and
other national and local charities.
Previous tournaments’ overall
cash payout has topped $1 million. Contact Mike Weinhofer at
305-395-3474 or Laura Emmole
at 727-631-0072, or visit www.
worldsailfish.com.
April 15-17: Redbone @
Large Sunrise/Sunset Tarpon
Tournament. Islamorada. One
of approximately 30 fundraisers held each year whose proceeds benefit the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation, the tournament is a
qualifying event for the Florida
Keys Outfitters IGFA Inshore World
Championship. Contact Gary or
Susan Ellis at 305-664-2002,
email [email protected] or
[email protected], or visit www.
redbone.org.
April 28 - May 1: Marathon
Offshore Bull and Cow Dolphin
Tournament. Marathon. A
$10,000 first prize awaits the
angler with the largest bull and
cow combined, as well as prizes
awarded to anglers catching the
largest dolphin, wahoo, tuna
and tripletail, grouper and snapper. Contact Byron Goss or Jack
Carlson at 305-289-0199, or visit
www.marathonoffshoretournament.com.
Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama Results
Sunday
At Barber Motorsports Park
Birmingham, Ala.
Lap length: 2.38 miles
(Starting position in parentheses)
1. (1) Will Power, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
2. (3) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
3. (7) Dario Franchitti, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
4. (9) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
5. (6) Oriol Servia, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
6. (24) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
7. (4) Helio Castroneves, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
8. (23) Simon Pagenaud, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
9. (13) Simona de Silvestro, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
10. (21) Charlie Kimball, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
11. (20) Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
12. (19) Vitor Meira, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
13. (15) J.R. Hildebrand, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
14. (17) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
15. (12) Alex Tagliani, Dallara-Honda, 90, Running.
16. (11) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 90,
Running.
17. (22) Danica Patrick, Dallara-Honda, 89,
Running.
18. (10) Graham Rahal, Dallara-Honda, 88,
Running.
19. (5) Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda, 62, Contact.
20. (14) Raphael Matos, Dallara-Honda, 62,
Contact.
21. (2) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Honda, 57, Contact.
22. (16) Mike Conway, Dallara-Honda, 45, Contact.
23. (18) E.J. Viso, Dallara-Honda, 40, Contact.
24. (8) James Hinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda, 40,
Contact.
25. (25) James Jakes, Dallara-Honda, 30,
Mechanical.
26. (26) Sebastian Saavedra, Dallara-Honda, 27,
Mechanical.
RACE STATISTICS
Winners average speed: 92.194.
Time of Race: 2:14:42.9523.
Margin of Victory: 3.3828 seconds.
Cautions: 6 for 20 laps.
Lead Changes: 0 among 1 driver.
Lap Leaders: Power 1-90.
Points: Power 94, Franchitti 87, Kanaan 63, Dixon
54, de Silvestro 54, Servia 52, M.Andretti 44, Sato
44, Tagliani 43, Meira 42.
LATE SATURDAY
Samsung Mobile 500 Results
Saturday
At Texas Motor Speedway
Fort Worth, Texas
Lap length: 1.5 miles
(Start position in parentheses)
1. (4) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 334 laps, 144.7 rating,
48 points, $525,886.
2. (3) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 334, 123.6, 43,
$353,883.
3. (2) Carl Edwards, Ford, 334, 116, 42,
$269,791.
4. (9) Greg Biffle, Ford, 334, 111.7, 41,
$206,975.
5. (19) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 334, 100.2, 39,
$162,625.
6. (7) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 334, 105.5, 39,
$176,341.
7. (1) David Ragan, Ford, 334, 115.5, 38,
$166,375.
8. (6) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 334, 92, 36,
$179,761.
9. (28) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 334, 93.8,
36, $140,525.
10. (10) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 334, 100, 35,
$167,125.
11. (12) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 334, 86.1, 33,
$132,325.
12. (26) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 334, 83, 33,
$168,308.
13. (14) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 333,
79.9, 31, $156,583.
14. (16) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 333, 76.7, 30,
$155,125.
15. (23) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 333, 82, 29,
$160,850.
16. (11) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 333, 96.7, 28,
$157,791.
17. (18) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 333, 72.9, 0,
$120,550.
18. (27) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 333, 88.9, 27,
$137,458.
19. (15) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 332, 84.3, 25,
$146,186.
20. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 332, 65.2, 24,
$153,861.
21. (13) Kasey Kahne, Toyota, 332, 61.5, 23,
$130,308.
22. (17) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 332, 75.4,
22, $139,564.
23. (32) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 332, 60.3, 22,
$140,936.
24. (8) Joey Logano, Toyota, 331, 56.8, 20,
$109,450.
25. (34) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 331, 52.6, 19,
$126,720.
26. (22) Casey Mears, Toyota, 331, 50.8, 18,
$98,250.
27. (30) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 330, 56.8, 17,
$123,839.
28. (24) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 330, 49.4, 0,
$110,183.
29. (25) David Reutimann, Toyota, 329, 49.9, 15,
$121,733.
30. (38) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 329, 40.2, 15,
$105,833.
31. (39) Robby Gordon, Dodge, 328, 42.7, 14,
$99,797.
32. (43) Andy Lally, Ford, 324, 37.1, 12, $96,150.
33. (41) Ken Schrader, Ford, 319, 34, 11,
$86,500.
34. (42) Tony Raines, Ford, 319, 30.9, 10,
$84,450.
35. (31) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, accident, 213,
63.8, 9, $91,325.
36. (21) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, accident, 213,
60.4, 8, $90,175.
37. (5) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, accident, 212,
57.5, 7, $107,420.
38. (33) David Starr, Ford, accident, 122, 41.4,
0, $79,925.
39. (37) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, clutch, 60, 30.7,
0, $79,800.
40. (20) Michael McDowell, Toyota, electrical, 56,
33.5, 4, $79,650.
41. (35) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, electrical, 52, 31.9,
3, $79,490.
42. (40) David Gilliland, Ford, accident, 44, 32.5,
2, $79,395.
43. (36) Mike Skinner, Toyota, rear gear, 36, 24.9,
0, $79,724.
Race Statistics
Average Speed of Race Winner: 149.231 mph.
Time of Race: 3 hours, 21 minutes, 26 seconds.
Margin of Victory: 8.315 seconds.
Caution Flags: 5 for 24 laps.
Lead Changes: 31 among 13 drivers.
Lap Leaders: D.Ragan 1-10; Ku.Busch 11-14;
B.Keselowski 15-46; Ku.Busch 47; R.Gordon
48; D.Blaney 49; M.Kenseth 50-51; G.Biffle 5258; M.Kenseth 59-94; C.Bowyer 95; C.Edwards
96; D.Earnhardt Jr. 97-98; M.Kenseth 99-114;
D.Ragan 115; Ku.Busch 116-123; M.Kenseth
124-162; C.Edwards 163-164; J.Gordon 165;
M.Kenseth 166-199; C.Bowyer 200-204;
M.Kenseth 205-213; C.Bowyer 214-248;
M.Kenseth 249; C.Bowyer 250; M.Ambrose 251;
T.Stewart 252-256; Ku.Busch 257-269; T.Stewart
270-276; M.Kenseth 277-294; C.Bowyer 295296; Ku.Busch 297-320; M.Kenseth 321-334.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led):
M.Kenseth, 9 times for 169 laps; Ku.Busch, 5
times for 50 laps; C.Bowyer, 5 times for 44 laps;
B.Keselowski, 1 time for 32 laps; T.Stewart, 2 times
for 12 laps; D.Ragan, 2 times for 11 laps; G.Biffle,
1 time for 7 laps; C.Edwards, 2 times for 3 laps;
D.Earnhardt Jr., 1 time for 2 laps; M.Ambrose, 1
time for 1 lap; J.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap; D.Blaney,
1 time for 1 lap; R.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap.
Top 12 in Points: 1. C.Edwards, 256; 2. Ky.Busch,
247; 3. M.Kenseth, 243; 4. J.Johnson, 243;
5. Ku.Busch, 240; 6. D.Earnhardt Jr., 235; 7.
R.Newman, 233; 8. J.Montoya, 232; 9. K.Harvick,
228; 10. T.Stewart, 213; 11. P.Menard, 209; 12.
C.Bowyer, 201.
GOLF
MASTERS SCORES
At Augusta National Golf Club
Augusta, Ga.
Purse: TBA
Yardage: 7,435; Par: 72
Final Round
(a-amateur)
Charl Schwartzel, $1,440,000 69-71-68-66—274
Jason Day, $704,000
72-64-72-68—276
Adam Scott, $704,000
72-70-67-67—276
Tiger Woods, $330,667
71-66-74-67—278
Geoff Ogilvy, $330,667
69-69-73-67—278
Luke Donald, $330,667
72-68-69-69—278
Angel Cabrera, $268,000
71-70-67-71—279
Bo Van Pelt, $240,000
73-69-68-70—280
K.J. Choi, $240,000
67-70-71-72—280
Ryan Palmer, $216,000
71-72-69-70—282
Justin Rose, $176,000
73-71-71-68—283
Steve Stricker, $76,000
72-70-71-70—283
Lee Westwood, $176,000
72-67-74-70—283
Edoardo Molinari, $176,000
74-70-69-70—283
Trevor Immelman, $128,000
72-69-73-69—284
Brandt Snedeker, $128,000
69-71-74-70—284
Fred Couples, $128,000
71-68-72-73—284
Ross Fisher, $128,000
69-71-71-73—284
Rory McIlroy, $128,000
65-69-70-80—284
Ryo Ishikawa, $93,200
71-71-73-70—285
Ricky Barnes, $93,200
68-71-75-74—285
Yong-Eun Yang, $93,200
67-72-73-73—285
Martin Laird, $93,200
74-69-69-73—285
Gary Woodland, $70,400
69-73-74-70—286
Jim Furyk, $70,400
72-68-74-72—286
David Toms, $70,400
72-69-73-72—286
Robert Karlsson, $54,400
72-70-74-71—287
Charley Hoffman, $54,400
74-69-72-72—287
Ian Poulter, $54,400
74-69-71-73—287
Alvaro Quiros, $54,400
65-73-75-74—287
Miguel Angel Jimenez, $54,400 71-73-70-73—287
Phil Mickelson, $54,400
70-72-71-74—287
a-Hideki Matsuyama
72-73-72-74—287
Matt Kuchar, $54,400
68-75-69-75—287
Alexander Cejka, $43,200
72-71-75-70—288
Sergio Garcia, $43,200
69-71-75-73—288
Ryan Moore, $43,200
70-73-72-73—288
Paul Casey, $36,800
70-72-76-71—289
Rickie Fowler, $36,800
70-69-76-74—289
Dustin Johnson, $36,800
74-68-73-74—289
Bubba Watson, $36,800
73-71-67-78—289
Bill Haas, $32,000
74-70-74-72—290
Steve Marino, $32,000
74-71-72-73—290
Kyung-Tae Kim, $28,800
70-75-78-68—291
Jeff Overton, $28,800
73-72-72-74—291
Nick Watney, $26,400
72-72-75-73—292
Ernie Els, $24,000
75-70-76-72—293
TRANSACTIONS
SUNDAY’S
BASEBALL
American League
BOSTON RED SOX—Agreed to terms with RHP Clay
Buchholz on a five-year contract.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Placed SS Erick Aybar
on the 15-day DL, retroactive to April 3. Recalled
RHP Francisco Rodriguez from Salt Lake (PCL).
Optioned RHP Michael Kohn and RHP Kevin
Jepsen to Salt Lake. Selected the contract of RHP
Tyler Chatwood from Salt Lake. Activated LHP Scott
Downs from the 15-day DL.
National League
LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Called up RHP John Ely
from Albuquerque (PCL). Placed C Hector Gimenez
on the 15-day DL.
NEW YORK METS—Placed C Ronny Paulino on the
15-day DL.
SAN DIEGO PADRES—Recalled LHP Wade LeBlanc
from Tucson (PCL). Activated INF/OF Eric Patterson
from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Samuel
Deduno and OF Cedric Hunter to Tucson.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NEW JERSEY NETS—Signed G Mario West for the
remainder of the season.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
FLORIDA PANTHERS—Fired coach Peter DeBoer.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Announced the retirement
of coach Jacques Lemaire. Recalled C Adam
Henrique and D Alex Urbom from Albany (AHL).
OTTAWA SENATORS—Reassigned D Andre Benoit, D
David Hale, D Derek Smith, F Cody Bass, F Bobby
Butler, F Erik Condra, F Colin Greening and F Zack
Smith to Binghamton (AHL).
COLLEGE
AUBURN—Named Rick Nold volleyball coach.
UNLV—Named Dave Rice men’s basketball coach.
MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Philadelphia
New England
Houston
New York
Toronto FC
Columbus
Chicago
Sporting Kansas City
D.C.
W
3
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
L
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
T Pts GF GA
0 9 3 1
3 6 5 6
2 5 5 4
2 5 2 2
2 5 6 6
2 5 3 3
1 4 5 5
1 4 8 8
1 4 6 8
WESTERN CONFERENCE
W L T Pts GF GA
Real Salt Lake
3 0 0 9 7 1
Colorado
3 1 0 9 8 5
Los Angeles
2 1 2 8 5 6
Vancouver
1 2 2 5 9 10
San Jose
1 1 2 5 5 4
Seattle
1 2 2 5 5 6
FC Dallas
1 2 1 4 4 5
Chivas USA
0 2 2 2 3 5
Portland
0 2 1 1 2 6
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.
Friday’s Game
FC Dallas 3, Colorado 0
Saturday’s Games
Seattle FC 2, Chicago 1
Philadelphia 1, New York 0
D.C. United 1, Los Angeles 1, tie
Real Salt Lake 2, New England 0
San Jose 1, Toronto FC 1, tie
Chivas USA 0, Columbus 0, tie
Sunday’s Game
Houston 3, Vancouver 1
Wednesday, April 13
Los Angeles at Toronto FC, 8 p.m.
Colorado at Real Salt Lake, 9 p.m.
Thursday, April 14
Chicago at Portland, 11 p.m.
Saturday, April 16
Seattle FC at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.
D.C. United at Toronto FC, 7 p.m.
Chivas USA at Vancouver, 7 p.m.
Sporting Kansas City at Columbus, 7:30 p.m.
San Jose at New York, 7:30 p.m.
COLLEGE BASEBALL
SUNDAY’S SCORES
EAST
Castleton St. 17-2, Farmington 1-1
Charlotte 11, Saint Joseph’s 0
Hamilton 3, Mount St. Vincent 1
Rhode Island 4, Saint Louis 2
Rowan 7, College of N.J. 4
Susquehanna 7-4, Drew 1-3
SOUTH
Auburn 8, Kentucky 2
Austin Peay 8, E. Kentucky 6
Boston College 6, Duke 4, 10 innings
Centre 10, Sewanee 7
East Carolina 7, Rice 3
E. Illinois 25-2, Morehead St. 8-9, Game 1, 7
innings
ETSU 8, Lipscomb 3
Georgia Tech 10, Virginia 8
Jacksonville St. 10, Murray St. 9
Liberty 14, High Point 9
Louisiana-Lafayette 8, W. Kentucky 6
Maryland 7, Clemson 6
Miami 3, N.C. State 0
North Carolina 7, Florida St. 6
Pfeiffer 3, Coker 1
Roanoke vs. Hampden-Sydney, ppd., wet field
S.C.-Aiken 4, Augusta St. 0
SE Missouri 13, Tennessee Tech 8
Southern Miss. 8, Memphis 5
Spalding 17, Westminster, Mo. 3
St. Andrew’s vs. Barton, ccd., weather
Tenn.-Martin 20, SIU-Edwardsville 14
Thomas More 12-11, St. Vincent 1-1
Tusculum 13-5, Mars Hill 5-4
Vanderbilt 11, Alabama 6
West Georgia 16, Lambuth 2
Young Harris 7-16, King, Tenn. 1-2
MIDWEST
Cent. Michigan 10, Akron 0
Kansas 11, Nebraska 5
SOUTHWEST
Henderson St. 15, Ark-Monticello 2
TCU 6, New Mexico 2
TENNIS
WTA FAMILY CIRCLE CUP
Sunday
At The Family Circle Tennis Center
Charleston, S.C.
Purse: $721,000 (Premier)
Surface: Green Clay-Outdoor
Singles
Championship
Caroline Wozniacki (1), Denmark, def. Elena
Vesnina, Russia, 6-2, 6-3.
ATP WORLD TOUR
Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters Results
Sunday
At The Monte-Carlo Country Club
Monte Carlo, Monaco
Purse: $3.66 million (Masters 1000)
Surface: Clay-Outdoor
Singles
First Round
Ivan Ljubicic, Croatia, def. Jeremy Chardy, France,
6-1, 6-2.
Milos Raonic, Canada, def. Michael Llodra, France,
6-3, 0-6, 6-0.
Ernests Gulbis, Latvia, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov
(14), Ukraine, 6-1, 6-4.
Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, def. Andrey
Golubev, Kazakhstan, 5-7, 7-6 (6), 6-4.
Doubles
First Round
Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, and Mikhail Youzhny,
Russia, def. Guillaume Couillard and Jean-Rene
Lisnard, Monaco, 7-6 (1), 6-4.
Marcel Granollers and Tommy Robredo, Spain, def.
Feliciano Lopez and Fernando Verdasco, Spain,
2-6, 7-6 (2), 11-9 tiebreak.
3B
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
SPORTS
CURLING
AUTO RACING: IRL
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
X
TENNIS
Canada’s Stoughton
wins world title
BYU assistant Rice
hired as UNLV coach
Power takes wire-towire win at Alabama
Wozniacki wins
Family Circle Cup
REGINA, Saskatchewan —
Canada’s Jeff Stoughton finally
won his second world curling
championship.
Stoughton, third Jon Mead,
second Reid Carruthers and
lead Steve Gould beat Scotland’s
Tom Brewster 6-5 on Sunday in
the championship game.
Stoughton and Gould also
won the world crown 15 years
ago in Hamilton, Ontario.
Stoughton and Mead were
teammates when they lost the
1999 world final in an extra end
in Saint John, New Brunswick.
LAS VEGAS — UNLV has
hired BYU associate coach
Dave Rice to lead its men’s
basketball program, picking
him to return to the school
where he was an assistant
under four coaches for 11
seasons.
The move comes a week
after Lon Kruger left UNLV
following seven seasons to
become Oklahoma’s new
coach.
The offer is pending the
approval of the Nevada
Board of Regents.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. —
Will Power started up front
and never relinquished his
spot to win the Indy Grand
Prix of Alabama.
The Australian extended his
lead in the final laps and finished 3.38 seconds ahead of
Scott Dixon on Sunday, while
Dario Franchitti was third on
the 2.38-mile road course at
Barber Motorsports Park.
Power was the first
IndyCar driver to lead wire
to wire since Franchitti did
it at Sonoma in 2009.
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Topranked Caroline Wozniacki
defeated Elena Vesnina 6-2,
6-3 to take the Family Circle
Cup on Sunday, capturing
her third title this season.
Wozniacki finished off a
strong week in her first claycourt tournament of the season. She lost only one set, in
the quarterfinals to Barbora
Zahlavova Strycova, and
held off Jelena Jankovic in
the semis.
She also won at Dubai and
Indian Wells, Calif.
BUTCH DILL/The Associated Press
Will Power celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the IndyCar
Grand Prix of Alabama on Sunday in Birmingham, Ala.
MLB: ROUNDUP
NHL: ROUNDUP
Happ drives in 2 to help Astros beat Marlins
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HOUSTON — J.A. Happ pitched fourhit ball into the eighth inning and drove
in two runs with a double in the Houston
Astros’ 7-1 victory over the Florida Marlins
on Sunday.
Hunter Pence, Carlos Lee and Matt
Downs also knocked in runs for the
Astros, who finished with a season-high
16 hits, six for extra bases.
Happ (1-1) allowed four hits in 72⁄3
innings, only two after the Marlins took
a 1-0 lead in the first inning. He put
Houston ahead to stay in the fourth with a
two-run double off Florida starter Anibal
Sanchez (0-1).
Sanchez came in with a 1.54 ERA in two
prior starts at Minute Maid Park, but gave
up six runs on 13 hits in 42⁄3 innings. He
lost for the first time in six career starts
against the Astros.
Plate umpire Jim Joyce ejected Florida
reliever Edward Mujica in the seventh,
when he hit Hall with a pitch. Hall scored
on Quintero’s drive off the right-field
fence, but Quintero was thrown out trying
to stretch the double into a triple.
Joyce ejected Astros’ reliever Aneury
Rodriguez in the ninth when he hit Gaby
Sanchez with a pitch. Houston manager Brad Mills protested, to no avail. Jeff
Fulchino got the final three outs for the
Astros.
CARDINALS 6, GIANTS 1
SAN FRANCISCO — David Freese went 3 for
4 with a homer and three RBIs and Kyle Lohse
allowed one run in eight innings to help St. Louis
snap a three-game losing streak.
Matt Holliday scored the go-ahead run and
added an RBI single in his first game since
undergoing an appendectomy April 1 to help the
Cardinals win for just the third time in nine games
this season.
Barry Zito (0-1) walked five batters, including
two who later scored, and the Giants were unable
to complete their first three-game sweep of the
Cardinals since 2001.
DIAMONDBACKS 10, REDS 8
PHOENIX — Chris Young hit the decisive threerun homer and Stephen Drew had four hits and
three RBIs, helping Arizona rally twice to beat
Cincinnati and take two of three from the Reds.
Drew’s RBI single tied it at 7 in the eighth
inning, then Young drove a 3-2 pitch from Nick
Masset (0-2) into the seats in left-center to put
Arizona ahead for only the second time all day.
The Reds led 5-0 after 212⁄ innings before
Heat
Continued from page 1B
Mario Chalmers had nine points in the
second quarter, when the Heat took the
lead. Joel Anthony had eight rebounds
in the first half, two less than the entire
Boston roster. Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored
six quick points early in the third as the
Heat remained in control, and Anthony
took advantage of a triple-team on James
for a dunk and a 74-59 lead on the final
play of the third quarter.
Then James took over.
An alley-oop dunk from Chalmers,
followed by a 20-foot jumper, pushed
Miami’s edge to 81-61. Of course, this
being Celtics-Heat, nothing would come
easily for Miami.
Down by 22, Boston ran off 12 straight
JOE MAHONEY/The Associated Press
Avalanche right wing David Jones tries to flip the puck past Oilers
goalie Nikolai Khabibulin in overtimeon Sunday in Denver. Colorado
won, 4-3, on the final day of the regular season.
BOB LEVEY/The Associated Press
Marlins manager Edwin Rodriguez, right, argues with home plate umpire Jim Joyce after
Joyce ejected Marlins pitcher Edward Mujica for hitting the Astros’ Bill Hall in seventh
inning on Sunday in Houston.
Arizona scored five in the fifth off Mike Leake, the
last three on Ryan Roberts’ homer, to go up 6-5.
Jonny Gomes’ two-run homer off Aaron Heilman
in the seventh put Cincinnati back on top 7-6.
Heilman (1-0) allowed two runs in three innings
to get the win.
BREWERS 6, CUBS 5
MILWAUKEE — Pinch-hitter Casey McGehee
delivered a two-run homer with two outs in the
eighth inning and the Brewers rallied to beat the
Chicago Cubs.
Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun each hit a tworun homer for Milwaukee, which has won five of
six after an 0-4 start.
McGehee had been mired in a 3-for-22
slump this homestand and didn’t get the start.
Cubs reliever Kerry Wood (0-1) walked Yuniesky
Betancourt to open the eighth and Betancourt
reached second on a sacrifice bunt.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
RANGERS 3, ORIOLES 0
BALTIMORE — Derek Holland allowed five hits
over six innings, Adrian Beltre and Ian Kinsler
homered, and Texas topped Baltimore to win its
third consecutive series.
The Rangers took two of three from the Orioles
and improved to 8-1, matching the best start in
franchise history (1989). The only other seasons
in which Texas opened with more than two successive series wins were 1989 (five straight) and
1993 (four).
Holland (2-0) struck out six, walked two and
hit a batter with a pitch. The left-hander had only
one perfect inning, but he never failed to get the
outs he needed.
points, Allen starting it with a four-point
play, and Pierce adding both a 3-pointer
and a three-point play to get the Celtics
within 85-75.
It was the last gasp. Mike Bibby’s 3pointer with 4:49 left, followed by Bosh’s
follow of James’ miss, sent the lead back
to 15. And with 2:38 left, Celtics coach Doc
Rivers went deep into the bench, essentially conceding.
Boston scored the game’s first eight
points and hit eight of its first nine shots.
The Celtics were making it seem easy,
especially when Garnett — who hadn’t
made a 3-pointer all season — stepped
into one from the left wing and connected
for a 22-15 lead.
Boston went scoreless for the next 6:17,
and just about everything seemed to
change.
Miami got within 22-21 after the first
Masters
Continued from page 1B
Then came the pivotal 17th, where
Schwartzel made a 10-foot birdie. It was the
first time all day he had the lead to himself,
and he finished it off in style.
South Africans now have won two of
the last three majors, following Louis
Oosthuizen winning at St. Andrews last
summer. This one came on the 50th anniversary of Gary Player becoming the first
international player to win the Masters.
ROYALS 9, TIGERS 5
DETROIT — Wilson Betemit went 4 for 4 with
two doubles and Kansas City beat the mistakeprone Detroit Tigers.
Luke Hochevar (1-1) pitched seven solid
innings and every Royals starter had a hit.
Miguel Cabrera, Jhonny Peralta and Alex Avila all
homered for Detroit, but the Tigers made four errors.
WHITE SOX 6, RAYS 1
CHICAGO — Paul Konerko hit two home runs
and Gavin Floyd pitched eight masterful innings
as Chicago beat the slumping Tampa Bay Rays.
Konerko’s solo shots in the first and fifth gave
him three home runs this season. He has a 10game hitting streak dating to last year and has
driven in a run in all but one game for Chicago
this year.
The loss dropped the Rays to 1-8, the worst
start in franchise history, and manager Joe Maddon
was ejected for arguing a call at first base. Tampa
Bay has scored 11 runs in its eight losses.
Jeff Niemann (0-2) only made it 46 pitches
into his second start of the season. He allowed
five runs, three earned, and five hits over 223⁄
innings.
ATHLETICS 5, TWINS 3
MINNEAPOLIS — Hideki Matsui homered to
help the Athletics break out of a season-long
offensive slump and Brandon McCarthy pitched
into the eighth inning in Oakland’s victory over
Minnesota.
McCarthy (1-0) allowed two runs and nine
hits with five strikeouts in 713⁄ innings and Josh
Willingham also went deep for the A’s, who took
two of three in the Twins’ first home series of the
season. Brian Fuentes earned his third save.
quarter, then took its first lead on Bosh’s
first field goal on the opening possession
of the second.
Tensions were already high, and emotions soon boiled over.
Jermaine O’Neal — who had just been
easily scored on by James 27 seconds earlier
in transition — tried to stop another drive
by the two-time reigning MVP with a shoulder check, making no play on the ball.
A scrum quickly broke out under the
basket. O’Neal earned a flagrant-1, James
got a technical for throwing the ball back
at O’Neal, Wade and Pierce also got technicals for some pushing and jostling, and
a small amount of debris flew from the
stands onto the court.
Bosh earned another technical 21⁄2 minutes later for arguing he tied up a loose
ball with Rondo, only to have referees
award Boston a timeout.
“I am absolutely delighted for Charl and
South Africa. Congratulations and very
well done to him. That is how you finish
like a champion!” Player said on Twitter.
In so many respects, this looked more
like 1986 when Jack Nicklaus charged on
the back nine to win a sixth green jacket
over a Hall of Fame cast of contenders.
There were twice as many possibilities
at this Masters, though, from Woods and
former Masters champion Angel Cabrera,
from Geoff Ogilvy and Luke Donald, from
K.J. Choi and Bo Van Pelt, who made two
eagles on the back nine.
Notebook
Continued from page 1B
“We don’t have a lot of playoff
experience and that was a playoff
type atmosphere,” Leal said about
the first game against Mater Lakes.
“We were just pushing, but I think
we’ll be alright We get them next
week again and in the first round of
districts. So, we know what we are
going to see and I like where we are
standing right now.”
Blackhawks lose,
still make playoffs
Rich Peverley and Chris Kelly
scored for the Bruins, and Tuukka
Rask was outstanding in making 29
CHICAGO — Jimmy Howard saves. Boston will meet Montreal in
made 33 saves and the Detroit the opening round of the playoffs.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Red Wings kept defending
Stanley Cup champion Chicago
from clinching the final playoff
berth in the Western Conference
with a 4-3 victory over the
Blackhawks on Sunday.
Needing a single point to get
in, Chicago still returned to the
postseason when Minnesota
beat Dallas, 5-3, on Sunday
night.
Drew Miller, Danny Cleary,
Tomas Holmstrom and Pavel
Datsyuk scored for the Red
Wings, who had already locked
down the No. 3 playoff seed in
the West.
Michael
Frolik,
Brent
Seabrook and Duncan Keith
had goals for Chicago.
DEVILS 3, BRUINS 2
AVALANCHE 4, OILERS 3
DENVER — David Jones knocked
in a rebound during a power play
3:57 into overtime and Colorado finished the season on a winning note
by beating Edmonton.
The game marked the farewell performance of Avalanche captain Adam
Foote, who announced Friday that he
was retiring after 19 seasons in the
NHL, all but two with the AvalancheQuebec Nordiques franchise.
Trailing 3-2, Colorado pulled into a
tie at 19:30 of the third when Milan
Hejduk scored. In overtime, Matt
Duchene sent a shot that caromed
away from Khabibulin and to Jones
for the winner.
Colorado snapped a four-game
losing streak, but still finished with
the fewest wins (30) since the team
moved to Denver from Quebec for the
1995-96 season. Edmonton joined
them outside of the playoffs, finishing
last in the NHL for the second consecutive season.
NEWARK, N.J. — Vladimir Zharkov
and Alexander Urbom scored thirdperiod goals and New Jersey topped
playoff-bound Boston in what was
Jacques Lemaire’s final game as
Devils coach.
The 66-year-old Lemaire said
before the regular-season finale that
he would disclose after the game
whether he would return next season.
Once it was over, he said he wouldn’t
be back in New Jersey.
Patrik Elias also scored, and Johan
Hedberg made 24 saves for the
Devils, who missed the postseason
for the first time since 1996.
PENGUINS 5, THRASHERS 2
Panthers
McCabe, Chris Higgins, Dennis
Wideman and Radek Dvorak.
All six of those players finished the season among
Florida’s top 11 in scoring,
despite being gone for the past
several weeks.
DeBoer came to the Panthers
in 2008 after 13 seasons of
leading teams in the Ontario
Hockey League, a top junior
level where his clubs won twothirds of their games. And there
was promise in his first season
with Florida, when the team
put up 93 points, its highest
total in nearly a decade.
The last two seasons have
gone the other way. Florida finished with 77 points last season and five fewer in 2010-11,
finishing last in the Southeast
Division both times and adding
to the team’s historic slump:
The Panthers haven’t prevailed
in a playoff series since 1996
and haven’t played a postseason game since 2000.
Continued from page 1B
DeBoer’s team closed the
season Saturday with a 1-0 win
over the Washington Capitals,
ending a 10-game winless
streak. Injuries and moves to
trade away some of the franchise’s better players in an effort
to build toward the future have
doomed Florida in the past two
seasons, but DeBoer believed
progress was being made.
“No one is happy with the
results,” DeBoer said.
The Panthers won only eight
of 33 games following the AllStar break, around the time
Tallon essentially decided to
become a seller instead of a
buyer. Florida made eight
trades in February alone, loading up with draft picks and
future prospects by shipping
away players such as Michael
Frolik, Cory Stillman, Bryan
ATLANTA — Tyler Kennedy scored
the first of Pittsburgh’s four secondperiod goals, reserve goalie Brent
Johnson won his fourth straight decision, and the Penguins closed the
regular season with a victory over
already-eliminated Atlanta.
Pascal Dupuis, Michael Rupp and
rookie Mark Letestu added goals to
give the Penguins a 4-1 lead 18:14
into the second. Kennedy’s 21st goal
came on a power play.
Mike Comrie scored an empty-net
goal to make it 5-1, and Ben Lovejoy
finished with three assists.
4B
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED
HOROSCOPES for today
Monday, April 11, 2011
It could prove to be highly
advantageous for you to get more
deeply involved in some kind
of club or organizational activity in the year ahead. Contacts
you’ll establish will prove to be
extremely helpful in more ways
than one.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- It would only work to your disadvantage to alienate a partner
over a petty issue. As events
unfold later on in the day, you’ll
be glad you stayed in the good
graces of this ally.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
-- Mishandling others will lead
to your undoing, so be careful
that you do not rub anybody the
wrong way, especially over a lowstakes matter. Be thoughtful at all
times.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - There’s a good chance you
could encounter someone who
is as strong-willed as you are, so
if you feel yourself being pushed
BRIDGE TIPS
to the wall, walk away rather than
responding in kind.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
-- Evaluate people realistically
and handle them appropriately, because underestimating a
competitor would most assuredly
deprive you of what you hope to
achieve.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Attentively waiting to get all the
pertinent facts will help you avoid
reacting negatively to the ideas
of others before you know what
they’re talking about. Patience is
your friend.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Involvement with the wrong
people could prove to be very
expensive for you. Be wary of
anybody who tries to profit in
some manner from your assets
or resources.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) - Your evaluations of events or
developments are likely to be
more accurate than those of your
companions, but, even so, don’t
come on too strong when trying
to prove a point.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
-- Like the song says, hang on
to your ego. It could cause you
to totally disregard what you
know to be true and spur you
to attempt to do something that
is way over your head. All signs
point to a huge failure.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) -- Should there be some
political stirrings within your peer
group, do not get involved regardless of how much you’re pressured to do so. Whichever side
you support will be the wrong
one.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) -- If someone you hold in high
regard disappoints you, chances
are it will be your own fault.
This is because you’re putting far
more credence in his or her abilities than this person possesses.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
-- Be careful, because you may
not be as competent at mental
gymnastics as you think you are.
Just because you have some
of the necessary skills, such as
enthusiasm and initiative, they
won’t be enough.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- When it comes to your financial or commercial dealings, the
ground on which you’re standing
may not be as firm as it looks.
You could get mired in mud.
From good bidding
to excellent
defense
By Phillip Alder
Malcolm Forbes, who was
an avid bridge player, said,
“When in doubt, duck.” That
is not an attitude one would
associate with him, because
he loved life and adventure.
But one of his words works
well in today’s deal.
Who should come out
on top after West leads the
spade eight against three notrump?
South was right to rebid
two notrump, showing 1820 points, not to raise diamonds. Note that five diamonds has no play.
South starts with five top
tricks: one spade, one heart
and three clubs. He will get
a second spade trick, and
could get two more in hearts,
but that would get him up to
only eight winners. Declarer
must attack diamonds.
This is an important defensive principle: When you are
trying to establish a suit in
which declarer has two stoppers, make him use one of
them as quickly as possible
-- and trick one isn’t too
soon. East must not play
his spade queen; he should
overtake with the nine.
South wins with his jack
and plays a diamond, but
West takes his king and leads
his second spade, establishing East’s suit while he still
has the diamond ace as an
entry.
Note that if East plays the
spade queen at trick one, it
is South who benefits from
a duck, letting East hold
the trick. East will return
a spade, but declarer wins
cheaply and plays a diamond. West is in but has no
spade to lead, so South still
retains a spade winner. He
ends with an overtrick, not
an undertrick.
KEYSWIDE
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Nail Tech
Great pay and benefits.
KW’s friendliest staff and working environment.
340044
RESERVATIONIST
PT SPA COORDINATOR
SERVER ASSISTANT
GREAT PAY, INCENTIVES, BENEFITS,
PAID VACATION, FULL TIME & PART TIME
340068
Please apply in person at
28500 Overseas Hwy., Little Torch Key
010 Public Notice
FKCC Foundation April
Meetings Dates:
Fundraising, April 18th,
1:00 p.m.; Finance, April
18th, 3:00 p.m.; Nominating, April 28th, 12:00
noon. For information
and meeting location call
305-809-3299.
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.
040 Personals
COMPUTER PROBLEM
24/7 Onsite Service
Home: $35.00/hr + Travel
Key West to Key Largo
305-849-5252
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
Fast
Buck
Freddie’s
EXPERIENCED
Sales Associate
Cashier
Benefits include Health
Insurance, Vacation &
401K plan
APPLY IN PERSON
500 DUVAL STREET
340161
A POSITIVE STEP OF
MONROE COUNTY INC.
is currently seeking. A
Case Manager. APSMC
is a Florida State Department of Juvenile Justice
provider serving the highest risk youth and their
families living in Monroe
County.
* Successful candidate
must have Bachelor Degree in related field
* Three years experience
* Valid Florida drivers license
* Willingness to travel up
and down the Keys
* Reliable transportation
* Pass DJJ background
screening
Email
resumes
to:
[email protected]
or
fax to (305) 295-8333.
APSMC is an equal opportunity employer.
220 HELP WANTED
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
Banana Cabanna
CLERK/CASHIER
Academy
Sunday-Tuesday
2:45pm-midnight. Recent Now hiring: Full Time Dicash handling experience rector VPK Instructor Rerequired. Must be able to sume to
[email protected]
pass extenstive backASSISTANT
ground check. Apply in
DOCKMASTER
Immediate full time open- person Capt Jim Citgo Office Administrator &
ing for individual with ex- 3700 N. Roosevelt next
Marketing Assistant
ceptional customer serv- to McDonalds.
ice skills to work at Key
The Key’s #1 Internet
EXPERIENCED
West Bight. Must have
Marketing Firm is curPLUMBER
ability to ope cashregister
rently seeking applicants
Must have Driver’s
and handle cash, have
for an Office AdministraLicense.
Tools
needed.
basic computer skills and
tor & Marketing Assistant
Must be drug free.
be able to communicate
position.
305-304-2986
effectively with co-workA-PLUS ROOFING
Help Wanted
Experienced only. Tools
required, Drivers license
preferred. 296-2568
ers and the public. Position interacts with the
public on daily basis in
scheduling reservations,
mooring vessels and
general operations of the
marina including operating the fuel dock and
maintaining a clean and
safe environment. Starting pay $12.27 per hour
+ benefits. Application
and job description available
at
www.keywestcity.com
and HR Department, 525
Angela Street. Drug Free
Workplace/EEO/Veterans
Preference
Employer.
AUTO MECHANICS
FOR BUSY TAXI CO.
Required for busy
company in Key West.
*Applicants must possess their own tools.
*Must be reliable
& organized.
The hours are 40 per
week and this will include
weekends.
Interested, please call
305-296-1800.
BIRKENSTOCK
Has an opening for Full
Time Experienced Sales
Person. Salary plus commission with excellent
earning potential. Call
294-8318 and ask for
Jennifer or Wally
to
schedule your interview.
Boy’s and Girl’s Club
Part-time and Full-time
Summer. Key West. Activity Coordinators work
directly with club members. Previous applicants need not apply.
Call 305-296-2258 for
more information.
CAPTAIN
POSITION AVAILABLE
Enjoy the summer sailing
with the Sea Scout Program. 12-5 day trips @
1000/trip.
[email protected]
CAPTAIN/FISHING
GUIDE WANTED
Keys largest light
tackle co. is hiring!
Vacation pay, tackle allowance, service bonuses all possible for the
right applicant. Apply in
person Cow Key Marina
5001 5th Avenue.
YOUR GUARANTEE...
KEYSWIDE GUARANTEED
CLASSIFIEDSTM
Experienced Draftsperson or Architect
to assist with production
of residential and commercial projects utilizing
current AutoCAD software. Resumes and references may be delivered to: mbi | k2m Architecture, Inc, 1001 Whitehead Street, Suite 101,
Key West, FL 33040 or
[email protected]
mbi | k2m offers
competitive salaries,
great benefits package,
and is an equal
opportunity employer.
Qualifications sought:
* Proficiency in Microsoft
Office
* Work easily with all
types of people
* Great organizer
* Multi-tasking in fastpaced office environment
* Great written and verbal
communication skills
* General Internet marketing knowledge preferred
* Professional appearance
* Positive demeanor
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
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
SEEKING
MECHANIC WANTED
ELECTRICIAN
for electrical motor repair
shop. Duties
include with minimum of 5 years
power tool repair, pump residential electric experirepair, starter and alter- ence. Call 745-1551.
nator repair, and small
SOUTHERNMOST
engine repair. Must have
HOTEL COLLECTION
experience. Apply in perHas the following
son at 311 Margaret st.
positions available due
No phone calls.
to expansion:
*Fullltime Pool
POSITIONS
Attendant
AVAILABLE
*Fulltime Bartender
at
Applicants must have
WESTIN KEY WEST,
desire to provide excepSUNSET KEY,
tional customer service to
WEATHER STATION
our guests.Please apply
AND BANANA BAY
at 1319 Duval St.
TERVIS TUMBLER
Westin
*Executive Housekeeper A premier provider of insulated drinkware, is
*Line Cook
opening a retail store on
*Barback
Duval St. We are taking
applications for Store
Sunset Key
*Retail Sales Associate Mgr, Assist. Mgr, key
holders and sales associ(experienced)
ate. Competitive pay. Ex*Host AM
cellent benefits for full
*Latitude AM Server
time. Apply at:
*Latitude PM Server
[email protected]. EOE
*Massage Therapist
941-966-2114
part-time
The Caribbean Spa at
*Spa Supervisor
the Pier House Resort
Is now hiring for the folBanana Bay
lowing licensed position.
*Front Desk
If you like working with
computers, have an interFRONT DESK
Weatherstation
Experience and refer- est in Internet marketing
*Room Attendant
ences required. Apply in and have matching qualifications, you’ll want to
person 11am-1pm only.
+ Previous applicants
No phone calls please. be part of this fast growneed not apply again.
ing
company.
718 South Street, Key
+ Application hours are
West Youth Hostel.
from 9am to 3:30pm.
This full-time position in- +Can also apply on-line
volves providing client
HIRING STAFF FOR
to:
newly constructed family support, assisting our ac- [email protected]
counting department in
affordable community in
Drug Free Work Place Key
West.
Positions invoicing, payment procAn Equal Opportunity
essing and collections,
range
from
Property
Employer
manger, Assistant Leas- assist our Account ManApply in Person
agement Team, aiding
ing agents to marketing
245 Front Street,
with marketing efforts,
and maintenance. Ideal
Key West, FL 33040
answering phones and
candidates possess all
Tel: 305-294-4000
general administrative
requisite skills to sucFax: 305-292-4348
cessfully run property, in- duties at the front desk.
cluding achievement of fiRESERVATIONIST
nancial goals. Knowledge Great benefits including
The Southernmost Hotel
health insurance and
of FLIHTC program preCollection
Reservation
401K opportunities.
ferred. Submit resume to:
Team is looking for a
[email protected]
F/T Hotel and/or ReserImmediate opening!
JOURNEYMAN
E-mail your resume to: vation experience preELECTRICIAN
[email protected] ferred. Must be computer
Experience in commeri- or fax to 305.294.1699 literate, detail oriented,
flexible,
must
have
cal/government contract.
P/T HOUSEKEEPING
knowledge of Microsoft
Must have valid drivers liINSPECTORS
Office. Apply at
1319
cense. Drug free workThe Galleon Resort is Duval St.
place. Send resume to
hiring p/t inspectors for
[email protected]
Saturdays only. Please
RESERVATIONS
apply in person at 617 Immediate opening for a
LINE COOKS
Line Cook with experi- Front Street or call at full/part time reservation
ence. Pay is determined 305-296-7711 ext 1722.
agent. Must be customer
by skill level. Come join PIER HOUSE RESORT friendly and computer litOPENINGS
our Team. Apply at Saerate.
Evenings
and
* P/T Spa Receptionist
lute Restaurant.
weekend are required.
* Housekeeping
Please email resume to
LOCAL
Supervisor
[email protected]
FAMILY-OWNED
* Housekeeping Room
SCOOTER RENTAL
RESTAURANT
Inspector
AGENT WANTED
We are looking for a * Room Service
For busy location. Must
cheerful, friendly, PM
Attendent
Salad Chef. Must expe- Current, strong, stable, be fit and ready to work
rienced in high volume. verifiable exp. required full-time. Experience a
Must be able to speak and must be able to work plus but will train. Call
and understand Eng- a flexible schedule. Ex- 305-923-1608.
lish. Must be creative, cellent benefits package,
reliable & dependable meal & parking available
SEARS AUTO CENTER
due to the changing
Now hiring FT & PT
EOE, M/F/D/V.
menu. Please apply in
Sales & Mechanics valid
Drug Free Workplace.
person only:
DL and Drug Test req.
Apply: H/R Dept. One
Camille’s Restaurant
Apply in person EO/AA
Duval St. M-F,
1202 Simonton Street
Employer.
10am to 4pm.
* F/T Lic. Hairdresser.
Must be able to perform
updos and makeup.
Preferably with a Local
clientele.
Experience necessary.
Please contact the Spa
Manager at
305-295-3293.
EOE, M/F/D/V Drug Free
Workplace
The Key West Citizen
Part-time Truck Driver
Applicants MUST be
able to work nights, early
morning hours, and 2-3
days every week. Applicants MUST have a
clean driving record and
Be able to speak and understand English. Applicant will drive from Key
West to Key Largo:
*Have valid driver’s
license*
*Clean driving record
ONLY*
*Speak and understand
English*
*Communicate
Effectively*
*Pass drug test*
*Ability to lift 50lbs*
*Responsible*
*Self motivated*
*Consistent*
*Problem Solve*
*Organized*
*Dependable*
Please email your
resume to
[email protected]
or apply in person at
3420 Northside Dr.
Key West. NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
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ANSWER GRID FOR 04/09/2011 CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1 Make a
mistake
4 Trucker,
often
8 Chips gowith
11 200 fins
12 Throng
13 I, to Caesar
14 Drivel
16 Brown the
bandleader
17 Catching
18 Go fly — —!
20 Ben & Jerry
rival
21 NNW
opposite
22 — Lama
25 Inconven
ient
29 Test
30 Paul Anka’s
“— Beso”
31 Oaxaca gold
32 Stately tree
33 Rookie
socialite
34 Excursion
35 Climb down
38 Non-com
nickname
39 Tijuana
“Mrs.”
40 Checkers
piece
41 Played over
44 Traveler’s
need
48 Pamplona
yell
49 Mascara
target
51 Tumult
52 Elite divers
53 Gore and
Capone
54 Long-faced
55 Reproving
clucks
56 Mao — tung
DOWN
1 Quiche
ingredients
2 Horse’s
brake
3 “Fancy”
singer
4 Trite
5 Admiral’s
jail
220 HELP WANTED
LOWER KEYS
240 HELP WANTED
UPPER KEYS
Medical Billing
Trainees Needed!
Hospitals, Doctors &
Insurance Hiring Now!
No experience Needed!
Local training & Job
Placement Available
HS Diploma or GED
to Qualify for Program
1-888-778-0456
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
CLERK
Must have 3-5 yrs exp in
A/P & proficient in Quickbooks & Excel. Analytical
abilities, initiative &
problem-solving skills
are required.
Must be organized.
Email resume w/ref to:
[email protected]
or fax 305-664-3116.
CROWNE PLAZA
KEY WEST LA CONCHA
*Room Attendants
Experience is preferred,
must be able to handle
high volume
*AM Server
Applicants must be available for am shifts only,
6am-2pm. Previous restaurant/hotel experience
is required.
**Applicants must have
verifiable references
and hotel experience in
order to apply**
Apply in person at:
430 Duval St.
M-F, 10am-3pm
EOE/M/F/V/D, Drug Free
Workplace
P/T MERCHANDISER
Needed to call on retail
account in Islamorada.
Great pay and flexible
hours. Previous experience helpful. Contact:
[email protected]
305 Pets
1 Year Old This March
Male Rat Terrier Dog
Black & white. $300 with
papers. Day phone from
7:00-3:00. 305-293-2992.
Home phone from 4:00
on 305-294-1546.
315 Bicycles
Bicycle built for 2
w/kids trailer (3 can ride).
$180 (803)206-9644
320 HOUSEHOLD
GOODS
1 Year Old Separate
WAREHOUSE
Washer & Dryer w/3 yr
MANAGER
warr $400. 305-240-4243
Refreshment
Services
325 Miscellaneous
Pepsi, Inc. is seeking a
WATER TREATMENT
Warehouse Manager to
PLANT plan, organize, develop
Located at 100 Hamand direct the overall
mocks Trail #2114, Key
daily operations of our
Largo, FL 33037 - 12
warehouse.Applicants for
TGD plant - biological
this position will be capanitrogen and chemical
ble of maintaining adephosphorous removal
quate staffing levels for
capabilities - attached
warehouse, and control
digester -dual clarifiers
inventory while monitoring current inventory lev- and dual chlorine contact
chambers - steel conels to meet sales volume.
Applicant will also pro- struction -includes blowvide a high level of cus- ers, diffusers, air lifts and
bar screen. Asking
tomer service to internal
and external customers, $25,000 Contact Kahlil
Bond 561-702-8308
all while seeking to accomplish company goals,
and staying within deDo You Want
partment budget. Salary
a Better Quality of Life?
is negotiable but will also
Do you enjoy essential
be based on level of ex- oils or want to try them?
perience. Interested apBeing a Young Living
plicants should apply in
Therapeutic Grade
person to: Refreshment Essential Oils Distributor
Services Pepsi, Inc. 5510
might be right for you.
McDonald
Ave.
Key We are a local distributor
West, Florida
here in the Keys and
want to share this
opportunity with you.
Water Sports Company
Check us out at:
seeking the following:
www.youngliving.org/dongato
1). Strong, Fit, Beach
6 VINTAGE DISPLAY
boys to assist with Hobie
CASES
Cat Sailing, Kayaks,
305-293-0208,
Paddleboards and more.
305-393-5053.
2). Check In Person
3). Ski Boat Captains,
330 YARD SALES
4). Snorkle Boat Mate.
LOWER KEYS
All positions require
HUGE YARD SALE!!!
valid drivers license.
Marine Supplies, Tools,
305- 747-0304
Clothing,
Furniture....
Everything!
Old Island Marina
7001 Shrimp Road
Stock Island
WYLAND GALLERIES
Saturday, April 16th
102 DUVAL
8 AM to 2 PM
looking for 1 Sales
$20 for an 8’ Table
person willing to work
Call 305-294-2288 to
and earn what they are
reserve your space.
worth. We offer:
* health benefits
345 Appliances
* 401 K
Avanti fully automatic
* Paid vacation
compact washer machine
* $500 sign on bonus
*Commissions up to 15% $150 like new, 315415-4609.
* Cash Spiff
* Advancement
Opportunities
Come in and apply
mornings Ask for Andy
TM
305-294-5240
YOUR GUARANTEE...
KEYSWIDE GUARANTEED
CLASSIFIEDS
5B
KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED
351 Electronics
14” Dell laptop/wifi Very
well equipped-Nr. NEW
$300 obo Carl 896-2180
355 Wanted to Buy
LOOKING TO BUY
lobster and crab certificates A's or B's. Paid
cash. (772) 519-0180.
[email protected]
402 Roommates
ROOMMATE WANTED
Share large , private
house and yard, pool,
WiFi, W/D, all util incl.
$900/mo (305)304-5143
Old Town near 5 Bros.
Room, A/C, W/D, pkg.
Quiet house, employed
female preferred w/refs.
$800/mo. includes. all.
292-9803, leave msg.
**PROFESSIONAL**
REDUCED!!!
Share Large Old Town
brand new 4BR superlux
house. Suit one person:
own queen size bed. Pvt
swimming pool. $350/wk.
minimum 6-12 mo. lease.
305-896-4004
404 ROOMS
LOWER KEYS
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
$499/week + tax
or 2 nite min@ $99/nite
305-296-5558
www.heartbreakhotel.org
Old Town Efficiency
Rentals By the Week
King $260; single $210,
1 week deposit. 4 week
minimum. Priv. entrance,
priv. bath, own A/C, cable TV, W/D, WIFI. No
drugs, alcohol. Sorry no
pets. 305-395-8731
6 Sullivan and
Murrow
7 Go over old
ground
8 Salami
seller
9 — — the
picture!
10 Work as a
model
12 Swiss miss
15 Minnow kin
19 Green
parrot
21 Uppity one
22 Heroic
exploit
23 Grease
gun target
24 Takes a
powder
25 Exploited
26 Jordan’s
queen
27 Penicillin,
e.g.
28 Knights of
—
30 Ferber or
Millay
34 Lemony
flavors
36 Dixie, once
37 Papa
Hemingway
38 Epics
40 Ruminates
41 Towel
holders
42 Charles
Lamb
43 Tear
44 Pipe
problem
45 At the drop
of — —
46 Thickens
47 Latin I verb
50 Survey
choice
STOPPING FOR FUNERAL CORTEGE IS THE
CUSTOMARY THING TO DO
DEAR ABBY: For years I have
wondered about this every time I have
gone to a funeral and have ridden in
the procession to the cemetery.
As the procession travels to the
cemetery, all cars and trucks pull over
and stop. That custom strikes
me as very touching. I was in
another procession last week,
and even the UPS truck and
several semis pulled over.
My question is, is this a
custom only in southern Indiana
where I live, or does everyone
do this? -- WONDERING NEAR
INDIANAPOLIS
DEAR
WONDERING:
According to Emily Post, this
consideration
should
be
accorded regardless of where people
live. She writes: “If you encounter a
funeral cortege (signaled by a line of
cars with headlights or flashing hazard
lights on), it’s respectful to pull over to
the side of the street until the cars have
passed. Waiting at a green light while a
cortege passes is also expected, even
if someone behind you is honking to
proceed.”
DEAR ABBY: “Charlene” and
I dated 10 years ago. We remained
friends after dating. At the time, she
was plus-sized.
I moved away for a while, and
now that I am back, Charlene will talk
to me only on the phone and not in
person. Her reason is she is much
too large now to let me see her. She
doesn’t want any human contact at all,
and I’m scared for her. I have told her
many times that I don’t care about her
weight. I want to see her, but she won’t
budge. I don’t know how to get her to
snap out of it. Help! -- KEPT AWAY IN
PHILADELPHIA
DEAR KEPT AWAY: If Charlene has
family and you know how to contact
them, do so. Outline your concern
that their relative has gained so much
weight she’s gone into hiding -- and
hope they can convince her to seek
help. Other than that, there’s no way to
force direct contact on someone who
doesn’t want to see you. However, you
should continue to be a supportive
telephone friend. She may need all the
emotional support she will allow.
DEAR ABBY: I divorced two years
ago after 25 years of marriage.
During the divorce I met a man
who helped me through the
emotional roller coaster I was
on.We became close and hoped
to be married eventually. He
died unexpectedly of a heart
attack.
My mother introduced me to
another man, “Donald,” who
is good and kind, but who was
“burned” after a divorce and a
long relationship. We see each
other once a week, but I’d like to see
him more often.
I’m having trouble being in limbo
and not becoming too attached to
Donald. Conventional wisdom tells me
to stop waiting for him to come around.
I work, volunteer, and have been asked
out by other men. I have turned them
down so as not to jeopardize what
I currently have. Donald isn’t seeing
anyone else.
Can you please help set me straight
once and for all? I’m in my late 40s and
feeling blue about my dating situation.
-- UNCERTAIN IN SOUTH CAROLINA
DEAR UNCERTAIN: Has Donald
TOLD you he’s not interested in
marrying again? If not, he may warm to
the idea eventually. However, for him
to expect you to date him exclusively
with no commitment on his part is
unfair to you.
How long have you been seeing
him? It seems to me you need to have
a mature discussion. From where I
sit you have no reason to feel blue.
You’re seeing him once a week, having
a guaranteed good time, AND you can
explore the possibility of a permanent
relationship with him or any of the
other men who have shown an interest.
So think positive and enjoy yourself.
417 UNFURN.CONDOS
LOWER KEYS
422 FURNISHED APTS.
LOWER KEYS
428 UNFURNISHED
APTS. LOWER KEYS
432 UNFURNISHED
APTS. UPPER KEYS
440 UNFURN. HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
keywestrentalco.com
2/1 Santa Clara, pool,
laundry, tennis on premises. $1,450/mo. F/S
2/1 Santa Clara,
furnished, move in now.
$1,500/mo. F/L/S
The Taporowski Team
Realty Executives
Florida Keys
305-292-1922
1 BR / 1BA In Old Town
Avail. 5/1- 9/30. W/D,
cable, pool, yard & prkg.
No smoking, No pets.
References & deposit req
$1300/mo. 612-805-7825
2/1 BIG PINE KEY
Boating canal, ground
level CBS duplex, OSP.
$1,150 F/L/S, no dogs.
Call 305-872-4026.
AVAILABLE NOW
2BR/1BA duplex MM94
Bayside, W/D, screen
porch,
$1,100/month
305-451-4100
COMPASS REALTY
305-292-1480
Saltponds Condo 2/2
A/C, cable/WD/pool &
tennis. No dogs. Avail.
5/1 $1,700/mo. + utils.
$1,000 sec. 294-3339 or
797- 5131
2/2 LAS SALINAS
Appliances, W/D.
6 month or year lease.
$1,350/mo + utils, F/S.
No pets. Ref. required
305-849-0261 or
305-294-6020
422 FURNISHED APTS.
LOWER KEYS
Old Town Studio
w/loft $1,250/mo Priv.
entrance, vaulted ceilings, fans, queen bed, 8’
window to garden, own
bath, own A/C, cable,
W/D, WIFI, BBQ. No
drugs, Sorry no pets.
305-295-9000
Old Town Efficiency
$950/mo. + util. F/S/S.
Priv. entrance, own bath,
own A/C, exp cable,
W/D, WIFI. No drugs,
Sorry no pets.
305-295-9000
814 WHITEHEAD ST
500 sf studio, renovated,
A/C, ceilings fans, no
pets. $1050/mo.
Incl
1 BR Apt., Mid-Town
sewer & garbage F/L/S.
w/sleeping loft, cent A/C, Credit
check. 1-317W/D, OSP, cable &
997-6493
Wi-Fi. Avail now. $1,400/
Roof Top Apt. 1BR/1BA
mo. F/L/S 305-923-0008
Over 700s.f. huge pool
NEW TOWN EXTRA
and patio. Great location.
LARGE 1 BEDROOM
$1,600 per month all util
Central
AC,
laundry incl. 294-7840.
room, fenced yard with
2/2 Seaport District
deck,
2
dogs
OK.
$1300/mo includes util + Rarely available. Great
for a couple or 2 roomcable. F/L/S. Avail. now
mates. Inc. microwave,
for year or 6 month
W/D, D/W, cent. A/C,
lease. 745-9132
OSP. Small pet OK! No
smokers. Avail. May 1st.
SPACIOUS 1BR/1BA
$1,900/mo. $4,400 to
Large living room and move in. Credit check &
kitchen, new appliances
ref. 305-923-6199
near the meadows and
432 UNFURNISHED
Old Town. $1,200/mo.
APTS. UPPER KEYS
plus $60 sewer/garbage
F/L/S. Call 294-3093 for Tradewind Hammocks
Apartments
appointment
to
see
apartment, 1year lease Spacious 1,2,& 3 Bedroom Apartments.
required.
Fantastic Location In
Key Largo!
KEY WEST REALTY
100 Hammocks Trail
Management Group
Key Largo, Florida 33037
305-294-RENT (7368)
Located behind Publix
www.keywestrealty.com
and Kmart Plaza
Affordable Rents!!
Prestigious Campbell
Income Restrictions
Courtyard 1BR/1.5BA
Apply
Old
Town
Condo
w/shared pool, D/W, tile Phone: (305) 451-1415
throughout, W/D. $1,400 Office Hours: Mon, Wed,
& Fri: 9:30am-5:00pm
/mo. F/S/S. No pets.
428 UNFURNISHED
APTS. LOWER KEYS
434 FURNISHED HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
GOLF CLUB
Avail. May 1st. Increditable Golf Course views.
2BR/1.5BA nicely furn.
town home, 2 pools,
gym, parking, 24 hr security, $1,800 mo., F/L/S.
305-849-1902
[email protected]
OPEN WATER
With private pool, spa. All
utilities included. One
bed/two full baths. 6800
Maloney Ave. $1,600.
Darlene Thomas, Realty
Executive Florida Keys
304-1043.
OLD TOWN
1BR/1BA with loft, W/D,
very private, $1,750 mo.
incl. util and premium cable. 305-797-0360.
SUMMER RENTALS
1 to 5 Bedrooms,
1 to 6 months.
Starting @ $1,600 /mth
Call Historic Hideaways:
305.294.RENT
See all properties/prices
online @
www.HistoricHideaways.com
Announce it in
Keyswide Classifieds!
Call 292-7777 ext.3
Unfurnished Homes
Call for more information.
Ask to be on our waitlist.
Furnished Homes
Golf Club-Bungalow
townhome 2b/1.5b
$1800 available for 5/1
short term.
Golf Club-Conch townhome 2b/2.5b
$1900 +utils
available 5/20 short-term
Golf Club-Cottage townhome 3b/2b $2500 available 5/7 short term.
Condo by the beach with
ocean views 3b/2.5b
$2500 available 5/1 short
or long-term
Golf Club-Private Home
3b/2.5b $2,800 available
5/1 short-term
WET SLIPS AVAILABLE
FOR LONG-TERM
MONTHLY RENTAL
Call Compass Realty
for an appt. 292-1480
or 8088-884-7368
www.compass-realty.com
Don’t miss any of the action!
410 MOBILE HOMES
LOWER KEYS
ONE BEDROOM
With pool, furnished.
On the Waterfront.
$800 moves you in.
15 Minutes to Key West
Call Dave 305-304-7579
3BR/1BA
New kitchen and appliances,
very
clean.
$1,500
mo.
F/L/S.
305-797-8167.
BIG PINE KEY
Fantastic location. Large
fully furnished 2BR/
1.5BA, covered screened
porch, 2 car OSP, pool,
clubhouse. $1000/mo. All
utilities incl except elec.
Possible lease purchase
Call 305-879-5800
416 FURN CONDOS
LOWER KEYS
SMATHERS BEACH
1, 2 & 3 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
417 UNFURN.CONDOS
LOWER KEYS
1BR - LAS SALINAS
$1250/mo. available immediately. Great view.
Small dogs accepted.
Call Scott (502)640-9666
Catch it all by subscribing to the Key West Citizen!
Call 305-292-7777 today!
THE KEY WEST CITIZEN ◆ MONDAY, APRIL 11, 2011
KEYSWIDE CLASSIFIED
Timeshare for Sale!
Coconut Mallory Booked
New Years! $13,500
464 Storage
STORAGE
Industrial Warehouses
Sizes vary.
Storage Containers
On our site or yours.
Call (305)294-0277
Kathleen P Hancock PA
Broker Associate
Property Management
of Key West, Inc.
305-304-4034
See these listings @
Furnished 1/1 in Casa
Marina area w/covered
lanai, OSP, shared pool
and laundry. Avail. May.
$1,600/mo. plus utilities
1/1 apartment. Central
AC, Washer/Dryer. Pets
Considered. Avail. May.
$1,300/mo. plus utilities
2/1.5 apt. with fenced
yard. Great location,
washer/dryer HU. Pets
considered. Avail. May.
$1,600/mo. plus utilities.
Furnished 1/1 in Casa
Marina with built in cabinetry, OSP, shared pool
and laundry. Available
May. $1,650/mo. plus
utilities
2/1 furnished Conch
house w/private pool.
Avail. May. 6 month
lease. $2,000/mo. plus
utilities.
1/1 upstairs apartment.
Located in heart of Old
Town. Avail. June.
$1,100/mo. plus electric.
MID TOWN
2/1 renovated duplex.
Fenced yard. Pets considered. Avail. May.
$1,800/mo. plus utilities.
Spacious 2/2 apt. Close
to the beach, OSP, private deck. Pets considered. Avail. May.
$1,900/mo. plus utilities.
2/2 condo with access to
beach. Shared pool &
tennis. Pets considered.
Avail. June. $2,300/mo.
plus utilities.
BIG COPPITT
2/1 single family home.
With large yard and private pool. Avail. May
$1,850/mo. plus utilities.
3/2 single family home on
canal with 51 Ft. seawall.
Avail. May. $2,000/mo.
plus utilities.
SUGARLOAF
Spacious 3/3 single family home. Beautiful open
water views. Large yard
with private pool. Furnished or Unfurnished.
Pets considered. Avail.
Mid-April $3,000/mo. plus
utilities.
www.athomekeywest.com
AT HOME IN
KEY WEST
296-7975
LARGE HOUSE 3/2
Storage, boating & yard.
24840 Park Dr. Summerland Key, MM25. Great
Location!! $2,000/mo
305-745-1514
444 UNFURN. HOUSES
UPPER KEYS
2 BEDROOM, 1.5 BATH
Key Largo. Canal front
home. Dock, davits, hot
tub, new SS appl.
$1400/mo 786-301-6923.
460 COMMERCIAL
RENTALS
Retail / Office Space
Two 600 SQF Units Fronts US Hwy 1 Big
Pine Key Bougainvillea
Bldg Marty 305-394-3583
YOUR GUARANTEE...
KEYSWIDE GUARANTEED
CLASSIFIEDSTM
*$399,000.00*
Key West
BRAND NEW
3/2
Ready to move in
14 days. 1,500 Sq. Ft.
Metal roof, Hurricane
impact windows,
Corian counter tops,
Hardi-plank siding.
Insurance is $1,500.00
per year. Low utilities &
Seller pays all closing
costs.
Low Payments
All Credit Considered
Call Joe Cleghorn
(305) 304-6627
305-295-8646
534 COMMERCIAL
PROPERTY
*Manager Specials*
Commercial For Sale
Search All Key West and
FL Keys Commercial RE
and Businesses For Sale
at www.KeysRealEstate.com
2003 Hyundai Santa Fe
V6, auto, a/c, leather.
Call for details
Restaurant on Duval St.
Real Estate & 3 business
ventures included in purchase
price.
Handicapped accessible, recently renovated w/ 72
seats & 5,392 SF
2005 Kia Sedona
Auto, a/c
Call for details
2006 Ford Focus SE
$6,995 $8,995
Auto, a/c, 84K miles.
2006 Ford Focus SE
704 Duval Street
Turn rent into equity on
Duval.
Retail space
down with large 1/ BD
apt upstairs. Priced right,
call for more information.
313 Margaret St.
Bank Owned corner retail
bldg w/ 2400 sq. ft. & limited parking. Historic KW
Seaport District.
KEY WEST 79 SEAT
RESTAURANT/BAR
High traffic location, w/
beer & wine license. For
sale @ $647k or rent for
$3,600 mo. Owner is a licensed real estate agent.
1500BerthaStreet.com
Vic Musmanno, P.A.
Coldwell Banker Schmitt
305-294-0123
Office Suites in
Sugarloaf
The Alamo, affordable
small office suites available from 450 to 788 SQ.
FT. w/ rent starting at
$750 per month.
Key Plaza
Join K-Mart, $ Tree, Albertson's, Verizon and
Office Max in one of
KW's busiest centers.
Space available from
1,125 SF up to 3,025
Contact Claude J.
Gardner, Jr.
305-766-3133
Prudential Knight &
Gardner Realty
CHEAP
Large commercial boat
basin with boat ramp approx 3.88+ acres zoned
commercial
fishing
CFSD2 $199,999.00 not
a typo!!!. Need quick
closing call if you have
cash. 305-831-8747.
Tax, tag and DOC fee
not included in sale price
(305)295-8646
Call us and
SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
650 Scooters
150CC Scooter 2006,
$700. In Key West. Dan
419-602-0515
2003 Mercedes E320
Auto, a/c, leather.
658 RV/Motor Homes
Call for details
RV LOT FOR SALE
Located Seaside Re2005 Jeep Liberty Sport sort. MM10.5 lot 90.
937-238-4563.
Auto, a/c, 4x4.
Call for details
$600 RV Waterfront Lot
w/pool, clubhouse &
laundry facilities.
2006 Jeep Liberty
15 min. to Key West
Limited
Call Dave 305-304-7579.
$13,995 $15,995
660 Marine Needs
Auto, a/c, leather,
24K miles
FISH & RACE
ENGINES IN STOCK
Mercury
2006 Nissan Maxima SE
300XS OPTI $15,000
$14,995 $16,995
250HP OPTI $13,500
Auto, a/c, only 21K miles
60HP 4 Stroke $5,735
15HP 4 Stroke $1,995
2006 Ford Ranger Sport
6HP 4 Stroke $1,495
$13,995 $15,995
5HP 4 Stroke $1,289
3.5HP 4 Stroke $950
Extended cab, auto, a/c,
Honda
only 15K miles.
20HP 4 Stroke $2,995
5HP 4 Stroke $1,489
2003 GMC Denali
Used Engines
Auto, a/c, leather,
200HP OPTI Set- 07
sunroof, only 15K miles
$12,800 w/1yr warranty
Call for details
250HP OPTI Set -08
$22,000 w/2yrs warranty
21’Triad Race Boat
2005 Nissan
$5,800
Pathfinder SE
305- 292-2291
$15,995 $17,995
Auto, a/c, DVD,
WE BUY
• Web Site Design
• Hosting & Maintenance
• Web Promotion
• Web Advertising
305-292-1880
To Guide - - - - - MARINE
PAINTING &
DECORATING
POOL SERVICES
ROOFING
MARK’S
MARINE DIESEL
Kenneth Wells
Advanced Pool & Spa, Key West
DAN
ACE
ROOFING, INC.
Located inside Oceanside Marina
Authorized Diesel Sales & Service, Installation
305-292-2300
DRIVE YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE GO TO GUIDE TODAY!
ONE INCH AD
BOAT SLIPS
SUNSET MARINA
35’ $750, 60’ $1500..
Includes utilities.
305-304-1751.
CALL 292-7777 X3
~ All Years ~
305-332-0483
Oceanside 60’ Slip
liveaboards
welcome.
$1,000/mo. includes utilities. Call Jim 305587-5411
292-7777
x203
COMPUTER
SERVICES
Or Donate for a Tax Write-Off
669 DOCKAGE/
STORAGE
Call today:
APRIL 6 — 12, 2011
Junk or Used Cars,
Vans & Trucks
Running or Not
Don’t deal with
traffic or severe
weather, just pick
up the phone! Most
classified
advertising can be
placed over the
phone. Call today.
292-7777
Ext. 3
664 Sailboats
27’ Buccaneer sailboat
$1,500. Ready to live on,
clean, in the water already.
Key
West
770-710-7715.
Find out how you
can get the
word out to
over 25,000
readers daily!
- - - - - - Go
AUTOS WANTED
CLASSIFIED
CUSTOMERS:
The Citizen
gets the
best results!
327 Overseas Hwy
Commercial retail, office
or industrial land available on Big Coppitt w/
highway visibility.
Lease Spaces:
Transient Licensed!
SF home w/dip pool
Owner is FL. Lic.
RE Broker
620 Autos For Sale
KEY WEST KIA
3424 N. Roosevelt Blvd.
Key West, FL 33040
www.Keywesthomes.org
[email protected]
526 BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
532 Income Property
Sacrifice!
Mixed Use!
2 Commercial
1 Residential
Location! Location!
Location!
On Truman near White
Under appraised value!
Owner is FL. Lic. RE
Broker
appx 3000 sq ft on
5428 sq ft lot!
Reduced to $575K!
Rose Dell & Associates
Real Estate
305-304-6045
2005 Chevy Silverado
2500 LS
$22,988 $29,988
Double cab, diesel, 4x4,
auto, a/c, 70K miles
2006 Honda CR-V
$14,995 $15,995
Auto, a/c, 69K miles.
TWO INCH AD
2 WEEKS . . . . . $140
2 WEEKS . . . . . $252
1 MONTH . . . . . $200
1 MONTH . . . . . $360
2 MONTHS . . . . $350
2 MONTHS . . . . $630
3 MONTHS . . . . $450
3 MONTHS . . . . $810
6 MONTHS . . . . $800
6 MONTHS . . .$1,440
1 YEAR . . . . . . $1500
1 YEAR . . . . . .$2,700
$10 EXTRA FOR LOGOS
MORE CATEGORIES AVAILABLE!
SP 1259
See pictures & more
properties @
CANAL FRONT HOUSE
3/2, Brand new home.
Million dollar view, lots of
amenities,
landscaped
fenced. Turn Key starting
at $295,000. For more information.
Call
Don
305-522-2133,
Danny
305-509-3375.
* Ramrod Key Non-waterfront $53,000
Double lot permit for
3bd/2bth home,
boat ramp nearby.
MLS #554378
2008 Chevy Aveo
$9,995 $11,995
5 door, 5 speed, a/c
Only 24K miles
272885
2/1.5 plus den apartment
Close to Duval. Pets considered. Avail. May.
$2,000/mo. plus electric
520 HOMES
LOWER KEYS
17 Acres on Out Island
$799K!
* Big Pine -Doctors Arm
$275,000
Open Water & Canal
w/concrete dock
Permit for 3bd/2bth home
Over 200ft of waterfront.
MLS #554752
2003 Kia Sedona EX
Auto, a/c, leather,
sunroof
Call for details
660 Marine Needs
662 Power Boats
‘03, 24' Palm Beach
Stern Dive/Swim fiberglass platform w/slideout Pontoon. $2030. Needs
ladder. Fits 12’ transom. motor work. 923-5753
$2000 OBO. 304-0626
1998 Aquasport 16’ CC
skiff, 50HP, trailer, live
662 Power Boats
well, SS prop, bimini top,
1981 42’ CALIFORNIAN all service done. $4,749
priced for immediate sale (305)396-7657.
$99,500. If you’re looking
for a great live aboard or 13’ BOSTON WHALER
long range cruiser, “10 Excellent condition and
Knots” is a perfect solu- recondition trailer. 40HP
50
hours,
tion. She is berthed in Johnson,
North Miami and ready bimini top, asking $5,000
for a new owner. She has OBO. 978-877-0121.
been
professionally
38’ 2002 RAMPAGE
maintained and recently
EXPRESS
updated, with new batter- 2 Yanmar 465 diesel enies, bottom paint, freezer, gines. Low hours, fishing
refrid and carpeting. Awl- gear included, charter
gripped in 1998, so abso- ready. $175,000 OBO.
lutely nothing to do but 305-304-1801.
enjoy the ride. Twin CAT
1996 PRO-LINE
3208 Diesels with only
24’
Sport,
center console,
1200 hr on rebuild.
Owner will consider fi- $14,900. Twin 150 Mernancing with 33% down cury’s, T-tops, Top Gun
and 5 years to pay. For a outriggers, Auto Helm
complete description and ST5000, VHF, new, dual
batteries,
Windlasses,
photos, go to:
Livewell,
http://web.me.com/1_stei Powerwinch,
n/42trawler
or contact Garmin, GPS Map, 178C
Fast
Load
me direct 305-951-0500. Sounder,
Trailer, Owners Manual,
Porter Potty, plus more.
Call Jay 305-395-8685.
& Co.
~ Four Generations ~
Painting • Faux Finishes
Crown & Trim
(305) 296-6985
Lic. # 0011655
Now accepting weekly
pool cleaning customers
~ Victor Huff ~
www.kennethwellspainting.com
Find me at Carol Sniders SwimLine
Pool Store on Kennedy Dr.
or call 305-766-0870
www.VicsAdvancedPoolService.com
PET GROOMING
PRINTING
30 years experience
RESIDENTIAL - COMMERCIAL
Licensed (RC0034111) & Insured
294-2380
Daniel Acevedo, Owner
329274
462 Office Space
PROFESSIONAL
OFFICE SPACE
avail. 1,300 sq. ft.;
MUST SEE; lobby, conf.
room, private offices &
much more; $1,000/mo.
+ FL sales tax & utilities.
6631
Maloney
Ave.,
Stock
Island;
call
305-294-5505 X23 for
more info. Avail. now.
3/2 GOLF CLUB
$1,850 plus util. Amy
294-6199.
BIG PINE HOUSE
2/2.5. 2 lots fenced in.
502 MOBILE HOMES
Recently renovated. W/D
LOWER KEYS
hook up, D/W, deep
FOR SALE BY OWNER
clean canal w/dock &
Harbor shores 2/1 Mobile
davits. $1800
w/ deeded land, boating
305-872-9004
access and water view.
AT HOME KEY WEST
MUST SELL !
305-296-7975
All Offers Considered
Pictures and more
Owner Lic. RE Agent
properties at
305-849-3061
www.athomekeywest.com
OLD TOWN
Spacious furnished 1/1.5
plus den apartment With
High ceilings. Close to
Duval, OSP. Pets considered. Avail. May
$2,200/mo. plus electric
Restaurant in Prime
200 Block Duval Street
Location! SRX licensed.
Reduced to $400K! 50%
owner finance poss.
Terms negotiable.
LOTS w/Permits for
Sale $$ WOW!!
* Big Pine-Eden Pines
$169,000.
120 ft of Canal front,
dock & house permit
for 2bd/2bth home.
Cut in Boat Slip too.
MLS #554752
328579
328029
1209 TRUMAN AVENUE
Four parking spaces,
High visibility
Call 293-8809
Grand Old Town Home
and adjacent commercial
lot! Reduced!
$595K each!
309245
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.
Mobile Home 2br 2ba
Large lot, Big Coppitt
$124,900
620 Autos For Sale
45K miles.
Tony’s
Roofing & Sheet Metal
DOG & CAT GROOMING
PRICES START @$15
Lic. #11-000-24949
Commercial Printing
on Quality Newsprint
Phone: 294-3800
1411-B First Street
Tabloids
Booklets
Newletters
Info Guides
Menus
Instructional Guides
Full Publications
Randy Erickson
Cooke Communications
[email protected]
305-292-7777 Ext. 203
RC0064676
RS0016738
Established 1953
Monroe County’s Oldest
Residential & Commercial
296-5932
328576
OFFICE/WORKSHOP/
WAREHOUSE/MARINA
AREA
2100-3000 sq.ft. 30 ft.
ceilings, 10ft roll up door,
2 offices with central A/C,
private
bath
$1,700$2,400 mo. or make offer
call 305-360-2137.
620 Autos For Sale
$7,995 $8,995
Auto, a/c, 54K miles
536 LOTS & ACREAGE
LOWER KEYS
328090
NAS KEY WEST
is now renting to retired
military. $2,425 a month,
utilities included, no security deposit, 24 hour
maintenance. Please call
Balfour Beatty for details.
305-432-9824
532 Income Property
Reduced to $699K!
311007
460 COMMERCIAL
RENTALS
329275
440 UNFURN. HOUSES
LOWER KEYS
329277
6B