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For a cause: CR, Citrus battle breast cancer, each c I ." L I1R TODAY & Sunday morning HIGH Partly cloudy with winds 77 at 8 mph. LOW PAGE A4 46 )ItNICL. CITRwS COUtNT Y im www.chronicleonline.com DECEMBER 17, 2011 Florida's Best CommunityI Newspaper Serving Florida's Best Community 50* VOl MERRY AND BRIGHT: Move to next step, TPO told Bill raises bar onfederal funding Need for trees Locals decorate spruces for families in need./Page A13 Church slates free holiday meal The New Church Without Walls will serve a free Christ- mas dinner to the homeless and needy of Citrus County from noon to 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 17, at Hernando Beach. Donations are needed of clothing, toiletries, tents and bicycles. For more information, call Lynda Simmons or Tiarra Alexander at 352-344-2425. Drum major's death ruled homicide TALLAHASSEE- A Florida A&M Uni- versity drum major whose death re- vealed a culture of hazing within the school's famed marching band died from shock caused by internal bleeding after suffering blunt force trauma, offi- cials said Friday. Robert Champion, 26, had bruises to his chest, arms, shoulder and back and suffered bleed- ing from soft tissues, causing him to go into shock, the med- ical examiner's office in Orlando said. The autopsy said Cham- pion was vomiting before becoming un- responsive Nov. 19 aboard a band bus outside an Orlando hotel after the school's football team lost to a rival. The drum major's death led to the sus- pension of longtime band director Julian White and the end of band perform- ances for the near future. Four students suspected of in- volvement in hazing were briefly expelled from the school. They were rein- stated after state po- lice asked the school to stop any disciplinary action until a criminal in- vestigation is fin- ished. The death also triggered a criminal investiga- tion by the Orange County Sheriff's Of- fice and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. -From staff and wire reports Comics . . . . .C8 Community . . . .C6 Crossword . . . .C7 Editorial . . . . .A5 Entertainment . . .B6 Horoscope .... .B6 Lottery Numbers . .B4 Lottery Payouts . .B6 Movies . . . . . .C8 Obituaries . . . .A5 Classifieds . . . .C9 TV Listings ..... C7 l6 l ll8478 200! U CHRIS VAN ORMER Staff Writer Just over a year old, Cit- rus County Transportation Planning Organization (TPO) was advised Thurs- day that it's time to speed up. If the TPO wants to be- come a metropolitan plan- ning organization (MPO), it should take action now, ac- cording to Dr. Tim Pitts, vice president of an eco- nomic development con- sulting company based in Beverly Hills. He warned if the TPO hesitated, it could be stopped in its tracks by U.S. Senate Bill 1813, an- nounced in November, called Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century (MAP-21). "The legislation would redefine an MPO to require an urbanized area with a population of at least 200,000," Pitts ex- plained. Currently, an ur- banized area is de- fined as having a population of 50,000. Pitts said he ex- pected the city of In- verness to reach 68,000 when new Tir U.S. Census data is Pit released. The proposed legislation would seem to remove ex- isting MPOs for Ocala-Mar- ion County, Lake-Sumter counties, Hernando County and Polk County, Pitts said, as none meets the criterion of 200,000 popula- S tion. "In order not to eliminate all those," Pitts said, "the legis- lation includes a rn second provision, ts which is if it's an ex- isting MPO, they will be al- lowed to continue in existence if they can reach 200,000 population total not in the urbanized area, but in the total metropolitan planning area." Citrus County's TPO was created for a unified front when reaching out for fed- eral and state funding for road projects that have re- gional impacts. The Citrus TPO model is similar to an MPO, which exists in every other county in the Depart- ment of Transportation's District 7. The Citrus County See Page A4 Airport progress ..... .- .. ...- ,. .... .- .- .-. . 0-I- -'--_-.--- -J - --,,. ? ,, , MATTHEW BECK/Chronicle The Crystal River Airport will soon be undergoing several construction projects. Improvements to Crystal River facility include tree-clearing new hangar A.B. SIDIBE Staff Writer CRYSTAL RIVER Officials hope new improvements slated to begin this week at the airport will make it more than a blip on fliers' radars. Citrus County has unveiled a plan to first clear some trees and then replace the outdated and faulty Automated Weather Ob- servation System (AWOS); build a 10-plane hangar and two taxi- ways to get to the hangar. A park- ing lot also is included in the plan. Project Director Quincy Wylu- pek said enough space will be cleared for two more 10-plane hangars, but current financial constraints will hold off con- struction at this point. Wylupek said the weather sys- tem should be replaced within two weeks, but the hangar and taxiways would take until next June to be completed. "The AWOS will help pilots know exactly how conditions are on the ground before they get here," Wylupek said. He said a similar AWOS was recently installed in county- owned Inverness Airport which should make it easier for staff to make repairs to them in the fu- ture, because the spare parts will be the same. Wylupek noted, for example, a pilot traversing the state heading to South Florida can now add Crystal River to their flight plan because of the upgraded AWOS. He said access to a good weather guidance sys- tem and fuel are among the most vital considerations when avia- tors sit down to draw up flight plans. Wylupek said construction on the project would have begun sooner, but protected burrows of gopher tortoises were found at the site and officials just fin- ished transferring the tortoises to safer ground. "This will be good for the air- port. It will mean more space for people to store their aircraft. You know there are people in Crystal River who go to Dunnel- lon's airport to store their planes because we don't have enough space here," he said. Tom Davis, president of Crys- tal Aero Group, Inc., which has operated the Crystal River Air- port for more than three decades, believes the new hangar will prove a boon for the facility. "Hangars are really at a pre- mium across the nation. There is a nationwide shortage. So, when- ever you can add hangars, it's al- ways a good thing," Davis said. He said the AWOS, which is at least 15 years old, sorely needed to be replaced. "There are times it doesn't work properly at all. The read- ings are sometimes completely inaccurate," Davis added. The entire upgrade plan will cost $1,019,000. Eighty percent of the money is a grant and the rest is being paid by the county, Wy- lupek said. Chronicle reporter A.B. Sidibe can be reached at 352- 564-2925 or asidibe@chronicle online.com. District: wait and see on governor's budget MIKE WRIGHT Staff Writer INVERNESS Citrus County School District offi- cials are urging caution to Gov Rick Scott's pledge to significantly increase school spending next year Scott's proposed 2012-13 budget includes $1 billion more for education, a year after the Legislature slashed education funding at Scott's behest. The increase would mean $3.6 million more for Citrus County, assistant superin- tendent of schools Kenny Blocker told school board members this week. Blocker said Scott's budget proposal, which must be approved by legis- lators during their 2012 ses- sion, already has district employees believing that the proposed $5 million cut next year isn't necessary Blocker said officials will continue seeking ways to cut district spending de- spite Scott's budget "This is early on in the process," he said. "I don't want to give people false hope." Blocker has led a district- wide committee consider- ing several areas of budget cutting. Those proposals, mentioned on the district's website www.citrus.kl2. fl.us, include pay cuts, un- paid furlough days and re- ducing administrative work days. School board mem- bers say the goal is to cut spending without impacting the classroom. The district absorbed a $5 million cut in state spending this year mainly through its reserve funds. Officials say they cannot continue that route and that's why budget talks for the 2012-13 year started even as the current budget year began. Blocker said many em- ployees assumed Scott's proposed education fund- ing is guaranteed. "I don't want people to see that number and think we're saved," he said. He noted that Scott's pro- posed increase in educa- tion funding comes at the expense of deep cuts in Medicaid programs. Whether legislators follow Scott's thinking, Blocker said, remains to be seen. Still, Blocker said Scott's proposal to increase fund- ing comes on the heels of See .Page A4 /B1 117 ISSUE 132 _ q -W%.v CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE XAa IL Ibi , "III Lit Publix Deli Small Wing Platter ................................. 1699 Signature Publix Deli Wings, Breaded or Non-Breaded, Made to Order, Place Your Order in Advance, Serves 8 to 12, each SAVE UP TO 5.00 Nabisco Ritz Crackers......... ............... ee Or Bits Sandwiches or Munchables Pretzel: Crisps or Thins, Assorted Varieties, 7.5 to 16-oz box SAVE UP TO 3.89 Selected Coca-Cola Products .99 1.25-L SURPRISINGLY LOW PRICE SHW A CR EWAMNEs Kraft Cracker Barrel 600 Cheddar Cheese................. .. ...0 - Or Monterrey Jack, Assorted Varieties, 10-oz pkg. SAVE UP TO 4.58 ON 2 Lindsay 399 Stuffed Manzanilla Olives.................... 3- 21-oz jar SAVE UP TO 1.00 6. I: I : Prices effective Thursday, December 15, through Saturday, December 24, 2011. Only in Hillsborough, Pasco, Pinellas, Highlands, Hernando, Citrus, Manatee, Sarasota, Charlotte, Lee, Collier, Lake, Sumter, Polk and Osceola Counties. Including Publix at Stoneybrook Hills Viallage in Mount Dora. Any item carried by Publix GreenWise Market will be at the Publix advertised sale price. Prices not effective at Publix Sabor. Quantities rights reserved. II:33: A2 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 I I IN : :1,Irnt, 1 N 14 pp, llalla.ill;;IN Page A3 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 TATE& LOCAL CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE Around Horseback hymns highlight weekend THE STATE Citrus County Local labor force grows by 316 Citrus County's labor force grew by 316 to 58,527 over the month of Novem- ber, according to Work- force Connection. The number of employed resi- dents rose by 309 to 52,105 and the number of those without jobs remained vir- tually unchanged at 6,422, it was announced Friday Citrus' unemployment rate fell 2.3 percent over the year when last year at this time, there were 7,809 jobless. Democrats meet for breakfast The Downtown Break- fast Club will meet at 9 a.m. today in the meeting room at the B&W Rexall Drug Store in Inverness. The Downtown Breakfast Club meets the third Sat- urday of each month and is a group of politically progressive citizens who meet to discuss issues and ideas of mutual interest. Viewfinder change coming in January In January, the Chroni- cle's weekly television section, Viewfinder, will become optional for sub- scribers who receive Sun- day's newspaper. The reformatted section will include expanded movie listings, late night listings, entertaining features and more. The cost for those wishing to receive the sec- tion is an additional 25 cents per week. On Jan. 8 and 15, all subscribers will receive a copy of the re- vamped section; after that, those interested in continued delivery should call the Citrus County Chronicle Customer Serv- ice Department at 352- 563-5655. Tampa Bay area FHP gets new commander Michael Thomas was promoted to major in the Florida Highway Patrol and assigned to lead field opera- tions in t h e T a mp a , Bay area, " effective Dec. 16, according to Direc- tor, Col. Michael David Thomas Brierton. His new com- mand comprises seven counties, including Pinel- las, Hillsborough, Polk, Pasco, Hernando, Sumter and Citrus. Thomas began his FHP career in 1987 as a mem- ber of the 79th recruit class. He has served in Broward County as a K-9 officer, in Marion County as a district lieutenant and in his current assign- ment as district captain in Orange and Osceola counties. Thomas is a U.S. Navy veteran and holds a bach- elor's degree in public ad- ministration from Barry University in Fort Laud- erdale. He is also a recent graduate of the Leader- ship in Police Organiza- tions Program, which the U.S. Military Academy and the International As- sociation of Chiefs of Po- lice developed. Tallahassee Gov. gives workers extra paid day off Gov. Rick Scott has been something of a Grinch for state employ- ees. But now he's giving them a holiday present - an extra paid day off. Scott on Friday ordered state offices closed Dec. 23 - the Friday before Christmas. The holiday will be observed Monday, Dec. 26, because it falls on a Sunday -From staff and wire reports Pine Ridge Christmas carolers sing from steeds on Sunday CATHY KAPULKA Staff Writer PINE RIDGE The pub- lic is invited to Pine Ridge's annual "Christmas Caroling on Horseback" event at 1:15 p.m. Sunday Ornamented mini and full- size horses will spread holi- day cheer parading through the subdivision's streets, pulling carriages and leading a hay wagon full of carolers. now," Hartzell recalled. "The seas were making up days before to the point the destroyers were unable to fuel, and then the rain came." He said the rain was torrential and caused lim- ited visibility for sailors on his ship and those on other ships, which they were trying to protect Despite worsening conditions, the ships in the Third Fleet re- mained at their stations. He said the USS New Orleans made it to the edge of the eye of the storm, where the ship sailed through large swells, some up to 60-feet high. "The worst thing was really fear," he said. "My most vivid memory was taking a 38-degree roll. We were on the open bridge; we were hanging on to the "Nowhere else will they see caroling on horseback," MaryAnn Smith, parade or- ganizer, said. The parade will stage at the Smith home on North Valley Terrace. The caval- cade will make its way along West Corral Place, North Bronco Terrace, West Wi- chita Drive, West Pawnee Drive, North Buffalo Drive, West Cisco Street, North Polaris (a navigational de- vice). You had to hold onto something to keep from going over the side." He said more than 50 percent of the crew on his ship were seasick and cans of rations were strewn throughout the ship. Hartzell said he did not get seasick and had to stand many watches, fill- ing in for those who couldn't He said one of the air- craft carriers in the fleet was the USS Monterey It was on fire because some of its aircraft had slammed into the ship's bulkhead and exploded during some of the vio- lent rolls. He said one of the Navy men fighting the fires was Lt. Gerald Ford, who was later Pres- ident of the United States. Cheyenne Drive, North Cimarron Drive, West Buck- skin Drive, back to West Cor- ral Place and returning to its starting point at North Valley Terrace. Smith said about 15 horses will participate in the procession. "It's cute," she said about the parade that has been taking place for the past 15 years. "It's a little break Storm surge CATHY KAPULKA/Chronicle Carl Hartzell, 88, holds a photo of the USS New Orleans, CL/CA-32, a heavy cruiser in the Third Fleet that he served aboard during World War II. The vessell cruised into a devastating category 4 typhoon on Dec. 17, 1944, in the Philippines. World War II veteran remembers Philippines' typhoon CATHY KAPULKA Staff Writer HOMOSASSA-It was 67 years ago today, but Carl Hartzell, 88, remem- bers it like it was yesterday Hartzell was 21 years old and serving in the U.S. Navy aboard the USS New Orleans, CL/CA-32, a heavy cruiser in the Third Fleet, cruis- ing in the Philippine Sea during World War II in December 1944. "We were supposed to go out with the (aircraft) carriers to protect them from attacks from the Japanese," he said. On Dec. 17, his ship and others in the fleet cruised directly and un- wittingly into a category 4 typhoon, which was later named Typhoon Cobra or Halsey's Typhoon. Weather reports were inaccurate and plotted the storm further north than its actual position. The sustained winds were tracked at more than 145 mph. "Weather reporting was nothing like it is The name "Halsey's Typhoon" was a U.S. Navy designation for the tropical cyclone that dev- astated the U.S. Pacific Fleet on that infamous day It was named after Admiral William "Bull" Halsey, who unknowingly led the Third Fleet into the heart of the storm. As a result of the storm, three destroyers capsized and sank-the USS Hull, the USS Monaghan and the USS Spence result- ing in 790 casualties. More than 100 aircraft were damaged or washed overboard. "We were with him (Halsey)," Hartzell said. "The reason why he went into the typhoon, it was his job to protect those invading the island of Mindoro just south of Luzon and because of poor information fur- nished to him by the me- teorologist of that day "I don't hold him re- sponsible for it at all." Chronicle reporter Cathy Kapulka can be reached at 352-564-2922 or ckapulka@chronicle online.com. from the hustle and bustle." She said the parade brings the community together and promotes community spirit "It's something old fash- ioned and it gives us a warm feeling," she added. For more information, con- tact Smith at 352-746-3773. Chronicle reporter Cathy Kapulka can be reached at 352-564-2922 or ckapulka@ chronicleonline. com. Boaters parade for holidays CATHY KAPULKA Staff Writer CRYSTAL RIVER The seventh annual Crystal River Lighted Boat Parade starts today at 6:15 p.m., and can be viewed on King's Bay Suzie Martin, parade or- ganizer, said boaters who want to participate can meet with a decorated boat near the river markers in King's Bay beginning at 4: 45 p.m. The theme for this year's boat parade is "Christmas in Florida." Santa will make an appearance riding on a boat complete with Christ- mas carolers. Prizes will be given for the best-themed boat and the boat with the most lights. To register for the parade or for more information, call Martin at 352-586-8068. The annual Homosassa River Christmas Boat Pa- rade, which is sponsored by The Freezer, starts at 6 p.m. today Decorated boats will begin lining up at 5 p.m. at Marker 75, near Bird Island. The parade will travel past Riverhaven subdivision, MacRae's of Homosassa re- sort and Homosassa River- side Resort, traveling up the river, turning around at the former Seagrass Pub & Grill and ending at the Magic Manatee Marina. For more information, or to register for the parade call Ricky Olpinski at 352- 302-5779 or visit The Freezer Light shines on "Joy of Christmas" NANCY KENNEDY Staff Writer LECANTO One of the joys of Christmas is the music. On Sunday Shepherd of the Hills Episcopal Church presents "The Joy of Christ- mas: A Celebration of Music." This free concert is part of the Light Shine humanities program, sponsored by Shepherd of the Hills Epis- copal Church in Lecanto, the Florida Humanities Council and the Citrus County Chronicle. The program, which be- gins at 4 p.m., Sunday, fea- tures veteran church organist Bill Kinley and soloist Stacey Adams, both from Shepherd of the Hills. "Bill Kinley is a marvelous organist," Adams said. Among other numbers, Kinley will be performing "Jesu Bambino" by Pietro Yon and "Forest Green," which is the English melody of "O Little Town of Bethlehem." Adams said the choir will be singing an eclectic vari- ety of music, from "Ave Maria" to a French folk melody called "Twas in the Moon of Winter Time." "Also, we'll have the audi- ence participate with singing carols, to set the mood," Adams said. She said the past few con- certs have packed the church and that only the first 200 can be seated. "Response has been tremendous," she said. The church is at 2540 W Norvell Bryant Highway My most vivid memory was taking a 38-degree roll. Carl Hartzell on a Navy ship in World War II during a typoon. CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE West bashed for Nazi remark Associated Press WEST PALM BEACH - A Florida Republican con- gressman who likened De- mocrats' opinion shaping to the efforts of Nazi pro- pagandist Joseph Goebbels defended his comment Friday as criti- cism mounted. U.S. Rep. Allen West, a freshman, made the Nazi reference Thursday when asked about Congress' ap- proval ratings and the blame that the public has apparently assigned to Re- publicans. "If Joseph Goebbels was around, he'd be very proud of the Democrat Party be- cause they have an incred- ible propaganda machine," West said, ac- TPO Continued from Page Al TPO is comprised of three county commissioners, two representatives of each city council and two non-voting members. Pitts explained the ne- cessity of forming an MPO as population rises. "Every defined metropoli- tan area must engage in met- ropolitan transportation planning," Pitts said. "There- fore, every metropolitan area must be represented by an MPO. It's not an option. If you want federal money, you have to have an MPO." How an urbanized area becomes part of an MPO has been defined under federal law. "The census data desig- nates urbanized areas," cording to Politico, the Ar- lington, Va.-based news or- ganization that first reported the comments. Goebbels was Adolf Hitler's propaganda minister. West represents a South Florida district that has an influential Jewish con- stituency and a sizeable population of Holocaust survivors. He told re- porters, in his remarks at the Capitol, that he was comparing Democrats to Nazi propaganda, not the Nazis themselves, but that did little to quell contro- versy. "Congressman West needs to immediately apol- ogize for insulting the memories of the millions who lost their lives during Pitts said. "When they iden- tify a new urbanized area, over 50,000 people that is not currently within the boundaries of an MPO, fed- eral law requires that the local officials, that would be you, representing at least 75 percent of the population in that 50,000-person or more urbanized area, plus the governor, go into negotia- tions to create a metropoli- tan planning organization. You must create a metro- politan planning organiza- tion in that situation." The hitch with forming an MPO before new legisla- tion raises the population requirement is that the pro- posed law has a time limit on that requirement. "If you can't reach 200,000 after three years, you are going to be phased out," Pitts said. In Florida, four current the Holocaust," said Steve Israel, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. "Comparing political dif- ferences today to the worst Nazi propagandist dimin- ishes what happened to millions of Jewish families during the Second World War. Unfortunately, this isn't the first time that Con- gressman West has made this type of hateful remark that makes a mockery of what millions of Jewish families suffered." West, one of two new black Republicans to join the 112th Congress this year, is a tea party favorite who has repeatedly drawn attention for off-the-cuff comments. He defended his latest remarks, saying MPOs are at risk of being phased out: Bay County, Panama City, Charlotte County, Hernando County and Vero Beach. "None of them can ex- pand their metropolitan planning area large enough by themselves get to 200,000 people," Pitts said. "It means those four are going to have to do something if this legislation passes." Pitts outlined five options for the Citrus TPO: Dissolve the TPO. Remain as an advisory board to FDOT District 7. Become a pseudo-MPO funded by member govern- ments. Seek to merge with a neighboring MPO: Her- nando, Ocala-Marion or Lake-Sumter Seek to become an in- dependent MPO. The TPO board planned to through a spokeswoman that twisting his comments was "a perfect example" of what he was talking about. "Congressman West was referring to the 'lies, de- ception and manipulation' coming from the Democrat propaganda machine and comparing that to the same misinformation coming from Goebbels during World War II," spokes- woman Angela Sachitano said. Invoking Goebbels has gotten numerous public figures in hot water. Earlier this year, U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, a Ten- nessee Democrat, likened Republican arguments against the health overhaul law to those of Goebbels. begin consideration of these options at its next meeting at 5:15 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 18, in the City Council Chamber of the Inverness Government Center at 212 W Main Street, Inverness. Chronicle reporter Chris Van Ormer can be reached at cvanormer@ chronicleonline.com or 352- 564-2916. Daniel J. Bossier, 55, Crystal River, on a charge of do- mestic battery on Dec. 11. No bond. Marvin Leon Sprouse Jr., 46, Inverness, on a charge of do- mestic battery on Dec. 10. No bond. David PatAutrey, 24, 2390 N. Reynolds Ave., Crystal River, on a charge of shooting or throw- ing a deadly missile into a con- veyance on Dec. 12. Bond was $10,000. William Richard Tremb- ley, 20, 2905 Eisenhower St. W., Inverness, on a charge of lewd and lascivious battery on a 14- year-old girl. Bond was $5,000. Matthew Ryan DeMarco, 28, 3243 E. Squirrel Court, In- verness, 9:36 p.m. Wednesday of grand theft (jewelry), false in- formation to a pawn broker and trafficking in stolen property. Bond is $14,000. Samuel E. Mesic, 23, 2045 S. Pine RidgeAve., Homosassa, 11:31 p.m. Wednesday of crimi- nal mischief. Bond $1,000. James Ricky Ashford, 33, BUDGET Continued from Page Al two consecutive years of $5 million in state cuts. "Three-point-six million 4400 S. Marquis Point, Ho- mosassa, 9:58 a.m. Thursday of failure to comply with sex of- fender registration law. According to the report, Ashford failed to register with the sheriff's office as a sex offender after moving from Tennessee. Bond $20,000. Paul Stasio, 41, 312 N. Dixie Drive, Howie, 12:21 p.m. Thursday of obtaining a con- trolled substance by fraud or de- ception. Bond $2,000. Michelle Gonzalez, 30, 39 S. Monroe St., Beverly Hills, 4:48 p.m. Thursday of scheme to de- fraud. Gonzalez is alleged to have stolen from her employer. Bond $2,000. ON THE NET For more information about arrests made by the Citrus County Sher- iff's Office, go to www. sheriffcitrus.org and click on the Public In- formation link, then on Arrest Reports. is a lot better," he said, "than $10 million in the hole." Chronicle reporter Mike Wright can be contacted at 352-563-3228 or m wrigh t @chronicle online. com. egal notices in today's Citrus County Chronicle V-City of Inverness........C2 FLORIDA TEMPERATURES City Daytona Bch. Ft. Lauderdale Fort Myers Gainesville Homestead Jacksonville Key West Lakeland Melbourne F'cast pc pc pc pc PC pc pc pc pc City Miami Ocala Orlando Pensacola Sarasota Tallahassee Tampa Vero Beach W. Palm Bch. F'cast pc pc pc pc pc pc pc pc PC MARINE OUTLOOK North winds around 10 knots. Seas 2 feet. Bay and inland waters will have a light chop. Partly cloudy skies today. 77 53 NA -- 75 54 NA THREE DAY OUTLOOK Exclusivedaly -.--- *==- TODAY & TOMORROW MORNING High: 77 Low: 46 Partly cloudy i ". SUNDAY & MONDAY MORNING High: 67 Low: 44 Sunny and cooler Gulf water temperature 71 Taken at AdrlpekM LAKE LEVELS Location Thu. Fri. Full Withlacoochee at Holder 27.78 27.77 35.52 Tsala Apopka-Hernando 34.92 34.91 39.25 Tsala Apopka-Inverness 37.04 37,03 40.60 Tsala Apopka-Floral City 38.91 38.89 42.40 Levels reported in feet above sea level flood stage ior lakes are based on 2.33-year flood, the mean- milli, dl II,...J r h.. l i .) u' ,:-,r3 '.lll,, r ur -I lllu ,] v-l'l ,., 3 -1, -1. V-d ll ,, 1 l-dl thIis data Is ,.,Ir, T. 1 1, 'i : i" Tn Tr ",,,,r W/ v. r., ',I-. IfTir' 5 Z' .- ,. u, i- In no event wil the District or the United States Geological Survey be liable or any damages arising out of Ihe use of this data. If you have any questions you should contact the Hydrnlogical Oata Section at (352) 796-7211 THE NATION High: 75 Low: 50 Mostly sunny ALMANAC TEMPERATURE* Friday 75/52 Record 88/20 Normal 72/50 Mean temp. 64 Departure from mean +3 PRECIPITATION* Friday 0.00 in. Total for the month 0.01 in. Total for the year 55.37 in. Normal for the year 51.33 in. 'As ot 6 p.m. at Inverness UV INDEX: 4 0-2 minimal, 3-4 low, 5-6 moderate, 7-9 high, 10+ very high BAROMETRIC PRESSURE Friday at 3 p.m. 30.18 in. DATE DAY 12/17 SATURDAY 12/18 SUNDAY DEW POINT Friday at 3 p.m. 59 HUMIDITY Friday at 3 p.m. 58% POLLEN COUNT** Today's active pollen: Composites, Palm, Juniper Today's count: 5.3/12 Sunday's count: 6 Monday's count: 6 AIR QUALITY Friday was good with pollut mainly ozone. SOLUNAR TABLES MINOR MAJOR MIl (MORNING) 6:24 1 12:49 7:14 1 NOR MA (AFTERNOC 2:06 2:39 CELESTIAL OUTLOOK SSUET TONIGHT........ SUNRSE TOMORROW MOONRISE TODAY....... 17 I J.1 ALI MOONSET TODAY ....... BURN CONDITIONS .0 8.4 ants MAJOR ON) 6:57 7:48 ..536 P. ..7:18 A .......NO 12:02 PR Today's Fire Danger Rating is: HIGH. There Is no burn ban. For more information call Florida Division of Forestry at (352) 754-6777. For more information on drought conditions, please visit the Division of Forestry's Web site: http://flame.fi-dof.com/tire weather/kbdi WATERING RULES Citrus County/lnvemess/Crystal River: Lawn watering is limited to twice per week. Even addresses may water on Thursday and/or Sunday before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. Odd addresses may water on Wednesday and/or Saturday before 10 am. or after 4 pm. Report violations: Citrus County (352) 527-5543; Crystal River and Inverness: (352) 726- 4488. Landscape Watering Schedule and Tmes: Hand watering and micro-Irrigation of plants (other than lawns) can be done on any day and at any time. TIDES "From mouths of rivers "At King's Bay Saturday City High/Low High/Low Chassahowitzka' 9:57 a/5:58 a 10:46 p/5:10 p Crystal River" 8:18 a/3:20a 9:07p /332 p Withlacoochee* 6:05 a/1:08 a 6:54 p/1:20 p Homosassa"- 9:07 a/4:57 a 9:56 p/5:09 p *"At Mason's Creek Sunday High/Low High/Lo 11:22 a/7:07 a 11:37 p/7:06 9:43 a/4:29 a 9:58 p/4:28 7:30 a/2:17 a 7:45 p/2:16 10:32 a/6:06 a 10:47 p/6:05 City Albany Albuquerque Asheville Atlanta I Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boise Boston Buffalo M Burlington. VT M. Charleston, SC NE Charleston, WV - Charlotte P' Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia. SC Columbus, OH Concord, N.H. Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit El Paso Evansville. IN Harrisburg Hartford Houslon Indianapolis Jackson Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Milwaukee Minneapolis Mobile Montgomery w Nashville Friday Saturday H LPcp. Fcst H L 50 38 pc 33 16 45 25 pc 47 29 54 49 ,34 s 45 30 72 60 s 55 33 62 43 c 46 29 56 47 c 54 45 60 42 pc 46 32 44 23 pc 50 30 65 48 18 s 53 33 43 19 pc 40 26 54 42 01 pc 38 20 38 34 03 pc 35 33 50 35 01 s 25 7 75 50 s 63 40 51 37 pc 40 28 67 50 .14 s 54 34 34 26 C 38 26 39 32 pc 41 27 37 31 sn 35 29 77 51 s 61 34 74 32 c 39 29 50 34 02 pc 32 14 53 41 .04 s 57 40 35 19 s 50 23 36 19 s 43 28 36 31 c 32 28 55 34 c 55 40 39 35 pc 45 28 59 39 c 41 28 55 42 pc 40 21 68 54 .01 pc 62 50 37 30 pc 39 27 67 46 1.55 s 57 32 57 38 pc 56 38 48 39 26 s 52 32 66 42 pc 68 48 41 35 pc 45 31 51 38 52 s 52 31 33 24 sf 35 26 26 17 pc 33 22 77 54 pc 62 37 73 54 s 59 33 46 37 .39 s 46 30 KEY TO CONDITIONS: c=cloudy; dr=drlzzle; ffabir hbhazy; p partly cloudy; rrakin rs=hain/vnow mix; shsumny Bh=showews sn= w; issthunderstwnms; w--=wlndy. 0 2011 Weather Cntrl, Madison, Wi. FORECAST FOR 3:00 P.M. SATURDAY Friday Saturday City H L Pop. Feat H L New Orleans 79 59 .05 pc 64 45 New York City 59 43 pc 42 28 Norfolk 66 46 pc 47 34 Oklahoma City 48 31 s 58 35 Omaha 37 20 s 47 24 Palm Springs 65 50 c 63 42 Philadelphia 57 44 c 43 30 Phoenix 70 46 pc 66 43 Pittsburgh 40 34 c 34 26 Portland. ME 50 35 pc 31 13 Portland, Ore 50 38 pc 49 37 Providence, RI 55 40 pc 40 19 Raleigh 66 45 .12 s 50 29 Rapid City 45 16 pc 51 29 Reno 46 31 s 43 21 Rochester, NY 41 34 .05 pc 29 24 Sacramento 55 31 s 57 33 St. Louis 40 31 pc 48 30 St. Ste. Marie 36 17 sn 26 22 Salt Lake City 31 27 s 42 26 San Antonio 59 50 sh 55 48 San Diego 63 46 .04 c 62 47 San Francisco 62 38 s 56 44 Savannah 76 47 s 68 40 Seattle 49 42 trace pc 49 42 Spokane 40 1 trace pc 37 27 Syracuse 47 37 .09 pc 30 19 Topeka 42 20 s 52 26 Washington 62 43 .01 pc 46 32 YESTERDAY'S NATIONAL HIGH & LOW HIGH 81 Marathon, Fla. LOW -7 Bryce Canyon, Utah WORLD CITIES SATURDAY Lisbon CITY H/ISKY London Acapulco 86/72/pc Madrid Amsterdam 42/36/sh Mexico City Athens 65/50/sh Montreal Beijing 36/19/s Moscow Berlin 38/32/sn Paris Bermuda 71/66/pc Rio Cairo 68/51/s Rome Calgary 41/27/pc Sydney Havana 79/62/sh Tokyo Hong Kong 66/56/s Toronto Jerusalem 60/40/pc Warsaw 58/47/sh 41/32/sh 47/36/c 74/43/pc 20/13/s 34/30/rs 42/34/sh 86/73/ts 55/43/sh 73/60/pc 47/33/s 32/24/pc 38/31/rs p p p p C I T R U S C 0 U N T For the RECORD LHRKON1CLL Florida's Best Communlty Newspaper Serving Florida's Best Community To start your subscription: Call now for home delivery by our carriers: Citrus County: (352) 563-5655 Marion County: (888) 852-2340 13 wks.: $36.65* 6 mos.: $64.63* 1 year: $116.07* *Subscription price includes a separate charge of .14 per day for transportation cost and applicable state and local sales tax. Call (352) 563-6363 for details. There will be a $1 adjustment for the Thanksgiving edition. This will only slightly affect your expiration date. For home delivery by mail: In Florida: $59.00 for 13 weeks Elsewhere in U.S.: $69.00 for 13 weeks To contact us regarding your service: (352) 563-5655 Call for redelivery: 7 to 10 a.m. Monday to Friday 7 to 11 a.m. Saturday and Sunday Questions: 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday to Friday 7 to 11 a.m. Saturday and Sunday Main switchboard phone numbers: Citrus County (352) 563-6363 Citrus Springs, Dunnellon and Marion County residents, call toll-free at (888) 852-2340. I want to place an ad: To place a classified ad: Citrus (352) 563-5966 Marion (888) 852-2340 To place a display ad: (352) 563-5592 Online display ad: (352) 563-5592 I want to send information to the Chronicle: MAIL: 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429 FAX: Advertising 563-5665, Newsroom 563-3280 EMAIL: Advertising: advertising@chronicleonline.com Newsroom: newsdesk@chronicleonline.com Where to find us: Meadowcrest l44 office Norvell Brant Hwi 1624 N. Dunkenteld Meadowcrest D~nken -d _-. Cannondale Dr Blvd. Ave Crystal River, S \ M dowcrest FL 34429 SiInverness Courthouse office To mpkins St. square 0 L 106 W. Main 41 44Inverness, FL S > 34450 Who's in charge: G erry M ulligan ...................................................................... Publisher, 5 63-3 2 22 Trina Murphy ...................... Operations/Advertising Director, 563-3232 C harlie B rennan ........................................... ......................... .. Editor, 5 6 3 -3 2 2 5 Tom Feeney .................................................... Production Director, 563-3275 Kathie Stewart .............................................. Circulation Director, 563-5655 John M urphy .......................................................... Online M manager, 563-3255 Neale Brennan .... Promotions/Community Affairs Manager, 563-6363 John M urphy.................................................... Classified M manager, 564-3255 Jeff Gordon ....................... ...... ........................... Business M manager, 564-2908 Mike Arnold.................................... Human Resources Director, 564-2910 Report a news tip: Opinion page questions.................................. Charlie Brennan, 563-3225 To have a photo taken ........................................ Darlene Mann, 563-5660 News and feature stories ............................ Sandra Frederick, 564-2930 Community/wire service content.................... Sarah Gatling, 563-5660 Sports event coverage .......................... ........................................ 563-3 2 6 1 S o u n d O ff ................................................................ ................. .................. 5 6 3 -0 5 7 9 The Chronicle is printed in part on recycled newsprint. Please recycle your newspaper www.chronicleonline.com Published every Sunday through Saturday By Citrus Publishing, Inc. 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429 Phone (352) 563-6363 1g POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Citrus County Chronicle 1624 N. MEADOWCREST BLVD., CRYSTAL RIVER, FL 34429 106 W. MAIN ST., INVERNESS, FL 34450 PERIODICAL POSTAGE PAID AT INVERNESS, FL SECOND CLASS PERMIT #114280 I ............... A4 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 CIRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE Donna Cathcart, 79 INVERNESS Donna Lou Cathcart, 79, Inverness, died Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, in Inverness, Fla. Arrangements are under the direction of the Inver- ness Chapel Hooper Fu- neral Home & Crematory. Barbara Ratulowski, 53 INVERNESS Barbara L. Ratulowski, 53, Inverness, Fla., died Thursday, Dec. 15,2011. Pri- vate cremation arrange- ments under the direction of Chas. E. Davis Funeral Home with crematory Amelia Segesdy, 89 BEVERLY HILLS Amelia P Segesdy, 89, Beverly Hills, Fla., died Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011. Chapel Service, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, at 2 p.m. at Fero Funeral Home with Entombment to follow at Fero Memorial Gardens. Arrangements entrusted to Fero Funeral Home. Death ELSEWHERE Christopher Hitchens, 62 MILITANT PUNDIT Cancer weakened but did not soften Christopher Hitchens. He did not repent or forgive or ask for pity. As if granted diplomatic immu- nity, his mind's eye looked plainly upon the attack and counterattack of disease and treatments that robbed him of his hair, his stamina, his speaking voice and eventually his life. "I love the imagery of struggle," he wrote about his illness in an August 2010 essay in Vanity Fair "I some- times wish I were suffering in a good cause, or risking my life for the good of others, in- stead of just being a gravely endangered patient" Hitchens, a Washington, D.C.-based author, essayist and polemicist who waged verbal and occasional physi- cal battle on behalf of causes left and right, died Thursday night at M.D. Anderson Can- cer Center in Houston of pneumonia, a complication of his esophageal cancer, ac- cording to a statement from Vanity Fair magazine. He was 62. INSIDE SEARS Crystal River Mall 795-1484 Inside WAL*MART Hwy. 200, Ocala 291-1467 "There will never be an- other like Christopher. A man of ferocious intellect, who was as vibrant on the page as he was at the bar," said Vanity Fair editor Gray- don Carter. "Those who read him felt they knew him, and those who knew him were profoundly fortu- nate souls." He had enjoyed his drink (enough to "to kill or stun the average mule") and cig- arettes, until he announced in June 2010 that he was being treated for cancer of the esophagus. He was a most engaged, prolific and public intellec- tual who wrote numerous books, was a frequent televi- sion commentator and a contributor to Vanity Fair, Slate and other publica- tions. He became a popular author in 2007 thanks to "God Is Not Great," a mani- festo for atheists. "Long after his diagnosis, his columns and essays ap- peared regularly, savaging the royal family, reveling in the death of Osama bin Laden or pondering the let- ters of poet Philip Larkin. He was intolerant of non- sense, including about his own health. In a piece that appeared in the January 2012 issue of Vanity Fair, he dismissed the old saying that what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. "So far, I have decided to take whatever my disease can throw at me, and to stay combative even while tak- ing the measure of my in- evitable decline. I repeat, this is no more than what a healthy person has to do in slower motion," he wrote. Survived by his second wife, author Carol Blue, and by his three children (Alexander, Sophia and An- tonia), Hitchens had quotable ideas about pos- terity, clarified years ago when he saw himself re- ferred to as "the late" Christopher Hitchens in print. For the May 2010 issue of Vanity Fair, before his illness, Hitchens submit- ted answers for the Proust Questionnaire, a probing and personal survey for which the famous have re- vealed everything from their favorite color to their greatest fear His vision of earthly bliss: "To be vindicated in my own lifetime." His ideal way to die: "Fully conscious, and either fighting or reciting (or fool- ing around)." IHearing Aid Repairss I $s6 95 MUST PRESENT COUPON S ANY MAKE OR MODEL L----------_ -Battery Sale .89 I (Limit 2 per visit) I I Coupon Expires 12/31/11 Feds reject early learning grant Gov. wouldn't accept money with "strings attached" tion of Young Children. "I don't know that there was anything that would be bur- densome to private providers." Her organization's 3,800 members include faith- based and other private providers, public school teachers, agency heads and academics. The grant would have provided many free serv- ices to providers but now "nobody'll be paying for them," she said. Florida Senate Demo- cratic Leader Nan Rich, one of the Legislature's strongest early learning supporters, also disputed Scott's claim of burden- some regulations. "That's a catch phrase for everything with this admin- istration," the Weston law- maker said. The state Office of Early Associated Press TALLAHASSEE Gov. Rick Scott said the federal government rejected Florida's bid for a $100 mil- lion early learning grant Friday because he wouldn't accept the money if there were "strings attached." Those strings were a commitment of state dollars to keep the effort to benefit at-risk children going when the federal money runs out and adoption of "burden- some regulations on private providers," the Republican governor said in a statement. "We stuck to our princi- ples, and unfortunately our insistence against irrespon- sibly using one-time dollars for recurring government programs did not win favor of the administration in Washington," Scott said. When President Barack Obama's administration an- nounced nine states would share $500 million in Race to the Top stimulus funding, Florida was not among them. Scott's stance disap- pointed early learning advocates. "The money would have allowed our state to take a lot of disconnected parts in early learning and connect them," said Suzanne Gel- lens, executive director of the Tampa-based Florida Association for the Educa- Study: Problems with Medicare contractors persist Associated Press MIAMI Private contractors that are supposed to guard against Medicare fraud, paid claims submit- ted in the names of dead providers or for unnecessary medical treatments, which were among problems esti- mated to cost more than $1 billion in 2009, according to an inspector gen- eral report released Friday Federal health officials contract with private companies to process and pay Medicare claims and investi- gate fraud. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services inspec- tor general examined how effectively several types of fraud contractors are investigating an estimated annual $60 billion in Medicare fraud. The report found 62 areas vulnera- ble to fraud during a 2009 investigation. The most common were related to billing and coding, such as paying a claim even though it had an incorrect code or a provider who billed for an excessive number of services. Another common issue in- cluded bills that used the identifica- tion numbers of dead providers. The contractors were asked to esti- mate how much the problems might cost, but they only accounted for one- third of the issues, which alone were estimated at $1.2 billion, the report showed. It's unclear why contractors didn't estimate the full amount. Federal health officials were noti- fied of the problems, but 77 percent of them remained unresolved nearly two years later, according the U.S. De- partment of Health and Services in- spector general report. The Centers for Medicare and Med- icaid Services stressed that it's ad- dressing all the issues raised in the report, but said resolving them is complicated. Changes in one part of the system may create problems for other parts of the system that could affect providers. Some problems may also require statutory changes. The contractors have been submit- ting reports highlighting potential fraud since 2007. But federal health of- ficials did not begin developing proce- dures to deal with it until 2010 and still lack a process to make sure the prob- lems are resolved, the report said. The agency has been criticized for lax oversight of Medicare contractors in the past Lawmakers have mandated the agency add various types of con- tractors over the years so the system has grown into a complex labyrinth that experts say is less than ideal. IARET, -jT:ILE' WOOIm VINo].LAMINAE I Hours: Mon. Fri. 8-5 Sat. 9-1on oJ pmnr F7=, a Avd g CARPET & TILE,^^ iY, L S 527-1811 FREE ESTIMA 44 W. Gulf To Lake Hwy., Lecanto (next to SERING C IUSI.IIITY INI Son BRAND NEW Holiday Decor Gifts Galore Gift Wrap Tree Trim And More! 25% off any one non-sale item with this coupon now through Saturday, Dec. 24 Goodwill-Suncoast retail stores only. Not valid on sale items One discount per customer per day. Crystal River .. r 408 N. Suncoast Blvd. | Spring Hill Superstore 4750 Commercial Way Ocala Superstore 2830 SW 27th Ave. Goodwill I i For more store locations: .......... www.goodwill-suncoast.org -|- I 4A. &. 2Wavs Funeral Home With Crematory DONNA MARIE TURNER Viewing: Sat. 2-4 PM Service: Sat. 4 PM BARBARA RATULOWSKI Pending ELMO BOONE Private Cremation Arrangements CLIFTON BAIRD Weathers Funeral Home Service: Monday Salem, IN 726-8323 To Place Your "In Memory" ad, Call Mike Snyder at 563-3273 msnyder@chronicleonline .com or Annemarie Miller at 564-2917 amiller@chronicleonline.com Welcome Children! Dr. Rajani is a certified Pediatric Dentist The Dentist Place for Kids Anjali Rajani, DMD Robert A. Capozza, DMD General Dentists 12005 Cortez Blvd.I Brooksville Call today! (352) 340-3219 A Proud Member of the Heartland Dental Care Family Most Major Insurance Plans Accepted TheDentistPlaceSpringHillKids.com D015, D0330, 0D0272D0210 D10,1110 IT IS OUR OFFICE POLICY THAT THE PATIENT AND ANY OTHER PERSON RESPONSIBLE FOR PAYMENT HAS THE RIGHT TO REFUSE TO PAY CANCEL PAYMENT OR BE REIMBURSED FOR PAYMENT FOR ANY OTHER SERVICE EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT WHICH IS PBEFORMED AS A RESULT OF AND WITHIN 72 HOURS OF RESPONDING TO THE ADVERTISEMENT FOR THE FREE, DISCOUNTED-FEE OR REDUCED-FEE SERVICE, EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT. I Obituaries Learning wanted the grant to partner with private businesses in programs for high-risk children. States winning the grants had to demonstrate a commit- ment to making early learning programs more accessible, coordinated and effective. The grant money would have paid for much needed testing of children when they begin and finish preschool to determine their progress before en- tering kindergarten and assess the quality of early learning programs, Rich said. "We are disappointed the governor's budget targets K-12, which needs it, but so does early learning," Gel- lens said. She said recent spending cuts are putting some providers out of business. WE'LL MEET OR BEAT ANY H COMPETITORS PRICE* i 7 2 H O U R nf t f. s ". |0 ! BLIND FACTORY FREE Valances LECANTO~ TREETOPS PLAZA Install ation ATES 1657 W. GULF TO LAKE HWY In Home Consulting landfill) CC2837 527-001 2 877746001 www.72-hourblinds.com 527-0012 1-877-746-00177*mustpreent written estimatefrom... petltor for this price. TheSavingsAreY. .i ,^K!.e t Is0uls * BUYERS OF PRECIOUS METALS & ESTATES - S9JIM GREEN JEWELERS "1 Beswt ofB 1665 US Hwy 19 South Crystal River Shopping Ctr. (Next to Sweet Bay) T T T eM1911RniWMK CAN YOUR BANK DO THIS? 100% Liquid Account...1.5%* One Year....................2.25%* Three Year.....................3.0% Longer terms and higher interest rates are available. Many of these can also be used for IRA accounts. American Insurance Advisors Faithfully Serving Citrus County for 20 Years! 3 S. Melbourne Street Beverly Hills, FL 34465 352-746-3332 *$50,000 max. Rates effective 1/10/11. Subject to change. Rate guarantees & conditions vary by contract. All products underwritten by the GCU. Not FDIC insured. 0009x37 I Vetcas-ax od lnd Sutes-eluarShades I SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 A5 :195 1&& Miracl-ErI CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CITRUSo- COUNTY " wwwchronicleonline.com 214 US Hwy. 41 S., Inverness, Fl 34450 Phone 726-1021 vOME OF T/4 Breakfast THE RESTAURANT -and- Chef Step hen 'Digiovanni PHARMACY & DURABLE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT C,01, ''1l,1t J Ih JtiL ti, 'i, Pain -inIt g MI ni t /, -ih J/iL l Equipment, Diabetes Care & Foot Wear DIABETES SHOPPE -11t di il Supplies & Equipiit. t, ,', witi ithi i t. of D ug it, next to the Plia, vIu V FLU SHOTS AVAILABLE! Msic .Accepted SERVING CITRUS COUNTY SINCE 1930 I p.. 7s kOME OFT4 880 Breakfast tHE RESTAURANt Pharmacy Hours: 9:00am-6:00pm Mon.-Fri. 9:00am- 1 pm Sat. jJ= UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE Post Office Hours: 7am-4pm Mon.-Fri. 7am-1 2pm Sat. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 6:30am-8:00pm Saturday 6:30am-6pm Sunday 6:30am-4:00pm 6, Licensed ip .. SGitware JOHNEERE 4 Must present coupon. 1 Coupon Per Item. Not valid with other offers. Expires 12/24/11. Imm mm mm mm mmmmmmmmmm mmmmmmmm 2011 1/4;).,o .Tole A6 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 B~ CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE Just Got Easier! t See these & olher fun gifts in our shol room. We have more than Furniture! -r 4'k Ml, _0 she BUON NATA RTistorante & Pizzeria / ITALIANO 1 Buy $50 Gift Certificate & Receive Extra $10! Buy $100 Gift Certificate & Receive Extra $25!1 Co,,e Tr Our Da.il Specials. AulnIenhic Neapolitan I I l, fo .isine o IK- Zloo lornd io /o a. i-~ o /O (on.! Give the Gift they Really Want... RELAXATION 60 Minute Massage ONLY $49 90 Minute Massage ONLY $69 Deep Tissue or Relaxation same Great Price. Gift Cards Available Online www.idealhealthmassage.com We use hot stones, moist heat and hot towels available for every massage. No charge. Holly Bisagna, LMT MA50585/MM20050 Paula Roberts, LMT MA46821 Ideal Health Massage 5494 S. Suncoast Blvd., Homosassa 352-621-5100 I FREE ESTIMATES SHOP AT HOME SERVICE rw 1Carpet prices are complete. 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(Across from Holiday Inn Express) S.. w.citruszerona.com www.dr-trish.com www.thehealingplace.biz SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 A7 "7' CL~P~ CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE Religion BRIEFS Church events NorthRidge Church in- vites the public to join us as we continue to prepare our hearts for the miracle of Christmas through this month of Advent. During this last week, we will reflect on "Love." Worship serv- ices begin at 9 a.m. Sunday followed by a coffee fellowship. The community is invited. Come as you are and experi- ence a casual and loving at- mosphere. The church meets at the Inverness Woman's Club, 1715 Forest Drive, across from the Whispering Pines Park en- trance. Call Pastor Kennie Berger at 352-302-5813. St. Paul's Lutheran Church, at 6150 N. Lecanto Highway in Beverly Hills, will have regular worship services at 8 and 10:30 a.m. with Sunday school and Bible class at 9:30 a.m. Bible information class at 4:30 p.m. Monday. St. Paul's Lutheran School children's Christmas services at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 10:30 a.m. Wednesday. Call 352-489-3027. St. Anne's Anglican Church is on Fort Island Trail West, Crystal River. St. Anne's celebrates the fourth Sunday of Advent at the 8 and 10:15 a.m. services tomorrow. St. Anne's will host "Our Fathers Table" today from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Overeaters Anonymous meets Wednesdays from 10 to 11:30 in the sanctuary and 7 to 8 p.m. in the parish library. Al- coholics Anonymous meets at 8 p.m. Friday and Monday in the parish library. St. Anne's will host its annual Christmas Was- sail sing-along at 6 p.m. Sun- day. Annie and Tim's United Bluegrass Gospel Band will perform. All are welcome. Sunday services take place at First Baptist Church of Floral City at the 8:30 a.m. blended service and 11 a.m. traditional service. Sunday school classes are from 9:45 to 10:45 a.m. Sunday evening service is at 6. Supper is served every Wednesday at 5 p.m. with AWANA, youth activi- ties and Bible study and prayer service following at 6:30 p.m. The youth/children's Christmas program is at 6 p.m. Sunday. A church-wide Christmas party will follow. Bring finger foods and desserts to share. A "Living Nativity Scene" will be pre- sented from 6 to 10 p.m. Thurs- day through Saturday on the Orange Avenue side of the church property. The church is at 8545 E. Magnolia St. Call 352-726-4296 or visit www.fbcfloralcity.org. Shepherd of the Hills Episcopal Church will cele- brate the fourth Sunday of Ad- vent with Holy Eucharist services at 5 p.m. today and 8 and 10:30 a.m. tomorrow with Christian Formation at 9:15, Sunday school at 10 a.m. and nursery at 10:30 a.m. Healing service and Eucharist at 10 a.m. Wednesday followed by Bible study and sack lunch. SOS at Good Shepherd Lutheran Church from 9 a.m. to noon Thursday. Evening Bible study in parish hall at 7 p.m. Thursday. St. Timothy Lutheran Church has a Bluegrass "come as you are" service with Com- munion at 5 p.m. today featur- ing the Swanson Family. Sunday worship services begin with early service with Com- munion at 8 a.m., Sunday school classes for all ages at 9:30 a.m., coffee fellowship hour at 9 a.m., and traditional service with Communion at 10:30 a.m. Special services are announced. Nursery provided. The church is at 1070 N. Sun- coast Blvd. (U.S.19), Crystal River. Call 352-795-5325 or visit www.sttimothylutheran crystalriver.com. Page A9 SMerry ChristmasH From Our Family To Yours! & RMXTJ N L q All Area Rugs 70% OFF Where Quality & Value Come Together s -INC. 41-081 Insured 685 E. Gulf to Lake Hwy., Lecanto (1 Mile West of Lowe's on Hwy. 44) Open Mon -Fn 8'30-5, Sat 9-4* Evenings by appointment _ www.michaelsfloorcoveringinc.net IZ ig lo I le g apS ^^R lags Up -F -Everyone wants to look- ounger and feel relaxed! Give a Gift Certificate that has a lasting effect. . -,/ BUDDY *Vita Bath *Claire Burke * Jewelry J *Small Appliances * Corinthian Bel 7 Wind chimes * BBQ Tools & Accessories * Electric Fireplaces * fr~ Anti-iaging and hwdlraing Licuils will be a most dppreci.uecl ,tt .... I ,ttc [1t .1c gixes reulcst 6930 W Grover Cleveland Homosassa 352-270-4069 & FRED'S 44 US Highway 19 N. INGLIS 352-447-2600 25% OFF ALL DECORATIVE GARDEN SOLAR LIGHTING 10% OFF ANY 2 PIECES* EXCLUDED PREVIOUSLY MARE DOWN TEMS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! SifT IN THE NICK OF TIME 4Ifif ts For All Occasions!:Cande Rins&Acesrs o/ I Large - 40%0 .. Slcc~nel H | I.... SOFF .# Dosois '. s _ COUNTRY IATnHl COUNTRY AT HOME a YANKEE CANDLES WE ACCEPT YANKEE CANDLE COUPONS I Al,:, Carr., IAmml(lee ain St., Courthouse Square, Inverness r-6621 erris Groves Historic Downtown Floral City, U.S. Hwy. 41 South i Last nute Gt Ideas S We Have Great Stocking Stuffers! S Small Jams Taffy Orange Bubble Gum Peanut Brittle Glazed Nuts Orange Blossom Perfume S* Pecan Rolls Fruit Cakes Floral City Honey Tw\visted 4801 N. Forest Ridge Blvd. Oaks Beverly Hills, FL 34465 (352) 746-6257 Golf Course, www.twistedoaksgc.com _iRL!_BIRD:: -FRIDAY :EVtnI mil I MON.-FRI. BEFORE 8AM AFTER 10AM % AFTER 2PM I E, CmVA 4 PLAY RlUUT It's Time To Place Your Order For Your Holiday Pie! rftvited To A Cdrist&* Party? Let us make you a beautiful Gourmet Basket INTRODUCING FERRIS BEEF! It's Only Natural! UNDER S20 GIFT PACKS Jams and Marmalades Local Handmade Soaps Florida Citrus Candies Coconut Patties Florida Strawberry Growers Cookbooks We have a variety of Citrus Trees W7..... 1,3 & 7gal. &U m mumatb EsI imsae A8 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE NOTES Continued from Page AB First Baptist Church of Inverness offers the following Sunday activities: SONrise Sun- day school class at 7:45 a.m., blended worship service at 9 a.m., "Kid's Church" for ages 4 through fourth grade during the 9 a.m. service featuring Bible stories, skits, music and group activities; Sunday school classes for all ages at 10:30 a.m. A nursery is available for all services except the 7:45 a.m. class. Evening fellowship is at 6 with various services during summer months. On Wednes- days at 6 p.m. is a prayer meet- ing, "Women in the Life Of Jesus" study, 'Youth Ignite," "Praise Kids" and a nursery for age 3 and younger. The church is at 550 Pleasant Grove Road, Inverness. The website is www.fbcinverness.com. St. Margaret's Episcopal Church's Sunday services in- clude the Holy Eucharist Rite 1 service at 8 a.m. and Holy Eu- charist Rite 2 service at 10:30 a.m. Adult Sunday school be- gins at 9:30 a.m. Family Eu- charist service and children's church are both at 10:30 a.m. Youth Sunday school and young adult forum with lunch follows the 10:30 a.m. family Eucharist service. On Monday, Girl Scouts meet at 6 p.m. and Bible study at the Radcliffe's is at 7:30 p.m.. Feed My Sheep feeding pro- gram for people in need is at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday followed by a Holy Eucharist and healing service celebrating St. Thomas the Apostle at 12:30 p.m. and Vestry meeting at 6 p.m. Visit stmaggie.org. The church is an equal opportunity provider. The church is at 114 N. Osceola Ave., Inverness. First Presbyterian Church of Inverness is at 206 Washington Ave. Sunday wor- ship schedule: Traditional serv- ices at 8 and 11 a.m., contemporary service at 9:30 a.m., Sunday school hour at 9:30 and coffee hour from 9 to 11 a.m. For the fourth Sunday of Advent, the Rev. Craig S. Davies will preach on "Are You Ready for Christmas?" with readings from Mark 1:1-8. "Silent Was the Night" will be performed by the chancel choir at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the sanctuary following a WOW dinner at 6 p.m. (dinner reser- vations required). The Rev. David Rawls, pastor of Crystal River United Methodist Church, will preach the fourth in a series of ser- mons, "The Journey to Bethle- hem," on Sunday. The theme of the sermon, based on Luke 28- 20 is "Called to be Prisoners of Hope." The title of the sermon is "From Nazareth to Bethle- hem." The church is at 4801 N. Citrus Ave. Traditional services are at 8 and 11 a.m. A contem- porary service and Sunday school is offered at 9:30 a.m. Call 352-795-3148. Inverness Church of God Sunday worship services are at 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Children's church is during the 10:30 a.m. worship service in the Children's Ministries Build- ing. Sunday school begins at 9:30 a.m. with classes for everyone The church has many Christian education opportuni- ties for all ages at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Missionettes and Royal Rangers Clubs meet for children from the age of 3. All teenagers are invited to the youth group, "Gravity," with Youth Pastor Jon Uncle. At the present time, the adult class meets in rooms 105 and 106 at 7 p.m. Wednesday. The church SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 A9 is at 416 U.S. 41 South, Inver- ness. Call the church at 352- 726-4524. Good Shepherd Lutheran Church invites the public to worship at 8:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday. Coffee hour fol- lows both services. The church is barrier free and offers a free tape ministry and large-print service helps and hearing de- vices. A nursery attendant is available for children ages 3 and younger. All are welcome. Worship and children's Nativity play at 8:30 and 11 a.m. Sun- day. Advent worship at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Call the church for more information at 352-746- 7161. The church is on County Road 486, opposite Citrus Hills Boulevard in Hernando. WILL CONSTRUCTION www.PreventDryerFiresNow.com 352-628-2291 OIL CIMIN & FILT ::WIPER BLADES: SEE NotJu..Oil.PENNZOIL.. SEE DEALER oI DEALER FOR I ff M FOR Sl DETAILS &Mos C t L DETAILS ai V Cars Most Vehicles C MPAER DAIOS :C 4WIlL AUIIIMIM COMPUTER SCAN SEE $5995 $4995:: DEALER SEE DEALER FOR FOR DETAILS f DETAILS MOSTvehicles. Parts and rear ..... ............ shims extra.. needed. tresfone nicgsroan ~US HWY.'19 S. -B -T CRYSTAL RIVER (ACROSS FROM AORT PLAZA on US 19) *Ttirestone 795-5118 AI~TH SAMDYADCMER1,201SOKSEiusCUTY IN)ECHRONICL I HwTosREHEMR "TINREI MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Here are the 825 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, 765 Name Vol(00) Last Chg Name Vol(00) Last Chg Name Vol(00) Last Chg most active on the Nasdaq National Market and 116 most active onthe Ameri- BkofAm 2159581 5.20 -.06 GoldStrg 64376 1.63 -.07 Zyngan 1157907 9.50 ... can Stock Exchange. Tables show name, price and net change. S&P500ETF1738074121.59 +.18 VantageDrl 62937 1.06 +.01 Microsoft 870713 26.00 +.44 Name: Stocks appear alphabetically by the company full name (not abbrevia- SPDRFncl 949484 12.54 +.05 AlldNevG 62270 32.09 +.57 Cisco 794493 17.94 -.10 tion). Names consisting of initials appear at the beginning of each letter's list. GenElec 898015 17.01 +.22 MdwGoldg 57823 2.39 +.03 Intel 700972 23.23 -.08 Last: Price stock was trading atwhen exchange closed fortheday. Pfizer 643774 21.03 -.11 NwGoldg 50951 10.07 +.41 RschMotn 634863 13.44 -1.69 Chg: Loss orgain fortheday. No change indicated by. GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Stock Footnotes: ld- Issue has been called for redempon by company. d New 52-week low. dd -Loss in last 12 mos. ec- Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Emerging Company Marketplace. h-temporary exmpt from Nasdaq capital and surplus list- RSCHIdgs 17.95 +6.58 +57.9 BioTime 4.27 +.53 +14.2 IstaPh 6.68 +2.79 +71.7 ingqualificaton. n Stockwasa new issue in the last year.The 52-week high and lowfig- MortonsR 6.85 +1.69 +32.8 AlexcoRg 7.50 +.79 +11.8 Cryptologic 2.16 +.58 +36.7 ures date only from the beginning of trading. pf-Preferredstockissue.pr-Preferences.pp- CobaltlEn 11.00 +2.00 +22.2 Rubicon g 3.62 +.37 +11.4 Tufco 3.48 +.67 +23.8 Holder owes installments of purchase price.rt-Right to buy security at a specifiedprice. s- CSVS2xlnPt57.36 +6.92 +13.7 Aerosonic 3.05 +.25 +8.9 DeerConsu 4.99 +.93 +22.9 Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the lastyear.wi -Trades will be settled when the Quiksilvr 3.46 +.39 +12.7 PfdAptCn 6.47 +.52 +8.7 Pansoft 2.65 +.43 +19.2 stock is issued. wd- When distributed. wt- Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock u New 52-week high. un Unit, including more than one security. vj Company in bankruptcy or re- LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) ceivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial. LenderPS 14.30 -3.04 -17.5 ASpecRIty 5.00 -.67 -11.8 Helios rsh 2.33 -.89 -27.6 Skyline 4.40 -.79 -15.2 CoastD 2.11 -.20 -8.7 KenseyN 20.75 -5.95 -22.3 ,__ _ T i__ _ StratFON 14.06 -1.49 -9.6 CTPtrs 4.88 -.42 -7.9 LiveDeal 5.09 -1.28 -20.1 . SwisHelv 9.75 -.98 -9.1 InvCapHId 3.82 -.30 -7.3 Inhibitex 10.45 -2.54 -19.6 PrisaA 4.15 -.40 -8.8 ElephTalk 2.81 -.21 -7.0 Seanrgy rs 2.21 -.53 -19.4 1,861 Advanced 1,152 Declined 110 Unchanged 3,123 Total issues 75 New Highs 64 New Lows 4,779,606,228 Volume DIARY 254 Advanced 209 Declined 20 Unchanged 483 Total issues 13 New Highs 17 New Lows 125,835,142 Volume 1,405 1,101 153 2,659 38 119 2,509,855,537 52-Week High Low Name 12,876.00 10,404.49Dow Jones Industrials 5,627.85 3,950.66Dow Jones Transportation 459.94 381.99Dow Jones Utilities 8,718.25 6,414.89NYSE Composite 2,490.51 1,941.99Amex Index 2,887.75 2,298.89Nasdaq Composite 1,370.58 1,074.77S&P 500 14,562.01 11,208.42Wilshire 5000 868.57 601.71 Russell 2000 Last 11,866.39 4,906.26 446.15 7,237.66 2,204.91 2,555.33 1,219.66 12,811.41 722.05 I NYSE Net % YTD % 52-wk Chg Chg Chg % Chg -2.42 -.02 +2.50 +3.26 +73.89 +1.53 -3.93 -2.87 -.69 -.15+10.16+11.08 +20.56 +.28 -9.12 -7.63 -5.80 -.26 -.16 +3.33 +14.32 +.56 -3.68 -3.32 +3.91 +.32 -3.02 -1.95 +60.77 +.48 -4.11 -2.97 +6.04 +.84 -7.86 -7.37 Request stocks or mutual funds to be listed here by writing the Chronicle, Attn: Stock Requests, 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429; or call 563-5660. Include the name of the stock, market and ticker symbol. For mu- tual funds, list parent company, symbol and the exact name of the fund. Staff will not provide real-time quotes. I NEWYORK STOKECAG Name Last Chg BRT 6.40 +.04 BakrHu 45.93 +1.11 BallCps 34.63 -.18 BeoBrades 16.00 +.08 ABBLtd 17.79 +.07 BeoSantSA 7.16 -.01 ACELtd 66.74 -.18 BoSBrasil 7.57 -.12 AESCorp 11.50 -.07 BkofAm 5.20 -.06 AFLAC 40.91 -.29 BkMontg 52.78 +.12 AGCO 40.31 -.36 BkNYMel 19.12 +.30 AGL Res 41.01 +.08 Barday 10.55 -.05 AK Steel 7.52 +.19 BariPVix 39.00 -.14 vjAMR .65 +.03 BarnesNob 16.08 +.65 AOL 14.05 +.33 BarrickG 44.93 +.74 ASAGold 26.50 +.29 BasicEnSv 17.66 +1.27 AT&T Inc 28.85 +.06 Baxter 48.08 -.28 AUOptron 4.14 +.02 BeamInc 49.15 -.50 AbtLab 54.89 BectDck 70.65 -.50 AberFitc 46.57 +.40 BerkHaAl112325.00 -75.00 Accenture 54.15 -1.98 BerkH B 75.13 +.23 AdamsEx 9.37 +.02 BestBuy 23.19 -.17 AMD 5.13 +.09 BioMedR 17.86 +.35 AdvSemi 4.31 +.13 BIkHillsCp 32.69 +.29 Aeropostf 15.35 -.11 BlkDebtStr 3.79 -.01 Aetna 40.39 +.34 BlkEnhC&l 12.06 +.05 Agilent 33.46 +01 BIkGlbOp 13.27 -.04 Agnicog 37.02 +.28 Blackstone 14.01 -.39 AlcatelLuc 1.48 -.03 BlockHR 15.36 Alcoa 8.81 +.03 Boeing 71.01 +.40 Allergan 83.66 Boise Inc 6.11 +.20 Allete 39.81 -.10 BorgWarn 62.35 -.58 AlliBGIbHi 14.28 +.16 BostBeer 103.05 +.78 AlliBInco 8.12 +01 BostProp 95.96 +.92 AlliBern 13.02 +.02 BostnSci 5.14 +.03 Allstate 26.44 +.10 BoydGm 6.31 +.20 AlphaNRs 19.62 +.35 Brandyw 8.81 +.24 Altria 29.14 +.03 BrMySq 34.22 -.05 AmBevs 35.91 +.22 BrwnBrn 21.87 +.11 Ameren 31.71 -.28 Brunswick 16.87 +.31 AMovilLs 22.23 +.03 Buckeye 61.70 -2.17 AmAxle 9.15 +.54 Buenavent 39.88 +1.58 AEagleOut 14.59 -.02 CBLAsc 15.40 +.35 AEP 39.66 -.08 CBREGrp 15.04 -.06 AmExp 46.88 +.46 CBSB 24.84 +.12 AmlntGrp 23.36 +.14 CFInds 129.89 -.27 AmSIP3 6.49 -.02 OH Engy 56.54 -.19 AmTower 59.14 +.34 CMS Eng 20.87 +.05 AmWtrWks 31.26 +.34 CNO Find 5.94 +.04 Amerigas 43.63 -.37 CSS Inds 19.66 +.74 Ameriprise 46.55 +1.38 CSXs 20.41 +.43 AmeriBrgn 36.75 +.95 CVREngy 18.49 +.51 Amphenol 41.62 -.04 CVS Care 37.55 +.25 Anadarko 72.94 +.27 CblvsNYs 12.75 -1.18 AnalogDev 34.16 +11 CabotO&G 74.17 +2.07 AnglogldA 41.14 -.10 CallGolf 5.52 -.14 ABInBev 57.96 -.11 Calpine 15.16 +.02 Annaly 16.37 +.12 Cameron 47.55 +2.69 Anworth 6.53 +01 CampSp 32.72 +.04 AonCorp 44.86 -.35 CdnNRsgs 34.89 +.98 Apache 88.74 +.59 CapOne 43.39 +.34 AquaAm 21.57 +.06 CapifSrce 6.40 +.22 ArcelorMit 17.16 +.54 CapM pfB 14.50 +.08 ArdchCoa 14.32 +.24 CapsteadM 12.77 +.05 ArchDan 27.70 -.26 CardnlHIth 40.94 -.09 ArmourRsd 7.02 +.09 CarMax 30.36 +.31 Ashland 55.36 +.55 Carnival 33.87 +.80 AsdEstat 15.60 -.10 Caterpillar 87.20 -.50 AssuredG 13.10 +.05 Celanese 42.15 +.21 AstoriaF 8.30 +.12 Cemex 5.03 +.31 AfPwrag 13.52 +.27 Cemigpf 17.67 -.37 ATMOS 32.75 +.34 CenterPnt 19.22 +.12 AuRicog 7.93 ... Cnt4yink 35.26 -.04 AveryD 27.47 +.19 Checkpnt 11.56 +.07 Avista 25.16 -.30 ChesEng 22.98 +.20 Avon 16.72 -.01 ChesUfi 42.60 -.24 BB&TCp 24.05 +.39 Chevron 100.86 +1.19 BHPBilLt 69.78 +.73 Chicos 10.39 +.11 BP PLC 41.39 ... Chimera 2.69 +.02 BPZRes 2.91 +.19 Chubb 67.38 +.07 BRFBrasil 19.59 -.14 Cigna 42.38 -.36 CindBell 3.06 +.05 Cinemark 18.94 +.18 Cifgrprs 26.03 +.12 Claroor 48.06 -.28 CleanHs 60.48 +1.89 CliffsNRs 63.95 +.81 Clorox 65.00 -.27 Coach 57.59 -1.22 CobaltlEn 11.00 +2.00 CCFemsa 90.53 +2.62 CocaCola 67.44 +.55 CocaCE 25.78 +.26 Coeur 25.28 +.54 CohStlnfra 15.66 +.15 ColgPal 89.89 -.69 CollctvBrd 13.93 +.43 Comerica 24.74 -.35 CmclMfis 14.04 +.17 CmwREIT 16.68 +.11 CmtyHIt 16.74 +.11 CompPrdS 32.54 +1.09 CompSci 25.93 +.47 Con-Way 28.29 +.60 ConAgra 25.45 -.10 ConocPhil 68.40 +.11 ConsolEngy 36.32 -.13 ConEd 59.78 +.01 ConstellA 19.53 +.03 ConstellEn 38.96 -.77 Cnvrgys 12.41 +.42 Cooper Ind 51.69 -.29 Corning 13.08 -.09 CottCp 6.26 +.05 CousPrp 6.14 +.17 Covidien 43.34 -.21 Crane 45.36 +.72 CSVS2xVxS 39.11 -.25 CSVeIIVSts 6.04 +.03 CredSuiss 22.77 -.39 CrwnCsfie 42.88 -.53 CubeSmart 10.27 +.21 Cummins 87.30 +.47 CurEuro 129.88 +.24 DCTIndl 4.85 +.11 DNP Selct 11.07 +.09 DR Horton 12.00 +.08 DSW Inc 45.05 +.34 DTE 51.44 -.07 DanaHIdg 11.08 +.06 Danaher 46.37 +.19 Darden 43.68 -.06 DeanFds 10.72 -.03 Deere 73.65 -.07 DeltaAir 9.02 +.43 DenburyR 14.94 +.46 DeutschBk 35.35 -.38 DevonE 60.45 +.10 DiaOffs 54.29 -.34 DicksSptg 36.26 +.99 DxFnBull rs 58.98 +.85 DrSCBr rs 29.29 -.69 DirFnBrrs 42.15 -.66 DrxEnBear 13.23 -.41 DirEMBear 21.41 -.44 DirxSCBull 41.74 +.97 DirxLCBull 55.47 +.29 DirxEnBull 41.09 +1.17 Discover 24.23 +1.16 Disney 35.32 +.13 DollarGen 41.02 +.11 DomRescs 50.65 -.13 DoralFnd .68 +.11 Dover 56.14 +.18 DowChm 26.36 +.56 DrPepSnap 38.81 +.61 DuPont 43.98 +.28 DukeErgy 21.01 -.03 DukeRlty 11.56 +.19 EMCCp 22.30 +.01 EOG Res 97.68 +3.24 EastChm s 36.74 +.53 EKodak .83 +.00 Eatons 42.19 +.21 EVEnEq 10.01 +.07 Ecolab 54.72 +.57 EducRlty 9.70 +.22 BPasoCp 24.98 +.25 Ban 11.82 +.34 BdorGldg 14.98 +.40 EmersonEl 49.13 +.26 EmpDist 20.57 +.06 EnbrEPts 30.95 +.25 EnCanag 18.40 +.36 EndvSilvg 9.98 +.48 EnPro 32.99 -.15 ENSCO 46.23 -.06 Entergy 71.64 +.06 EntPrPt 44.80 -.10 EqtyRsd 55.85 +.49 ExeoRes 9.79 +.10 Exelisn 8.80 +.46 Exelon 42.84 -.41 Express 20.08 -.11 ExterranH 8.75 -.07 ExxonMbl 80.16 +.13 FMC Tch s 49.41 +1.75 FNBCp PA 10.96 +.12 FedExCp 84.89 +1.42 FedSignl 4.32 +.14 Fedlnvst 14.73 -.11 Ferrellgs 19.82 +.14 Ferro 4.43 -.18 RdlNRn 15.42 -.17 FidNatlnfo 25.42 +.19 FstHorizon 7.42 +.02 FMajSilvg 17.09 +1.04 FTActDiv 8.12 +.01 FtTrEnEq 10.66 +.01 FirstEngy 43.43 -.88 Ruor 48.09 -.18 FootLodckr 23.97 +.12 FordM 10.25 ForestCA 11.26 +.33 ForestLab 29.03 +.20 ForestOils 12.92 +.05 FMCGs 36.99 +.12 Frontine 3.83 +.34 GATX 42.08 +.92 GabelliET 5.01 +.07 GabHIthW 6.92 +.03 GabUlI 7.75 +.17 GafisaSA 5.46 +.10 GameStop 23.34 -.36 Gannett 12.92 +.21 Gap 18.30 -.06 GenDynam 63.20 -.10 GenElec 17.01 +.22 GenGrPrp 14.52 +.15 GenMills 39.72 -.24 GenMotors 20.15 +.05 GenOn En 2.47 +.01 Genworth 6.26 Gerdau 7.37 GlaxoSKIn 44.89 -.30 GoldFLtd 15.35 +.25 Goldcrpg 46.12 +.77 GoldmanS 90.10 -1.80 Goodridich 122.73 -.02 Goodyear 13.58 +.05 GtPlainEn 20.99 -.03 Griffon 8.66 -.36 GpTelevisa 20.07 -.35 GuangRy 17.56 +.49 Guess 28.84 +.40 HCA HId n 21.57 +.43 HCP Inc 39.01 +11 HDFCBks 25.21 -1.22 HSBC 37.16 -.04 HSBCCap 26.13 +.05 Hallibrtn 31.76 +.50 HanJS 14.75 +.12 HanPrmDv 13.00 +17 Hanesbrds 22.24 -.21 Hanoverlns 33.86 -.24 HarleyD 36.69 -.43 HarmonyG 11.82 -.06 iSR1KV 61.66 HartfdFn 15.66 -.31 iSR1KG 56.54 HawaiiEl 25.72 -.21 iSR2KG 82.36 HItCrREIT 52.04 +.86 iShR2K 72.26 HItMgmt 7.04 -.08 iShREst 55.45 HIthcrRIty 17.82 +.04 iShSPSm 66.74 Heckmann 6.74 +.21 iStar 5.56 HeclaM 5.51 +.10 ITTCps 19.19 Heinz 52.97 +.01 Idacorp 41.13 Herbalifes 51.66 +.64 ITW 46.00 Hertz 11.31 +.64 Imafton 5.98 Hess 54.31 -.28 InergyMn 17.65 HewleftP 25.84 -.32 HighwdPrp 29.16 +.37 HollyFrts 22.51 +.58 HomeDp 40.42 +1.00 HonwIllnfi 53.10 +.69 Hospira 28.92 +.08 HospPT 22.34 +.18 HostHofis 13.88 +.08 Humana 84.75 +.16 Huntsmn 9.70 +.02 Hyperdyn 2.22 +.01 IAMGIdg 16.40 +.36 ICICI Bk 25.33 -.30 ING 6.73 -.05 ION Geoph 5.93 +.11 iShGold 15.57 +.29 iSAsfia 21.89 iShBraz 56.94 +.35 iSCan 25.76 +.32 iShGer 18.58 -.13 iSh HK 15.26 +16 iShJapn 9.05 -.03 iSh Kor 51.77 +.38 iShMex 52.86 +.13 iShSing 11.04 +12 iSTaiwn 11.70 iShSilver 28.85 +.63 iShChina25 34.53 +.44 iSSP500 122.78 +.19 iShEMkts 37.52 +.28 iShB20T 122.32 +1.41 iShBl-3T 84.54 +.04 iS Eafe 48.34 -.21 IngerRd 30.65 -.32 IntegrysE 51.70 +.04 IntcnfiEx 117.68 +.56 IBM 183.57 -3.91 InfiGame 15.70 -.17 IntPap 27.79 +.26 Interpublic 9.09 Invesco 19.24 +.20 InvMtgCap 15.00 +.11 IronMtn 30.16 +.52 ItauUnibH 17.94 +.27 JPMorgCh 31.89 +.13 Jabil 19.42 -.09 Jaguar g 6.01 +.40 JanusCap 5.96 +.03 Jefferies 12.31 -.05 JohnJn 64.30 +.30 JohnsnCfl 28.96 +.11 JoyGIbl 75.17 +.96 JnprNtwk 18.35 -.25 KB Home 7.22 -.05 KCSouthn 63.81 +1.57 Kaydon 29.17 +.25 KA EngTR 24.41 +.01 Kelbgg 48.77 +.01 KeyEngy 13.75 +.82 Keycorp 7.18 +.06 KimbClk 71.28 +.03 Kimeo 16.13 +.39 KindME 79.28 -.03 KindMorn 29.84 +1.01 Moodys 32.60 +.25 PepsiCo 64.71 Kinrossg 12.09 +.40 MorgStan 14.98 -.03 Prmian 20.14 KodiakOg 8.81 +.41 MSEmMkt 12.78 +.11 PetrbrsA 23.08 Kohls 48.82 -.21 MortonsR 6.85 +1.69 Petrobras 24.49 Kraft 36.49 +.03 Mosaic 48.12 +.80 PtroqstE 6.37 KrispKrm 6.34 +.02 MotrlaSoln 46.16 +.15 Pfizer 21.03 Kroger 23.71 -.10 MotrlaMon 38.70 -.10 PhilipMor 75.60 LSI Corp 5.42 ... MuellerWat 2.17 +.09 PiedNG 33.52 LTCPrp 29.61 +.25 NCRCorp 16.18 -.12 Pier1 13.65 LaZBoy 11.12 -.48 NRG Egy 18.31 +.10 PimoStrat 11.62 Ladede 39.50 -.02 NV Energy 15.42 +.07 PinWst 46.63 LVSands 41.53 +.74 NYSEEur 26.23 -.22 PioNtrl 83.78 LeggMason 23.51 -.18 Nabors 16.74 +.37 PitnyBw 18.34 LeggPlat 21.77 +.32 NatFuGas 55.44 -.09 PlainsEx 32.96 LenderPS 14.30 -3.04 NatGrid 47.49 -.06 PlumCrk 35.25 LennarA 18.77 +.37 NOilVarco 65.53 +1.30 Polariss 56.08 LeucNati 22.04 -.05 NatRetPrp 25.96 +.57 PostPrp 42.16 Level3rs 17.61 +.12 NewAmHi 10.20 +.05 Potashs 39.41 LbtyASG 3.72 +.01 NJRscs 47.46 -.16 PwshDB 26.17 LillyEli 40.53 -.69 NwOriEds 21.74 -.07 PSUSDBull 22.49 Limited 38.40 -.09 NYCmtyB 11.97 -.03 PSEmgMkt 19.77 LincNat 18.51 -.19 NewellRub 14.99 -.06 Praxair 103.77 Lindsay 50.45 +.11 NewfidExp 37.01 +.04 PrecDrill 9.59 Linkedlnn 65.84 -.54 NewmtM 62.18 +.42 PrinFnd 23.54 LizClaib 7.78 +.05 NewpkRes 8.28 +.24 ProLogis 27.51 LloydBkg 1.50 +.03 Nexeng 14.67 +.19 ProShtS&P 41.82 LockhdM 77.10 +.18 NextEraEn 57.87 -.04 PrUShS&P 20.70 Loews 36.96 -.23 NiSource 22.53 +.25 PrUIShDow 16.35 Lorillard 108.03 -1.60 NielsenHn 27.80 -.06 ProUltQQQ 78.65 LaPac 7.61 +.08 NikeB 93.67 -.41 PrUShQQQ rs47.06 Lowes 25.02 +.36 NobleCorp 30.60 -.08 ProUItSP 43.55 L 205 1.25 NokiaCp 4.68 .18 PrUShtFn rs 64.20 Nordstrm 47.03 -.25 ProUShL20 17.94 NorfikSo 69.82 +.16 ProUltFin 41.55 M&TBk 72.75 +1.01 NoestUt 34.74 +.06 ProUltR2K 33.14 MBIA 11.86 -.31 NorthropG 55.66 +.32 ProUSSP50014.63 MDU Res 20.84 +.11 Novars 55.35 -.76 PrUtSP500 s54.89 MEMO 3.83 +.16 NSTAR 45.84 +20 ProUSSIvrs 14.52 MFAFnd 6.98 +.07 Nucor 38.99 +.38 ProUltSIv s 48.66 MCR 9.06 -.02 NvlMO 14.56 +.01 ProUShEuro 20.03 MGIC 3.57 +.12 NvMulSI&G 7.59 +.05 ProctGam 65.14 MGM Rsts 9.29 ... 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NetSpend 7.78 +.40 NYMtgTrst 7.24 +.14 NewsCpA 16.98 -.07 NewsCpB 17.62 +.04 NobltyH If 5.50 -.04 Nordson s 40.25 -.05 NorTrst 38.98 -.26 NwstBcsh 12.17 +.02 NovfiWrls 3.06 +.08 Novavax 1.33 -.01 Novlus 40.18 -.19 NuVasive 11.46 -.04 NuanceCm 24.63 +.56 Nvidia 13.51 +.05 02Micro 4.10 +.10 OCZTech 7.51 -.05 OCharleys 5.24 -.14 OReillyAu 79.88 +.93 Oclaro 2.89 +.05 OdysMar 2.34 +.08 OldDomFrt 39.09 +.41 OmniVisn 11.62 -.07 OnAssign 10.35 -.02 OnSmcnd 7.39 +.21 Oneothyr 7.67 +.16 OnyxPh 39.40 -.19 OpenTable 40.15 +1.39 OpnwvSy 1.57 +.05 OpbmerPh 12.26 +.55 Oracle 29.21 +.18 Orexigen 1.60 +.09 Oritani 12.62 -.07 Orthfx 32.88 -.16 OtterTail 21.15 -.04 Overstk 7.94 +.02 PDLBio 6.01 +.08 PMCSra 5.15 +.17 PSSWrld 24.13 +.21 Paccar 36.22 -.16 Pacerlnfi 5.00 +.28 PacEth rs .92 +.06 PacSunwr 1.63 -.01 PanASIv 22.15 +.49 PaneraBrd 135.44 +.26 ParamTch 19.77 +.09 Parexel 19.63 +.44 Patterson 28.55 -.02 PattUTI 18.89 +.66 Paychex 29.59 +.24 Pendrell 2.66 -.01 PnnNGm 35.97 +.39 PennantPk 10.16 -.09 PeopUtdF 12.42 +.10 PeregrineP .95 -.01 Perrigo 98.18 +1.21 PetSmart 50.49 +1.78 PetroDev 35.28 +.75 Pharmacyc 14.62 +.36 Pharmssts 123.75 -4.04 PhotrIn 5.90 +.13 PinnaclFn 14.96 -.17 Plexus 27.43 +.01 Polyomms 16.16 +.06 Pool Corp 28.47 -.12 Popular 1.22 -.01 Potlatch 29.89 -.50 Power-One 3.85 PwShs QQQ 54.86 +.28 Powrwvrs 1.70 +.09 Presstekh .47 +.02 PriceTR 54.28 +.28 priceline 457.08 +11.69 PrimoWtr 2.72 +.07 PrivateB 9.93 +.31 PrUPShQQQ21.03 -.29 PrUltPQQQs 64.66 +.80 PrognicsPh 6.57 -.49 ProgrsSfts 20.01 -.45 ProspctCap 9.16 +.02 ProspBcsh 38.52 +.52 PureCycle 1.72 -.21 QIAGEN 13.52 -.10 QlikTech 27.23 +.27 Qlogic 14.76 +.13 Qualeom 52.61 +.06 QualitySs 35.11 +1.10 QuantFu rs .75 -.43 QuestSft 18.43 -.15 Questeor 43.89 +.45 RFMicD 5.15 +.02 Rambus 7.27 +.13 Randgold 101.80 +3.59 RaptorPhm 6.47 +.06 Rdiff.cm 7.79 +.56 Regenrn 53.00 +1.05 RentACt 34.98 -.07 RepubAir 4.06 +.16 RschMotn 13.44 -1.69 RetailOpp 11.55 +.08 RexEnergy 14.09 +.33 RigelPh 7.20 -.27 RightNow 42.70 +.05 RiverbedT 23.60 +.26 RosettaR 43.04 +1.48 RossStrss 47.00 +.59 Rovi Corp 23.83 -.56 RoyGId 69.93 +.81 Rudolph 8.63 +.25 rue21 21.59 -.01 S1 Corp 9.64 +.04 SBACom 39.96 -.06 SEI Inv 16.37 +.36 SLMCp 13.41 +.13 SS&CTech 17.72 +.85 STEC 9.08 -.22 SVB FnGp 45.08 +.26 SabraHItc 10.94 +.04 SalixPhm 43.66 -.41 SanDisk 47.91 -.04 Sanmina 8.95 +.13 Sanofirt 1.26 -.01 Sapient 11.80 +.20 Sateon h .60 SavientPh 2.09 +.05 Schnitzer 45.73 +.93 Scholastc 27.98 +1.23 SciGames 7.92 -.31 SeagateT 15.43 +.05 SearsHldgs 46.16 -4.21 SeattGen 16.38 +.25 SelCmfrt 19.44 +.64 Selectvlns 17.36 -.01 Semtech 23.13 +.27 Sequenom 3.73 +.06 SvcSourcn 14.70 +.81 ShandaGm 4.56 +.02 ShuffiMstr 10.99 -.53 Shutterfly 23.22 -.49 SifyTech 4.28 +.48 SigaTech h 2.20 SigmaDsg 5.94 +.11 SigmaAld 63.15 +.80 SignatBk 58.06 +.32 SilicGrln 10.87 -.47 Silicnlmg 4.41 -.11 SilcnLab 42.33 +1.34 SilicnMotn 19.84 +.21 Slcnware 4.11 -.08 SilvStdg 13.49 +.69 Sina 55.05 +2.25 Sindair 10.60 +.05 SiriusXM 1.77 -.01 SkyWest 12.68 +.32 SkywksSol 14.37 +.08 SmithWes 3.90 +.01 SmithMicro 1.15 +.05 SnydLance 22.36 +.77 SodaStrm 30.92 +.02 Sohu.cm 48.18 +1.80 SonicCorp 6.71 -.01 SonoSite 53.80 +.10 Sonus 2.45 +.05 SouMoBc 21.87 -.13 Sourcefire 35.42 +1.63 SpectPh 14.51 +.50 Spreadtrm 20.23 +.72 Stamps.cm 25.25 +1.04 Staples 14.08 +.06 StarSdent 2.31 -.08 Starbucks 43.48 +.08 SfDynam 12.50 +.15 StemCell rs .83 -.57 Stericyde 76.51 +.29 StewEnt 5.37 -.13 SunPower 5.13 -.16 SusqBnc 7.99 +.09 SwisherHy 3.21 -.24 SykesEnt 14.93 -.08 Symantec 15.46 +.10 Symetricm 5.34 -.06 Synapfics 30.74 +.13 Synopsys 26.88 +.15 Synovis 27.90 -.02 TDAmeritr 15.25 -.01 TFS Fncl 8.65 -.12 THQ .77 +.01 TTMTdC 11.13 +.34 twteleeom 19.12 -.17 TakeTwo 13.69 -.07 TaleoA 39.61 +.65 Targacept 7.79 +.06 TASER 5.66 -.02 TechData 49.57 +.58 Tekelec 11.01 +.06 TICmSys 2.29 +.12 Tellabs 3.87 -.03 TeslaMot 28.00 -.62 TesseraTch 16.00 +.16 TetraTc 20.99 -.27 TevaPhrm 42.72 +.30 TxCapBsh 28.78 +.44 TexRdhse 14.21 -.15 Theravnce 22.09 +.01 Thoratec 30.50 +.06 TibeoSft 23.60 TlVo Inc 8.90 -.16 TowerGrp 20.53 +.22 Towerstm 1.91 TractSupp 72.82 +1.32 Travelzoo 27.62 +.45 TridentM h .17 +.01 TrimbleN 42.72 +.05 TripAdvwi 28.46 +.13 TriQuint 4.53 +.11 TrstNY 5.31 -.04 Trustmk 22.72 +.11 TuesMrn 3.54 +.21 UTiWrldwd 13.10 +.11 Ubiquitf n 20.90 +.35 UltaSalon 67.01 +.29 Umpqua 12.29 +.14 Unilife 3.05 -.20 UBWV 27.71 -.41 UtdNtrIF 38.13 +.57 UtdOnln 5.30 +.25 US Enr 2.74 +.20 UtdStatn s 31.01 +.05 UtdTherap 43.24 +1.29 UnivDisp 34.46 +.87 UnivFor 27.49 -1.16 UranmRs .84 +.03 UrbanOut 26.58 -.28 VCAAnt 19.38 -.12 VOXX )In 7.68 +.30 ValueClick 15.84 +.46 Veeeolnst 22.29 +.06 Veli n 6.83 +.59 VBradley 32.96 -.21 Verisign 34.72 +.62 Verisk 39.40 +.92 VertxPh 33.91 +2.48 ViacomB 42.76 -.22 Vical 4.27 -.07 VirgnMdah 20.95 -.45 ViroPhrm 27.02 -.78 Vivus 10.09 -.06 Vodafone 27.17 -.07 Volcano 22.10 +.10 WarnerCh 14.02 -.10 WarrenRs 3.00 +.11 WashFed 12.95 -.13 WaveSys 2.14 -.01 WebMD 38.31 +.56 WernerEnt 23.50 +.65 Westmri 11.29 +.38 Wstptlnng 29.36 +1.12 WetSeal 3.19 -.06 WholeFd 66.16 -.13 WilshBcp 3.21 +.08 Wndstrm 11.58 +.20 Winn-Dixie 5.43 -.32 Wntrust 27.38 -.13 Woodward 39.02 +.48 WrightM 15.15 +.53 Wynn 105.65 +1.07 XOMA 1.15 -.07 Xilinx 31.21 +.19 Xyratex 13.73 -.11 Yahoo 14.96 -.20 Yandexn 17.55 -.42 Yongye 3.91 -.06 Zagg 9.35 +.59 Zalicus 1.16 +.01 ZelfqAesn 12.34 ZonBcp 15.07 +.16 Zopharm 4.51 +.16 Zpcar n 14.31 +1.50 ZxCorp 2.81 +.03 ZollMed 61.17 +.88 Zumiez 28.01 +.26 Zyngan 9.50 Ralcorp 85.21 RangeRs 60.20 RJamesFn 29.56 Rayoniers 41.79 Raytheon 45.51 Rltylneo 34.58 RedHat 47.64 -.14 RegionsFn 3.99 +.02 +.26 Renren n 3.45 -.02 -.08 RepubSvc 26.46 -.31 -.18 ResMed 24.72 +.45 +.33 ResoluteEn 11.10 -.15 -.11 Revlon 14.54 +.42 -.32 ReynAmer 40.66 -.41 -.17 RioTinb 47.40 +.70 +.62 RiteAid 1.22 +.04 +.10 RockwAut 71.85 -.19 +.32 RockColl 53.70 +.11 +.97 Rowan 29.87 +.09 +.11 RBSofind 6.28 +.16 +1.39 RoyDShllA 70.79 +.66 -.10 Royce 11.94 +.10 -1.71 RoycepfB 25.67 +.16 +.32 Rand 14.35 -.08 +.61 +.21 -.07 SCANA 42.78 -.19 -.04 SKTIcm 14.14 -.12 +.49 SpdrDJIA 118.22 -.23 +.21 SpdrGold 155.23 +2.90 +08 SPMid 155.22 +1.49 +.27 S&P500ETF121.59 +18 -.07 SpdrHome 16.13 +.14 -.05 SpdrS&PBk 18.88 +.16 +.06 SpdrLehHY 38.09 +.14 +.71 SpdrS&P RB 23.34 +.28 -.46 SpdrRefi 51.49 +.39 +.11 SpdrOGEx 50.09 +1.07 -.70 SpdrMetM 48.88 +.62 -.45 Safeway 20.57 -.41 +.52 StJoe 15.03 +.03 +.49 SJude 32.95 -.65 -.06 Saks 9.56 +.05 +.31 Saesforce 107.06 +.35 -.68 SJuanB 23.01 +.14 +1.98 SandRdge 6.76 +.18 -.09 Sanofi 34.77 +15 SaraLee 18.42 +.02 -.04 Schlmbrg 66.91 +.58 +.02 Sichwab 10.85 -.02 -.68 SiorpioTk 5.00 +.54 +.20 SeadrillLtd 32.32 +.40 +.16 SemiHTr 29.12 -.55 SempraEn 52.84 +.08 +1.32 SenHous 22.10 +.39 +.02 Sensient 37.25 +.82 -.01 SiderurNac 7.57 -.05 -.56 SilvWhtng 29.18 +.85 +.64 SilvrcpMg 6.34 +.30 +.31 SimonProp 123.34 +1.09 +.08 Skedchers 12.23 +.20 +.39 SmithAO 38.68 +1.02 +.72 SmithfF 24.12 -.26 +.15 Smucker 76.76 +.24 +6.58 SoJerlnd 54.92 +.27 +.70 SouthnCo 44.55 -.17 -.06 SthnCopper 29.46 +.22 -.52 SoUnCo 42.21 +.34 +.12 SwstAirl 8.71 +.29 +.49 SwstnErgy 33.49 +.38 +.47 SpectraEn 29.41 +.32 +.74 SprintNex 2.25 -.03 +.13 SprottGold 14.15 +.31 +.25 SP Mais 32.53 +.21 +1.41 SP HlIthC 33.41 -.11 The remainder of the NYSE listings can be found on the next page. Yesterday Pvs Day Argent 4.2890 4.2820 Australia 1.0040 1.0085 Bahrain .3769 .3770 Brazil 1.8520 1.8598 Britain 1.5499 1.5501 Canada 1.0384 1.0358 Chile 518.25 519.45 China 6.3525 6.3619 Colombia 1938.50 1936.50 Czech Rep 19.45 19.55 Denmark 5.7063 5.7120 Dominican Rep 38.52 38.52 Egypt 6.0215 6.0225 Euro .7678 .7686 Hong Kong 7.7838 7.7811 Hungary 233.37 231.82 India 52.585 53.645 Indnsia 9035.00 9085.00 Israel 3.7932 3.8038 Japan 77.87 77.91 Jordan .7093 .7100 Lebanon 1505.00 1505.50 Malaysia 3.1780 3.1864 Mexico 13.8879 13.8964 N. Zealand 1.3147 1.3276 Norway 5.9703 5.9979 Peru 2.699 2.698 Poland 3.46 3.48 Russia 32.0205 31.8515 Singapore 1.3037 1.3086 So. Africa 8.3888 8.4211 So. Korea 1158.80 1157.25 Sweden 6.9319 6.9859 Switzerlnd .9372 .9405 Taiwan 30.40 30.33 Thailand 31.34 31.43 Turkey 1.8858 1.8793 U.A.E. 3.6731 3.6733 Uruguay 20.0499 19.8999 Venzuel 4.2925 4.2925 British pound expressed in U.S. dollars. All oth- ers show dollar in foreign currency. Yesterday Pvs Day Prime Rate 3.25 3.25 Discount Rate 0.75 0.75 Federal Funds Rate .00-.25 .00-.25 Treasuries 3-month 0.003 0.008 6-month 0.04 0.04 5- ear 0.80 0.89 10-year 1.85 2.06 30-year 2.85 3.11 S FUTURES Exch Contract Settle Chg Lt Sweet Crude NYMX Jan 12 93.53 -.34 Corn CBOT Mar 12 583 +4 Wheat CBOT Mar 12 5833/4 +412 Soybeans CBOT Jan 12 1130 +181/4 Cattle CME Feb 12 118.50 -.65 Sugar (world) ICE Mar 12 23.08 +.33 Orange Juice ICE Jan 12 167.05 +.65 SPOT Yesterday Pvs Day Gold (troy oz., spot) $1595.60 $1712.80 Silver (troy oz., spot) $29.61b 32.1/3 Copper (pound) $3.3240 $3.b4/o Platinum (troy oz., spot)$141/.30 $1b1b.80 NMER= NewYork Mercantile Exchange. CBOT= Chicago Board of Trade. CMER = Chicago Mercantile Ex- change. NCSE= New York Cotton, Sugar & Cocoa Ex- change. NCTN = New York Cotton Exchange. DIARY DIARY Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume Make your life a bit EASIER!! and get ONE MONTH FREE Eg 2Pay 563-5655 It's EZ ! *Charge may vary at first transaction and at each vacation start. I AMEX I NASDA YTD YTD Name Div YId PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div YId PE Last Chg %Chg AKSteel .20 2.7 ... 7.52 +.19-54.1 McDnlds 2.80 2.9 19 97.49 -.65 +27.0 AT&Tlnc 1.76 6.1 15 28.85 +.06 -1.8 Microsoft .80 3.1 9 26.00 +.44 -6.8 Ameteks .24 .6 18 40.56 +.45 +3.3 MotrlaSol n .88 1.9 16 46.16 +.15 +21.3 BkofAm .04 .8 ... 5.20 -.06 -61.0 MotrlaMo n ... ... ... 38.70 -.10 +33.0 CapCtyBk ...... 23 10.10 +.20 -19.8 NextEraEn 2.20 3.8 15 57.87 -.04 +11.3 CntryLink 2.90 8.2 16 35.26 -.04-23.6 Penney .80 2.5 20 32.64 +.05 +1.0 Citigrprs .04 .2 7 26.03 +.12-45.0 PiedmOfc 1.26 7.4 22 17.03 +.49 -15.4 CmwREIT 2.00 12.0 23 16.68 +.11-34.6 ProgrssEn 2.48 4.6 20 53.71 -.04 +23.5 Disney .60 1.7 14 35.32 +.13 -5.8 RegionsFn .04 1.0 23 3.99 +.02 -43.0 EKodak ... ... ... .83 +.00 -84.5 SearsHIdgs .33 ... ... 46.16 -4.21 -37.4 EnterPT 2.80 6.6 25 42.66 +.33 -7.8 Smucker 1.92 2.5 19 76.76 +.24 +16.9 ExxonMbI 1.88 2.3 10 80.16 +.13 +9.6 SprintNex ... ... ... 2.25 -.03 -46.8 FordM .20 2.0 5 10.25 ... -39.0 TimeWarn .94 2.7 13 34.59 +.71 +7.5 GenElec .68 4.0 14 17.01 +.22 -7.0 UniFirst .15 .3 14 55.40 -.68 +.6 HomeDp 1.16 2.9 17 40.42 +1.00 +15.3 VerizonCm 2.00 5.2 16 38.78 +.36 +8.4 Intel .84 3.6 10 23.23 -.08 +10.5 Vodafone 2.10 7.7 ... 27.17 -.07 +2.8 IBM 3.00 1.6 14183.57 -3.91 +25.1 WalMart 1.46 2.5 13 58.27 +.32 +8.0 Lowes .56 2.2 18 25.02 +.36 -.2 Walgrn .90 2.6 12 34.13 +.02 -12.4 m A10 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 STOCKS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE BUSINESS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 All I MB TA3lFUN Iy i Name NAV Chg Name NAV Chg Advance Capital I: HiYIdA p 6.16 Balancp 15.57 +.07 StratValA 25.63 +.12 RetInc 8.70 +.01 TechGroA 29.83 +.07 Alger Funds B: DreihsAcInc 10.04 SmCapGr 6.18 +.07 Driehaus Funds: AllianceBern A: EMktGr 27.22 +.28 BalanAp 15.15 +.06 EVPTxMEmI 41.48 +.10 GIbThGrAp 57.60 +.28 Eaton Vance A: SmCpGrA 33.34 +.51 ChinaAp 16.26 +.10 AllianceBern Adv: AMTFMuInc 9.57 -.01 LgCpGrAd 25.03 +.09 MuliCGrA 7.40 +.05 AllianceBern B: InBosA 5.61 GIbThGrBt 49.35 +.23 LgCpVal 16.68 +.06 GrowthBt 23.79 +.08 NatlMunlnc 9.30 -.02 SCpGrBt 26.61 +.41 SpEqtA 14.92 +.16 AllianceBern C: TradGvA 7.46 SCpGrCt 26.79 +.41 EatonVance B: Allianz Fds Insti: HIthSBt 9.70 NFJDvVI 11.13 +.05 NatlMuInc 9.30 -.02 SmCpVi 28.71 +.22 EatonVance C: Allianz Funds A: GovtC p 7.45 SmCpVA 27.28 +.20 NatMunInc 9.30 -.02 Allianz Funds C: Eaton Vance I: AGICGrthC 22.51 +.08 FItgRt 8.78 TargetCt 13.51 +.16 GblMacAbR 9.87 +.02 Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapVal 16.73 +.06 LgCaplnst 18.42 +.04 FBR Funds: Amer Beacon Inv: Focuslnvtn 44.88 +.16 LgCaplnv 17.45 +.04 FMI Funds: Amer Century Adv: LgCap p n 14.98 +.02 EqGroAp 20.85 +.07 FPA Funds: EqlncAp 7.11 +.01 Nwlnc 10.75 Amer Century ylnv: FPACres 26.80 +.07 AIICapGr 26.62 +18 Fairholmex 23.48 -1.06 Balanced 15.75 +.05 Federated A: DivBnd 10.97 +.01 MidGrStA 32.98 +.32 EqInc 7.12 +.01 MuSecA 10.23 Growth 24.99 +.08 TfiRtBdp 11.37 +.02 Heritagel 19.28 +.25 Federated Insti: IncGro 23.69 +.06 KaufmnR 4.52 +.03 InfAdjBd 13.03 +.03 TotRetBd 11.37 +.02 IntDisc 8.65 +.07 StrValDvIS 4.70 -.02 InfiGrol 9.38 +.02 Fidelity Adv FocT: NewOpp 7.12 +.08 EnergyT 33.06 +.41 OneChAg 11.61 +.06 HItCarT 20.12 +.07 OneChMd 11.35 +.05 Fidelity Advisor A: RealEstl 19.70 +.20 Nwlnsghp 19.27 +.11 Ultra 22.37 +.09 StrInA 12.35 +.02 Valuelnv 5.49 +.02 Fidelity Advisor C: American Funds A: Nwlnsghtn 18.28 +.11 AmcpAp 18.35 +.07 Fidelity Advisor I: AMuiAp 25.33 +.08 EqGrlen 56.15 -.03 BalAp 17.93 +.06 Eqlnlxn 22.43 -.12 BondAp 12.56 +.02 IntBdIn 11.46 +.02 CaplBAp 48.67 +.05 Nwlnsgtln 19.50 +.11 CapWGApx31.19 -.21 Fidelity AdvisorT: CapWAp 20.59 +.05 BalancTx 14.71 -.02 EupacAp 34.85 +.09 DivGrTp 11.02 +.07 FdlnvAp 34.29 +.21 EqGrTp 52.60 +.27 GovtAp 14.71 +.01 EqlnTx 22.10 -.09 GwthAp 28.25 +.16 GrOppT 34.18 +.21 HITrAp 10.62 ... HilnAdTp 9.23 +.01 IncoAp 16.54 +.06 IntBdT 11.44 +.02 IntBdAp 13.63 +.01 MulncTp 13.16 +.01 InfiGrIncA p 27.29 +.03 OvrseaT 14.61 -.03 ICAAp 26.45 +.10 STFiT 9.25 +.01 LtTEBAp 16.11 +.01 StkSelAIICp 17.06 +.08 NEcoAp 23.48 +.14 Fidelity Freedom: NPerAp 25.77 +.07 FF2010n 13.30 +.04 NwWrldA 45.93 +.26 FF2010K 12.29 +.03 STBFAp 10.08 ... FF2015n 11.09 +.03 SmCpAp 32.52 +19 FF2015K 12.32 +.04 TxExAp 12.46 +01 FF2020n 13.32 +.04 WshApx 27.46 -.11 FF2020K 12.60 +.04 Ariel Investments: FF2025n 10.95 +.04 Apprec 37.32 +.07 FF2025K 12.58 +.04 Ariel 41.36 +.28 FF2030n 13.00 +.05 Artio Global Funds: FF2030K 12.67 +.04 InfiEqlr 22.57 -.03 FF2035n 10.64 +.04 IntEqlllr 9.51 -.01 FF2035K 12.61 +.05 Artisan Funds: FF2040n 7.42 +.03 Inf 19.07 +.05 FF2040K 12.65 +.05 InfiVal r 24.26 +.01 FF2045n 8.75 +.03 MidCap 32.37 +.32 Incomen 11.30 +.02 MidCapVal 19.13 +.09 Fidelity Invest: SCapVal 14.56 +.08 AIISectEq 10.89 +.05 Baron Funds: AMgr50xn 14.78 -.05 Asset 44.61 +.38 AMgr70 rx n l5.11 -.23 Growth 50.02 +.67 AMgr20rxn 12.64 -.18 SmallCap 22.33 +.25 Balancxn 17.83 -.04 Bernstein Fds: BalancedKx 17.82 -.05 IntDur 13.88 +.03 BlueChGrxn4l.38 +.20 DivMu 14.76 +.01 CAMunn 12.35 +.01 TxMgdlni 12.12 ... Canadan 47.96 +.53 BlackRock A: CapApn 24.23 +.14 EqtyDiv 17.52 +.04 CapDevOn 9.92 +.06 GIAIAr 18.27 +.05 Cplncrn 8.60 +.01 HiYInvA 7.34 ... ChinaRg r 24.90 +.33 InfiOpA p 27.30 +.02 CngS 465.09 BlackRock B&C: CTMunrn 11.90 +.01 GIAICt 17.00 +.05 Contraxn 65.88 +.30 BlackRock Instl: ContraKx 65.83 +.20 BaVIl 23.51 +.08 CnvScn 22.42 +.09 EquityDv 17.55 +.04 DisEqn 20.85 +.08 GIbAllocr 18.37 +.05 DiscEqF 20.82 +.08 Brinson FundsY: Divlntin 24.78 +.04 HiYddlY 5.90 DivrslntKr 24.73 +.03 BruceFund387.98 +.52 DivStkOn 14.30 +.04 Buffalo Funds: DivGthn 25.03 +.17 SmCapn 24.34 +.21 EmergAsrn25.04 +.23 CGM Funds: EmrMkn 20.25 +.16 Focus n 25.48 +.29 Eqlncn 39.97 +.08 MutIn 24.43 +.26 EQIIn 16.83 +.05 Realtyn 25.97 +.29 ECapAp 14.85 -.04 CRM Funds: Europe 24.48 -.06 MdCpVII 25.67 Excht 323.88 Calamos Funds: Exportn 20.08 +.08 GrwthA p 48.08 +.42 Fidelx n 30.29 -.02 Calvert Invest: Fifty r n 16.96 +.13 Inco p 15.83 +06 FItRateHi r n 9.60 IniEqAop 11.93 FrInOnen 25.92 +.06 SocialAp 27.56 +.15 GNMAn 11.84 -.01 SocBdp 15.80 +06 Govtlnce 10.78 -.11 SocEqAp 32.37 +.13 GroCoxn 79.22 -2.20 TxF Lgp 15.80 +.01 Grolncn 17.64 +.06 Cohen & Steers: Growl'o79.14 2.34 7 GrowtCoKx 79.14-2.34 RltyShrs 58.73 +.63 GrSowatrn 18.14 +.09 ColumbiaClass A: Highlncrn 8.56 +.01 Acorn t 25.92 +.24 Highncrn 8.56 +01 DivEqlncx 9.13 -.02 InoBdep n 12.81 -.20 DivrBd 5.04 +.01 lntBdn 10.88 +.02 DivOpptyAx 7.70 -.07 ntGovn 10.98 +.02 LgCapGrAt22.03 +.1 InnMun 10.42 +.01 LgCorQAp 5.52 +.01 InftDiscn 2674 MdCpGrOp 9.34 +.09 InfilSCprn 1708 +.02 MidCVIOpp 6.99 +.04 InvGrBdn 1168 +02 PBModAp 10.32 +.02 InvGBn 7.72 +.01 TxEAp 13.58 +.01 Japanr 899 .05 SelCommA42.03 +.13 nr 8 -05 FrontierA 9.15 +.11 JpnSmn 8.30 -.02 GlobTech 19.18 +.05 LgCapVal 4.72 +.03 Columbia Cl I,T&G: LevCoS n 24.20 +.20 EmMktOpln7.93 +.05 LowPrtkn 347 +.10 ColumbiaClass Z: LowPriKr 34.84 +.10 AcornZ 26.82 +.26 Magellnn 61.28 +.38 AcornlntZ 33.35 +.07 MagellanK 61.20 +.37 DivlncoZ 13.30 +.04 MDMurn 11.33 +.01 IntBdZ 9.27 +.02 MAMunn 12.27 IntTEBd 10.74 +.01 MegaCpStkn9.79 +.04 LgCapGr 11.78 +.10 MIMunn 12.19 LgCpldxZ 23.53 +.08 MidCapxn 25.90 +.11 MdCpldxZ 10.37 +.10 MNMunn 11.80 +.01 MdCpVIZp 12.36 +.08 MtgSecn 11.16 -.01 ValRestr 43.01 +.07 Munilncn 12.98 ... Credit Suisse Comm: NJ Munr n 11.88 +.01 ComRette 7.97 +.03 NwMktren 15.76 -.11 DFA Funds: NwMillxn 28.04 -.78 InfiCorEqn 8.96 -.01 NYMunn 13.26 +.01 USCorEq nln10.43 +.06 OTCn 53.97 +.36 USCorEq2nlO.26 +.07 OhMunn 11.97 +.01 DWS Invest A: 0lOIndex 8.54 +.02 CommAp 16.63 ... Ovrsean 25.54 -.08 DWS Invest S: PcBasn 21.36 +.07 CorPlsInc 10.71 +.01 PAMunrn 11.06 +.01 EmMkGrr 14.37 +.06 PuriTnxn 17.38 .04 EnhEmMk 9.97 +.01 PuritanKx 17.37 -.05 EnhGlbBdr 9.92 +.02 RealExn 26.61 +.16 GIbSmCGr 35.00 +.22 SAIISecEqF 10.88 +.04 GIblPiem 19.71 +.06 SCmdtyStrtn8.75 +.09 Gold&Prc 18.62 +.36 SCmdtyStrFn8.76 +.08 GrolncS 15.57 +.05 SrEmrgMkt 14.11 +.12 HiYldTx 12.10 -.01 SrslntGrw 9.81 +.02 IntTxAMT 11.77 ... SerlnflGrF 9.82 +.02 Infl FdS 36.87 -.05 SrslntVal 7.82 -.02 LgCpFoGr 27.92 +.12 SrlnvGrdF 11.68 +.01 LatAmrEq 40.61 +.14 StlntMun 10.80 +.01 MgdMuniS 9.03 ... STBFn 8.49 MATFS 14.50 ... SmillCpSrn 16.05 +.19 SP500S 16.19 +.05 SCpValur 13.46 +.14 WorldDiv 21.69 +.01 SWSelLCVrn9.93 +.05 Davis Funds A: SlSlcACapn23.55 +.11 NYVenA 31.78 +.23 SkSelSmCp 17.57 +.15 Davis Funds B: SBatlnc en 10.77 -.18 NYVenB 30.25 +.22 SCrReRtrx 9.09 -.29 Davis Funds C: TotalBden 10.90 -.03 NYVenC 30.51 +.22 Trendn 65.61 +.38 Davis FundsY: USBIen 11.79 +.01 NYVenY 32.19 +.24 Utilityn 16.71 -.02 Delaware Invest A: ValStra tx n 24.28 -.01 Diver Incp 9.40 +.03 Value n 61.20 +.36 SMIDCapG 21.74 +.07 Wrldwn 16.85 +.06 TxUSAp 11.52 ... Fidelity Selects: Delaware Invest B: Air n 34.37 +.42 SelGrBt 29.70 +.11 Bankingn 15.29 +.11 Dimensional Fds: Biotchn 81.78 +.42 EmMCrEqnl6.98 +.07 Brokrn 38.72 -.09 EmMktV 25.63 +.08 Chemn 91.14 +.88 IntSmVan 13.13 -.02 ComEquipn21.45 -.03 LargeCo 9.59 +.03 Compn 53.12 -.05 TAUSCorE2n8.35 +.06 ConDisn 22.62 +.06 USLgVan 18.43 +.07 ConsuFnn 10.81 +.10 US Micron 12.92 +.08 ConStapn 69.24 +.01 USTgdVal 14.86 +.12 CstHon 34.37 +.47 USSmalln 19.99 +.17 DfAern 75.40 +.06 USSmVa 22.48 +.19 Electrn 42.74 +.45 IntSmCon 13.45 ... Enrgyn 47.17 +.59 EmgMktn 23.37 +.11 EngSvn 62.23 +1.26 Fixdn 10.30 ... EnvAltEn rn4.71 +.03 IntGFxlnn 12.92 +.04 FinSvxn 47.14 -.13 IntVan 14.27 -.02 Gold r n 42.82 +.79 Glb5Fxlncn 10.90 +.02 Healthin 117.34 +.40 TM USTgtV 19.50 +.15 Insur n 42.85 +.07 2YGIFxdn 10.08 Leisrn 92.96 +.43 DFARIEn 22.27 +.24 Material n 59.52 +.63 Dodge&Cox: MedDI n 53.20 +.45 Balanced 66.35 +.28 MdEqSysn24.29 +.03 Income 13.40 +.02 Multmdn 41.43 -.01 InfiStk 29.06 -.13 NtGasn 29.19 +.34 Stock 99.13 +.50 Pharmn 13.20 +.01 DoubleUne Funds: Retail xn 51.07 -1.06 TRBdI 11.10 Softwren 77.61 -5.58 TRBdNp 11.10 ... Techn 85.69 +.59 Dreyfus: Telcm x n 42.47 -.41 Aprec 39.72 +05 Trans n 48.76 +.70 CTA 11.94 +.01 UtilGrn 51.39 -.17 CorV A 22.47 Wireless n 7.00 -.02 Dreyf 8.22 +.01 Fidelity Spartan: DryMidr 26.51 +.27 ExtMklnxn 34.52 -.43 Dr5001nt 34.06 +10 5001dxlnvxn43.12 -.11 GNMA 15.95 -.01 5001dxlx 43.12 -.12 GrChinaAr 31.38 +55 lnfilnxlnvxn28.83 -1.08 Here are the 1,000 biggest mutual funds listed on Nasdaq. Tables show the fund name, sell price or Net Asset Value (NAV) and daily net change. Name: Name of mutual fund and family. NAV: Net asset value. Chg: Net change in price of NAV. Data based on NAVs reported to Lipper by 6 p.m. Eastern. Name NAV Chg TotMktlnvxn35.03 -.39 USBondle 11.79 +.01 Fidelity Spart Adv: 5001dxAdvxn43.12 -.11 IntAdrxn 28.83 -1.09 TotMktAd rx n35.03 -.40 First Eagle: GIbIA 44.14 +.12 OverseasA 20.00 +.02 First Investors A BIChpAp GloblAp 5.85 +.04 GovtAp 11.60 -.01 GrolnAp 13.99 +.05 IncoAp 2.44 MATFAp 12.01 MITFAp 12.41 +.01 NJTFAp 13.28 +.01 NYTFA p 14.75 OppAp 26.13 +.18 PATFAp 13.26 +.01 SpSitAp 23.84 +.18 TxExAp 9.93 +.01 TotRtAp 14.98 +.04 ValueBp 6.82 +.02 Forum Funds: AbsStrlr 11.03 -.02 Frank/Temp Frnk A: AdjUS p 8.84 -.01 ALTFAp 11.43 AZTFAp 10.97 +.01 CallnsAp 12.32 +.01 CAIntAp 11.78 +.01 CalTFAp 7.09 +.01 COTFAp 11.88 +.01 CTTFAp 11.10 +.01 CvtScAp 13.59 +.02 Dbl TFA 11.98 +.01 DynTchA 28.31 +.22 EqlncAp 16.18 +.04 Fedlntp 12.18 +.01 FedTFAp 12.12 +.01 FLTFAp 11.65 +.01 FoundAlp 9.84 GATFAp 12.20 +.01 GoldPrMA 36.37 +.90 GrwthAp 43.56 +.17 HYTFA p 10.23 HilncA 1.92 IncomAp 2.05 InsTFAp 12.09 +.01 NYITF p 11.66 +.01 LATFAp 11.62 +.01 LMGvScA 10.41 MDTFAp 11.64 +.01 MATFAp 11.73 +.01 MITFAp 12.05 +.01 MNInsA 12.55 +.01 MOTFAp 12.31 +.01 NJTFAp 12.26 NYTFAp 11.79 +.01 NCTFA p 12.48 OhiolAp 12.64 +.01 ORTFAp 12.15 +.01 PATFAp 10.52 ReEScAp 14.24 +.14 RisDvAp 33.77 +.02 SMCpGrA 33.10 +.26 Stratlncp 10.08 +.01 TtlRtnAp 10.25 +.01 USGovAp 6.92 UJisAp 12.86 VATFAp 11.85 +.01 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GIbBdAdv n 12.32 +.06 IncmeAd 2.04 Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.07 USGvCt 6.88 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesAx 19.23 -.26 Frank/Temp Temp A: DvMktAp 21.21 +.17 ForgnApx 5.77 -.18 GIBdAp 12.36 +.06 GrwthAp 15.80 -.01 WorldApx 13.36 -.26 Frank/Temp Tmp Adv: GrthAv 15.79 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: DevMktC 20.57 +.17 ForgnCpx 5.66 -.13 GIBdCp 12.38 +.06 Franklin Mutual Ser: QuestAx 15.78 -.70 GE Elfun S&S: S&Slnc 11.75 +.02 S&SPM 38.22 +.14 GMOTrust: USTreas 25.01 GMOTrust III: Quality 21.57 +.03 GMOTrust IV: InfiGrEq 20.50 -.05 InfilntrVI 18.59 -.05 GMOTrust VI: EmgMktsr 11.08 +.05 InfiCorEq 25.21 -.08 Quality 21.57 +.02 StrFxInc 17.17 +.04 Gabelli Funds: Asset 47.06 +.10 Gateway Funds: GatewayA 26.24 +.11 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVAp 32.23 +.18 Goldman Sachs Inst: GrOppt 21.48 +.17 HiYield 6.80 +.01 HYMunin 8.45 +.01 MidCapV 32.44 +.18 Harbor Funds: Bondx 12.14 -.07 CapAplnstx36.19 +.06 Inftllnvtx 50.23 -1.15 Intl rx 50.66 -1.37 Hartford Fds A: CpAppAp 28.81 +.17 DivGthAp 18.32 +.06 IntOpAp 12.56 +.04 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppln 28.88 +.17 Hartford HLS IA: CapApp 36.63 +.21 Div&Gr 19.05 +.07 Advisers 19.10 +.06 TotRetBd 11.61 +.02 Hennessy Funds: CorGrllOrig Hussman Funds: StrTotRetr 12.34 +.04 StrGrowth 12.73 -.04 ICON Fds: EnergyS 17.62 +.19 HIlthcareS 14.34 +.03 ISI Funds: NoAm p 7.93 +.02 IVA Funds: WdwideAt 15.11 +.01 WldwideIr 15.10 +.01 Invesco Fds Invest: DivrsDivp 11.46 +.02 Invesco Funds: Energy 36.49 +.57 Utliies 16.52 -.03 Invesco Funds A: Chart p 15.67 +.06 CmstkA 14.76 +.06 Const p 20.78 +.07 EqlncA 8.12 +.03 GrlncAp 17.98 +.07 HilncMu p 7.68 HiYldp 3.97 HYMuA 9.36 InfiGrow 24.56 -.09 MunilnA 13.29 +.01 PATFA 16.13 USMortgA 12.99 -.01 Invesco Funds B: CapDevt 12.58 +.14 MunilnB 13.26 USMortg 12.92 -.02 Ivy Funds: AssetSCt 21.08 +.13 AssetStAp 21.69 +.14 AssetSbir 21.87 +.14 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBdA 11.88 +.02 JPMorgan C Class: CoreBdp 11.94 +.03 JP Morgan Instl: MdCpVal n 23.23 +.09 JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond n11.88 +.02 ShtDurBd 10.97 +.01 JPMorgan Select: USEquityn 9.66 +.04 JPMorgan Sel CIs: CoreBdn 11.87 +.02 HighYIdn 7.58 IntmTFBd n 11.24 +.01 ShtDurBdn 10.96 USLCCrPIsnl9.40 +.08 JanusT Shrs: BalancdT 24.58 +.07 ContrarnT 12.26 +10 EnterprT 56.53 +.35 FIxBndT 10.69 +.03 GllUfeSciTr 24.13 +.07 GIbSel T 9.34 +.09 GITechTr 15.65 +.10 Grw&lncT 29.05 +.09 JanusT 26.79 +.12 OvrseasTr 34.44 +.19 PrkMCValT21.37 +.11 ResearchT 27.47 +.11 ShTmBdT 3.06 +.01 Twenty T 58.88 +.27 VentureT 55.15 +.56 WrldWTr 39.14 +.10 Jensen Funds: QualGrthJn25.97 +.05 John Hancock A: BondAp 15.43 +.02 RgBkA 11.65 +.09 SrlnAp 6.35 +.02 John Hancock B: StrlncB 6.35 +.02 Name NAV Chg John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 11.17 +.04 LSBalanc 12.25 +.03 LSConsrv 12.75 +.03 LSGrwth 11.95 +.05 LSModer 12.35 +.03 Keeley Funds: SmCpValAp 22.57 +.24 Lazard Instl: EmgMktl 17.60 +.05 Lazard Open: EmgMkOp 17.94 +.06 Legg Mason A: CBAgGrp 106.63 +.69 CBApprp 13.61 +.06 CBLCGrp 19.90 +.15 GCIAIICOp 7.46 WAHilncAt 5.70 WAMgMup 16.17 +.01 Legg Mason B: CBLgCGrt 18.20 +.14 Legg Mason C: CMSplnvp 25.51 +.24 CMValTrp 36.45 +.17 Longleaf Partners: Partners 26.17 +.06 SmCap 24.43 Loomis Sayles: LSBondl 13.79 +.05 StrlncC 14.43 +.04 LSBondR 13.74 +.05 StrlncA 14.35 +.04 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdAp 12.10 +.04 InvGrBdY 12.11 +.05 Lord Abbett A: AffilAp 10.23 +.06 FundlEq 11.72 +.08 BdDebAp 7.57 +.01 ShDurlncAp 4.54 +.01 MidCpApx 15.26 +.09 Lord Abbett C: ShDurlncCt 4.57 +.01 Lord Abbett F: ShtDurlnco 4.53 MFS Funds A: MITA 18.14 +.04 MIGA 15.07 +.02 EmGA 40.88 +.26 HilnA 3.33 MFLA 9.65 TotRA 13.80 +.02 UtilA 16.46 ValueA 21.71 MFS Funds B: MIGBn 13.57 +.01 GvScBn 10.58 +.02 HilnBn 3.34 +.01 MulnBn 8.46 +.01 TotRBn 13.80 +.02 MFS Funds I: ReInT 13.29 -.05 Valuel 21.80 MFS Funds Instl: InfilEqn 15.32 -.06 MainStay Funds A: HiYIdBA 5.74 MainStay Funds B: ConvBt 13.85 +.06 GovtBt 8.86 +.01 HYIdBBt 5.72 IncmBldr 15.63 -.02 InfiEqB 9.03 +.01 MainStay Funds I: ICAPSIEq 32.87 +.15 Mairs & Power: Growth n 70.05 +.31 Manning&Napier Fds: WIdOppA 6.42 -.01 Matthews Asian: AsianGllnv 14.84 +.10 Indialnvr 13.95 PacTgrlnv 20.12 +.26 MergerFdn 15.98 Meridian Funds: Growth 40.78 +.27 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.36 +.01 TotRtBdl 10.36 +.01 Midas Funds: Midas Fdt 3.62 +.09 Monetta Funds: Monettan 13.31 +.07 Morgan Stanley B: GlobStratB 14.20 +.04 MorganStanley Inst: InfiEqlx 11.86 -.36 MCapGrl e 32.46 -1.72 MCapGrPpe31.32-1.72 Muhlenkn 50.36 +.28 Munder Funds A: GwthOppA 26.03 +.22 Munder Funds Y: MCpCGrYn27.48 +.27 Mutual Series: BeacnZx 11.35 -.21 GblDiscAx 26.31 -.50 GlbDiscCx 26.13 -.29 GlbDiscZx 26.62 -.59 QuestZx 15.90 -.76 SharesZx 19.37 -.32 Neuberger&Berm Fds: Focusx 18.41 +.04 Genesisx 32.43 -1.34 Geneslnstx 45.52 -1.28 Intlrx 14.56 -.10 Partnerx 23.68 -.02 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesisx 47.26 -1.12 Nicholas Group: Hilnc I n 9.34 +.02 Nichn 44.27 +.19 Northern Funds: Bondldx 10.96 HiYFxlnc 6.97 MMIntEq r 8.22 SmCpldx 7.94 Stkldx 15.12 Technly 14.14 Nuveen Cl A: LtMBAp 11.13 Nuveen Cl Y: RealEstn 18.53 +.19 Oak Assoc Fds: WhitOkSG 36.84 +.15 Oakmark Funds I: Eqtylncr 26.44 +.08 Globall 19.48 +.04 Inftllr 15.99 -.08 Oakmark 40.55 +.14 Select 27.17 +.11 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 6.98 +.01 GlbSMdCap 13.09 +.05 LgCapStrat 8.50 +.03 RealRet 9.24 +.08 Oppenheimer A: AMTFMu 6.46 AMTFrNY 11.39 +.01 CAMuniAp 7.87 CapApAp 41.74 +.12 CaplncAp 8.61 +.02 ChmplncAp 1.73 DvMktAp 28.75 +.09 Discp 53.55 +.79 EquityA 8.26 +.01 GlobAp 52.34 -.12 GIbOppA 25.81 +.06 GblStrlncA 4.05 +.01 Gold p 37.27 +.89 IntBdA p 6.27 +.02 LtdTmMu 14.62 MnStFdA 31.25 +.21 PAMuniAp 10.77 SenFltRtA 8.03 +.01 USGv p 9.74 +.02 Oppenheimer B: AMTFMu 6.43 +.01 AMTFrNY 11.39 CplncBt 8.43 +.01 ChmplncBt 1.74 ... EquityB 7.64 +.01 GblSfrlncB 4.06 Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYAp 3.31 ... RoMuAp 15.89 +.01 RcNtMuA 6.82 +.01 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 28.40 +.09 InfiBdY 6.26 +.01 IntGrowY 24.88 -.11 PIMCO Admin PIMS: ShtTmAd p 9.67 TotRtAd 10.90 +.02 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AIAsetAutr 10.43 +.05 AIIAsset 11.84 +.03 ComodRR 7.17 +.03 Divlnc 11.21 +.02 EmgMkCur 9.91 +.03 EmMkBd 11.21 +.02 Fltlncr 8.24 ForBdUnr 11.07 +.04 FrgnBd 10.68 +.03 HiYId 8.91 +.01 InvGrCp 10.32 +.02 LowDu 10.33 ModDur 10.57 +.01 RealRet 11.43 +.05 RealRhil 11.86 +.02 ShortT 9.67 TotRt 10.90 +.02 TRII 10.55 +.02 TRIll 9.58 +.01 PIMCO Funds A: AllAstAutt 10.36 +.05 ComRRp 7.04 +.03 LwDurA 10.33 RealRtAp 11.86 +.02 TotRtA 10.90 +.02 PIMCO Funds C: RealRtCp 11.86 +.02 TotRtCt 10.90 +.02 PIMCO Funds D: TRtnp 10.90 +.02 PIMCO Funds P: AstAIIAuthP 10.42 +.05 TotRtnP 10.90 +.02 Name NAV Chg Parnassus Funds: Eqtylncon 25.66 +.06 Perm Port Funds: Permanent 45.89 +.30 Pioneer Funds A: BondA p 9.56 +.01 InfilValA 17.07 -.06 PionFdAp 37.56 +.08 ValueAp 10.52 +.05 Pioneer Funds B: HiYldBt 9.43 +.05 Pioneer Funds C: HiYIdC t 9.52 +.04 Pioneer FdsY: CullenVY 16.80 +.01 Price Funds: Balance n 18.56 +.05 BIChip n 37.68 +.26 CABond n 10.95 CapAppn 20.19 +.02 DivGro n 22.68 +.06 EmMktBenl2.69 -.10 EmEurp 15.59 -.02 EmMktSxn28.13 +.07 Eqlncn 22.31 +.07 Eqlndexn 32.83 +.10 Europexn 12.71 -.41 GNMAn 10.14 Growth 31.08 +.22 Gr&lnn 19.38 +.06 HIthScin 31.15 +.24 HiYieldn 6.43 InsfiCpG 15.76 +.10 InfiBonden 9.69 -.18 IntDisxn 36.34 -.38 IntlG&lx 11.12 -.40 InfiStkxn 11.96 -.18 Japanx n 7.16 -.14 LatAmxn 38.37 -3.37 MDShrtn 5.23 MDBondn 10.66 MidCapn 51.38 +.46 MCapValn 20.68 +.01 NAmern 31.04 +.18 NAsiaxn 13.62 -2.70 New Era n 40.69 +.56 NHorizn 30.40 +.30 NIncn 9.66 +.01 NYBondn 11.38 OverS SF rx n7.07 -.20 PSIncn 15.52 +.03 RealAssetrn10.04 +.10 RealEstn 17.79 +.18 R2010n 15.15 +.03 R2015n 11.62 +.03 R2020n 15.89 +.04 R2025n 11.52 +.03 R2030n 16.40 +.05 R2035n 11.53 +.04 R2040n 16.38 +.06 R2045n 10.93 +.05 SciTecn 25.14 +.15 ShtBdn 4.81 SmCpStkn 30.42 +.30 SmCapVal n33.59 +.27 SpecGrn 16.59 +.06 Speclnn 12.24 +.01 TFIncn 10.07 +.01 TxFrHn 10.90 TxFrSIn 5.66 USTIntn 6.26 +.01 USTLgn 13.81 +.13 VABondn 11.83 Value n 21.84 +.08 Principal Inv: LgCGI In 8.98 LT20201n 11.26 LT20301n 11.02 Prudential Fds A: BlendA 16.07 +.09 HiYIdAnp 5.32 +.01 MuHilncA 9.59 NatResA 45.14 +.85 UilityAx 10.40 -.02 Prudential Fds B: GrowthB 15.64 +.04 HiYIdBt 5.31 Putnam Funds A: AmGvApx 9.24 -.50 AZTE 9.15 ConvSec 18.18 +.05 DvrlnAp 7.27 -.01 EqlnAp 14.62 +.03 EuEq 16.84 -.07 GeoBalA 11.80 +.03 GIbEqtyp 8.07 +.02 GrInAp 12.27 +.04 GIblHIthA 42.77 +.06 HiYdAp 7.28 HiYId In 5.70 IncmAp 6.77 -.01 IntGrln p 8.33 -.01 InvAp 12.24 +.03 NJTxAp 9.49 MuliCpGr 46.87 +.31 PATE 9.19 TxExA p 8.65 +.01 TFInA p 15.05 TFHYA 11.77 +.01 USGvAp 13.75 GIblUtilA 9.87 -.02 VoyAp 19.11 +.10 Putnam Funds B: TaxFrlns 15.07 +.01 DvrlnBt 7.21 -.01 Eqlnct 14.48 +.03 EuEq 16.04 -.06 GeoBalB 11.68 +.02 GIbEqt 7.25 +.02 GINtRst 16.56 GrlnBt 12.07 +.05 GIblHIthB 34.93 +.04 HiYldBpt 7.26 HYAdBt 5.59 IncmBt 6.71 -.01 IntGrlnt 8.19 -.02 InfiNopt 12.29 InvBt 11.05 +.03 NJTxBt 9.48 MuliCpGr 40.25 +.27 TxExB t 8.65 +.01 TFHYBt 11.79 +.01 USGvBt 13.69 GlblUtilB 9.83 -.02 VoyBt 16.12 +.08 RS Funds: IntGrA 14.99 +.02 LgCAIphaA 37.55 +.20 Value 22.38 +.11 RidgeWorth Funds: LCGrStkAp 9.82 +.07 Royce Funds: LwPrSkSvr 13.94 +.13 MicroCapl 14.19 +.09 PennMulr 10.48 +.08 Premierlr 18.08 +.15 TotRetl r 12.34 +.07 ValSvct 10.67 +.10 Russell Funds S: StratBd 11.00 +.03 Rydex Advisor: NasdaqAdv 13.61 +.07 SSgA Funds: EmgMkt 17.75 +.18 Schwab Funds: HIntCare 17.15 +.07 0lOOOnvr 34.28 +.14 S&P Sel 18.97 +.06 SmCpSl 18.51 +.16 TSMSelr 21.94 +.10 Scout Funds: Intfix 27.05 -.29 Selected Funds: AmShD 38.63 +.28 AmShSp 38.53 +.27 Sentinel Group: ComSAp 30.66 +.08 Sequoian 141.82 +.52 Sit Funds: LrgCpGrx 40.72 .25 SoSunSCInv t20.11 ... St FarmAssoc: Gwll 51.11 +.11 Stratton Funds: Mulf-Capx31.71 +.13 RealEstate x 26.02 .26 SmnCap 48.43 +.51 SunAmerica Funds: USGvBt 10.25 +.02 TCW Funds: TotRetBdl 9.73 TIAA-CREF Funds: Bdldxlnst 10.79 +.02 Eqldxlnst 9.21 +.04 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 17.26 -.03 Third Avenue Fds: InflValnstr 14.01 +.04 REVallnstr 19.80 +.09 Valuelnst 40.05 +.43 Thornburg Fds: IntValAp 23.48 -.01 IncBuildAt 17.56 -.01 IncBuildCp 17.57 IntValue I 24.02 -.01 LtTMul 14.47 Thrivent Fds A: HiYld 4.63 +.01 Income 8.72 +.02 Tocqueville Fds: Goldtn 72.79 +1.65 Transamerica A: AegonHYBp 8.77 +.01 Flexlncp 8.73 +.01 Turner Funds: SmlCpGrn 31.40 +.42 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 22.04 -.02 US Global Investors: AIIAm 22.08 +.10 ChinaReg 6.84 +.15 GIbRs 9.06 +.05 Gld&Mtls 12.62 +.17 WdPrcMn 12.91 +.20 USAA Group: AgvGt 31.53 +.18 CABd 10.38 +.01 CrnstStr 21.46 +.03 GNMA 10.41 Name NAV Chg GrTxStr 13.22 +.02 Grwth 14.10 +.05 Gr&lnc 14.16 +.08 IncSt 11.96 +.04 Inco 13.11 +.02 Inf 21.07 -.07 NYBd 11.93 PrecMM 31.41 +.60 SciTech 12.27 +.06 ShtTBnd 9.13 SmCpStk 13.00 +.12 TxElt 13.25 TxELT 13.13 TxESh 10.78 VABd 11.17 +.01 WIdGr 17.29 -.04 VALIC: MdCpldx 19.56 +.20 Stkldx 24.47 +.08 Value Line Fd: LrgCon 16.97 +.04 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml n 21.51 +.08 CAITAdmn 11.32 +.01 CALTAdm n11.39 CpOpAdl n 66.34 -3.55 EMAdmr rn 31.88 +.16 Energyn 108.16 -5.19 EqlnAdm n n44.22 -.25 EuroAdmln 51.91 -.15 ExplAdml n 64.91 +.64 ExtdAdm n 38.71 +.38 500Adml n 112.89 +.37 GNMAAdn11.19 -.01 GrwAdmn 31.12 +.14 HlthCr n 52.69 -2.69 HiYldCp n 5.64 InfProAd n 28.22 +.06 ITBdAdml n 11.91 +.04 ITsryAdml n 12.20 +.03 IntGrAdm n 50.53 -1.04 ITAdml n 13.97 +.01 ITGrAdmnn 10.10 +.03 LtdTrAdn 11.14 LTGrAdmln 10.39 +.09 LTAdmln 11.28 +.01 MCpAdml n 87.67 +.68 MorgAdm n 53.43 +.30 MuHYAdm nlO.67 +.01 NYLTAdn 11.37 +.01 PrmCap r n 62.83 -2.64 PALTAdm n11.32 +.01 ReitAdmrnn80.14 +.88 STsyAdml n 10.85 STBdAdmlnlO.66 +.01 ShtTrAdn 15.92 STFdAdn 10.94 STIGrAdn 10.63 SmCAdm n 32.90 +.29 TxMCaprn 61.51 +.27 TfBAdml n 11.06 +.02 TStkAdm n 30.52 +.13 ValAdml n 19.89 +.07 WellslAdm n54.71 -.38 WelltnAdm n53.35 +.16 Windsorn 42.10 +.21 WdsrllAdn 44.79 +.12 Vanguard Fds: AssetAn 23.49 -.18 CALTn 11.39 CapOppn 28.73 -1.51 Convrtn 11.96 +.03 DivdGron 15.14 +.05 Energy n 57.61 -2.73 Eqlnc n 21.09 -.12 Explr n 69.65 +.68 FLLTn 11.74 +.01 GNMAn 11.19 -.01 GlobEqn 15.82 +.03 Grolncn 25.87 +.07 GrthEqn 10.60 -.01 HYCorpn 5.64 HlthCren 124.89 -6.30 InflaPron 14.37 +.04 InfiExplrn 13.06 +.01 IntlGrn 15.89 -.30 InfiVal n 26.75 -.04 ITIGraden 10.10 +.03 ITTsryn 12.20 +.03 LifeConn 16.20 +.04 LifeGro n 20.91 +.06 Lifelncn 14.24 +.03 LifeModn 19.11 +.05 LTIGraden 10.39 +.09 LTTsryn 13.93 +.13 Morg n 17.21 +.09 MuHYn 10.67 +.01 Mulntn 13.97 +.01 MuLtdn 11.14 MuLongn 11.28 +.01 MuShrtn 15.92 NJLTn 11.88 +.01 NYLTn 11.37 +.01 OHLTTEn 12.23 +.01 PALTn 11.32 +.01 PrecMtls rn 19.65 -1.19 PrmcpCorn 13.34 +.05 Prmcp r n 60.57 -2.47 SelValurn 18.35 +.13 STARn 18.72 +.06 STIGraden 10.63 STFedn 10.94 STTsryn 10.85 StratEqn 18.04 +.18 TgtRe2005ni 2.21 +.03 TgtRetlncn 11.56 +.03 TgRe2010n22.75 +.06 TgtRe2015nl2.41 +.03 TgRe2020n21.80 +.06 TgtRe2025 nl2.30 +.04 TgRe2030n20.89 +.06 TgtRe2035 nl2.46 +.04 TgtRe2040 n20.39 +.06 TgtRe2050 n20.30 +.06 TgtRe2045 nl2.81 +.04 USGron 17.65 +.11 USValuen 9.84 -.18 Wellslyn 22.58 -.15 Well n 30.89 +.10 Wndsrn 12.47 +.06 Wndsll n 25.23 +.07 Vanguard Idx Fds: DvMklnPl rn88.36 -.16 MidCplstPI n95.54 +.75 TotlntAdmr r21.89 +.01 Totlntllnstr n87.61 +.06 TotlntllP r n 87.63 +.06 500 n 112.86 +.37 Balancedn 21.50 +.07 DevMktn 8.54 -.01 EMktn 24.23 +.12 Europe n 22.26 -.06 Extend n 38.64 +.38 Growithn 31.11 +.14 LgCaplxn 22.58 +.09 LTBndn 14.09 +.12 MidCapn 19.29 +.15 Pacific n 9.21 -.01 REITr n 18.78 +.21 SmCap n 32.83 +.29 SmlCpGlthn21.02 +.21 SmlCpVin 14.88 +.11 STBndn 10.66 +.01 TotBndn 11.06 +.02 Totllntl n 13.09 +.01 TotStkn 30.51 +.13 Value n 19.89 +.08 Vanguard Instl Fds: Ballnstn 21.51 +.08 DevMklnstn 8.48 -.01 Extln n 38.71 +.38 FTAIIWIdl r n78.27 +.05 Grwthlstn 31.11 +.13 InfProlnstn 11.50 +.03 Instldxn 112.14 +.36 InsPIn 112.15 +.36 InstTStldxn 27.61 +.12 InsTStPlusrn27.61 +.12 MidCplstn 19.37 +.15 SCInstn 32.90 +.29 TBIstn 11.06 +.02 TSInstn 30.53 +.14 Valuelstn 19.89 +.07 Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl n 93.25 +.30 GroSign 28.81 +.12 ITBdSign 11.91 +.04 MidCpldx n 27.67 +.22 STBdldxn 10.66 +.01 SmCpSig n 29.64 +.26 TotBdSgl n 11.06 +.02 TotStkSgIn 29.46 +.13 Virtus Funds A: MulSStAp 4.71 Waddell & Reed Adv: AssetS p 8.25 +.05 CorelnvA 5.52 +.01 DivOppAp 13.45 +.08 DivOppCt 13.33 +.08 Wasatch: SmCpGr 38.94 +.32 Wells Fargo Adv A: AstAIlAp 11.97 Wells Fargo Adv C: AstAIICt 11.54 Wells Fargo Adv: CmSlllnv 18.38 +.33 Opptylnv 35.20 +.23 Wells Fargo Ad Ins: UlStMulnc 4.81 Wells Fargo Instl: UItSTMuA 4.81 Western Asset: CorePlusl 11.09 +.02 William Blair N: GrowthN 10.42 +.08 Yacktman Funds: Fundpn 17.27 -.01 Focused 18.51 -.01 Stock market down for the week Associated Press 2 points. It was up as many as 99 points in the morning An early rally faded on after the Italian government the stock market Friday, won a confidence vote on leaving indexes down about austerity measures. That 3 percent for the week as gain evaporated after Fitch worries resurfaced about a warned that it might down- breakup of the euro. grade the debt of Italy, Spain BlackBerry maker Re- and four other countries that search in Motion plunged use the euro. After markets after slashing its forecast for closed, Moody's downgraded holiday sales. The IPO of on- Belgium's debt two notches line game maker Zynga Inc. and said more cuts were pos- didn't live up to its lofty ex- sible. Materials and indus- pectations. The stock lost 5 trial companies rose, percent on its first day of signaling that traders ex- trading. The Dow Jones in- pect the U.S. economic re- dustrial average closed down cover to remain on track. i nCody's dOy' MLSS0 U SALAD BOWL m Sr the othdr fixing Crystal Rivr Other locations include 305 S.E. US 19 St. Pete, Belleair Bluffs, Tampa, Bradenton, 392-799-7223 Spring Hill, Clearwater, and Tarpon Springs, Letters to L b-Mu C, The Citrus County Chronicle and the Crystal River Mall want to help you get your letter to Santa. Cut out this letter, fill it with your dreams and wish list for Christmas and drop it by our Santa's Mail Box at We will also publish all of the letters for all to read and enjoy. Drop your letter by the Crystal River CRYSTAL RIVER Mall before December 20, 2011. M.A.L.L Hwy 19, Crystal River In sponsorship with the CHI' )NK. Name Last Chg SP CnSt 31.49 -.03 SP Consume 37.90 SP Engy 66.14 +.42 SPDRFncl 12.54 +.05 SP Inds 32.67 +.14 SPTedch 24.98 +.07 SP UDI 34.54 -.10 StdPac 2.88 -.06 Standex 34.18 +.58 StanBlkDk 63.10 +.11 StarwdHfl 45.42 +.26 StateStr 40.04 +.93 Steris 28.12 -.40 Sterlite 6.86 -.22 SillwtrM 11.21 +.74 Styker 46.21 -.42 SturmRug 32.57 -.06 SubPpne 46.13 -.91 SuccessF 39.88 +.15 SunCmts 35.33 +.78 Suncorgs 26.86 +.25 Sunoco 39.12 +.29 Suntedch 2.33 +.04 SunTrst 16.48 -.19 SupEnrgy 27.33 +1.18 Supvalu 7.49 +.27 Synovus 1.44 +.07 Sysco 28.90 -.09 TCF Fncl 9.74 +.02 TE Connect 30.45 +.18 TECO 18.33 TJX 62.14 ThawSemi 12.76 TalismEg 11.30 Target 52.20 TataMotors 15.94 TeckRes g 33.86 TelNorL 8.70 TelcmNZs 7.74 TelefEsps 16.63 TelMexL 14.63 TempurP 52.67 Tenaris 34.95 TenetHIth 4.42 Teradyn 13.20 Terex 12.81 TerraNitro 155.68 Tesoro 22.10 TetraTech 8.51 Texlnst 28.69 Textron 17.82 Theragen 1.60 ThermoFis 43.84 ThmBet 52.87 ThomCrkg 6.73 3M CO 78.87 Tiffany 62.61 TW Cable 62.21 TimeWarn 34.59 Timken 37.59 TollBros 19.66 TorchEngy 2.30 Trchmrks 42.14 TorDBkg 70.01 Total SA 47.26 TotalSys 19.21 Transom 39.83 Travelers 57.28 Tredgar 21.85 TriConfi 13.83 TwoHrblnv 9.50 Tycolnt 44.86 Tyson 20.37 UBS AG 11.45 UDR 24.59 UIL Hold 33.96 USAirv y 6.18 US Gold 3.13 USEC 1.14 USG 8.55 UniSrcEn 36.58 UniFirst 55.40 UnilevNV 32.53 UnionPac 99.88 UtdCont 21.24 UtdMicro 2.09 UPSB 71.76 UtdRentals 27.89 US Bancrp 26.00 US NGs rs 6.89 US OilFd 36.27 USSteel 25.87 UtdTedch 72.39 UtdhlthGp 49.00 +.48 Weathflnfi 13.51 20.58 +.10 WenRIt 21.32 SWellPoint 64.95 WellsFargo 25.98 VFCp 128.48 -1.75 WendysCo 5.11 Valassis 19.18 -.16 WestarEn 27.29 ValeSA 21.09 +.10 WAstEMkt 13.00 ValeSApf 20.19 +04 WstAMgdHi 5.90 ValeantPh 45.33 +.47 WAstlnfOpp 12.70 ValeroE 20.52 +.18 WDigital 30.95 viyNBcp 11.69 +.17 WsnRefin 12.78 VanS&P500 55.90 +.04 WsnUnion 17.78 VangEmg 38.40 +.27 WseyUnon 7.78 VangEAFE 30.59 -.13 Weyerh 16.70 VarianMed 63.19 -.37 Whrlpl 46.64 Vectren 29.15 +.31 WhifngPts 45.27 Ventas 52.90 +.05 WmsCos 31.00 VeoliaEnv 10.57 -.18 WmsPtrs 57.45 VeriFone 35.18 -1.62 Winnbgo 6.94 VerizonCm 38.78 +.36 WiscEn s 33.44 VimpelCm 9.38 -.11 WT India 15.97 Visa 97.44 +1.62 WorldFuel 40.69 Vishaylnt 8.66 -.20 Worthgtn 16.24 Vonage 2.36 +.16 Wyndham 34.84 Vornado 74.23 +.73 XLGrp 19.66 VulcanM 38.78 +.10 XcelEngy 26.41 WGL Hold 42.57 +.26 Xerox 7.97 Wabash 6.97 +.36 Xylem n 24.67 WalMart 58.27 +.32 Yamanag 14.20 Walgrn 34.13 +.02 YumBrnds 57.70 WalterEn 62.81 +.10 Zimmer 47.52 WsteMInc 31.00 +.11 ZweigTI 2.99 Market watch Dec. 16, 2011 Dow Jones -2.42 industrials 11,866.39 Nasdaq +14.32 composite 2,555.33 Standard & +3.91 Poor's 500 1,219.66 Russell +6.04 2000 722.05 NYSE diary Advanced: 1,860 Declined: 1,152 Unchanged: 111 Volume: 4.8 b Nasdaq diary Advanced: 1,406 Declined: 1,100 Unchanged: 151 Volume: 2.4 b AP I NEWYORKSTOCK EXCHANGE I *O 010) TS I PI_..j 'AM ff^ Jf.......... y ~ s *>ti y J ^ ?> .. ....... -<^ yy~rf..........^ Page A12 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17,2011 PINION "The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation." Henry David Thoreau, 1817-1862 CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE b ON THE COUNTY'S BEHALF Services of lobbyists can have impact The image of well-heeled lobbyists crafting legisla- tion to benefit big-money interests is cause to question port, so we can surmise that Port Citrus is of primary con- cern. In October, that same law one's faith in our representa- firm was retained by the tive democracy. county commis- The image of sion to provide lawmakers suck- THE ISSUE: eminent domain ing up to those County hiring services, as well. lobbyists, sponsor- lobbyist. While it's fair to ing their bills with scrutinize the knowledge that OUR OPINION: commission's ac- well-financed tions, it's clear backers can make For better or worse, that a majority of or break political that's how the game board members careers is equally is played. have confidence disturbing. in the Pennington, However, all who seek leg- Moore, Wilkinson, Bell and islative consideration for is- Dunbar firm, based in Talla- sues of concern have the right hassee, Tampa and Clearwater. to employ lobbyists includ- In a lobbying capacity, the ing Citrus County government, commission is agreeable to a Organizations, institutions base fee of $15,000 for a five- and industries ranging from month arrangement with that animal rights and environmen- law firm. Commissioner Winn tal groups to governmental and Webb was the sole commis- educational interests employ sioner to object, based on the lobbyists to bird-dog legislation cost during a tough economy. beneficial to their cause. That While it's true that Citrus is to say, lobbying is not the ex- County's state senators and clusive franchise of big busi- representative are elected to ness. represent the county's inter- The Citrus County Commis- ests in the Capitol; and it's true sion recently made the deci- that the county is a member of sion to hire a lobbyist to various organizations that have represent its interests during lobbyists, as well, the volume of the upcoming session of the legislative proposals is stagger- Florida Legislature. Issues ing. Lobbyists are the experts specified by commissioners in- who cut to the core in pursuit clude seaport legislation and of their clients' interests. transportation corridors. Given Time will tell if employing a the commission's interest in lobbyist for the upcoming leg- developing Port Citrus and islative session will pay off for seeing the Suncoast Parkway the commission. However, Cit- extended through the county, rus County is far from alone. that should come as little sur- Dozens of Florida municipali- prise. ties will have lobbyists working Other areas commissioners the halls in Tallahassee. voiced interest in having a lob- Agree or disagree with the byist focus on are health, agri- commission's stance on certain culture, tourism and code issues, there's little disputing regulations. The law firm that that lobbyists can be the most has expressed interest in con- effective means to an end. tracting out the lobbying serv- Given that, the county com- ice is the same law firm that mission is -so to speak- put- initially approached the ting its money where its mouth county about establishing a is. T he United Way of Citrus County is trying to help feed the hungry this year and you can help. If each family in Citrus County con- tributed $30 (or more), the fundraising organization could meet its goal for 2012. The United Way just gave $50,000 to match a private $50,000 grant to push for the completion of the food pantry in Homosassa Springs. Once completed, this pantry will pro- vide food supplies to 51 nonprofit and church groups in our community that feed the hungry. Do your part and mail a contribution to The United Way, c/o Gerry Mulligan, The Chronicle, 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429. Thanks for your help. Zenith of the day In reading my Chronicle this morning on Thursday, Dec. 8, vOUN the first paragraph in | the Three Sisters arti- lel cle, "... the ecotourism at draw may have reached its nadir." Now I've been around a little bit and I hadn't heard the word "nadir" before. CAL I appreciate you, that 563-05. you had me learn that word, which means it's lowest point. Thanks a lot for the daily education. II I 7 Gerry Mulligan Increase speed limit I definitely think that they D should increase the speed limit on the Suncoast Parkway. I take F it almost every weekend and I do between 70 and 75 mph. Last week I got stopped over by a trooper for doing 75 mph in a 70 mph zone. I explained to him that when I do 70, people come up 1 behind me with gestures and blink their lights, that I'm driving Q too slow even in the slow lane. Please, there has to be some- thing done about it. Please in- crease the speed limit on the Suncoast. Mitt the Heartless, part two CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE EDITORIAL BOARD Gerry Mulligan................... .................. publisher Charlie Brennan ..................... ................. editor Mike Arnold ........... .... .............. HR director Sandra Frederick..........................managing editor J J Curt Ebitz.................. ................. citizen member Founded Mac Harris .. .............. .......... citizen member iy Albert M. Williamson Rebecca Martin .......... ................ guest member "You may differ with my choice, but not my right to choose." David S. Arthurs publisher emeritus L L hey basically cut |our throats." Those are the words of a woman from Marion, Ind., who worked for SCM, an office supply company After SCM was bought in the early '90s byAmpad, a firm controlled by Mitt Romney and his partners at Bain Capital, all 350 work- ers were laid off. Some , then were offered their jobs back, but at lower wages and with- out benefits. The former SCM worker appeared in a TV commercial run by * Ted Kennedy in 1994, when he was defend- Cokie ing his U.S. Senate Steven] seat in Massachusetts OTH against a strong chal- VOl lenge from Romney And one thing is cer- tain in a political season marked by uncommon uncertainty she will return to the political spot- light if Romney wins the Repub- lican nomination to face President Obama next fall. In fact, viewers might not have to wait that long. After Romney suggested this week that Newt Gingrich return the money he made advising Freddie Mac, the federal housing agency, Gingrich retorted that he'd consider such a move if Romney returned his earnings from "bankrupting companies and laying off employees." As the Republican race speeds up, Romney's foes are increas- ingly tempted to go negative. And as Newt's comment indicates, Mitt the Heartless, Part Two, could already be in the works. During last Saturday's debate, Gingrich derided Romney's fre- quent boast that he is not a career politician. "Let's be candid," snapped the former House speaker "The only reason you UNIVERSAL UCLtCk o0t didn't become a career politician is because you lost to Teddy Kennedy in 1994." Romney was leading that race 17 years ago well into the fall, but one reason he lost was a series of devastating ads featuring work- ers from SCM. We recently ob- tained a copy of those -."a commercials, and make no mistake: They could be a huge prob- lem for Romney this time around as well. One worker says about the lost jobs: "I'd like to say to the work- ers of Massachusetts, if you think it can't hap- and pen to you, think again. Roberts Because we thought it IER couldn't happen here, CES either" Another adds: "We had no rights any- more." Even more damaging are the workers who compare their dis- tressed financial situations to Romney's vast wealth. "He's cut our wages to put money into his pocket," was a typical comment. Count on Obama (or Gingrich, for that matter) to repeat some ver- sion of the question Kennedy posed in his ads: "Whose side is he on?" The accusations of the Marion workers could get a strong boost from two factors: jobless rates are even higher today than they were in 1994, and Romney is already suffering from a campaign narra- tive that brands him as a man of wealth and privilege who does not have a clue about the prob- lems of ordinary folks. For example, during an edito- rial board session in Nevada last October, Romney advised: "Don't try to stop the foreclosure process. Let it run its course and hit bottom." Democrats have al- ready featured that unfortunate comment in an ad they test-mar- _ LETTERS to the Editor Dogs on duty I believe it was Will Rogers who said: "Everyone is igno- rant, only on different subjects." I am referring to the person who complained about the lap dog in a restaurant. He said it was neither a service nor a guide dog. How would he know? The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) does not require either an- imal to display its service tag, ac- cording to ADA title II 28 CFR part 35 sec E For the record, paragraph 35.136 C through H also applies to service miniature horses. I'm sure the restaurant per- sonnel are aware of the dog's status, or they could be in viola- tion of state and county health laws. Since this person was so indignant, he could have asked the dog's handler/companion if he had a service dog on his lap. On the other hand, anyone who misrepresents having a service animal is in violation of a state statute that carries up to six months in jail or a $500 fine, or both. In closing, I suggest this per- son get used to seeing more serv- ice dogs around town, because veterans returning from war zones with post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are prescribed such animals by their mental OPINIONS INVITED The opinions expressed in Chroni- cle editorials are the opinions of the newspaper's editorial board. Viewpoints depicted in political cartoons, columns or letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the editorial board. Groups or individuals are invited to express their opinions in a let- ter to the editor. Persons wishing to address the editorial board, which meets weekly, should call Charlie Brennan at 352 563-5660. All letters must be signed and in- clude a phone number and home- town, including letters sent via email. Names and hometowns will be printed; phone numbers will not be published or given out. We reserve the right to edit let- ters for length, libel, fairness and good taste. Letters must be no longer than 350 words, and writers will be limited to three letters per month. SEND LETTERS TO: The Editor, 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429. Or, fax to 352-563-3280, or email to letters@chronicleonline.com. health providers, not to mention those with physical disabilities. Project Pet Service Animal Trainers Homosassa Springs Double taxation The letter to the editor Mon- day, Dec. 12, from Claude Strass, is spot on about underfunding Social Security. Not making in- surance payments while flood waters are rising seems totally imprudent and foolhardy So why skip Social Security funding in the face of pending insolvency? Where is the vigilant press on this matter? Talk of funding the payroll tax holiday with a so- called millionaire surtax makes no plan for replacing Social Se- curity funding, but would only add tax dollars to the Obama "stash," where presumably it will go to pay for more Democratic gimmicks to buy voter's votes. And then, it's going be OK for the payroll tax holiday recipients to double dip by eventually re- ceiving Social Security benefits based on earnings not taxed? How can I do that with my insurance? Current Social Security re- tirees paid in full all of the pay- roll tax on earnings that they also paid income tax on. That is, the same dollar was taxed both as in- come and payroll. Then Social Security retirees are again in- come taxed on up to 85 percent of benefits from lifetime earn- ings that were already taxed. Enough, already How about a holiday from double-income tax- ation of retiree's income? William Henley Inglis THE CHRONICLE invites you to call "Sound Off" with your opinions about any subject. You do not need to leave your name, and have less than a minute to record. COMMENTS will be edited for length, libel, personal or political attacks and good taste. Editors will cut libelous material. OPINIONS expressed are purely those of the callers. keted recently in Arizona with the tagline: "Mitt Romney's mes- sage to Arizona? You're on your own." Three years ago, Romney wrote an op-ed article in The New York Times opposing gov- ernment help to the auto industry and counseled, "Let Detroit go bankrupt." Team Obama pre- saged another line of attack against Mitt the Heartless when a spokesman declared: "If Mitt Romney were president, there would not be an American auto industry Industry experts have been clear: Our auto companies would have faced liquidation if Mitt Romney had his way" And then there was Romney's offer to bet Rick Perry $10,000 over a dispute concerning Mitt's health-care policy That now looks like a big mistake. The Obama campaign has already drawn up a fake $10,000 bill fea- turing Romney's picture and the slogan, "In Corporations We Trust." Team Romney, of course, will argue that business is business, that efficiency is the key to pros- perity, that sometimes you have to cut certain jobs and salaries to save others. And that argument would probably play well at the Harvard Business School, where Romney learned his profession, or in the world of leveraged buy- outs, where he made his money But an election is not a busi- ness school seminar, and in poli- tics, a balance sheet is not the only measure of success. Voters want a candidate who has a heart as well as a brain; they are look- ing for compassion, not just cal- culation. And that's why Romney has to fear the workers of Marion. --*--A Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail. com. ( 8 lI ! SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 A13 Christmas tree giveaway brings smiles to Beverly Hills DAVE SIGLER/Chronicle Gloria Hembree, left, Dianne Kaufmann, right, and Bob Hembree, lower left, decorate one of the 5- to 6-foot spruces donated by Lowes of Inverness. FRS B R I S O I I Ig - TO ENTER: Enter online @ chronicleonline.com click on "Features", enter contest or fill out this form, mail or bring to 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429 Anytime before Noon on December 19. A Beautiful Holiday Centerpiece from The Flower Basket (352) 726-9666 2600 Hwy 44 W., Inverness www.flowerbasket-fl .com Name.................................................... Phone................................................. Email................................................... Citrus Publishing employees and their families are not eligible. Decorated trees wil go to families DAVE SIGLER Chronicle Local residents, business- people and members of civic organizations got in the Christmas spirit Friday by decorating Christmas trees for families in need. The 5- to 6-foot tall spruces were donated by Lowes of In- verness to the Beverly Hills Christmas Tree Contest and Giveaway The Inverness Lowes store donated 55 trees to the event to provide fully decorated Christmas trees for families who could not af- ford one. Local families, businesses and civic organi- zations adopted trees to dec- orate for the event The trees were judged by County Com- missioners Winn Webb, Joe Meek and Kathy Pearson. "Best Tree" awards were presented in each of the cat- egories. On Monday morning, Lowes will pick up the fully- decorated trees and deliver to the families suggested by the Family Resource Center, Citrus United Basket, Daystar and the We Care Baskets. The decorated trees will be on display Saturday and Sunday and can be viewed lit from 5:30 to 11:00 p.m. at the Beverly Hills Community Park. The Bev- erly Hills Woodsmen Guild built the stands for the Christmas trees, according to Andy Smith, recreation su- pervisor for Citrus County. DUNNELLON RV SHOIw Dec. 12-19 ~ 9am ? .. Across from Walmart .. . 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I Household Hazardous Waste Materials Pesticides / Herbicides Latex Paint Pool chemicals Oil Base Paint I Aerosols Household cleaners Paint Remover Solvents / degreasers S* Paint Thinner Fireworks / Flares Stale gasoline *Ammunition SATURDAY DROP OFF SCHEDULE JAN. 14, APR. 21, JUL. 28 & OCT. 27, 9AM 1PM For more information call Citrus County Solid Waste Management (352) 527-7670 ?------------------- AMERICA AMiERICA J OJUT OF 'OAT WITH MEDICARE & SUPPLEMENT IF YOU QUALIFY * Rentals & Repairs Stair, Chair & Auto Lift Take Apart Scooter Go-Go Elite Traveller ,899 OoG FINANCING sily 352- www.mrsmobilitv.com lorida Ave. (Hwy. 41) ss from the airport -637-6088 MInE -in- -rn Cwr4 ,f^Mo6ility 11163 Spring Hill Drive, Spring Hill East of Mariner Blvd. 352-666-3006 F XCEPYIONs SER WI7H Q 1Ts[^'UAI7V g b r? u U C;N HEAR! XHear Cfe ar Hearing Centers A divisi o Mrs. Nobitfity 352-340-5931 Financing Available! FREIE I I LOWEST PRICES IN II fRlInA PIIAIANIiTFni 4 V ,l,.I nVIl nnv vnnUnInl nmnmI n 4-Year Warranty I- .-------.----------, with the Purchase of Hearing Ai dsiFE E- HEARING NOW ACCEPTING MEDICAID CONSULTATION N L---AS- I _ CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE LOCAL Cr~ CITRUS^ COUNTY-r Sl RON _I C IT Swww.chronicleonline.com Says Thank You to our faithful subscribers ASK USABO1 U*T PY ! ----------- - ;a NATION & WORLD CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE NationBRIEF Bleak financial news flows from Europe Freebie Debt deal so far hasn 't delivered expected crisis containment Associated Press Zack Patrick, 36, a med- ical marijuana patient, dis- plays the free gram of marijuana he received from the Magnolia Wellness medical marijuana dispen- sary Friday, its last day of business, in Orangevale, Calif. As a going-away pres- ent, the alternative care dispensary gave each cus- tomer a free gram of high- quality pot. Magnolia Wellness is among dozens of dispensaries that are closing since California's four U.S. attorneys an- nounced in October that they are cracking down on marijuana cultivation and retail sales. World BRIEFS Clash Associated Press Egyptian army soldiers ar- rest a woman protester wearing the Niqab during clashes Friday near Cairo's downtown Tahrir Square. Activists say the clashes began after soldiers se- verely beat a young man who was part of a sit-in out- side the Cabinet building. Report child sexu THE HAGUE, -As many as 2 dren endured se Dutch Catholic ii over the past 65 church officials f quately address victims, accordir awaited investing released Friday. The findings d of the most wide abuse yet linked Roman Catholic which has been years over abus in Europe, the U where. Based or 34,000 people, t timated that 1 in children suffered of sexual abuse that rose to 1 in dren who spent youth in an instit a boarding scho dren's home, wh Catholic or not. "Sexual abuse said bluntly, "occ Dutch society." The findings p archbishop of Ut Eijk, to apologize on behalf of the church, saying t[ us with shame a UN unfr assets of UNITED NAT U.N. Security Cc cided to unfreez of two Libyan ba been under the Moammar Gadh the way for the r than $40 billion I new government country. claims ial abuse , Netherlands 20,000 chil- xual abuse at institutions years, and ailed to ade- it or help the ig to a long- ative report detailed some spread I to the Church, under fire for e allegations Associated Press DUBLIN Alarming fi- nancial news flowed out of Europe in a torrent Friday, just a week after the EU leaders struck a deal they thought would contain the continent's debt crisis. The bombardment shred- ded hopes of a lasting solu- tion to the turmoil that is endangering the euro the currency used by 17 Euro- pean nations and threat- ening the entire global economy In quick succession: The Fitch Ratings agency announced it was considering further cuts to the credit scores of six euro- zone nations heavy- weights Italy and Spain, as well as Belgium, Cyprus, Ire- land and Slovenia. It said all six could face downgrades of one or two notches. Ireland's economy shrunk again much deeper than had been expected, with its third-quarter gross domestic product falling 1.9 percent. Ireland is one of three eurozone nations kept solvent only by an interna- tional bailout. Bankers and hedge funds were balking in talks about forgiving 50 percent of Greece's massive debts, a key issue in the debate over Greece's second rescue bailout. The red ink in Spain's regional governments surged 22 percent in the last year, endangering the cen- tral government's efforts to cut overall Spanish debt. France, the second- largest eurozone economy after Germany, warned that it faced at least a temporary recession next year. The euro hovered Fri- day just above $1.30, a cent higher than its 11-month low. On the positive side, Fitch said France should keep its top AAA credit rating even though the country's debt load is projected to rise through 2014. Italian law- makers overwhelmingly passed Premier Mario Monti's new austerity pack- age in a confidence vote, even though many still ob- jected to its pension reforms. French officials and in- vestors had feared that France could get down- graded, which would have immediate repercussions for the entire eurozone. France and Germany's AAA credit ratings underpin the rating for the eurozone's bailout fund. European Union leaders confirmed Friday they have distributed the text of their proposed new budget-stabil- ity treaty, a pact designed to deter runaway deficits and supposed to become EU law by March. But as growth prospects fade across the continent, governments are facing the likelihood that Europe's debt crisis will prove longer and tougher to overcome than even their most recently revised forecasts. Until this week, EU lead- ers held up Ireland as the model for how a debt-struck nation should behave de- fying economic gravity by si- multaneously growing its economy while sucking bil- lions out of that same econ- omy in Europe's longest austerity drive. But on Friday, Ireland an- nounced its third-quarter gross domestic product fell 1.9 percent, its national product 2.2 percent Econo- mists had expected only an 0.5 percent fall for GDP and none at all for GNP The lat- ter figure is considered a better measure of Ireland's economic vitality because it excludes the largely ex- ported profits of about 600 American companies based in the country Ireland has been cutting spending and hiking taxes since late 2008 and has plans to keep doing so through 2015. Next year's target is $2.9 billion in cuts and $2.1 billion in extra charges, including a hike in national sales tax to 23 per- cent and introduction of a new $131 tax on every property But the country's finances this year are seriously out of whack: It is spending $74.5 billion, including $13 bil- lion to keep its five nation- alized banks afloat, but collecting just $44 billion in taxes. SEC charges ex-Fannie, Freddie CEOs with fraud Associated Press WASHINGTON The Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday brought civil fraud charges against six former top exec- utives at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, saying they misled investors about risky subprime loans the mort- gage giants held when the housing bubble burst Those charged include the agencies' two former CEOs, Fannie's Daniel Mudd and Freddie's Richard Syron. They are the highest-profile individuals to be charged in connection with the 2008 fi- nancial crisis. The federal government has faced criticism for not bringing charges against top executives who may have contributed to the worst fi- nancial meltdown since the Great Depression. Mudd, 53, and Syron, 68, led the mortgage giants in 2007, when home prices began to collapse. The four other top executives also worked for the companies during that time. The lawsuit was filed in federal court in New York City. "Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac executives told the world that their subprime exposure was substantially smaller than it really was," said Robert Khuzami, SEC's enforcement director "These material misstate- ments occurred during a time of acute investor inter- est in financial institutions' exposure to subprime loans, and misled the market about the amount of risk." Fannie and Freddie both entered into agreements with the government on Fri- day, accepting responsibility for its conduct without ad- mitting or denying the charges. The government- controlled companies also agreed to cooperate with the SEC on the cases against the former executives. The Justice Department has opened up probes into Fannie and Freddie but has not charged anyone with a crime. In a statement re- leased through his attorney, Mudd said the lawsuit "should never have been brought" and said the gov- ernment reviewed and ap- proved all of the company's financial disclosures. "Every piece of material data about loans held by Fannie Mae was known to the United States govern- ment to the investing pub- lic," Mudd said. Russian team trying to top K2- in winter Associated Press ISLAMABAD Reaching the summit of K2 in summer is one of mountaineering's most deadly and difficult challenges. Now, a team of Rus- sians is attempting what no other has yet achieved - scaling the world's sec- ond highest peak in winter. The 15 climbers will endure temperatures plunging more than 50 below zero and winds of up to 40 miles per hour as they inch up the stunning giant pyramid that strad- dles Pakistan and China. The assault is expected to take 2 1/2 months. "This is only possible for a Russian team," said Victor Kozlov, the affable leader of the expedition, whose members put up a new route on K2 in 2007. "God willing, we can make it," he said this week in the Pakistani capital, ahead of his jour- ney to the Karakoram Associated Press Victor Koslov, the leader of the Russian expedition to K2, gestures Wednesday dur- ing an interview in Islamabad, Pakistan. Summiting K2 in summer is one of moun- taineering's most deadly and difficult challenges. Now, a team of Russians is attempting what no other has yet achieved: Scaling the peak in winter. range in the far north of the country Winter ascents of the world's 14 highest moun- tains are some of the most prized achievements left in climbing. The "eight-thou- sanders," as they're known since they all top 8,000 meters (five miles), were all conquered in summertime long ago. Amid a crowded field where each year hun- dreds pay around $80,000 to be guided up Everest, winter ascents can help a climber stand out and get his or her name in the history books. Winter climbers have been summiting the 14 one by one the past decades starting with Everest but peaks of the Karakorum remained unconquered. The range is further north than the Himalayas, where Ever- est is located, and thus sees harsher winters. K2 is the northernmost peak of the lot. Teams attempted win- ter ascents in the Karako- rum 16 times in recent years. The first success came this year, when a three-member team, in- cluding American Cory Richards summitted Gasherbrum II. That left only four peaks, three of them in the Karakorum and one nearby in the Himalayas. "If they make it up K2 in winter, it will be huge," said Billi Bierling, a mountaineering journal- ist with three "eight thou- sanders" to her name, including Everest. Congress flips dimmer switch on light bulb law Associated Press J.S. and else- WASHINGTON Republicans in n a survey of Congress are flipping the dimmer the report es- switch on a law that sets new energy- 10 Dutch savings standards for light bulbs. some form They've reached a deal to delay - a figure until October enforcement of stan- 5 among chil- dards that some fear will bring about part of their the end of old-style, 100-watt bulbs. ution such as GOP lawmakers said they're trying to ol or chil- head off more government interfer- hether ence in people's lives. But environmentalists and the light Sof minority bulb industry say the move is not too Sof minors," it bright. curs widely in Language postponing enforcement of the light bulb law it was set to promptedd the take effect Jan. 1 -was included in a trecht, Wim massive spending bill that funds the e to victims government through September. The Dutch House passed the measure on Friday, he report "fills with approval expected Saturday in and sorrow." the Senate. breezes Rep. Fred Upton, chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Com- 2 banks mittee, said the light bulb delay shows IONS The Congress is listening to the American council has de- people. e the assets "We heard the message loud and inks that had clear," said Upton, R-Mich. "Ameri- control of cans don't want government stan- afi, clearing dards determining how they light er their homes." eturn of more Upton said he was not opposed to to help the the more efficient- and expensive- t rebuild the curlicue fluorescents that have be- come increasingly familiar in recent -From wire reports years. But he said government should Associated Press General Electric's 9-watt Energy Smart LED light bulbs are tested Oct. 21 in an oven at the lighting group's Nela Park headquarters in East Cleveland, Ohio. Republicans in Congress are hit- ting the dimmer switch on a law that has angered Americans who love their traditional light bulbs. not penalize those who prefer tradi- tional, incandescent bulbs. "New lighting options are great news for the public, but the lesson is that markets and consumer demand are the best drivers of innovation and new choices," Upton said. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said the move would have little practical consequence, since it does not affect a 2007 law that requires manufacturers to produce or import more efficient bulbs. The five largest light bulb manufacturers have already switched to making and selling the more efficient bulbs, Bingaman said, so the enforcement delay only serves to confuse the public. "Blocking funds to enforce mini- mum standards works against our na- tion getting the full benefits of energy efficiency," said Bingaman, D-N.M., a key sponsor of the 2007 law. A group representing light bulb man- ufacturers spoke out against the delay, which applies only to 100-watt bulbs. Tighter standards for 75-watt bulbs take effect in 2013, and lower wattage bulbs must be more efficient by 2014. "American manufacturers have in- vested millions of dollars in energy- efficient light bulbs," said Joseph Higbee, a spokesman for the National Electric Manufacturers Association, which represents 95 percent of U.S. light bulb makers. Delaying enforcement of the stan- dards "undermines those invest- ments and creates regulatory uncertainty and consumer confu- sion," he said, adding that a lack of federal enforcement "allows bad ac- tors to sell non-compliant products" to consumers who may be unable to tell the difference between an energy- efficient bulb and one that isn't. The new law blocks the Energy De- partment from enforcing efficiency standards, but it does not prevent states from enforcing their own standards. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, called the light-bulb provision "an early Christ- mas present for all Americans" and said it strikes a blow against expensive fluorescents that he said are not as re- liable as the old-style incandescents. Long, cold climb SPORTS Dr. Ron Joseph provides another timely column./B2 CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE 0 Baseball, golf/B2 0 NHL/B3 0 College basketball/B3 0 Scoreboard/B4 SSports briefs/B4 0 Football/B5 0 Entertainment/B6 Panthers overtaken by Wolf Pack, 70-63 Lecanto drops 1st district contest at home to West Port SEAN ARNOLD Correspondent LECANTO West Port didn't bring any holiday cheer to the Lecanto gym Friday. Instead, it brought answers to the Panthers' defensive riddle. The Wolf Pack captured a 37-25 lead before the break and main- tained at least a 6-point advan- tage throughout most of the second half as they handed Lecanto its first district loss with a 70-63 victory The Panthers made four 3- pointers in the fourth period, in- cluding two by junior guard Michael Makros (11 points), but failed to put together consecutive baskets in the final 12 minutes of play "West Port got after it de- fensively and they kind of took it to us," Pan- thers coach Eddie Buckley said. "We did- n't do a good job of counterpunching like AW we should." Midway into the third, it looked like Lecanto was on its way to erasing its 12-point half- time deficit after a pair of back- to-back scores by junior forward Robert Vega, a dunk by guard Skylar Summers (8 points) off a breakaway steal and a turn- around jumper in the paint by senior forward Clayton Roessler (16 points) narrowed the margin to four points with four minutes remaining in the quarter But West Port accounted for nine of the ensuing 12 field goals in the period, which culminated in a buzzer-beating steal | and dunk by Wolf Pack junior guard Chris Jackson that put his team ahead, 53-43, going into the fourth. Jackson led the game with 18 points. West Port junior guard Marvin Wilker- son drained three of his squad's five 3s for a 16-point perform- ance. "We got out of the press a little bit and played a little 2-3 (zone) and got it to about a 6-point game after Skylar's dunk," Buckley Cold shooting prevents CR from victory MICHAEL MAKSYMICZ Correspondent CRYSTAL RIVER The Crystal River Pirates boys bas- ketball team started the game in sync. Within the first three minutes, the Pirates had built a 7-0 lead. Shortly after that point in the game, the visiting Dunnellon Tigers came to life and finished strong for 44-39 win over the Pirates 44-39. Crystal River is now 4-6 over- all and 1-3 in District 5A-7 while Dunnellon improved to 3-7 and 1-3. Both teams shot poorly, aver- aging well below 50 percent. The lead bounced back and forth in a contest it appeared neither team wanted to take control of. At halftime the Pi- rates trailed the Tigers 18-17. Again, foul shooting was a key factor with the Pirates not showing a good presence at the line. Crystal River sophomore guard Ty Reynolds, the Pirates' sharpshooter, hit three 3-point- ers for the evening and was high man with a total of 13 points. Sam Franklin didn't have his sharpest game of the season but managed to add 6 points for the evening. The Pirates' Will Cleveland See Page B3 Page B4 Citrus strong all along Four second-half goals give 'Canes victory over CR JOE KORNECKI III Correspondent INVERNESS A pair of qual- ity Citrus County county girls soc- cer teams went head-to-head on Breast Cancer Awareness night on Friday night as Citrus (10-2) scored four second-half goals to defeat county rival Crystal River Pirates 4-0. "In the first half, we saw some things really happen, but couldn't put it together, and the game stalled," Citrus head coach Steve Ekeli said. "In the intermission, we talked about being patient and not being hesitant. Once we got that first goal, our confidence went up after" SIn the first half, the 'Canes had chances to score on three corner For more kicks, but they photos, click couldn't put it in on this story at the net A Payton www.chronicle Wells long-range online.com. blast hit the top of the goal in the 21st minute. Crystal River (10-3-1) senior goalkeeper Minnah Bara- jas had six of her 8 saves in the first half to keep the score at 0-0 going into the intermission. In the second half, the 'Canes found a spark when sophomore midfielder Erin Cagwin scored in the 42nd minute for a 1-0 lead. Citrus would strike again two minutes later when senior mid- fielder Kylie Fagan scored on a header for a 2-0 'Canes advantage. Junior forward Deycasha Miller scored the next two goals in the 52nd and 70th minute to round out he scoring for the night as they went on to a 4-0 victory Miller now has 28 goals on the year. The Pirates, at times, got into the 'Canes end of the field, but could- n't get much pressure on Citrus junior goalkeeper Victoria Ekeli. The Pirates only had two quality chances throughout the match. "Citrus was well-organized and when an organized team plays a disorganized team, that's what happens, and we've go to pull to- gether," Crystal River head coach Bill Reyes said. On Jan. 4, the Pirates will travel to West Port and Citrus will host another county rival Lecanto when the season resumes after the holiday break. Citrus High School's Rachel Albrecht tries to control a corner kick while Crystal plays close defense on her during the first half Friday at Citrus High School. Lady Panthers play JAMES BLEVINS Correspondent LECANTO The Lecanto Lady Panthers soccer team met up with the Vanguard Knights Friday night and, despite several opportunities on net, were unable to convert the effort into a win. Forcing a 0-0 draw against the Knights, the Pan- thers (9-3-2) still lead District 4A-4 as the top seed, DAVE SIGLER/Chronicle River's Casidy Newcomer Vanguard to 0-0 tie having finished all of their district games this sea- son with a current record of 7-1-2. "We played really aggressive the second half," Lecanto head coach Roselle Lattin said. "We kind of maintained possession. Unfortunately, we weren't able to find the back of the net. First-half action was mostly even between both Page B3 Citrus boys net last 5 goals in 6-3 win over Pirates STEVE MCGUNNIGLE Correspondent Sometimes, even in 80 min- utes of action, one single play makes all the difference. Up 2-1 early in the second half, Crystal River's Donnie De- wees lined up for a penalty shot. But Citrus goalkeeper Chris Malz was up to the task, dramat- ically diving low toward the left post for the save. Three minutes later, Ivan Espinoza tied the game on a free kick from just outside the box, and the Hurri- canes would go on to a resound- ing 6-3 victory over the host Pirates Friday night at Earl Bramlett Stadium. Citrus outscored Crystal River 5-1 in the final 32 minutes of the match, while outshooting the Pirates 22-11. A red card for Crystal River's Charles Moschello in the 53rd minute put the Citrus attack a man up the rest of the way, opening the field for more opportunities. But Malz's key save was the ig- niter for the momentum swing in Citrus' favor "They were supposed to go up 3-1, and I think that would've been a turning point," Citrus coach David Assumpcao said. "Chris Malz did the best he could on that play..he was a game-changer" Crystal River coach Bobby Verlato agreed. "That save was a great save by their keeper That save kicked the momentum back in their favor," Verlato said. The save came after Crystal River took a 2-1 advantage 48 seconds into the second half on a Dewees goal off an assist from John McAteer Espinoza's equal- izer was followed by an Austin Wilcoxon goal in the 57th minute, as Citrus' Skylar Frank took the ball from midfield up the middle to Josh Marsden right of the goal box. Marsden's crossing feed in front found a sliding Wilcoxon for the 3-2 lead. Dewees' second goal of the night would tie it up again, as- sisted by Jimmy Tully in the 64th minute. But Citrus' relentless pressure would eventually be See Page B3 Lady Hurricanes sweep away visiting Bears Garvin leads Citrus with 20points JUSTIN PLANTE Correspondent INVERNESS In a week filled with final exams and Christmas break prepara- tions, the Citrus High School girls basketball team found time to notch another big district win against Cen- tral High School, clobbering the Bears 70-22 on Friday night at Citrus High. The defense shined in the first quarter for the Lady 'Canes (11-0 overall, 5-0 Dis- trict 6A-6), allowing only one shot from the field, and lim- iting the Bears to just 5 points. Citrus' Elizabeth Lynch stayed true to her ball hawk form, as she accounted for 9 first half steals and 11 for the game. But rebounding hurt the Central the most, as Citrus cleaned up the boards and outrebounded the Bears 22-11 in the first half. Citrus' de- --- - fense gave ; way to an of- fensive out- burst in the second quarter. Led by Hurricanes Paige Garvin and Lindsay Connors, Citrus went on a 20-5 run to close out the first half. Garvin ended the first half with 10 points, before going on to finish with a game-high 20 points, while Connors fin- ished the game with 15, putting up 13 in ..--. the first half. S Citrus head coach Brian Lattin com- mented on his team's first-half play "It's a weird week you know," he said. "It's finals week and we had a couple of half days. We didn't come out like we know we could have in that first quarter And of course, give Central credit. We played them al- ready, so I'm sure they made adjustments just like we have. But I think we re- sponded well in the second quarter" The second half was more of the same from the Lady 'Canes, as they widened their lead behind excellent inside play and a stifling de- fense that only allowed two field goals in the entire sec- ond half. This marks Citrus' second win against Central, and an- other big district win for the Lady 'Canes. "At the end of the day, this is a district win," Lattin stated. "And it's always great to get district wins. We're playing at a good level right now, but like we say, we want to keep getting better and keep improving." Citrus takes some time off for the holidays, but gets right back to work as they prepare for the Holiday Tournament being held at Lecanto High School on Dec. 28 and 29. Reyes says he's eager to play with Ramirez Associated Press MIAMI New Miami Marlins shortstop Jose Reyes misspoke Friday talking about the teammate he bumped to third base, Hanley Ramirez. "I can't wait to play for, er, with Hanley," Reyes said. If Reyes played for Ramirez, there would be no change at short- stop. Instead, Ramirez is reluc- tantly giving up the position. Reyes signed a $106 million, six- year deal with Miami last week and said he hasn't heard from Ramirez since. There has been no phone call, text message or Christ- mas card from his pal and fellow Dominican. Meanwhile, speculation persists that Ramirez is unhappy about being supplanted at shortstop. "As soon as I have the opportu- nity, I'm going to talk to him, be- cause we are very good friends," Reyes said. "We're both here for one reason to win the World Se- ries. It doesn't matter where I'm going to play or where he's going to play" Reyes and another recent All- Star acquisition, closer Heath Bell, were in Miami for appearances at team retail outlets. Both said they expect big things from the Marlins after the team's recent $191 mil- lion spending spree, which also in- cluded the signing of All-Star left-hander Mark Buehrle. "If you see the lineup and the pieces we have, you have to think we can compete with anybody," Reyes said. The Marlins went 72-90 in 2011. But thanks to the free-agent sign- ings, the hiring of manager Ozzie Guillen and the move into a new ballpark, they're brimming with optimism. "We want to win now," Bell said. "The Marlins had talent last year and in years past. They didn't re- ally put up the numbers they wanted to. But you needed a few pieces to the puzzle. You get some- body like Buehrle and Jose, and hopefully I can finish games like I did in the past." Newly acquired Miami Marlins' Jose Reyes right, and Heath Bell arrive at a media availability conference Friday in Miami. Associated Press Lexi still up at Dubai Associated Press DUBAI, United Arab Emi- rates American teenager Lexi Thompson has a one- shot lead going into the final round of the Dubai Ladies Masters after making a birdie putt on the 18th for a 2-under 70 on Friday The 16-year-old Thomp- son, the youngest LPGA Tour winner, is 10 under for the tournament, one shot ahead of Sophie Gustafson (69) of Sweden. Thompson, who led by two shots going into the third round, bogeyed the 15th. Gustafson made three birdies on the back nine. But the American re- claimed the lead when she reached the green in two on the 18th and made the birdie putt. "I was pretty much like 'let's just hit it,"' Thompson said. "You've been hitting it pretty good, so you've just got to be confident." Lee-Anne Pace of South Africa (67) and Pernilla Lindberg of Sweden (68) are two shots back of Thompson in the season-ending Ladies European Tour tournament Michelle Wie (71) is a five shots off the pace at 5 under Thompson is looking to become the second young- ster winner on the Euro- pean Tour, just three months after she won her first LPGA event in Ala- bama to make history on that tour "I hit it pretty well. I just left a few putts out there," she said. "But you know, a lot of girls are in contention so it will be a great day out there. "I'm just going to try and make birdies throughout the whole day, play consis- tent. Pars, birdies, nothing can be worse than that." Thompson opened with a bogey when she hit a drive behind some trees and failed to make a 4-foot putt She got a shot back with a birdie on the third but could- n't pull away from the 38- year-old Gustafson, who closed within a shot with a birdie on six and then tied for the lead with a birdie on 13. Thompson retook the lead with a birdie on 14, only to fall back when she hit a bad drive on 15 and three-putted for her second bogey Tied coming down the 18th, the big-hitting Thompson unleashed a 3- wood, a la Tiger Woods, that cleared the water and r r Alexis Thompson reacts after she finishes on the 18th hole during the third round of Dubai Ladies Masters golf tournament on Friday in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. landed on the edge of the green. She just missed a 35- foot eagle putt but made a birdie. "Once I saw the drive, I was like 'all right, I probably can go for it' from there and it was 212 to the pin," she said. Looking for her first tour win of the year, the 14-time tour winner Gustafson said she was pleased with a round that included five birdies and two bogeys. She missed a 10-foot birdie putt on 18. "Started off a bit iffy but figured it out pretty quick and was solid from there," she said. "I mean, obviously Lexi is going to be hard to beat. But if I can keep play- ing well, then I think I have a good chance." It was another inconsis- tent day for Wie. She dropped a shot on the front nine before making all three of her birdies and a bogey on the back. Westwood follows 60 with 64 in Thailand BANGKOK Lee West- wood followed his career-best 12-under 60 with a 64 on Friday to take a commanding 11-stroke lead at the halfway stage of the Thailand Golf Championship. The Englishman had eight birdies in his second straight bogey-free round at Amata Spring Country Club to reach 20 under overall. Westwood had 10 birdies and an eagle in the first round Thursday. "Arguably a better round this morning than yesterday in windy conditions!" Westwood tweeted. "64 to add to yester- day's 60. For sure the best I've ever played. -20." Masters champion Charl Schwartzel of South Africa had a 66 on Friday and was tied for second at 9 under with Ameri- can Michael Thompson, who also shot a 66. John Daly followed his open- ing-round 65 with a 73 to slip to fourth at 6 under, 14 shots adrift of Westwood. Ian Poulter leads Australian Masters MELBOURNE, Australia - England's lan Poulter birdied the final two holes for a 3-under 68 and a two-stroke lead Friday after the second round of the Australian Masters. Poulter, also the first-round leader, had a 9-under 133 total at Victoria Golf Club. Australia's Matthew Giles was second after a 68. Top-ranked Luke Donald was Bonds sentenced for obstruction Formerplayer gets 30-day home sentence Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO - Eight years of being inves- tigated for steroid allega- tions ended for home run king Barry Bonds on Fri- day with a 30-day sentence to be served at home. No more and maybe less. U.S. District Judge Susan Illston immediately delayed imposing the sentence while Bonds appeals his obstruc- tion of justice conviction. The former baseball star was found guilty in April, not of using steroids, but of misleading grand jurors. Even without prison time, the case has left its mark on the seven-time National League MVP His 762 career home runs and 73 homers in 2001 may forever be seen as tainted records, and his ticket to baseball's Hall of Fame is in doubt. Bonds declined to speak in court. Well-wishers hugged the 47-year-old in the hallway courtroom after the hearing was over, and a smattering of fans cheered him as he left the court- house. It was a marked de- parture from his initial court appearance four years ago, when guards had to clear a path for Bonds to get through dozens of on- lookers to his SUV "Whatever he did or did- n't do, we all lie," said Es- ther Picazo, a fan outside the courthouse. "We all make mistakes. But I don't think he should've gotten any kind of punishment at all." Bonds was sentenced to two years of probation, 250 hours of community serv- ice, a $4,000 fine and 30 days of home confinement. It will take time to deter- mine whether he serves any of it; his appellate spe- cialist, Dennis Riordan, es- timated it would take nearly a year and a half for the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rule. Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Parrella called the sentence a "slap on the wrist" and the fine "almost laughable" for a superstar athlete who made more than $192 million for play- ing baseball. Parrella had sought 15 months in prison and ar- gued that home confine- ment wasn't punishment enough "for a man with a 15,000-square-foot house with all the advantages." Bonds lives in a six-bed- room, 10-bath house with a gym and swimming pool. "The defendant basically lived a double life for decades before this," Par- rella said. He ripped Bonds not only over per- formance-enhancing drugs but over his personal life: "He had mistresses throughout his marriages." Parrella said Bonds made lots of money due in part to his use of perform- ance enhancers and that he has been "unrepentant" and "unapologetic" about it Illston said none of that had any bearing on Bonds' sentencing. She said she agreed with a probation department re- port that called Bonds' con- viction an "aberration" in his life. Associated Press Former baseball player Barry Bonds leaves federal court after being sentenced for obstructing justice in a govern- ment steroids investigation Friday in San Francisco. A fed- eral judge handed Bonds a sentence of 30 days of house arrest, two years of probation and 250 hours of community service, but delayed the sentence pending an appeal likely to take a year or more. Do Tebowing and medicine go hand in hand? Many years ago, while watching the "Wide World of Sports" opening segment, I noted that before diving into the ocean from their craggy perch, the cliff divers were all "crossing th emse lv e s." Baseball players after hitting home runs, quar- terbacks throw- ing touchdowns, (- receivers catch- ing TD passes and NASCAR drivers getting Dr. Ron out of their win- DOCT ning cars have pointed to the ORD sky. From the days of Reggie White, the 'Minister of De- fense' to Kurt Warner win- ning the Super Bowl after being a grocery store shelf stocker to Carl Lewis in the Olympics, God and faith have always been visible in sports. With Tim Tebow getting at- tention from Sports Illus- trated's Power of the Possible and the Associ- ated Press arti- cle, "Faith and Football," the question to ask is: what about faith and medicine? A few weeks ago, I wrote about 'Tebowing,' faith Joseph and attitude in OR'S working out and health, but how ERS does this really come to affect us when injured, ill or needing surgery not only involving sports injury but medicine and surgery A 1998 study noted that a semi-scientific study con- cluded that "doctors in- creasingly find introducing prayer helps calm patients and speeds recovery" Har- vard medical school in the mid-to-late 1990s held con- ferences on spirituality and medicine but at that time only three U.S. medical schools had courses dealing with the issue. Dr Arnold Ahnfeldt, a Brooke Army Medical Cen- ter orthopedic surgeon noted that "prayer remained as much of a professional tool to him as the scalpel." On the other hand, Ray- mond J. Lawrence, an Epis- copal priest and the director of pastoral care at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia Univer- sity Medical Center, noted that as a clergyman over several decades and work- ing closely with doctors that he has never met one who prays with patients, nor one who prescribes prayer. Where I come from in the Southwest and definitely here in the South, not only do doctors pray with and for their patients, but they en- courage their patients to pray Mr. Raymond is in New York City, where a high school athlete was sus- pended yesterday for 'Tebowing.' "More and more health professionals are taking se- riously the relationship be- tween spirituality and physical health notes," said Dr. Christina Puchalski, founder of the George Wash- ington University Institute for Spirituality and Health in 2001. The change in the way the medical community looks at spirituality and faith has changed considerably in the past decade. This is not to say there is a return to the physician as being the healer of ancient times. According to Harold Koenig, M.D., the co-direc- tor of the Duke Center for Spirituality and Health, there has been more re- search and discussion on the topic of religion and health in the last decade than was conducted from 1800 through the year 2000. These more recent grow- ing number of rigorous stud- ies showing that spirituality including prayer, medita- tion and attendance at reli- gious services, benefits health in ways that science can't fully explained. These studies also point out that regular worship and other spiritual acts appear to lengthen life expectancy, strengthen immunity, im- prove the body's response to stress and boost other meas- ures of physical health. So when it comes down to viewing sports and medi- cine from different perspec- tives, we can learn from athletes and sports, as Tim Tebow said "living your faith and being genuine is in everything you do and that's football, and that's life." Remember it is attitude that significantly helps shape and determine med- ical treatment outcomes and if this helps your atti- tude great. Have a very merry Christmas! Ron Joseph, M.D., a Hand and Orthopedic Specialist, can be reached at 352-212-5359 or via email at rbjhand@cox.net B2 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 SPORTS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE 1 rl M1 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE Donovan extends deal with UF Associated Press GAINESVILLE Florida coach Billy Dono- van has signed a three-year contract extension that should keep him in Gainesville through the 2015-16 season. Donovan agreed to the extension in October, adding to the six-year deal he signed in 2007 that pays him $3.5 million annually Donovan has led the Gators to two national ti- tles, three Final Four ap- pearances and 11 NCAA tournament berths in 15 seasons. His career record is 402-169, including 367- 149 at Florida. Donovan's base salary will be $220,000 from 2014- 17, plus nearly $2.7 million coming from an activities agreement that includes television and radio pro- grams/sponsorships, and basketball camps. His incentives include $50,000 for a Southeastern Conference regular-season title, $37,500 for making the NCAA tournament and $50,000 for a top-10 finish in the AP poll. He also has graduation incentives. Women's basketball No. 7 Miami 103, La.-Monroe 39 CHICAGO Shenise Johnson, Riquna Williams and Krystal Saunders each scored 16 points to lead No. 7 Miami past Louisiana Monroe 103-39 on Friday night. Morgan Stroman added 14 points and Michelle Woods had 13 for the Hurricanes in their 30th straight home win. Johnson scored eight points, including two 3-point- ers, during an opening 22-0 run by Miami (9-1), which was never threatened. The Warhawks broke the scoring drought on Larrie Williams' jumper 4:53 into the game, but Miami scored the next 11 points and took a 33-2 lead on Jessica Capers' jumper with 9:26 to go in the half. Williams scored 11 points to lead Louisiana Monroe (1-10). No. 23 DePaul 73, Arizona State 55 Freshman Brittany Hrynko scored a career-high 25 points to lead DePaul. Katherine Harry and Jas- mine Penny had 14 points apiece for the Blue Demons (10-2), who have won consec- utive games since their 84-61 loss to Tennessee. DePaul opened the game with a 9-0 run while Arizona State missed its first eight shots. Hrynko had 16 points in the first half as DePaul carried a 41-26 lead into the break. Janae Fulcher scored 16 points for the Sun Devils (7-2) and Kali Bennett added nine. Associated Press Florida coach Billy Donovan signed a three-year extension Friday to remain the head basketball coach of the Gator men for the foreseeable future. Panthers avoid Flames' heat Associated Press Florida Panthers defenseman Jason Garrison, left, and goalie Jose Theodore celebrate as the Panthers defeated the Cal- gary Flames 3-2 during a shootout Fridayin Sunrise. Associated Press SUNRISE Sean Bergenheim's scored Florida's two goals in regu- lation, and Stephen Weiss connected for the shootout winner as the Panthers beat the Calgary Flames 3-2 on Friday night. Jose Theodore stopped 24 shots for the Panthers, whose last 11 home games have been decided by one goal. Olli Jokinen and Rene Bourque scored for Calgary, and Leland Irving made 39 saves in his NHL debut, but the Flames dropped their third straight game. Irving, a 2006 first-round pick, was recalled from the minors on Dec. 5. Dmitry Kulikov also scored in the shootout for Florida, and Alex Tanguay scored for the Flames. Bergenheim's second goal made it 2-2 with 4:35 left in regulation. Shawn Matthias took a shot on net that was blocked by Irving, but Bergenheim wristed in the rebound. The Flames took a 2-1 lead on Bourque's power- play goal 3:55 into the third. Jokinen passed to Bourque, who was waiting at the right corner of the crease. His writer beat Theodore on the short side. Florida took a 1-0 lead on Bergenheim's first goal 6:57 in. Irving stopped Matthias' initial shot, and Bergen- heim was there to poke in the rebound. Calgary tied it at 10:00 when Jokinen backhanded a rebound of Curtis Glen- cross' shot from in front that Theodore couldn't control. The Flames had a 5-on-3 power play for 1:32 of the second, but couldn't take ad- vantage. NOTES: Florida RW Matt Bradley played in his 650th NHL game. ... Florida D Erik Gudbranson missed his second straight game be- cause of a lower body injury ... Jokinen has five goals and six assists in eight games ... Irving was 15-7 with a 2.30 goals-against average for AHL Abbotsford. Sabres 5, Maple Leafs 4 BUFFALO, N.Y. -Thomas Vanek had two goals and an assist, and Drew Stafford and Tyler Ennis both added a goal and assist to help lift the Buffalo Sabres to a 5-4 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Friday night. Andrej Sekera also scored, and Ryan Miller made 29 saves for the Sabres (16-12-3), who won for the third time in six games. Down by a goal midway through the second period, Buf- falo scored three straight times - including two power-play goals to take a 4-2 lead. Toronto committed five penal- ties in the second, and over the final 7:03 of the period the teams played 5-on-5 for just 6 seconds. Nikolai Kulemin scored on a penalty shot in the third period, Students suspended for 'Tebowing' Emulated QB tells kids to respect elders Associated Press GARDEN CITY, N.Y. - Two New York athletes have been suspended by school administrators for organizing several "kneel- downs" in tribute to NFL sensation Tim Tebow, who said Friday that while he appreciates their boldness, the students have to obey their elders. "I think if they had good intentions, then good for them for having the courage to do something different," the Denver Broncos quarterback said when told of the suspen- sions this week on New York's Long Island. The devout Christian, who has led his team to a 7- 1 record, often kneels in prayer after a success on the gridiron. He added: "You have to respect the position of au- PANTHERS Continued from Page B1 teams. A lot of back-and- forth soccer was played and dominated by strong defen- sive efforts with very few shots on goal. Lecanto defender Lauren Cole was strong all night, thority and people that God's put as authority over you, so that's part of it, and just finding the right place and the right time to do things is part of it, too." Riverhead High School administrators suspended 17-year-old twins Connor and Tyler Carroll this week after they organized sev- eral "Tebowing" tributes to the NFL star in their school hallway Connor Carroll said in a telephone interview on Fri- day afternoon that he and his friends -nearly 40 took part in the last of three demonstrations on Wednes- day merely wanted to pay tribute to Tebow as a "role model, leader and winner." He conceded that al- though kneeling for Tebow has a religious connotation, their intent was simply to honor a sports hero. Riverhead School Super- intendent Nancy Carney said in a statement that the students' actions created a potential safety hazard. "I think it's wonderful that our students look up to sports heroes such as Mr. keeping strict control of every ball to enter her zone. Lecanto goalkeeper Darah Nason was reliably strong with three saves and a string of strong kicks to midfield, keeping the Knights from get- ting too comfortable around the box. Panther midfielder Kayla Perry came out of the night with 7 shots on goal. Perry Tebow, but we can't allow students to create unsafe situations in school," Car- ney said in a statement. "Students cannot block hallways and prevent other students from getting to class." She said the Carroll 1 brothers, who play on the Riverhead football and I baseball teams, were disci- plined because of prior warnings about disruptions in the hallway Connor Car- roll said that he and his brother and others had been creating "human I walls" in the hallways about six weeks ago and conceded they were told to stop, but argued that the "Tebowing" 1 tribute was different School administrators did not see it that way "Two students who were spoken to previously did i not heed to the warning 1 given by administrators, and they were disciplined accordingly," Carney said. She added: "We hope that these students and all of our students continue to look up to the positive role mod- els in public life; we just en- courage them to do it in a I was a big part of the offensive efforts in the first half and maintained her presence throughout the rest of the game. Lecanto forward Kait- lyn Lemanowitz, stepping up from junior varsity, was also impressive in the first half with great ball-handling, put- ting pressure on the net The second half brought a more aggressive Panther of- responsible way" Tebow learned of the sus- pensions Friday when told of it by an AP reporter "I don't know the whole context, but I guess if they were told not to, then obvi- ously you have to respect them and wait until you get off property because you have to respect people who are in charge of you and obey the rules." The Tebow tempest has garnered the Carroll broth- ers unexpected attention, Connor Carroll said, noting he was interviewed live on ESPN's SportsCenter on Thursday night. "I really can't believe all this," he said. Connor served his sus- pension on Friday, sitting in a tiny room doing his schoolwork, he said. Tyler's in-school suspension will be served Monday When he got bored, Con- nor Carroll says, he ranked all the top professional sports teams and players as a mental exercise. Where did he rank Tebow? "He was in the Top 15," he said. fensive, with numerous at- tempts to score. Lecanto's Taylor Christian stepped up her efforts with a breakaway shot on goal and involvement in several key plays of prom- ise. Panther midfielder Chloe Benoist added 3 shots of her own but with nothing finding net The real standout player for Lecanto in the second half and Dion Phaneuf, Joffrey Lupul, and Mikhail Grabovski also scored for Toronto (16-12- 3), which has dropped three of four (1-2-1). Senators 6, Penguins 4 OTTAWA- Jason Spezza had two goals and two assists, and Jared Cowen also had four points to lead the Ottawa Sena- tors to a 6-4 win over the Pitts- burgh Penguins on Friday night. Daniel Alfredsson scored his 398th NHL goal and added two assists, and Erik Karlsson also had three points. Colin Greening scored 25 seconds into the second, and Zenon Konopka netted Ot- tawa's fifth goal of the period with 5.7 seconds left, increas- ing the Senators' lead to 5-3 just 4 seconds into a power play. Karlsson recorded his 100th point with his third assist of the period on Konopka's goal. Pittsburgh's Steve Sullivan had a goal and two assists as the teams combined for eight goals in the middle period after a scoreless first. Matt Niskanen and Evgeni Malkin scored power-play goals 1:07 apart to draw the Penguins even at 3. Chris Kunitz scored with 1:02 left in the third. Blackhawks 4, Ducks 1 CHICAGO Ray Emery stopped 24 shots, and Patrick Sharp and Marian Hossa each had a goal and an assist for the Chicago Blackhawks, who beat the Anaheim Ducks 4-1 on Fri- CR Continued from Page B1 had a rough night and fouled out in the fourth quarter "When you have 9-for-18 and 2-for-9 from the line at the end, you are now in the stretch and you have to GOALS Continued from Page BI too much for the Pirates playing a man down, as the Hurricanes scored three times in the final 12 minutes for the win. Killian McLean took a feed from Marsden while entering the box, booting the shot off a defender's hand and into the net for a 4-3 lead. Goals by Robert Cignarelli and another by McLean would insure the Citrus win. Assumpcao noted the sig- nificance of playing with a man advantage. "It just eases the ball flow on the field," Assumpcao said. "After that, there was- n't much that they were able to do to create in our end, and we were able to capital- was midfielder Brittany Put- ney, who had 3 shots on goal in a matter of a few minutes. Putney maintained a lot of control over many frontal at- tacks with little to show for it. "We wished we could have taken more shots," Lattin said. "Not make it such a tight game. (We had) strong de- fense...We were able to con- tain their strikers. The ball day night for their fourth straight win. Jamal Mayers and Dave Bol- land also scored for Chicago, which moved into a first-place tie with Minnesota in the West- ern Conference. The Black- hawks, 6-0-1 in their last seven, and the Wild both have 44 points. Emery lost a bid for his first shutout in nearly two years when Teemu Selanne scored with 1:47 left in the third period. Devils 6, Stars 3 NEWARK, N.J. Zach Parise made sure the night the New Jersey Devils honored for- mer captain Scott Niedermayer ended on a winning note by scoring a goal and setting up three others in a 6-3 victory over the Dallas Stars on Friday. David Clarkson, rookie Adam Henrique, Ilya Kovalchuk, Petr Sykora and Patrik Elias also scored as the Devils won their third straight and snapped the Stars' and rookie goaltender Richard Backman's three-game winning streak. Johan Hedberg finished with 33 saves for the Devils. Michael Ryder, Brendan Mor- row and Toby Petersen scored for the Pacific Division-leading Stars, who went 3-2 on a road trip that covered 6.500 miles. Niedermayer, who helped the Devils win the Stanley Cup in 1995, 2000 and 2003 while wearing No. 27, became the third Devils player to have his number retired. close that out," Pirates head coach Steve Feldman said. "When you hold a team to 44 points in a game, that should be good enough for us. "Offensive execution was poor tonight and the missed free throws killed us," Feld- man added. Crystal River's next game will be at Lecanto on Jan. 4. ize." Verlato concurred once again. "A team like that, they spread the field, they pass well," said Verlato. "It was a little tough to come back from." Crystal River's Jerry Crawford notched 10 saves in defeat, while the Malz/Alan Verone duo com- bined for seven saves for the Hurricanes. Citrus' balanced attack was highlighted by Wilcoxon and McLean (two goals each) and Marsden (three assists). Brothers Austin and Connor Killeen each notched assists for the Hur- ricanes as well. Crystal River will return from the Christmas break with an immediate chance for revenge, as the Pirates will travel to Citrus for a re- match on January 5. pretty much didn't go in our half. "It kind of all boils down to we weren't able to find the back of the net," Lattin con- tinued," and we didn't capi- talize on the opportunities we did have." Lecanto meets Lake Weir at home next week for the final game of the regular sea- son. SPORTS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 B3 B4 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 Bowl Glance All Times EST Saturday, Dec. 17 New Mexico Bowl At Albuquerque Wyoming (8-4) vs. Temple (8-4), 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Famous Idaho Potato Bowl At Boise, Idaho Utah State (7-5) vs. Ohio (9-4), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) New Orleans Bowl Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4) vs. San Diego State (8-4), 9 p.m. (ESPN) Tuesday, Dec.20 Beef 'O'Brady's Bowl At St. Petersburg, Fla. Marshall (6-6) vs. FlU (8-4), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Wednesday, Dec. 21 Poinsettia Bowl At San Diego TCU (10-2) vs. Louisiana Tech (8-4), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Thursday, Dec. 22 MAACO Bowl At Las Vegas Boise State (11-1) vs. Arizona State (6-6), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Saturday, Dec. 24 Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu Nevada (7-5) vs. Southern Mississippi (11-2), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Dec. 26 Independence Bowl At Shreveport, La. North Carolina (7-5) vs. Missouri (7-5), 5 p.m. (ESPN2) Tuesday, Dec.27 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl At Detroit Western Michigan (7-5) vs. Purdue (6-6), 4:30 p.m. (ESPN2) Belk Bowl At Charlotte, N.C. North Carolina State (7-5) vs. Louisville (7- 5), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Wednesday, Dec. 28 Military Bowl At Washington Air Force (7-5) vs. Toledo (8-4), 4:30 p.m. (ESPN) Holiday Bowl At San Diego Texas (7-5) vs. California (7-5), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Thursday, Dec. 29 Champs Sports Bowl At Orlando, Fla. Florida State (8-4) vs. Notre Dame (8-4), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Alamo Bowl At San Antonio Baylor (9-3) vs. Washington (7-5), 9 p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Dec. 30 Armed Forces Bowl At Dallas Tulsa (8-4) vs. BYU (9-3), Noon (ESPN) Pinstripe Bowl At Bronx, N.Y. Rutgers (8-4) vs. Iowa State (6-6), 3:30 p.m. (ESPN) Music City Bowl At Nashville, Tenn. Mississippi State (6-6) vs. Wake Forest (6-6), 6:40 p.m. (ESPN) Insight Bowl AtTempe, Ariz. Oklahoma (9-3) vs. Iowa (7-5), 10 p.m. (ESPN) Saturday, Dec. 31 Meineke Car Care Bowl At Houston Texas A&M (6-6) vs. Northwestern (6-6), Noon (ESPN) Sun Bowl At El Paso,Texas Georgia Tech (8-4) vs. Utah (7-5), 2 p.m. (CBS) Liberty Bowl At Memphis, Tenn. Vanderbilt (6-6) vs. Cincinnati (9-3), 3:30 p.m. (ESPN) Fight Hunger Bowl At San Francisco UCLA (6-7) vs. Illinois (6-6), (ESPN) 3:30 p.m. Chick-fil-A Bowl At Atlanta Virginia (8-4) vs. Auburn (7-5), 7:30 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Jan. 2 TicketCity Bowl At Dallas Penn State (9-3) vs. Houston (12-1), Noon (ESPNU) Capital One Bowl At Orlando, Fla. Nebraska (9-3) vs. South Carolina (10-2), 1 p.m. (ESPN) Outback Bowl At Tampa, Fla. Georgia (10-3) vs. Michigan State (10-3), 1 p.m. (ABC) Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Florida (6-6) vs. Ohio State (6-6), 1 p.m. (ESPN2) Rose Bowl At Pasadena, Calif. Oregon (11-2) vs. Wisconsin (11-2), 5 p.m. (ESPN) Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. Stanford (11-1) vs. Oklahoma State (11-1), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN) Tuesday, Jan. 3 Sugar Bowl At New Orleans Michigan (10-2) vs. Virginia Tech (11-2), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Wednesday, Jan. 4 Orange Bowl At Miami West Virginia (9-3) vs. Clemson (10-3), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Jan. 6 Cotton Bowl At Arlington, Texas Kansas State (10-2) vs. Arkansas (10-2), 8 p.m. (FOX) Saturday, Jan. 7 BBVA Compass Bowl At Birmingham, Ala. Pittsburgh (6-6) vs. SMU (7-5), Noon (ESPN) Sunday, Jan. 8 GoDaddy.com Bowl At Mobile, Ala. Arkansas State (10-2) vs. Northern Illinois (10-3), 9 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Jan. 9 BCS National Championship At New Orleans LSU (13-0) vs. Alabama (11-1), 8:30 p.m. (ESPN) Saturday, Jan. 21 East-West Shrine Classic At St. Petersburg, Fla. East vs. West, TBA, (NFLN) Saturday, Jan. 28 Senior Bowl At Mobile, Ala. North vs. South, 4 p.m. (NFLN) Saturday, Feb. 5 Texas vs. Nation At San Antonio Texas vs. Nation, 2 p.m. (CBSSN) Dubai Ladies Masters Friday At Emirates Golf Club (The Majlis), Dubai, United Arab Emirates Purse: $650,000 Yardage: 6,425, Par: 72 Third Round Alexis Thompson, U.S. 70-66-70-206 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE For the record = Florida LOTTERY Here are the winning numbers selected Friday in the Florida Lottery: CASH 3 (early) 2-3-4 CASH 3 (late) 3-9-0 PLAY 4 (early) 0-1-6-6 PLAY 4 (late) 0-2-9-3 FANTASY 5 3 15 18 20 21 MEGA MONEY 4-21-28-44 MEGA BALL On the AIRWAVES TODAY'S TELEVISION SPORTS BASKETBALL 12 p.m. (ESPN) Ohio State at South Carolina 12 p.m. (SUN) Orange Bowl Classic Florida Atlantic vs. Miami 2 p.m. (10 CBS) Butler vs. Purdue 2:30 p.m. (ESPN2) Temple at Texas 2:30 p.m. (SUN) Orange Bowl Classic Florida vs. Texas A&M 4 p.m. (10 CBS) Memphis at Louisville 4:30 p.m. (ESPN2) Notre Dame at Indiana 4:30 p.m. (FSNFL) Mississippi at Southern Mississippi 4:30 p.m. (SUN) Winthrop at Clemson 6:30 p.m. (ESPN2) Syracuse at North Carolina State 10 p.m. (FSNFL) Georgia at USC 10:30 p.m. (ESPN2) New Mexico at Oklahoma State FOOTBALL 11 a.m. (ESPN2) NCAA Division II Championship: Pittsburg State (Kan.) vs. Wayne State 1 p.m. (FSNFL) Florida Class 6A Championship: Armwood vs. Miami Central 2 p.m. (ESPN) Gildan New Mexico Bowl Temple vs. Wyoming 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Ohio vs. Utah State 7 p.m. (FSNFL) Florida Class 8A Championship: Miramar vs. Plant 8 p.m. (NFL NETWORK) Dallas Cowboys at Tampa Bay Buccaneers 9 p.m. (ESPN) R&L Carriers New Orleans Bowl - Louisiana-Lafayette vs. San Diego State 1:30 a.m. (ESPN2) Famous Idaho Potato Bowl Ohio vs. Utah State (Same-day Tape) GOLF 3 p.m. (GOLF) Omega Dubai Ladies Masters, Final Round. (Same-day Tape) 8:30 p.m. (GOLF) JBWere Masters Final Round 1:30 a.m. (GOLF) Asian Tour: Thailand Championship, Final Round (Taped) HOCKEY 7 p.m. (SUN) Tampa Bay Lightning at Columbus Blue Jackets VOLLEYBALL 8:30 p.m. (ESPN2) NCAA Tournament, Final: Teams TBA SKIING 4 p.m. (VERSUS) Audi Birds of Prey: Men's Downhill (Taped) 5 p.m. (VERSUS) Audi Birds of Prey: Men's Super G (Taped) Note: All times and channels are subject to change at the discretion of the network. If you are unable to locate a game on the listed channel, please contact your cable provider. Prep CALENDAR TODAY'S PREP SPORTS WRESTLING 8 a.m. Citrus at St. Cloud IBT Sophie Gustafson, Sweden 71-67-69 207 Lee-Anne Pace, South Africa 69-72-67-208 Pernilla Lindberg, Sweden 72-68-68- 208 Stacy Lee Bregman, S. Africa 68-73-68 209 Becky Morgan, Wales 70-69-70- 209 Julieta Granada, Paraguay 68-71-70 209 Michelle Wie, United States 73-67-71 211 AlisonWalshe, United States 70-74-68 -212 Veronica Zorzi, Italy 74-70-68 212 Caroline Hedwall, Sweden 75-69-68 212 Carlota Ciganda, Spain 71-72-69 212 Maria Verchenova, Russia 69-74-69-212 L. Elena Lawrence, Greece 70-72-70 -212 Linda Wessberg, Sweden 68-73-71 212 Margherita Rigon, Italy 70-68-74 212 Louise Stahle, Sweden 72-70-71 213 Florentyna Parker, England 72-70-71 213 Diana Luna, Italy 69-73-71 213 Beth Allen, United States 69-72-72-213 Nontaya Srisawang, Thailand 74-69-72 214 Kylie Walker, Scotland 72-70-72 214 Sara Brown, United States 71-71-72 214 Christel Boeljon, Netherlands 69-72-73-214 Lotta Wahlin, Sweden 66-74-74 214 Anna Nordqvist, Sweden 75-72-68 215 Lydia Hall, England 72-74-69 215 Carin Koch, Sweden 73-73-69- 215 Giulia Sergas, Italy 75-69-71 215 Hannah Jun, United States 73-70-72-215 Melissa Reid, England 72-71-72 215 Georgina Simpson, England 72-70-73 215 Elisabeth Esterl, Germany 70-71-74 -215 Also J. Sweeney, United States 69-74-74 217 Christina Kim, United States 73-74-71 -218 Kim Welch, United States 73-74-74 221 NHL standings EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Philadelphia 30 20 7 3 43110 85 N.Y. Rangers 29 17 8 4 38 84 65 Pittsburgh 32 1711 4 38 99 85 New Jersey 31 1713 1 35 85 89 N.Y. Islanders 29 914 6 24 67 96 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Boston 30 20 9 1 41102 61 Buffalo 31 16 12 3 35 86 86 Toronto 31 1612 3 35 97 100 Ottawa 33 1514 4 34102 116 Montreal 32 1312 7 33 82 84 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Florida 32 17 9 6 40 87 82 Washington 30 1613 1 33 90 94 Winnipeg 31 1413 4 32 84 94 Tampa Bay 31 1316 2 28 84 105 Carolina 33 1018 5 25 84 113 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Chicago 32 20 8 4 44107 96 Detroit 30 1910 1 39 96 67 St. Louis 30 18 9 3 39 75 63 Nashville 31 1611 4 36 83 83 Columbus 31 918 4 22 74 102 Northwest Division GP W LOT PtsGF GA Minnesota 32 20 8 4 44 83 70 Vancouver 31 1811 2 38101 77 Calgary 32 1414 4 32 80 90 Edmonton 31 1414 3 31 85 84 Colorado 32 1417 1 29 86 99 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Dallas 31 1812 1 37 80 86 San Jose 29 1610 3 35 83 72 Phoenix 31 1612 3 35 82 82 Los Angeles 31 1413 4 32 67 71 Anaheim 31 917 5 23 72 100 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for over- time loss. Thursday's Games Dallas 3, N.Y Islanders 2 Carolina 4, Vancouver 3 Los Angeles 2, Columbus 1 Philadelphia 4, Montreal 3 Tampa Bay 5, Calgary 4, OT St. Louis 4, N.Y. Rangers 1 Nashville 4, Detroit 3 Washington 1, Winnipeg 0 Phoenix 4, Edmonton 2 San Jose 5, Colorado 4 Friday's Games Florida 3, Calgary 2, SO Buffalo 5, Toronto 4 Ottawa 6, Pittsburgh 4 New Jersey 6, Dallas 3 Chicago 4, Anaheim 1 Saturday's Games Boston at Philadelphia, 1 p.m. Vancouver at Toronto, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Montreal, 7 p.m. Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Anaheim at Winnipeg, 7 p.m. Los Angeles at Detroit, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Columbus, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Nashville, 8 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Minnesota, 8 p.m. N.Y Rangers at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Washington at Colorado, 9 p.m. Edmonton at San Jose, 10 p.m. Sunday's Games Carolina at Florida, 5 p.m. Calgary at Chicago, 7p.m. Columbus at St. Louis, 7 p.m. BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES Named Danny Haas national crosschecker. CLEVELAND INDIANS -Traded RHP Cory Burns to San Diego for OF Aaron Cunningham. Agreed to terms with INF Jose Lopez and OF Felix Pie on minor league contracts. MINNESOTATWINS Named Bill Smith as- sistant to the president and general manager. National League CHICAGO CUBS Named Chris Bosio pitching coach, Dave McKay first base coach, Jamie Quirk bench coach and Mike Borzello and Franklin Fort major league staff assistants. Reassigned bench coach Pat Listach to third base coach. NEW YORK METS Agreed to terms with OF Mike Baxter on a minor league contract. American Association WINNIPEG GOLDEYES Signed INF Amos Ramon and OF Asif Shah. Can-Am League BROCKTON ROX Traded RHP Zach Woods and RHP Jake Hale to New Jersey to complete an earlier trade. Sports BRIEFS GIRLS BASKETBALL Warriors go to Ocala, pound St. John Andrea Zachar's 18 points and 20 rebounds helped lead the Seven Rivers Christian girls basketball team to a 60-24 vic- tory at St. John on Friday. For the Warriors, Alyssa Gage (17 points), Kayleigh Kiernan (13 assists) and Alexis Zachar (11 points) also chipped in for the win. Seven Rivers (7-1, 3-0) plays Monday-Wednesday at the Northside Christian holiday tournament in St. Petersburg. BOYS BASKETBALL Warriors escape Ocala with win over Saints Behind 24 points from soph- omore guard Adam Gage, the Seven Rivers Christian boys took a 69-57 triumph from St. John Lutheran. Sam Jones was right there for the Warriors (6-2 overall, 3-0 district) with 23 points while teammate Trey Gaskin added 10 in the win. Seven Rivers (6-2, 3-0) plays at Bishop McLaughlin against Carrollwood Day at 10 a.m. Saturday. BOYS SOCCER Panthers pounce all over Vanguard Jacob Sims, Chris Fernan- dez-Davila and Ryan Good each scored a goal as the Lecanto soccer team notched a 3-1 victory over Vanguard at Booster Stadium in Ocala. Lecanto (7-2-2, 3-2-2) plays Jan. 4 at home against Lake Weir. CF holiday hoops camp coming soon College of Central Florida men's basketball coach Tim Ryan is hosting a Holiday Basketball Camp at CF in Ocala from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 19-22. The camp is for boys and girls ages 8-18 and provides complete skills for all ages. Cost is $100 for the full camp. Extended hours are available from 8:15 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. for an additional $20 fee. Campers may attend for just one day at a cost of $35. Half days are also offered for $20 per day. To register or for additional information, please contact coach Ryan at 352- 427-7435. DelGuidice Baseball Camp signups now The Key Training Center's Who's On First is accepting signups for the inaugural Nick DelGuidice Winter Baseball Camp. The camp will be from Dec. 19 to 22 at Bicentennial Park in Crystal River. Each day will run from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Campers signing up by Dec. 12 will pay $65. After that day, the cost will be $70. Lunch will be provided each day. Campers are encouraged to bring their own baseball equipment and wear athletic at- tire. Nick DelGuidice is a former graduate of Citrus High School and Florida Atlantic University. He plays baseball in the Kansas City Royals minor league system. Instruction from Lake-Sumter Community College Rich Billings and professional coaches will also be featured. For information or to reserve a spot, call (352) 344-0209. -From staff reports Kobe's wife wants divorce Lakers star, family ask for privacy during breakup Associated Press ORANGE, Calif. -Kobe Bryant's wife, who stood by her husband when he was charged with sexual as- sault in 2003, filed for di- vorce on Friday from the Los Angeles Lakers star, citing irreconcilable differ- ences after a decade of marriage. Vanessa Bryant signed the papers on Dec. 1. Kobe Bryant signed his response on Dec. 7 and it was filed Friday, according to the documents. "The Bryants have re- solved all issues incident to their divorce privately with the assistance of counsel and a judgment dissolving their marital status will be entered in 2012," according to a statement from a rep- resentative for the couple. In the filing, Vanessa Bryant asked for joint legal and physical custody of the couple's two daughters, Natalia, 8, and Gianna, 5. Kobe Bryant asked for the same in his response. Vanessa Bryant also re- quested spousal support. The Bryants "ask that in the interest of our young children and in light of the upcoming holiday season the public respect our pri- vacy during this difficult time," according to the statement. Bryant met his future wife in 1999 on a music video shoot when Vanessa Laine was 18 years old. Six months later, she and the then-21-year-old Bryant be- came engaged. They mar- ried on April 18, 2001. The Bryants have been through trying times to- gether Vanessa Bryant ap- peared at a news confer- ence with her husband when he was charged with sexually assaulting a 19- year-old woman who worked at the exclusive Lodge & Spa at Cordillera near Vail, Colo., in 2003. She held his hand and stroked it tenderly as the NBA star admitted he was guilty of adultery but nothing else. Earlier she had issued her own state- ment to the media, vowing to stand by her husband. "I know that my husband has made a mistake the mistake of adultery," she said in the statement at the time. "He and I will have to deal with that within our marriage, and we will do so. He is not a criminal." A year later, prosecutors dropped the criminal charge against Kobe Bryant because the woman did not want to go ahead with a trial. Last year, Kobe and Vanessa Bryant settled liti- gation with a former maid who accused the NBA star's wife of harassment. The Bryants countersued Maria Jimenez for violating a confidentiality agree- ment by talking to re- porters about the family Bulls beat Pacers as NBA starts preseason Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS Der- rick Rose and Luol Deng each scored 16 points to help the Chicago Bulls beat the Indiana Pacers 95-86 on Fri- day night in the preseason opener for both teams. C.J. Watson added 15 points for the Bulls, who brought their share of red- clad fans for the game that had some of the intensity of a key regular-season game. It was a rematch of last sea- son's first-round playoff se- ries, which the Bulls won 4-1. Tyler Hansbrough had 19 points and 12 rebounds, and Paul George added 17 points and 10 rebounds for the Pac- ers. Danny Granger scored 12 points for Indiana, but was just 5 for 17 from the field. Indianapolis native George Hill scored three points in his first game in a Pacers uniform after being acquired from San Antonio. 76ers 103, Wizards 78 WASHINGTON With new 76ers owner Josh Harris sitting behind a baseline, Lou Williams scored 19 points and Philadel- phia beat the cold-shooting and light-defending Washington Wiz- ards 103-78 on Friday night be- LECANTO Continued from Page BI said. "I was hoping that would turn momentum. But they answered and got the lead back up to 10 and we had to go back to pressure." Vega topped all Lecanto scorers with 17 points, and he also led with 21 boards as he started for senior for- ward Angelo Rizzolo. Riz- fore a sparse crowd in the first of two post-lockout exhibition games between the teams. Relying on the core that led them to last season's playoffs, the 76ers shot 51 percent. It was their first game since Harris' group completed its purchase in October. The Wizards unveiled their new red-white-and-blue uni- forms, "dc" logo and three draft picks but looked very much like a young team coming off a 23-win season. They had trouble at both ends of the court, making 33 percent of their shots which could hasten the return of free-agent Nick Young. John Wall, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2010 draft, scored eight points on 3-for-12 shooting. Andray Blatche had 18 points. The announced attendance was 11,419. The arena's capac- ity is more than 20,000. Hornets 97, Grizzlies 90 MEMPHIS, Tenn.- Jarrett Jack scored 24 points, Quincy Pondexter and Emeka Okafor added 12 apiece and the New Orleans Hornets beat the Mem- phis Grizzlies 97-90 in a presea- son game Friday night. The Hornets, playing their first game since the trade of star zolo will miss the remainder of the season for the second straight year after suffering from a torn tendon against Lake Minneola. "Vega played great," Buckley said. "He was prob- ably the lone absolute bright spot for us. I think he came to play" Panthers guard Richie Rizzolo made a pair of 3s and added 9 points for his club. Buckley hopes his team guard Chris Paul to the Los An- geles Clippers this week, scored six straight points to take a 95- 89 lead. Trevor Ariza scored 11 points for New Orleans, and Carldell Johnson finished with 10, while playing only in the fourth quarter. Tony Allen led Memphis with 17 points, while Rudy Gay and Jeremy Pargo scored 15 each. O.J. Mayo had 12, but was 5 of 15 from the field. Both teams used multiple lineups, giving starters time early, but allowing bench players to get most of the second-half minutes. Cavs 91, Pistons 87 AUBURN HILLS, Mich. - Kyrie Irving scored 21 points in his first exhibition game in- cluding five free throws in the final minute in the Cleveland Cavaliers' 91-87 victory over the Detroit Pistons on Friday night. Irving, the top pick in this year's draft, wasn't in the start- ing lineup, but he looked com- fortable in what was a sloppy game. Both teams have a lot of work to do before their season openers Dec. 26. At halftime, Cleveland was shooting 33 percent and had 14 turnovers. Detroit was at 30 per- cent and 10 turnovers. can learn from the defeat "It's a long season and that was one of the first teams that really competed with us like Lake Minneola did. "West Port is someone we need to do well against for the district," Buckley added. "They're no pushover. It was good practice for us. I can't say we quit." Lecanto plays at home against Seven Rivers Chris- tian on Dec. 27. SCOREBOARD E CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE Saturday n Bucs welcome Cowboys to Tampa Bay Associated Press TAMPA-- If the suddenly reeling Dallas Cowboys learned anything while let- ting a solid grip on the NFC East lead slip away, it's to not take anything for granted. So while Tony Romo and a talented supporting cast may still control their own destiny in the division race, a string of late collapses that's cost them a clear path to the playoffs illustrate why they can't afford to overlook anyone including the struggling Tampa Bay Buc- caneers on Saturday night - down the stretch. "We take it week by week," Romo said, declining to speculate on the prospects of rebounding from consecutive losses to the Cardinals and Giants to finish atop the standings. The Cowboys (7-6) are tied with the Giants for first place, however New York holds the tie-breaker advan- tage after rallying from a 12- point deficit in the final three minutes to win 37-34 in Dallas last Sunday Dallas can clinch the NFC East by winning remaining games against Tampa Bay (4-9), at home against Philadelphia, and on the road against the Giants in the regular season finale. "Obviously we've lost a couple of close games. ... We just have to come out and play a great game this week, have great energy and play our best game of the year," Romo said. "It's going to be a great challenge. ... Tampa is never an easy place to play" The Bucs have lost seven straight and eight of nine overall following a 3-1 start, raising questions about whether ownership is con- templating replacing coach Raheem Morris. There's been talk that Cowboys coach Jason Garrett may be on the hotseat, too, even though Dallas owner Jerry Jones said this week that Garrett's job is safe. Garrett said he's focused on the Buccaneers, not whether he will be dis- missed if the Cowboys fail to make the playoffs. "There's no question, any time the owner says some- thing positive, that's a good thing," Garrett said. "But again we know what the challenges are, and we've got to keep putting our best foot forward. We ask our players to do that and we have to do that as coaches, regardless of what anybody fi gtin' Associated Press Tampa Bay quarterback Josh Freeman (5) and the Buccaneers host the Dallas Cowboys in a prime time game on the NFL Network at 8:20 p.m. Saturday night in Tampa. says." The Bucs, who've fallen apart after a start that in- cluded victories over NFC South rivals New Orleans and Atlanta, are relishing their role as potential spoil- ers. After facing the Cowboys, who've led in the fourth quarter of five of their six Dallas C losses, Tampa (7-6) at Ta Bay closes on Buccane the road at Carolina and U Time: 8:2 Atlanta. Saturday "Dallas is TV: NFL N kind of on the bubble right now. ... I can't think of any- thing happier than to go out and get a win and maybe put a damper on their hopes," Bucs quarterback Josh Freeman said, adding that while Tampa Bay's skid has been frustrating he and teammates haven't given up on themselves. "Guys just want to win. We're upset about losing, but guys come into work and want to do something about it to correct it. It's not a deal where we're losing and no- body wants to be around the building or nobody wants to work at it," Freeman added. "Guys are still giving it all they've got, trying to figure out a way to right the ship." After leading the Bucs to a surprising 10-6 record and narrowly missing the play- offs last season, Freeman has struggled in his second full season as a starter. A year ago, the third quar- terback se- owboys elected in the impa Bay 2009 draft ers (4-9) threw for 25 touchdowns 0 p.m. and just six interceptions. network This season, he's been slowed by right thumb and shoulder injuries, made some poor decisions with the football and thrown for 12 touch- downs vs. 18 interceptions. Garrett looks at Freeman and sees a 23-year-old expe- riencing the normal growing pains of a NFL quarterback. "I think what happens is for any quarterback of any age, taking care of the foot- ball is a critical thing. We certainly understand, I think everybody around the league understands that," the Dallas coach said. "Sometimes interceptions or turnovers happen for a lot of reasons. You have to try to minimize them as best you can. He didn't have a lot of them last year, so he cer- tainly understands how to do that and handle that. He'll grow with every expe- rience he gets. He's cer- tainly a heck of a young player, and a guy who's got a great future." Tampa Bay turned the ball over seven times against the Jaguars and enter Saturday night tied with the Eagles with a league-leading 31 give- aways, compared to 19 all of last season. The Bucs also are the third-most penal- ized team in the league. Morris declines to make excuses, but stresses that as the league's youngest team the Bucs are far from a fin- ished product. He's adamant that he has the team headed in the right di- rection. He insists he's not spending time worrying about his job because the pressure to win is no greater than it's ever been. "If you don't feel like you're working for your job every day," the third-year coach said, "then you're probably not doing your job." a C I Khan takes control of Jaguars New owner wants Jacksonville to become international brand Associated Press JACKSONVILLE The NFL's newest owner has a long-term vision for the small-market Jacksonville Jaguars. And it includes a broad- based audience. Shahid Khan wants the team to expand its fan base, even if it means play- ing overseas. Khan, born in Pakistan, visited Jacksonville on Fri- day for the time since buy- ing the franchise for $760 million. He spoke to coaches, front-office per- sonnel and just about every- one else in the football facility, and got a big kick out of the team mascot don- ning an oversized mustache in honor of the new owner Khan said all the right things: He reaffirmed his commitment to keeping the team in Jacksonville; talked about bringing a championship to the city; and even asked employees for input on how to im- prove the long-term viabil- ity of the franchise. But the most interesting aspect of his introductory news conference was his desire to create an interna- tional fan base. "The NFL is going to be developing an interna- tional fan base. Why shouldn't it be the Jaguars?" Khan said. "In all honesty, internationally, they don't know the differ- ence between the Jaguars and the Steelers." Khan said the reason outgoing owner Wayne Weaver had been reluctant to play in London was be- cause of "moveophobia," the fear that fans would take it as a sign the fran- chise was in jeopardy of re- locating. Khan is so confident things will work in Jacksonville that he has no concerns about playing overseas. "I'm very open," he said. "I think it would serve Jack- sonville well to play a game or two overseas, to get the name Jacksonville out. If you look at some of the in- ternational premier league teams, they have a huge fan following overseas in the Middle East, India, Pak- istan, Malaysia, etc. "I think the NFL, in the long run, will probably be doing something like that. Why shouldn't we be one of the flag carriers?" Although the Jaguars haven't blacked out a game since 2009, they have strug- gled to fill EverBank Field the last two seasons, often needing to find creative ways to sell tickets to keep games on local television. Playing in London or elsewhere would lower season-ticket prices and possibly improve the chances of enticing new fans in a tough economy Nonetheless, Khan reit- erated what NFL Commis- sioner Roger Goodell said two years ago: Jacksonville can't be a viable franchise with 40,000 or 50,000 fans in the stadium. "They can't support an NFL team with 40, 50,000," Khan said. "We're gonna do everything to get them. You gotta fill the stands. A football team doesn't work. It's not just the money You need the enthusiasm, the fan support, you need the energy You need the en- ergy for the players." It could help that there's a buzz around the fran- chise for the first time in years. With Khan's deep pockets and general man- ager Gene Smith searching for a new coach, the Jaguars feel they're poised to end the staleness that set in with longtime coach Jack Del Rio, who was fired last month. Associated Press New Jacksonville Jaguars owner Shahid Khan concludes a news conference at the NFL owners meeting in Irving, Texas on Wednesday. The sale from franchise founder Wayne Weaver to the Pakistani-born Khan was unanimously approved, with the deal being for reportedly $760 million. NFL Stats CENTRAL NFL standings New England N.Y Jets Buffalo Miami y-Houston Tennessee Jacksonville Indianapolis Baltimore Pittsburgh Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Oakland San Diego Kansas City N.Y Giants Dallas Philadelphia Washington x-New Orleans Atlanta Carolina Tampa Bay y-Green Bay Detroit Chicago Minnesota y-San Francisco Seattle Arizona St. Louis AFC East W L T 10 3 0 8 5 0 5 8 0 4 9 0 South W L T 10 3 0 7 6 0 4 10 0 0 13 0 North W L T 10 3 0 10 3 0 7 6 0 4 9 0 West W L T 8 5 0 7 6 0 6 7 0 5 8 0 AFC East W L T 7 6 0 7 6 0 5 8 0 4 9 0 South W L T 10 3 0 9 5 0 4 9 0 4 9 0 North W L T 13 0 0 8 5 0 7 6 0 2 11 0 West W L T 10 3 0 6 7 0 6 7 0 2 11 0 Pct PF .769 396 .615 327 .385 288 .308 256 Pct PF .769 330 .538 266 .286 207 .000 184 Pct PF .769 320 .769 282 .538 285 .308 178 Pct PF .615 269 .538 290 .462 324 .385 173 Pct PF .538 324 .538 317 .385 297 .308 229 Pct PF .769 415 .643 341 .308 313 .308 232 Pct PF 1.000 466 .615 367 .538 301 .154 274 Pct PF .769 307 .462 246 .462 253 .154 153 x-clinched playoff spot, y-clinched division Thursday's Game Atlanta 41, Jacksonville 14 Saturday's Game Dallas at Tampa Bay, 8:20 p.m. Sunday's Games New Orleans at Minnesota, 1 p.m. Seattle at Chicago, 1 p.m. Cincinnati at St. Louis, 1 p.m. Carolina at Houston, 1 p.m. Green Bay at Kansas City 1 p.m. Tennessee at Indianapolis, 1 p.m. Miami at Buffalo, 1 p.m. Washington at N.Y Giants, 1 p.m. Detroit at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. New England at Denver, 4:15 p.m. Cleveland at Arizona, 4:15 p.m. N.Y Jets at Philadelphia, 4:15 p.m. Baltimore at San Diego, 8:20 p.m. Monday's Game Pittsburgh at San Francisco, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 22 Houston at Indianapolis, 8:20 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 24 Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m. Jacksonville at Tennessee, 1 p.m. St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m. Denver at Buffalo, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Carolina, 1 p.m. Minnesota at Washington, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Miami at New England, 1 p.m. N.Y. Giants at N.Y Jets, 1 p.m. Arizona at Cincinnati, 1 p.m. San Diego at Detroit, 4:05 p.m. San Francisco at Seattle, 4:15 p.m. Philadelphia at Dallas, 4:15 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 25 Chicago at Green Bay 8:20 p.m. Monday, Dec. 26 Atlanta at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m. NFL leaders AFC Week 15 Quarterbacks Att Corn Yds TI Brady, NWE 496 328 4273 33 Schaub, HOU 292 178 2479 1 Roethlis., PIT 429 276 3526 2 Rivers, SND 480 302 3745 22 Mat. Moore, MIA 263 162 1864 10 Tebow, DEN 198 96 1290 1 Sanchez, NYJ 426 242 2859 2 Hasselbeck, TEN 403 246 2701 15 10 Dalton, CIN 415 245 2833 18 12 Fitzpatrick, BUF 449 278 3013 20 16 Rushers Att Yds Avg LG TD Jones-Drew, JAC 294 1334 4.54 43 7 R. Rice, BAL 234 1029 4.40 67 10 A. Foster, HOU 239 957 4.00 43 8 Mathews, SND 185 943 5.10 39 4 F Jackson, BUF 170 934 5.49 80t 6 McGahee, DEN 199 920 4.62 60t 4 Benson, CIN 222 883 3.98 42 5 Johnson, TEN 217 875 4.03 48t 4 S. Greene, NYJ 207 868 4.19 31 6 Be. Tate, HOU 146 820 5.62 44 3 Receivers No Yds Avg LG TD Welker, NWE 100 1339 13.4 99t 9 Gronkowski, NWE 71 1088 15.3 52t 15 B. Marshall, MIA 67 937 14.0 46 4 Bowe, KAN 65 937 14.4 52t 4 St. Johnson, BUF 63 790 12.5 53 6 M.Wallace, PIT 62 1034 16.7 95t 8 R. Rice, BAL 62 593 9.6 52 2 Garcon, IND 60 851 14.2 87t 6 Washington, TEN 59 798 13.5 57 5 Hernandez, NWE 59 607 10.3 30 5 Punt Returners Arenas, KAN 25 333 An. Brown, PIT 27 330 Mariani, TEN 31 363 Edelman, NWE 23 269 Bess, MIA 29 316 L. Webb, BAL 27 290 Jac. Jones, HOU 41 439 Cosby, DEN 26 269 Br.Tate, CIN 44 425 Kerley NYJ 21 201 Kickoff Returne No Yds McKnight, NYJ 29 940 An. Brown, PIT 20 549 Cribbs, CLE 30 787 R. Goodman, SND 25 652 C. Gates, MIA 27 675 Mariani, TEN 26 635 Karim, JAC 24 573 Br. Tate, CIN 33 785 McCluster, KAN 23 510 Arenas, KAN 17 362 Avg LG 13.3 37 12.2 60t 11.7 79t 11.7 72t 10.9 22 10.7 68t 10.7 79t 10.3 30 9.7 56t 9.6 53 ers Avg LG 32.4 107t 27.5 52 26.2 63 26.1 44 25.0 77 24.4 49 23.9 37 23.8 45 22.2 35 21.3 35 Scoring Touchdowns TDRush Rec Gronkowski, NWE 16 1 15 R. Rice, BAL 12 10 2 A. Foster, HOU 10 8 2 Jones-Drew, JAC 10 7 3 Decker, DEN 9 0 8 Welker, NWE 9 0 9 M. Bush, OAK 8 7 1 Green-Ellis, NWE 8 8 0 V. Jackson, SND 8 0 8 Mendenhall, PIT 8 8 0 Kicking PAT FG L Cundiff, BAL 33-33 27-35 .5 Gostkowski, NWE 46-46 22-26 5C Rackers, HOU 36-37 24-29 5z Nugent, CIN 28-29 25-27 ' Novak, SND 31-32 23-28 i5 Janikowski, OAK 30-30 22-24 ( Bironas, TEN 29-29 21-24 5i Folk, NYJ 39-39 16-21 i5 Suisham, PIT 32-32 18-24 ' D. Carpenter, MIA 19-19 21-26 i5 NFC Week 15 Quarterbacks Att Com Yds A. Rodgers, GBY 438 305 4125 Brees, NOR 543 385 4368 Romo, DAL 453 294 3646 E. Manning, NYG 489 303 4105 Stafford, DET 516 327 3754 Ale. Smith, SNF 358 221 2565 M. Ryan, ATL 505 307 3698 Cutler, CHI 314 182 2319 Kolb, ARI 253 146 1955 C. Newton, CAR 452 270 3573 Rushers Att Yds Avg L. McCoy, PHL 242 1172 4.84 M.Turner, ATL 273 1129 4.14 Gore, SNF 234 1054 4.50 Forte, CHI 203 997 4.91 M. Lynch, SEA 225 969 4.31 B. Wells, ARI 216 943 4.37 Murray DAL 164 897 5.47 S. Jackson, STL 202 895 4.43 A. Peterson, MIN 186 872 4.69 Blount, TAM 167 737 4.41 Receivers No Yds Avg R.White, ATL 85 1100 12.9 J.Graham, NOR 80 1101 13.8 T Gonzalez, ATL 74 826 11.2 Sproles, NOR 74 580 7.8 Johnson, DET 72 1121 15.6 Harvin, MIN 69 779 11.3 Cruz, NYG 68 1150 16.9 St. Smith, CAR 67 1217 18.2 G. Jennings, GBY 67 949 14.2 H. Nicks, NYG 65 1023 15.7 Punt Returners No Yds Avg D. Hester, CHI 24 443 18.5 P Peterson, ARI 37 603 16.3 GinnJr., SNF 38 466 12.3 Cobb, GBY 24 287 12.0 Banks, WAS 30 317 10.6 Washington, SEA 34 354 10.4 Weems, ATL 31 306 9.9 RP Parker, TAM 23 210 9.1 Sproles, NOR 23 204 8.9 Sherels, MIN 32 273 8.5 Kickoff Returners No Yds Avg Ginn Jr., SNF 28 788 28.1 Cobb, GBY 30 839 28.0 Pilares, CAR 19 515 27.1 Sproles, NOR 31 813 26.2 Logan, DET 26 665 25.6 Washington, SEA 35 877 25.1 Thomas, NYG 24 576 24.0 Stephens, ARI 32 759 23.7 Booker, MIN 19 450 23.7 Weems, ATL 23 536 23.3 Scoring Touchdowns TD Rush Rec L. McCoy, PHL 17 14 3 C. Newton, CAR 13 13 0 Ca. Johnson, DET 12 0 12 A. Peterson, MIN 12 11 1 M. Lynch, SEA 10 9 1 J. Nelson, GBY 10 0 10 G. Jennings, GBY 9 0 9 M. Turner, ATL 9 9 0 B. Wells, ARI 9 9 0 Br. Jacobs, NYG 8 7 1 Kicking PAT FG L Akers, SNF 27-27 36-42 D. Bailey DAL 32-32 31-35 Crosby GBY 55-56 23-25 Kasay, NOR 45-45 26-31 M. Bryant, ATL 38-38 23-25 Gould, CHI 32-32 25-28 Ret Pts 0 102 0 78 0 72 0 72 0 60 0 60 0 54 0 54 0 54 0 50 .G Pts 55 135 51 125 58 124 53 123 50 107 57 107 Ja. Hanson, DET 41-41 22-26 51 107 Barth, TAM 20-20 24-26 55 92 Henery, PHL 34-34 19-22 47 91 Gano, WAS 20-21 23-32 59 89 NFL playoff scenarios Week 15 AFC NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Clinches AFC East division with: New England win OR New England tie and a N.Y Jets loss ortie OR N.Y. Jets loss Clinches a playoff spot with: New England tie OR Cincinnati loss ortie and an Oakland loss or tie and a Tennessee loss or tie BALTIMORE RAVENS Clinches a playoff spot with: Baltimore win or tie OR N.Y Jets loss and Oakland loss or tie OR N.Y. Jets loss and Tennessee loss or tie OR Oakland loss ortie and Tennessee loss or tie PITTSBURGH STEELERS Clinches a playoff spot with: Pittsburgh win or tie OR Oakland loss or tie OR Tennessee loss or tie OR Denver loss OR N.Y. Jets loss NFC CLINCHED GREEN BAY NFC North and first-round bye SAN FRANCISCO NFC West NEW ORLEANS- playoff spot GREEN BAY Clinches home-field advantage through- out NFC playoffs with: A win or tie OR San Francisco loss or tie NEW ORLEANS SAINTS Clinches NFC South division with: New Orleans win and a Atlanta loss or tie OR New Orleans tie and an Atlanta loss SPORTS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 B5 ENTERTAINMENT CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE Spotlight on PEOPLE Britney Spears engaged LOS ANGELES-Brit- ney Spears is ready to walk down the aisle for the third ^ time. The 30-year- old pop star has agreed to C marry her 'longtime boyfriend Britney and for- Spears mer agent Jason Trawick Trawick announced Friday on "'Access Holly- wood" that he and Spears are en- gaged. The two have been dating since 2009. Spears hinted at Jason the big Trawick news with a tweet Friday morning that read, "OMG. Last night Jason surprised me with the one gift I've been waiting for Can't wait to show you! SO SO SO ex- cited!!!!" Spears was previously married to Kevin Feder- line, with whom she has two sons: 6-year-old Sean Preston and 5-year-old Jayden James. The cou- ple divorced in 2006. Spears also briefly wed childhood friend Jason Alexander in 2004, but the marriage was an- nulled after 55 hours. Stephen King warming homes BANGOR, Maine - Horror author Stephen King's efforts to raise money to help low-in- come Maine residents pay their heating oil bills this winter have ex- ceeded goals. King announced last month that his founda- tion would match up to $70,000 if listeners of the three Bangor-area radio stations he owns donated that amount, for a total of $140,000. Listeners do- nated $24,000, the Lerner Foundation pitched in $46,000 and the founda- tion kept its promise. On-air personality Pat LaMarche said an anony- mous Californian then promised another $50,000, if King matched it. The Maine native agreed, bringing the total to over $240,000. King tells the Bangor Daily News he's "grateful" to everybody who helped. Etta James terminally ill RIVERSIDE, Calif. - "At Last" and "Tell Mama" blues singer Etta James, whose health has been fading in recent years, is now ter- minally -t ill, and Etta her live- James in doctor is asking for prayers. The singer's leukemia was incurable two s chronic declared weeks ago. -From wire reports Shut out in China Associated Press English actor Christian Bale, center, is led by security guards upon arrival Monday on the red carpet for an event of the Zhang Yimou-directed new movie "The Flowers of War" in Beijing, China. The Academy Award- winner, in the midst of promoting a film he made in China some critics have called propaganda, got stopped trying to visit a blind activist living under house arrest, with a CNN camera crew in tow. CNN posted footage of a scuffle between Bale and the activist's guards on its website Friday, Dec. 16. 'Batman' star Christian Bale tries to visit Chinese activist Associated Press BEIJING "Batman" star Chris- tian Bale, in the midst of promoting a film he made in China that some critics have called propaganda, was physically stopped by government- backed guards from visiting a blind activist living under house arrest - with a CNN crew in tow to record the scuffle. CNN posted footage of the con- frontation on its website Friday The run-in and publicity is likely to cause discomfort in China's gov- ernment-backed film industry, which hopes Bale's movie "The Flowers of War" will be a creative success at home and abroad. The star's actions are sure to focus at- tention on the plight of Chen Guangcheng, guarded around the clock by burly, aggressive security men who have blocked dozens of re- porters and fellow activists trying to see him in the past Bale was to leave China on Friday and his representatives could not immediately be reached for com- ment. Bale, who won a best supporting actor Oscar for last year's "The Fighter," traveled Thursday with a crew from CNN to the village in eastern China where Chen, the blind lawyer, lives with his family in complete isolation. They were stopped at the en- trance to Dongshigu village in Shandong province by unidentified men. The video footage shows Bale asking to see Chen, with a CNN pro- ducer providing interpretation, but being ordered by one of the guards to leave. He then asked why he was unable to pass through. The guards responded by trying to grab or punch a small video camera Bale was carrying. "What I really wanted to do was to meet the man, shake his hand and say what an inspiration he is," Bale was quoted as saying by CNN. Chen's case has been raised pub- licly by U.S. lawmakers and diplo- mats, including Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, all to no response from China. CNN said Bale first learned of Chen from news reports when he was in China filming "The Flowers of War," China's official submission this year for best foreign language film Oscar "Chen Guangcheng is a newswor- thy figure ... and as such it is in the interest of CNN's global viewers to hear from him," CNN said in a statement. "Mr Bale reached out to CNN and invited us to join him on his journey to visit Chen." Chen, a self-taught lawyer who was blinded by a fever in infancy, angered authorities after docu- menting forced late-term abortions and sterilizations and other abuses by overzealous authorities trying to meet population control goals in his rural community. He was impris- oned for allegedly instigating an at- tack on government offices and organizing a group of people to dis- rupt traffic, charges his supporters say were fabricated. Although now officially free under the law, he has been confined to his home in the village eight hours' drive from Beijing and sub- jected to periodic beatings and other abuse, activists say While Bale's visit focuses new at- tention on Chen's case, CNN's role raises questions about activism and advocacy among reporters, said David Bandurski, editor of the China Media Project website at the University of Hong Kong. "It made me instantly uncomfort- able, wondering how it all came to- gether It raises questions about where the lines are drawn," Ban- durski said. The incident also drew strong in- terest most of it highly positive - on social networking sites such as Twitter and its Chinese equivalent, Weibo. Bieber stages concert at low-income Vegas school Associated Press LAS VEGAS It was clear at one Las Vegas school Friday morning that the mid-December chill wasn't cooling down Bieber fever Second-grader Amya Saulsberry and third-grader Mia Godinez were wearing glittery red hair bows and T- shirts emblazoned with teen pop icon Justin Bieber's face as they walked with their grandma to Whitney Elementary School, where Bieber was set to perform a private Christmas concert in the afternoon. "When he noticed how kind we were and how gen- tle we were, he wanted to come," Godinez explained, as a Bieber ballad fit for a sixth-grade slow dance Birthday: You love teaming up with others, which makes you a perfect candidate for partnership situations. Some of the arrangements you make in the coming months may be the best you'll ever experience. Make the most of it. Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Because you will likely be dealing with some extravagant urges, it's best not to go shopping. If you do anyway, restrict your purchases to small cash sales. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Being your own person and doing everything independently has its merits, but not if it makes you aloof and unfriendly. Accept interruptions graciously. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If you think you're a loser, it generally has a way of becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy. You should guard against a tendency to anticipate negative outcomes. Pisces (Feb. 20-March 20) -A crafty acquaintance who's piped from campus loud- speakers toward the run- down apartment complexes in the neighborhood. The 17-year-old star's con- cert came along with a $100,000 donation to Whitney Elementary, which has gar- nered publicity for providing needy students' families with food, clothes, money for util- ity bills and just about everything in between. After Bieber announced on a Nov 1 episode of "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" that he would visit to per- form songs from his album "Under the Mistletoe," the hundreds of students watch- ing the taping from their Las Vegas school erupted into screams and cheers. One girl is seen jumping up and down, and school offi- cials said some of the stu- dents burst into tears of joy "For the kids, it shows that someone loves them and cares about them to fol- low up," Principal Sherrie Gahn told the Las Vegas Sun after the taping. "When you live in an existence where everything seems so hope- less, it's an amazing gift they will never forget It's beyond their wildest dreams." Whitney Elementary was first featured on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" in Sep- tember The episode high- lighted how the school provides a food pantry, clothes closet, free haircuts and literacy training for stu- dents' families. Gahn said more than 85 percent of the school's 600- plus students receive free or reduced-price lunch. The school also has one of the Today's HOROSCOPE an expert at manipulating the generosity of others might single you out. Be on guard and don't fall prey to any sob story or duplicitous shenanigans. Aries (March 21-April 19) If you hope to achieve your objectives, it's important to plan all your moves in advance, even those you think of as small beer. When all is said and done, you'll come out ahead. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Having self-doubts and being cautious are not one and the same, so don't make the mis- take of confusing the two. Tread warily, but also harbor high hopes in your heart. Gemini (May 21-June 20) Usually you operate excep- tionally well in all partnership situations, but this might not be the case for you currently. Try going it alone; you may not need to team up with anybody. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Take care about how you react to pressure, because coming unglued can easily im- Associated Press Canadian pop star Justin Bieber performs May 10 dur- ing his "My World Tour" con- cert in Manila, Philippines. Bieber performed a private concert Friday for an east Las Vegas school. highest homeless student populations in the Clark County School District. pair your good judgment. A cool head is needed in order to make sensible moves or decisions. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) Be mindful of the fact that what- ever chores you neglect will eventually have to be done. Chances are the tasks will only become harder and more distasteful with time. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It's never a good time to take a big financial gamble without knowing the odds. If you act on something with scant information, it could end badly. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If you and your mate can't re- solve a disagreement, sleep on it instead of turning to oth- ers for their advice. The more people involved, the worse the matter could become. Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Even if you think you have some constructive suggestions to offer, this is one of the worst days to be openly critical about others. Keep your thoughts to yourself. Florida LOTTERIES SO YOU KNOW Last night's winning numbers, Page B4. THURSDAY, DEC. 15 Fantasy 5:6 16 18 23 33 5-of-5 2 winners $107,535.12 4-of-5 275 $126 3-of-5 8,806 $11 WEDNESDAY, DEC. 14 Powerball: 2 24 -46 52 56 Powerball: 19 5-of-5 PB No winner No Florida winner 5-of-5 6 $200,000 Lotto: 1 3 -4 -9 -33 -38 6-of-6 No winner 5-of-6 52 $4,197.50 4-of-6 3,490 $49.50 3-of-6 65,346 $5 Fantasy 5: 2- 3 -5 -6 -30 5-of-5 1 winner $244,342.31 4-of-5 504 $78 3-of-5 12,480 $8.50 TUESDAY, DEC. 13 Mega Money: 16 27 29 42 Mega Ball: 7 4-of-4 MB No winner 4-of-4 10 $1,049 INSIDE THE NUMBERS To verify the accuracy of winning lottery num- bers, players should double-check the num- bers printed above with numbers officially posted by the Florida Lottery. Go to www.flalottery.com, or call 850-487-7777. Today in HISTORY Today is Saturday, Dec. 17, the 351st day of 2011. There are 14 days left in the year. Today's Highlight: On Dec. 17, 1903, Wilbur and Orville Wright of Dayton, Ohio, conducted the first suc- cessful manned powered-air- plane flights near Kitty Hawk, N.C., using their experimen- tal craft, the Wright Flyer. On this date: In 1777, France recog- nized American independ- ence. In 1957, the United States successfully test-fired the Atlas intercontinental ballistic missile for the first time. In 1975, Lynette Fromme was sentenced in Sacra- mento, Calif., to life in prison for her attempt on the life of President Gerald R. Ford. (She was paroled in Aug. 2009.) In 1986, Eugene Hasen- fus, the American convicted by Nicaragua for his part in running guns to the Contras, was pardoned, then re- leased. Ten years ago: Marines raised the Stars and Stripes over the long-abandoned American Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. Five years ago: Gunmen in Iraqi army uniforms kid- napped some 30 people at the Red Crescent offices in downtown Baghdad (about half were released the same day). One year ago: President Barack Obama signed into law a huge, holiday-season tax bill extending cuts for all Americans, saluting a new spirit of political compromise as Republicans applauded and liberals seethed. Today's Birthdays: Actor Armin Mueller-Stahl is 81. Actor George Lindsey is 76. Singer-actor Tommy Steele is 75. Actor Bernard Hill is 67. Actor Ernie Hudson is 66. Political commentator Chris Matthews is 66. Comedian- actor Eugene Levy is 65. Ac- tress Marilyn Hassett is 64. Actor Wes Studi is 64. Actor Joel Brooks is 62. Rock singer Paul Rodgers is 62. Actor Bill Pullman is 58. Actor Barry Livingston is 58. Coun- try singer Sharon White is 58. Rock musician Mike Mills (R.E.M.) is 53. Pop singer Sarah Dallin (Bananarama) is 50. Country singer Tracy Byrd is 45. DJ Homicide (Sugar Ray) is 41. Actor Sean Patrick Thomas is 41. Actress Claire Forlani is 40. Thought for Today: "A life of leisure and a life of lazi- ness are two things." - "Poor Richard's Almanack." RELIGION CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE Relics held in reserve JASMINE GOLDBAND/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review In this photo, broken and unused statues are in the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh storage. As a seminarian, the Rev. Joseph McCaffrey knelt before a tabernacle in the chapel at Mercy Hospital, where his mother was being treated for a brain tumor, and prayed for her recovery. Later, when he was named pastor of St. John and Paul Church in Marshall, he noticed that same tabernacle an ornamental cabinet used to store the Blessed Sacrament at his new church. For some churches, recycling religious items is more than just practicality CRAIG SMITH Pittsburgh Tribune-Review PITTSBURGH As a seminarian, the Rev. Joseph McCaffrey knelt be- fore a tabernacle in the chapel at Mercy Hospital, where his mother was being treated for a brain tumor, and prayed for her recovery Later, when he was named pastor of St John and Paul Church in Marshall, he noticed that same tabernacle an orna- mental cabinet used to store the Blessed Sacrament at his new church. And when it came time to build a new Sts. John and Paul Church building, he "knew that was going to be in there." The practice of reusing reli- gious items is a common one among Catholics. The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh has two warehouses one an old church that house aging, un- used religious articles and statu- ary. The buying and selling of sacred items, called simony, is forbidden by the First Com- mandment, the Catholic church says. "We've found some creative ways to reuse things," said for- mer Pittsburgh priest Daniel Di- Nardo, now a cardinal who heads the archdiocese of Galve- ston-Houston. In the past two decades, the number of Catholics in the archdiocese doubled to 1.4 million. DiNardo, who arrived there in 2004, has dedicated 11 new church buildings. As Western Pennsylvania's population declines, so have the number of Catholics, from 815,719 in 2004 to 673,201 in 2008, the latest year for which figures are available. The Pittsburgh Diocese has closed 17 parishes and estab- lished seven new ones over the past decade. Unused items from those churches are stored in hopes that other churches will use them. "We have moved quite a bit of items, some to new churches - Sts. John and Paul, St. Francis of Assisi in Finleyville and St. Joseph in O'Hara," said Joseph M. Kubiak, facilities coordina- tor/inspector, who maintains the inventory for the Pittsburgh dio- cese's property planning department. One diocesan warehouse holds smaller items, such as chalices and candles; the other contains larger items such as pews, altars and statues. One wall holds nothing but candle- sticks and chalices. Some of the inventory is damaged, such as a statue of Jesus missing its hands. "It's reflected in the law of the church.... We believe sacred items can't be sold," said the See Page C5 Nancy Kennedy GRACE NOTES Built for great things Last month my hus- band and I went to Charlotte, N.C., one of our favorite cities. We stayed uptown - which I would call down- town, but what do I know? - right in the middle of all the tall buildings and skyscrapers. I have a confession to make. I love buildings. I mean, I love, 1-o-v-e build- ings, like chocoholics love chocolate and pie-aholics love pie. Well, maybe not that much, but I love ar- chitecture and design, Gothic arches and flying buttresses. One night during our trip we were out walking uptown and we passed the Hearst Tower building on North Tryon Street, which happens to be my favorite of favorites of the Char- lotte skyline. As I tried the glass front door and found it un- locked, I told my husband, See Page C5 Christmas programs First Christian Church of Homosassa, 7030 W. Grover Cleveland Blvd. in Homosassa, will show the family Christian film, "The Stable Boy's Christmas" at 7 tonight. Pop- corn and drinks served at inter- mission. No charge to attend. Parents and children of all ages are invited. First Baptist Church of In- verness will present the musi- cal, "The Night Before Christmas" at 6 p.m. today and Sunday. Join us as we retell the true story of Christmas and cel- ebrate the birth of our Lord. Everyone is invited to a Christmas presentation of "A Savior Born" at 6:30 p.m. today and 10:30 a.m. Sunday at First Baptist Church of Ho- mosassa, 10540 Yulee Drive, Homosassa. The musical fea- tures drama, the adult and chil- dren's choirs, and the FBCH Bell Choir. On Sunday, Hernando United Methodist Church's choir will present its cantata, "Child of Hope," directed by Debbie Thompson, accompa- nied by John Petro, organist, and Anita Jackson on the key- board. The church is at 2125 E. Norvell Bryant Highway Call 352-726-7245. Good Shepherd Lutheran Church's children's Nativity play will be performed during the 8:30 and 11 a.m. services Sunday. Christmas Eve worship services with Holy Communion are at 5 and 7 p.m. All are in- vited to these special events. Call the church for more infor- mation at 352-746-7161.The church is on County Road 486, opposite Citrus Hills Boulevard in Hernando. Inverness Church of God will present the Christmas musi- cal, "Mary, Did You Know?" in Religion NOTES Stewardship committee Special to the Chronicle The stewardship committee of St. Scholastica Parish, Lecanto, recently attended the In- ternational Stewardship Council convention in Orlando. The pictured poster was on display representing the parish. In attendance were Michael and Michelle Belanger, Joseph and Beth Tarnowski, Winfredo and Rose Samson and Alexander Groppe, director of music and worship. Rose Samson is the committee chairperson. The committee thanks Fr. Michael Smith, church pastor, for his prayerful support, inspiration and encouragement. the 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. worship services Sunday. Pas- tor Larry Powers invites the pub- lic to attend. The church is at 416 U.S. 41 S., Inverness. Call the church at 352-726-4524. The Christmas cantata, "A Song Is Born," under the di- rection of Jason Longtin, will be presented during the 9:30 a.m. worship service Sunday at Hope Evangelical Lutheran Church, 9425 N. Citrus Springs Blvd., Citrus Springs. Dee Forsyth is the narrator and Hazel Rienstra, the accompa- nist. Christmas Eve candlelight service at 7 p.m. Christmas Day service at 9:30 a.m. Community invited. Call 352-489-5511. Heritage Baptist Church Choir will present the Christmas cantata, "Jesus There is Something About That Name," at 10:15 a.m. Sunday at the church, 2 Civic Circle, Bev- erly Hills. Call 352-746-6171. First Christian Church of Homosassa Springs, at 7030 W. Grover Cleveland Blvd. in Homosassa, will present the Christmas cantata "Holy Child" at the 10:30 a.m. wor- ship service Sunday. This can- tata was written by Marty Parks and is directed by Lynn Miller, choir director. It is a celebration of the majesty, the mystery and the miracle of Christmas. All are welcome to attend. Nursery provided. A songfest of carols is at 6 p.m. Sunday at the church. Call the church at 352-628- 5556. The Hand Bell Choir of First United Methodist Church of Inverness will present its an- nual "Ring and Sing" concert at 2 p.m. Sunday. The concert consists of beloved Christmas carols played by handbells and chimes with organ and piano accompaniment. Audience par- ticipation in singing of the carols is encouraged. The church is on Pleasant Grove Road (County Road 581), two miles south of Applebee's. Call 352- 726-2522. First Church of God, 5510 E. Jasmine Lane, will present "A Christmas Gift to Citrus County" at 2 p.m. Sunday. This gospel concert will feature Phyllis Morgan, former pianist for the "Lawrence Welk Show" and piano accompanist for Norma Zimmer for more than 15 years. There is no charge. A love offering for Phyllis will be collected. Doors open at 1 p.m. Pastor Tom Walker invites to public to attend. First Lutheran Church will present "A Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols," featur- ing music and scripture read- ings to tell the story of the birth of Christ, at 3 p.m. Sunday in the sanctuary at 1900 W. State Road 44, Inverness. This is a divine service to celebrate the Nativity, just as it is traditionally performed every Christmas Eve at Kings College, Cambridge, England. Everyone is invited. There is no admission charge. A freewill offering will be col- lected. Call the church office at 352-726-1637. The Central Florida Master Choir will be at Dunnellon Pres- byterian Church at 3 p.m. Sun- day as part of their concert series. They will present their seasonal concert, "Carols from Around the World," with a freewill offering taken at the end of the concert with all pro- ceeds going to the Master Choir. The church is at 20641 Chestnut St., Dunnellon. The annual Christmas cantata by Crystal River United Methodist Church will be pre- sented at 4 p.m. Sunday. "A Christmas Promise," under the direction of Margaret Williams, will include the bell choir, sanctuary choir, praise See Page C2 Judi Siegal JUDI'S JOURNAL Jewish message for the holidays In 2001, Daniel Pearl, a noted journalist, was killed by Muslim ex- tremists in Pakistan. Al- though he kept his Jewish heritage to himself, in his final moments he proudly declared his Jewish line- age for all to know In trib- ute to his courage and to the humanistic ideals he upheld, his parents, Judea and Ruth Pearl, edited a book called "I Am Jew- ish," which highlighted fa- mous and not-so-famous people's views on being Jewish. At this time of the year, commonly called the "De- cember Dilemma," when Jews are bombarded with Christmas trappings from all sides, I thought I would share some of my feelings about being Jewish, which not so surprisingly are strikingly similar to those of the people interviewed in the Pearls' book. There is no particular order to my beliefs; all are impor- tant and all reflect a differ- ent aspect of being Jewish. First, Judaism is a faith with a belief system that goes back some 3,200 years. It is what we call a "Wisdom Faith," because See Page C4 C2 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 NOTES Continued from Page Cl team and children. The church is at 4801 N. Citrus Ave. Call 352-795-3148. "Everlasting Light," con- temporary Christmas music blended with traditional carols, will be presented by the wor- ship choir of North Oak Baptist Church in Citrus Springs at 6 p.m. Sunday. Christmas good- ies fellowship will follow. The community is invited. The church is at the corner of N. Elkcam Blvd. and N. Citrus Springs Blvd. in Citrus Springs. Call 352-489-1688 for more in- formation. The public is invited to a Christmas concert at 6 p.m. Sunday at Christian Center Church, 7961 W. Green Acres St. (U.S. 19), Homosassa. Hernando Church of the Nazarene invites everyone to take time to make Christ the focus of the Christmas season and join us for "HerNaz Christ- mas Live 2011." Pastor Walt will direct the dynamic, spirit-filled choir and orchestra in this free presentation at 6 p.m. Sunday at the church, at 2101 N. Florida Ave. on U.S. 41 in Hernando. The Eden Baptist Church Choir along with "Impact Stu- dent Ministry" will present the cantata with drama, "The Love of God at Christmas" at 6 p.m. Sunday. The cantata was created by Dove Award winners Joel Lindsey, Sue C. Smith and Russell Mauldin. The choir is di- rected by Keith Looper, music minister. Free admission. The public is invited. Enjoy refresh- ments and fellowship after the presentation. The church is at 22308 Lake Lindsey Road, Brooksville. Call 352-796-3855. Holiday celebrations Kids ages 3 through 12 are invited to "Children's Christmas Fun Day" from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at Parsons Memorial Presbyterian Church. Children will enjoy decorating cookies, Bible stories, music, crafts and food. Call Donna Brown for more information at 352-489-5274. New Church Without Walls will serve a free Christmas dinner for the homeless and needy of Citrus County from noon to 4 p.m. today at Her- nando Beach. Donations needed include clothing, toi- letries, tents and bicycles. Inverness Church of God will host its annual "Family Christmas Fest" at 6 p.m. Sunday at the church, 416 U.S. 41 South, Inverness. The public is invited to enjoy this time of fellowship with baked goodies and hot beverages to share. Children will decorate cookies and make a Christmas orna- ment. Admission is free. Call 352-726-4524. A Hanukkah candle-light- ing and celebration will take place at 6 p.m. Tuesday on the historic Old Courthouse grounds in downtown Inverness (U.S. 41/State Road 44). Latkes (potato pancakes) Munchkins and coffee and tea will be served. Music provided. All are invited. Join us for the The Rev. Lauri Gist, a Unity minister, spoke at a recent PFLAG (Parents, Families and Friends of Gays and Les- bians) meeting in Lecanto. The topic of her talk was "Thank God for Gay Chil- dren." The Rev. Gist and her spiritual community wel- come, love, and support all of God's children regardless of their spiritual paths, sex- ual orientation, or religious faith. PFLAG is a non-de- nominational organization and the Unity church pro- vides space for PFLAG's monthly meetings. For more information about PFLAG, call Linda at 352-419-2738. Special to the Chronicle only public Hanukkah celebra- tion in Citrus County. Sponsors are Congregation Beth Sholom of Citrus County, Joe's Family Restaurant, and the Citrus RELIGION PFLAG speaker Ocala. The event will celebrate the Festival of Lights with the traditional lighting of the Chanukah candles followed by singing, games and a festive meal featuring roast brisket of beef and potato latkes (pan- cakes), vegetable and an array CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE of desserts. The cost is $18. RSVP to Estelle at 352-861- 2542 to make a reservation. Congregation Beth Israel is the only Reconstructionist Jewish community in the S.R. 200 See NOTES/Page C3 Places of worship that offer love, peace and harmony to all. Come on over to "His" house, your spirits will be lifted!!! . SERVICING THE COMMUNITIES OF CRYSTAL RIVER AND HOMOSASSA . St. Benedict Catholic Church U.S. 19 at Ozello Rd. - MASSES -- Vigil: 5:00pm Sun.: 8:30 & 10:30am DAILY MASSES Mon. Fri.: 8:00am HOLY DAYS As Announced CONFESSION Sat.: 3:30 4:30pm 795-4479 Sunday Masses: 8:00 a.m. 10:15 a.m. Morning Prayer & Daily Masses 4th Sunday 6:00p.m. Gospel Sing Along 9870 West Fort Island Trail Crystal River 1 mile west of Plantation Inn 352-795-2176 wwwstannescr.org Special Event or Weekly Services Please Call Beverly at 564-2912 For Advertising Information THE SALVATION CITRUS COUNTY ARMY CORPS. SUNDAY: Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Morning Worship Hour 11:00 A.M. TUESDAY: Home League 11:30 A.M. Lt. Vanessa Miller ClvlndBv.Hooas Sunday Services 10:00 A.M.' 11:00 A.M.- 6:00 P.M. Wednesday 7:00 P.M. Come Worship With Us! Bible Questions Please Call Ev. George Hickman 795-8883 746-1239 t St. Timothy t Lutheran Church ELCA 1070 N. Suncoast Blvd., Crystal River 795-5325 Saturday Informal Worship 5:00pm Monthly Blueqrass Service 5:00pm Sunday Worship 8:00am & 10:30am Sunday School All Ages & Adults 9:30am Nursery Provided Youth Activities Rev. David S. Bradford, Pastor a, C-ni ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH MASSES: aturday 4:30 P.M. I Sunday 8:00 A.M. 10:30 A.M. L I r .. . .i t r t - I'[l [r, ] 1 .,t I-I,,r,,,,,] , ? Temple Beth David 13158 Antelope St. Spring Hill, FL 34609 352-686-7034 Rabbi Lenny Sarko Services Friday 8PM Saturday 10AM Religious School Sunday 9AM-Noon S Crystal Diver Church of God Church Phone 795-3079 Sunday Morning Adult & Children's Worship 8:30 & 11:00 AM Sunday School 9:45 AM Evening Service 6:00 PM Wednesday Life Application Service Jam Session Youth Ministries & Teen Kid (ages 4-11) 7:00 PM 2180 N.W. Old Tallahassee Rd. (1 2th Ave.) Provided First Baptist Church of Homosassa "Come Worship with Us" 10540 W. Yulee Drive Homosassa 628-3858 Rev. J. Alan Ritter Rev. Steve Gerhart, Assoc. Pastor Sunday 9:00 am Sunday School (AII Age Groups) 10:30 am Worship Celebration Choir / Special Music / "Kidz Worship" Sunday Night 6 pm Worship Celebration Wednesday Night 6:30 pm Worship Celebration Children's Awanas Group Youth Activities www.fbchomosassa.org West :0 0 Citrus gw Church of Christ HCKC, YOU'LL FIND A CAKING FAMILY 9592 W. Deep Woods Dr. IN CH KIST Crystal River, FL 34465- 352.564.8565 C KYSTXL www.westcitruscoc.com R I VK W. Deep Woods Dr. VNITED o I ETHODIST S4801 N. Citrus Ave. C (2 Mi. N Of US 19) I1 SERVICES Sunday AM Bible Study 9:30 Worship 10:30 Sunday PM Worship 6:00 Wednesday PM Bible Study 7:00 EVANGELIST | Bob Dickey I9-31 '10 www.crumc.com Rev. David Rawls, Pastor Sunday Worship 8:00 Early Communion 9:30 Praise & Worship 11:00 Traditional Bible Study At 9:30 & 11:00 For all ages. Wednesday 6:30 Nursery available at all services. Youth Fellowship Sunday 4:30 Wednesday 6:30 Bright Beginnings Preschool 6 Weeks-VPK Mon. Fri. 6:30a.m.-6pm. 795-1240 * A Stephen Ministry Provider 1 CB Crystal 0 River Foursquare Gospel Church 1160 N. Dunkenfield Ave. 795-6720 A FULL GOSPEL FELLOWSHIP Sunday 10:30 A.M. Wednesday "Christian Ed" 7:00 P.M. Prayer Sat. 4-6pmr Pastor John Hager Come grow [ with us! The First Assembly of God Family WELCOMES YOU! IPastor Richard Hart Schedule of Services: Sunday: 9:00 a.m. Adult Bible Study Youth and Children's Classes 10:00 a.m. Spirit Filled Worship Service Inspiring Message Youth andChildren's Ministries 6:00 p.m Youth Ministries Wednesday 7:00 p.m Praise and Worship In-Depth Bible Study Youth and Children's Ministries Nursery Provided Every Service LocatBioi*mn:^^ Crystall R ivr Foida ;: [ij (352)795-2594^B htt:wwwcystaiivrasemiyTrg County Historical Society. The Chabad Jewish Cen- ter of Marion County and The Villages invites the community to celebrate the Festival of Lights at a public Menorah kin- dling ceremony. The grand Chanukah celebration will take place at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Ocala City Square in Down- town Ocala. Public dignitaries and community leaders will at- tend the ceremony and will as- sist in kindling the giant "Menorah of Freedom." Follow- ing the kindling, the program will feature Chanukah gifts and treats, music, clowns, balloons and more. For more informa- tion, contact Chabad of Marion County and The Villages at info@jewishmarion.org or call 352-291-2218 or visit www. jewishmarion.org. Congregation Beth Israel of Ocala will host a Chanukah party at 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 25, in Building 300 at the Collins Center, 9401 State Road 200, 209-1217 SACRN NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING The City Council of the City of Inverness will hold a public hearing on Tuesday, December 20, 2011 at 5:30 p.m. at the Inverness Government Center, 212 W. Main St., Inverness, Florida to consider and finalize a resolution to amend the adopted budget for the General Fund for the fiscal year commencing on October 1, 2011 and ending September 30, 2012. )A3F2 208-1217 SACRN 000A3FO BUDGET SUMMARY CITY OF INVERNESS 2011/2012 FISCAL YEAR THE PROPOSED OPERATING BUDGET EXPENDITURES OF THE CITY OF INVERNESS ARE .12% MORE THAN LAST YEAR'S TOTAL OPERATING EXPENDITURES ROAD TOTAL BEFORE GENERAL WHISPERING PINES IMPROVEMENT CAPITAL PROJECTS WATER & PENSION COMPONENT I.C.R.A. TOTAL ALL ESTIMATED REVENUES FUND PARK FUND FUND SEWER CEMETERY IMPACT FUND FUNDS UNIT TRUST FUND FUNDS AXES AD-VALOREM MILLAGE PER $1000 -6.2159 2,165,464 2,165,464 2,165,464 AD-VALOREM Delinquent Taxes 110,000 110,000 110,000 SALES AND USE TAXES 302,000 302,000 302,000 FRANCHISE FEES 742,000 742,00 742,000 UTILITY SERVICE TAXES 680,000 680,000 680,000 COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE TAX 433,517 433,517 433,517 LICENSES AND PERMFTS 104.900 104,900 104.900 GRANTS AND LOCAL SHARED REVENUES 307,500 1,806,850 500,000 2,614,350 62,000 2,676,350 STATE SHARED REVENUES 658,100 6- - 58,100 658,100 CHARGES FOR SERVICES 292,663 116,350 2,650,950 3,059,963 3,059,963 FINES AND FORFEITURES 25,500 25,500 25,500 INTEREST EARNINGS 88.300 500 1,800 5,000 76,600 44,050 6,000 222,250 1,700 223.950 RENTS & ROYALTIES 10,785 10,785 10,785 SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS/IMPACT FEES 600 345,000 75,000 420,600 420,600 CONTRIBUTIONS/DONATIONS 10.800 10,800 10,800 SALE OF FIXEDASSETS 10,400 10,400 10,400 PENSION CONTRIBUTIONS 10,000 10,000 10,000 MISCELLANEOUS REVENUES 37,294 200 19,020 500 57,014 57,014 DEBT PROCEEDS ro-AL,61,53 424,bb 1,800 2,15,150 3,246,5m0 54,950 15,000 1 ,000 11, 31,643 53,700 11,701,343 RANSFERS IN 340,000 667,581 2,197,650 3,094,377 53,018 6,352,626 57,000 6,409,626 FUND BALANCESIRESERVES/NET ASSETS 8,304,709 290,014 153,738 5,637,842 8,700,436 826,887 142,408 318,539 24,374,573 206,357 24,580,930 rOTAL REVENUES, TRANSFERS & BALANCES 14,306,632 1,382,145 155,538 9,992,342 15,041,383 934,855 217,408 334,539 42,5364,842 327,057 42,691,899 EXPENDITURES GENERAL GOVERNMENTAL 1.888,619 2,649,120 43,500 4,581,239 4,581,239 PUBLICSAFETY 515,000 15,000 530,000 530,000 PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT 596,250 2,901,110 144,263 3,641,623 3,641,623 TRANSPORTATION 676,653 1,888,199 2,564,852 2,564,852 ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT 200,285 103,400 303,685 27,995 331,680 CULTURE & RECREATION 345.014 813,410 1,892,017 3,050,441 3.050,441 DEBT SERVICES 350,638 1,236,959 1,587,597 1,587,597 TOTAL EXPENDITURES 4,572,45 813,410 6547,736 4,138,06 144,263 43,W0o 16,259,437 27,995 16,287,432 RANSFERS ul 2,623.231 51,500 3,496,877 56,518 6,228,122 6 1810 6,409,626 FUND BALANCESIRESERVES~NETASSETS 7,110,942 517,235 155,538 3,444,606 7,406,437 734,074 217,408 291,039 19,877,279 117,562 19,994,841 TOTAL APPROPRIATED EXPENDfTURES, TRANSFERS, RESERVES & BALANCES 14,306,632 1,382,145 155,538 9,992,342 15,041,383 934,855 217,408 334,539 42,364,842 327,057 42,691,890 E ST. ANNE'S Crystal River CHURCH CHURCH OF A Parish in the Anglican Communion CHRIST Rector: Fr. Kevin G. Holsapple A Friendly Church Celebrating 50Years of With A Bible Message. Serving God and the Community Corner of U.S. 19 & 44 East U5 nwy. 19 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE NOTES Continued from Page C2 corridor and welcomes all to come and experience the joy and warmth of this festival with the Beth Israel community. Christmas activities scheduled at Heritage Baptist Church, 2 Civic Circle, Bev- erly Hills: The Christmas Choral Cantata is at 10:15 a.m. Sunday Christmas car- oling is at 6 p.m. no evening service. Kids For Christ Christmas party is at 6:45 p.m. Wednesday. Christmas Eve service is at 6 p.m. Christmas Day worship service is at 10:15 a.m. (no evening service). New Year's Eve service is at 7 p.m. Morning worship service is at 10:15 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 1 (no evening service. Call 352-746-6171. Christmas worship Hernando United Methodist Church, at 2125 E. Norvell Bryant Highway, continues Advent services. In keeping with theme of gifts, during Sunday's service at 10 a.m., the topic is "The Gift of Peace." Pastor Tyler Mont- gomery leads an Advent study on Wednesdays called "Christmas Gifts That Won't Break," an Advent study for adults by James W. Moore. On Christmas Eve at 6 p.m., there will be a candlelight ceremony proceeding out- side to the manger with chil- dren participating. Christmas Day service is at 10 a.m. Call 352-726-7245. St. Raphael Orthodox Church will celebrate Christ- mas Eve with Vespers of Na- tivity Eve at 4 p.m. followed by Holy Supper at 5 p.m. and See NOTES/Page C4 Craft fair Jill Booth of St. John's Catholic Church Craft Group displays one of the many Christmas items on sale at the recent craft fair at the church on Sat- urday, Dec. 10. A record crowd at- tended, with more than 30 vendors selling their crafts. Special to the Chronicle Places of worship that offer love, peace and harmony to all. I Come on over to "His" house, your spirits will be lifted! I SERVICING THE COMMUNITIES OF HERNANDO, LECANTO, FLORAL CITY, HOMOSASSA SPRINGS Homosassa Springs a SVEaim-DmYAvwENSfCHURCH Come, Fellowship & Grow With Us In Jesus 5863 W. Cardinal St. Homosassa Springs, FL 34446 Telephone: (352) 628-7950 Pastor Dale Wolfe Tuesday Mid-Week Meeting 7:00 pm Sabbath-Saturday Services Sabbath School 9:30 am Worship 10:45 am www. homosassaadventist.com St. Scholastica Roman Catholic Church Masses: SATURDAY VIGIL 4:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. SUNDAY 9:00 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Daily Mass: 8:30 a.m. Mon. Fri. Confessions: Saturday 2:45 3:30 p.m. 4301 W. Homosassa Trail Lecanto, Florida 34461 (352)746-9422 www.stscholastica.org Located one mile south of Hwy 44 on SR 490 adjacent to Pope John Paul II Catholic School Glory to Glory .Ministries I A Family United by The Love Of Jesus! Non-Denominational Spirit Filled Worship Family Friendly Sunday 10:30 a.m. (352) 566-6613 www.G2GCares.org Pastor Brian Gulledge 1274 E. Norvell Bryant Hwy, Hernando, FL The New Church Without Walls "An Exciting & Growing Multi-Cultural Non-Denominational Congregation Ministering to the Heart of Citrus County" Senior Pastors & Founders Al I~s * Dr. Douglas Alexander Sr. & Lady "T" Alexander Sunday School 9am Sunday Service 10:30 AM Wednesday Bible Study 7pm 3962 N. Roscoe Rd. Hernando, FL Ph: 352-344-2425 www.newchurchwithoutwalls.com Email:cwow@embarqmail.com "The perfect church for people who aren't" _ Floral City United Methodist Church 8478 East Marvin St. (across from Floral City School) Sunday School 9:05 A.M. Sunday Worship Service 10:30 A.M. Sanctuary 8:00 A.M. Service in the 1884 Church Bible Study Tuesday 10:00 A.M. Wednesday 6:00 P.M. "We strive to make newcomers feel at home." Wheel Chair Access Nursery Available Rev. Steven Todd Riddle Church 344-1771 WEBSITE: floralcitychurch.com SShepherd of the Hills EPISCOPAL CHURCH Our mission is to be a beacon of faith known for engaging all persons in the love and truth of Jesus Christ. Bishop Jim Adams, Rector 527-0052 Services: Saturday 5:00 pm Sunday 8:00 & 10:30 am Christian Formation 9:15 am Sunday School 10:00 am Nursery 10:30 am Healing Service Wednesday 10:00 am 2540 W. Norvell Bryant Hwy. (CR 486) Lecanto, Florida (4/10 mile east of CR 491) www.SOTHEC.org A Place to Belorg 2101 N. Florida Ave, Hernando FL 726-6144 Nursery Provided *CHILDREN *YOUTH *SENIORS Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Praise & Worship 10:40 A.M. Praise Service 6:00 P.M. Praise & Prayer (Wed.) 7:00 P.M Randy T. Hodges, Pastor www.hernandonazarene.org Come as you are! 7EIMESIS COMMUNITY CHURCH ---I PASTOR BRIAN AND KATHY BAGGS Worship Service & Children's Church 10:00 AM Meeting at Knights of Columbus Bldg. County Rd. 486, Lecanto (352) 527-4253 Grace Bible Church Sunday 9:30 AM...................Discovery Time 11:00 AM................Praise & Worship 6:00 PM.................. Evening Service Monday 6:15PM ...................Teens Tuesday 6:15 PM.......Awana (Sept. Apr.) Wednesday 7:00 PM...................Bible Study & Prayer Meeting Pastor: Rev. Ray Herriman (352) 628-5631 Men & Ladies Bible Studies, TOPS, Infant & Toddler Nursery /2 mi.eastofUS.19 6382 W. Green Acres St. P.O. Box 1067 Homosassa, FL. 34447-1067 www.gracebiblehomosassa.org email: gbc@tampabay.rr.com First Baptist Church of Floral City Lip ii Up Jesus 8545 Magnolia 726-4296 Sunday Schedule 8:30 AM Blended Worship Service 9:45 AM Sunday School 11:00 AM Traditional Worship 6:00 PM Worship Wednesday 6:30 PM Music, Youth, Fellowship A warm, friendly Church Nursery Available L www.fbefloralcity.org HERNANDO United Methodist Church Ope Doors .. ryfor Children and Families 2125 E, Norvell Bryant Hwy. (486) ((1'2 miles from Hwy. 41) For information call (352) 726-7245 www.hernandoumcfl .org Reverend Tyler Montgomery Sunday School 8:45 AM 9:30 AM Fellowship 9:30 AM Worship Service 10:00AM Individual Hearing Devices 9 SEVENTH-DAY *...^^^i .i ..~ f^^^^ .... .. ~flP^Hi.B -1880 N. Truk v. Good Shepherd Lutheran Church ELCA Worship 8:30 am 11:00 am * Fellowship After Worship Weekly Communion Sunday School 9:45am Nursery Provided Reverend Kenneth C. Blyth Pastor 439 E. Norvell Bryant Hwy. Hernando, Florida Building is Barrier-Free gshernando.org 352-76-716 Special Event or Weekly Services Please Call Beverly at 564-2912 For Information On Your Religious Advertising COME Worship With The Church of Christ Floral City, Florida Located at Marvin & Church streets. Established in 33 A.D. in Jerusalem by Jesus Christ. A warm welcome always awaits you where we teach the true New Testament Christian Faith. Sunday Bible Study 9:30 a.m. Sunday Worship 10:30 a.m. & 6:00 p.m. Wed./Eve. Bible Study 6:00 p.m. Steve Heneghan, Minister CHURCH OF CHRIST 5E Floral City, FL. A mFL RELIGION SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 C3 C4 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 NOTES Continued from Page C3 Nativity Compline at 6:30 p.m. Christ- mas Day Divine Liturgy is at 10 a.m. Christmas Eve services at First United Methodist Church are as fol- lows. A contemporary service at 5 p.m. in the Family Life Center with a praise band and children's skit. A traditional service at 6:30 p.m. in the sanctuary with children's and youth choirs, chan- cel choir, instrumental ensemble, organ, and harp. A traditional service RELIGION at 8 p.m. in the sanctuary with chancel choir, instrumental ensemble, organ and harp. All services include candle- light and communion. Youths will pres- ent a live nativity in the courtyard at 6:15 and 7:45 p.m. Childcare provided for all services. Christmas Day service is at 10 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 25, in the Family Life Center. The church is at 1126 E. Silver Springs Blvd. (State Road 200), Ocala. Call 352-622-3244 or 352-537-0207. Episcopal Church of the Ad- vent Christmas services: Christmas Eve 5 p.m. family service with Holy Eucharist, and 10 p.m. Solemn High Candlelight Mass. Christmas Day 8 and 10 a.m. Holy Eucharist services. New Year's Day Sunday Holy Eu- charist services at 8 and 10 a.m. The church is at 11251 S.W. Highway 484, Dunnellon, (1.2 miles west of State Road 200, Ocala). Call 352-465-7272. NorthRidge Church Christmas Eve candlelight service is at 5 p.m. The community is invited. Come as you are and experience a casual and loving atmosphere. The church meets at the Inverness Woman's Club, 1715 Forest Drive, across from the Whis- pering Pines Park entrance. Call Pas- tor Kennie Berger at 352-302-5813. Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Christmas Eve worship serv- ices are at 5 and 7 p.m. with Holy Communion. Christmas Day worship service is at 9:30 a.m. Call the church for more information at 352-746- 7161.The church is on County Road 486, opposite Citrus Hills Boulevard in Hernando. St. Timothy Lutheran Church Christmas Eve candlelight services with communion are at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Music provided 30 minutes prior to each service. Christmas Day wor- ship service with communion is at 10:30 a.m. Nursery provided. The CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE church is at 1070 N. Suncoast Blvd. (U.S.19), Crystal River. Call 352-795- 5325 or visit www.sttimothylutheran crystalriver.com. First Christian Church of Ho- mosassa, at 7030 W. Grover Cleve- land Blvd. in Homosassa, will celebrate the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ with a candlelight and communion service at 6 p.m. Christmas Eve. All are welcome to attend. First Baptist Church of Inver- ness Christmas Eve candlelight See NOTES/Page C5 JEWISH Continued from Page C1 its teachings are based on the wisdom and teachings of our sages. I am proud to be part of a continuum that traces its roots back to the patriarch Abraham and to Mount Sinai. While others in the ancient Near East where sacrificing children to their gods, my ancestors forbade the practice and set in motion a set of laws which were to become the foundation of Western Soci- ety Its system of guidance, based on the teachings of the Torah and its commen- taries, is the cornerstone of the faith. It is a religion which understands the human condition, and I can turn to it at any time for guidance and inspiration. It is a faith based on traditions and rituals. While some of these are centuries old, in light of modern times, they are being reinterpreted and made more meaningful to moderns. I love being Jewish be- cause of the universality of the Jewish faith. The God we worship is the Creator of all. We therefore regard every human being with the dignity and respect they de- serve. We respect all people of different faiths, as we re- alize there are others who hold beliefs as true as ours. Being part of a people is important to me. I have in- stant mishpocha, family, with any Jew I meet. We are part of an ethnic group with customs, folkways and lan- guage that cannot stand alone from the faith. Every- thing we do has a basis in Judaism, from not hunting animals for sport to sup- porting charitable causes. It's how we raise our chil- dren, with our emphasis on education to the professions and occupations that we un- dertake. It's the joy we get when yet another of us is given the Nobel Peace Prize, and it is also the col- lective guilt and shame we all feel when a Jew commits a terrible crime. We have a saying that all Jews are re- sponsible for one another, and this kind of thinking is what holds us together as a people. I am glad to be Jewish be- cause I have a spiritual homeland, Israel. I have been there twice, and I have been very impressed each time I have visited. What the Israelis have accomplished in 60-some odd years of in- dependence is miraculous, but even more so is that they have shared their knowl- edge with other nations. As Jews, we are supposed to set an example for the world, and I am proud that Israel, with its scientific and tech- nological knowledge, has done just that. An important tenet of Ju- daism is tzedakah, or char- ity Along with helping those less fortunate, Jews are ex- horted to make the world a better place, or what we call Tikun Olam, repairing the world. From helping with disaster relief to volunteer- ing in the community, Jews have always lent a helping hand where needed. I like being a part of a community with altruistic principles. Judaism is a religion of love. Each day, once in the morning and upon retiring, observant Jews recite the Shema, the Jewish state- ment of faith declaring that God is one and that we should love God with our whole being. This love we have for God is also the love God has for us, which trans- lates into the love we have for others. This whole idea of what is called ethical monotheism is the great principle Jews gave to the world. I love being a part of that tradition. Lastly, I love Jewish food. (Of course you knew that was coming!) You don't need to be Jewish to like bagels and lox or matzoh ball soup, but to me, these things just taste better because I am Jewish! The Maccabees of old fought to retain Jewish identity against the Syrian Greeks of the day The mili- tary battle was won and the Temple was rededicated to Jewish worship. Amidst the commercialism of the Christmas season, modern Maccabees hold forth their Jewish identity, and through the dark night, a menorah burns brightly! Happy Chanukah! (Chan- ukah is observed December 20-28) Judi Siegal is a retired teacher and Jewish educa- tor She lives in Ocala with her husband, Phil. She can be reached at niejudis@yahoo. com. Most Major Insurances Accepted! TheDentistPlaceSpringhill.com OOOA2DE The ON W i) 1'% Cr-l-n fI- rt[ 'r, ,," a, 1 1 .,I 1 -U 4' .' ir ,," , 1 ' lIJwLl ,Ik : A, m Aml: 'Pli,' -t .UI I :, N[". Lars Berk, DMD & Robert Capozza, DMD General Dentists 12009 Cortez Blvd. I Brooksville SF'r.:.u. .Le b.,r 1 I -e Hearrl,an Denial Care Fam,ir First Baptist Church of Beverly Hills * Marple Lewis, IlH Jeff Owen Pastor Minister of Worship and Youth Sunday Services: Bible Study 9:15A.M. Worship 11:00 A.M. Wednesday Services: Prayer and Youth Activities 6:00 P.M. 4950 N. Lecanto Hwy., Beverly Hills, FL Located at the intersection of Hwy. 491 (Lecanto Hwy.) and Forest Ridge Blvd. For more information call (352) 746-2970 Office Hours 9-3 P.M. or email us at: beverlyhillsbaptist@tampabay.rr.com www.fbcbh.com Beverly Hills Community Church 82 Civic Circle, Beverly Hills, Florida (352) 746-3620 Pastor Stewart R. Jamison, III Email: bhcchurch@embarqmail.com Wednesday Bible Study 6p.m. Sunday Coffee/Conversation 8:30 a.m. Sunday Worship Service 10 a.m. Communion -1st Sunday, Monthly Where Christ is Proclaimed! Special Event or Weekly Services Please Call Beverly at 564-2912 For Advertising Information nature Coast Unitarian Universalists SUNDAY SERVICES 10:30 A.M. WHERE REASON & RELIGION MEET GLBT WELCOME 7633 N. Florida Ave. (Route 41) Citrus Springs | 465-4225 WWW.NCUU.ORG COMMUNITY 8 CONGREGATIONAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH ^ ----- 3/o SUNDAY 10:00 AM Dr. Jeff Timm 9220 N. Citrus Springs Blvd. 352-489-1260 Mission Possible MINISTRIES V. David Lucas, Jr. ,j Senior Pastor 9921 N. Deltona Boulevard (352) 489-3886 www.missionpossibleministries.com I Sundays I W orship ...................10:30 am Spanish Translation Provided (Nursery Care & Children's Church Provided) Wednesday ] Youth Group, Bible Study & Kid's Programs................7 pm (Nursery Care Provided) ARMS OF MERCY FOOD PANTRY 1st & 3rd Tuesday of the month. 8:00 am-11:00 am Hope Evangelical Lutheran Church ELCA Pastor Lynn Fonfara 9425 N. Citrus Springs Blvd. Citrus Sprngs Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Communion Every Sunday Information: 489-5511 Go To Our Web Page hopelutheranelca.com First Baptist* Church of Inverness 550 Pleasant Grove Road Inverness, Florida (352) 726-1252 SUNDAY OPPORTUNITIES 7:45 a.m. Bible Study 9:00 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. Bible Study for all 4:00 p.m. Worship Choir Practice 5:15 p.m. Awana 5:45 p.m. Connection Classes WEDNESDAY OPPORTUNITIES 4:30pm Bread Basket Cafe 6:00pm Praise Kids 6:00pm Youth Ignite 6:00pm Mid-Week Worhsip 7:30pm Praise Team & Praise Band Nursery Provided All Services Donnie Seagle, Senior Pastor wwwJfbinverness.comff tler Y~lIt1a1e B1ptist A friendly church where Christ is exalted!!! Sunday School Morning Worship Evening Service Bible Study & Prayer 9:00 A.M. 10:15 A.M. 6:00 P.M. 7:00 P.M. * * VIGIL MASSES: 4:00 P.M. & 6:00 P.M. SUNDAY MASSES: 8:00 A.M. &10:30 A.M. SPANISH MASS: 12:30 Pm.. CONFESSIONS: 2:30 P. to 3:30 P.M. Sat. orByAppointment WEEKDAY MASSES: 8:00 A.M. 6 Roosevelt Blvd., Beverly Hills 746-2144 (1 Block East of S.R. 491) www.ourladyofgracefl : .catholicweb.com . SOME THINGS SHOULDN'T CHANGE Independent Do you miss sound Bible teaching, the beloved hymns & gospel songs, an Eve- ning Service, and being part of a caring, Christian family? Find them at Grace! 2672 W. Edison PI. at Elkcam Blvd. Citrus Springs, FL S.S. 9:45 am, Services 11:00 am & 6:00 pm Wed. Bible Study & Prayer 7:00 pm Rev. Richard W. Brosseau, Pastor Directions, mp3 sermons & more at www.gracebapchurh.org Phone (352) 445-9013 Redemption Christian Church SUNDAY Bible School...............9:00 Worship.................. 10:15 WEDNESDAY Bible School...............6:30 Currently meeting at East Citrus Community Center 9907 East Gulf-to-Lake Highway (At The Flashing Light) For more information call / 352-422-6535 Pastor Todd Langdon Fmist Places of worship that offer love, peace and harmony to all. Come on over to "His" house, your spirits will be lifted!!! SERVICING THE COMMUNITIES OF CITRUS SPRINGS, BEVERLY HILLS, BROOKSVILLE, DUNNELLON, INVERNESS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE GRACES Continued from Page C1 "I'm going in." He said he'd be wait- ing with bail money to get me out of jail if I got arrested for breaking and entering. I really love buildings. When I walked inside the art deco style structure, tears came to my eyes. Seriously It was that incredible, and other than walking into my church - modem French Gothic awesomeness - I'd never experienced such a reaction. Of course, it could've been all the caffeine I'd consumed earlier, mixed with the excitement of being on vaca- tion and up past my bedtime. Right inside the door there was a man in a suit (who said the building was open because there were about a half-dozen restaurants and bars inside and, therefore, I wasn't breaking and entering) who told me that the build- ing was built in 2002 and that the bronze stairway and balcony railings had been rescued from Au Bon Marche, a 1920s Paris department store. I also learned that the 47-story sky- scraper has a "reversed floorplate de- sign," which means it's wider at the top than at the bottom, giving it an un- usual appearance, adding to its cool- ness factor, in my opinion. NOTES Continued from Page C4 service is at 6 p.m. The Christ- mas morning service is at 10. All are invited to join us in cele- brating Christmas. Call the of- fice at 352-726-1252. The church is at 550 Pleasant Grove Road, Inverness. The website is www.fbcinverness.com. Heritage Baptist Church, at 2 Civic Circle, Beverly Hills, will have a Christmas Eve serv- ice at 6 p.m. Christmas Day wor- ship service is at 10:15 a.m. (no evening service). New Year's Eve service is at 7 p.m. Morning worship service is at 10:15 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 1 (no evening serv- ice. Call 352-746-6171. The man in the suit let me go up- stairs, and I walked around, touching the marble and studied the lines and angles of metal and glass and mirrors. I had a camera with me, but I knew I couldn't capture what I was feeling. I've since seen professionally taken photos of this building and they don't do it justice. Reading over these words, I realize how silly they sound, but this building stirred something in me. It thrilled me to be able to explore the handiwork of an architectural artist. I really, really love buildings. When my church was building our sanctuary back in 2003, the day the huge pre-fabricated concrete walls went up, a bunch of us came out to watch. As a huge crane hoisted the 92- foot wall in place we all ate hot dogs and cheered. Over the next few months, I passed the church every day on my way to work, sometimes stopping and walk- ing through the construction site. One week some of the members got to take markers and write messages and favorite Bible verses on the floor before the carpet was installed. I wrote, "God is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think" (Ephesians 3:20). The sanctuary was completed just before Christmas 2003. I still never get tired of counting the arches and mar- veling at how the red steel beams cre- Hernando United Methodist Church, at 2125 E. Norvell Bryant Highway, will have a Christmas Eve service at 6 p.m. with a candlelight cer- emony proceeding outside to the manger with children partici- pating. Christmas Day 0 For service is at 10 a.m. ReliE Call 352-726-7245. brie Inverness F Church of God Christmas Eve service is at 6 p.m. Christmas morning can- dlelight service is at 10 a.m. with Pastor Larry Powers' ser- mon, "The Greatest Gift." The church is at 416 U.S. 41 South, Inverness. Call the church at 352-726-4524. Faith Lutheran Church in Crystal Glen Subdivision, off n 2 State Road 44 and County Road 490, will have Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year's Eve and Day services at the regular times of 6 p.m. Sat- urdays and 9:30 a.m. Sunday. The Christmas Eve service is a candlelight service nore and all four services ion will celebrate Holy ts, see Communion. Page A8 0 Crystal River United Methodist Church, will have three candlelight services on Christmas Eve. A family (contemporary) service is at 6 p.m. Traditional services are at 8 and 11 p.m. Call 352-795-3148. Unity of Citrus County, at 2628 W. Woodview Lane, will have a Christmas Eve candle- ate a cross in the window. Recently, my pastor commented that the reason we built such a beautiful building is because Jesus is beautiful. The building reflects his beauty. My pastor also often says that we did not build the building for ourselves, but for the community, for those who will come some time in the future. Each week as I walk into this mag- nificently simple yet powerfully artis- tic place of worship, I'm reminded that it's God who is the master archi- tect, who's building his church world- wide, not with 92-foot slabs of concrete, but with people. The apostle Peter called the follow- ers of Jesus "living stones" used to build a spiritual structure. So, not only do I get to explore my love of buildings whenever I go some- place, but as a Christian I actually get to be a building! And not just a building, but part of a city, a city on a hill, as Jesus said. The city of God, for all to see. Truly, what more can a building geek like me ask for? Nancy Kennedy is the author of "Move Over, Victoria -I Know the Real Secret," "Girl on a Swing," and her latest book, "Lipstick Grace. "She can be reached at (352) 564-2927, Monday through Thursday, or via email at nkennedy@chronicle online, com. lighting and music service at 6 p.m. Christmas celebration service at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Christmas community dinner (call 352-746-1270 to sign up). Burning Bowl Ceremony and New Year celebration at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 1. White Stone Ceremony and Kwanzaa Sunday at 8:30 a.m. on Jan. 8. Unity of Citrus County also col- lects for the following organiza- tions: Toys and gifts for children for the Family Resource Center through Dec. 18; cleaning sup- plies, nonperishable foods and toiletries for Homeless Veterans Org. the first Sunday monthly; and food and funds for SOS food pantry. Donations are greatly needed. Call the office at 352- 746-1270. RELICS Continued from Page C1 Rev Ron Lengwin, who helped write a new policy for the diocese after the former St. John the Baptist Church in Lawrenceville was sold with all the reli- gious items still inside. It became The Church Brew Works, a use of the space that horrified some Catholics. Some religious items from Pittsburgh have gone to the Virgin Islands and churches in the West In- dies. Bishops there had come here looking for win- dows and pews. Artifacts from Pittsburgh also have been sent to churches in Europe and a cathedral in Croatia, offi- cials said. Despite the prohibition on sales, though, religious items from across the coun- try are available for sale, experts said. "The market is ab- RELIGION at i Church I God Inverness *~~~~~~ I lf&LJI *I PHYLLIS MORGAN LAWRENCE WELK & PHYLLIS Phyllis Morgan began playing at the early age of three. At 14 she won a music Scholarship to the Arthur Jordan Conservatory in Indianapolis, Indiana. Dunng her lifetime she has been pianist and organist in many churches around the country and featured at the Crystal Cathedral in California. She has traveled in concert as a performer and also as an accompanist for many well known vocal artists, among them, Norma Zimmer, the Champagne Lady of the Lawrence Welk Show, of whom she traveled with for over 12 years. She was with Billy Graham at Mayor's and Governor's Prayer Breakfasts and World Wide Pictures. Phyllis's piano recordings have been broadcast on radio and she was co-host of a TBN television show along with Jan Crouch interviewing noted personalities. She recently has been featured at the Orange Blossom Opry and in concert at churches around Florida. May your spirit be inspired and uplifted as you listen to her play and sing some of your favorite songs. She has recorded several CD's that are available for your listening pleasure. pianostylings@yahoo.com First Church of God 5510 Jasmine Lane, Inverness 352-344-3700 Our Lady of Fatima CATHOLIC CHURCH U.S. Hwy. 41 South, Inverness, Florida Sunday Masses 7:30 A.M., 9:00 A.M. & 11:00A.M. Saturday Vigil 4:00 P.M. Weekdays 8:00 A.M. Confessions 2:30 3:30 P.M. 726-1670 "o PRIMERA IGLESIA HISPANA DE CITRUS COUNTY Asambleas de Dios Inverness, Florida ORDEN DE SERVICIOS: DOMINGOS: 9:30 AM Escuela Biblica Dominical 10:30 AM Adoraci6n y Pr6dica MARTES: 7:00 PM Culto de Oraci6n JUEVES: 7:00 PM Estudios Biblicos Les Esperamos! David Pinero, Pastor 1370 N. Croft Ave. Inverness, FL 34451 Tel6fono: (352) 341-1711 All are invited to our Healing Services First Church of Christ, Scientist Inverness 224 N. Osceola Ave. Sunday Services 10:30 AM Sunday School 10:30 AM Wed. Testimony Meeting 5:00 PM 352-726-4033 t-CCI "First For Christ"...John 1:41 000A4L7 FIRST || CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF INVERNESS We welcome you and invite you to worship with our family. John A. Scott, Minister Sunday: 9:00 A.M. Sunday School 10:15 A.M. Worship Service Wednesday: 6:00 P M. Bible Study Special Event or Weekly Services Please Call Beverly at 564-2912 For Information On Your Religious Advertising Pastor Tom Walker Inverness First Church of God 5510 E. Jasmine Ln. Phone: 726-8986 Non-denominational Sunday: 10:30 AM & 6:00 PM Wed. 6:00 PM Bible Study Children's Church School Weekly ALL ARE WELCOME ^ First Assembly of God 4201 So. Pleasant Grove Rd. (Hwy. 581 So.) Inverness, FL 34452 R g Pastor, .- .H Dairold Rushing Come To ST. MARGARET'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH where everyone is still welcome! In Historic Downtown Inverness 1 Block N.W. Of City Hall 114 N. Osceola Ave. Inverness, FL 34450 726-3153 www.stmaggie.org Services: Sun. Worship 8 & 10:30 A.M. Wednesday 12:30 P.M. Morning Prayer 9:00 A.M. Mon- Fri Fr Gene Reuman, Pastor 3896 S. Pleasant Grove Rd. Inverness, FL 34452 (2 mi. so. ofApplebee's) Come as you are. (352) 726-2522 TONY ROSENBERGER Senior Pastor 8:30 AM Traditional Worship with Holy Communion 9:45 AM WWSunday School 11:00 AM Contemporary Praise & Worship OFFICE: (352) 726-1107 I43 Years of FIRTBriinging Christ F IRSxI to Inverness LUTHERAN CHURCH Holy Communion Every Sunday at 7:45am & 10:00am Sunday School & Bible Class 8:45 A.M. 726-1637 Missouri Synod www.1stlutheran.net 1900 W. Hwy. 44, Inverness The Rev. Thomas Beaverson Victory Baptist Church General Conference Sunday School 9:45 AM Worship Sindi., Evening Wednesday Choir Practice 10:45 AM 6:00 PM 7:00 PM 8:00 PM Quality Child Care Pastor Gary Beehler 352-465-8866 5040 N Shady Acres Dr. 726-9719 Highway 41 North, turn at Sportsman Pt. - I eia,' to belong.A place to become." r'oad I twist rch 5335 E. Jasmine Lane, Inverness 4 Miles North Of K-Mart Off 41 North (Formally Calvary Bible Church Location) You're invited to our Services Sunday School 10:00 AM Sunday 10:45 AM & 6:00 PM Wednesday 7:00 PM Independent Fundamental Pastor Terry Roberts Ph: 726-0201 Places of worship that offer love, peace and harmony to all. Come on over to "His" house, your spirits will be lifted! !I I SERVICING THE CITY OF INVERNESS INVERNESS CHURCH OF GOD l .k .l..,rr l .. r. NuId.l Nrtrki ,: T dil l s- 1 I '., -St _'! E 1 11111. l I I I \\ idni-,d. Nighi Ju l I1 '1 ., ,,,,J l I ,, " ,, ii H,,i I , "\\fkl.lIl H.mlIl I I "'=| ' *^ *r~ * First United Vi.r Vic ry Methodist t -Church injSS of Inverness Al e SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 CS solutely flooded with prod- uct right now," said Rick Lair, one of the owners of King Richard's Religious Artifacts in Alpharetta, Ga. "You have 300 to 400 Catholic churches closing each year ... supply far ex- ceeds demand." In the past, many dioce- ses weren't choosy about where their unwanted arti- facts went. "They just got rid of it," Lair said. "When 33 churches on the south side of Chicago closed in the 1990s, lots of stuff wound up in nightclubs." The basic rule for the disposition of sacred items is to burn them or to bury them, said the Rev James R. Gretz, director of the De- partment for Worship at the Pittsburgh diocese. "If large religious items are in disrepair, burial is the preferred method of disposal," he said. "Smaller items, such as books, can be burned and their ashes buried in a cemetery" r C Page C6 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 COMMUNITY CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE New NOTES Make holidays pet-friendly NeW SNOTES vril Ieami I appear in show BROOKSVILLE Citrus Stampede Rodeo 4-H Drill Team will take part in the "Night of Amazing Horses" Saturday, Dec. 17, at Her- nando County Fairgrounds, Brooksville. The show begins at 6 p.m. In addition to the drill team, there will be performances by Loyal Repensky Riders, Mav- erick the Wonderdog, Incredi- ble Liberty and more. Showtime begins at 6 p.m. For advance tickets, visit the website at www.equine extremist.com. Advance tick- ets are $8 for seniors and children; $13 for adults. Tick- ets at the door are $10 for seniors and children; $15 for adults. Christmas in the Park Dec. 17 Christmas in the Park (the holiday version of the monthly Music in the Park) will be from 4 to 6 p.m. Satur- day, Dec. 17, in Crystal River. The musical group will be The Christmas Ensemble, and the program will be a cel- ebration of Christmas and gospel music. The event is free and the public is wel- come. Numismatic education on tap Beverly Hills Coin Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 19, at Central Ridge Library. The club, which has no dues, seeks to bring local coin collectors together and promote numismatic educa- tion. For more information, call Joe at 352-527-2868. Life Pirates to gather Dec. 17 Life Pirates LLC invites everyone to its monthly gath- ering from 7 to 10 p.m. Satur- day, Dec. 17, at the Crystal River Ale House to watch the Christmas Boat Parade, as well as music, door prizes, food and drink specials. The club is collecting un- wrapped toys for the kids. They will be given to local charities to hand out to Citrus County children. All are welcome to bring business information to place on the business promotion table. For more information, visit www.lifepirates.com or call 352-422-7910. Humanitarians OF FLORIDA Fed Ex Special to the Chronicle Fed Ex is so loving he would make a great "spe- cial delivery" Christmas gift. This gray and white tabby is 14 weeks old and needs a home. For the month of December, each adopter will receive a free bag of Science Diet Food plus a special pop-up cube toy. All our felines are neutered, microchipped, vaccinated and free of fe- line leukemia, AIDs and heartworms. Visitors are welcome from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Sat- urday at the Humanitari- ans' Manchester House on the corner of State Road 44 and Conant Avenue, east of Crystal River. Call the Humanitarians at 352- 613-1629 for adoptions, or view most of the Hardin Haven's felines online at www.hofspha.org. PetAngels drive collects items to help local animal rescue groups Special to the Chronicle Orphaned pets in the Citrus County community need your help. The sec- ond annual Pet Angels pet needs drive has begun and runs through Sunday, Jan. 8. Two local rescue groups, Home at Last Pet Adoptions, halpetadop- tions@yahoo.com, and Precious Paws Rescue, preciouspawsflorida.com, are the beneficiaries of this collection. Both organizations are nonprofit, all- volunteer registered charities. Foster pets are cared for in the homes of their volunteers, who pro- vide all the needed daily care. All pets receive the necessary vet- erinary care are spayed or neutered, dogs are tested for heartworm disease and cats for feline leukemia/AIDS, they are up to date on age-appropriate vaccinations and are microchipped. Items to help with their care include cat litter, pet food (both canned and dry), disinfectant cleaners, laundry detergent, paper towels, donations and gift cards. Drop off a gift at any of the following sites: Precious Paws Adoption Center in Crystal River Mall between noon and 4 p.m. Friday, Saturdays or Sundays. Closed for Christmas and New Year's weekends. Plantation Animal Clinic at 9030 W Fort Island Trail, Crystal River Pawfection Ranch at 6420 S. Sun- coast Blvd., Homosassa. Goin' Postal at 7789 S. Suncoast Blvd. Homosassa. Cypress Village Property Owners Association at 108 W. Cypress Blvd., Homosassa, at the entrance to Sug- armill Woods. Oak Village Association at Servos Square, 5478 S. Suncoast Blvd, Ho- mosassa. Donations may be left at any site or checks made out to and mailed to Home at Last, PO. Box 4533, Ho- mosassa, FL 34447. All donations are tax deductible. For more information, or if you need a donation picked up, call Home at Last at 352-476-6832 or Precious Paws at 352-726-4700. A volunteer will return your call. PetMeals Program needs donations to help feed seniors'animals Special to the Chronicle Each month, the PetMeals Program provides dog food and cat food to the compan- ion pets of senior citizens who receive Meals on Wheels. The PetMeals Program was started when it was no- ticed that a very thin man was only taking small bites of his food and then placing his food tray on the floor for a very overweight Chi- huahua to finish the meal. When asked why he was doing this, he said he did not have the money to buy dog food any longer and he would rather go hungry himself than not feed his beloved dog. The program is a 100 per- cent donation-based, volun- teer-driven program. The PetMeals Program seeks help from pet lovers to do- nate unopened bags or cans of dog food and cat food at a local community center, or send monetary donations to: PetMeals Program, 2804 W Marc Knighton Court, Key No. 3, Lecanto, FL 34461. For more information about the PetMeals Pro- gram or drop-off locations for donations, call 352-527-5975. Habitat homes bring happiness Special to the Chronicle ABOVE: Nature Coast EMS team members and their fam- ilies recently participated in a wall raising for Habitat for Humanity of Citrus County. Pictured, from left, are: Misty Boyers, Holly Martin, Wayne Martin, Dawn Taylor, Joe Ghigliotti, Doreen Ghigliotti, Katrina Gillette and J.R. Gillette. LEFT: Gulledge fam- ily members celebrate their first day in their new home Nov. 12 with Bob Swain, left, Habitat Restore truck driver. Habitat House No. 72 was sponsored by the estate of Swain's friend and fellow truck crew member, Russ Garrison, a Habitat volunteer who passed away earlier this year. Pictured, from left, are: Swain, Pastor Brian and Jessica Gulledge, with sons Josiah and Noah. Garrison, a retired social worker, volun- teered with Habitat for Hu- manity of Citrus County for five years before his death. AARP needs help with Tax-Aide Special to the Chronicle AARP Tax-Aide is a national service of the AARP Foundation, offered in conjunction with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. It is a volunteer-run program whose mission is to provide high-quality free assistance in the preparation and electronic filing of federal income tax returns for low- and middle-income taxpayers. Volunteers are trained locally and are certified by the IRS to assist tax- payers in preparing their federal in- come tax forms. All tax returns are completed using IRS/AARP-provided computers and software. Last year in Citrus County, more than 100 volunteers provided this free help to more than 6,000 residents at seven locations in the county Are you good with numbers? Tax volunteers help taxpayers by prepar- ing and filing federal tax returns. For- mal tax preparation experience is not required. Training is provided. Are you tech savvy? Technical vol- unteers manage computer equipment, ensure taxpayer data security, manage small networks and provide technical assistance to other volunteers. Are you a people person? Greeters welcome taxpayers at a site and make sure they have all the necessary pa- perwork before meeting with a tax vol- unteer They also manage the flow of taxpayers being served. To volunteer, visit the website at AARPorg/taxaide and enter contact information under Volunteer with AARP Foundation Tax-Aide for 2012, or email Mark Joyce, district coordi- nator for Citrus County, at markjoyc- etaxaide@gmail.com. D.ill t^-m.fn V IV * Submit information at least two weeks before the event. U Submit material at Chronicle offices in Inverness or * Early submission of timely material is appreciated, but Crystal River; by fax at (352) 563-3280; or email to multiple publications cannot be guaranteed. community@chronicleonline.com. * Notes tend to run one week prior to the date of an event. Publication on a special day can't be guaranteed. * Expect notes to run no more than once. Church slates free holiday meal The New Church Without Walls will serve a free Christ- mas dinner to the homeless and needy of Citrus County from noon to 4 p.m. Satur- day, Dec. 17, at Hernando Beach. Donations are needed of clothing, toiletries, tents and bicycles. For more informa- tion, call Lynda Simmons or Tiarra Alexander at 352- 344-2425. Civic group to host sheriff's speaker The North Citrus Civic As- sociation will have Sgt. Chris Evans of the Citrus County Sheriffs Office as guest speaker at 5:30 p.m. Tues- day, Dec. 20, when monthly meetings resume. There will be a question- and-answer session regard- ing crime in North Citrus County happening during the holiday season and winter months. All North Citrus resi- dents with concerns about scams, person crimes or Sheriff's Office responsibili- ties are invited to attend. The meeting time and lo- cation have changed from the DeRosa Fire Station (which is being renovated) to the Citrus Springs Fire Sta- tion, 9575 N. Citrus Springs Blvd. (across from Texaco). Senior Friends plan potluck Senior Friends for Life will have its Christmas potluck at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 20. Bring a covered dish. This will be a tree-trimming party. Bring an ornament either handmade or one that you aren't using. The Christmas potluck will be at 6435 W Pine Ridge Blvd., Beverly Hills. Reservations must be made by calling Myrna Hocking at 352-860-0819, Teddie Holler at 352-746- 6518, Astrid Grant at 352- 341-0346, or Jackie Bouyea at 352-527-6929. Civic group taking party reservations Inverness Highlands Civic Association invites everyone to its New Year's Eve Party. Attendance will be by reser- vation only, and those who want to come must RSVP by Thursday, Dec. 22. Tickets, for $25 each, can be paid for at the door, but reservations must be made by calling Bubbles at 352- 634-1516. Dine, dance and celebrate the new year. Dance music for all ages will be provided by Bubbles. Dinner will be prime rib catered by the Rustic Ranch, and there will be a cham- pagne toast at midnight, followed by breakfast. Tickets on sale for New Year's Eve Ball Citrus County Parks and Recreation will present its first New Year's Eve Ball. The formal affair will be on Saturday, Dec. 31, at the Cit- rus Springs Community Center. Doors will open at 7 p.m.; dinner will be served at 8 p.m. and music will be pro- vided by a six-piece band, Magic Sound, from Orlando. Make this an evening to share and remember with your friends, as we ring in the New Year and say goodbye to the last. Appetizers will be offered before the sit-down dinner, with a cash bar available dur- ing the event. Advance tickets are $25 per person and need to be purchased at the Citrus Springs office with choice of New York strip or chicken marsala. For information, call 352- 465-7007 or 352-527-7540. Sponsored by Citrus County Parks & Recreation and the Chronicle. * CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE SATURDAY EVENING DECEMBER 17, 2011 C: Comcast, Citrus B: Bright House D: Comcast, Dunnellon 1: Comcast, Inglis F: Oak Forest H: Holiday Heights C B D IF H 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 WESH NBC O 19 19 19 News Nightly News Entertainment Tonight (N)'PG' Grimm "Lonelyhearts"'14' WWE Tribute to the Troops Law & Order: Special Victims Unit News Sat. Night Live WE PBS 3 3 14 6 John Sebastian Presents: Folk The Big Band Years (My Music) Big Band hits. (In Stereo)'G' s Magic Moments: The Best of 50s Pop Musicians perform. (In Stereo)'G' s John Sebastian Presents: Folk PBS B 3 3 14 6 Rewind (My Music) 'G' s Rewind (My Music) 'G'Bc WUFT PBS 5 5 5 5 16 ToBeAnnounced ToBeAnnouncedLive From the Artists Den 'PG' L NC 8 8 NewsChannel 8 NBC Nihtly Entertainment Tonight (N) (In Grimm "Lonelyhearts" A series of WWE Tribute to the Troops Law & Order: Special Victims Unit News Channel 8 Saturday Night W ANBC 8 8 8 8 8 8 at 6(N) News (N)G' Stereo) 'PG' s deaths and disappearances.'14' "Educated Guess" '14' aat 11PM (N) Live (N)'14' WFV AC 20 20 20 2 Eyewitness News ABC World News Paid Program Wheel of Fortune Wipeout The Nutcracker Sweet; CMA Country Christmas Country stars share holiday traditions. (In Stereo) Eewitness News Hot Topics'PG' Wk ABC n 20 20 20 0 Weekend G' Santa's Workshop. 'PG' 'PG' Weekend P CBS 10 10 10 10 10 10 To Be Announced CBS Evening 10 News (N) TheYoung Icons Frostythe Frosty Returns The Story of Santa Claus Jolly 48 Hours Mystery (In Stereo) 'PG' 10 News, 11pm Paid Program I CBS 10 10 10 10 News (N) x 'G'E XSnowman'G' 'G' X couple's history 'G' a (N) FOX13 6:00 Tailgate Sunday TMZ (N) (In Stereo)'PG'c America's Most Wanted: U.S. Marshals Special Edition U.S. Marshals' FOX13 10:00 News (N) x Hell's Kitchen Five contestants com- (WTT) FOX 0 13 13 13 13 News (N) a most-wanted criminals. (N) (In Stereo) '14, D,L,S,V'x pete as a team.'14' E WCJB ABC D 11 11 4 15 News World News Entertainment Tonight (N)'PG' Wipeout (In Stereo) 'PG' CMA Country Christmas Country stars share holiday traditions.'PG' News Crook & Chase WCLF IND 2 2 2 2 22 22 Cornerstone With John Hagee JackVan Impe Great Awakening All Over the Freedom Today Great Awakening Presents 'G' World 'G' ABC Action News ABC World News Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy!'G'x Wipeout The Nutcracker Sweet; CMA Country Christmas Country stars share holiday traditions. (In Stereo) ABC Action News Grey's Anatomy (W ) ABC 11 11 11 11(N) 'G' X Santa'sWorkshop.'PG' 'PG's at11PM '14'X M IND ~ D 12 12 Family Guy '14' a Family Guy'14' s The Big Bang The Big Bang House "Whatever It Takes" House House "Ugly" Fellowship candidates *, "Three to Tango"(1999, Romance-Comedy) Matthew Perry An archi- WiI Theory PG' Theory'14' must help a CIA agent.'14' s distract House. '14' s tect falls for a woman who thinks he is gay 'PG-13' s WTTA) MNT D 6 6 6 6 9 Hollyscoop'PG' Ring of Honor Wrestling'14'x Bucs Pregame NFL Football Dallas Cowboys at Tampa Bay Buccaneers. From Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Fla. Paid Program Ring of Honor WACX) TBN D 21 21 21 The Faith Show Summit Bible M & J Koulionos Life Center Church |Hal Lindsey'G' Variety |Claud Bowers Tims Ministries |Spencer Wisdom Keys St. Luke Lead The King of 'Til Death "The Two and a Half Two and a Half Criminal Minds Murders may linkto Cold Case "Revolution" A younq NUMB3RS Don uncovers a potential The Unit "Best Laid Plans" Bob runs I cw M) 4 4 4 4 12 12Queens PG' Baby"'PG' Men'PG'x Men'PG'x one perpetrator.'14' x woman is found murdered. 'PG terrorist plot.'PG' s interference.'14' m Y FM 16 16 16 1 Ford in the Fast To Be Announced I Spy'Y' Cold Squad (In Stereo) '14' s (DVS) Da Vinci's Inquest (In Stereo) '14' X Movie'MA' EFAM E6 16 16 16 16 Lane WOGX FOX g 13 13 7 7 TMZ (N) (In Stereo) 'PG' s Big Bang Theory |Big Bang Theory America's Most Wanted: U.S. Marshals Special Edition'14, D,L,S,V' FOX 35 News at 10 (N) a Hell's Kitchen '14' s WVEI UNI 15 15 15 15 15 15 Familia de Diez |Noticiero Protagonistas'PG'(SS) Sabado Gigante (N) 'PG'(SS) 13 Miedos'14' Noticiero WXPXN ION m, 17 ** "Dr. Dolittle 3" (2006)'PG' ** "Dr. Dolittle 3" (2006, Comedy) John Amos. (In Stereo)'PG' Psych "High Top Fade Out"'PG' Psych "Let's Get Hairy"'PG' Psych (In Stereo)'PG' s A&E 54 48 54 54 25 27 Beyond Scared Straight'14' Beyond Scared Straight'14' c Beyond Scared Straight'14' c Beyond Scared Straight'14' c Beyond Scared Straight'14' c Beyond Scared Straight'14' c Ai 55 64 55 55 *** "Pale Rider"(1985)'R' *** "The Outlaw Josey Wales"(1976, Western) Clint Eastwood, Chief Dan George, Sondra Locke.'PG' Hell on Wheels'14' s "The Outlaw Josey Wales"(1976) AN 52 35 52 52 19 21 Ned Bruha |Ned Bruha Too Cute! (In Stereo)'PG' s |Meet the Sloths (N)'PG' Pit Bulls and Parolees'PG' Pit Bulls and Parolees (N)'PG' Pit Bulls and Parolees'PG' iETD 96 19 96 96 *** "Undercover Brother" (2002) Eddie Griffin. "Exit Wounds" (2001, Action) Steven Seagal, DMX, Isaiah Washington.'R' **/ "Animal"(2005, Drama) Ving Rhames, Jim Brown.'R' (iRAV0I 254 51 254 254 Real Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly ** "Angels & Demons" (2009) Tom Hanks. Robert Langdon confronts an ancient brotherhood.'PG-13' "The Silence of the Lambs"'R' (CC] 27 61 27 27 33 ** Sex Drive |*** "The 40-Year-Old Virgin" (2005, Romance-Comedy) Steve Carell.'R' s *h "The Love Guru"(2008) Mike Myers. Premiere.'PG-13' s **/, "Shallow Hal" (2001) CMT 98 45 98 98 28 37 *** "Pure Country"(1992, Drama) George Strait.'PG' **/ "Because of Winn-Dixie"(2005, Drama) AnnaSophia Robb. Premiere.'PG' ** "Unlikely Angel"(1996, Drama) Dolly Parton. CN 43 42 43 43 Paid Program Paid Program Money in Motion |How I, Millions American Greed The Suze Orman Show (N) a Debt Do Us Part Debt Do Us Part American Greed CN 40 29 40 40 41 46 Situation Room CNN Newsroom (N) CNN Presents'PG' s Piers Morgan Tonight CNN Newsroom (N) CNN Presents'PG' c DISN 46 40 46 46 6 5 ** "The Game Plan" (2007) Dwayne"The Rock" Johnson.'PG' A.N.T Farm'G' |Jessie'G' So Random!'G' Shake It Up!'G' Good-Charlie e Good-Charlie Good-Charlie |Good-Charlie ESP 33 27 33 33 21 17 College Football Famous Idaho Potato Bowl: Teams to Be Announced. From Boise, Idaho. (N) (Live) College Football R&L Carriers New Orleans Bowl: Teams to Be Announced. From New Orleans. (N) (Live) ESPNI2 34 28 34 34 43 49 Basketball |College Basketball Syracuse at North Carolina State. (N) (Live) |Women's College Volleyball NCAA Tournament, Final: Teams TBA. (N) |College Basketball New Mexico at Oklahoma State. EWTNI 95 70 95 95 48 Archbishop Sheen: Servant of All Mother Angelica-Classic Loyola, the Soldier Saint'G' |Holy Rosary Web of Faith'G' s The Journey Home'G' FAI 29 52 29 29 20 28 ***1 "Up"(2009, Comedy) Voices of Ed Asner.'PG' **** "Toy Story"(1995, Comedy) Voices of Tom Hanks.'G' Santa Claus Is Comin'to Town'G' "Willy Wonka & Chocolate" FN 44 37 44 44 32 America's News Headquarters (N) FOX Report (N) Huckabee (N) Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) The Five Journal Editorial FOX News [F 26 56 26 26 Chef Hunter "Quay" Chopped"Chopped Liver" Chopped "Season's Choppings" Chopped 'G' Chopped Iron Chef America $FSNFI 35 39 35 35 Basketball Football Weekly High School Football Florida Class 8A Championship: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) College Basketball Georgia at USC. (N) (Live) (FX) 30 60 30 30 51 **, "Night at the Museum"(2006, Comedy) Ben Stiller.'PG' **, "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian"(2009) Ben Stiller.'PG' It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia |Always Sunny G F 67 Golf Central (N) |The Golf Fix Golf Academy |Golf Academy Best of Britain |Golf JBWere Masters, Final Round. (N) (Live) (HALL 39 68 39 39 45 54 "A Dog Named Christmas" (2009) Bruce Greenwood.'NR' N "Christmas Comes Home to Canaan" (2011) Billy Ray Cyrus. a "Christmas Comes Home to Canaan" (2011) Billy Ray Cyrus. a ** "The Losers" (2010, Action) Jeffrey Dean Moran. Elite commandos *h "Red Riding Hood" (2011, Horror) Amanda Boardwalk Empire Jimmy hopes to 24/7 Fyers/Rangers: Road to the "Red Riding O 302 201 302302 2 2 hunt the man who betrayed them. (In Sfereo) 'PG-13' sSeyfried. Premiere. (In Stereo)'PG-13 c make amends with Nucky 'MA' NHL Winter Classic'PG' s Hood (HfTVi 23 57 23 23 42 52 House Hunters |Hunterslnt'l House Hunters Hunters Int'l Design/Dime High Low Proj. Color Splash'G' Dina's Party'G' Donna Dec House Hunters Hunters Int'l Hunters Int'l HIST 51 25 51 51 32 42 Bigfoot: The Definitive Guide'PG' Amer. Pickers Amer. Pickers Real Deal'PG' Real Deal'PG' Real Deal'PG' Real Deal'PG' Real Deal'PG' Real Deal'PG' Invention USA Invention USA LIFE 24 38 24 24 31 **, "The Holiday" (2006) Cameron Diaz, Jude Law 'PG-13'i "Christmas Angel" (2009) K.C. Clyde. Premiere.'PG'x "12 Men of Christmas" (2009) Kristin Chenoweth.'NR' s S"Gone" (2011, Suspense) Molly Parker, Lochlyn Munro. Kidnappers force *h "Whiteout" 2009 Suspense) Kate Beckinsale. Premiere. An "Nora Roberts' Carnal Innocence" (2011, Mystery) Gabrielle Anwar. A ("I" (50 a nurse to kill a hospital patient. a Antarctica law officer has three days to solve a murder.'R' s musician visits a Mississippi town where a killer strikes.'NR' s **l "Date Night" (2010) Steve *** "Get Him to the Greek" 2010, Comedy) Jonah Hill. An executive Strike Back A double-cross involving "Beatdown"(2010) RudyYoungblood. A former MMA Strike Back (I 320 221 320320 3 3 Carell.'PG-13 c must drag a boozy rock star to Hollywood. (In Stereo) 'NR' s Hasani. (In Stereo) 'MA' a champion and a street fighter try to win money 'MA' a MSNBC 42 41 42 42 MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MSNBC Documentary MTV 97 66 97 97 39Ridiculousness |Ridiculousness Ridiculousness |Ridiculousness Ridiculousness |Ridiculousness Ridiculousness IRidiculousness ***"ScaryMovie"(2000, Comedy)ShawnWayans.(InStereo)'R' 1 65 44 53 The Truth Behind...'PG' Brain Games"Watch This!"'G' Brain Games "Pay Attention!"'G' Alaska State Troopers '14' Alaska State Troopers'14' Brain Games"Pay Attention!"'G' NK 28 36 28 28 35 25 SpongeBob |SpongeBob iCarly'G' |iCarly'G'a Victorious'G' iCarly'G' Victorious'G' |iCarly'G' That '70s Show |That'70s Show Friends'PG' Friends'PG' XYI 44 *** "Pride & Prejudice" (2005, Drama) Keira Knightley, Matthew MacFadyen, Judi Dench.PG' **, "The Notebook" (2004) Ryan Gosling. A man tells a story to a woman about two lovers.'PG-13' ui$oWW 340 241 340 340 oHomeland "The Vest" (iTV) Carrie is *** "Fair Game" (2010, Drama) Naomi Watts, Sean Penn, Sam Boxing Andre Ward vs. Carl Froch. (iTV) (N) (Live) Strikeforce: Melendez vs. Masvidal (N) (Live) '14, L H340 241 340 340 hospitalized.'MA' s Shepard. iTV Valerie Plame is revealed as a CIA agent.'PG-13' 'PG, LI (SPEEDI 122 112 122 122 Truck U'G' |Truck U'G' Truck U'G' |Truck U'G' Am. Trucker |Am. Trucker Am. Trucker Am. Trucker Am. Trucker Am. Trucker Am. Trucker |Am. Trucker SPIEI 37 43 37 37 27 36 ** "Star Wars: Episode II -- Attackof the Clones"(2002)'PG' The Playbook (In Stereo) (SUNii 36 31 36 36 Basketball Inside Lightning NHL Hockey Tampa Bay Lightning at Columbus Blue Jackets. (N Subject to Blackout) Lightning Live! Israeli Bask. Seminole Sports Fight Sports MMA (SYFY 31 59 31 31 26 29 ***Y "Planet Terror"(2007) ** "Resident Evil: Apocalypse"(2004) Milla Jovovich.'R' *h, "Pandorum"(2009, Science Fiction) Dennis Quaid, Ben Foster. Premiere.'R' *** Serenity (T I 49 23 49 49 16 19 Friends'PG' Friends'PG' Commercials Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory IBig Bang Theory Big Bang Theory IBig Bang Theory *** "The Hangover" (2009, Comedy) Bradley Cooper.'R' *** "The Story of Will Rogers"(1952, Biography) Will Rogers Jr., Jane ***h "Bringing Up Baby"(1938) Katharine Hepburn. A socialite with a **** "The Philadelphia Story" (1940) Cary Grant. An ex-husband's L i 169 53 169 169 30 35 Wyman. Life of the homespun American humorist. NR' leopard ensnars a fundraising scientist.'NR' s (DVS) return upsets a socialite's wedding plans.'NR a (DVS) T 53 34 53 53 24 26 MythBusters Snow myths.'PG' MythBusters (In Stereo)'14' sx MythBusters (In Stereo)'PG' c MythBusters (In Stereo) 'PG' MythBusters (In Stereo) PG'X MythBusters (In Stereo)'PG' c TLC 50 46 50 50 29 30 Toddlers & Tiaras 'PG' s Invasion of the Christmas Lights Extreme Christmas Trees 'PG' Christmas Lgts. DCCupcakes Invasion of the Christmas Lights 2 Extreme Christmas Trees'PG' 4 3TNT 48 33 48 4831 34*** "Pretty Woman"(1990)'R' **** "The Wizardof Oz"(1939) Judy Garland.'G' (DVS) **** "The Wizard of Oz"(1939, Fantasy) Judy Garland, Ray Bolger.'G' (DVS) Pretty Woman TRAl 9 54 9 9 44 Extreme Barhopping 'PG' a 21 Sexiest Beach Bars '14' sa Ghost Adventures 'PG' s Ghost Adventures 'PG' s Ghost Adventures 'PG' s Ghost Adventures 'PG' s truT 25 55 25 25 98 98 Most Shocking'14' Top 20 Most Shocking'14' Top 20 Most Shocking'14' Top 20 Most Shocking'14' World's Dumbest...'14' Forensic Files Forensic Files TVL 32 49 32 32 34 24 M*A*S*H'PG' M*A*S*H'PG' Hot in Cleveland I Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Hot in Cleveland Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond ILove-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens US) 47 32 47 47 17 18 NCIS "False Witness"'PG' NCIS "Ships in the Night"'14' NCIS"Kill Screen"'PG' NCIS'PG' (DVS) NCIS "Tell-AII"PG' (DVS) **Y "Quantum of Solace" (WE) 117 69 117 117 Ghost Whisperer 'PG' Ghost Whisperer PG' s Ghost Whisperer'PG' s Ghost Whisperer'PG' s Ghost Whisperer 'PG' Ghost Whisperer "Slam"'PG' WiN-Al 18 18 18 18 18 20 Law& Order: Criminal Intent'14' America's Funniest HomeVideos FunnyVideos To Be Announced News at Nine Scrubs'14' PHILLIP ALDER Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, a French playwright and actor known by his stage name of Moliere, said: "Es- teem must be founded on prefer- ence: To hold everyone in high esteem is to esteem nothing." If you and your partner can use the suit-preference signals we will look at today, you will be held in high esteem by your peers. How should the declarer-play and defense go in this four-spade contract after West leads the club king? South's jump to game is normal, but with such a balanced hand, he should not be surprised if the con- tract isn't ironclad. Declarer starts with four losers: three hearts and one club. West cannot have the ace and king of hearts, because he would have led Bridge North 12-17-11 t K J 6 3 V Q 72 + Q 7 2 J 6 4 West East S92 7 4 10 83 VAKJ6 +1083 9 6 5 4 4KQ 1087 4 952 South A Q 10 8 5 V 9 5 4 +*AKJ 4 A 3 Dealer: South Vulnerable: Both South West North East 1 A Pass 2 A Pass 4 i Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: J K that suit, not a club. Consequently, South has only nine winners: five spades, three diamonds and one club. However, if declarer wins the first trick and immediately returns a club, he will establish dummy's jack as a winner Then, if West does not shift to a heart, the contract will make. Note that West seems to have a guess between hearts and dia- monds. However, East can tell his partner which suit to lead. At trick one, East must discourage with the club two. But on the second round, he can play his nine or five with im- punity. Here, because he would like a heart switch, he drops the nine, the higher card asking for the higher-ranking side suit. There is one last similar point. If declarer draws trumps immedi- ately, East should play first his seven, then the four, as a signal for hearts. THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek vMiaA Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. s^w m 5o l< CO 0 C CD I I ^-c -a - fil 0 C- ) U)0 CO a)C L>o COC Dcu <-2 ECo ^2 Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon. A:wers Monday (Answers Monday) ACROSS Chirp Recipe amt. Tux-rental event Harm Zodiac sign "- Zapata!" Vaccines Patchwork cats General course Free of Tunnel blaster Lama, usually "- Road Runner" Patron of lost causes "Typee" sequel Filet - Seal a tub White-faced Shaggy flower Persuade Flake Actress Myrna - 12 Mocked 15 Cries of pain 18 Justice Dept. org. 19 Regretful 53 Saturate 56 Cellist Ma 57 "Sesame Street" denizen 58 Some 59 Mutual-fund charge 30 Perm follow-ups 31 Dogma 62 Sicilian smoker DOWN 1 Nuisance 2 Perpetually 3 Colleen's home 4 Fern, e.g. 5 RN's specialty 6 Grilled a steak 7 Well-behaved 8 Garden hose plastic Answer to Previous Puzzle Very funny person Hot place Pole on a ship Wyo. neighbor Spicy mustard Hamburger need - Wyle of "ER" Colorful Apple Soy-based soup Ottoman title Think over carefully Potpourri Not super Coming up Soap units Pac-Man morsel Genghis' grandson Scallions Olduvai loc. Arthur Conan - Is indebted Hull plank Mo. bill Cheer on Pitcher Nolan - Skywalker's guru Sister of Helios Locker locale Dear Annie: During a self- exam in March, I noticed a painful lump above my left breast. I was told re- peatedly that painful lumps are rarely breast cancer, and that it was probably a benign fi- broid. I was unable to get a doctor to take it seriously. During an appoint- ment for another pro- cedure, I insisted that the doctor examine my breast. The lump was growing like crazy and AN N getting more painful. I MAIL had an immediate mammogram, a biopsy was recommended, and I received a confirmation of breast cancer in May. By then, the lump had grown to the size of a small fist. I am in the middle of treatment and doing well. Please tell your readers to do those monthly breast exams, and to insist on fur- ther testing if they find anything out of the ordinary, including a painful lump. Be firm if necessary. I also would like to mention these helpful websites: The American Cancer Society (cancer.org) and Susan G. Komen for the Cure (komen.org). Somewhere in America Dear Somewhere: Thank you for reminding our readers male and female to pay attention to their bodies, do regular self- exams, and not be intimidated when it comes to advocating for your health. While painful lumps are often benign, there are always exceptions, and any irregularity should be taken seriously. Dear Annie: We have come to dread the holiday season. Starting in October, it's a race between var- ious women in the family to see who will get to host the family dinner. Then several relatives will not attend because of squabbles with others. Some family members go all-out buying pres- ents for everyone and insist on a full-family gift exchange. This can get really expensive. Last year was finan- cially hard for us, so we IE'S asked to do a one-per- BOX son gift exchange and were ignored. We then insisted they not buy us anything, suggesting they spend their money only on the children. We were ignored again.The holi- days have become a royal pain, but we love going to the Christmas plays, family events and attending church. How can I tactfully tell my family our wishes to have a pleas- ant holiday season without the guilt tripping and stress, and not have everyone mad at us? Give Me an Old-Fashioned Christmas Dear Old-Fashioned: The only way to win is to stop playing. An- nounce to all the relatives that this year, in order to return to the meaning of Christmas, you will be donating to charity as your gift to the entire family. Suggest they do the same. (Charities will accept as much or as little as you choose to give.) If they insist on buying pres- ents for you anyway, thank them graciously, but do not reciprocate. If necessary, remind them that you already donated to charity in their honor. Keep smiling, and stick to your guns. Don't make their materialistic insanity your problem. Dear Annie: The letter from "Not So Dutiful for Much Longer" asked how to handle the rude be- havior of an elderly parent. In our family, we noticed that as relatives aged, some of them lost their emo- tional filters. They became con- trary, mean-spirited and downright rude. Cruel words that used to be said behind our backs were now being voiced to our faces.In my father-in-law's case, this once sweet man became so nasty that we dreaded all contact. Dad was demanding, vulgar and insensitive. After seeking profes- sional advice, my husband and I made an agreement. The minute Dad began attacking us verbally, we would excuse ourselves, say- ing, "Dad, we can see you're not in a good mood for company. We hope you feel better next time." Dad would plead for us to stay, but he still could not temper his hurtful actions. Sometimes we had to turn around and go home minutes after arriving, but it was worth it. It did not alter Dad's be- havior, but it allowed us to have only good memories of him. - Saved Our Sanity Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Lan- ders column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W Cen- tury Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045. To find out more about Annie's Mailbox visit www. creators. com. Want more puzzles? Check out the "Just Right Crossword Puzzles" books at QuillDriverBooks.com 12-17 2011 UFS, Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS FJOIGEHEAPMYA W D E I~Y ALDAmAR GlOm ER HAI RmGROlW LAMP AGENDAS WORST !! UE UR FOB HAUTE BOWERS URN LUREmSTAB HE R R I SE ECO AV ER SE L ASSO0 Lv EA SA P OPTIC BONANZA MUSCULARmCOAL ARK RREmH E NS RES SCAIRmE L Y ENTERTAINMENT SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 C7 RFIAAS| D, L NN / ^ DILNNA 71-7 | -^ I CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE Peanuts WHEN 5ANTA CLAU5 BRIN65 ME THE DO6, WILL HE LEAVE IT ON THE FRONT PORCH OR IN THE BACK YARP? HE WOULDN'T PROP IT DOWN THE CHIMNEY, WOULP HE -7 Pickles WITH E' A LITTLE Sally ForthAM Sally Forth TRERE WAG A-fREE FRO6 IN IRE C R(6TMAS Tr EE, 11" 3Ia SE o0T VIER FACE. .1,, Dilbert The Born Loser Kit 'N' Carlyle Rubes SIC1, \THINK WE'VE FoiktPA -..__ ____-, 41 - The Grizzwells Blondie SO... WELL, THEY I HAVE TO ELF UNION HEADACHES... CANT I WONDER IF IT'S YOU OON'T HOW'S CUT ME TO WORK EXTRA COMPLAIN...I MEAN, I HAVE A SORE TOUGH FOR SANTA KNOW THE LIFE AS PART-TIME, PARAES TO LAP, BUT WHO OOESNT?1! TO E JOLLY ( HALF OF IT A MALL SO I LOST COVER MY ALL THE TIAE?' SANTA? MY BEARD SLEIGH ( I INSURANCE COSTS.., Dennis the Menace The Family Circus Doonesbury Flashback Big Nate YOUNG MAN, WE DON'T THROW THINGS HERE AT THE BOOK LOFT! 5-SORRY. IT... UH... SLIPPED OLT OF M- HAND. Arlo and Janis 9'SNICKER,.'.. YOU'RE BUYING A "EETHAN'(' TREASURY? IT'S FOR MY SISTER! .F y r (._^ I /' THEN WHY WERE YOU SITTING ON riHE FLOOR READING, IT WHEN r FOUND YOU'? I HATE PC^^ "Yes! Now it's beginning' to look a LOT like Christmas!" "BRING ME A PONI AN' I'LL BET EVEN N\R.WILGONM \lLL START BELIEVIN' IN OU!" Betty Citrus Cinemas 6 Inverness; 637-3377 "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows" (PG-13) 1 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m., 10:05 p.m. No passes. "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked" (G) 12:30 p.m., 2:45 p.m. 5 p.m., 7:30 p.m., 9:50 p.m. "New Year's Eve" (PG-13) 1:10 p.m., 4:10 p.m., 7:15 p.m., 10:10 p.m. "The Sitter" (R) ID required. 1:30 p.m., 4:20 p.m., 7:40 p.m., 10 p.m. "Hugo" (PG) 3:50 p.m. "Hugo" (PG) In Real 3D. 12:45 p.m., 7:05 p.m., 9:55 p.m. No passes. "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part I" (PG- 13) 1:20 p.m., 4:15 p.m., 7:20 p.m., 10:10 p.m. Crystal River Mall 9; 564-6864 "Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows" (PG-13) 1:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m., 6:30 p.m., 7 p.m., 7:30 p.m., 9:30 p.m., 10 p.m., 10:30 p.m. No passes. "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked" (G) 12:20 p.m., 2:40 p.m. 5:05 p.m., 7:20 p.m., 9:40 p.m. No passes. "The Sitter" (R) ID required. 12:30 p.m., 2:35 p.m., 4:40 p.m., 7:55 p.m., 10:25 p.m. "New Year's Eve" (PG-13) 1:10 p.m., 4:20 p.m., 7:10 p.m., 10:05 p.m. "Hugo" (PG) In Real 3D. 12:55 p.m., 3:45 p.m. "Arthur Christmas" (PG) 12:25 p.m., 5:10 p.m., 9:55 p.m. "Arthur Christmas" (PG) In Real 3D. 2:45 p.m., 7:35 p.m. No passes. "The Muppets" (PG) 12:45 p.m., 4:10 p.m., 7:05 p.m., 9:45 p.m. "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part I" (PG- 13) 1:20 p.m., 4:50 p.m., 7:40 p.m., 10:15 p.m. "Puss in Boots" (PG) In Real 3D. 12:15 p.m., 2:30 p.m., 4:45 p.m. No passes. Times subject to change; call ahead. WJUF-FM 90.1 National Public Local RADIO WYKE-FM 104.3 Sports Talk WHGN-FM 91.9 Religious WDUV 105.5 FM Hudson WXCV-FM 95.3 Adult Contemp. WSKY 97.3 FM News Talk WJQB-FM 106.3 Oldies WXOF-FM 96.3 Adult Mix WXJB 99.9 FM News Talk WFJV-FM 103.3 '50s, '60s, '70s WEKJ FM 96.7, 103.9 Religious WRGO-FM 102.7 Oldies WRZN-AM 720 Adult Standards CELEBRITY CIPHER by Luis Campos Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another. TODAY'S CLUE: H equals V "DY JANFB'Y FNNL YA RVHN LVJN V CAY AT JDTTNPNBON YA LX VWJDNBON YRVY D'L VF MVCJ VF V MDCCDVPJ MVCC!" GVLNF YVXCAP Previous Solution: "The only kind of love worth having is the kind that goes on living and laughing and fighting and loving." Dalton Trumbo (c) 2011 by NEA, Inc., dist. by Universal Uclick 12-17 Frank & Ernest Today's MOVIES Garfield For Better or For Worse MICHRELJ.-WHHfFRgj YOU KNOW I DON4TLIKE NOW- OUrBUROF [OEDIDNTSEE RNy yOU flND LI-Z DOING- yoU SNOOPNG AROUND yoU. FIlDOTHREi PC-F--ESKID- UTT oIN oUCLOSET-F THIS FooM INGS-r 1 LAWERE tlsE H aOT! Beet leF.1! Baile Beetle Bailey C8 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 COMICS SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 C9 C CITRUS COUNTY H ONICLE www.chronicleonline.com BUSINESS HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:00 A.M. 5:00 P.M. CLOSED SATURDAY/SUNDAY WE GLADLY ACCEPT Classifieds Classifieds In Print and Online All The Time! Publication Days/Deadlines Chronicle / Daily.................................... 1 PM, Daily Homefront / Sunday...............................3 PM, Friday Chronicle / Sunday.............................4...4 PM, Friday Chronicle / Monday............................4...4 PM, Friday Sumter County Times / Thursday.............11 AM, Tuesday Riverland News / Thursday.....................2 PM, Monday South Marion Citizen / Friday..................4 PM, Tuesday West Marion Messenger / Wednesday.......4 PM, Friday A secure white widow would like to meet a country gentleman. 70-85 years old for companionship. (352) 344-0002 LOOKING for that Santa I can put in my stocking, i you are that Santa between 70 & 80 years of age write me. I will be waiting so I can fill my Stocking.Send it to Citrus Co. Chronicle Blind Box 1745 P 106 W Main St Inverness FI 34450 (2 sets) of Twin, Mattressess, Boxsprings & Frames, $100. (352) 794-7436 7 ft Oak Pool table, slate top, $425 elypitical 750 exercise machine, nearly New $325. (352) 270-8650 For Sale" 117 S Lunar Terrace 2 bedroom. 2 bath. Enclosed FR, Garage & Carport,Large Yard. UPDATED MUST SEE $74.900 mavery3@tampabay.rr .com or 352-344-9290 AR15 parts kit to build a complete carbine with 2/30rd mags red dot site and adjustable stock $660. Assembly availa- ble. 352-344-9663 Black Wrought Day Bed w/ mattress $200 Never used Dark wood computer desk with chair, Never used $100 (352) 270-8650 Carpenter Wants Any Work 212-9092 L. . .......... .-. ' CRYSTAL RIVER Sat. & Sun. 9a-2p Tools & Miscellaneous Household Items 343 N. Hour Glass Terr. Ijfll )III ' YouI \\OId first. \ u' Da}y CH'k"cL Close Cell Foam Rubber used for gym- nastics, wrestling etc. (828) 557-1724 nverness area desired 352-201-2120 CRYSTAL RIVER Sat. 7AM-Noon. TOC Corvette Club benefit yard sale, across from PO,407 NE 1st St. YARD SALE Floral City Saturday Only 9-? Yg men designer clothes, new& used la- dies clothes & more! 352-344-0678 YARDSALE Hernando Sat only 8-? Something for all, all must go, low prices! 4289 E Tennessee Lane HONDA SCOOTER 80 CC, Great Shape, $400. (352) 341-0336 Cell (352) 586-8946 JEANS WOMEN'S 24W Gloria Vanderbilt & Izod Stretch, New with tags $7.00 each Large outdoor glass top table w/ 4 chairs, $175 2 Dark wood end tables $50 (352) 270-8650 Navy Leather Recliner $150 2 Brown Lamps $30. (352) 270-8650 Rascal 3 Wheel Scooter, power seat. new batteries, never used. $350. (352) 341-4949 S&W 40 cal. / 2 clips, great cond. $375 (352) 212-5523 Shi-A-Poo Puppies Paper trained, good with kids, will not shed, health certs. CKC reg. Females $375. Males $350 (352) 489-6675 Twin Size Extra Long Adjustable Bed $2,000 + Value Like New Asking $500 obo (352) 637-1337 $$ TOP DOLLAR $$ Paid for Junk Vehicles, J.W. 352-228-9645 $$ CASH PAID $$ for junk vehicles. 352-634-5389 BUYING JUNK CARS SRunning or Not (ONNE(TIGTHE^ RIGHT [o)N l'J;THIIo llM : rllHS^ I t o E 1111 li 111 I I T' :tRJ^^ I ^^ . iai* * l^ ^^.^ .B^^ .^^^ f 2 Free kittens 9 weeks old both are black and white, one male, one fe male. Male is fluffy. Free to good home just in time for Christmas please call orange/white &Mom needs home too (352) 795-7285 5 month Old Bird Dog/Pit Mix Female, all shots, wormed To Good Home (352) 794-6312 CHRISTMAS KITTENS 8 wks all colors long & short hair (352) 234-5610 fertilizer horse manure mixed with pine shavings .great for gardens. U load and haul. 352 628 9624 Free 1 pair of para- keets to a good home .1 Hemmingway female kitten (352) 634-2781 Free Beaglelsheppard puppies. Born June 3, 1 male and 1 female. Current shots. friendly.(352) 637-3700 Free Calahulah mix to good home, good farm dogs, serious inquiries only, call 352-794-7385 or 352-212-7186 Free cat and dog serious inquiries only please, Call 352-586-2629 FREE couch & Ir chairs, some wear 352-364-1771 Free to good home large mixed breed dog needs new k9 pal and large yard 352-364-1771 Free Turtle!! Red eared slider about 5 years old Please call 352-533-7324 KEEP your used auto parts in Citrus Co. Dale's Auto Parts. & Savage Pays top $$$. 352-628-4144 OSCAR Needs a good country home. Brown tiger Cat 1-2 yrs. old, neutered. Indoor/outdoor Cat Cell (352) 564-7051 Couch Large light color, fair cond.(352) 621-0141 FRESH CITRUS @ BELLAMY GROVE Located 1.5 mi. E. on Eden Dr. from Hwy. 41 Inverness Gift shipping MUSTARD & COLLARD GREENS, CLOSED SUN 9A-5P, 352-726-6378 0 FRESH JUMBO SHRIMP 15ct.@ $5 per lb Stone Crab@ $6 per lb delivered 727-771-7500 Deer Chihuahua male, maybe 10 pounds, last seen 12/15 11 Citrus Springs Community 352-219-2056 Gold Man's wedding band. lost in Lecanto around 12/5/11 REWARD ask for Don 352-419-7368 GOT.....BLACK DOG ? ----- Vanished Aliens ? Elian's? Dead ? Adopted ? ****HE SITS n STARES- To let ya know'" MALE, Fixed,55Lb. -White Chest n Toes-Lept from Van 11/5 Gr.Cleveland Yard Sale/Texaco $$ Mom n Bro. miss him too. $$ Short Hair, Not DO A dog on 19 by Justin Case. Tried An.Control daily. (CitrusCritters.com) 352-220-3890 Grey & White Male nuet.17 pound, micro chip, missing from 1861 S. Whitehurst Av Homosassa 12/8/11 (352) 503-7211 Lost Cat, female, spayed, lost near by S Ponder andHwy 44 Thompson/Otis Street, Black coat with white spots and green eyes. We miss our cat, please call 352-527-4572 MAN's gold wedding band belong to my deceased Dad. Lost in Crystal River Bealls parking lot 12/15/11 REWARD (352) 795-4970 REWARD $1000. No Questions ask. Min Pin Female 10 lbs name Zoey, Needs meds. last seen Sun 8/7 Holiday Dr off Turkey Oak Crystal River (352) 257-9546 352-400-1519 Ferrett found Sugarmill Woods Area (352) 464-0578 Found Dog Citrus Springs area Near Hampshire & Bedstrow Call (352) 586-7349 Found female cat in Homosassa, black and white female, blue collar, aprox 1 year old. Please call 352-229-5578 Found IPod By Cooter Pond Call to Identify (352) 586-2582 Man's prescription sun glasses in Citrus Hills (352) 628-3734 AIRPORT RIDES (352) 746-29291 AT&T U-Verse for just $29.99/mo! SAVE when you bundle internet+ Phone + TV and get $300 BACK! (Select Plans) Limited Time Call NOW! 877-265-1754 PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail) O most beautiful flower of Mt. Cara- mel, fruitful vine, splendor of heaven. Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. 0 Star of the Sea, help me and show me here you are my mother. 0 Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to secure me in my necessity. (Make request). There are none that can withstand your power. 0 Mary, con- ceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee. (3 times). Holy Mary I place this causein your hands (3 times). Say this prayer for 3 consecutive days and then you must publish and it will be granted to you. BHL SAVE $$$ on Advertis- ing! Run your classified ad in over 100 Florida newspapers reaching over 4 MILLION readers for $475-that is less that $4 per newspaper. Call this newspaper or (866)742-1373 or visit: www.florida -classifieds.com FRESH JUMBO SHRIMP 15ct.@ $5 per lb Stone Crab@ $6 per Ib delivered 727-771-7500 CNA, seeking in home position, female w/ refs. Inverness area desired 352-201-2120 Tell that special person Happy Birthday" with a classified ad under Happy Notes. Only $28.50 includes a photo Call our Classified Dept for details 352-563-5966 #1 Affordable CNA Prep Course CPR-AED-Free Book Am & PM classes aefvourcna.com 352-341-PREP (7737) EXPERIENCED MEDICAL ASSISTANT For Busy Specialty Group. Previous EMR helpful. Must have excellent computer, organizational skills and be a team player. Competitive Salary and Benefits Send resume Citrus Co. Chronicle Blind Box 1746p Crstal River Fl 34429 NOW HIRING RN's All Units, with Hospltal Experience Apply on Line: www. nurse-temps.com (352) 344-9828 Circulation Sales and Community Promotions Manager The Circulation Sales and Community Pro- motions Manager is responsible for the marketing, promotion and sales functions of the department as reflected in the goals of the department and company. The Chronicle is a seven-day morning newspaper with 28,000 daily and 32,000 Sunday subscribers. The newspaper market is located on the Gulf of Mexico 70 miles north of Tampa Bay. Essential Functions: Create and imple- ment strong sales strategies to grow circulation revenue Represent the company in public events, meetings and other functions Provide input and aide with implement- ing the annual marketing plan Maintain extraordi- nary levels of internal and external cus- tomer service Community involve- ment and leadership essential Minimum Qualifications: * Proven sales and management effectiveness * Articulate in repre- senting the company before large and small groups * Highly organized and great attention to detail is necessary * Strong analytical skills and expertise with applicable com- puter software, such as Excel and Word * Excellent interper- sonal skills Superior coaching skills * Ability to produce sales results * Familiarity with database manage- ment This is a full time exempt position. Position requires some weekend and Holiday duties. EOE Fax resumes to: (352) 564-2935 or email to: marnold@chronicle online.com. COMMERCIAL APPRAISER Obtain an application at www.citruspa.org. Click the employment tab for info. Salary is commen- surate with qualifica- Director for a Christian Preschool needed Must have Current VPK Director's Cre- dentials, Bachelor's Degree in Education (desirable) and a years of supervisory Please fax your resume to 352-795-9611 or email resume to admin@crumc.com. Deadline is December 21, 2011. Youth Care Worker Cypress Creek Juvenile Offender Correctional Center, a residential program for maximum risk males committed to the Dept. of Juvenile Justice is recruiting for Youth Care Workers * Must be over 21 years of age, have High School Diploma and be able to pass a Level 2 back ground screening * Must be able to com plete self- de- fense and physical intervention training. * Ability to tolerate verbal and mental abuse while main- taining a professional demeanor. * Ability to perform appropriate crisis in- tervention, including physically breaking up fights. Pick up an application at 2855 W Woodland Ridge Dr. Lecanto, Florida, 34461 Drug Free Workplace /EEO .EXP. COOKS & SERVERS Apply in person Mon-Fri. 9am-11am COACH'S 114 W. Man St. Inverness EOE EXPERIENCED FAST LINE COOK 6 NIGHTS, Inglis Area Some Italian cuisine Call Btw. 10AM-6PM 352-212-1607 for appt CHORpNICLE Accepting applications for Multimedia Designer. Design online advertising and web pages. Develop successful online and print advertising campaigns for all aspects of print and interactive advertising. Qualifications * BS in graphic design, and art related field and/or computer science (or equivalent) * At least two years in Internet develop- ment, with extensive knowledge of HTML, CSS Programming and domain man- agement * Apple products working environment, experience a plus * Proficient in a wide range of tools such as Photo Shop Flash, Illustrator, Quark Express, Final Cut Pro and Adobe Go Live * Must be able to in- teract with customers professionally and efficiently * 1 to 4 years in web design, online prod- uct development from initial concept to completion. Send Resume and Cover Letter to: marnold@ chronlcleonllne.com EOE, drug screen required for final applicant. A/C SERVICE & INSTALL TECH EPA Cert., Valid DL, Exp. only., Call Bob 352-628-5700 or email resume bl@newalr.blz Captain 25Ton & up only Manatee tours, Must in water guide Apply River Ventures at 498 SE Kings Bay Drive, CR 7:30AM-12:30PM Class B Route Driver Apply in Person: NDI 3403 NE 37th Place Wildwood, Florida DRIVER Dry & Refrigerated. Single source Dispatch. No tractor older than 3 years old. Daily Pay! Various hometime op- tions! CDL-A, 3 months current OTR experience. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com Drivers: Run GA, AL, MS, & TN & FL HOME WEEKENDS, earn Up to 39 cents a mile 1 yr OTR Flatbed Exp. Call: SUNBELT TRANSPORTLLC (800)572-5489 EXT 227 Exp. EASE Mech. Gas/DieselOil/Lube Tech & Service Rider Apply at Ridgeline Tires & Service, Inv. HOME WEEKLY 100% O(/Op Company O/Ops CDL A Drivers/ Reefer $1,000 sign on bonus! Call 800-237-8288 or visit www.suncocarriers.com Night Packaging Supervisor Crystal River Florida Citrus Publishing Inc. has an opening for the position of Night Shift Packaging Su- pervisor to manage all aspects of the packaging depart- ment on the night shift. The position is responsible for dead- line compliance, quality assurance, safety, training and time management. QUALIFICATIONS: *Minimum two years supervisory experi- ence in the printing industry. *Minimum five years experience working in print publishing. *Must possess effec- tive written and ver- bal communication. *Ability to work in a fast-paced work en- vironment. *Good organiza- tional, interpersonal skills. PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS *Lifting up to 45 Ibs from a level of 0 inches to a level of 48 inches *Standing or sitting for up to eight hours per day *Walking up to eight hours per day on a variety of surfaces *Twisting, kneeling and bending move- ments are required *Finger dexterity and wrist movement are required ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS Position is routinely exposed to loud noises ink and paper dust Position is routinely exposed to chemi- cals such as cleaning solvents, ink and other press chemistry. To apply, contact: Human Resources E-mail: marnold@ chronicleonline.com Mail: Citrus Publishing 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd Crystal River, FL 34429 Phone:(352) 564-2910 RV & MOTORIZED DELIVERY DRIVERS Needed NOW! See the Country side! Deliver Motorhomes. boats, and other trail- ers to the 49 states & Canada. Details www.horizontransport.co Your World 46 72 17 $300 is a bad day! Fortune 500 Company. Security equip, dist. Several positions avail. entry-level to mgmt. Great pay / full benefits. We train. Advancement oppy's. Co. trans. avail. H.S. Diploma or GED req'd. No Felonies. 352-597-2227 SINGLE COPY ROUTES AVAILABLE. This is a great opportunity to own your own business. Unlimited potential for the right person to manage a route of newspaper racks and stores. Must have two vehicles and be able to work early morning hours. Email: emorales@chronicle onlinecom or come to 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd. and fill out an application. #1 Affordable CNA Prep Course CPR-AED-Free Book Am & PM classes aeftourcna.com 352-341-PREP (7737) A Better Career With Melton Great Equipment & Benefits 2 Mos. CDL Class A Driving Exp (877)258-8782 www. meltontruck.com Heat & Air JOBS - Ready to work? 3 week accelerated program. Hands on environment. Nationwide certifica- tions and Local Job Placement Assistance! (877) 359-1690 AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for hands on Avi- ation Maintenance Ca- reer. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified Housing Available. Call Aviation Institute Of Maintenance. (866)314-3769 MORTGAGE ELIMINATION No up front Fees Completed in 4 wks bdebtfreenow.com 352-422-7887 #1 Affordable CNA Prep Course CPR-AED-Free Book Am & PM classes aeftourcna.com 352-341-PREP (7737) ALLIED HEALTH Career training -Attend college 100% online. Job place- ment assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if quali- fied. SCHEV certified. Call (800)481-9409 www.Centura Online.com EARN COLLEGE DEGREE ONLINE Online from Home *Medlcal, *Business, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assis- tance. Computer available. Financial Aid If qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 877-206-5165 www.CenturaOnlne CTAYL COLLEGE NEffiW 2 Week Courses! *PHYSICAL REHAB TECH $475. *NURSING ASST. $475. PHLEBOTOMY $475. *EKG $475. *MEDICAL ASSISTANT *ALF ADMINISTRATOR $300 tavlorcolleae.edu (352) 245-4119 17 35 59 ---- Eu NOW ENROLLING For January BARBER COSMETOLOGY FACIAL FULL SPECIALTY INSTRUCTOR TRAINING MANICURE/NAIL EXT. MASSAGE THERAPY BENE'S International School of Beauty New Port Richey/ Spring Hill 727-848-8415 352-263-2744 $$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!! $$$ As seen on TV. Injury Lawsuit Dragging? Need $500-$500,000++ within 48/hours? Low rates APPLY NOW BY PHONE! Call Today! Toll-Free: (800)568-8321 www.lawcapital.com LIGHTED CHRISTMAS VILLAGE 9 bldgs, houses, church, light- house, more, plus access. $100 all. 352-422-1309 Lionel Disneyalnd Train Set New 35 year Anniver- sary $300 takes it!! 249-4420/ 476-8352 IA Tell that special person " Happy Birthday" with a classified ad under Happy Notes. Only $28.50 includes a photo Call our Classified Dept for details 352-563-5966 A/C + HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS Starting at $880 13-18 Seer Installation w/permit RREATES uo to 2.5A00 352-4 6-4394 Lic.&Ins. CAC 057914 Dishwasher Kenmore 2 yrs old, white pd $500., sell $150. (352) 249-4460 Electric Range, like new, self cleaning $250(352) 794-3672 FREEZER Deep Freezer for sale. Works great. $100 obo. Pics available Email at iat82@yahoo.com FREEZER Kenmore, 19 CI, $90. 352-634-0422 GE chest freezer, works great! $80 obo 352 406 0641 GE WALL OVEN MI- CROWAVE COMBO Pro- file model in bisque. Like new condition. $400 352621 1941 Kenmore Deluxe Glasstop Range 6 burners, lots of fea- tures, front knobs, $1,250 New, asking $300. call for Details(352) 637-6310 SMITTYS APPLIANCE REPAIR, washers dryers,FREE pick up 352-564-8179 WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE Washers & Dryers Working or not. (352) 209-5135 WASHER & GAS DRYER. Kenmore. White. Good Cond. $90. 352-634-0422 WASHER OR DRYER $135.00 Each. Dependa- ble, like new, excellent condition, can deliver. 352 263-7398 WASHING MACHINE Whirlpool Gold Catalyst,white,great cond.$150. call 352-637-3080 CHAISE BURGUNDY STYLE VICTORIAN EX- CELLENT CONDITION $70 352-777-1256 <9"8'2 5i:3_{6 147 5 7 34119682 72935-4861 615928473 43816 7295 0009XRK Sudoku ****** 4puz.com 1468 4 2 7 93 8 8 72 5 3 1 7 6 _____5934 5]9 3 4 Fill in the squares so that each row, column, and 3-by-3 box contain the numbers 1 through 9. YOUR AD HERE $250/month Call Finette to reserve this space 352-564-2940 CLASSIFIED CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CIO SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 AMT SCROLL 16" SCROLL SAW $40. 352 621-3856 CRAFTSMAN 4" BELT, 6" DISC SANDER COMBO On stand. $75. 352 621-3856 Firestorm table saw with stand, 10 inch,15 amp, like new condition $65.00 352-410-0360 HILTI Fasting Gun model 36-35 w/shots $95.(352) 249-4420 352-476-8352 Ryobi 14amps COMPOUND Miter Saw with lazer & bag, 2 months old, new in box $175(352) 795-7513 RYOBI 6 1/8" JOINTER ON STAND Extra blades. $50. 352 621-3856 RYOBI 8 1/2" SLIDING CPD. MITRE SAW $100.00 352 621-3856 SHOPSMITH CLONE 5 tools in 1 table saw, lathe, drill press, sander,$900. 12" Planner $250. (352) 628-4265 ENTERTAINMENT CENTER good condition 29"opening/60"h/49"w $20.00 352-628-4210 Panasonic Plasma TV 58", 1 yr old, like new, comes w/ wall bracket $800 obo(352) 344-4384 SONY 13 INCH TV. W/REMOTE GREAT FOR KITCHEN OR KID'S ROOM $20.00 352-726-0686 SONY TRINITRON 35" #KV35S42. Beautiful pic- ture, outstanding reviews, works fine, includes base. $100 firm. 810-441-4192 TV TOSHIBA 27" color TV excellent condition and picture. Cinema series $50.00 352-464-5429 57 patio blocks 16 x 16" $150 ea. (352) 613-6317 32" X 80" INTERIOR DOORS (2)used hollow core doors with locksets $10.00 each call/text 352-302-8529 NEW UPPER CABINET 15" High x 39" Wide x 12" Deep Cream in color, call text for pic 352-302-8529 DIESTLER COMPUTER New & Used systems repairs. Visa/ MCard 352-637-5469 HARDLY USED WII & Sports & Play, Wii Fit Plus, Balance Board etc mikeand- donib@hotmail.com HEWLETT PACKARD PHOTOSMART 1,000 Photo printer for com- puter. $10.00 352-344-3472 PLAYSTATION 1 Sony w/adapter 1 controller $25.00 352-628-4210 (2 sets) of Twin, Mattressess, Boxsprings & Frames, $100. (352) 794-7436 3 pcs. Burgundy leather love seat & recliner, new $1200 sell $400. 2 twin beds night stand dresser w/mirror center leaf 6 chairs, & hutch $250. (352) 746-9747 4 PIECE DRESSER, MIRROR, NIGHT STAND 3-piece sectional & matching chair. Includes sofa, corner wedge, love seat & chair. Made by American Furniture. Exc. cond. Purchased new two years ago for $1450. Sell for $795 obo. Will email photos. Great family Christmas gift! 352-746-1644. Antique Buffet dark wood $75.00 352-628-9257 BED FRAMES 2 full size bed frames $20 each. 1 metal and 1 bookcase. Bedroom Set 5 piece off-white $100 Call:628-4271 CHINA CABINET Lovely wood, 50Wx 69Hx16Dp $350 call aft 5p for info (352) 613-6317 COMFORTS OF HOME USED FURNITURE www. comfortsofhomeused furniture.com. 795-0121 CROWN FOR BED DE- COR ACCENT VICTO- RIAN STYLE BEAUTI- FUL GOLD AND BLACK $50 352-777-1256 ENTERTAINMENT UNIT walnut with green trim, glass door with shelves, storage drawers, retract- able door for 32"TV; TV available.$425/$450 obo 352-637-4690 HUTCH Solid Maple, 2 piece top with shelves, wine rack and glasses holder; bottom has 3 drawers with shelf; 45W x 17D x 66H, beautiful. pic- tures available. $475. 352-637-4690 KING SIZE BED SET 2 king size bed sets.$75 ea...moving 352-364-1771 Large outdoor glass top table w/ 4 chairs, $175 2 Dark wood end tables $50 (352) 270-8650 Listen up owner will sacrifice these 2 items before Christmas Recliner purchased from Ashely Furn $399 like new asking $139. Attractive Curio Hutch was $150 NOW $69. Lecanto 352-212-6191 Lt. Blue sectional couch with 2 recliners.Good Condition. First $100 Takes it. 352 344 1637 RECLINER Slightly worn microfiber overstuffed recliner $200 obo Email iat82@yahoo.com Navy Leather Recliner $150 2 Brown Lamps $30. (352) 270-8650 Oak Bunk Bed w/mattress and linens $150.(352) 503-6776 Parson Chairs (4) white fabric, nice, for dining room or Kitchen $60 (352) 382-2449 PAUL'S FURNITURE Now open Tues-Sat. 352-628-2306 paulsfurnitureonline.com Preowned Mattress Sets from Twin $30; Full $40.Qn $50; Kg $75. 352-628-0808 QUEEN SIZE SLEEPER SOFA Floral, mattress still in plastic. $100.00 352-257-5722 RACK TOWER CD/DVD MEDIA $35 LAMP AP- PLE CANDLE $20 DESK CHAIR BLACK $15 352-777-1256 Rattan Set 42" round glass dinette set w/4 cushion chairs, coffee table end tab le, coredenza, TV center w/ glass shelves $200.(352) 628-7729 Real Cherry wood Computer work station 5' L x 5.5 H, lovely $900 Pine Ridge 352-220-0480 ROCKER RECLINER Clean used rocker recliner-$75.00 352-257-5722 Round table converts to 8 place poker table w/chips $55.(352) 489-6068 TOP CRYSTAL SMALL FOR DINNING TABLE $25 SET ANGEL GOLD WALL DECOR VICTO- RIAN $ 25 352-777-1256 6' HOLLY TREES very nice for the price $50. Other plants available call 352-257-3870 9' TALL LITTLE GEM MAGNOLIAS very nice 1/2 the price of store $75 other plants available call 352-257-3870 EDGER/TRIMMER Sears Craftsman 4.0 HP. $50 352-228-9030 in Homosassa GENERAL ENGINE 7.8hp general engine ohv runs and looks great 30.00 o.b.o great for go cart dennis 352 220 2519 HUSQUVARNA LAWN TRACTOR 25hp hydro-static dr. 48" mower, 48" land- scape box. $1500 352-601-2480 Troy-Bilt, 6.25HP Yard vacuum/chipper/ shredder, 1 yr old, new $476. Selling for $200 (352) 560-4220 6' HOLLY TREES very nice for the price $50. Other plants available call 352-257-3870 9' TALL LITTLE GEM MAGNOLIAS very nice, 1/2 the price of store $75 other plants available call 352-257-3870 CREPE MYRTLES very nice crepes, many to choose from. $50 Green- house full of plants call 352-257-3870 For ft Cousn of Buddy Holly CITRUS SPRINGS Sat Only 8-4p Some Furn. & House- hold 1307 w. Kenmore Dr. a. a :, Beverly Hills Sat Sun 8-2p hsehld glassware, gold watches, matching hutch & buffet, antiques, etc 304 S Tyler St. SALE Citrus Springs Fri Sat 9a- Lamps, some accessories fur- niture Boxes of Chris- tams decorations. 2162 W Greenway PI. corner of Greco & Greennway CLEARING OUT SALE Homosassa Springs Furn iture & Household Thur Fri Sat not before 10am till??? 3168 S. Lee WY Cry Riv/Dunnellon Fri & Sat 7a-Gp Harley parts, toys, collectibles, nascar tools, & much More 7569 W. Riverbend Rd Off end of 495 turn R to 7569 W Riverbend (on Lake Rousseau) CRYSTAL RIVER Sat. & Sun. 9a-2p Tools & Miscellaneous Household Items 343 N. Hour Glass Terr. CRYSTAL RIVER Sat. 7AM-Noon. TOC Corvette Club benefit yard sale, across from PO, 407 NE 1st St. DUNNEL- LON CEDAR COVE Antiques, Furn. Entire household, 10 Bass boat (352) 344-0993 YARDSALE DUNNELLON Fri. & Sat. 8a-5p Christmas Gifts, Misc. & Tools 8595 Presnell Terr. (352) 422-2113 Floral City Estate Sale Furniture only. 7535 S. Bobcat Pt. off Trail's End. a FLORAL CITY Fri. 10-4 and Sat. 8-? Bicycles, furn., clothes, tools, antiques, & other misc. 9400 E. Tsala Apopka Drive YARD SALE FLORAL CITY Inside yard sale Sat. & Sun. 8618 E. Orange Ave. Garage Sale for Men MAN SALE or Woman looking for the perfect gift for him. Power tools, hand tools, yard tools. Dewalt, Craftsman, all American Tools. Satur- day only Dec 17TH 8AM to 2PM 748 N Rooks Ave Inverness. GUN SHOW CRYSTAL RIVER ARMORY THIS WEEKEND Sat, 9-5, Sun, 9-4 GunTraders is now buying GOLD Concealed Weapons Classes Daily Bring your GUNS & GOLD to sell or trade GunTrader GunShows.com 352-339-4780 YARD SALE HERNANDO Sat 8-2p tools, lawn chairs, Cmas decor. clothes & much more Everything must go! 1226 E Bismark St YARDSALE Hernando Sat only 8-? Something for all, all must go, low prices! 4289 E Tennessee Lane 5 'A L E Inverness Fri & Sat 8-3 Yard ornaments, Air comp,hand tools, turn 320 N Hebrides Pt NEIGHBORHOOD SALE INVERNESS Fri Sat 8a-? Avon, yard tools, & Barbie Dolls. Furn. Hsehld MUCH More! 3710E Fox Wood Ln YARD SALE INVERNESS Frl. & Sat. 8a-4p HUGE MULTI FAMILY SALE Huge Assortment Low prices 8531 Cresco Lane Behind Inv. Co. Club INVERNESS 8505 E Hampton Pt Rd Sat 9-2 Xbox/games sport cards baby clothes misc hsehold clothes YARD SALE INVERNESS Fri. & Sat., 9am-6p 20 Family Garage Sale Everything Must Go 1819 N. 41 Hwy, on left just N. of Kmart behind Prestige Mobile Home Sales Inverness Golf & C.C Sat 7:30 - something for everyone. 8340 E. Fairway Lp. Inverness SAL sE INVERNESS Leaving Country ALL must go! Furn, books, hsehld 705 Champlain Av. /1/we -, /\ INVERNESS Sat 8-2p Too Much to list 3925 & 3945 Spaniel Trail (off Sanpiper to Owens to Spaniel) YARD. SALE INVERNESS Sat. only 8am-4pm Very nice household items, lots of quality toys for the holidays, Inverness Country Club 8711 E. Cresco Lane PINE RIDGE SAT. 8AM.-2PM. antiques, collector plates, a/c tools, misc. 5395 N. Red Ribbon Pt. TIMBERLANE 2519W Lauree St Lecanto Fri & Sat 8 -1 PM Misc & video game/movies, clothing. YARDSALE INVERNESS Deerwood Sat 9-3p Many Items to much too list!! 1036 S. BEA AV 3X WOMEN'S CLOTH- ING Knit Shorts. JMS Sweatpants. 2X, 22W pants, $1.00 each 352 634-2737 BEAUTIFUL DRESS ,SILVER,BURGUNDY, CHAMP 352-777-1256 GOOD PRICES WOMEN'S SHOES Keds 8 slip-ons. Danskin 8W, Nike 8. Cobbie Cuddlers, Thom McAn 7.5W $1.00 each (352) 634-2737 (4) OPERA CD SETS- cost $50.00+ea.-sell $20.00 ea. or all $75.00 more info.call 352-527-9982 (4) Pigmy Goats mature female $25. each. 2 bar stools for $25. padded very good cond(352) 476-4797 1 generator 5k $250 (352) 637-0619 ROUTES AVAILABLE NOW!!. V Able to work early morning hours before 6am V Must be 18 years old V Florida driver's license and insurance If interested come to the Meadowcrest Plant between 1 and 2 am, drive around to the back and ask for a district manager. 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd. Crystal River IT REALLY PAYS TO WORK FOR THE \C I T R U 0 U N T y 2 www.chrwonilclonlliMe.com 999 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CLASSIFIED SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 Cll Lots more to choose from including many Certified k Pre-Owned Kias FINAL DAYS OF OUR 1000 GALLONS OF GAS DRAWING! 0 NOW ON ALL USED VEHICLES SOLD Starting November 1st, 2009 Citrus Kia introduced the New "Peace Of Mind" Warranty program on Used vehicles. Peace of mind is a Dealership promise... When you Buy a used car, truck, van, or SUV from us we will be at your side for the 1st 90 days /or 3000 miles of your driving. If anything, and we are talking anything breaks* on your vehicle, from the headlights to the taillights we will fix it for you at NO CHARGE. You have trusted us for all your NEW car needs and have made us the #1 New Kia dealer in the state. Now we want to prove to you that Citrus Kia is the best place in the state of Florida to buy a Used vehicle also. CITRUS KIA"PEACE OF MIND WARRANTY" PROGRAM At Citrus Kia, "We just don't close car deals, we open relationships" WE NEED EVERY TRADE HIGHEST TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE AND LOWEST PRICES IN THE STATE OF FLORIDA THANKS TO OUR CITRUS KIA FAMILY FOR MAKING OUR . DRIVE A HUGE SUCCESS! ((awbm wsse-4ii us-104 w ^I w F -= 3 f Ml| C ?'^ ^1850 S.E. Hwy. 19, Crystal River, FL C Kirus iA 352-564-8668 - The Power lo Surprise" r A.Mon Fri: 9:OOam 7:00pm Sat 9:00am 6:00pm SHome p wWWirsulsaCOm Sunday Noon 5:00pm *ALL PRICES PLUS TAX, TAG, LICENSE AND $699 DEALER FEE, REBATE & INCENTIVES INCLUDED & RETAINED BY DEALER. MUST QUALIFY FOR KIA OWNER LOYALTY AND/OR COMPETITIVE BONUSES.! *PICTURES PHOTOS ARE FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY. mil CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE C12 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 I A New 2012 VolKswagen JETTA S STK#W311358 Was $19,479 New 2012 volKswagen GOLF STK#W106101 Was $19,079 New 2011 VolKswagen JETITA SE STK#W394777 Was $21,189 New 2012 Volkswagen BEETLE STK#W601172 Was $22,379 New 2012 Volkswagen TIGUAN S STK#W526789 Was $26,119 New 2012 Volkswagen | New 2011 Volkswagen I New 2012 Volkswagen PASSAT SE ROUTAN SE EOS KOMFORT STK#W024615 Was $26,074 STK#W642706, W695198 Was $33,069 STK#W006353 Was $35,389 New 2011 BMW 328i 3 AtThis Price! STK#MN05985 MSRP $39,025 Sale Price $33,999 New 2011 BMW 335D 3 AtThis Price! STK#M949726 MSRP $53,975 Sale Price $44,999 New 2011 Porsche Cayman s48,999 New 2011 Porsche Boxster *59,999 New 2011 Porsche 911 Carrera $73,999 New 2011 Porsche Panamera s73,999 New 2011 Porsche Panamera S $97,999 New 2011 BMW 535i New 2011 BMW 550i STK#M803328 STK#M758270 MSRP $55,475 MSRP $66,875 Sale Price $49,999 Sale Price $59,999 New 2011 BMW 335i Convertible STK#M743882 MSRP $64,880 Sale Price $62,999 New 2011 BMW 750i STK#MY37199 MSRP $84,375 Sale Price $73,999 1 13I H CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE or Illlrcs~i~-~"g'_iraeL SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 C13 S e '09 CRV '09 SONATA '09 PT CRUISER I ._11 '08 RAM A A A A $16,875 $1Q965 $6,570 $11,875 oRO272^ $$177P OR$106MOoR191 ^ '08 ACCORD '08 EQUINOX '08 300 '07 ODYSSEY FE2HHIFOIA $14,370 $13 650R $12550 $14450 oR$231 OR $.220 Mo0202ME OR$0 Mo.I amRo. I M0.1 '07 CAMRY '07 SILVERADO '07 IMPALA '07 CIVIC ./ VIJ7l"7-%-r% .^ 1. LI RH 24 HR iM7M R Wil *l W MD I K I-SWJU6R -r-r FvJ~t-I-'29TjA7 I', ME 2 HRWIW A A A $11,850 $11,475 $870 $7,165 OR$191 O. OR l 5o. OR43 MO. OR$115mO I '05 EQUINOX '04 SIENNA '04 F-150 '03 PROTEGE A ^ * :1.M2i-2irN I =w'RI A** : E :124 H itREE I cwf 0011 11 T rt I A A A A * i 7t..U _. K ^ ru. 1rrU m .^ _.7t .U ^K n.J L. Tk -Z '~..^ 'y .. ^ E .- -- i. ;. .^. 1.1L $7 JJA $7990 A$11,277 $6,875 $3,875 OR$ PER ORPE OR$111PER OR $62 PER MO I MO MO CALL THE INSTANT APPRAISAL LINE: 800-440-9054 0 0 I e In II !i2 MEINF=AM)SiEKbPIN 1-80-5"75 Ed709 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE tFREE l-2 4 H ECDDMEUE 1rHINF N PCIIPJ 1-80058:75 Ed5707 FREE 24 R Mi INM 1-80-5"75 Fd.308 lFRRi E WrrHIO 1-800-58"755 Ed.5128 FEE 2 H RCOREDMESAG WrHINF MSMA RCN 1-800-58" 55 EXU2 i0 RUE2 R RCOEDl= IEWrH INF I I iH. tCM2A-27 *r~ CJ-J- w L* 1110,17r% C14 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 The holiday shopping season is here. So are the best holiday offers at Nick Nicholas Ford-Lincoln in Crystal River. If you're looking for a new way to drive into the new year, come on into Nick Nicholas Ford-Lincoln in Crystal River during the Ford Year End Celebration. We invite you to see the newest technology in our fuel-efficient cars, trucks, SUVs and crossovers. Find out Ior yourself why Ford is the best-selling brand in America.1 ' So come on in today. Take a look and drive one. We're sure you'll have a very happy new year. 2011 FORD FIESTA SES 5 DR .. .MSRP...................... $20,085 Nick Nicholas Ford Lincoln Discount ...............-1,090 LOADED! NOW ONLY 2012 FORD FUSION SE MSRP....................$25,210 Nick Nicholas Ford Lincoln Discount....................-310 Sale Price............$24,900 Retail Customer Cash......-1,000 Promo Retail Customer Cash......-1,000 NOW ONLY 2012 FORD TAURUS SEL MSRP ..................$29,250 Nick Nicholas Ford Lincoln Discount............-1,300 Sale Price............$27,950 Retail Customer Cash......-1,000 Promo Retail G2C034 Customer Cash......-1,000 NOW ONLY 2011 FORD EDGE SE MSRP....................$29,030 Bonus Customer Cash.........-500 Promo Retail Customer Cash......-1,000 FMCC ................. -1,000 NOW ONLY '00 CEVY CAVELIER CONVT '02 FORD FOCUS WAGON ZTW 62,000 miles Loaded $ _.9 n 50_n$. FORD EXPLORER SPORT '03 FORD WINDSTAR SE '07 FORD FOCUS ZX4 '08 FORD FOCUS SE 4x4 1 owner One owner $7 950 $8 950 $9 950 $10,950 _:- ..-460LV CHEVY AVEO LT '06 GRAND MARQUIS LS '08 GRAND MARQUIS GS '10 FORD FOCUS SE '08 FORD FUSION SEL '08 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S 11 000 miles 1 owner, 47,000 miles 28,000 miles $13.950 $13.950 1$4.950 $16.950 1 6.950 1$7.950 '08 F150 XLTCREW CAB4X4 $24,950 LINCOLN MKS '08 EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER '08F-250 CREW CAB 4X4 LINCOLN MKX '09 F-150 CREW CAB 4X4 '08 SHELBY GT 500 32,000 miles, one owner, loaded 1 owner, Loaded King Ranch Lariat 44,000 miles, like new, loaded 026,950 $27,950 $29,950 $31,950 $32,950 132,950 Nick Nicholas C rysta R * ver Hwy. 19 N. 795-7371 Based on CYTD sales 'Optional Feature Driving while distracted can result in loss of vehicle control Only use SYNC/My FordTouch/other devices, even with voice commands, when it is safe to do so Some features may be locked out while the vehicle is in gear 'Based on RDA Group's GQRS cumulatix- .r hr-- r-rih- -f service in three surveys of 2010 Ford and competitive owners conducted 9/09-5/10 all incentives and Ford Factory rebates with approved credit Plus tax, tag, title ar .. '. '. Ford Credit Financing required Not all buyers will qualify See dealer for details Dealer is not responsible for typographical errors Pictures are for illustration purposes only Prices and payments good through 12/31/11 Call Toll Free 877-795-7371 or Visit Us Online www.ni(kni(holasfordLINCOLN.com LINCOLN QUALITY PREOWNED VEHICLES --- CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE Af ".m.-< 4| <_4 ]iilllll SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 C15 2012 Mazda3i Sport at te ,*d 2012 Fr-s--ut ;1111 *wp I I ill 1112111 IT 'J&UT' Lease S136 Mo. For Leaset \II prn.c' ..ft QI. L.A LCt r.iid art'c n:ct-e .n% .ie..'er *r..ita!!ed .'pL.&fl nad .rncI.,e .11 .i^*'ti1' nii......i.S... ieh.Le. .\ iii-eiritc. I I tas >?.Tk(ti\. e'. [ rciqi,.*cn.r.~i- LiL.. t0u .ti*.c andi rin^nLbr,~r t.,.r .etj~c *Scc ., iF rk'.ait.' Priolo -auc k-r dJ..u.auor* LftrPi.-Ct oidt\ d~enj-cxl 'crik- '.t.*ie.. Ia pr~or -dae Pn'rafT~n*--rt. 'u Li . I i ACURA Safest Vehicle Lineup In America! with Highest Expected Residual Value Among Luxury Brands ! lN ^2012 TSX TSX Lease: $299 mo x 36 months. $1,999 Due At Signing Includes Security Deposit, Down Payment; Excludes Tax & Tag, With Approved Credit 1 Safet Rating ...sEASON Safe -NHTSA REASON * Siar ralings are pan ol ihe U.S. Deparunemn ol Transporialion's Safercar gov program (www.salercar.gov). Mooels tested wlln standard side-lmpacl alroags (SABs). r Based on ALG's 2009 and 2010 Residual Va'ue Awards for a Luxury Brand. Subject to ilmlea availability. Through January 3 2012 to approved lessees oy Acura Financial Serv-ces DBA o A.erincan Honda Finance Corp Closed-end lease for 2012 TSX 5 Speea AuLomalic (Mooes CU2F6CjW MSRP S30 695 Actual nel caprial.ze cosi -28 75143 Total moninly payments S10 764. Opl-on lo purchase al lease end S19 33 085. Addil-onal lease terms for well-aualifred lessees Nol all losses will qualify. Higher lease rates apply tor lessees witn lower credit ratings or In di'erent regions. Dealer pardcipation may astrect actual payment MSRPs Include destinadon taxes. license, tit'e fees, options and Insurance extra. Sectrily deposh waived. Lessee responslole lor malnlenance. excessive wearnrear and 15iml over 10.000 mllesiyear lor vehicles wllh MSRP less Ihan 13.n 0nn ...l fr.... ne..... In. u on f130n n rmo .......ecnl...i.... ..c n ,o ,mlo.... in 0nn l.n ...... Sd. ele.rnc. ......1- n ...II.n. SI IMI* _I rl CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE C16 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 1/ REDESIGNED * Remote Keyless Entry & Push Button Start Cruise Control Brake Assist (BA) Power Locks * Power Windows Auto Transmission MSRP................................... .......... $24,336 Village Savings............................... $1,139 Toyotathon Bonus.....................$1,000 / Huge Selection to Choose From STOCK NOW OR 0%0 FOR 36 IMOS. I I I IiHWY I Auto Transmission Air Conditioning Cruise Control Power Windows Power Locks Keyless Enty M S R P .............................................. $18,415 Village Savings.............................. $2,420 Toyotathon Bonus......................$500 LASE FOR 149IOR 3MO$S.* iEA T OR BUY FOR0%a50REBRTE* N , '/ / 2IfrA'r Star Safety System: Enhanced Vehicle 4-Spd. Electric Controlled Auto Trans Electronic Power Steering Stability Control Traction Control Air Conditioning AM/FM CD w/6 Speakers Cruise Control Power Windows/Door Locks/Keyless Entry MSRP..............................................$23,480 Village Savings...............................$1,485 Toyotathon Bonus...................$1,000 Better Cars. Better Deals. Better Hurry! i ToyotaCare Featuring a complimentary maintenance plan with roadside assistance StockvC 11100299 .:".M 2002 CADILLACDEVILLE 4 Dr. Sdn. $3,995 Slock 1lO1100312 2009 DODGE JOURNEY FWD, 4 Dr. SXT s14,995 Stock #11110035 2008 KIASORENTO 2WD, 4 Dr. LX s13,995 2006 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS 4 Dr. Sdn., LS, Premium 1O0,995 2010 NISSAN ARMADA 2 WD, 4 Dr., SE $33,995 2005 JEEP WRANGLER 2 Dr. X s12,995 2010 BUICK LACROSSE 4 Dr., Sdn., CXL, 3.0L, FWD 122,995 2010 CHRYSLER TOWN COUNTRY 4 Dr. Wg., Touring s18,995 ,II 2008 LINCOLN MK FWD, 4 Dr. s21,995 352-62 MUST PRESENT AD PRIOR TO PURCHASE 'nce excludes tax, tag, registration, title, and $499 80 ^ ^dealer fee Prices include all Village Toyota incentives Offers cannot be combined All vehicles subject to por purchase All customers who purchase or lease a 8 5 1 0new Toyoa receive a 2 year, 25K mile free maintenance plan Photos for illustration purposes only We reserve the right to correct typographical errors Corolla lease is $149/month with $2,000 cash cap reduction for 36 months Corolla 0% 36 month W W W .Villa eto ota.com1 term Camry lease is$199monthwith$2,000cashcap reduction for 36 months All leases 12kmilespervear VILLAGE 19 * 0 a CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE 11 ~IC~1 o-A1 IN ;~ t~, S22, 5 5 s2 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE 2 MATCHING BICYCLES red for xmas 24 inch sev- eral speeds great condi- tion 100.00 for both firm 352 637 5171 18 Round above ground Pool, pump, fil- ter 2 vacuums, large steps & chemicals. You take down $1000 OBO (352) 212-4522 150 GALLON SALTWATER TANK Email for details / photos michelles garage sale@a ol.com 3/4 HP Blower Housing & Motor, $85 obo 1/4 HP Fan& Motor $40. obo Both for 3 ton AC Unit (352) 422-2113 Alum Shed white 8x8, 3 y.o. $300 U haul. Coleman work bench & storage unit new $1000 sell $300 (352) 527-0671 AREA RUG slight dam- age5,$25, printed pattern, size 5x7 (352)465-1616, ayeshacr08@gmail.com BICYCLE BOYS 18" Surge by Next good condition has training wheels $25.00 352-628-4210 BICYCLE BOYS 20" Rocket Huffy good condition $25.00 352-6284210 BICYCLES 2 boys 20-inch bikes $30 each. Good condition. 352-344-1503 CANON EOS, zoom camera w/ bag, used once $100 (352) 628-3570 Chain Saw, $50. Safety first child bike carrier, goes behind bicycle, $25. (352) 628-7688 CLARITY AMPLIFYING PHONE Walker 300 phone-large lighted numbers-$40-excellent 352 382 0220 Close Cell Foam Rubber used for gym- nastics, wrestling, etc. (828) 557-1724 COME-ALONG Sears Craftsman 2000 Ib come-along,good condi- tion, $16.50 860-1039 860-1039 CONTEMPORARY CAN- DLE LANTERN Gift item/NEW 29.95;asking 10.00 Linda 341-4449 COPPER/AMBER CAN- DLE LANTERN Gift item/NEW 34.95;asking 10.00 Linda 341-4449 COPPERISILVER CABI- NET DOOR HANDLES (24) 5 1/2" w, 3" bet screws, like new, $20 352-249-7017 DISNEY PRINT- cert. no.838 of 2000-size 18"by 24" $100.00-more info call 352-527-9982 Dog Stroller, used only 3 times, New $110 will sell for $65 352-287-3729 FIREPLACE Propane. Requires wall opening 27 1/2" X 24 1/2". Gold Faceplate 37" X 26 3/4". $75. 352-634-0422 *- WASHER New 1700psi $80.00 352-628-9257 FISHER PRICE POWER WHEELS KAWASAKI KFX twist grip throttle, 2 driving speeds, 12-volt battery & charger Used 2 weeks like new $160 obo 352.270.3258 GUN SHOW CRYSTAL RIVER ARMORY THIS WEEKEND Sat, 9-5, Sun, 9-4 GunTraders is now buying GOLD Concealed Weapons Classes Daily Bring your GUNS & GOLD to sell or trade GunTrader GunShows.com 352-339-4780_ HANDY MANDY STUFF tool set/motorcycle $12ea radio/TV $5ea. 352-628-2360 IMAGINARIUM TRAIN SET all the pieces like new asking $65.00 352-628-2360 Kenmore Hepa Filter Bagless upright vaccum w/attachments, like new $80.00 (352) 382-3666 LOST DOG MISSING FROM ROCKCRUSHER RD LAST SEEN 12-9-2011 REWARD 352-628-1809 MICKY GARDENING FIGURINE Gift item /NEW 34.05;ASKING 10.00 Linda 3414449 NEW PYREX GLASS BEAKERS 20 total 1000ml down to 50ml new in the box reduced 80.00 352 637 5171 NEW! INSANITY SHAUN-T WORKOUT INCLUDES DVDS, GUIDES, CALENDAR $75 (352)949-1340 NEW! P90X EXTREME HOME FITNESS WORK- OUT DVDS, GUIDES, CALENDAR $75 (352)949-1340 Nike/Michael Jordan apparel, new with tags never worn, 2x. Very Gifable! $40 for all! 489-6146 PONYTAIL Palm, 8' tall in 18" dia clay pot on wheels, exc.cond. Great for office.$ 150 obo (352) 794-3980. Pressure Cleaner 4,000 PSI, Honda engine 2 hoses, guns & tips $400. obo (352) 746-3228 RED LAMPSHADES 10" high 14"wide-NEW-$30 for the pair 352-382-0220 RIBBON 1/4" curli ng, 1500 yds gold, 1,000 yds blue, 500 yds white, $15 for all. 352-249-7017 ROCKWELL SCOUT- ING-"1979"- 50 first day covers-matching gov. stamps $100.00 352-527-9982 RYOBI SANDER compact finish sander.$30.00 352-628-9257 SUPERWAVE MICRO OVEN,NEW $65 352-344-3472 STATE QUARTER SET Boxed Proof Set $45.00 352-795-9819 TIRE 1-Hankook H 727, size P225/70R15 100T 90% Tread $25.00 call / Text 352-302-8529 Upright Vacuum 8 pounds, new inbox $75. (352) 270-9254 Upscale Leisure Bay Oak pool table,slate like new, matching oak chairs & deluxe wall rack, all accessories inc $1500 obo 228-0400 ALUMINUM WALKER & BEDSIDE COMMODE clean & sterilized 20.00 each 352 637 5171 Lift Chair Recliner Golden top of the line never used cost new $1400 sell $650. (352) 382-3881 MANUAL WHEELCHAIR extensions only 100.00 352 637 5171 Rascal 3 Wheel Scooter, power seat, new batteries, never used, $350. (352) 341-494 Twin Size Extra Long Adjustable Bed $2,000 + Value Like New Asking $500 obo (352) 637-1337 WE BUY US COINS & CURRENCY (352) 628-0477 "NEW" ACOUSTIC GUITAR PRO MODEL W/GOLD GROVER TUNERS, SOLID TOP $85 352-601-6625 ACOUSTIC/ELECTRIC MANDOLIN NICE "ALMOST NEW" CONDITION,FREE GIGBAG! $65 352-601-6625 GREAT CHRISTMAS Complete Drum, gen- tley used $150 or trade (352) 212-3517 SPEAKERS 2 PEAVEY Prof. 115 international HC w/ covers & casters. like new $200. Speaker Peavey 12" pre amp. floor monitor w/cover like new $75. 352)-746-0183 YAMAHA 61 KEY KEY- BOARD W/POWER ADAPTER, BUILT IN TEACHING PROGRAMS $65 352-601-6625 YAMAHA Digital Piano Keyboard DGX520 Like new, portable 88 key, in- clude stand, bench, pedal, USB, manual/DVD $400.00 352-726-9797 ;_ 1r/O;S YAMAHA PORTABLE GRAND PIANO DGX-505 w/stand bench foot switch, digital music notebook and soft ware, exc.cond $600 (352) 489-1593 YAMAHA PORTAHONE PSR 550 KEYBOARD $200 (352) 503-6776 ARABIAN CANDLE LANTERN Gift item /NEW 44.00;asking 10.00 Linda 341-4449 Built in fireplace, used, with triple walled chimney pipe $1500 obo 352-464-4329 FIRE AND WATER FOUNTAIN Gift 10.00 linda 341-4449 TWIN MATTRESS SET Like new condition. $100 (352)613-3727. Leave msg. Aero Pilates Performer Model 55-4298A, like new condition $225 352-746-1644 Bow Flex Xtreme2SE $1,000 OBO (352) 621-0570 EXERCISE BIKE upright tells the distance time and calories 75.00 352 637 5171 Malibu Pilates Chair new, no box, all DVD's chart & manuel included $150. (352) 746-6998 MANUAL TREADMILL also works the arms for a total workout get fit for the new year only 75.00 call352 637 5171 NORDIC TRACH RE- CUMBENT EX BIKE Model C3 SI. Easy entry. 10 programs. 3yrs. old. $150.00 746-5658 PLATES Core strength- ening machine. Includes Rebounder for cardio,Elevated stand and mat. Paid $425.00. Asking $125.00. Like new condition. 628-3868 16 COBRA GOLF CLUBS 1 complete set & 7 misc. $150. (352) 794-6203 18 M Kiteboard Package Like New $800 obo (352) 697-5316 100 black powder pel- lets N.I.B., 1 box 209 primers N.I.B. plus extras $50 352-726-1059 AR15 parts kit to build a complete carbine with 2/30rd mags red dot site and adjustable stock $660. Assembly availa- ble. 352-344-9663 CLASSIFIED 357 MAG AMMO Brand new FMJ, one box $26, 860-2475 CABIN ON 40 ACRES of Prime Hunting Land Located in Gulf Ham- mock Management. Area. $165,000 OBO (352) 795-2027 (352) 634-4745 CLUB CAR '06 $1,500 352-344-8516 COLD STEEL POCKET BUSHMAN Knife New in box, never used. $30 860-2475 Colt Python Revolver. 6" barrel, blue finish w/case, like new $1000 (352) 489-4172 Concealed Weapons Permit Course DAN'S GUN ROOM (352) 726-5238 EZ GO GOLF CART with battery charger, $600.00. 352-601-0952 FRESH JUMBO SHRIMP 15ct.@ $5 per lb Stone Crab@ $6 per lb GOLF CLUBS Ping 1-3 Irons, RH $200 Taylor Made Racs Irons RH $100. All with senior grafite shafts, excel. cond (352) 795-5918 GUN SHOW CRYSTAL RIVER ARMORY THIS WEEKEND Sat, 9-5, Sun, 9-4 GunTraders is now buying GOLD Concealed Weapons Classes Daily Bring your GUNS & GOLD to sell or trade GunTrader GunShows.com 352-339-480 H&R Pardner 12 GA. home defense pump shot gun, 870 clone, 18.5" bar. drilled & tapped,new in box $240.(352) 637-0844 LADIES BC JACKET Scuba pro -great shape small-$35 352 382 0220 Men's Murray 24 inch bike $25.00 (352) 287-3729 PROLINE CUSTOM SLATE Pool Table solid oak, leather pockets, novelty coin operated, asking $600 (352) 726-5590 Ive mess RIDING HELMET ladies black riding (horse) helmet-new-$45 352-382-0220 S&W 40 cal. / 2 clips, great cond. $375 (352) 212-5523 WE BUY GUNS On Site Gun Smithing (352) 726-5238 utIgf TrailersB SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 C17 12-17 BOUNCER HUG ME BEAR $15 BOUNCER DELUXE SAFARI MUSI- CAL $25 352-777-1256 CAR SEAT WINNIE P $35 DELUXE JUMP- EROO $35 MOBILE CRIB $15 WALKER ANI- MAL $10 352-777-1256 JOGGING STROLLER InStep Jogging Stroller; Fixed Wheel;$50 mikeand- donib@hotmail.com SWING MUSICAL $ 45 GYM ACTIVITY $15 CAR SEAT FOR INFANT $35 EXCELLENT Cond 352-777-1256 Sell r Swa Tell that special person " Happy Birthday" with a classified ad under Happy Notes. Only $28.50 iniia m nhnf C LaughingStock International Inc ,DIS by Universal Uclck for UFS 201 "Good King Wen-ces-las looked out ... on the feast of Steeeephen ..." YOUR AD HERE $250/month Call Finette to reserve this space 352-564-2940 WANTED Gold or Silver Coins, scrap jewelry, Old knifes & Guns .Pay Cash 352-344-1283 PVC Porch Furniture in very good condition and reasonable (304) 661-9811 TASHA'S TOWING We buy Junk and Unwanted cars. 352-426-4267 THREE WHEEL BICYCLE in very good condition & reasonable. (304) 661-9811 WANT TO BUY HOUSE or MOBILE Any Area, Condition or Situation. Call (352) 726-9369 # Employment T source is... ACA Shih-Tzu Pups, Lots of colors, average $450-$600 + Beverly Hills, FL (352)270-8827 www.aceofpups.net Beautiful Jack Russell Terrier puppies Health Cert., 3 males, Tails docked, both parents on prem. $300. (352) 949-0131 BLUE PITBULL Puppies, UKC reg., health cert., all shots, must sale $300 (352) 287-0530 BREEDING SUN CON- JURES PAIR I have a beautiful pair of sun con- jures gorgeous colors they are proven pair proven to me I'm asking ,ninuanua ruppy beautiful, silver/cocoa color, friendly, shots and neutered, male $350 obo (352) 419-4489 CKC SHIH TZU For sale: 9 month old CKC regis- tered male Shih Tzu. Very playful, loves kids and house broke. $325.00 obo 352-634-4892 KITTENS & CATS many breeds, all neutered micro chip, tested, shots some declawed $85-$150 352-476-6832 MALTI-POO PUPPIES Great combination 8 Wk adorable, non- shed, will hold till Christmas, $250 (352) 795-5204 Shi-A-Poo Puppies Paper trained, good with kids, will not shed, health certs. CKC reg. Females $375. Males $350 (352) 489-6675 Small Breed puppies, yorkies, chihuahua, 2008 Continental cargo o ,ou a ,v I I'm having to down size pomeranian, dachshunds trailer, 9ft, V nose Call our Classified my flock due to the econ- $250.00 and up. side& ramp door, roof Call our lassified omy and lack of work I COME SEE US AT vent, wall /floor tie ept for details will not ship no checks HOWARDS FLEA downs, perfect cond 352-563-5966 and no trades MARKET HOMOSASSA $1375 860-1106 AAAAAAA www.chronicleonline.com 352-270-4689 ROW i #1. 352 484-2113 ALL EXTERIOR ALUMINUM 6" Seamless Gutters Lic & Ins 352-621-0881 SUBURBAN IND. INC. Screen rms, Rescreens, Siding, carports, rfovers, wood decks, fla. rms., windows, garage scrns. 628-0562 (CBC1257141) SMITTYS APPLIANCE REPAIR. Washer & Dryers, Free Pick Up 352-564-8179 Vertical Blind Factory We custom make all types. Best prices any- where! Hwy 44 & CR 491. (352) 746-1998 */THIS OUT! PHIL'S MOBILE MARINE Repairs & Consigment 30 yrs Cert. Best Prices & Guar 352-220-9435 Tweet Carpenter Wants Any Work 212-9092 Loving Adult Care Home (SL 6906450) Alzheimer/Dementia No problem. Nursing homes do not need to be your only alternative 352-503-7052 ROGERS Construction All Construction sm. jobs Free Est (352) 637-4373 CRC1326872 SHADY VIEW CANVAS Awnings *Carports *Boat Tops & Covers Repalrs.352 613-2518 Clean Ups & Clean Outs (352) 220-9190 DIESTLER COMPUTER New & Used systems repairs. Visa/ MCard 352-637-5469 m^^^^ ROB'S MASONRY & CONCRETE Slabs, Driveways & tear outs Tractor work, All kinds Lic. #1476, 726-6554 All AROUND TRACTOR Landclearing,Hauling, Site Prep, Driveways. Lic. & Ins. 352- 795-5755 COUNTYWIDE DRY- WALL 25 years exp. For all your drywall needs Ceiling &Wall Repairs. Licins. 352-302-6838 #1 A+TECHNOLOGIES All Home Repairs. Plasma TV installed Lic.#5863 352-746-3777 ANNIE'S ELECTRIC Husband & Wife Team.(352) 341-5952 EC-13002696 BRIGHT ELECTRICAL Res./Comm. Lic & Ins. $50.hr. EC0001303 352-302-2366 DUN-RITE Elect Elec/Serv/Repairs New const. Remodel Free Est 726-2907 EC13002699 Serving Citrus Co. Since 1978 Thomas Electric LLC Generator main & repair. Guardian Homestandby. & Centurion. Cert. Tech. Briggs Stratton 352- 621-1248 #ER00015377 ^^^^^^^ Bianchi Concrete A5 STAR COMPANY inc.com lic/ins GO OWENS FENCING Driveways-Patios- All Types. Free Est. Sidewalks.352-257-0078 Comm/Res. 628-4002 V THIS OUT! BOB BROWN'S Fence & Landscaping CURB APPEAL/ Lic 352-795-0188/220-3194 Yardscape, Curbing, Flocrete. River rock ROCKY'S FENCING reseals & repairs. 352 Free Est., Lic. & Ins., 364-2120/593-8806 352 422-7279 * DRY OAK FIREWOOD Split, 4 X 8 Stack $80 Delivered & Stacked. 352-344-2696 Premium Seasoned split Firewood $75 Per Stack (4x8) Free Delivery (352) 527-8352 SEASONED FIREWOOD FOR SALE $40 a Face Cord (352) 465-5445 ALL EXTERIOR ALUMINUM 6" Seamless Gutters Lic & Ins 352-621-0881 ALUMINUM STRUCTURES 5" & 6" Seamless Gutters Free Estimates, Lic & Ins. (352) 563-2977 #1 A+TECHNOLOGIES All Home Repairs. Plasma TV installed Lic.#5863 352-746-3777 Andrew Joehl Handyman. Gen/Maint/Repairs Pressure cleaning. Lawns/Gutters. No job too small!Reli able ,ins. 0256271 352-465-9201 A HANDYMAN If Its Broke, Jerry Can Fix It. Housecleaning also. 352-201-0116 Lie. Affordable Handyman FAST V AFFORDABLE RELIABLE HOME REPAIRS *100% Guar. *Free Est * 352-257-9508 i* Affordable Handyman FAST AFFORDABLE V RELIABLE HOME REPAIRS 100% Guar. *Free Est * 352-257-9508 * Affordable Handyman FAST V AFFORDABLE V* RELIABLE HOME REPAIRS .100% Guar. *Free Est * 352-257-9508 * V FAST AFFORDABLE RELIABLE HOME REPAIRS *100% Guar. *Free Est * 352-257-9508 * Handyman Dave Pressure Clean Paint & Repairs, oddjobs & hauling (352) 726-9570 Remodeling, Additions, Doors, Windows, Tile work. Lic.#CRC1330081 Free Est. (352)949-2292 MAID TO ORDER House Cleaning * (352) 586-9125 Have Vacum Will Travel HOLIDAY CLEANING call Citrus Cleanina Team or call for our Handyman 352- 527-2279/302-3348 Looking For a Pro Guitar Instructor? 10 yrs teaching exp. all ages & skill levels for info. 352-620-5310 The Tile Man Bathroom remodel handicap. Lic/Ins. #2441. 352-634-1584 #1 BOBCAT FOR HIRE Light land clearing, site work, grading, hauling. NO JOB TOO SMALL!!8 Lic. & Ins. 352-400-0528 All Tractor Work Service specializing in clean up Tree Removal, General prop. maint. 302-6955 All AROUND TRACTOR S .- I ,, : 352-795-5755 CURB APPEAL Yardscape, curbing, flocrete. River rock reseals & repairs. Lic. (352) 364-2120 Florida Sitescapes, LLC FREE est: Yard Clean Up Mowing, and MORE Call 352.201.7374 CLEAN UP, Hedge Trim, haul, press wash, 20 yrs experience (352) 220-6761 LAWN CARE 'N" More Fall Clean up, bed, bushes, haul since 1991 (352) 726-9570 WE BAG LEAVES and clean gutters! 50% OFF thru holidays. COASTAL LAWN CARE (352) 601-1447 AT YOUR HOME Mower, Parts Service & Repair.Visit our store@ 1332 SE Hwy 19 352-220-4244 TREAT YOURSELF THIS MONTH. w/realxing massage at home Holiday Specials Avail this month only! MA58438(352) 897-4670 A-1 Hauling, Cleanups, garage clean outs, trash, lawn maint. furn. & misc. Mark (352) 287-0767 HAULING FRE E ESTIMATES scrap metals, haul for FREE (352) 344-9273, Chris Satchell Painting & Wallcovering. 30 yrs. Exp. Exc. Ref. Ins. 352-464-1397 CALL STELLAR BLUE All Int./ Ext. Painting Needs. Lic. & Ins. FREE EST (352) 586-2996 Handyman Dave Pressure Clean, Paint & Repairs, odd jobs & hauling (352) 726-9570 INTERIOROR/EXTERIOR & ODD JOBS. 30 yrs J. Hupchick Lic./Ins. (352) 726-9998 Tim Herndon Plumbing $10. off w/this ad 10 yrs serving Citrus Co lic/insCFC 1428395 (352) 201-8237 CALL STELLAR BLUE All Int./ Ext. Painting Needs. Lic. & Ins. FREE EST (352) 586-2996 Handyman Dave Pressure Clean, Paint & Repairs, odd jobs & hauling (352) 726-9570 Pic PICARD'S Pressure Cleaning & Painting 352-341-3300 Remodeling, kitchens baths, ceramic tile & tops. Decks, Garages Handyman Services 40 Yrs Exp. crc058140 344-3536; 563-9768 Attention Consumers! Please make sure you are using a licensed and insured service professional. Many service advertisers are required by state law to include their state license number in all advertisements. If you don't see a license number in the ad, you should inquire about it and be suspicious that you may be contact- ing an unlicensed business. The Citrus County Chronicle wants to ensure that our ads meet the re- quirements of the law. Beware of any service advertiser that can not provide proof that they are licensed to do business. For questions about business licensing, please call your city or county gov- ernment offices. Bahia Pallets 400sq.ft. $60- pick-up. Pasture Seeding avail 352-400-2221 Installations by Brian o- ss - IfREE' nwol : PermitAnd M v s ; engineering! 0 * Fees I Siding Soffit Fascia Skirtng I "Roofovers; -Carports Up to Screen Rooms -Decks $200 value,' Windows Doors Additions Q352-628-7519 , 8. www.advancedaluminumofcitrus.com gt A Cutting Edge Tile Jobs Showers. Firs .Safety Bars. ETC 352-422-2019 Lic. #2713, Insured. A TREE SURGEON Lic. & Ins. Lowest Rates Free est.(352)860-1452 DAVID'S TREE SERVICE (352) 302-5641 All Tractor Work Service specializing in clean up Tree Removal, General prop. maint. 302-6955 DOUBLE J STUMP GRINDING Mowing, Hauling, Cleanup, Mulch, lic/ins 302-8852 GRIFFINS TREE SERV Competitive Rates lic/ins Free Est 352-249-6495 R WRIGHT Tree Service Tree removal & trimming. Ins. & Lic.# 0256879 352-341-6827 RON ROBBINS Tree Serv Trim, Shape & Remove Lic/Ins Free Est..Fire wood avail.. 628-2825 344-2556, Richard WATER PUMP SERVICE & Repairs- all makes & models. Call anytime! & SUPPLY INC. County For 25 Years... We're Here To Stay! NEW ROOFS RE-ROOFS REPAIRS , $ 0t0 OFF :, ,ANY RE-ROOF: I One coupon per household I - FREE ESTIMATES, S(352) 628-5079 BATHFITTER "One Day Bath Remodeling" In Just One Day, We will Install A Beautiful New Bathtub or Shower "Right Over"Your Old One!!! Tub to Shower Conversions Too!!! Call now for a FREE In-Home Estimate 1-866-585-8827 BATHFITTER.COM O009ZaX *1 Day Cabinets Laminates * Remodeling Supplies Woods * Refacing Supplies Glues * Hinges Saw Sharpening *Cabinet Supplies & Hardware 3835 S. Pittsburgh Ave., Homosassa, FL 0ooAoTC 352-628-9760 AAA ROOFING Call the eak6usteis." Free Written Estimate 100 OFF: Any Re-Roof Must present coupon at time contract is signed | Lic./Ins. CCC057537 000A4H ww 6arofig hmeta*o COPES POOL AND PAVER LLC YOUR INTERLOCKING BRICK PAVER SPECIALIST Build your new pool now and be ready for next summer! Refinish your pool during the cooler months. 352-400-3188 Ron's Affordable Handyman Services "Repairs Small Carpentry Fencing Screening Clean Dryer Vents Affordable & Dependable Expenence lifelong 352.344-0905 celb 400-1722 tinnn^B Trailers Is N 3 C18 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 WORDY GURvDY BY TRICKY RICKY KANE 1. Glance over a length of a bridge (1) Every answer is a rhyming pair of words (like FAT CAT Sand DOUBLE TROUBLE), and 2. Deducts pay from actress Courteney (1) they will fit in the letter squares. The number after the definition tells you how many 3. Party guest gift taste sensation (2) syllables in each word. 1 2011 UFS, Dist. by Univ. Ucick for UFS 4. Coarse savage's owl-like sounds (1) 5. Italian gondola city racket sport (2) 6. Composer Gustav's shirt neckbands (2) 7. Feeling bitter about formally bestowing (3) 9NILNaHSHd ONIINXS3I 'L SH WTIO S0 3 IHVW "9 SINN aJtINHA '* SIOOH SSHiflH i' HOAV'Id HOAVdA 8 X03 SHIO *'Z NVdS NVJS 'I 12-17-11 Sh AMSNV Tell that special person Happy Birthday" with a classified ad under Happy Notes. Only $28.50 includes a photo Call our Classified Dept for details 352-563-5966 CR./ HOMSASSA SEE AD UNDER WORDY GURDY PUZZLE . DUNNELLON 5159 W. Disney Ln 2/2, New AC, Lrg. Lot $450. $450 dp (727) 480-5512 Hom 3/2 Large $650/$650 fireplace 503-6747,628-1928 HOMOSASSA 2/1 Furn. 1 AC fncd.shed deckremodld628-5244 HOMOSASSA 2/1 MH furn., priv. ranch No pets. (386)871-5506 HOMOSASSA 2/2, No Pets $500. Mo. (352) 628-5696 HOMOSASSA Lg 3/2 & 2/1 no pets (352) 637-1142 Inv./Homosassa 3BR and 4BR, C/H/A, $450 & $550 no pets, 1st, last, sec. 352-564-0578 INVERNESS RENT SPECIAL: Sec. dep, pro-rated over 3 mo. period In the INVERNESS WATERFRONT 55+ Park w/5 piers for fishing & enjoyment, clubhouse, onslte shuffleboard, and much more! 1 BR home $325 plus. 2BR home $450 Includes H20. 2 BR, 1.5 bath, Park Model $500. Pets considered. Section 8 accepted. (352) 476-4964 2/1 FURNISHED MOBILE HOME, Over 55 Park $190 Lot Rent Village Pine, Inglis Lot 4 A$12,500 (906) 281-7092 Bank foreclosures USED HOMES/REPO'S Doublewides from $8,500 Singlewides from $3,500 Bank authorized liquidator. New inventory daily CALL (352) 621-9183 HOLIDAY SALE Appx. 1200 sq. ft. 3/2, many upgrades. Buy for only $36,900 or have delivered and set up with A/C, heat, steps & skirting only $2,600 down, $379.97/mo. for 20 years W.A.C. Come by or call 352-621-9181 Taylor Made Homes INVERNESS 55+ Comm. 2/1.5, carport, screen rm. shed $6900 (352) 586-7962 INVERNESS Waterfront 55+ Park w/5 piers for fishing & enjoyment, clubhouse, onslte shuffleboard and much more! Single wide 1 & 2 BR, starting @ $6,900. Lot rent $274/mo. H20 Included. 3 mo. free rent with purchase. 352-476-4964 Floral City On canal 2/2 dbl lot,ig LR, Ig scr rm, 2 decks, shed wkshop w/elec, W/D hkups, roofover,Clean, seawall, appls. Cash offers only. Reduced $39,500 OBO 904-887-8940 I Livesto porches, 4043 N. Roscoe Rd. Hernando $44,500 (352) 270-8310 Crystal River 2/2 S/W: 16X80. $38,500 No agents, No financing /4 acre lot. Unfurn. 352-794-3362/345-9108 Green Acres Is The Place To Be 3/2 ON v2 ACRE New carpet through- out, new appliances. Nice Home $2,200 down P& I only $369.84/mo. W.A.C. Call to View 352-621-9182 HOLDER 3/2, fenced yard $450/mo 10% down Owner Financ Avail (352) 302-9217 INVERNESS 2/2 SW, 2 nice big additions / AC fenced, near lake, part furn. $37k 352-341-1569 Sugarmill Woods Area 3/2, approx. 1500 sq. ft. on over I acre. Quite,, nice home on paved road. Brand new A/C & heat & appliance, under full warranty. Ceramic tile in master bath, guest bath & kitchen. New wood cabinets, new deck & driveway This house has a great location, 2 mi. from Publix, 3 mi., from Suncoast Pkwy. 5 mi. from new Walmart. $2,200. down $399.00/mo., P & I, W.A.C. Must See to steal this house 352-627-9181 Furnished 14 x 50 w/ added enclosure, vinyl & scrn. rm., SS appl's New Washer/Dryer, workshop w/ power Remodeled inside/out $11,500 (352) 418-5926 INVERENESS 55 + Comm. 14X54 MH, 2/1 55' carport w/deck, front scr room w/storage shed, CHA part furn, W/D, Reduce to $6K, 352-344-1002 INVERNESS Waterfront 55+ Park w/5 piers for fishing & omeoyment, clubhouse, onslte shuffleboard, and much more! 2 BR 1.5 BA for $2.000. must be approved 352-476-4964 WESTWIND VILLAGE 55+ Park. Updated 2/2 DW's for sale. Reasonable (352) 628-2090 CRYSTAL RIVER 3/2, $495/mo+dep. also 2/1, $400/mo. or both $700 mo or $60,000 cash (612) 226-0091 835 NE Hwy 19 Crystal River, FI (352) 795-0021 View our website C21 NatureCoast.com CHASSAHOWITZKA 3/2 House, $600. 3/2 Furnished DW., $600 Agent (352) 382-1000 CRYSTAL RIVER 2 BR. $550. 3BR $800 -$850., 352-563-9857 CRYSTAL RIVER Completely furn., Pool, boat dock, Wash/Dry (352) 302-5972 FLORAL CITY LAKEFRONT 1 Bedrm. AC, Clean, No Pets (352) 344-1025 Alexander Real Estate (352) 795-6633 Crystal River Apts 2BR/1 BA $375-$500 CRYSTAL RIVER 1/1 Laundry on site, no pets. Lv. Msg. (352) 628-2815 BEVERLY HILLS 2/1, 20 S. Osceola, $525. mo. 352-697-1907 BEVERLY HILLS Nice 2/1 carport fully furnish, utilities incl. short or long term $750/mo 352-422-4012 CITRUS HILLS 2/2, Pool, fully turn. Call Jorge (352) 484-4815 3/2 Newly Renovated Appliances furnished 1137 N.E. 3rd. Ave. Near CR Primary. Middle, High School & Library 352-795-3006 CRYSTAL RIVER Large 2/2 CHA, Ds/Wa, W/D hk-up $550.mo., 1st Mo. FREE 726-2006 CRYSTAL RIVER Lg 2 BR 1 BA W/D hook up, dishwasher, lawn water & sewer $450 mo (352) 212-9205 FLORAL CITY FREE Use of boat ramp, fishing dock, canoe & Jon boat rentals. 1 BR unit avail, walk to river Trails End Camp, A Friendly Place to Live 352-726-3699 HOMOSASSA 1BR, refr. stove, W&D, until. Includ. $500. mo.+ sec, 352-628-6537 INGLIS VILLAS 33 Tronu Drive Inglis, Florida 34449 352-447-0106 Mon., Wed., Fri. 8a-5p Ask About Our SPECIALS * RENTAL ASSISTANT AVAILABLE Foreclosures Welcome This institution is an equal opportunity Provider & Employer INVERNESS 2/1, Tri-plex, Great Loc., clean & roomy. no pets $500.mo $300. Sec. 352-341-1847 INVERNESS Close to hosp 1/1 $450 2/2 $575 352-422-2393 Royal Oaks /Inv 2/2 Pool, tennis + facili- ties, H20, W/D+appl's incl. Scr. patio 1st Fl. $625. (973) 222-1100 SEVEN RIVERS APTS OPEN HOUSE DEC 15th 1-4pm Absolutely Beautiful Place to Call Home! near the mall & 7 Rivers Hosp. fishing walking trails near by in a old Florida setting Quite, clean,, well maintain .Central laundry room. no deposit Bu.si5.n. ess ^^ Office or Retail space Floral City excel price 352-341-3000 CRYSTAL RIVER Completely furn., Pool, boat dock, Wash/Dry (352) 302-5972 CRYSTAL RIVER Large 2/2 CHA, Ds/Wa, W/D hk-up $550.mo., Ist Mo. FREE 726-2006 HERNANDO 1/1 Furnished $100/wk., $300 Sec., $400 moves in. 352-465-0871 HERNANDO Affordable Rentals Watson's Fish Camp (352) 726-2225 Rental^ Houses^^ C LASSIFIEDS INVERNESS Phone, pool incl. $110 wk. (352) 419-2480 LECANTO RENT TO BUY!! 3BD 2.5 BA. Lrg Garage on 1 acre (mol) (352) 344-9436 FARMS, LAND, COMMERCIAL UNIQUE & HISTORIC HOMES, SMALL TOWN COUNTRY LIFESTYLE OUR SPECIALTY SINCE 1989 Kristi Bortz Let our property management team help you with your short or long term rentals. See all our rentals in Citrus Co. www. plantation rentals 352-795-0782 or 866-795-0784 BEVERLY HILLS ISt Mo. FREE Bed w/fla rm. + bonus room $550/m (352) 422-7794 BEVERLY HILLS 2/12/I1 big garage, Lrg. Inground Pool, New Central Air& Carpet Wash/Dryer, Fla Room $700/mo 954-294-0531 BEVERLY HILLS 2/2/1+FR, $645; 2/1/2/1, +FR $550. 795-1722 BEVERLY HILLS 3/2, Remodeled, New Carpet CHA, $650 + Sec. 352-563-2480 CITRUS HILLS 3/2 Pool, 671 Olympia St $1,050 mo, 637-1173 CITRUS SPRINGS 2 BEDROOM. 1-1/2 BATH. 595.00 A MONTH AVAILABLE JAN,1st 2012 352-586-4480 9AM-5PM CITRUS SPRINGS 3/1V2, + Carport (352) 489-0117 CITRUS SPRINGS 3/2/2, Recently Built, W/D, incl. lawn serv., $750 mo. 1st & sec. (352) 489-6377 CITRUS SPRINGS Never 3/2/2, Ig. mast. sute. $800 mo. 3/2/1 $695 352-697-3133 CITRUS SPRINGS Newer 3/2/1 Lg Mast suite $695 352-697-3133 CRYSTAL RIVER 2/2/1 + Family Room $650 + dep 464-2716 DUNNELLON $499. Rainbow Lakes Est. Rent or Rent to Own 2/1, Darling Ginger Bread House Re- decorated Inside/out Welcome Special $499. 352-527-0493 DUNNELLON 3/2/1 RENT TO OWN Owner help w/ finan. Close to downtown & Rainbow River, off street parking fenc'd (561) 719-8787 (561) 575-1718 after 7pm FLORAL CITY 3/1/1, Lrg. eat in Kit. TV rm. w/ built in wall unit, Irg. fenced in rear yd., easy distance to all floral city amenities, not your normal rental house, $650. incld's basic water, lawn mowing (352) 560-3879 HERNANDO 3/2/1,g scr porch fenc'd yd. Pets. OK (352) 201-1675 HERNANDO Lg. 2/1 block, on water Apachee Shores w/Mother N- Law Suite Estate Sale! Must Sell! $90K (229) 246-8008 Homosassa 2/2/1 den Lg Scr porch $700/m (352) 302-0202 INVERNESS $950 3/2/2 paddock, 2+acres corral fenced lst&last Kelly@613 0916 INVERNESS 2/1 Caged Pool Fl. Rm. 1 mi. from Wal -Mart $850 (352) 344-1411 INVERNESS age, fam. rm, living rm, enclosed lanai, quiet neighborhood. Refs & Sec. required Broyhill Estates 860-208-3691 (352) 212-4147 INVERNESS 3/2, fireplace home, 7 Lakes, on pond, Irg. lot, 2600+ sq.ft. Appli- cation required. $800 Chris, (352) 637-9588 INVERNESS 3/2/2 Pool Home $775. 2/1+Carport $545. (352) 228-1542 INVERNESS 3/2 ', clean, spacious close to hosp. $650 mo. 1st & sec. leave mess (561) 313-5308 or (352) 270-3859 INVERNESS Highlands, 2/1/1 scr porch fenced yd $600 mo.lst & Sec (352) 344-2560 SUGARMILL WOODS New Deluxe Villa 2/2/2 (352) 382-1132 Crystal River 2/2 1/2 LR/DR Lrg rec room w/FP seawall/ dock$900 352-267-4271 HERNANDO Affordable Rentals Watson's Fish Camp (352) 726-2225 CITRus COUNTY(FL) CHRONICLE For Salek! 117 S Lunar Terrace 2 bedroom. 2 bath. Enclosed FR, Garage & Carport,Large Yard. UPDATED MUST SEE $74.900 mav- ery3@tampabay.rr.com or 352-344-9290 3/2/2, I.G. &C.C. 3k sf. new kit. Ig closets, CHA, firepl. on golf course $139K make of- fer, norealtors 726-0652 3BR, 3BA, Pool home, 2,000 sq.ft. 518 Poinsettia 352-860-0878. To view www.InvernessPool Home.FSBOnetusa.com HIGHLANDS, Remodeled 2/1/1, w/ 2 additional lots, Nice quiet Area $58,900. (352) 697-2884 INVERNESS Waterfront 55+ Park w/5 piers for fishing & enjoyment, clubhouse, onslte shuffleboard and much more! Single wide 1 & 2 BR, starting @ $6,900. Lot rent $274/mo. H20 Included. 3 mo. free rent with purchase. 352-476-4964 Lakefront Gospel Island Location Spac3/2/2 Irg oak trees. Rent $700/mo or buy$125K neg 908-322-6529 GREAT LOCATION 3/2/2 Water access. Updated roof/ac/ap- pliances. Corner lot w/beautiful adjacent lot. $99k 352-422-2970 Ready to Move In 4/2/1, scr ingound pool sitting on 2 lots fenced,, close to town, nice area $135K (352) 628-9483 ^^^'^^^^ "LIFE IS BETTER WITH A PORCH" www. crosslandrealty.com (352) 726-6644 Crossland Realty Inc. PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertis- ing in this newspaper is subject to Fair Housing Act which makes it ille- gal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make such preference, limita- tion or discrimination. " Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with par- ents or legal custodi- ans, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspa- per will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimina- tion call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. OPPORTUNITY Specializing in Acreage Farms/Ranches & Commercial Richard (Rick) Couch, Broker Couch Realty & Investments, Inc. (352) 344-8018 RCOUCH.com 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath includes, priv. suit, fenced yrd. new roof, dble carport, $57,700 (352) 464-0641 (239) 298-0076 2br/2ba/2car. 14 New Florida Av New roof, baths, appliances, paint, flooring, Newer A/C $65,900. 352- 527-1239 REDUCED TO $139,000 2BR/2BA house with heated pool & fireplace on I acre lot in Citrus Hills. Exc. cond. Owner finance with D/P + approved credit. Call 304-673-0110 or 304-673-5550. Arbor Lakes, Gated Community 3/2/2 Split Fir plan Lots of ceramic, Fl. Rm. great patio & landscaping $129,900 3757 Arbor Lakes Dr. 352-344-3700 YOU'LL THIS! Have it all! Inverness Highlands, S.Carol Terrace. Huge 1 Fam- ily. Major updates you'll enjoy only in a new home. Owner down sized, will ne- gotiate. In nature's paradise this 4 bed- room 3 bath on 2.8 acres fits a family with children who love to play explorer. Own deep well (no water bills!), plus new whole-house water treatment system, 16x34 in-ground screened pool with fountain and lights. New 2-zone energy efficient heat/cool; new full attic R-30 in- sulation; new attic so- lar fan; new ducts/vents; updated bathrooms, 2 new AirMaster air cleaning units to remove dust, pollen, mold spores. Majestic trees. Extra long concrete drive- way. Watch the deer play from the lanai or living room window. Newer (2002) Timber- line roof, ridge vents, 7 solar tubs thru out the house. Two hot water heaters. Wired for generator. Com- pletely chain link fenced. Corral your horses, park your boat or RV. Occu- pancy at funding. Approx. 2700 sq ft un- der air. $209,900. Contact owner, 352-556-1510, 352-238-6274 email: rosepub@excite.com DEB INFANTINE MERRY CHRISTMAS and THANK YOU!! To all my Customers & Co-workers who make my business a SUCCESS! Real EstateL.. it's what I do. ERA American Realty Phone:(352) 726-5855 Cell:(352) 302-8046 Fax:(352) 726-7386 Email:debinfantine@ yahoo.com FOR SALE BY OWNER Dunnellon Area, 2 story 4BR 3BA above ground pool.8x10 utility bldg. financing avail $100 closing cost.Low Down Call Dan 800-285-4414 2/2, Garage, heated pool/spa, 8500 Gospel Isl. Road, Inverness $125,000 Owner financ- ing, email for photo, trader@tampabay.rr. com (727) 415-7728 Crystal River/Ozello REDUCED! 2+/2/2 open floor plan, Hardwood floors, www.waterfrontozello.co m or 352-563-5527 Homosassa Awesome location! Quick access to gulf, deep canal minutes to springs, 2/2 hted pool/ spa $154,500 (863) 698-0020 Thank You To All Our Loval Clients Happy Holidays CABIN ON 40 ACRES of Prime Hunting Land Located in Gulf Ham- mock Management. Area. $165,000 OBO (352) 795-2027 (352) 634-4745 LAND 1.5 acres fenced partially cleared, on 480 in Homosassa across and sewer are avail.$25K 352-382-0535 CABIN ON 40 ACRES of Prime Hunting Land Located in Gulf Ham- mock Management. Area. $165.000 OBO (352) 795-2027 (352) 634-4745 CLEARANCE SALE Boat Motor Parts & accessories partially cleared, on 480 Trailer arts,ail Upholstery & More! Thur. Fri. 9a-5p Sat. 9-3p NOBLES MARINE 352) 795-119 of Prime Hunting Land EVINRUDE 120HP 1988 oil injected power tilt, strong motor, runs great must see $1000 (352) 795-4240 NEW PONTOON FURNI- TURE, made by Wise all composite( No wood) FAR BELOW WHOLESALE, Limited quantity,M-F (352) 527-3555 207 Seahunt 2007 model w/T to hydraulic steering full cushion set, tan Tdem alum trailer NO MOTOR $12950 (352) 795-11193555 06 ProKat 20 ft 140 HP Suzuki 4 stk low 198hours very clean, alum tandem trailer, VHFr , twin hull t-top Depth, GPS, Windless anchor 18k obo(352) 464-4877 '07 Proline 17 ftU 4 stroke 90 HP Suzuki very low hmade by Wiours ready to FAR BELOWs trailer SA& mLEor Limited$13,500 352-795-3894 25hp Yamaha on trailer 352-697-5677 14' ALUM CRAFT OB 15HP HONDA, Many Extra s $2800 (352) 503-6776 215ct. $5 per Stone Crab@ $6 er lbi delivered 727-771-7500 KAYAK PUNGOM console $550 352) 503-6776-3555 LOWE 1982 Lhours, very clewe 18' aluminum $950.00 212-5716 21' Cuddy, full transom, Bimini, VHF, port pot, dep. finder, trailer $5,900. (352) 382-3298 SEA PRO 17' PF trailer $6500 OBO (352) 465-1074 '07PrSOUTHBAY '0817ft Pontoon, 2ft 75HP e Suzukng. loaded hardly used 21 to fish trailer & mtr $19K or take over payments WEin garage $410 BOATS 352-697-5677GULF TO LAKE 14'We Pay CASH For UsedRAFT Pontoon, Deck & FishingDA Boats (352)527-05553 boatsupercenter.com console $550 1982 Lowe 18' aluminum SOUTHBAY1'08 MARINE WE:EE BOATSe I Buy RV'S, Steve Henry, RV World of Hudson Inc.Since 1974. (888) 674-8376 (727) 514-8875 WINNEBEGO 2001 Chieftain 35U, garaged, non smoker no pets. 2 slides, Cen. Heat Pump. exc. cond. 76K mi., $38,900 (352) 208-8292 hauler, like new, fulls slide out, sleeps 7, new 2011 Grand Junction 5 wheel, 39 ft 4 slides w/Bumper to bumper for 16 years, too many extras to list! $47,000 (603) 991-8046 '07 32 foot KZ toy hauler, like new, full slide out, sleeps 7, new tires, like new Owan Gen., gas tank, alum wheels $18,500 352-795-2975 ARDON 5th Wheel Camper 24' Inside needs work decent shape $600.firm lye mess (352) 628-2483 FORD 08 Diesel Lariat super duty low miles, '05 fleetwood 15K 5th wheel Hitch 4 way tilt, $250 obo (352)422-2113 I BUY RV'S, Travel Trailers, 5th Wheels, Motor Homes call me 352-201-6945 JAYCO 2005 Jay Feather LGT 25Z New tires/brakes; sleeps 6;new queen mattress shower/tub; stove/ove/oven; refrig/sep freezer; lots of storage. Like new $9,500 priced below blue book retail see in Inglis 352-447-5434 Jayco Designer 95 Series, 5th Whl. 37 .10" 3 slides, $1000 repairs from local buz $7500 (352) 628-1126 Spirit of America '07, 28 ft, Coachman, 4 new tires,2 new batts. Ig. slide, sleeps 5, like new REDUCED! $11,400, 352-637-2735 WILDERNESS '06, 27 ft., (fiberglass) 1 slide out, Q.bed de- luxe upgrades, sps 6 WELL MAINTAINED $11,500 (352) 344-4087 Sterling Tow Bar, 6,0001b aluminum w/ cover cables & wire $600.obo Blueox Aventa Tow Barl 0000 lbs. w/cables & wire $600 obo (727) 639-5229 Homosassa BIG SALE Consignment USA WE DO IT ALLI BUY-SELL-RENT- CAR-TRUCK-BOAT-RV AUTOS' FROM $1,500. US 19 BY AIRPORT US 44, BY NAPA Low Payments * 461-4518 & 795-4440 consignmentusa.org BUYING JUNK CARS Running or Not* CASH PAID $200 & UP (352) 771-6191 CASH BUYER'S Buying Used Cars Trucks & Vans, For used car lot LARRY'S AUTO SALES, Hwy 19... 352 564-8333 CASH PAID FOR JUNK CARS Any Condition Up to $500., Free Towing 352-445-3909 JUNK CARS COMPLETE JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS PAYING FROM $200 AND UP !!!DEPENDING ON MAKE MODEL &YEAR. NO TITLE NEEDED. FREE TOWING. SAME DAY REMOVAL OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK CALL TODAY FOR A FREE QUOTE. WE PAY THE MOST(352)301-8888 KEEP your used auto parts in Citrus Co. Dale's Auto Parts. & Salvage Pays top $$$ for your autos. 352-628-4144 '01 Chrysler 300M All factory options Silver showroom cond senior owned ,66K ,$6300 obo (352) 382-0986 '01 Crown Vic LX Very good cond ,98k miles, $4999 352-726-2139 or 352-637-2258 '04 Toyota Matrix XRS 4dr wagon,6 speed manual trans,6 disc 34 mpgPW, PDP Sun roof, Extra clean, 130Ksenior owned, $5800 860-1106 BIG SALE Consignment USA WE DO IT ALLI BUY-SELL-RENT- CAR-TRUCK-BOAT-RV AUTOS' FROM $1,500. US 19 BY AIRPORT US 44, BY NAPA "k Low Payments *- 461-4518& 795-4440 consignmentusa.org CHEV. MonteCarlo 1999, brilliant black, runs & looks great, Ask- Ing $1,950 352-637-2588 or 845-701-6370 CHEVY IMPALA 2007, V-6, loaded, mint cond., grey mist, 55K $13,500 obo (352) 201-5428 FORD '02, Explorer, 4 wheel drive, 151K mi., new tires, runs great. $4,000 firm (352) 382-4377 LINCOLN '06 Signature Town Car silver w/ leather interior, new Michelin tires, new battery, excel. cond. 95K mi. asking $9,750 352-527-3276, 697-2274 MERCURY 1988 Grand Marquis Low milage, good condition, $1,000 352-621-3135 NISSAN '11 Altima 6800 k miles, loaded, smells new. Warranty until 2014. Health forces sale $18,950 (352) 513-4257 TOYOTA 05 Camry XLE 63K miles excellent condition new tires $12,000 (352) 302-6313 TOYOTA '09, PRIUS Under 50K miles, pkge 5 leather seats $17,350 (352) 746-3663 VOLKSWAGON BUG 2000, rare car, custom wheels $7400 352-697-5677 WANTED VW Dual carb wanted for type II 2 liter (352) 400-2066 Tell that special Happy Birthday with a classified ad under Happy Notes. Only $28.50 includes a photo Call our Classified Dept for details 352-563-5966 BIG SALE Consignment USA WE DO IT ALL! BUY-SELL-RENT- CAR-TRUCK-BOAT-RV AUTOS FROM $1,500. US 19 BY AIRPORT US 44, BY NAPA Low Payments* 461-4518 & 795-4440 consignmentusa.org CHEVROLET 1996 Silverado $4,500 (352) 637-7179 CHEVY 1988 Silverado suburban STRONG $1100.00 firm 352-795-0898 DODGE 1998 Pickup 1500 excel- lent condition, recently detailed $1999. 352-426-1241 FORD 08 Diesel Lariat super duty low miles, 05 fleetwood 5th whl. K bed. 4 slides, firepl $45K obo (352) 341-1347 07 LIBERTY 29K mi 4X2 new tires needs window regulator fixed $11K email ssgt.williams@yahoo.com CHEVY '03 VENTURE 7 pass. all the bells & whistles $5500 obo (352) 527-8247 Dodge97 Caravan, 178 K miles good cond. kept with regular maint $1500 (352) 795-9023 2005 HD Ultra Classic w/Fat Bagger kit, Custom seat, wheels ect $15000 OBO 352-563-6327or 860-3481 '99 Honda Helex scooter, red, 3967 miles, $1500 obo,runs great 352-382-4727 Harley Davidson 04, 1200 Sportest turq & silver, chromed out, 7K mi $4700. Crystal River cell (727) 207-1619 HARLEY DAVIDSON 2002 Low Rider 14,000 miles, one owner, lots of extras. $9500.00 352-560-3731 Harley Davidson Trike 09 HOT DEAL Happy for Christmas" like new 3K mis. garage kept only $25K 813-917-1632 (352) 628-6224 HONDA 1999 600 Shadow, black, deluxe 23,800 mi. $2,500 (352) 726-8005 HONDA SCOOTER 80 CC, Great Shape, $400. (352) 341-0336 Cell (352) 586-8946 Just Scooters-Sales & Service.We work on Chinese scooters! 352-201-7451 KAWASKI 2011 Vulcan 900 LP low miles, many extra's 50 mpg $7,499. obo over 1000's in options (352) 697-2760 Lucky U Cycles (352) 330-0047 2009 Yamaha Vstar 650 EXTRA CLEAN $4,200 352-330-0047 1990 HARLEY TOUR GLIDECHEAP $5,995.00 2007 HARLEY DAVIDSON ELECTRA GLIDE TRIKE LOW MILES $19,995.00 WWW.LUCKYUCYCLES. COM 2003 HONDA SHADOW VT1100 LOADED, WE FINANCE $3,995.00 2010 HARLEY ULTRA CLASSIC EXTRA CLEAN, ABS $17,995.00 SUZUKI '07, Boulevard C-50T, 1 owner, only 4K mi., $5,000 (352) 484-9853 WANTED TO BUY Suzuki VL 1500 or C90 PLEASE CALL ! (352) 222-5905 Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE, Let Me Work For You! BETTY HUNT, REALTOR ERA KEY 1 Realty, Inc. 352 586-0139 hunt4houses68 @yahoo.com www.bettyhunts homes.com. Thinking of Buying? Save Thousands Free list foreclosures & short sales... Phyllis Strickland (352) 613-3503 TROPIC SHORES REALTY. | |I CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 C19 C20 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011 A ...... . . . 2012 200 '199 PM BRAND NEW 300 BRAND NEW 300 ssiAMSl^ '399 M. With $3139 cash or trade equity. 2012 TOWN & COUNTRY 2012 JOURNEY BUY FOR $19,855 2012 CHALLENGER BUY FOR 2012 RAM --^A 2012 WRANGLER ' 269 VEMINOAmII ! I-800-,,4875 P.. R2 2012 LIBERTY FREE 4 HRRECORED MSSAG VJMINO ND RIIN 2012 GRAND CHEROKEE SAVE BUY FOR '16,888 With $2999 cash or trade equity. CALL THE INSTANT APPRAISAL LINE: 800-440-9054 .-... = o*g Jeep ! BROOKSVILLE HOMOSASSA SINVERNESS 0 0 '299 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE rl A, |