Niko worked in the Patrol Division for nine years

Q_-_APD_Niko_Bryan_DSF3080Alachua Police Department Officer David Floyd's four-footed compansion, eleven year old Niko, served as a working K9 for the Alachua Police Department for nine years prior to his recent retirement.

Retiring after nine years on the job would be an unusually brief career by most standards.

Then again, most standards only measure in human years.

K9 Niko, who served the Alachua Police Department (APD) for 49 dog years, was recognized at Monday night’s City Commission meeting for his work in the Patrol Division of the APD.

“This is the good part of my job,” said Chief of Police Joel DeCoursey.

Niko, an 11-year-old German Shepherd, and his handler, Officer David Floyd, were also congratulated by Patrol Sergeant Carl Newsome, who spoke for a few minutes about the contributions made to the Alachua community by police dogs.

“This dog makes an impression on our community as a fighter of crime and a teacher,” said Newsome, who emphasized the popularity of police dogs with young children during demonstrations at schools.

“We get there with motorcycles and cars and flashing lights and what do they want to see? ‘Where’s the dog?’” said Newsome.

Floyd, who served as Niko's handler for the entire nine years, said his favorite part of working with Niko was doing demonstrations for kids.

“What they really want to see is the dog bite someone,” said Floyd.

Niko's duties as a police dog included detecting narcotics, apprehending suspects and initiating building searches. Niko made building searches safer for his two-legged coworkers by alerting them to the presence of people who might be hidden behind doors or around corners.

Also present at the meeting were four of Niko’s canine colleagues from APD and the Gainesville Police Department. The dogs were so enthusiastic in congratulating Niko on his retirement that the commission moved to alter the agenda just prior to the meeting, so that Niko’s recognition could be the first item.

Niko, who was donated to APD by a citizen in 2001, will live at home with Officer Floyd. Floyd said that retirement will be a difficult adjustment for Niko.

“For him, what he loves most, going to work, he doesn't get to do anymore,” said Floyd.

LEGAL NOTICE

 

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO BID

The City of High Springs is currently seeking bids for cleaning services for the Civic Center building located at 330 NW Santa Fe Blvd. The bid should include cost of cleaning the restrooms, kitchen, floors, carpet and all horizontal and vertical services once a month. The stripping and waxing of the tile floor should be quoted separately as it is done annually. Sealed bids must be submitted to the City Manager's office at City Hall, 110 NW 1st Avenue, High Springs Florida 32643, by 4:30 p.m., Friday, February 18, 2011. THE CITY OF HIGH SPRINGS RESERVES THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY OR ALL BIDS.

 

(Published: Alachua County Today - January 27 and February 03, 2011)

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:

 

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Florida Statutes Section 715.109, of the public sale of personal property located at 918 NE 16th Avenue, Gainesville, Florida and abandoned by former tenant CHUNKY T'S OLD FLA BBQ, INC., a Florida corporation.  Such personal property includes a ceramic pig, wood dining chairs (4), metal tubular kitchen chairs with vinyl upholstery (2), aluminum step ladder, stacking sling chairs (4), wood bar stool, metal bar stool, wood high chair, 8’ stainless steel counter, Budweiser sign, Bud Light sign, open sign, wood dining tables (3), wood magazine rack, partial box of portion cups/lids, stainless steel baker racks (2), aluminum door frame, plastic lawn chairs (8), stainless steel tables (4), round wood dining table, framed needlepoint (6), framed print of Willie Nelson, framed print of Tom Petty, hand dolly, wood table (7’ approx), beverage cooler (box), mop/bucket, stainless steel cooler (2-door), beer tap, mini refrigerators (2), small ice machine, tea brewer, desk, dry erase board, chalk board, flashlight, Sharp 1/2 pint microwave, Toshiba laptop computer, hand tools, and outdoor carport.  The sale will occur at 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 at 918 NE 16th Avenue, Gainesville, Florida.

 

(Published: Alachua County Today - January 20 and 27, 2011)

ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

DIVORCE with or without Children $125.00. With FREE name change documents and marital settlement agreement. Fast and easy. Call us 24hrs./7days: (888)789-0198 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              (888)789-0198      end_of_the_skype_highlighting

Advertise in Over 100 Papers throughout Florida. Advertising Networks of Florida, Put us to work for You! (866)742-1373  www.florida-classifieds.com.

SPECIAL EVENTS

 

Make your wedding special at a budget price!

 

Don’t let these tough times keep you from having your dream wedding. Weddings performed anywhere. Non-denominational , non judgmental, any and all marriages. Your choice of wedding vows, candle ceremonies, and sand ceremonies. Starting at $69. Many upgrades and wedding planner services available for an additional fee.

 

Call us at (352)317-7340 or (352)317-0846 .

SCHOOLS/INSTRUCTION

 

Heat & Air JOBS - Ready to work? 3 week accelerated program. Hands on environment. Nationwide certifications and Local Job Placement Assistance! (877)994-9904

EMPLOYMENT

 

Help Wanted

 

ABLE TO TRAVEL Hiring 8 People. No Experience Necessary. Transportation & Lodging Furnished. Paid Training. Work & Travel Entire USA. Start Today! www.protekchemical.com (386)299-2833

Regional Opportunity 100% Owner Operator Reefer Company $1,000.00 SIGN ON BONUS! Home weekly. Call (800)237-8288 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              (800)237-8288    

Cash paid for junk cars. $200 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191

CALL NOW! Top 5% Pay! Excellent Benefits. 300 New T660's. Need CDL-A & 3 mos recent OTR. (877)258-8782 www.meltontruck.com

Colonial Life is seeking business-to-business sales representatives & managers to market voluntary benefits to employees. Commissions average $56K+/yr. Training & leads. Call Kathryn, (813)207-2673 This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Drivers - FOOD TANKER DRIVERS NEEDED OTR positions available NOW! CDL-A w/ Tanker REQ'D. Outstanding pay & Benefits! Call a recruiter TODAY! (877)882-6537 www.oakleytransport.com

Nail tech needed (part time) in Archer area. If interested, please call 352-225-7034

Office & Administrative Support

 Alachua area. Part time starting at $9/hr. Excellent communication/computer skills required. Good organization. Ability to handle multi-faceted duties. 386-418-0103 or 352-316-3683

Medical Help Wanted

 

Care giver positions in Alachua County. Part-time/Full Time. Must be dependable, CPR/First Aid certified. Ability to lift, FDLE check required. Starting $8.00+ 386-418-0103 or 352-316-3683

Professional Help Wanted

 

 

CITY OF HIGH SPRINGS EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Firefighter – Full-time. Responds to emergency calls including fire and medical emergencies. Station duties including general maintenance of facility and firefighting/medical trucks and equipment. Current State of Florida Firefighter II certification, Emergency Medical Technician certification, State of Florida Drivers license and CPR certification required. (Approximate salary $28,885 plus benefits)

 

Apply at City Hall, 110 NW 1st Avenue, 8:30 am - 4:30 pm. Applications accepted until February 15, 2011.

 

THE CITY OF HIGH SPRINGS IS AN EQUAL EMPLOYER /DRUG FREE WORKPLACE

 

(Published: Alachua County Today - January 27 and February 3, 2011)

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

 

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

 

DO YOU EARN $800.00 IN A DAY? Your Own Local Candy Route 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995.00 All Major Credit Cards Accepted (877)915-8222 AINB02653

SERVICES OFFERED

 

FINANCIAL

 

CASH NOW! Cash for your structured settlement or annuity payments. Call J.G. Wentworth. 1-866-494-9115  Rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau.

$$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! $$$ As seen on TV.$$$ Injury Lawsuit Dragging? Need $500-$500,000++within 48/hrs? Low rates APPLY NOW BY PHONE! Call Today! Toll-Free: (800)568-8321 www.lawcapital.com

FARM & LIVESTOCK

 

Hay For Sale

 

Large round bales of Coastal-Bahia cow hay. $20 per bale. After 5 p.m. evenings or weekends anytime. 386-454-8591

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

 

Apartments For Rent

 

Alachua Villas Apartments AVAILABLE FEB. 1 2 Bedroom Apt. Starting at $507/mo. Call 386-462-5832 TDD# 1-800-955-8771 “This institution is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.”

Houses For Rent

 

Poe Springs Estates. 5 Bedroom 3 Bath. 5 acres. 22x34 metal garage. Three marble baths. Granite counters and gas fireplace. Vaulted ceilings. Energy Star newer home. High Springs schools. Long or short-term. $1,550 per month. 352-213-2089

Vacations/Getaways

 

Bring the family! Warm up with our Winter and Spring specials at Florida's Best Beach, New Smyrna Beach. See it all at www.NSBFLA.com/Specials or Call (800)541-9621

MERCHANDISE

 

Guns & Rifles

 

GUN SHOW

 

Newberry American Legion Sat. Jan. 29 9a.m.-5p.m., Sun. Jan. 30 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. GunTraders is now buying GOLD. Concealed Weapons Classes Daily. Bring your GUNS and GOLD to sell or trade. Located 26821 W. Newberry Rd.

 www.GunTraderGunShows .com. 352-339-4780

Health/Beauty

 

GAIN MALE SIZE FDA Medical Vacuum Pumps Gain 1-3 Inches Permanently. Testosterone, Viagra, Cialis FREE PILLS! (619)294-7777 Code FL www.drjoelkaplan.com (Discounts Available)

Miscellaneous

 

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call (877)206-5165 , www.Centura.us.com

AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (866)314-3769

WANTED TO BUY

 

Cash paid for junk cars. $200 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191


To Place a Classified Call 386-462-3355.

Martin Luther King remembered

HS_MLK_HS_DSC_0045

Saturday morning’s commemorative march was one of several events held around town in celebration of Martin Luther King Day. Participants gathered at High Springs City Hall and set out around 11 a.m., led by a police escort.

Forget walking a mile in someone else’s shoes. Try walking a mile in their honor – in memory of them.

Some toddled and some marched. Some strained while some peddled bikes, and some depended on their motorized wheelchairs. But together, about 50 to 60 pairs of feet joined in procession from High Springs City Hall downtown to Catherine Taylor Park, in the Douglass neighborhood, just under a mile away.

The Saturday-morning commemorative march was one of several events held around town in celebration of Martin Luther King Day. Participants gathered at City Hall and set out around 11 a.m., led by a High Springs police escort.

Mayor Larry Travis and city commissioners Byran Williams and Sue Weller followed at the head of the crowd as it snaked down the street. Behind them, singing and clapping would break out intermittently along the way.

“This little light of mine” echoed through town as the procession passed.

Upon arriving at Catherine Taylor Park, where grills would soon be lit and piled with food for a celebration to ensue, grown-ups gathered under the pavilion while children suddenly scattered.

Most relocated to the adjacent jungle gym, or the basketball court across the field, as if knowing to escape now or else remain at whatever serious activity was about to take place.

But in their absence they were talked about as community leaders took turns with a microphone, sharing their thoughts on King’s legacy and how he changed history.

Afterward they would go to work preparing a feast to be sold to raise money for the daycare center at the park.

“We need to let our young people know that what they have cost a price,” Commissioner Williams said, referring to the ultimate sacrifice King made for his cause.

Mayor Travis acknowledged that many young people don’t understand what went on leading up to and culminating in the civil rights movement in this country. On the other hand, there are people here, he said, who were there for it. And for them, he said, he has the utmost respect.

Others, like Ronald Wilson, president of the High Springs Community Development Association, explained that King made it possible for them to get where they are today. Wilson ended his career in the U.S. Army as an officer.

“That never would’ve happened if it weren’t for what Dr. King did,” he said.

The oldest marcher on Saturday was Esther H. Thomas. She’s 80, and she remembers going to the movies at the Priest Theater in High Springs with her brothers and friends and not being allowed to sit with the white audience. She had to go upstairs to watch movies, because of the color of her skin.

“I’m thankful to have been able to live to see change,” she said.

She went on to say, “Freedom is a two-way street.”

“I can’t go around hating you because of what your parents or grandparents might have done.”

She echoed sentiments shared earlier by former city commissioner and community activist, Freddie L. Hickmon.

He said, “We’ve marched 10 or 12 consecutive years, and during those years did not have one Caucasian marching with us.”

Hickmon was happy, he said, to see that was not true this year. In closing his remarks, he said, “I would suggest to all of us that we learn to live together.”

King was a man who loved people, Commissioner Williams later declared.

“Not just black people – everybody.”

Commissioners unanimously approved an extension to Alachua City Manager Traci Cain’s employment contract during a meeting Jan. 10.  Cain’s previous contract began March 1, 2010 and was set to expire on Feb. 28, 2011.

The new contract extends Cain’s employment to Sept. 30, 2014.  City Attorney Marian Rush said the new timetable coincides with the city’s budget cycle and falls just after a performance evaluation of the city manager.

In addition to the extension, other changes, mostly minor, were made to the terms of Cain’s employment.  Her current salary of $111,500 annually does not increase as a result of the extension.  The commission imposed a general freeze on raises last year.

Stricken from the new contract is a provision that allowed Cain to return to her prior position as Assistant City Manager.  Instead, a section allowing for a severance package was included.  If the commission fires Cain before the contract expires, she would be entitled to a lump sum cash payment equal to six months of her salary, plus all accrued annual leave and up to 200 hours of sick leave.

Commissioner Robert Wilford noted that the originally proposed language did not cap the sick leave payout.  He recommended the cap to be consistent with an existing ordinance that caps sick leave payout at 200 hours for the city’s general employees.

In the absence of a morals clause, the commission included a provision that states Cain could be fired without severance pay if she were convicted of an illegal act involving a personal gain to her or convicted of any felony.

Broad language that allowed the city to pay for educational expenses virtually anywhere and for any purpose was restricted to allow for up to $8,000 per fiscal year, only at an accredited college or university.  The expenses may only be paid by the city if the budgeted funds are available.

Commissioner Orien Hills inquired of Cain if she intended to utilize the educational expense opportunity and was pleased when Cain said she planned on it.

Mayor Gib Coerper said he appreciated Cain’s work so far, adding, “I’ve known [Cain] for over 10 years and she’s always done an excellent job no matter what position she’s been in and I know she’ll continue to do an excellent job as city manager.”

In 1988, 22 explorers were trapped underwater in Pannikin Plains, a dangerous cave system in the remote Nullarbor plain in south-central Australia.  An unexpected rainstorm caused parts of the cave system they were diving in to collapse.

Among the 22 explorers was the late Wes Skiles— recognized as one of the world's foremost underwater explorers as well as a renowned photographer, diver and environmentalist from High Springs, Fla.  Skiles survived the ordeal, continuing to explore and document dive sites across the globe, until his untimely death last year.

Now, his 1988 adventure will come to life in 3-D on the big screen, and before it premiers nationwide on Feb. 4, “Sanctum” will be shown for one advance screening at the Regal Royal Park Stadium 16 in Gainesville. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 2, and only 238 tickets are being sold.

In July, Skiles was found motionless on the ocean floor by other divers during a shoot about three miles offshore South Florida.   Autopsy reports failed to pinpoint a cause of death.

The film, co-written and produced by Australian explorer Andrew Wight, with Academy Award- winning executive producer James Cameron, was already in the works before Skiles’ death, and he had worked on the project as well.

Now, according to a press release issued by Florida’s Eden, the advance screening is being held in honor of Skiles and to benefit the cause he dedicated his life’s work to: Florida’s natural springs.

All proceeds from the screening will go to the non-profit organization, Florida’s Eden, specifically to benefit two of its projects; the Howard T. Odum Florida Springs Institute and The Blue Path Campaign.

For more information on how to help Florida’s springs, or to buy tickets, visit http://floridaspringsinstitute.org.

An area business owner contacted the High Springs Police Department (HSPD) Monday to report a burglary that included two vehicles and an assortment of mechanic hand tools.

According to police reports, the owner of Southern Specialty Equipment, Inc., told officers that sometime between 5 p.m. on Saturday and Monday morning around 8:30, someone had cut the lock on the fence surrounding his business, located at 26003 West Highway 27, and then entered the building through a window.

In addition to the theft of two vehicles and nearly $30,000 worth of power tools, battery chargers, and mechanic grade hand tools, most of which are Craftsman, it appeared some food was taken from the refrigerator in the building, too.

The stolen vehicles include a blue, 1999 four-door Chevrolet Tahoe with a Florida license plate and a black, 2004 C5500 Chevrolet four-door diesel truck with a Georgia license plate.

HSPD is asking that anyone with information contact Lieutenant Bill Benck at 386-454-7535 or Officer Dustyn Shenk at 386-454-1415. Callers can remain anonymous and could be eligible for a reward of up to $1,000 for information leading to an arrest by calling Crime Stoppers at 352-372-7867.

After signing a legal complaint against Alachua County, the City of Waldo is at a standstill in its attempt to sue the county.

The disagreement between Waldo and Alachua County comes out of the city’s complaint that the county misused money from the “$12.50 fund,” formally known as the Florida Statute, section 318.21.

The fund calls for $12.50 from every moving traffic ticket violation written in Waldo to go to the county. This money is supposed to go to the Intergovernmental Radio Communication Program (IRCP).

Waldo has made a public records request to the State of Florida for copies of documents relating to the IRCP and Alachua County.  The city is currently waiting for those documents in order to move on.

“We are going to hold off serving papers until we get this information,” said Waldo City Manager Kim Worley.

The county has been collecting money for the IRCP since 1993 to help pay for law enforcement radios and communications systems. In 1999, when the county switched to a different radio system, money from the IRCP agreement was supposed to pay for it. However, Waldo officials say that the city never received any financial help for the new radio system.

Waldo could possibly recover up to $616,007 if a court rules in favor of the city.

Residents of Alachua County have started to embrace two smart phone applications that help the Alachua County’s Environmental Protection Department save money and time locating environmental concerns.

The two free applications were launched about a month ago. Alachua County Environmental Protection Director Chris Bird said that the county is starting to see activity with the programs and hopes there will be considerably more participation as residents become aware of the technology and update their phones.

The county encourages residents to use the smart phone applications because, when citizens call to complain about an environmental violation, it is often difficult for county workers to determine the precise location of the concern. Street addresses aren’t good enough when trying to pinpoint an environmental issue. The apps use a smart phones’ GPS capabilities to report an exact location, making it easier for the county to address the concerns.

The “What’s Invasive?” application allows residents to report exotic plants that harm the local environment. It has a key that shows what invasive plants are in the area so users can easily identify invasive plants and then use the app to report it.

“In our area, invasive plants are a threat to the environment and agriculture,” Bird said. The agriculture community is realizing that some invasive plants can hurt farming, and in result, the economy.

The other application is called “Creek Watch” which is set up to help identify trash and pollution in creeks. This app not only helps the government, but local volunteer organizations or even individuals that want to do a cleanup. Anyone can access the map which shows where trash has been reported.

Both programs are functionally fairly similar in usability.  The user snaps a picture using their phone and the application takes care of GPS mapping and recording the data.

“What’s Invasive?” is available for both the iPhone and Android-based smart phones.  “Creek Watch” is currently only available for the iPhone platform.

It is much cheaper and effective to gather information through a smart phone report than through a phone call, e-mail or walk-in, Bird said.

He said that data shows that within a couple of years the majority of cell phone users will have a smart phone device. The county is looking at other free smart phone applications that it might want to adopt in the future.

Bird said, “I think that this whole idea of using smart phones to report community problems is going to be the future.”

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE:

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Florida Statutes Section 715.109, of the public sale of personal property located at 918 NE 16th Avenue, Gainesville, Florida and abandoned by former tenant CHUNKY T'S OLD FLA BBQ, INC., a Florida corporation.  Such personal property includes a ceramic pig, wood dining chairs (4), metal tubular kitchen chairs with vinyl upholstery (2), aluminum step ladder, stacking sling chairs (4), wood bar stool, metal bar stool, wood high chair, 8’ stainless steel counter, Budweiser sign, Bud Light sign, open sign, wood dining tables (3), wood magazine rack, partial box of portion cups/lids, stainless steel baker racks (2), aluminum door frame, plastic lawn chairs (8), stainless steel tables (4), round wood dining table, framed needlepoint (6), framed print of Willie Nelson, framed print of Tom Petty, hand dolly, wood table (7’ approx), beverage cooler (box), mop/bucket, stainless steel cooler (2-door), beer tap, mini refrigerators (2), small ice machine, tea brewer, desk, dry erase board, chalk board, flashlight, Sharp 1/2 pint microwave, Toshiba laptop computer, hand tools, and outdoor carport.  The sale will occur at 1:00 p.m. on Tuesday, February 8, 2011 at 918 NE 16th Avenue, Gainesville, Florida.

 

(Published: Alachua County Today - January 20 and 27, 2011)

ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

DIVORCE with or without Children $125.00. With FREE name change documents and marital settlement agreement. Fast and easy. Call us 24hrs./7days: (888)789-0198  www.CourtDivorceService.com.

Advertise in Over 100 Papers throughout Florida. Advertising Networks of Florida, Put us to work for You! (866)742-1373 www.florida-classifieds.com.

SPECIAL EVENTS

 

Make your wedding special at a budget price!

 

Don’t let these tough times keep you from having your dream wedding. Weddings performed anywhere. Non-denominational , non judgmental, any and all marriages. Your choice of wedding vows, candle ceremonies, and sand ceremonies. Starting at $69. Many upgrades and wedding planner services available for an additional fee.  Call us at (352)317-7340 or (352)317-0846

SCHOOLS/INSTRUCTION

 

Heat & Air JOBS - Ready to work? 3 week accelerated program. Hands on environment. Nationwide certifications and Local Job Placement Assistance! (877)994-9904

EMPLOYMENT

 

Help Wanted

 

ASAP! New Pay Increase! 34-46 cpm. Excellent Benefits. Need CDL-A & 3 mos recent OTR. (877)258-8782 www.meltontruck.com

Between High School and College? Over 18? Drop that entry level position. Earn what you're worth!!!. Travel w/Successful Young Business Group. Paid Training. Transportation, Lodging Provided. (877)646-5050

Drivers - FOOD TANKER DRIVERS NEEDED OTR positions available NOW! CDL-A w/ Tanker REQ'D. Outstanding pay & Benefits! Call a recruiter TODAY! (877)882-6537 www.oakleytransport.com

Colonial Life is expanding and looking to fill 2 positions by January 17- an account manager and sales manager. Submit resume to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call (904)424-5697

Customer service, print and copy production. Cheerful personality, dependability and computer savvy a must. Full or part time. Starting salary $8-10/hr. with opportunity for substantial increases. Send resume to designprinting@ windstream.net.

Cash paid for junk cars. $150 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191

Regional Opportunity 100% Owner Operator Reefer Company $1,000.00 SIGN ON BONUS! Home weekly. Call (800)237-8288  or visit www.suncocarriers.com

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

 

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

 

DO YOU EARN $800.00 IN A DAY? Your Own Local Candy Route 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995.00 All Major Credit Cards Accepted (877)915-8222  AINB02653

SERVICES OFFERED

 

FINANCIAL

 

$$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! $$$ As seen on TV.$$$ Injury Lawsuit Dragging? Need $500-$500,000++within 48/hrs? Low rates APPLY NOW BY PHONE! Call Today! Toll-Free: (800)568-8321 www.lawcapital.com

CASH NOW! Cash for your structured settlement or annuity payments. Call J.G. Wentworth. 1-866-494-9115  Rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau.

FARM & LIVESTOCK

 

Hay For Sale

 

Large round bales of Coastal-Bahia cow hay. $20 per bale. After 5 p.m. evenings or weekends anytime. 386-454-8591

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

 

Apartments For Rent

 

Alachua Villas Apartments AVAILABLE FEB. 1 2 Bedroom Apt. Starting at $507/mo. Call 386-462-5832 TDD# 1-800-955-8771  “This institution is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.”

Houses For Rent

 

Poe Springs Estates. 5 Bedroom 3 Bath. 5 acres. 22x34 metal garage. Three marble baths. Granite counters and gas fireplace. Vaulted ceilings. Energy Star newer home. High Springs schools. Long or short-term. $1,550 per month. 352-213-2089

Vacations/Getaways

 

Bring the family! Warm up with our Winter and Spring specials at Florida's Best Beach, New Smyrna Beach. See it all at www.NSBFLA.com/Specials or Call (800)541-9621

MERCHANDISE

 

Miscellaneous

 

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call (877)206-5165  www.Centura.us.com

AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (866)314-3769

WANTED TO BUY

 

Cash paid for junk cars. $150 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191


To Place a Classified Call 386-462-3355.

PurvisDaisy Elizabeth (Bettye) Purvis, 77, of Alachua, Fla., passed away January 14, 2011 at Haven Hospice in Gainesville, Fla. after a prolonged battle with cancer.

Bettye was born in High Springs, Fla. on May 20, 1933, to James Thomas and Alice Juwett Harrington.

In 1956, she married Wallace Ray Purvis. They lived their lives together in Alachua, and were happily married for 54 years.

She was preceded in death by her parents and her brother, Horace Lester Harrington.

Survivors include her sons, Wallace Ray “Butch” (Jennie) Purvis, Jr., of Hong Kong, and Charles Glenn (Margarita) Purvis, of Alachua; her "favorite" granddaughter, Elizabeth Kay “Beth” Purvis and her “favorite” grandson, Hunter Alexander Purvis, both of Hong Kong; her siblings, J.T. Harrington and Harvey E. (Mary) Harrington, both of Miami, John Robert (Shirley) Harrington of Gainesville, Mary Francis McFarland and Bobbie Jean (Harold) Owens both of Alachua.

She was “Aunt Bettye” to the Tom Spencer family. She was a devoted phone-pal to many. She was an avid sports fan, especially of the Florida Gators and the Atlanta Braves. She was passionate about cooking and spending time with her family.

Bettye loved flowers, or in lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in her name to Haven Hospice of Gainesville, 4200 NW 90th Blvd, Gainesville, FL 32606-3809.

Graveside services will be held on Thursday, January 20, 2011 at 11 a.m. at Newnansville Cemetery. Interment to follow service.

Visitation will be held Wednesday, January 19, 2011 at Evans-Carter Funeral Home at 6 p.m.

Mazie Lee Haynes Williams, 94, passed away Thursday, January 13, 2011 at Haven Hospice- E T York Care Center, Gainesville, Fla.

She was born September 27, 1916 in McAlpin, Fla. to the late Shelton and Lula Haynes.

She was educated in Suwannee County Schools, married to the late Simon Williams, and was a seamstress and housewife.

Sister Mazie Williams was converted at an early age at New Mt. Zion Baptist Church in O’Brien, Fla.  She served as Church Clerk and a member of the Choir and Deaconess Board.  She later moved to High Springs in 1986 and joined Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church where she served in the Choir and Deaconess Board.  Sister Williams was a faithful and dedicated member.  The Lord closed her eyes and sealed her lips so she could now take her rest.

Survivors include two daughters, Lula Davis of High Springs and Mae Helen Thomas of Tampa, Fla.; six grandchildren, Jerone (Cassandra) Davis, James Davis, and Vicki Davis, all of High Springs; Michelle (Reggie) Thomas, Cynthia Thomas, and Paris Ford, all of Tampa; two granddaughters preceded her in death, Clara Davis Jerkins and Bernita Thomas Encinosa; 16 great grandchildren and one great granddaughter who she raised, Shana Thomas; one great granddaughter, Maya Rentz, preceded her in death; 26 great great grandchildren; a special cousin, Nellie Demps, of Orlando; many nieces, nephews, cousins and sorrowing friends.

We shall miss her, for we all loved her, but heaven loved her best.

Funeral services for Sister Williams will be Saturday, January 22, 2011 at 11 a.m. at Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church, Rev. W.F. Cunningham, Pastor/Eulogist.  Burial will follow in Cedar Grove Cemetery, O’Brien, Fla.  Visitation will be Friday 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.

Arrangements Entrusted to A. Jerome Brown Funeral Home, 1560 NW 1st Avenue, High Springs, Fla.

Henry Richardson Thomson, 85, of High Springs, Fla. passed away Monday, January 17, 2011 in Trenton, Fla.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Warner A. Thomson and Susie Richardson Thomson; two brothers and one sister.

He was a member of the First Methodist Church of High Springs, Gainesville Amateur Radio Society, The Flying Gators and the Southern Bell Pioneers.

He was a retired engineer from Southern Bell Telephone Company and had served in the U.S. Army.

Survivors include one sister-in-law, Madeline Thomson of High Springs; one nephew, Gary Swilley of High Springs; four nieces; Yvonne Thompson of Brooker, Fla., Susie McDuffie of McRae, Ga., Becky Bergman of High Springs and Bonnie Vann of Jacksonville, Fla.

Visitation will be held Tuesday, January 18, 2011 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Evans-Carter Funeral Home.

Graveside services will be held Wednesday, January, 19, 2011 at the High Springs Cemetery at 11 a.m. with the Rev. Morris C. Beck officiating.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to Haven Hospice, 4200 NW 90th Blvd., Gainesville, FL 32606.

Arrangements are under the care of Evans-Carter Funeral Home, High Springs.

columnColumn by ELLEN BOUKARI

It’s that time of year…again.

And that song keeps playing in my mind.

“And so this is Christmas, and what have you done?

Another year older, a new one just begun.”

Thanks, John (Lennon).

Thanks, a lot.

Yes, it is a new year, and yes everyone is another year older.

But, for those of us with January birthdays, Lennon’s words ring ominously clear.

It’s time for another one!

And January birthdays aren’t for sissies.

Christmas is still a recent memory, people are heading back to work, money’s tight, nobody really wants to think about another party; it’s cold outside, and everything is dead…or dying.

Of course, birthdays are a matter of perspective.  At age 5 having a birthday is great; around age 39 it just isn’t that appealing.

We know we’re getting old when the only thing we want for our birthday is not to be reminded of it.

That’s why when my birthday comes around each year, as it does annually the first week of January, I try and put life in perspective.

Each year brings with it more experience, a greater body of knowledge, and after so many years we can start cashing in on the “w” word – wisdom – gained from our rich life experiences.

I’m not sure if I’m quite there yet, but it does give me something to look forward to.

So that’s why this year, when it was time to add another candle to the cake, I did so with great aplomb.

And to those folks who are silently snickering that there is no cake large enough, or that such a cake would surely ignite quite a fire, the joke’s on you because I was just kidding.

I’m not crazy…just older…than I was this time last year.

After a deep breath, gut sucked in, and with chin held high, I resolved to celebrate proudly.

At some point the realization sets in that there are obvious benefits to getting older (other than the obvious alternative of not having a birthday, which is something most people do not celebrate).

Or to put it another way:  Better to be over the hill than buried under it.

Some people say to count your blessings, not your wrinkles.

So much for what “some people” say.

These dire warnings about tell-tale wrinkles are of no concern – can’t see them.

Amazing how God plans these things.

Just when those facial crags and valleys should start appearing, the eyesight compensates.

Close up vision today is as fleeting as was distance vision about 20 years ago.

So, as far as I am concerned, no wrinkles yet.

And that goes for dust balls under the bed, dog hairs on clothing and crumbs on the kitchen counter. Which reminds me, why did I come into the kitchen anyway?

Oh well, guess I’ll remember that later.

Imagine my excitement this year with the new athletic shoes my husband gave me for my birthday.  I envisioned myself youthfully jogging down the street fulfilling my annual New Year’s resolution to get fit.

That was last week.

Now I’m just as excited that when I stoop to tie the laces I wonder what else I can do while I’m down there.

Remember, we are not getting older, we are just getting better – and smarter.

But honestly, just how much better can we get?

Whether your birthday falls in January or December, or somewhere in between, happy birthday, and thanks to those who wished me the same.

And remember, while growing old is mandatory; growing up is optional.

Campus_USA_Credit_Union

The Campus USA Credit Union Alachua branch will be similar to the Hunter's Walk Service Center in Gainesville pictured above.

Campus USA Credit Union officials has confirmed reports that the financial institution is planning to build its next branch in the City of Alachua.

Larry Scott, chief executive officer of Campus USA, said the credit union has been eyeing a location on U.S. Highway 441 in front of Lowe’s Home Improvement store for several months.

Paving the way for the new branch, Alachua commissioners voted unanimously on Monday to approve both a preliminary and final plat to the site, which is currently owned by Alachua Development Co., LLC.  Developed under the name Baywood Centre, the approved plat designates four lots and a storm water basin for the 11.27-acre parcel of land.

Scott said Campus USA has a contract to purchase one of the roughly one-acre lots on which it will build a branch similar to the one at Hunter’s Walk on NW 43rd Street in Gainesville.  The building itself will carry a footprint of about 4,500 square feet and have three drive through lanes as well as a formal lobby.

After it has established its presence in the community, the credit union will employ about six tellers and five others in management and loan officer positions, Scott said.

Campus USA reportedly has just under 30 days to finalize the purchase.  The developer must make physical site adjustments to accommodate the retention basin accompanying the newly approved plat.

The credit union appears to be moving full speed ahead with the project.  Scott estimates that if the entire process proceeds smoothly, construction could begin around September or October 2011 and open about 90 to 120 days after that.  An Alachua branch of Campus USA would mark the credit union’s ninth in Alachua County.  The financial institution has a reported 65,000 members.

After the Alachua City Commission’s approval of the plat, Mayor Gib Coerper said of the credit union, “It will be a quality addition to the city of Alachua.”

ExerciseBenefitWhen treating an eating disorder, exercise is rarely considered therapeutic; it’s more likely to be viewed as dangerous for patients already obsessed with their weight. But a new University of Florida study shows that the psychological benefits of exercise could be used as an intervention for — or even a way to prevent — eating disorders.

Despite the documented mental and physical benefits of exercise, health care practitioners have long assumed that people with eating disorders shouldn’t be encouraged to burn calories through physical activity. While it’s true that compulsive exercisers risk further harm, healthy exercise that’s not compulsive could help people with eating disorders or people who are at risk for eating disorders, said Heather Hausenblas, a UF exercise psychologist who co-authored the study, published in the January issue of European Eating Disorders Review.

“When it comes to eating disorders, exercise has always been seen as a negative because people use it as a way to control their weight. But for most people, exercise is a very positive thing,” Hausenblas said. “Our results show it’s not necessarily bad for people with disordered eating to engage in exercise. The effects on self-esteem, depression, mood and body image can reduce the risk of eating pathologies.”

In the study, co-authored by Brian Cook, an exercise psychologist at the University of Kentucky, Peter Giacobbi, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona, and former UF doctoral student Daniel Tuccitto, Hausenblas and her colleagues surveyed 539 normal-weight students, most of whom were not at risk for eating disorders. They evaluated the students’ drive to be thin, along with their exercise habits and risk for exercise dependence, and used statistical models to find potential relationships. She found that, more than its physical benefits, the psychological effects of exercise could help prevent and treat eating disorders.

The study’s findings could have far-reaching impact, said Danielle Symons Downs, director of the Exercise Psychology Laboratory at The Pennsylvania State University.

“The public health implications of this study are important,” she said. “This research is important for understanding the complex interactions between exercise behavior and eating pathology, and it can assist clinicians with better understanding how to intervene with and treat eating pathology.”

Beyond offering an affordable treatment to address the needs of people with eating disorders, exercise therapies also could help relieve the burden of such diseases on the health-care system, Hausenblas said. “If a patient is extremely underweight, you’re not going to have them exercising two or three hours a day. But once they’re at a stable level, exercise could have a big positive effect,” she said. Hausenblas hopes to launch another study that would follow at-risk individuals over a period of several months to see if exercise impacts their symptoms.

“We’d like to assess them over time, and we hope to see their risk factors go down,” she said.

The City Commission of Archer has undergone its annual power shift, as the commission elected its new mayor and vice mayor Monday.

Frank Ogborn will replace Roberta Lopez as mayor, and Marjorie Zander will replace Blanch Parker as vice mayor. Their appointments go into effect immediately.

Ogborn, who is also a licensed commercial pilot, became a member of the commission August of last year when he replaced former commissioner Ken Green. Green had stepped down for health issues. Ogborn was then elected to the seat in November of last year.

He is also a Recreation Committee chair and a member of the North Central Florida Regional Planning Council.

Outgoing mayor Lopez, who will remain a city commission member, was the first African American female to hold the position of mayor. She first joined the city commission in 2002 and was elected as mayor in January of last year. One of her notable accomplishments as a commission member has been pushing for the restoration of the Archer Civic Auditorium.

New vice mayor Zander is a Florida history, English and piano instructor. She was first elected as a commissioner in a special election in 2009. She is a member of several community committees including the School Planning Advisory, Archer Community Crime Watch and Cemetery committees.

Former vice mayor Parker, who was recently awarded a community service award, will also remain a commission member.

 

Cont: Lopez, Parker to remain on commission

 

 

Ronnie_Ganley-MugshotA Hawthorne man was arrested Tuesday morning for stabbing his mother and stepfather after they cut off power to his camper, according to a police report from Alachua County Sheriff’s Office (ACSO).

Ronnie Ganley, 30, who lives behind his parents’ house on their property at 24214 SE 41st Lane, used a kitchen knife to stab his mother, Lorraine Meyer, in the hand and his stepfather, Harry Meyer, in the head, side and arm, said Art Forgey, public information officer for ACSO. Forgey said that the injuries were not life-threatening and that Ganley ran into the woods immediately after the stabbings took place.

Deputies arrived at the scene around 8:55 p.m. Monday evening. Gainesville police officer Harry Young and his K-9 partner, Argos, were called in to help search for Ganley. Forgey said that Argos located Ganley within 45 minutes. When he resisted arrest, Argos bit Ganley in the right thigh while trying to apprehend him.

Ganley received stitches for his bite wounds at Shands at the University of Florida. He was booked at the Alachua County Jail at 6:46 a.m. on Tuesday and was charged with aggravated battery and resisting arrest.

Forgey said that he was unsure why the power to Ganley’s camper was shut off, but deputies reported the action was what triggered the stabbings. He added that deputies smelled a strong odor of alcohol on Ganley.

The Meyers declined medical assistance at the scene and drove to North Florida Regional Medical center for care, Forgey said.

Alachua_Welcome_Center

Volunteers removed an assortment of miscellaneous and abandoned furniture, including this glass room divider, as the first step in renovating Alachua’s old police station into a community welcome center.

Originally a post office and once a police station, one building downtown will soon experience another life as a community welcome center.

14801 Main Street in downtown Alachua is a shell of a building. It has sat dormant since 2007, when the City of Alachua Police Department relocated to a bigger, better facility.

It has since sat empty, save some dusty, abandoned furniture and other relics of past occupants.

By the end of the year, the Alachua Chamber of Commerce hopes to reopen its doors as a community welcome center.

The renovated and refurbished space will hold a chamber office, museum-like displays done by the local historical society, as well as public bathrooms, said Jim Brandenburg, principal of Alachua Elementary and member of the chamber’s board of directors.

Built in 1961, the 1,800 sq. ft. space originally housed the Alachua Post Office, remnants of which were discovered upon gutting the building last weekend in preparation to start renovations.

Among desks and chairs left from the police department days, a full-sized, official U.S. postal service blue mailbox emerged from the dust.

Specially qualified volunteers from the non-profit organization Rebuilding Together went in last week to remove lead-painted doorframes and asbestos-filled panels.

Brandenburg said the building needs a lot more updates to meet current codes before it is ready for use. The ductwork for the heating and air system needs to be redone, the plumbing and electric systems need some tweaks, and entrances and exists must be improved to current American Disabilities Act standards.

But, he added, “Fortunately, the building’s structure is very good,” so there is no need for any major rebuilding.

Local architect Paul Stressing has donated his time as an advisor on the project, and volunteers from Rebuilding Together and the Walmart distribution center are involved in the project too.

Brandenburg explained that the funding is coming in part from the chamber and will be supplemented by grants, in-kind donations from the community and a lot of fundraising.

Last year, a general contractor estimated the cost of the entire project would be between $70,000 and $80,000. Brandenburg said the chamber hopes to get it done for about half as much.

The chamber’s goal is to have the welcome center up and running by the end of the year, but much of the cosmetic work, both interior and exterior, will be ongoing, dependant on funds.

Once it’s open, the center will have information and literature available on community activities and city history.

Referring to the volunteer efforts he saw last weekend in gutting the place, Brandenburg said this is an example of how things get done in Alachua.

“No one here has a lot of money,” he said, “But that doesn’t keep us from getting something done.”

On Saturday, local businesses donated food for the volunteers, who, in turn, were donating their services.

“If something needs to get done, people pitch in and contribute what they can,” he said.

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE

IN THE CIRCUIT CIVIL COURT OF THE EIGHTH JUDICIAL ClRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR ALACHUA COUNTY CIVIL DIVISION Case No. 01-2010-CA-001716 Division MG MlDFlRST BANK Plaintiff, vs. LINDA L. LITZA, and WALTER BRICKMEYER, PALISADES COLLECTION LLC, AND UNKNOWN TENANTS/OWNERS, Defendants. ______/

NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given, pursuant to Final Judgment for Plaintiff entered in this cause on December 17, 2010, in the Circuit Court of Alachua County, Florida, I will sell the property situated in Alachua County, Florida described as:

LOT 83, OF SPRINGSTEEN III, AS PER PLAT THEREOF, RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK "J", PAGE 75, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA.

and commonly known as: 4319 NW 26TH DR, GAINSVILLE, FL 32605; including the building, appurtenances, and fixtures located therein, at public sale, to the highest and best bidder, for cash. in the lobby of the Alachua County Courthouse, 201 E. University Avenue, Gainesville, Florida, on January 19, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. IF YOU ARE A PERSON CLAIMING A RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK NO LATER THAN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY REMAINING FUNDS. AFTER 60 DAYS, ONLY THE OWNER OF RECORD AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MAY CLAIM THE SURPLUS. Dated this 21st day of December, 2010.

J.K. Irby Clerk of the Circuit Court By: /s/ Julia Rogers Deputy Clerk

(Published: Alachua County Today – January 06 and 13, 2011)

City of Alachua Request for Qualifications, RFQ 2011-02 Rev Administrator for Alachua Cares Program

The City of Alachua is requesting statements of qualifications from local not-for-profit social service agencies to function as Administrator of the “Alachua Cares” Program. “Alachua Cares” is a volunteer program in which the City of Alachua will collect voluntary contributions to be used to assist City of Alachua residential utility customers in need of emergency assistance to pay their utility bills associated with energy-related expenses such as lighting, heating, cooling and water. All contributions collected will be disbursed at the end of each month to the independent not-for-profit social service agency who will administer the program. The City does not intend to allocate any funds for the administration of this program. All contributions received are to be used for utility assistance payments. Preference for financial assistance will be given to those citizens who are at least 60 years of age and/or to those who are disabled and unable to be self-sufficient. RFQ documents may be obtained from the City’s website (cityofalachua.org) or by contacting Frank Sodek at 386-418-6105 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              386-418-6105      end_of_the_skype_highlighting. Statements of qualifications must be clearly marked “RFQ 2011-02 Rev, Administrator for Alachua Cares Program”, sealed and submitted by 6:00PM, on or before 27 Jan 2011, to: Frank Sodek, III – Administrative Services Director City of Alachua 15100 NW 142 Terrace

Alachua FL 32615

(Published: January 13, 2011)

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: A-1 AUTO REPAIRS OF ALACHUA INC gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicle on 02/05/2011, 10:00 a.m. at 14515 NW PEGGY RD, ALACHUA, FL 32615-5449, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. A-1 AUTO REPAIRS OF ALACHUA INC reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids. 1G1JC124917404076 2001 CHEVROLET 1G4HP52L3RH514048 1994 BUICK 1G8ZG5597RZ185917 1994 SATURN 1YVGE22C1S5397317 1995 MAZDA 2FMDA5144TBC21855 1996 FORD

(Published: Alachua County Today - January 13, 2011)

NOTICE OF INTENT TO APPLY

The City of Archer, Alachua County, FL, intends to apply for financial assistance to USDA Rural Utilities Service to implement the City of Archer Wastewater System Project. This project consists of construction of a wastewater treatment plant, pumping station(s), force main(s), collection system, effluent disposal, customer connection, septic tank abandonment, and related work. Any person interested in additional information or with comments regarding this notice should submit the request in writing to the City of Archer, c/o John Glanzer, 16870 SW 134th Avenue, Archer, FL 32618 by 02/21/2011.

(Published: Alachua County Today - January 13, 2011)

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2010-CP-1767 IN RE: ESTATE OF ROBERT B. ROCKEFELLER Deceased.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The administration of the estate of ROBERT B. ROCKEFELLER, deceased, whose date of death was September 17, 2010, and whose social security number is XXX-XX-9503 is pending in the Circuit Court for Alachua County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 201 East University Avenue, Gainesville, Florida 32601. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT'S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is January 06, 2011.

 

Attorney for Personal Representative: William C. Carroll Florida Bar No. 957471 Mettler Shelton Randolph Carroll & Sterlacci, P.L. 340 Royal Palm Way, Suite 100 Palm Beach, FL 33480 Phone: 561-833-9631 Fax: 561-655-2835 Personal Representative: ARLENE M. RIEDL a/k/a ARLENE M. ROCKEFELLER 34 Waterston Road Newton Corner, MA 02458 (Published: Alachua County Today – January 06 and 13, 2011)

ANNOUNCEMENTS

GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

DIVORCE with or without Children $125.00. With FREE name change documents and marital settlement agreement. Fast and easy. Call us 24hrs./7days: (888)789-0198 ; www.CourtDivorceService.com

Advertise in Over 100 Papers throughout Florida. Advertising Networks of Florida, Put us to work for You! (866)742-1373  www.florida-classifieds.com.

SPECIAL EVENTS

 

Make your wedding special at a budget price!

 

Don’t let these tough times keep you from having your dream wedding. Weddings performed anywhere. Non-denominational , non judgmental, any and all marriages. Your choice of wedding vows, candle ceremonies, and sand ceremonies. Starting at $69. Many upgrades and wedding planner services available for an additional fee.

 

Call us at (352)317-7340 or (352)317-0846 .

SCHOOLS/INSTRUCTION

 

Heat & Air JOBS - Ready to work? 3 week accelerated program. Hands on environment. Nationwide certifications and Local Job Placement Assistance! (877)994-9904

EMPLOYMENT

Help Wanted

Regional Opportunity 100% Owner Operator Reefer Company $1,000.00 SIGN ON BONUS! Home weekly. Call (800)237-8288 or visit www.suncocarriers.com

Colonial Life is expanding and looking to fill 2 positions by January 17- an account manager and sales manager. Submit resume to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call (904)424-5697

Drivers - FOOD TANKER DRIVERS NEEDED OTR positions available NOW! CDL-A w/ Tanker REQ'D. Outstanding pay & Benefits! Call a recruiter TODAY! (877)882-6537  www.oakleytransport.com

Cash paid for junk cars. $150 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              352-771-6191      end_of_the_skype_highlighting.

Driver- Drive KNIGHT in 2011! Daily or Weekly Pay, Top Equipment, 27 Service Centers, Van and Refrigerated. CDL-A with 3 mos OTR experience. (800)414-9569 . www.driveknight.com

Customer service, print and copy production. Cheerful personality, dependability and computer savvy a must. Full or part time. Starting salary $8-10/hr. with opportunity for substantial increases. Send resume to designprinting@ windstream.net.

17 DRIVERS NEEDED! Top 5% Pay! Excellent Benefits New Trucks Ordered! Need CDL-A & 3 mos recent OTR. (877)258-8782  www.meltontruck.com

Part time cleaner/floor tech needed for commercial office building on US 441. Must have floor experience, ability to lift over 40 lbs and pass background check. $7.50/hour. Call Pat at 352-870-0363

Experienced Nail Tech Wanted. 386-454-4422

Between High School and College? Over 18? Drop that entry level position. Earn what you're worth!!!. Travel w/Successful Young Business Group. Paid Training. Transportation, Lodging Provided. (877)646-5050 .

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

 

DIVORCE with or without Children $125.00. With FREE name change documents and marital settlement agreement. Fast and easy. Call us 24hrs./7days: (888)789-0198 ; www.CourtDivorceService.com

SERVICES OFFERED

 

FINANCIAL

 

$500 CASH LOAN, No Credit Check, 6 Months Repay, Payments $55 Biweekly. Active checking account and $1,000/month min income required. Call 24 hrs (760)569-6474

CASH NOW! Cash for your structured settlement or annuity payments. Call J.G. Wentworth. 1-866-SETTLEMENT (1-866-738-8536) . Rated A+ by the Better Business Bureau.

$$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! $$$ As seen on TV.$$$ Injury Lawsuit Dragging? Need $500-$500,000++within 48/hrs? Low rates APPLY NOW BY PHONE! Call Today! Toll-Free: (800)568-8321 www.lawcapital.com

ADOPTIONS

 

Are you pregnant? A childless, successful, single woman seeks to adopt. Will be HANDS-ON mom w/flexible work schedule. Financially secure. Ellen. (888)868-8778 This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. FL Bar#0150789

FARM & LIVESTOCK

 

Hay For Sale

 

Fertilized Coastal Bermuda, barn stored, large round rolls, excellent quality. $45 per roll. Cow hay $30 per roll. 352-215-1018

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

 

LAND & HOME PACKAGES

 

NC MOUNTAINS CLOSEOUT SALE! Cabin Shell, 2+ acres with great view, very private, big trees, waterfalls & large public lake nearby, $99,500 Bank financing (866)275-0442 .

Acreage & Farms

 

5 acres High Springs area. Gorgeous country setting with cleared oak-shaded homesite. Owner financing. No down payment. $69,900. $613/mo. 352-215-1018 , www.LandOwnerFinancing .com.

1 AC GILCHRIST COUNTY

 

Paved road frontage on CR 138. Cleared homesite. High and Dry! OWNER FINANCING! NO DOWN PAYMENT! Only $205/mo. Total $19,900. Call 352-215-1018 . www.LandOwnerFinancing .com.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

 

Apartments For Rent

 

Alachua Villas Apartments AVAILABLE FEB. 1 2 Bedroom Apt. Starting at $507/mo. Call 386-462-5832 TDD# 1-800-955-8771 “This institution is an Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.”

MERCHANDISE

 

Health/Beauty

 

GAIN MALE SIZE FDA Medical Vacuum Pumps Gain 1-3 Inches Permanently. Testosterone, Viagra, Cialis FREE PILLS! (619)294-7777 Code FL www.drjoelkaplan.com (Discounts Available)

Garage Sales

 

MOVING SALE - Saturday January 15th 8:00-2:00 Furniture, Household Items, Books, Clothes and more. 19928 NW 78th Avenue, Off CR 235 Between Alachua and Newberry

 

Alachua Estate Sale Multi-Family and many other items. Furniture, jewelry, china, clothes. Sat. ONLY 8-12 Jan. 15 14407 NW 146 Terr Across from Alachua Rec Center

Miscellaneous

 

AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (866)314-3769 .

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call (877)206-5165 www.Centura.us.com

WANTED TO BUY

 

Cash paid for junk cars. $150 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191

Auctions

 

 

IRS Auction January 19, 2011 Gainesville, FL For pictures & sale information go to www.irsauctions.gov or call (602) 501-2146


To Place a Classified Call 386-462-3355

lettersI want to report another successful Alachua Christmas Parade and thank my committee for their hard work. Also, a big thank you to the 55 parade participants and all the residents who lined Main Street and applauded their efforts.

Once again we awarded plaques and cash prizes for the entrants. This year’s awards for non-profit groups went to River of Life Assembly of God (First Place), Tacachale (Second Place) and Pop Warner Raider Football (Third Place). Plaques for businesses went to Lees Preschool (First Place), Hitchcock (Second Place) and Alarion Bank (Third Place).

We hope that everyone had a great time and next year should be even better.

Bud Calderwood

Alachua Chamber of Commerce Parade Chairman

Alachua, Fla.

columnColumn by ELLEN BOUKARI

Holidays are good and vacations are great.  But the combination can lead to unintended…and unwelcome… consequences.

Each provides an opportunity for our minds and our bodies to become rejuvenated; a time to stop watching the clock and counting the minutes.

But as with all good things, excess is bad and moderation is good.

If a glance at the calendar, or a gentle nudge from a spouse isn’t reminder enough that it’s time to head back to the grindstone, there are a few additional indicators that might tip one off that it’s time to get out of the house and back to reality before the holiday time warp takes hold for good.

The Time Slippage indicator is the gradual, but ever so real loss of time perception, and is a sure sign that vacation time should be drawing to a close.  The first day of vacation is marked by the alarm sounding at the usual hour, bright and early.  The freshly awakened vacationer is out of bed and completely dressed in 10 minutes, in time to watch the sun rise.

By day two, sleeping in for a few minutes can surely be harmless and there is certainly no damage in staying up a bit later than usual…because there is really no reason to get up so early anyway.

And by day five the new pattern is becoming firmly entrenched.  Except now, the alarm clock is nowhere to be found, and neither are the house slippers that were discarded sometime between 2 and 4 a.m. as the late, late show was moving into hour three.

Or as the DVD drones on and on playing the same nonsensical clip of theme music over and over and over again.  What, did the film end?

When did that happen?

Somewhere between midnight nap two and twilight nap three.

The sun is high in the sky and the television is blaring something about the midday news break.  The bathrobe is still stained with last night’s spaghetti sauce which now joins a drop of maple syrup from breakfast the day before.

As surreal as Time Slippage is, Houseclean Fever is just as bizarre as the persona of Mr. Clean on speed, stealthily surveying each room, armed with Formula 409 in one hand and a spray bottle of chlorine bleach and a cleaning rag in the other.  Children and pets run when this manifestation of sanitary meets insanity enters the room.  No room, no nook, no cranny is safe from this cleaning crazed homebody.  And this can happen at any hour, day or night, midnight or twilight.

That’s when the omnipresent Television Terminus kicks in.  A condition marked by bleary eyes, loss of verbal communication skills and couch potato positioning, these telltale signs of this vacation related malady results from watching endless reruns of the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, C.S.I. and The Golden Girls.

Boredom spawns Betty Crocker Cracked — If it can be baked, basted, boiled, broiled or braised, it is now crammed in the refrigerator.  The pantry is empty, save the two cans of Fancy Feast Seafood Gourmet cat food, and given one more day of mindless vacation, there’s no guarantee that won’t end up in the crockpot with the carrot that slipped behind the refrigerator’s vegetable crisper.  All the Tupperware containers, Glad disposable food savers and Cool-Whip tubs are stacked neatly in the freezer, filled with newly tried recipes resulting from the cooking frenzy that has practically depleted the entire state’s supply of milk, eggs and chocolate chips

The real hint that vacation time is no longer fulfilling its intended purpose is when one just can't slip into that mindfully relaxed state for which one is searching. There is a battle of wills raging between cleaning the cracks in the driveway, sautéing the dill pickles in Fancy Feast Seafood Gourmet and wondering if Leave it to Beaver will ever be regarded as a literary work of art.

It’s time to call it a day; buck that time warp and head back to work — and that includes dealing with the pressing issues of life, such as where in the heck is that alarm clock anyway?

GreatOutdoorsThe Great Outdoors General Manager Carol Doherty credits excellence in food, atmosphere and service as the three ingredients earning the restaurant a 2010 Golden Spoon award from Florida Trend Magazine.

Fresh meat.

Wet-aged for no less than 28 days, then grilled to order— dripping, juicy and oozing with flavor.

General manager Carol Doherty said if she had to name the absolute best thing on the menu at the Great Outdoors Restaurant, it would have to be the steaks. The 14-ounce New York Strip or the 22-ounce T-Bone would be her top picks.

They are just two examples of what earned the restaurant a 2010 Golden Spoon award from Florida Trend Magazine. The accolade recognizes excellence in food, atmosphere and service— the three things, Doherty explained, that make or break a restaurant.

“It’s a triangle. If one piece is missing, the whole thing falls apart.”

Another Great Outdoors manager, Sandy Flaitz, agreed that it’s the restaurant’s mastery of all three components that earned it this award.

“In the culinary world,” Doherty said, “it’s extremely prestigious.”

Though she holds that the steaks are the absolute best of the diverse menu options, she admitted they’re not what she usually has.

“Every day I eat the same thing— the Chop Chop salad with Ahi Tuna.”

That selection, she explained, is because she tries to eat healthy.

“It’s delicious,” she said, which makes eating healthy fairly easy. And the reason it’s so good is the fresh fish is brought in daily, and the dressing is homemade, meaning less sodium and preservatives, she explained.

She said that she, as well as the owners, Bob and Karen Bentz, and the executive chef, Tara McDermott, have worked long and hard throughout their careers to get to this point, and to receive the Golden Spoon is truly gratifying.

On Florida Trend Magazine’s Web site listing Golden Spoon recipients, is an article discussing the adjustments and adaptations occurring in the dining industry since the recession hit.

Restaurant editor Chris Sherman writes, “No question that the market in Florida cannot afford as many $100 dinners and gilt-edged settings as it did in the boom times.”

He goes on to praise those restaurants that have found a way to continue serving quality food, whether to a market of working-class diners eating out on a budget, or the rich and famous who can still afford to eat out nightly and indulge in entrees upward of $20 a plate.

Eating at the Great Outdoors can go both ways. Order a $4 hamburger on half-price burger Monday nights, or the 20-ounce bone-in Porterhouse; the most expensive item on the menu at $26. Either way, it’s the same historic ambience of original brick walls and windows in the dining room and intimately lit aura on the patio. It’s the same full table service and the same quality standards for all the ingredients and preparation.

Doherty credits that versatility and reliability with the restaurant’s continued success.

What makes it stand out, she said, is “We offer the perfect guest experience.”

Everyone, no matter what they order, she said, is treated like family.

According to Doherty, while many restaurants think frozen and pre-made equals cheaper and fresh is unaffordable these days, that’s not true.

As America tightened its belt, eateries have gone under left and right. Now in its third year, the Great Outdoors hasn’t so much as felt a strain. Without sacrificing ingredients or labor— which adds up quickly in a kitchen where every sauce, dressing and dessert is made from scratch, the restaurant is thriving.

Doherty said the numbers from Dec. 2010 were up 32 percent from Dec. 2009, and the entire year was up 24 percent.

It’s undeniable that whatever the Great Outdoors is doing, it works.

Doherty made it clear they don’t believe in, as she put it, “freezer to fryer” cooking.

“The bottom line is the guest knows the difference.”

Look at other places in the area as proof, she said. Beef O’ Brady’s in Alachua just closed, and what was once Floyd’s Diner in High Springs, where Doherty had worked and been part-owner, has changed hands twice since doing away with the original menu, which she said, was more fresh, less frozen.

The Golden Spoon was “a dream come true” for her. But she stressed that it’s a reflection of the entire restaurant and staff, not just management.

On New Year’s Eve, as the Great Outdoors was gearing up for what everyone knew would be a long, busy night, Doherty gathered her 20 servers for an “up front,” a meeting at the beginning of a shift to go over daily specials and reminders.

She told them, “I’ve set the reservation book, and the kitchen has set the menu. Now I’m turning the whole night over to you.”

When a busy dinner service runs smoothly, it’s magic. Nothing less than perfect leaves the kitchen, no guest is left feeling unattended and at the end of the night all the strain and pressure of getting it right is worth it. And when the next day runs smoothly, and the day after that, guests leave happy knowing they’ll return, and that’s when it’s golden.

Q_-_Beefs_Bryan_DSF2977Just months after Main Street eatery Ristorante Deneno shut its doors for the final time, another Main Street restaurant has been forced to follow suit.

Beef O’ Brady’s, which opened in March 2008, has closed after financial difficulties made its continued operation unsustainable.

Owner Dan McCann, who also owns the Beef O’ Brady’s on Archer Road in Gainesville, said although the restaurant had many regular customers, the net gain simply did not add up enough to keep it running.

“We had some good moments when we were packed, but those moments weren’t enough to sustain us throughout the rest of the weeks and months,” he said. “I still had to pay the bills, and I still had to pay my employees.”

McCann said although the Alachua restaurant is closing down, he is trying to help his employees as much as possible, especially the ones with the most need.

“I’m moving several of my employees, including my manager, over to the Gainesville store, based on need,” he said.

Although McCann faced tough business times while the restaurant was open, he still managed to donate time, money and food to the community throughout his nearly two years of operations.

McCann was active in the community, even before the restaurant opened, earning Beef O’ Brady’s the title of “Business of the Year” by the Alachua Chamber of Commerce in 2009.

During the awards ceremony, Alachua Elementary Principal Jim Brandenburg lauded the restaurateur for his involvement in the community.

“Before Danny ever opened his doors in Alachua, he came to the school and met with me and said, ‘I want to help your school,” Brandenburg said. “He then gave us a few gift certificates and he’s been involved ever since.”

Alachua recreation director Hal Brady said McCann will be sorely missed in Alachua because he has been an exceptional supporter of community residents and programs.

“It’s really sad that he’s closing down,” Brady said. “He’s been one of our great local partners, not only in sports, but also in the schools.”

Although the restaurant is closed for now, McCann is not ruling out the possibility of reopening in Alachua in the future.

“I’m already talking to corporate about the future,” he said. “Alachua still has great potential, especially when the Walmart opens up in a few years. Either way, we’ve made some great friends here, and I hope we can stay in touch and see what happens in the future.”

Seeking interim manager

In a narrow margin, commissioners in Hawthorne agreed Tuesday to pay out $26,370 to Ed Smyth, the city manager they fired on Dec. 16.  The agreement to pay the severance called for in Smyth’s employment contract with the City didn’t come without apprehension from some who questioned if the city had the funds to make the payment.

Concerns about the City’s fiscal standing nearly kept the commission from authorizing the severance payout and was the single-largest reason cited by commissioners for firing Smyth in the first place.  An initial motion by Commissioner Harry Carter to write the check in one lump sum payment to Smyth resulted in a stalemate when only Vice-Mayor Matthew Surrency supported the measure.  Commissioners William Carlton and DeLoris Roberts opposed the move.  Mayor Eleanor Randall was not present.

Carlton and Roberts said they weren’t sure the City could afford to pay out the full three-months severance called for in the contract, mainly because Smyth never presented the commission with a balanced budget.  The initial budget adopted in September and set to begin on Oct. 1 was found to be out of balance with nearly $400,000 of unfunded expenses.

Since that discovery, the commission has seen a reported six revisions to the budget.  The final straw came at the Dec. 16 special meeting in which the latest revision allegedly still wasn’t balanced.

Despite the stalemate, commissioners continued to debate their options with Smyth’s severance pay.  Urging commissioners not to delay the payout, City Attorney Audrey Harris said, “I’m uncomfortable prolonging it because of [the City’s] contractual obligation.”

With tensions clearly rising on the dais, Commissioner William Carlton said, “I think it’s time the City Attorney start thinking about the City of Hawthorne.”  Carlton was critical of the employment contract with Smyth which was drafted by Harris.

Harris said she took exception to Carlton’s comment and that she has “never not looked out for the interests of Hawthorne.”

Carter and Surrency said they wanted to make the full payout to bring closure to the issue and allow the City to move in a new direction.  Carlton and Roberts meanwhile said they remained concerned that the City did not have adequate funds to follow through on its commitments.

After revenues and expenses, including Smyth’s severance, the City would have about $52,000 in the general fund according to estimates prepared by the City’s accountants.

Carter and Surrency seemed amenable to a staggered payout to Smyth over three months, but that wasn’t enough to tip Carlton and Roberts on the issue.

The debate among commissioners and residents who spoke ensued until one resident seemed to sway Roberts.

Ray Daniel, the resident who first brought to light the budget errors, recounted the events over the last several weeks.

Daniel noted that the commission opted not to continue employing Smyth for three months in lieu of a lump sum severance.  He also characterized the contract as “one-sided” in favor of Smyth.  But the tide seemed to turn when Daniel said, “You’re obligated to pay [Smyth] as the contract states.”

His comments prompted Roberts to budge on the issue.  In light of Daniel’s comments, Roberts said she would vote for a lump sum severance pay.

After another motion by Carter to make the full payout, Roberts went along with the move, which passed 3-1.  Carlton continued to oppose the measure.

The $26,370 severance pay includes nearly three months of pay totaling $17,500, about $7,600 in vacation pay and some $1,250 in sick pay.  The City is also obligated to continue paying Smyth’s health and life insurance premiums for three months.

Commissioners in Hawthorne have been working quickly to find someone to fill the city manager position on an interim basis while looking for a more permanent manager.  Paul Sharon of the International City Manager Association of Florida presented commissioners with the option of his assistance in the process of finding both an interim and permanent city manager.

Sharon, who works under the “Range Riders” program gave the commission a list of four city managers in the surrounding area that might be interested in helping on an interim basis.  Among those are former High Springs City Manager James Drumm.  Also on the list are James Gleason of Ocoee, Ken Venables of Palatka and Oel Wingo of Palm Coast.

Sharon also offered to help the commission put together an advertisement as well as filter through the applicants for a permanent city manager.

The commission accepted Sharon’s assistance and scheduled a meeting for Jan. 12 at 11 a.m. to further discuss the immediate and long-term needs of Hawthorne.

 

Flag_HS

The Alachua Police Department (APD) has arrested a third suspect in the attempted homicide and robbery that occurred at SunState Federal Credit Union.

Police obtained a warrant for the arrest of Akil Flagg on Dec. 30 in connection with the incident.

Shortly after the warrant was obtained, APD officers, with assistance of the Alachua County Sheriff's Office Warrant Division, contacted Flagg at his residence in Alachua.

Flagg was found hiding in an air conditioner vent inside his residence, and he was arrested without incident.

On Dec. 16 at about 11:15 p.m., a man entered the lobby of APD saying he had been shot while retrieving cash from an automatic teller machine (ATM) at SunState Federal Credit Union on U.S. Highway 441 in Alachua.

The man said after retrieving the cash, he got back into his vehicle.  Moments later, he leaned forward to start the vehicle’s engine when he heard what was described as a “very loud” gunshot, which apparently shattered the driver’s side window.  Upon looking back, the man noticed a white Ford Explorer sitting in the parking lot of Alachua Tractor, a neighboring business.

Police say when they went to the area of SunState Federal Credit Union, they saw the reported Ford Explorer parked in the same location described by the man who had been shot.  Upon approaching the white Ford, police say three people exited the vehicle and fled on foot.

After about a 200-yard foot chase, police reportedly caught Richard Demond Addison, 23, of Alachua.  According to police reports, the vehicle in which the trio was sitting had been reported stolen two days prior and a gun was found inside the Ford.

At the time, police were unable to catch the two other people who reportedly fled the scene.  By Thursday, Dec. 23, police obtained a warrant for the arrest of Derae Jenkins, 18, of Alachua in connection with the alleged shooting.  Police picked up Jenkins Friday morning, Dec. 24.

Q_-_Tom_KeelerKeeler

It’s game-on at Santa Fe High School. That’s the plan, at least.

Shea Showers has been the school’s head football coach for the past three years, but now he’s stepping down, and Tommy Keeler, the head coach and athletic director from Newberry High School, will be taking his place.

“He [Showers] saw a need for the program to move in a different direction,” said Santa Fe Athletic Director Michele Faulk.

“It was a mutual agreement.”

Keeler met with his new players Wednesday afternoon, and he said he’d be starting workouts with them Jan. 24. He wasn’t sure yet when he’s going to start teaching at Santa Fe, but he did express his excitement for it, saying he wanted the new position in part to get back to teaching weight lifting and coaching football.

As a dean and athletic director at Newberry, ‘It’s hard to give the kids my full time and attention while also dealing with everything else.”

“I’m not an administrator. My heart is in working with the kids.”

He makes his devotion to the sport clear, too, without even speaking. Instead of hearing a ring sounding for him to answer his cell phone, the Florida State Seminoles’fight song announces an incoming call.

He and his wife are both ‘Noles, but, he said, “My daughter’s a traitor.” She went to the University of Florida, he explains.

Santa Fe High School is rich in football tradition, though the past few years have been rough, he said. But, he declared, “We’re going to have success again.”

Faulk said the school is excited about the new edition to the team.

Newberry’s football program, she explained, was in a similar situation to Santa Fe’s now, and Keeler turned it around. She’s confident he’ll bring new ideas, energy and discipline to the Raiders.

Showers will continue teaching his weight lifting class at Santa Fe until the end of this school year, Faulk said. When he leaves, Keeler will take over that as well.

LEGAL NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTIC

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO: 2010-CA-5679-MG K.A. MILLER, Trustee under the provisions of a Trust agreement dated 2/8/2002 known as Trust Number 11598-000-000 and 11599-000-000, Plaintiff, v. DONNA TAYLOR and UNKNOWN HEIRS OF INEZ T. BROWN, Defendants. ____/

NOTICE OF ACTION

To: UNKNOWN HEIRS OF INEZ T. BROWN YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action to quiet title on the following property in Alachua County, Florida: THE NORTH 60 FEET OF LOTS 8 AND 9 OF BLOCK 33, OF NEW GAINESVILLE SUBDIVISION ACCORDING TO THE MAP OR PLAT THEREOF AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK "A", PAGE 65 OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF ALACHUA, COUNTY, FLORIDA. has been filed against you, and Donna Taylor, and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on John Grant, plaintiff's attorney, whose address is 2121 G Killarney Way, Tallahassee, FL 32309 on or before January 17th, 2011, and file the original with the clerk of this court either before service on plaintiff's attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or petition. Dated on November 19, 2010. J.K. Irby as Clerk of the Court P.O. Box 600 Gainesville, FL 32602 By: /s/ S. Brown as Deputy Clerk

 

(Published: Alachua County Today - December 16, 23, 30, 2010 and January 06, 2011.)

 

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 01-10-CA-3840 FLORIDA CAPITAL BANK, N.A., a national banking association Plaintiff, vs. MILLHOPPER INVESTMENT COMPANY, LLC, a Florida limited liability company; JOSEPH E. FRECK; WINDSOR GLEN OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., a Florida not for profit corporation; and Unknown Tenant Defendants. _____________/

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to an Order Of Summary Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated November 15, 2010, in Case No. 01-10-CA-3840 of the Circuit Court of the Eighth Judicial Circuit in and for Alachua County, Florida, wherein FLORIDA CAPITAL BANK, N.A., a national banking association is Plaintiff, and MILLHOPPER INVESTMENT COMPANY, LLC, a Florida limited liability company; JOSEPH E. FRECK; WINDSOR GLEN OWNERS ASSOCIATION, INC., a Florida not for profit corporation; and Unknown Tenant, are Defendants, that I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at 201 East University Avenue, Gainesville, Florida 32601 at the Court Lobby, on the 25th day of January, 2011, at 11:00 o’clock, A.M., the following described property as set forth in said Summary Final Judgment of Foreclosure, to-wit:

Lot Three-A (3A) of WINDSOR GLEN PLANTATION - LOT 3 REPLAT, according to the Plat thereof as recorded in Plat Book “U”, Page(s) 9, of the Public Records of Alachua County, Florida. IF YOU ARE A PERSON CLAIMING A RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK NO LATER THAN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY REMAINING FUNDS. AFTER 60 DAYS, ONLY THE OWNER OF RECORD AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MAY CLAIM THE SURPLUS.

DATED, at Gainesville, Alachua County, Florida, this 21st day of December, 2010

 

J.K. “BUDDY” IRBY, CLERK OF COURT BY: /s/ Julia Rogers Deputy Clerk

 

(Published: Alachua County Today – December 30, 2010 and January 06, 2011)

 

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA

 

CASE NO. 01-10-CA-4055 DIVISION MG

 

CAMPUS USA CREDIT UNION,

 

Plaintiff, vs.

 

RITA C. MOSELEY, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF RITA C. MOSELEY, CHANDLER DANIELS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF CHANDLER DANIELS, RIVERGLEN PROPERTY OWNERS' ASSOCIATION, INC., UNKNOWN TENANT(S) IN POSSESSION and SECOND UNKNOWN TENANT(S) IN POSSESSION,

 

Defendants. ____________/

NOTICE OF SALE

 

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on the 19 day of January. 2011, at 11:00 A.M in the Lobby at the Alachua County Family/Civil Justice Center, 201 East University Avenue, Gainesville, Alachua County Florida, the undersigned Clerk will offer for sale the following real and personal property more particularly described as follows: Lot 21, RIVER GLEN, according to the map or plat thereof as recorded in Plat Book T, Pages 15 through 17, of the Public Records of Alachua County, Florida TOGETHER WITH: all the improvements now or hereafter erected on the property, and all easements, appurtenances, and fixtures now or hereafter a part of the property. The aforesaid sale will be made pursuant to the Final Judgment entered in Civil No. 01-10-CA-4055-MG now pending in the Circuit Court of the Eighth Judicial Circuit in and for Alachua County, Florida. IF YOU ARE A PERSON CLAIMING A RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK NO LATER THAN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY REMAINING FUNDS. AFTER 60 DAYS, ONLY THE OWNER OF RECORD AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MAY CLAIM THE SURPLUS. DATED this 21st day of December, 2010. J.K. Irby Clerk of the Court BY: /s/ Julia Rogers As Deputy Clerk Meredith L. Minkus, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 41656 BURR & FORMAN LLP Post Office Drawer 1690 Winter Park, Florida 32790 Telephone: (407) 647-4455 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              (407) 647-4455      end_of_the_skype_highlighting Attorneys for Plaintiff

 

(Published: Alachua County Today - December 30, 2010 and January 06, 2010)

 

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2010-CP-1767 IN RE: ESTATE OF ROBERT B. ROCKEFELLER Deceased.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

 

The administration of the estate of ROBERT B. ROCKEFELLER, deceased, whose date of death was September 17, 2010, and whose social security number is XXX-XX-9503 is pending in the Circuit Court for Alachua County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 201 East University Avenue, Gainesville, Florida 32601. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent's estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT'S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is January 06, 2011.

 

Attorney for Personal Representative: William C. Carroll Florida Bar No. 957471 Mettler Shelton Randolph Carroll & Sterlacci, P.L. 340 Royal Palm Way, Suite 100 Palm Beach, FL 33480 Phone: 561-833-9631 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              561-833-9631      end_of_the_skype_highlighting Fax: 561-655-2835 Personal Representative: ARLENE M. RIEDL a/k/a ARLENE M. ROCKEFELLER 34 Waterston Road Newton Corner, MA 02458 (Published: Alachua County Today – January 06 and 13, 2011)

 

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 01-10-CA-3838 FLORIDA CAPITAL BANK, N.A., a national banking association Plaintiff, vs. JOSEPH E. FRECK; PECAN PARK OFFICE OWNERS ASSN., INC., a Florida not for profit corporation; and PECAN PARK 802 CONDOMINIUM ASSN., INC., a Florida not for profit corporation Defendants. ____________/

NOTICE OF SALE

 

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to an Order Of Summary Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated November 15, 2010, in Case No. 01-10-CA-3838 of the Circuit Court of the Eighth Judicial Circuit in and for Alachua County, Florida, wherein FLORIDA CAPITAL BANK, N.A., a national banking association is Plaintiff, and JOSEPH E. FRECK; PECAN PARK OFFICE OWNERS ASSN., INC., a Florida not for profit corporation; and PECAN PARK 802 CONDOMINIUM ASSN., INC., a Florida not for profit corporation, are Defendants, that I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash at 201 East University Avenue, Gainesville, Florida 32601 at the Court Lobby, on the 19th day of January, 2011 at 11:00 o’clock, A.M., the following described property as set forth in said Summary Final Judgment of Foreclosure, to-wit:

Parcel 1: Building 5 of PECAN PARK OFFICE PARK, being more particularly described as a parcel of land situated in the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter (SE 1/4 of NW 1/4) of Section 32, Township 9 South, Range 20 East, City of Gainesville, Alachua County, Florida, and being more particularly described as follows: For a point of reference, commence at a 3/4 inch iron pipe at the Northwest corner of Lot 1, Block H of INGLESIDE SUBDIVISION, as per plot thereof recorded in Plot Book C, page 2, of the Public Records of Alachua County, Florida; thence run South 89 deg. 53 min. 17 sec. Eat along the North line of said Lot 1 and the South right of way line of NW 17th Avenue (50-foot right of way), a distance of 150.88 feet; thence South 00 deg. 23 min. 49 sec. West, a distance of 135.30 feet to a point on the South boundary line of Lot 2 of said Block H; thence run South 89 deg. 46 min. 13 sec. East along said South boundary a distance of 24.00 feet to the Southeast corner of said Lot 2, Block H and the Northeast corner of Lot 5 of said Block H; thence run South 00 deg. 05 min. 28 sec. East along the East line of said Lot 5 a distance of 99.59 feet; thence run North 89 deg. 54 min. 32 sec. East a distance of 17.47 feet to the Point of Beginning; thence run North 00 deg. 30 min. 07 sec. East a distance of 116.00 feet; thence run South 89 deg. 29 min. 53 sec. East a distance of 46.00 feet; thence run South 00 deg. 30 min. 07 sec. West a distance of 60.00 feet; thence run South 89 deg. 29 min. 53 sec. East a distance of 4.00 feet; thence run South 00 deg. 30 min. 07 sec. West a distance of 56.00 feet; thence run North 89 deg. 29 min. 53 sec. West a distance of 50.00 feet to the Point of Beginning. Parcel 2: Condominium Unit B, PECAN PARK 802 CONDOMINIUM, together with an undivided interest in the common elements, according to the Declaration of Condominium thereof recorded in Official Record Book 2818, Page 295, as amended from time to time, of the Public Records of Alachua County, Florida.

 

IF YOU ARE A PERSON CLAIMING A RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK NO LATER THAN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY REMAINING FUNDS. AFTER 60 DAYS, ONLY THE OWNER OF RECORD AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MAY CLAIM THE SURPLUS.

 

DATED, at Gainesville, Alachua County, Florida, this 21st day of December, 2010. J.K. "BUDDY" IRBY CLERK OF COURT BY: /s/ Julia Rogers Deputy Clerk Attorney For Plaintiff: Philip L. Logas, Esq. Philip L. Logas, P.A. 121 S. Orange Avenue Suite 1470 Orlando, Florida 32801 (407) 849-1555 Defendants: Bevin G. Ritch, Esq. Attorney for Joseph E. Freck P.O. Box 1025 Gainesville, Florida 32602 John F. Roscow IV, Esq. Attorney for Pecan Park Office Owners Assn., Inc. and Pecan Park 802 Condominium Assn., Inc. 5608 Northwest 43rd Street Gainesville, Florida 32653

 

(Published: December 30, 2010 and January 06, 2011)

Notice of Public Auction

 

January 19th, 2011 10:00 a.m. with registration at 9:30a.m. Location: Ultimate Towing of Gainesville Inc, 907 SW 3rd Street, Gainesville, FL

 

Property Offered: 2007 BMW 328i VIN: WBAVA33527PG52809 Mileage: 55,025.00 CD Player A/C Scratch on the driver's rear bumper

 

MINIMUM BID - $11,821.80

www.treasury.gov/ auctions/irs

 

Under the authority in IRC 6331 and 6335 the property described herein was seized from Rosario Fortunato and will be sold at public auction.

 

Only the right, title and interest of Rosario Fortunato is offered for sale. If requested the IRS will furnish information about possible encumbrances.

 

All property is offered subject to any prior valid outstanding liens in favor of third parties against the taxpayer which are superior to the lien of the U.S. The US makes no guarantee or warranty, expressed or implied, as to the validity, quality, or condition of the property or it’s fitness for any use. No claim will be considered for allowance or adjustment or for rescission of the sale based upon failure of the property to conform with any representation expressed or implied.

 

Full payment is required upon acceptance of the highest bid; Notice of sale has been given in accordance with all legal requirements. All payments must be by cash, certified, or cashiers or check drawn on any bank of trust company incorporated under the laws of the U.S., payable to U.S. Treasury.

 

For more info: www.treasury.gov/ auctions/irs Darlene Shadday,

 

(602) 501-2146

 

IN THE CIRCUIT CIVIL COURT OF THE EIGHTH JUDICIAL ClRCUIT OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR ALACHUA COUNTY CIVIL DIVISION Case No. 01-2010-CA-001716 Division MG MlDFlRST BANK Plaintiff, vs. LINDA L. LITZA, and WALTER BRICKMEYER, PALISADES COLLECTION LLC, AND UNKNOWN TENANTS/OWNERS, Defendants. ______/

NOTICE OF SALE

 

Notice is hereby given, pursuant to Final Judgment for Plaintiff entered in this cause on December 17, 2010, in the Circuit Court of Alachua County, Florida, I will sell the property situated in Alachua County, Florida described as:

 

LOT 83, OF SPRINGSTEEN III, AS PER PLAT THEREOF, RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK "J", PAGE 75, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF ALACHUA COUNTY, FLORIDA.

 

and commonly known as: 4319 NW 26TH DR, GAINSVILLE, FL 32605; including the building, appurtenances, and fixtures located therein, at public sale, to the highest and best bidder, for cash. in the lobby of the Alachua County Courthouse, 201 E. University Avenue, Gainesville, Florida, on January 19, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. IF YOU ARE A PERSON CLAIMING A RIGHT TO FUNDS REMAINING AFTER THE SALE, YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITH THE CLERK NO LATER THAN 60 DAYS AFTER THE SALE. IF YOU FAIL TO FILE A CLAIM, YOU WILL NOT BE ENTITLED TO ANY REMAINING FUNDS. AFTER 60 DAYS, ONLY THE OWNER OF RECORD AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MAY CLAIM THE SURPLUS. Dated this 21st day of December, 2010.

 

J.K. Irby Clerk of the Circuit Court By: /s/ Julia Rogers Deputy Clerk

 

(Published: Alachua County Today – January 06 and 13, 2011)

ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

Advertise in Over 100 Papers throughout Florida. Advertising Networks of Florida, Put us to work for You! (866)742-1373 www.florida-classifieds.com.

SCHOOLS/INSTRUCTION

 

Heat & Air JOBS - Ready to work? 3 week accelerated program. Hands on environment. Nationwide certifications and Local Job Placement Assistance! (877)994-9904

GOOD THINGS TO EAT

 

C&R Produce, 13789 NW US Hwy 441, Alachua

SEASONAL CLOSING FROM JAN. 3 TO FEB. 21. Now accepting EBT cards, MasterCard, Visa, Discover, Debit/Credit.

 

Call 386-462-6158

EMPLOYMENT

 

Help Wanted

 

Drivers - FOOD TANKER DRIVERS NEEDED OTR positions available NOW! CDL-A w/ Tanker REQ'D. Outstanding pay & Benefits! Call a recruiter TODAY! (877)882-6537 www.oakleytransport.com

Experienced Nail Tech Wanted. 386-454-4422

Between High School and College? Over 18? Drop that entry level position. Earn what you're worth!!!. Travel w/Successful Young Business Group. Paid Training. Transportation, Lodging Provided. (877)646-5050

ASAP! New Pay Increase! 34-40 cpm. Excellent Benefits Need CDL-A & 3 mos recent OTR. (877)258-8782 www.meltontruck.com

Driver- Drive Knight in 2011! Get paid today for what you hauled yesterday. Top equipment! Van and Refrigerated. CDL-A, 3 months OTR experience. (800)414-9569 www.driveknight.com

Regional Opportunity 100% Owner Operator Reefer Company $1,000.00 SIGN ON BONUS! Home weekly. Call (800)237-8288 or visit www.suncocarriers.com

Part time cleaner/floor tech needed for commercial office building on US 441. Must have floor experience, ability to lift over 40 lbs and pass background check. $7.50/hour. Call Pat at 352-870-0363 .

Cash paid for junk cars. $150 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

 

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

 

Home based FRANCHISE Opportunity! Low Cost, Award winning franchise. NO Cold Calling, Proven System. Leading service provider. Window film and other services. (727)289-5757

Advertise in Over 100 Papers throughout Florida. Advertising Networks of Florida, Put us to work for You! (866)742-1373 www.florida-classifieds.com.

SERVICES OFFERED

 

FINANCIAL

 

$$$ ACCESS LAWSUIT CASH NOW!!! $$$ As seen on TV.$$$ Injury Lawsuit Dragging? Need $500-$500,000++within 48/hrs? Low rates APPLY NOW BY PHONE! Call Today! Toll-Free: (800)568-8321  www.lawcapital.com

ADOPTIONS

 

ADOPTION. A childless happily married couple seeks to adopt. Loving home. Large extended family. Financial security. Expenses paid. Laurel & James. (888)488-4344 LaurelAndJamesAdopt.com FL Bar #0150789

Are you pregnant? A childless, successful, single woman seeks to adopt. Will be HANDS-ON mom w/flexible work schedule. Financially secure. Ellen. (888)868-8778 This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. FL Bar#0150789

FARM & LIVESTOCK

 

Hay For Sale

 

Fertilized Coastal Bermuda, barn stored, large round rolls, excellent quality. $45 per roll. Cow hay $30 per roll. 352-215-1018 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              352-215-1018      end_of_the_skype_highlighting

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

 

Acreage & Farms

 

5 acres High Springs area. Gorgeous country setting with cleared oak-shaded homesite. Owner financing. No down payment. $69,900. $613/mo. 352-215-1018 www.LandOwnerFinancing .com.

1 AC GILCHRIST COUNTY

 

Paved road frontage on CR 138. Cleared homesite. High and Dry! OWNER FINANCING! NO DOWN PAYMENT! Only $205/mo. Total $19,900. Call 352-215-1018 www.LandOwnerFinancing .com.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

 

Mobile Homes For Rent

 

3/2 Mobile Home for rent. Off CR 225 on 1+ acres. Well/septic. Fenced doghouse available. Outside pets only. $735/month. 352-727-0029 Shown by appointment only.

Houses For Rent

 

2BR/1BA block home. High Springs. Quiet neighborhood, terrazzo floors, hardwood paneling, fenced back yard. Storage shed. Non-smokers. $675 a month. 386-454-2004 Lease option considered.

MERCHANDISE

 

Miscellaneous

 

AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified - Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (866)314-3769

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call (877)206-5165  www.Centura.us.com

WANTED TO BUY

 

Cash paid for junk cars. $150 and up. Running or not. Free pick up. 352-771-6191

Auctions

 

 

IRS Auction January 19, 2011 Gainesville, FL For pictures & sale information go to www.irsauctions.gov

 

or call (602) 501-2146


To Place a Classified Call 386-462-3355

Bernice Ann McClain, 52, of Fort White, Fla. passed away December 30, 2010 at Shands at the University of Florida.  She was 52.

She was born in New Orleans, La. on October 30, 1958. She was a cashier in retail. She was a member of the First Baptist Church of High Springs and the High Springs Lions Club.

She was preceded in death by her parents, George Glenn McClain, Sr. and Ruby Lee Cato.

Survivors include her stepmother, Juanita McClain of Lake City; four sons, George Glenn McClain, Jr. of Fort White, Charles Edward McClain of Portland, Maine, John E. McClain of Fort White, and Bobby Lee McClain of Fort White; three step-daughters, Karen Emerson of Alachua, June Caldwell of Lake City and Connie Roane of Alachua.

A memorial service will be held at the Bethlehem Baptist Church in Lake City, Fla., on Saturday, January 8, 2011. Dinner will be at 11 a.m. followed by services at 12 noon.

Arrangements are under the care of Evans-Carter Funeral Home, High Springs, Fla.

William “Robert” Earl Tillman peacefully passed away on January 3, 2011 at home with his family after a valiant battle with cancer.  He was 49.

He was a lifetime resident of Gainesville and High Springs, as well as a lifetime “Gator.”  He graduated from Oak Hall High School in 1979 and he also attended Santa Fe College and The University of Florida.  He was the owner of Sonny’s Bar BQ in Alachua, and had been in the barbeque business since he was 15 years old.

He is survived by his father and mother, Floyd “Sonny” & Lucille Tillman; a son, Joe Brown; the woman he loved, Elizabeth Nolan; five sisters, Carolyn Tillman, Dianne Tillman, Marian Tomlinson, Amy Tillman and Teresa Wooden; numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and many, many, good close friends.  He was an avid musician and a proud member of the “Phlegmtone’s Band.”

Viewing was held Wednesday, January 5, 2011 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Williams-Thomas Funeral Home Westarea, 823 NW 143rd Street (CR 241 North, Jonesville).

Funeral services will be held Thursday, January 6, 2011 at 1 p.m. at Williams-Thomas Funeral Home Westarea with Pastor Steve Matchett officiating.  Mr. Tillman will be laid to rest on the “Tillman Farm” in High Springs, Fla., located at 16202 NW 22nd Street, High Springs, Fla. 32643.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to UF Shands Cancer Center, P.O. Box 103633, Gainesville, Fla., 32610, Attn: Denise Stobbie.