virus update court document gives background on woman ...€¦ · fillet knives. there were three...
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APRIL 10, 2020www.chronicleonline.com
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Latest figures as of 6:30 p.m. Thursday, April 9.
CITRUS COUNTY
n Positive cases of COVID-19: 58 .
n Total tests: 778 .
n Negative results: 720 .
n Men (positive test): 28 .
n Women (positive test): 30 .
n Deaths: 6 .
n Hospitalizations: 18 .
STATE OF FLORIDA
n Positive cases of COVID-19: 16,826 .
n Total tests: 156,852 .
n Deaths: 371 .
— Florida Department of Health
VIRUS UPDATE
Chronicle delivery safeThe Citrus County
Chronicle is taking every safety precaution in the wake of the coronavirus alert.
We have instituted a new policy where gloves will be used by all em-ployees who touch the finished product before it comes to your home.
The raw materials used to create the newspaper (ink and paper) are never touched prior to the cre-ation of the paper.
In our offices and with our product, we are fol-lowing all of the recom-mended procedures to use sanitizer and ap-proved hygiene proce-dures to stop the spread of the virus.
Easter egg ‘hunt’ through April 12
Although social dis-tancing has put a damper on real-life Easter egg hunts, Citrus County fam-ilies have been going on virtual egg hunts all week, continuing through Sun-day, April 12.
Similar to the “bear hunts” and “chalk walks” you may have seen pop-ping up in neighborhoods all over America, the Chronicle has invited readers to download and print an Easter egg color-ing page from the website chronicleonline.com and decorate your favorite egg any way they want and then display the egg(s) in their windows.
The hunt, from April 9-12, is simple: As you travel through your neighborhood and see how many eggs you can find — and don’t forget to take a picture of the beautiful eggs you find and share to the Chroni-cle’s Facebook page.
NEWS BRIEFS
— From staff reports
File details alleged murderBuster thompson
Staff writer
A court filing reveals more details on why a Crystal River woman is accused of murdering her husband.
Victrina Marie Crites- Worley, 50, is scheduled to be arraigned June 16 on a capital-felony charge of pre-meditated murder, according
to court records.A judge kept Crites-Worley
jailed without a bond Tues-day at her first court appearance.
Citrus County Sheriff ’s Of-fice Major Crimes Unit detectives arrested Crites-Worley Monday night, a week after deputies found her husband, 77-year-old Lawrence Howard Worley
Sr., dead on their homestead in the 5100 block of North Andri Drive.
Assistant Public Defender Ed Spaight, Crites-Worley’s lawyer, said Thursday his of-fice is reviewing their new client’s case, and is expected to enter a plea of not guilty.
Assistant State Attorney Pete Magrino said Thursday he’s yet to decide if he’ll
pursue lethal injection as punishment if Crites-Worley is convicted as charged.
“The facts and circum-stances of the murder and the defendant are currently under review for the poten-tial death penalty,” the pros-ecutor said.
An affidavit seeking a war-rant for Crites-Worley’s
Victrina Crites- Worley
Court document gives background on woman accused of killing husband
Easter Bunny hands out sweet treats for students
MATTHEW BECK/ChronicleThe Easter Bunny made a special visit to the school Thursday morning to hand out candy and treats to all of the students passing through the food-distribution line. Various community partners joined together to provide candy and other items for the children to take home in addition to the meals. Crystal River Primary School pre-kindergartener Jordan Sexton holds up a homemade sign thanking Citrus County School District employees for their work providing daily meals at the school as well as Happy Easter wishes.
LEFT: Five-year-old Carlos Rodriguez is all smiles as he pulls treats from a goodie bag handed to the kindergartener by Crystal River Primary School’s Tonya Briggs, dressed as the Easter Bunny. RIGHT: Crystal River Primary School front desk receptionist Tonya Briggs, dressed as the Easter Bunny, hands candy and treats to Isabella Quadrato, 6, and her brother Carson, 2, Thursday morning during the daily food-distribution at the school.
Beverly Hills woman dies after car
overturns on US 19A Beverly Hills woman died
Wednesday night after her vehi-cle overturned south of Homosassa.
Shannon Rose Mary Wel-come, 24, was driving south in a 2008 Hyundai Tiburon on U.S. 19 and was approaching the inter-section of West Industrial Lane at around 9:55 p.m., when she lost control of her car, according to a Florida Highway Patrol (FHP) crash report.
As a result, the Hyundai ro-tated into the highway’s grass median, overturned across north-bound lanes of U.S. 19 and trav-eled onto the highway’s eastern shoulder until it stopped on top of a culvert, FHP’s report shows.
Welcome, who was wearing a seatbelt, died at the scene. Alco-hol test results are pending.
— From staff reports
County BRIEFRestaurant eyes Lecanto sitemichael D. Bates
Staff writer
Citrus County is on its way to Glory.
To be exact, Glory Days Grill — a restaurant chain that has set its sights on the southwest cor-ner of County Roads 491 and 486 in Lecanto. It has requested
from the county a site develop-ment permit for a 6,045-square-foot restaurant and 9,835 square feet of shops
That intersection is growing in chains. Wawa recently joined a plethora of chains there, includ-ing Walmart, McDonald’s and Wendy’s.
Glory Days is a sports-themed
family restaurant — plenty of TVs for game-watching and a laid-back ambience. Tables and booths have individual volume- controlled speakers and many sites have private banquet facili-ties and catering.
Diners can order a variety of
FreD hiersStaff writer
In normal times, hospital staff donned respirator masks and gowns when they entered a pa-tient’s room who was contagious and tossed the garb into a bin when they left.
But these are not normal times.As the coronavirus crisis forces
hospitals across the country to make tough choices on how to use
diminishing resources, many hos-pital staff reuse disposable per-sonal protective equipment meant to be thrown away after each use.
Nurses at Bayfront Health Seven Rivers told the Citrus County Chronicle their hospital is now in that group of facilities where health care workers are handed a single gown and mask for their shift and told to make due.
The nurses told the Chronicle they fear getting infected or in-fecting someone else as they keep the protective equipment on for hours.
“I am absolutely concerned that we’re using the same per-sonal protection equipment for multiple patients and over multi-ple days,” said Anne Marshall, a Seven Rivers hospital intensive care nurse.
Some hospital staff fear reuse of masks, gloves
See FEAR/Page A5
See GLORY/Page A5
Glory Days Grill is a sports-themed family establishment
See MURDER/Page A2
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arrest was obtained Thurs-day through the Citrus County Clerk of Court records.
It summarizes CCSO’s weeklong investigation into the alleged homicide. Here’s what it shows:
On March 30, CCSO dep-uties responded to the Worley home for a well- being check.
Crites-Worley had re-ported to cutting her arms, and finding her husband, Worley, in the backyard, but she didn’t remember anything from the night of March 29.
Arriving deputies saw a black BMW convertible parked by the garage with the driver’s door open and a fillet knife box on the passenger-side floorboard. When they walked through the property, deputies found the home’s back door open and blood throughout.
Crites-Worley called for help, and deputies found her inside the house with deep cuts to both arms that appeared to be self- inflicted. She kept telling deputies, “I don’t remember.”
Nature Coast EMS med-ics transported Crites- Worley to Ocala Regional Medical Center for treatment.
While riding in the am-bulance with a detective recording her statements, Crites-Worley said she was uncertain on if she injured herself, adding it hap-pened before the night of March 29.
Crites-Worley said she tried then to open a medi-cation bottle but couldn’t, leading her to step on the bottle with her foot.
Deputies also discov-ered Worley’s body in the backyard next to a pair of fillet knives.
There were three knife wounds to Worley’s neck, and smaller punctures across his body. Medical examiners found more than 10 stab wounds.
Blood patterns at the scene indicated Worley was stabbed and moved.
Detectives saw no signs of forced entry into the home, and the Worleys were the only two people living on the premises.
A witness told CCSO in-vestigators he spoke to Worley sometime between 2 and 3 p.m. on March 28 for a minute while Worley was outside near his white pickup truck.
Worley then went inside his house to cook. The wit-ness said he didn’t see Crites-Worley but noticed her car, the black BMW, parked sideways against the garage.
On March 29, during a golf cart ride around the block, the witness found both of Worley’s vehicles parked as they were the day before, he told detectives.
Another neighbor told investigators she spoke with Worley on March 27. Worley said to the witness he was divorcing Crites-Worley, but were still on good terms.
During a search of Crites-Worley’s BMW, de-tectives seized two fillet knife boxes near a Walmart plastic bag containing a receipt for the knives, which were bought at 2:28 p.m. March 28.
Crites-Worley’s debit card found inside a wallet on the BMW’s passenger seat also matched the card number used to buy the knives.
Walmart surveillance footage taken around the time the knives were pur-chased showed a woman matching Crites-Worley’s appearance buying the knives, and wearing cloth-ing detectives found at the
homicide scene and next to Worley’s body.
Inside the Worley home, CCSO detective’s found Worley’s planner that noted on March 25 Crites-Worley wanted a di-vorce again. Blood was
also found inside Worley’s truck.
A search of Crites- Worley’s cellphone re-vealed internet searches on March 27 and March 28, stating: “if one spouse kills the other do the claim life
insurance when okd” and “where do most women murders go to prison for murder.”
Contact Chronicle re-porter Buster Thompson at 352-564-2916 or bthompson @chronicleonline.com.
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MURDERContinued from Page A1
Special to the Chronicle
The Citrus County Clerk’s offices in the Courthouse and at the Clerk Annex remain open during the COVID-19 pandemic by limiting some services and using innovative technology to keep others active. Both locations are providing services as outlined by the Executive Order 20-91 and Judicial Administra-tive Orders that are in place.
“We are still continuing to provide services to the citizens,” Clerk Angela Vick said. “With COVID-19 dominating the world and local news, our focus is on
the safety of Clerk’s Office employees as well as the safety of the public. While this is an extraordinary situation with many orga-nizations temporarily clos-ing or reducing hours of operation, the majority of our services must, by law, be available to citizens. We implanted protective mea-sures and are assisting all face to face customers from behind a plexi-glass barrier at both locations. To further comply with the CDC recommendations for telecommuting, about 65% of my team is working re-motely, and they have been for the past few weeks.
“We will continue to
adapt as this situation evolves, and will imple-ment additional precau-tions and changes as directed by the Florida Department of Health and the CDC.”
Vick also promotes and encourages customers to conduct business online, via eService solutions, or by phone as much as possi-ble as per the Governor’s “Safer At Home” Execu-tive Order. Visit the clerk’s website at www.citrus clerk.org to view the on-line services available for items that you may be able to take care of electroni-cally or over the phone.
Marriage licenses are being issued by
appointment only for cou-ples getting married on or before May 3, 2020. You are encouraged to start this process online by ac-cessing the Clerk’s online Marriage Kiosk at https://web.c i tr usclerk .org / MarriageKiosk/ to begin your application process. Upon completion, make an appointment by calling 352-341-6424, option 2, or online through Qless at www.citrusclerk.org.
Court-related duties are also slightly modified. The Fifth Judicial Circuit has released Amended Ad-ministrative Order 2020-12-D Regarding Court Closure Due to COVID-19 Pandemic, continuing the
court suspension of non-mission critical hear-ings through Friday, May 29.
“We are working with our judicial partners to deploy technology to con-tinue the mission critical court functions as defined in the Administrative Or-ders,” Vick said.
If you are exhibiting any coronavirus symptoms, re-frain from visiting the clerk’s offices. If your presence is requested in court while you are still exhibiting symptoms, make all appropriate ar-rangements to excuse your attendance.
Note the following changes, effective until
further notice unless spec-ified below:
Suspension of services:n Self-Help Center: Ap-
pointments have been sus-pended until further notice.
n Passport services: All Passport services have been suspended until fur-ther notice. Call 877-487-2778 for other passport service locations.
n Jury duty: All jury tri-als in Florida’s Court Sys-tem are now suspended through Friday, May 29.
Updates will also con-tinue on social media ac-counts Facebook/Instagram @CitrusCounty Clerk, and Twitter @CitrusFLClerk.
Clerk of Courts notes changes to services
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Buster thompsonStaff writer
A Beverly Hills woman was arrested Tuesday on a c h i l d - n e g l e c t charge accusing her of driving under the influ-ence of heroin with a 2-year-old girl in the backseat.
Citrus County Sheriff ’s Office deputies responded April 1 to the intersection of South
Lucille Street and Regina Boulevard in Beverly Hills, where 29-year-old Jarrie Olivia Reeder was
found uncon-scious driving a white car, accord-ing to her arrest report, obtained Thursday.
Medics with Na-ture Coast EMS revived Reeder with Narcan, a nasal spray used
to counteract an opioid overdose.
A witness told deputies
she found Reeder passed out in the car’s driver’s seat, and the young girl in the backseat yelling for Reeder to wake up, the ar-rest report shows.
During an interview with deputies Tuesday at her home, Reeder admit-ted to traveling with the girl to a friend’s house and using heroin there, her ar-rest report shows.
According to her arrest report, Reeder told depu-ties she got back into her car with the child to drive home, but the last thing
she remembered before passing out was stopping at the intersection.
Reeder was jailed on a charged of child neglect without great bodily harm. Her bond was set at $2,000, and she was released from
custody Thursday after post-ing bail, court records show.
She’s scheduled to be arraigned June 16.
Contact Chronicle re-porter Buster Thompson at 352-564-2916 or bthompson @chronicleonline.com.
Search underway for missing Homosassa
womanAuthorities are asking for
the public’s help in finding a missing 75-year-old Homosassa woman.
Diane Mcinnis’ dis- appearance was reported
Tuesday to the Citrus County Sheriff’s Office.
Mcin-nis was last seen at around 10 p.m. Monday,
walking from her home off West Finch Court, accord-ing to the sheriff’s office.
It’s unknown what clothes Mcinnis was wearing when she went missing, or what direction she traveled in.
According to the sheriff’s office, Mcinnis is not known to have symptoms of de-mentia, Alzheimer’s or other serious medical conditions.
Sheriff’s office spokes-man Sgt. Lee Carey said foul play is not suspected at this time as investigations continue.
Those with information about Mcinnis’ whereabouts are being asked to call the sheriff’s office at 352- 726-1121.
Tipsters wishing to re-main anonymous can con-tact Citrus County Crime Stoppers, at 888-269-8477.
— Buster Thompson/Staff
YMCA to host blood drive
Amid coronavirus con-cerns, many organizations are experiencing fewer blood donations due to the cancellation of blood drives and the temporary shut-down of facilities.
As coronavirus cases continue to grow and im-pact more communities, the Citrus Memorial Health Foundation YMCA will host LifeSouth from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Friday, April 17, at its facility at 4127 W. Nor-vell Bryant Highway, Lecanto.
All donors will receive a free T-shirt and a coupon for a free pizza from Domino’s.
Chronicle office closed
The Chronicle main office in Meadowcrest will be closed to the general public starting Wednesday, April 1. The decision has been made in an effort to discour-age unnecessary travel and to protect the health of Chronicle employees. Cus-tomer access will not be permitted until further no-tice. The main switchboard at the Chronicle is open at 352-563-6363.
More than half of Chroni-cle employees are working from home or remote loca-tions on a daily basis, but they are still available via email or phone. Practice will change when the Coronavi-rus impacts in our commu-nity subside.
— From staff reports
State & LocaLPage A3 - FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2020
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Prosecutor to file charges in shootingBuster thompson
Staff writer
Prosecutors intend to a file formal charges against Michael Kenneth Ball for Taylor Dorbert’s alleged shooting death during an argument outside the neighbors’ Beverly Hills homes.
Citrus County Sheriff ’s Office (CCSO) deputies ar-rested 62-year-old Ball Wednesday for Dorbert’s second-degree murder with a firearm.
A circuit court judge OK’d Ball’s arrest warrant for the murder of 32-year-old Dorbert, based on an affidavit written by a CCSO detective investigat-ing the case, court records show.
Ball, of Beverly Hills, will remain jailed without bond, a judge ruled Thurs-day at Ball’s first appear-ance in court, according to case filings.
Ball also faces a third-degree felony charge of carrying a concealed firearm without a permit, which CCSO deputies ar-rested Ball for after find-ing him at the March 25 shooting scene near South
Monroe Street and South Plaza Street in Beverly Hills.
Assistant State Attorney Pete Magrino said Thurs-day he anticipates pursu-ing both felony charges against Ball.
Magrino said Florida’s Stand Your Ground Law doesn’t apply to Ball’s defense be-cause Ball was il-legally carrying a firearm and en-gaged in criminal activity when he used deadly force on Dorbert.
“All the evidence laid out in the affidavit for ar-rest, coupled with the in-formation at the time he was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon, that’s why it’s not a justified ho-micide,” the prosecutor said.
If convicted as charged with Dorbert’s murder, which involved a dis-charged firearm, Ball faces a mandatory sen-tence of life in prison, Magrino said.
Ball and Dorbert’s his-tory of disputes as neigh-bors began about a year
ago, stemming from an original disturbance that involved both men, Magrino said.
Magrino said he would be speculating if he knew what Ball and Dorbert were arguing over the
morning o f March 25, noting:
“There is noth-ing in the affidavit that reflects there was physical con-tact made by ei-ther the defendant or the victim,” Magrino said, “with the excep-tion of the defen-
dant shooting the victim in the chest out in a public street.”
According to CCSO’s af-fidavit for Ball’s arrest, deputies responded to the shooting at around 7:45 a.m. to find Ball in the intersection of South Mon-roe Street and South Plaza Street, and Dorbert dead from gunshot wound in his front yard.
Ball told deputies they’d find his firearm, a .45- caliber Colt 1911 pistol, in-side his nearby home off South Plaza Street.
In his arrest report for
unlawfully carrying a con-cealed firearm, Ball stated he left his house to check the mail with the handgun hidden in his jean’s waist-band and covered by a sweatshirt.
Four witnesses in the neighborhood told CCSO investigators they saw Dorbert and Ball start ar-guing at around 7:30 a.m. from their respective properties, according to Ball’s affidavit for arrest.
At different points during their dispute, Dorbert and Ball each went back to their homes before returning outside to resume arguing, wit-nesses told sheriff ’s detectives.
Ball then walked down South Monroe Street in front of Dorbert’s property while the two men contin-ued yelling at each other, witnesses said, adding Dorbert also walked across his front yard to-ward Ball.
Witnesses said they then saw Ball point a firearm at Dorbert from the street and fire a single gunshot, which struck and killed Dorbert on his property. Ball then stood over
Dorbert’s body and contin-ued to yell at him, wit-nesses stated.
According to the affida-vit, Ball told one witness on his return home: “You knew this was going to happen sooner or later, I had enough of this guy.”
During an interview with CCSO investigators, Ball said Dorbert came at him and he fired in re-sponse, the affidavit shows.
Ball said Dorbert was much larger than him, weighing close to 300 pounds.
At his autopsy, Dorbert was measured at 5 feet, 7 inches tall and weighing 159 pounds. Ball’s height was measured at 5 feet, 8 inches, weighing 160 pounds, according to the affidavit.
“I didn’t shoot to kill,” Ball was stated saying in the affidavit. “I just shot. ... He wasn’t going to beat me again. ... So I nailed him.”
Contact Chronicle re-porter Buster Thompson at 352-564-2916 or bthompson @chronicleonline.com.
MIchael Kenneth
Ball
Rapid testing slowly ramping upJohn haugheyThe Center Square
Comprehensive rapid COVID-19 testing has been the holy grail in tracking the dis-ease and is a pivotal compo-nent in plans to get the grounded economy up and running.
Yet, in Florida, as elsewhere across the country, testing for the disease is episodic and re-stricted. Eligibility for a test requires permission from a personal physician, hospital physician or the state’s Depart-ment of Health (DOH), which prioritizes tests for only the sickest, the most vulnerable and health care workers.
As of Wednesday afternoon, 144,570 Floridians had been tested for coronavirus with 15,455 results confirmed posi-tive and 127,679 negative, ac-cording to DOH’s COVID-19 webpage, which reported 309 dead and 1,956 hospitaliza-tions because of the disease.
Several types of rapid tests are infiltrating into some Flor-ida hospitals. A 45-minute test by California-based Cepheid has been circulating since the U.S. Food & Drug Administra-tion (FDA) approved it in late March.
Last week, the FDA ap-proved a 5-15 minute test pro-duced by Illinois-based Abbott Laboratories. Florida received 2,000 of the first 5,500 Abbott RealTime SARS-CoV-2 EUA tests shipped Monday and sent
them to Jacksonville and south Florida hospitals.
Abbott’s nasal swab test is a “game-changer” for nursing homes, hospitals and first re-sponders potentially exposed to coronavirus, Gov. Ron De-Santis said.
“When you have to wait 48, 72 hours for a test result, those are people that you’ve got to keep in the hospital most likely,” he said.
The governor said he scored the “instant” tests after Satur-day discussions with Abbott Laboratories Vice President Tom Evers and President Don-ald Trump.
The company is producing 50,000 a day but will scale up production to ship 1 million tests a week by month’s end.
Because Abbott’s diagnostic platform only runs one sample at a time, it may not increase the volume of testing statewide dramatically, but it could be critical in testing nurses, doc-tors, EMTs and others to en-sure they are not infected.
A blood diagnostic tool, DMGtest, also is being intro-duced in Miami-Dade County in one of the world’s first, if not the first, random tests to mea-sure people’s exposure to coronavirus, not necessarily whether they have COVID-19.
The University of Miami Miller School of Medicine is coordinating with Miami-Dade County and BioMedomics of North Carolina to conduct se-rological testing of up to 750
random people contacted a week.
DMGtest will seek signs of people developing antibodies to the virus, which would mark a turnaround in stemming the disease’s spread and be “es-sential for tailoring interven-tions to stop local spread” that “may allow for less-restrictive measures,” the Wall Street Journal recently said.
In announcing the purchase of 20,000 DMGtests to screen first-responders, Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez said the goal is to create a “snapshot.”
“This will give us tremen-dous insight into the dynamics of this virus,” he told reporters this week.
DeSantis said the state has purchased about 1 million
doses of hydroxychloroquine, the anti-malarial drug primar-ily used to treat lupus that President Trump has called a “game-changer” despite only anecdotal evidence of a bene-fit for COVID-19 patients.
The governor spent much of his Tuesday new conference touting hydroxychloroquine and trotting out medical ex-perts to say it should be used in treating severe coronavirus cases.
The state purchased the drug from Israeli manufac-turer Teva, but DeSantis said prohibitions in shipping it from India, where it is pro-duced, required a phone call from Trump to Prime Minister Narenda Modi.
Associated PressA 5-minute test kit for COVID-19 developed by Abbott Laboratories sits on a table ahead of a briefing by President Donald Trump.
Woman charged with child-neglect, accused of DUI
Jarrie Olivia Reeder
DIane Mcinnis
n The Chronicle welcomes tips from readers about breaking news.Email the newsroom at [email protected].
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Birthday — A secretive approach to achieving your goals will make it easier for you to reach your destination. Ro-mance and personal growth are featured. Aries (March 21-April 19) — Instill confidence and self-assurance in the people you want on your team, and success will follow. Make plans with a loved one. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Lighten up and be willing to compromise if nec-essary. Embrace life instead of hiding out. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Physical activities will provide a beneficial chal-lenge. Taking better care of your health and well-being will also improve your attitude as well as your friendships. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Stick to your plans, budget and promises. A project that interests you should stimu-late you mentally and bring you in con-tact with people who share your sentiments. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — You’ll make a good connection if you get involved in events that make you feel passion-ate. A good deed will boost your repu-tation, but don’t go overbudget to impress someone. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Don’t worry about what others are doing. Concentrate on your image and on being the best that you can be. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Someone from your past will come to mind. Don’t be too eager to let this person back into your life. Distance yourself from anyone who is a bad influence.Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) — Judge others and others will judge you. Give people the same freedom you want for yourself. Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) — Don’t be fooled by a deal that sounds too good to be true. Focus on how to im-prove your appearance and enhance your important relationships. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — If you lend a helping hand, you will benefit. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Emo-tional problems will surface if you make a change without consent. Use your imagination and offer solutions that will satisfy everyone’s needs. Personal dis-cipline will result in better health. Pisces (Feb. 20-March 20) — Speak up and press forward. Work hard, play hard and reap the rewards.
Today’s HOROSCOPES
Today is Friday, April 10, the 101st day of 2020. There are 265 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight:On April 10, 1912, the British liner
RMS Titanic set sail from South-ampton, England, on its ill-fated maiden voyage.
On this date:In 1916, the Professional Golfers’
Association of America was founded in New York.
In 1925, the F. Scott Fitzgerald novel “The Great Gatsby” was first published by Scribner’s of New York.
In 2005, Tiger Woods won his fourth Masters with a spectacular finish of birdies and bogeys.
Ten years ago: “Designing Women” co-star Dixie Carter, 70, died in Houston.
Five years ago: The Apple Watch made its debut.
One year ago: Holden Mat-thews, the white son of a sheriff’s deputy, was arrested in connection with a string of fires that destroyed three black churches in rural Louisi-ana; authorities said his father helped arrange for his arrest. (Mat-thews pleaded guilty to federal and state criminal charges in February; sentencing is set for May.)
Scientists released the first image ever made of a black hole, revealing a fiery, doughnut-shaped object in a galaxy 53 million light-years from earth.
Today’s Birthdays: Football Hall of Famer John Madden is 84. Reg-gae artist Bunny Wailer is 73. Actor Steven Seagal is 68. Singer- producer Kenneth “Babyface” Ed-monds is 62. Rock singer-musician Brian Setzer is 61. Singer Mandy Moore is 36. Actor Haley Joel Os-ment is 32. Country singer Maren Morris is 30. Actress Daisy Ridley is 28. Singer-actress Sofia Carson is 27. Actress Audrey Whitby is 24. Actress Ruby Jerins is 22.
Thought for Today: “Your ac-tions, and your actions alone, deter-mine your worth.” — Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966).
Today in HISTORY
HI / LO PR
H / LO
YTD
PR
HI / LO PR
HI / LO PR
YESTERDAY’S WEATHER
THREE DAY OU T LOOK Exclusi
Legend: YTD-Year toDate, PR-Daily Precipitation
ve daily forecast by:
DEW POINT
HUMIDITY
POLLEN COUNT**
**Light - only extreme allergic will show symp-toms, moderate - most allergic will experience symptoms, heavy - all allergic will experience symptoms.AIR QUALITY
ALM A N A C
CE L EST I A L OU T LOOK
WATER ING R UL ES
B U R N CON D I T ION S
For more information call Florida Division of Forestry at (352) 797-4140. For more information on wildfire conditions, please visit the Division of Forestryʼs Web site: www.freshfromflorida.com/Divisions-Offices/Florida-Forest-Service/Wildland-Fire
Today’s Fire Danger Index is:
City H L F’cast City H L F’cast
F LO R I DA TE M PERAT U RES
Gulf watertemperature
LA K E L E V E L S Location Full
Levels reported in feet above sea level. Flood stage for lakes are based on 2.33-year flood, the mean-annual flood which has a 43-precent chance of being equaled or exceeded in any one year. This data is obtained from the Southwest Florida Water Management District and is subject to revision. In no event will the District or the United States Geological Survey be liable for any damages arising out of the use of this data. If you have any questions you should contact the Hydrological Data Section at (352) 796-7211.
M AR IN E OU T LOOK
Taken at Aripeka
T HE N AT ION
YESTERDAY’S NATIONAL HIGH & LOW
HIGH
LOW
CITY H/L/SKY
W O R L D CI T I ES
City H L Pcp. H L City
C ity High Low
T I DES *From mouths of rivers **At Kingʼs Bay ***At Masonʼs Creek
S OLUN AR TAB L ES DATE DAY MINOR MAJOR MINOR MAJOR
HI / LO PR
SUNSET TONIGHT ...........................
SUNRISE TOMORROW ....................
MOONRISE TODAY .........................
MOONSET TODAY ..........................
Fcst H L Pcp. H L Fcst
(MORNING) (AFTERNOON)
TEMPERATURE*
RecordNormalMean temp.Departure from meanPRECIPITATION*
Total for the monthTotal for the yearNormal for the year
UV INDEX:0-2 minimal, 3-4 low, 5-6 moderate,7-9 high, 10+ very highBAROMETRIC PRESSURE
*
**Official record values from Tampa International
Data fromCrystal River Airport
Provided byezfshn.com
40s10s 90s80s70s60s50s 100s 110s0s 20s 30s
L
HH
SUNDAY & MONDAY MORNINGHigh: 85° Low: 68°Breezy with scattered showers.
Yesterday 0.00"0.06"2.06"
11.10"
29.80
Yesterday at 3 p.m. 61%
Yesterday observed GoodPollutant Ozone
Apr 14 Apr 22 Apr 30 May 7
Chassahowitzka*9:01 a.m. 0.3 ft 8:47 p.m. 0.6 ft 3:48 a.m. 0.0 ft 2:11 p.m. 0.1 ftCrystal River** 7:11 a.m. 2.0 ft 6:55 p.m. 2.5 ft 1:21 a.m. -0.3 ft 1:19 p.m. 0.5 ftWithlacoochee* 4:38 a.m. 3.3 ft 4:03 p.m. 3.6 ft 11:13 a.m. 0.8 ft 11:52 p.m. -0.6 ftHomosassa*** 8:06 a.m. 0.9 ft 7:24 p.m. 1.6 ft 2:57 a.m. -0.2 ft 1:49 p.m. 0.2 ft
Miami 87 75 mcOcala 76 52 shOrlando 75 59 shPensacola 71 53 shSarasota 80 64 shTallahassee 68 45 shTampa 79 62 shVero Beach 78 66 shW. Palm Bch. 83 74 sh
THU FRI
New Orleans 81 72 0.00 70 61 shNew York City 59 49 0.14 51 38 mcNorfolk 79 60 Trace 58 42 sOklahoma City 70 55 0.00 64 52 sOmaha 52 37 0.00 55 44 sPalm Springs 63 49 Trace 65 54 shPhiladelphia 67 46 0.05 53 37 mcPhoenix 73 54 0.00 76 57 sPittsburgh 56 37 0.34 45 30 rsPortland, ME 45 34 1.10 46 35 raPortland, OR 75 43 0.00 64 44 pcProvidence, RI 52 39 0.69 49 37 mcRaleigh 81 57 0.52 60 41 sRapid City 46 30 0.00 64 39 sReno 56 46 Trace 64 43 sRochester, NY 48 34 0.10 41 33 ssSacramento 64 51 0.01 71 50 sSalt Lake City 67 43 0.00 65 46 sSan Antonio 90 66 0.00 74 60 shSan Diego 64 55 0.18 64 51 shSan Francisco 63 52 0.00 63 51 pcSavannah 89 67 0.32 70 45 mcSeattle 66 42 0.00 61 47 sSpokane 70 32 0.00 71 43 pcSt. Louis 63 45 0.00 56 43 sSt. Ste Marie 39 34 0.05 34 26 pcSyracuse 52 39 0.09 42 32 rsTopeka 63 37 Trace 59 45 sWashington 75 55 0.14 52 38 pc
Lisbon 66/55/raLondon 71/49/pcMadrid 55/50/raMexico City 83/64/sMontreal 41/31/snMoscow 51/42/raParis 73/53/sRio 74/69/mcRome 70/48/sSydney 66/62/raTokyo 61/43/raToronto 40/32/snWarsaw 55/37/s
n/a/n/a n/a81/72 0.00"
82/72 0.00"
84/73 0.00"
84/71 0.00"5.00"
THU WEDWithlacoochee at Holder 27.43 27.40 34.64Tsala Apopka-Hernando 36.47 36.48 38.66Tsala Apopka-Inverness 37.54 37.56 39.73Tsala Apopka-Floral City 38.89 38.92 41.37
THU
Acapulco 101/64/sAmsterdam 57/43/mcAthens 67/52/sBeijing 64/44/pcBerlin 56/41/mcBermuda 69/68/raCairo 72/55/sCalgary 39/31/snHavana 93/72/sHong Kong 73/68/sJerusalem 57/49/ra
THU FRI
Albany 52 40 0.36 49 33 shAlbuquerque 73 53 0.00 71 42 sAsheville 74 57 0.01 50 31 sAtlanta 77 60 0.24 63 40 sAtlantic City 74 51 0.25 54 37 pcAustin 93 68 0.14 73 58 shBaltimore 73 52 0.24 51 37 pcBillings 55 27 0.00 68 32 pcBirmingham 77 63 0.07 62 42 sBoise 72 39 0.00 71 48 sBoston 48 42 0.64 47 38 shBuffalo 47 33 0.23 43 32 rsBurlington, VT 49 39 0.39 43 33 shCharleston, SC 91 65 Trace 67 46 pcCharleston, WV 61 54 0.18 50 35 mcCharlotte 82 60 0.11 60 38 sChicago 50 39 0.06 49 37 sCincinnati 58 48 0.57 51 33 sCleveland 61 36 0.17 44 35 mcColumbia, SC 88 68 0.00 64 40 sColumbus, OH 57 43 0.30 47 32 pcConcord, NH 46 30 0.90 47 31 raDallas 79 61 Trace 70 53 sDenver 56 32 0.00 72 41 pcDes Moines 51 34 0.00 53 43 sDetroit 52 37 0.18 46 33 pcEl Paso 81 64 0.00 77 52 sEvansville, IN 63 48 Trace 54 38 sHarrisburg 64 48 0.25 47 36 pcHartford 50 39 0.47 49 37 mcHouston 90 66 1.33 72 62 shIndianapolis 54 42 0.18 49 36 sKansas City 61 40 0.00 56 45 sLas Vegas 61 46 0.00 65 49 mcLittle Rock 72 58 0.11 60 43 sLos Angeles 56 52 0.47 66 52 raLouisville 64 50 0.36 54 37 sMemphis 75 57 0.00 58 41 sMilwaukee 48 39 0.02 46 35 pcMinneapolis 43 30 0.04 51 39 pcMobile 90 73 0.00 70 50 shMontgomery 83 64 0.01 68 42 pcNashville 68 55 0.27 56 37 s
Daytona Bch. 72 59 shFort Lauderdale 89 73 shFort Myers 82 66 shGainesville 73 50 shHomestead 91 72 pcJacksonville 73 53 shKey West 86 76 pcLakeland 79 60 shMelbourne 78 63 sh
7:52 pm7:07 am
11:03 pm9:10 am
04/10 FRIDAY 7:08 3:35 7:52 4:0304/11 SATURDAY 7:07 4:32 7:53 5:00
Predominant: TreesFri
low med high
Yesterday at 3 p.m. 71°
5
Yesterday 87/7592/3682/53
6814
SATURDAY & SUNDAY MORNINGHigh: 78° Low: 64°Chilly start with a stray shower through the day.
TODAY & TOMORROW MORNINGHigh: 76° Low: 54°Scattered showers and breezy.
NONE. There is no burn ban.
Lawn watering is limited to twice-per-week unless your city or county has a different schedule or stricter hours.
Under the Southwest Florida Water Management District's year-round measures, even addresses may water on Thursday and/or Sunday before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. and odd addresses may water on Wednesday and/or Saturday before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. Hand watering or micro-irrigation of non-grass areas, such as vegetable gardens, flowers and shrubs, can take place any day at any time.
Questions, concerns or reporting violations, please call: City of Inverness at 352-726-2321; City of Crystal River at 352-795-4216, Ext. 313; unincorporated Citrus County at 352-527-7669.For more details, visit WaterMatters.org/Restrictions
FRIDAYKEY TO CONDITIONS: c=cloudy; fg=fog; hz=haze; mc=mostly cloudy; pc=partly cloudy; ra=rain; rs=rain/snow; s=sunny; sh=showers; sm=smoke; sn=snow; ss=snow showers; t=thunderstorms
101, Rio Grande City, Texas13, Centennial, Wyo.
Today: Northwest winds around 15 knots then becoming north in the afternoon. Seas 2 to 3 feet. Bay and inland waters a moderate chop. A slight chance of thunderstorms in the morning. 77°
FORECAST FOR 3:00 P.M.Friday
Today’s active pollen:Oak, bayberry, pellitoryToday’s count: 9.5/12Saturday’s count: 7.8Sunday’s count: 10.2
EntErtainmEntCeleb chefs unite to
feed hungry, help bleeding restaurants
FORT LAUDERDALE — When Jose Andres first came to New York City, the wide-eyed sailor in the Spanish navy docked on West 30th Street full of ambition. Decades later, the award-winning chef has an up-scale food hall on that very street and will serve 40,000 meals this week across the city where he built his dreams, and which is now the U.S. epicenter of the coronavirus.
Andres, whose restaurants in the United States include The Bazaar, Jaleo and the two Michelin-starred Somni, founded World Central Kitchen in 2010. It has served over 15 million meals worldwide after hurricanes, wild-fires and other disasters.
Since the pandemic, his orga-nization has served more than 750,000 meals from Miami and Los Angeles to Little Rock, Ar-kansas, and Fairfax, Virginia. It works out of places like libraries, food trucks and shuttered restaurants, feeding 125 hospi-tals, students in school lunch programs and even quarantined cruise ship passengers.
Andres has amassed an A-list network around the world, rely-ing on celebrity chef pals includ-ing Rachael Ray, Guy Fieri and Marcus Samuelsson to feed the hungry and buoy the humble restaurant kitchens across America where many started their careers.
“I’m in debt to America. ... That’s the best I can give to America because America gave me a home. America gave me opportunity,” Andres told The As-sociated Press in a recent phone interview.
In New York City, he set up a
cafe to serve the Mount Sinai field hospital in Central Park. In Harlem, he’s using “Chopped” TV judge Samuelsson’s Red Rooster restaurant to feed families.
Samuelsson’s Miami restau-rant hasn’t opened to the public yet, but instead of leaving it empty, he turned it over to World Central Kitchen. They are serv-ing sandwiches and salads there to laid-off hospitality workers, homeless residents and Uber drivers.
Even in crisis, these top chefs aren’t serving bland porridge. Recent meals at senior centers in Washington, D.C., included creamy tomato pasta with spring vegetables, and cilantro rice bowls with spiced chickpeas and spinach topped with citrus vinai-grette and crispy tortillas.
Andres was among the first to close his restaurants, hoping to create a blueprint for chefs around the world on how to use their restaurants and employ workers while feeding the hungry.
“This operation is growing every day,” he said. “We want to put America to work in the pro-cess of feeding America.”
In California, Fieri is on standby, ready with a 48-foot-long rescue kitchen and support team. “Guy is ready to go,” An-dres said. “This is like war. You need to have troops ready for action.”
Fieri compared his longtime friendship with Andres and other famous chefs to “playing in a band.”
“When you hang out with gen-erous, philanthropist warlords like Jose Andres, all you want to do is go bigger, go better,” said Fieri, who cooked alongside An-dres during last year’s California wildfires.
Ray announced a $4 million donation Tuesday from her two charities. Half will go to feeding and nutritional programs, includ-ing World Central Kitchen. The other half will support animal rescue, feeding and veterinary programs.
— From wire reports
Associated PressChef Liset Garcell prepares to give out free meals Monday to those affected by the coronavirus pandemic, at Marcus Samuelsson’s Red Rooster Restaurant in the Overtown neighborhood of Miami.
A4 Friday, april 10, 2020 Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
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Office’s Alert Citrus weather program, visit www.sheriffcitrus.org and click on the links to register.
n Create a profile, list how you want to be contacted in case of a weather emergency (text, mobile phone, home phone, email), then include the address(es) you want alerts for. You can choose what types of emergencies you want to hear about, and set a quiet period for no contact.
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Although there is no statewide burn ban in effect at this time, Citrus County IS under a countywide burn ban until further notice.
![Page 5: VIRUS UPDATE Court document gives background on woman ...€¦ · fillet knives. There were three knife wounds to Worley’s neck, and smaller punctures across his body. Medical examiners](https://reader034.vdocuments.us/reader034/viewer/2022050213/5f5f8af755e2224c0b0410f8/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Marshall said she un-derstands the hospital must make its supplies last.
“I don’t know what the solution is ... but they should have been more prepared,” she said.
Marshall is at home now recovering from a shoul-der injured while lifting a patient. She said the hos-pital is short staffed and there weren’t enough workers to help her.
She said hospital staff have even taken to putting patient gowns over their own uniforms for a little added protection.
A hospital representative did not dispute that staff were not disposing of masks and gowns and continuing to use them. But regional Bayfront Health spokes-woman Jennifer Siem said the Crystal River hospital was following Centers for Disease and Prevention guidelines.
“At this time, we have sufficient FDA approved supplies on hand to main-tain protections for our team caring for current patients and in case our community sees an in-crease in cases requiring hospitalization, but we need to appropriately con-serve supplies given na-tional shortages,” Siem wrote, in part, in an email to the Chronicle when the newspaper asked the hos-pital about its gown and mask reuse.
“I want to assure you that our hospital is closely following guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Florida De-partment of Health,” Siem added. “We update our in-fection control and PPE (personal protective equipment) practices every time new guidance is released.
“We have educated our team members on infec-tion prevention protocols established by the CDC for COVID-19, just as we do for other types of infec-tious diseases insisting upon the proper use of
PPE. We continue to rein-force that education daily.”
Before the pandemic, Bayfront Seven Rivers ICU nurses treating pa-tients used new masks and gowns each time they en-tered a patients’ room, Marshall said.
That’s changed, Mar-shall said.
Marshall said she treated nine patients over three days using the same protective gear.
She said staff were told to hang their gowns in the room of the last patient they saw at the end of their shift or after removing the gown. She said staff are told to place masks in a baggie with their name written on it in the room of their last patient and reuse them when they come back to work.
Marshall told the Chron-icle that under those con-ditions she’s afraid she’ll bring the virus home.
The CDC has guidelines and recommendations for reusing personal protec-tion equipment during times of crisis and short-ages brought on from pan-demics. Siem said her hospital is following those CDC guidelines.
“Supplies of N95 respi-rators can become de-pleted during an influenza pandemic or wide-spread outbreaks of other infec-tious respiratory ill-nesses,” according to CDC guidelines posted on its websites.
The Chronicle also con-tacted Citrus Memorial Hospital for comments about its gown reuse poli-cies. CMH spokeswoman Katie Myers said CMH is not reusing its gowns and masks.
“We are not reusing gowns and masks,” Myers told the Chronicle.
But with personal pro-tection equipment in short supply across the country, CMH is asking staff to con-serve the equipment, she said.
“This includes collec-tion of certain items (such as goggles and face shields) for sterilization and reuse, cohorting pa-tients with similar respira-tory issues where we can
and using telehealth tech-nology when possible to conserve PPE,” she said.
The CDC website gives recommendations about how best to reuse masks and gowns and extend supplies when supplies are short.
“(The) CDC recom-mends that a respirator classified as disposable can be reused by the same worker as long as it re-mains functional and is used in accordance with local infection control pro-cedures,” the CDC states.
“Limited reuse has been recommended and widely used as an option for con-serving respirators during previous respiratory pathogen outbreaks and pandemics.”
The CDC makes the same kinds of recommen-dations for gowns.
“Consideration can be
made to extend the use of isolation gowns (dispos-able or cloth) such that the same gown is worn by the same health care profes-sional when interacting with more than one pa-tient known to be infected with the same infectious disease …,” the CDC guidelines state.
But the CDC also warns that not all masks are the same and some are strictly intended for only one-time use.
The federal agency also warns that the longer a mask is worn, the greater the possibility of infection.
“The most significant risk is of contact transmis-sion from touching the surface of the contami-nated respirator,” accord-ing to the CDC. “One study found that nurses aver-aged 25 touches per shift
to their face, eyes or N95 respirator during ex-tended use.”
Last week, the 128-bed hospital in Crystal River posted a request on social media, asking for dona-tions of supplies including masks, latex gloves, gowns, face shields and eye protection.
Siem told the Chronicle the hospital was asking for public donations to be bet-ter prepared for a poten-tial surge in COVID-19 patients.
Federal officials con-tinue to say that equipment to protect health workers is making its way through the supply chain. But many hospitals report they are not seeing it. As a result, prices have skyrocketed.
New York state was forced to pay about 15 times the regular price for masks and four times the
regular price for gloves, according to ProPublica.
The federal govern-ment’s supply has also dangerously diminished as it sends masks, gloves and gowns to the states.
The Department of Health and Human Ser-vices told the Associated Press Wednesday that the federal government has distributed 90% of its stockpile of masks, gloves, gowns and face shields. It plans to keep 10% in reserve.
Bayfront Health Seven Rivers is a for-profit Com-munity Health Systems Inc. facility. CHS owns, op-erates or leases 99 hospi-tals in 17 states, according to its website. It has 16 hospitals in Florida.
Contact Chronicle re-porter Fred Hiers at 352-563-5660 or [email protected].
Friday, april 10, 2020 A5LocaLCitrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
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FEARContinued from Page A1
appetizers, sandwiches and entrees, including na-chos, quesadillas, wings, fish, burgers, chicken, steaks, ribs and salads. There’s also craft beer
and wine.The chain has 38 loca-
tions in five states. The name originates from the concept of the “glory days” or “good ol’ days” of sports and famous moments in sports history.
A site permit precedes the submission of building plans to the county.
Joanna Coutu, director of the Citrus County land development division, said Glory Days Grill also requested an amendment to its development agree-ment on the site, allowing it flexibility in creating outparcels. The PDC rec-ommended approval of that agreement and county
commissioners are sched-uled to review it at their April 28 meeting.
A Glory Days Grill spokesperson did not re-turn calls to the Chronicle about further plans for the Lecanto location.
“For the last 20 or so years, that intersection has been identified as
one of the highest and best uses in the county,” said Josh Wooten, presi-dent/CEO of the Citrus County Chamber of Com-merce. “With the widen-ing of 486 and now 491, it has become very attractive.”
Wooten said the site is within a few miles of
several prominent subdi-visions with a good road network and other infrastructure.
For information about Glory Days Grill, visit www.glorydaysgrill.com.
Contact Chronicle re-porter Michael D. Bates at 352-563-5660 or [email protected].
GLORYContinued from Page A1
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Curt AndersonAssociated Press
ST. PETERSBURG — At the holiest time of year for Christians, churches are wrestling with how to hold services amid the corona-virus outbreak, and in some cases, that has set up showdowns with local gov-ernments over restrictions that forbid large gatherings.
Many churches are offer-ing parishioners lives-treaming options so they can observe Good Friday and Easter on TVs, smart phones and computers. Others are sending wor-shipers to drive-in movie theaters for services.
Governors in several states have deemed church an “essential service,” al-lowing Easter worship to proceed even as public health officials warn that large gatherings could be a major setback amid a pan-demic that has killed more than 14,000 people in the U.S.
The restrictions have created conflicts with state and local authorities. Kan-sas lawmakers on Wednes-day threw out an order by the governor that limited church gatherings to 10 people. A Georgia church where more than 30 people congregated inside a small building on Palm Sunday, prompting a visit from state troopers, plans to move forward with normal Easter worship.
The Rev. John Greiner said the Glorious Way Church in Houston ini-tially moved services on-line after the county limited large gatherings, but his congregation will hold in-person services on Easter.
“We can’t do what God called us to do on lives-tream,” Greiner said.
The church has installed hand-washing stations and rearranged the 1,000- person sanctuary to hold about 100 people with six or more feet between them, Greiner said. They plan to hold two abbreviated Eas-ter services to accommo-date everyone who wants to attend.
Churches such as The Center Arena in Orlando
held in-person services on Palm Sunday and plan to do the same for Easter, Pas-tor Envor Moodley said. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican and close ally of President Donald Trump, exempted religious services from a stay-at-home order issued this month, although he said they must observe social distancing guidelines.
The fallout from the pan-demic has upended other rituals. Easter egg hunts have been canceled in favor of virtual events where children go on the internet to find eggs. Fami-lies are reconsidering whether to invite grand-parents and other relatives to dinner.
German Chancellor An-gela Merkel emphasized that “even short trips in-side Germany, to the sea-side or the mountains or relatives, can’t happen over Easter this year.” New Zealand police warned people not to drive to vaca-tion homes and risk arrest, and Lithuania moved to lock down major cities in the heavily Catholic nation.
Pope Francis will cele-brate Easter Mass in a nearly empty St. Peter’s Basilica, instead of the huge square outside, and in Britain, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby will deliver his traditional Easter sermon by video.
In the U.S., major
denominations are adher-ing to the restrictions and keeping parishioners at home to stop the spread of the virus.
In the Miami Archdio-cese, no in-person services are being held. But church leaders have recorded Mass in English and Span-ish for broadcast on local TV at 11 a.m. on Sunday in-stead, said spokeswoman Mary Ross Agosto.
“We taped the Easter Sunday Mass in all its glory,” she said. “The Cath-olic Church is not closed. People are looking for something uplifting.”
But some smaller churches plan to defy the orders, and law enforce-ment will be watching in some locations.
In New Mexico, the Archdiocese of Santa Fe said it was closing the grounds of El Santuario de Chimayó, one of the most popular pilgrimage sites in the nation’s most Hispanic state.
Police will be at a vari-ous locations to tell pil-grims to turn around, officials said.
In Kansas, Senate Presi-dent Susan Wagle, a Wich-ita Republican, said her phone had been “ringing off the wall” since the Democratic governor re-stricted the size of reli-gions gatherings.
“It appears to be out of line and extreme and
clearly in violation, a bla-tant violation, of our funda-mental rights,” she said. Religious leaders and faithful have made similar arguments elsewhere.
After receiving a com-plaint Sunday, troopers showed up at Church of God the Bibleway in States-boro, Georgia, and found more than 30 people inside the small building. The congregation wasn’t follow-ing social distancing prac-tices, and many people were seen hugging and shaking hands with the pastor, an incident report said. Troopers gave the pastor a warning and urged him to hold services in the parking lot.
They returned in the evening to find the pastor holding another indoor service with people again standing close together. That’s when the pastor, Eli Porter, was cited on a mis-demeanor charge of reck-less conduct, as were four other men.
Clayton Cowart, presi-dent of the Statesboro church’s parent corpora-tion, told The Associated Press the church plans to move forward with a nor-mal, indoor service for Easter.
“We’re going to do as much as we can to respect the law. But when it comes down to telling us how our religious services should go, we’re not going to do that,” he said.
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ObituariesSome churches confront virus restrictions on Easter services
OBITUARIESn Obituaries must be
verified with the funeral home or society in charge of arrangements.
n The Chronicle does not edit obituaries for content.
n Death notices are $25, and may include: full name of deceased; age; hometown/state; date of death; place of death; date, time and place of visitation and funeral services and, for members of the military, the branch of the armed services in which they served.
n Paid obituaries are $175, and include placement in the newspaper and online, a standard-size headshot and a keepsake plaque. Text exceeding 210 lines will be subject to an additional fee of $80.
n Extra plaques are available for $40 each.
n Obituaries are at www. chronicleonline.com.
n Email obits@chronicle online.com or call 352-563-5660 for more information.
Associated PressParishioners pray from their car Tuesday as the Rev. Steve Buno, pastor of St. Rita of Cascia Catholic Church in Harahan, La., performs drive-thru Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, as a form of social distancing due to the new coronavirus, during Holy Week.
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We have made the following changes to our practice:
All patients with any suspected respiratory illness have been directed to our secondary facility located at 6199 West Gulf to Lake Hwy
All patients will be screened at the door of the Main Office (1250 N Vantage Point Drive) for a fever and asked to clean hands.
Our waiting room, exam rooms, and facilities will be cleaned throughout the day.
We will continue to maintain regular appointments. If you do not desire to come to clinic, we can offer a telehealth visit to review blood work and chronic medical conditions. If you do not desire either option, we would be happy to reschedule your appointment.
Please note that policies and procedures may change based on updated information regarding the COVID-19 epidemic.
For established patients, telemedicine allows you to discuss symptoms, medical issues, and more with our providers
in real time. You can receive a diagnosis, learn your treatment options, and receive a prescription.
Typically used for follow up visits Virtual visits still require an appointment
We are currently accepting new patients, which requires an office visit. The office does screen all visitors for a fever
or other signs of sickness, and we offer separate office locations to triage effectively.
Rotarian collecting itemsMegan D. Bramlett with the
Crystal River Rotary Club is collecting playing cards, books, crosswords, puzzles, word searches, etc., for peo-ple at different health care fa-cilities who can’t have visitors or leave their rooms.
For information, call Bram-lett at 352-302-1298.
Think before you flush
The Citrus County Water Resources Utility Division needs your cooperation in protecting the county’s waste-water infrastructure, particu-larly during this time.
Customers are cleaning more regularly with disinfect-ing wipes and may be using alternative items for toilet paper such as napkins, paper towels, baby wipes, or “flush-able” wipes.
Remember to place these
items in the trash as they may not be flushed down the toilet. These items do not break down in the sewer system and may cause severe clogs, pump failures, and treatment issues. It is important to only dispose of human waste and toilet paper in the toilet.
Items that should never be flushed or placed down any drain:
n Disposable wipes, wet wipes, disinfecting wipes, or baby wipes (even if marked “flushable”).
n Paper towels.n Gloves and/or medical
supplies.n Facial wipes.n Grease/oils.n Feminine hygiene
products.n Cotton swabs/cotton balls.n Diapers.n Dental floss.n Medicines or vitamins.n Cigarette or cigar butts.For Citrus County BOCC
information, cancellations and
postponements, visit www. citrusbocc.com.
For information about COVID-19 visit, www.florida health.gov/ or www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html.
COVID-19 Call Center available 24/7 at 866-779-6121 or email COVID-19@ flhealth.gov.
CCSO activates information linesIn an effort to keep Citrus
County residents informed on the impacts of COVID-19 in the community, the Citrus County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) has activated a Citi-zen Information Line (CIL) in partnership with the Florida Department of Health in Cit-rus County.
This line is designed to an-swer questions and concerns specific to Citrus County. All citizens with medical ques-tions are still urged to contact the Florida Department of
Health in Citrus County at 352-527-0068. Citizens with general COVID-19 questions not specific to Citrus County should contact the COVID-19 hotline at 866-779-6121.
If you have Citrus County specific questions, contact the CIL at 352-249-2775 where an operator will assist you from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Many general COVID-19 questions can be answered by visiting www.FloridaHealth COVID19.gov.
SBA paycheck protection program
As part of the federal eco-nomic stimulus program that passed the Senate earlier this week and the House on Friday, businesses that apply for a Small Business Association (SBA) economic injury disaster loan will qualify for a $10,000 advance within three days of applying. The advance is a grant that does not need to be
repaid. For more info, visit https://bit.ly/2wJ6cXt.
The Citrus County Cham-ber of Commerce has re-leased several resource links to help employers and employees:
n Temporary layoff pro-gram assistance: File a claim by accessing CONNECT through www.floridajobs.org.
n Reemployment assis-tance: For information about temporary wage replace ben-efits, visit www.FloridaJobs.org.
n Unemployment claim fil-ing assistance: Call 1-800-204-2418 or visit FloridaJobs.org.
n For information about the state’s emergency bridge loan program, the Small Business Administration’s disaster loan program and the state’s short-time compensation program, visit the chamber’s website at www.citruscountychamber.com.
n Business Damage
Assessment Survey: The state wants to get information to evaluate and access tools to help businesses. To submit a survey, visit FloridaDisaster.biz.
n To contact CareerSource Citrus Levy Marion for ser-vices or help, visit www.career sourceclm.com.
Habitat closes stores, office
In accordance with the gov-ernor’s “stay-at-home” order, Habitat for Humanity of Citrus County will remain closed to the public through May 1, the nonprofit stated in a news release.
The closure covers its ad-ministrative office as well as the Crystal River and Inver-ness ReStores, which will not accept donations or schedule pickups or deliveries.
ReStores are tentatively scheduled to resume regular hours of operation Saturday, May 1.
County BRIEFS
— From staff reports
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They make the Masters unlike other majorsDoug Ferguson
AP golf writer
Gene Sarazen hit the shot that put the Masters on the map.
Jack Nicklaus made the ground shake with a charge that gave meaning to the Masters not really starting until the back nine on Sun-day. Arnold Palmer had his army. Sam Snead slipped on the first green jacket.
There is no Masters this week be-cause of the COVID-19 pandemic, the first time there is no golf at Au-gusta National the first full week in April since the end of World War II in 1945.
There is no shortage of memo-ries, the moments that define this major unlike any other.
“Gary Woodland at the U.S. Open, hit pitch shot on the 71st hole will last forever. But I don’t remem-ber many more shots,” Fred Cou-ples said. “You start talking about Augusta over and over and over ... so many magical things happen.”
THE SHOT HEARD ‘ROUND THE WORLD
The Masters wasn’t even the Mas-ters in 1935. It was the Augusta Na-tional Invitation Tournament, the second edition. Craig Wood was the presumed winner, in the clubhouse at 282, until one shot changed everything.
From the fairway on the par-5 15th, 235 yards away, Sarazen hit 4-wood that bounced just short of the green, hopped on and rolled into the cup for an albatross 2. That tied him for the lead, and he beat Wood in a 36-hole playoff the next day.
Reports vary how many people actually witnessed the shot. In later years, Sarazen joked that 22 people saw it, and 22,000 said they did. One spectator was club co-founder Bobby Jones, who later said the swing was so perfect “one knew im-mediately it was a gorgeous shot.”
It was the shot that sent the Mas-ters on its way. And it was the start of so many more.
GOLDEN BEARNicklaus was at his most domi-
nant when he set the scoring re-cord in 1965 and beat Palmer and Gary Player by nine shots. He was at his best in 1975 when he out-lasted Tom Weiskopf and Johnny Miller, which Nicklaus said this week was “the most fun from a competitive standpoint.”
But it was the sixth victory, in 1986, that remains the most popular.
Nicklaus played the final 10 holes in 7 under — a 30 on the back nine — to become the oldest Masters champion at 46. The birdie putt on the 17th gave Nicklaus the lead. But it was the 5-iron to 4 feet on the par-3 16th that was vintage Nicklaus. “Be good,” his son, Jackie, said as the shot was in flight. Nicklaus stooped to pick up the tee and replied, “It is.”
ARNIE’S ARMYPalmer’s power and charisma ar-
rived about the same time as televi-sion, making him golf ’s most beloved figure and the Masters’ must-see TV. It was the perfect mar-riage, especially when he birdied the last two holes, hitting 6-iron to 6 feet on the 18th, to win in 1960.
The year after his first victory, in 1958, soldiers from Fort Gordon an-nounced the arrival of “Arnie’s Army.” The army expanded across the world over the next half- century, but it took root at Augusta. And it was a big part of golf ’s first
boom in popularity.
TIGER’S ARRIVALTwenty-two years after Lee Elder
became the first black player in the Masters, Woods became the future of the game. His power was so great he was hitting pitching wedge into a par 5. He broke 20 records in 1997 when he became the youngest champion at age 21. That launched “Tigermania,” an era that led to big TV contracts and record prize money.
For the next two decades, the Sunday red shirt got nearly as much attention as a green jacket.
THE GREEN JACKETAugusta National members
began wearing green jackets in 1937 so the patrons would know who to ask if they had any ques-tions about the tournament. It wasn’t until 1949 that the Masters champion — Sam Snead — was presented one.
It now is the most famous piece of clothing in golf. Only the Masters champion can take it home with him for the year.
Nicklaus won it six times. But it wasn’t until 1998 that Nicklaus had a jacket of his own. The club keeps several jacket sizes available for the winner. For reasons unknown, Nicklaus didn’t have his own when he returned from his first victory in 1963. He wore the jacket belonging to former New York Gov. Tom Dewey. He eventually had his own clothing company make one.
Nicklaus finally got his own jacket from Augusta National 12 years after winning his last Masters.
SHARK BAITWeiskopf holds the Masters re-
cord for most runner-up finishes (4) without ever having won. But no other player embodies heartache at Augusta National more than Greg Norman.
Larry Mize chipped in from 140 feet to beat him in a playoff in 1987. The year before, Norman sent a 4-iron into the gallery and made bogey on the last hole to finish one behind Nicklaus.
His legacy at Augusta was
cemented in 1996, however, when he blew a six-shot lead to Nick Faldo. It remains the only time a player lost a six-shot lead in the final round of a major.
AMEN CORNERHerbert Warren Wind gave the
11th, 12th and 13th holes at the Masters the nickname. At the heart of Amen Corner is Rae’s Creek in front of the 12th green. The list of players who made it perhaps the most famous hole in golf is long.
Fred Couples had a shot hang up on the bank to win in 1992. Nor-man, Jordan Spieth and Francesco Molinari were among those who saw the Masters slip away when their shots did not.
THE SLAMWoods’ first Masters was a water-
shed moment. His fifth green jacket last year was the most emotional. The most significant was in 2001, when he became the only player to hold the four professional majors at the same time.
He was grilled about that historic chance for seven months. And then he beat Phil Mickelson and David Duval on the back nine to capture all four majors in a span of 294 days.
THE LEAPMickelson had 22 wins on the
PGA Tour without a major, and it took his best to shed the label as the best player without one. He birdied five of his last seven holes in 2004, none more memorable than his 18-footer on the 18th that swirled around the cup. Mickelson leaped in the air with his legs apart, arms raised, a mixture of joy and disbelief on his face.
PLAYOFFSThe Masters now is the only
major to use sudden death for a playoff. Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979 was the first winner with a birdie on the 11th hole. Sergio Garcia was the most recent in 2017 on the 18th. Faldo did it twice, both times on the 11th hole. The most memorable was Bubba Watson, who hooked a gap-wedge 40 yards out of the trees.
A8 Friday, april 10, 2020 SportS Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
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Associated PressJimmie Johnson gets ready for a practice session Feb. 15 for the NASCAR Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach. Johnson wanted to retire from full-time racing to step away from NASCAR’s 11-month grind. The coronavirus pandemic has brought his final season to an unexpected pause, and now the seven-time champion isn’t sure what his future holds.
Jimmie Johnson mulls his futureIn red-flagged farewell season
Jenna FryerAP auto racing writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Jimmie Johnson, seven- time NASCAR champion and all-around Everyman, has added home-schooling elementary teacher to his resume.
The sports stoppage from the coronavirus pan-demic has thrown a red flag on Johnson’s farewell tour. He had planned a final season of racing a full NASCAR schedule, but so far that has lasted just four races.
Amid all the uncertainty, Johnson doesn’t know when he’ll be back in his beloved No. 48 Chevrolet.
NASCAR is publicly tar-geting a May 9 return at Martinsville, privately holding its breath for a May 24 re-opening at the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte but vowing only to com-plete the entire 36-race points schedule.
In the meantime, John-son teaches his two daugh-ters’ daily school lessons, continues his fanatical fit-ness routine, spends hours upon hours on his racing simulator and waits to see how his pending retire-ment plan goes.
“I don’t know what’s going to happen in the coming months and if we’ll be able to run the full sea-son or not,“ Johnson said Thursday. ”I feel like I set out to make 2020 my last full-time year, but I’ve al-ways left the door open for other racing and NASCAR and abroad for the future.
“I feel like I am still pretty much on that path. I am hopeful that we get our full year in and we can get back going in a month or so ... and that I can run the season to its entirety. I re-ally don’t have an answer — it’s up in the air just as so much is in the world.”
This 19th season was supposed to be his last as a full-time driver at Hen-drick Motorsports because Johnson, now 44 and father of two active young girls, doesn’t want to live in a motorhome at tracks
across the country 38 weekends a year. John-son wanted to shift his rac-ing to focus on a bucket list — the kind of schedule for-mer Formula One cham-pion Fernando Alonso, a new friend, has created.
This unconventional route works for drivers who still have the skills and ability to compete but are exhausted from their full-time jobs. NASCAR has the longest season in sports and participants av-erage three nights a week — the weekend — away from home.
Johnson figured he’d transition to the kind of competitions he could never do as a NASCAR racer: Besides triathlons, Iron Man competitions and cycling pursuits, Johnson was locked in on trying IndyCar and had a test scheduled for early April that was canceled because of the pandemic.
Now he’s adapting to what he described as the most free time he’s ever had as an adult and is eager to get back to work. Johnson was off to a decent start before the season was suspended; through four races he had a pair of top-10 finishes and was fifth in the points.
Impressive for Johnson, who has slogged through a winless streak dating to June 4, 2017. He’d unbur-dened himself this year of the internal pressure to win a record eighth cham-pionship that would sepa-rate him from Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt. And he is far more comfort-able in the new Camaro that General Motors is rac-ing this year.
Final or not, this year could ultimately be wasted. But Johnson sympathizes most with the fans who paid to attend what they thought would be his final races at respective tracks.
“I know where I am in terms of fulfillment with the career I’ve had. Sure, I want to be on track and sure, I want to go to these places a final time,“ he said. ”But I feel more for the fans who aren’t having that opportunity now than I long for myself to experi-ence it and to be there.”
Associated PressIn this April 13, 1986, file photo, Jack Nicklaus watches his shot go for a birdie, giving him the lead and the title on the 17th hole at the Masters golf tournament in Augusta, Ga. There is no Masters this week because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the first time there is no golf at Augusta National the first full week in April since the end of World War II in 1945.
UFC 249 canceled after ESPN, Disney halt plans
LOS ANGELES — UFC 249 has been canceled after ESPN and parent company Disney stopped UFC Presi-dent Dana White’s plan to keep fight-ing amid the coronavirus pandemic.
After defiantly vowing for weeks to maintain a regular schedule of fights, White announced the decision to cease competition Thursday on ESPN, the UFC’s broadcast partner in a re-ported $1.5 billion deal.
UFC 249 was scheduled for April 18, and White planned to follow it with weekly fight cards from Tachi Pal-ace Hotel & Casino on tribal land in California’s Central Valley.
White says he “got a call from the highest level you can go at Disney and the highest level of ESPN” on Thurs-day asking him to stop his efforts. The UFC moved to ESPN in 2019.
Yanks most valuable in MLB at $5 billion
NEW YORK — Forbes estimates
the New York Yankees are baseball’s most valuable franchise at $5 billion, up 9% over last year and 47% more than the No. 2 Los Angeles Dodgers at $3.4 billion.
The Yankees are second among all sports in Forbes’ evaluations to the Dallas Cowboys, listed at $5.5 billion in the last NFL ranking.
The Yankees’ YES Network broad-casts Forbes “SportsMoney” television show.
The Boston Red Sox are third at $3.3 billion, Forbes said Thursday, fol-lowed by the Chicago Cubs ($3.2 billion), San Francisco ($3.1 billion), the New York Mets ($2.4 billion), St. Louis ($2.2 billion) and Philadelphia ($2 billion).
Miami was last at $980 million, a drop of $20 million. Also near the bot-tom were Kansas City ($1.025 billion), Tampa Bay ($1.05 billion), Cincinnati ($1.075 billion) and Oakland ($1.1 billion).
NCAA: Ga Tech eligible for 2021 postseason
ATLANTA — Georgia Tech athletic
director Todd Stansbury says the school met the requirements of its men’s basketball postseason ban as part of punishments from the NCAA even though most of the postseason was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.
In a letter to fans Thursday made available to the public, Stansbury said he was recently informed Georgia Tech completed its mandated ban by removing itself from the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament on March 2. Georgia Tech made that decision when it withdrew its appeal of the NCAA postseason ban.
In the letter, Stansbury wrote the school “recently received official confir-mation from the NCAA Committee on Infractions that we met the conditions of the penalty by not participating in this year’s ACC Tournament.”
By accepting the ban this year, Georgia Tech will be eligible for all postseason tournaments in the 2020-21 season.
— From wire reports
SPORTS BRIEFS
Defining moments
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Money&Markets A click of the wristgets you more at www.chronicleonline.com
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24,040 Dow Jones industrialsClose: 23,719.37Change: 285.80 (1.2%)
10 DAYS
Advanced 2330Declined 377New Highs 11New Lows 3
Vol. (in mil.) 7,655Pvs. Volume 5,689
3,9883,3902360
6491513
NYSE NASD
DOW 24008.99 23504.09 23719.37 +285.80 +1.22% -16.89%DOW Trans. 8425.45 8106.62 8236.92 +84.53 +1.04% -24.44%DOW Util. 837.96 796.85 827.83 +38.68 +4.90% -5.84%NYSE Comp. 11272.48 11019.82 11136.61 +234.02 +2.15% -19.96%NASDAQ 8227.91 8072.32 8153.58 +62.67 +0.77% -9.13%S&P 500 2818.57 2762.36 2789.82 +39.84 +1.45% -13.65%S&P 400 1609.15 1563.38 1586.37 +50.86 +3.31% -23.10%Wilshire 5000 28217.95 27641.00 27938.93 +481.88 +1.75% -15.05%Russell 2000 1250.13 1212.66 1246.73 +55.07 +4.62% -25.28%
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG %CHG YTDStocksRecap
AT&T Inc T 26.08 4 39.70 30.73 +.84 +2.8 s t s -21.4 -0.7 14 2.08f
Ametek Inc AME 54.82 5 102.31 78.23 +1.00 +1.3 s s s -21.6 -9.4 33 0.72f
Anheuser-Busch InBev BUD 32.58 3 102.70 48.90 +1.00 +2.1 s s s -40.4 -43.5 12 3.19e
Bank of America BAC 17.95 4 35.72 24.86 +1.41 +6.0 s s s -29.4 -21.5 9 0.72
Capital City Bank CCBG 15.61 3 30.95 20.16 +1.96 +10.8 s s s -33.9 -20.1 1 0.56f
CenturyLink Inc CTL 8.16 4 15.30 10.65 +.82 +8.3 s s s -19.4 -16.3 4 1.00
Citigroup C 32.00 4 83.11 47.41 +3.15 +7.1 s s s -40.7 -34.1 7 2.04
Disney DIS 79.07 4 153.41 104.50 +3.43 +3.4 s s s -27.7 -10.4 14 1.76
Duke Energy DUK 62.13 7 103.79 90.31 +4.81 +5.6 s s s -1.0 -7.4 22 3.78
EPR Properties EPR 12.56 2 80.75 25.58 +2.86 +12.6 s t s -63.8 -66.9 8 4.32
Equity Commonwealth EQC 27.62 9 33.51 32.73 +.56 +1.7 s s s -0.3 +9.3 33 2.50e
Exxon Mobil Corp XOM 30.11 3 83.49 43.13 -.72 -1.6 s s s -38.2 -45.8 10 3.48
Ford Motor F 3.96 3 10.56 5.37 +.34 +6.8 s s s -42.3 -42.6 4 0.60a
Gen Electric GE 5.90 2 13.26 7.14 -.16 -2.2 s t t -36.0 -29.4 dd 0.04
HCA Holdings Inc HCA 58.38 6 151.97 108.06 ... ... s s s -26.9 -25.2 16 1.72f
Home Depot HD 140.63 6 247.12 201.53 +6.71 +3.4 s s s -7.7 -2.1 20 6.00f
Intel Corp INTC 42.86 6 69.29 57.14 -1.84 -3.1 s s s -4.5 +7.3 20 1.32
IBM IBM 90.56 5 158.75 121.50 +2.21 +1.9 s s s -9.4 -15.3 13 6.48
LKQ Corporation LKQ 13.31 4 36.63 22.53 +.53 +2.4 s t s -36.9 -30.3 13 ...
Lowes Cos LOW 60.00 6 126.73 95.31 +.96 +1.0 s s s -20.4 -19.0 21 2.20
McDonalds Corp MCD 124.23 7 221.93 183.70 +6.21 +3.5 s s s -7.0 -5.4 28 5.00
Microsoft Corp MSFT 118.58 7 190.70 165.14 +.01 ... s s s +4.7 +38.0 33 2.04
Motorola Solutions MSI 120.77 5 187.49 152.89 +5.12 +3.5 s s s -5.1 +3.0 28 2.56
NextEra Energy NEE 174.80 7 283.35 245.28 +11.78 +5.0 s s s +1.3 +22.9 18 5.60f
Penney JC Co Inc JCP 0.26 1 1.37 .34 +.02 +5.2 s t t -69.5 -78.0 dd ...
Piedmont Office RT PDM 13.59 6 24.78 19.25 +.91 +5.0 s s s -13.4 -13.9 9 0.84
Regions Fncl RF 6.94 4 17.54 11.01 +.90 +8.9 s s s -35.8 -34.0 8 0.62
Smucker, JM SJM 91.88 6 128.43 112.75 -1.38 -1.2 s s s +8.3 +0.7 14 3.52
Texas Instru TXN 93.09 4 135.70 107.69 -2.48 -2.3 s s s -16.1 -3.6 19 3.60
UniFirst Corp UNF 121.89 5 217.90 167.64 +5.58 +3.4 s s s -17.0 -1.5 19 1.00
Verizon Comm VZ 48.84 7 62.22 57.44 +.26 +0.5 s s s -6.4 +0.6 15 2.46
Vodafone Group VOD 11.46 3 21.72 14.22 +.37 +2.7 s s s -26.4 -17.8 0.96e
WalMart Strs WMT 98.85 8 128.08 121.80 -.04 ... s s s +2.5 +25.6 70 2.16f
Walgreen Boots Alli WBA 39.41 2 64.50 43.98 +.89 +2.1 s s t -25.4 -18.4 8 1.83f
52-WK RANGE CLOSE YTD 1YR NAME TICKER LO HI CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN P/E DIV
Stocks of Local Interest
Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
The online clothing seller pulled its forecasts and said it continues fulfill-ing orders despite the closure of two distribution centers.
The discount retail chain will net $550 million via a sale-leaseback agreement for several of its distribu-tion centers.
The company said its lenders have agreed to increase its credit facility from $350 million to $481 million.
The company reported March sales figures that disappointed investors.
The company’s Disney Plus stream-ing service surpassed 50 million paid subscribers just five months af-ter launching.
The Federal Reserve announced more aggressive measures to sup-port lending to companies, house-holds and local governments.
SOURCE: FIS AP
Stocks closed out the best week in 45 years on Thursday after the Federal Reserve launched its latest effort to support the economy through the pandemic. The Fed said it may provide up to $2.3 trillion in loans to households, local governments and businesses.
PE: 9.6
16.7
35.2
7.7
3.2
61.6
50
100
$150
J AF M
JPMorgan Chase JPMClose: $102.76 8.46 or 9.0%
$76.91 $141.10Vol.:Mkt. Cap:
41.0m (1.9x avg.)$313.1 b
52-week range
Yield: 3.5%
50100150
$200
J AF M
Walt Disney DISClose: $104.50 3.43 or 3.4%
$79.07 $153.41Vol.:Mkt. Cap:
31.4m (1.7x avg.)$188.7 b
52-week range
PE:Yield: 1.7%
250
300
$350
J AF M
Costco Wholesale COSTClose: $300.01 -5.96 or -2.0%
$233.05 $325.26Vol.:Mkt. Cap:
6.4m (1.8x avg.)$132.5 b
52-week range
PE:Yield: 0.9%
102030
$40
J AF M
Six Flags Entertainment SIXClose: $16.14 1.85 or 13.0%
$8.75 $59.52Vol.:Mkt. Cap:
7.2m (2.0x avg.)$1.4 b
52-week range
PE:Yield: 6.2%
102030
$40
J AF M
Big Lots BIGClose: $19.63 3.86 or 24.5%
$10.13 $39.53Vol.:Mkt. Cap:
7.5m (4.1x avg.)$768.8 m
52-week range
PE:Yield: 6.1%
10
20
$30
J AF M
Stitch Fix SFIXClose: $15.05 1.48 or 10.9%
$10.90 $32.34Vol.:Mkt. Cap:
7.4m (2.7x avg.)$850.7 m
52-week range
PE:Yield: ...
Interestrates
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 0.72% on Thursday. Yields affect rates on mort-gages and other consumer loans.
NET 1YR TREASURIES LAST PVS CHG AGO
3.255.005.50
.131.882.38
PRIMERATE
FEDFUNDS
3-month T-bill .25 .20 +0.05 2.416-month T-bill .25 .24 +0.01 2.4552-wk T-bill .26 .24 +0.02 2.402-year T-note .21 .24 -0.03 2.325-year T-note .40 .46 -0.06 2.277-year T-note .60 .65 -0.05 2.3710-year T-note .72 .76 -0.04 2.4730-year T-bond 1.35 1.36 -0.01 2.90
NET 1YRBONDS LAST PVS CHG AGO
Barclays Glob Agg Bd 1.23 1.24 -0.01 1.82Barclays USAggregate 1.57 1.59 -0.02 3.00Barclays US Corp 3.30 3.39 -0.09 3.66Barclays US High Yield 6.18 6.18 ... 6.24Moodys AAA Corp Idx 2.56 2.55 +0.01 3.6710-Yr. TIPS 0 0 ... .51
LAST6 MO AGO1 YR AGO
CommoditiesEnergy prices continued to be volatile, with oil and natural gas falling sharply. Gold and silver prices rose.
Crude Oil (bbl) 22.76 25.09 -9.29 -62.7Ethanol (gal) 0.94 0.89 +5.04 -31.8Heating Oil (gal) 0.97 1.01 -3.77 -52.0Natural Gas (mm btu) 1.73 1.78 -2.80 -20.8Unleaded Gas (gal) 0.68 0.68 -0.10 -59.9
FUELS CLOSE PVS %CHG %YTD
Gold (oz) 1736.20 1665.40 +4.25 +14.3Silver (oz) 16.00 15.15 +5.60 -10.3Platinum (oz) 744.60 729.60 +2.06 -23.4Copper (lb) 2.28 2.28 -0.02 -18.5Palladium (oz) 2138.50 2123.70 +0.70 +12.0
METALS CLOSE PVS %CHG %YTD
Cattle (lb) 0.94 0.93 +1.27 -24.6Coffee (lb) 1.20 1.21 -0.95 -7.7Corn (bu) 3.32 3.30 +0.53 -14.4Cotton (lb) 0.54 0.54 +0.98 -21.3Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 322.10 303.40 +5.93 -20.6Orange Juice (lb) 1.10 1.04 +5.23 +12.9Soybeans (bu) 8.64 8.55 +0.99 -8.4Wheat (bu) 5.57 5.48 +1.50 -0.4
AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS %CHG %YTD
American Funds AmrcnBalA m 26.30 +.30 -7.3 +1.5 +6.0 +6.2 CptWldGrIncA m 43.68 +.60 -16.0 -7.9 +3.2 +3.2 CptlIncBldrA m 55.18 +.86 -12.0 -5.3 +1.6 +2.1 FdmtlInvsA m 52.20 +.71 -15.5 -5.5 +5.3 +6.9 GrfAmrcA m 45.94 +.42 -10.2 -0.6 +9.3 +8.9 IncAmrcA m 20.30 +.40 -11.9 -3.8 +2.9 +3.8 InvCAmrcA m 33.98 +.36 -13.7 -4.9 +4.5 +5.8 NwPrspctvA m 40.72 +.57 -13.8 -3.5 +7.6 +6.5 WAMtInvsA m 40.58 +.55 -15.2 -4.8 +6.0 +6.8Dodge & Cox Inc 14.11 +.20 +1.5 +7.4 +4.6 +3.7 IntlStk 31.46 +.65 -27.8 -22.1 -5.9 -4.4 Stk 147.81 +2.85 -22.2 -13.6 +0.8 +4.1Fidelity 500IdxInsPrm 96.74 +1.40 -13.1 -1.1 +7.9 +8.1 Contrafund 12.45 +.11 -8.6 +2.0 +11.9 +10.0 TtlMktIdxInsPrm 77.17 +1.36 -14.6 -3.4 +6.8 +7.1 USBdIdxInsPrm 12.36 +.07 +4.5 +10.4 +5.1 +3.5Schwab SP500Idx 42.89 +.61 -13.2 -1.1 +7.9 +8.1T. Rowe Price BCGr 113.96 +.49 -8.7 0.0 +14.4 +11.6Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl 257.68 +3.71 -13.2 -1.1 +7.9 +8.1 DivGrInv 27.18 +.42 -11.0 +2.0 +9.7 +8.5 HCAdmrl 80.64 +.89 -5.5 +8.2 +8.4 +5.3 InTrTEAdmrl 14.31 +.06 -0.4 +3.8 +3.5 +2.9 MdCpIdxAdmrl 179.86 +4.79 -18.1 -9.6 +3.2 +3.8 PrmCpAdmrl 120.98 +1.14 -16.1 -5.0 +8.2 +8.4 STInvmGrdAdmrl 10.59 +.06 -0.6 +3.0 +2.5 +2.2 TrgtRtr2025Inv 18.00 +.21 -9.3 -1.2 +4.6 +4.2 TrgtRtr2030Inv 32.53 +.40 -10.8 -2.4 +4.5 +4.2 TtBMIdxAdmrl 11.42 +.07 +4.1 +10.2 +5.1 +3.5 TtInBIdxAdmrl 22.62 +.09 +0.2 +5.1 +4.3 +3.4 TtInSIdxAdmrl 23.58 +.27 -20.8 -14.5 -0.9 -0.5 TtInSIdxInv 14.10 +.17 -20.9 -14.5 -1.0 -0.6 TtlSMIdxAdmrl 67.83 +1.19 -14.5 -3.4 +6.8 +7.2 TtlSMIdxInv 67.81 +1.19 -14.5 -3.5 +6.7 +7.0 WlngtnAdmrl 67.32 +.83 -9.4 +1.4 +6.1 +6.1 WlslyIncAdmrl 63.34 +.98 -3.5 +5.1 +5.7 +5.4
TOTAL RETURNFAMILY FUND NAV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR* 5YR*
MutualFunds
*– Annualized; d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing fee and either a sales or redemption fee. x - fund paid a distribution during the week.
Interestrates
(Previous and change figures reflect current contract.)
Friday, april 10, 2020 A9BusinessCitrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
000Y9P6
CRYSTAL RIVER 305 S.E. US 19 • 352-795-7223
Wall Street caps best week since 1974
Stocks strong behind latest Fed stunnerStan Choe and
alex Veiga AP business writers
NEW YORK — Wall Street closed out its best week in 45 years on Thurs-day after the Federal Re-serve launched its latest titanic effort to support the economy through the coronavirus outbreak.
The central bank an-nounced programs to pro-vide up to $2.3 trillion in loans to households, local governments and busi-nesses as the country tips into what economists say may be the worst reces-sion in decades. It’s the latest unprecedented move by the Fed, which has rushed to ensure cash gets to parts of the econ-omy that need it after mar-kets got snarled by a rush of investors pulling cash out of the system.
The stock market is not the economy, and that dis-tinction has become even more clear this week. The S&P 500 rose 1.4% Thurs-day, the same day the gov-ernment announced 6.6 million Americans ap-plied for unemployment benefits last week as lay-offs sweep the nation. For the week, the S&P 500 jumped 12.1%, its best per-formance since late 1974. Markets will be closed for Good Friday.
Stock investors are con-tinuously looking ahead to where the economy will be a few months or more in the future. From mid- February through late March, they sent stocks down by a third on expec-tations that a steep reces-sion was imminent, before the economy really began to crunch.
In the last few weeks, though, investors have sent the market back up nearly 25% following promises for massive aid from the Fed, other cen-tral banks and govern-ments around the world, even as evidence piles up that the recession fears were prescient. This week, some investors have begun to look ahead to the econ-omy possibly reopening amid signs the outbreak may be peaking or pla-teauing in several of the world’s hardest hit areas.
”The market is solely fo-cused on the number of
cases,” said Quincy Kro-sby, chief market strategist at Prudential Financial. “The question is when can the restrictions be lifted? That’s what the market is focused on, when does America open up for busi-ness again?”
The S&P 500 rose 39.84 points to 2,789.82. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 285.80, or 1.2%, to 23,719.37, and the Nasdaq climbed 62.67, or 0.8%, to 8,153.58..
Many professional in-vestors have been skepti-cal of the rally, saying there is still too much un-certainty. They say predic-tions for a relatively quick economic rebound are overly optimistic, and the head of the International Monetary Fund said Thursday the global econ-omy is set for its deepest recession since the Great Depression..
While hopes are build-ing that a plateau may be arriving for infections in several hotspots, it’s not assured. In the meantime, businesses continue to shut down and one in 10 U.S. workers has lost their jobs in the last three weeks.
”You typically have very strong rebounds, even in a bear market,” Krosby said of markets where stocks have fallen more than 20%. “The question is whether or not we see sell-ing into this rebound, or can we continue to build on it.”
The market’s big gains this week have been some-what tentative. On Tues-day, the S&P 500 charged to an early 3.5% gain be-fore it disappeared in the final minutes of trading. On Thursday, the index nearly gave up all of an early 2.5% gain, paring it down to 0.5% before climb-ing again in the last hour of trading.
Such volatility has be-come routine in markets at the end of each week recently.
“People are a little ner-vous to hold risk going into the weekend, especially a 72-hour weekend,” said J.J. Kinahan, chief strate-gist with TD Ameritrade.
The afternoon’s fade also coincided with an-other abrupt downdraft in the price of oil. Bench-mark U.S. crude oil fell $2.33, or 9.3%, to settle at $22.76 per barrel after in-vestors learned that Rus-sia and members of OPEC had reached a prelimi-nary agreement to reduce production by 10 million
barrels a day — far short of what would be needed to offset the steep decline in demand because of the coronavirus shutdowns, said Dave Ernsberger, global head of commodi-ties pricing at S&P Global Platts.
“What this was is a case of spectacular disappoint-ment,” Ernsberger said. “In the oil market today, 20 million barrels of oil de-mand just got blown off the face of the Earth by the coronavirus. It’s gone, and they can’t even begin to paper over that with what they agreed on today.”
Brent crude fell $1.36, or 4.1%, to $31.48 per barrel.
The Fed’s immense pro-grams announced Thurs-day touch far-reaching corners of lending mar-kets, and if they continue for the long term, they could eventually lead to market bubbles.
But in the short term, “what the Fed is doing is great and helping markets function and providing li-quidity so investors can do what they need (and) want to do,” said Warren Pier-son, deputy chief invest-ment officer at Baird Advisors.
The programs even in-clude bonds for compa-nies that have weak enough credit ratings to be called “junk,” or specula-tive grade.
Worries have been high about the ballooning amount of corporate debt concentrated at the bot-tom edge of high-quality “investment grade.” The looming recession could push a lot of that into “junk” status, which would force many investors to sell it because they’re re-quired to hold only invest-ment-grade bonds. A run from such bonds could trigger sell-offs in other areas of the market and lead to even more pain across the economy.
Also in the Fed’s pro-grams are municipal bonds, which allow cities and state governments to raise cash. On a normal day, trading in the market might see 15 buyers make a bid for a particular bond. But as recently as a few weeks ago, there were 15 sellers for every buyer, ac-cording to Gabe Diederich, portfolio manager at Wells Fargo Asset Management.
All the difficulty in sell-ing caused prices to tumble more than they otherwise should, even for high-qual-ity bonds. That makes it more difficult for local gov-ernments to borrow.
Associated PressNew York Stock Exchange Chief Security Officer Kevin Fitzgibbons rings the opening bell at the NYSE on Thursday, while recognizing Randy Timmons in Albany, Ga., and thousands of employees of the Proctor & Gamble Company.
![Page 10: VIRUS UPDATE Court document gives background on woman ...€¦ · fillet knives. There were three knife wounds to Worley’s neck, and smaller punctures across his body. Medical examiners](https://reader034.vdocuments.us/reader034/viewer/2022050213/5f5f8af755e2224c0b0410f8/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
OpiniOnPage A10 - FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2020
Help available for small businesses
The federal government Small Business Administra-tion (SBA) defines small busi-nesses as employers of 500 employees or less. That means that almost every busi-ness in Citrus County is a “small business” within SBA guidelines. Yes, every small retailer, restaurant, medical practice, body shop, electri-cian, etc., are small businesses.
These small businesses are the backbone of the U.S. economy. They are responsi-ble for about half of all U.S. jobs and are the most vulner-able in the COVID-19 crisis we are facing now.
The CARES Act, signed by the president on March 27 provides significant assis-tance for small businesses. This legislation includes the Economic Injury Disaster Loans and the Paycheck Pro-tection Program. These pro-grams are not welfare, they are short-term economic as-sistance programs to help our local businesses. The fact is the government wants U.S. small businesses to survive and thrive. It wants small businesses to continue to be an important part of our economy eight weeks from now, 16 weeks from now and beyond.
Small business owners should take advantage of these programs to help them with what we hope is a short- term crisis. The sooner small businesses return to their previous strength, the sooner our nation will recover from this nightmare.
The Citrus County Chamber of Commerce and SCORE Na-ture Coast Florida are two local organizations whose main purpose is to support local businesses. If you have any questions about accessing these SBA programs, these two organizations are a free resource for you.
There is something all of us in Citrus County can do to help our neighborhood busi-nesses as well. We can make every effort to patronize a local small business. Our sup-port for these local small businesses might just be the boost they need so they can be there for us in the future. It might just be the difference between employment and lay-off for their employees.
We have heard it a lot over the past few weeks: “We are all in this together.” Lets strive to do our part to sup-port local small businesses because “We really are all in this together.”
Jim GreenSCORE
Telehealth an option during the pandemic
Have you heard about tele-health and not sure exactly what it means? The World Health Organization (WHO) defines telehealth as health care services that use
telecommunications and vir-tual technology to deliver health care outside of the of-fice setting. This style of treatment can be ideal for people and circumstances we are presently facing due to the coronavirus. With tele-health, you can have secure, real-time, two-way communi-cation from anywhere. I am trained and able to provide telehealth counseling for on-cology patients and their fam-ilies. Sessions can be scheduled ahead just like a regular appointment. This may also be helpful for peo-ple who normally would at-tend cancer support groups and other educational meet-ings that provide support and encouragement.
Typically, an oncology so-cial worker helps people cope with the diagnosis and with the emotions experienced through all the phases of can-cer treatment. Some current or recent patients that are self-isolating due to the coro-navirus might be experienc-ing unusual depression and anxiety. Please communicate with your health care team regarding all of your physical and emotional symptoms. However, if you would like to schedule a counseling session with me, meeting in person is not the only option, but still available. If you do not have the internet, talking on the phone is also possible. Robert Boissoneault Oncology Insti-tute has always been sensitive to the emotional impact indi-viduals may face coping with cancer and will continue re-assuring patients before, during and after treatment. To speak with me call 352-527-0106. We will all continue to support one another through this difficult time.
Wendy HallRobert Boissoneault
Oncology Institute
We Care
We Care is the largest hunger relief organization in Citrus County as well as the FEMA Hub. During crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic, it is es-sential that We Care remain op-erational to provide relief and services to the agencies and clients it serves. Overcoming a crisis of this length and magni-tude has never been attempted before.
The food supply is already running low at food pantries throughout the area. Over the next weeks and months, We Care will be bringing an untold number of semi-trucks full of food, water, cleaning supplies and household items. We must get this relief to food pantries
and clients in an expeditious manner.
We Care is putting together a plan to deliver food to the homes of the elderly and infirm who are afraid to come out to giveaways. The elderly are a very large portion of the popu-lation of Citrus County and are the most at-risk members of our community from this pandemic.
Another unusual challenge faced by We Care is the inabil-ity to hold the typical fundrais-ing events that would bring in the monies needed to help us through this trying time. We Care is in desperate need of funds to remain operational.
We Care has a 7,200-square-foot warehouse that costs thou-sands per month to keep its
doors open. We currently have two large distributions per month and three mobile pan-tries that we must keep going.
Food pantries throughout the county we serve are letting us know that they are close to shutting their doors because of a lack of food. These pantries do not have trucks and staff to pick up the amounts of product they need from We Care. There-fore, We Care must deliver products all over the county. Funds to keep our trucks fueled and operational are vital.
Please give what you can to help your community during this unprecedented time. Send checks to: We Care, P.O. Box 331, Homosassa FL 34487. Do-nate on our website: wecarefoodpantry.org.
“Find something you’re passionate about and keep tremendously interested in it.”
Julia Child
We Care needs your help
CORONAVIRUS: SMALL BUSINESS
Support small businesses
Locally-owned busi-nesses in Citrus County are taking a big hit
from country-wide social distancing orders amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Small business owners are in peril, shifting op-erations to com-ply with closure mandates and limiting service to prevent the spread of the deadly coronavi-rus. Temporary closures of non-essential busi-n e s s e s a r e necessary, but they are hurting our local economy and work-force greatly.
Now, more than ever, is the time to support your friends, family and neighbors in small business.
In a recent Chronicle guest column (Sunday, March 29, page B1), Florida Executive Director of the National Federation of Independent Business Bill Herrle offers ways consumers can con-tinue to patronize small business during this unex-pected scale back of eco-nomic activity. Help support the tight-knit Citrus commu-nity, and consider doing the following while under Gov. Ron DeSantis’ stay at home order:
n Order takeout or deliv-ery, or go through a drive-thru. Many restaurants have kept their kitchens open, de-spite closing dining areas. If you don’t feel like cooking, support your favorite local restaurant — and don’t for-get to tip well!
n Buy gift cards or gift cer-tificates to a local shop or business. Purchase them on-line or over the phone, and get ready to shop when the coronavirus outbreak has passed.
In light of the rapid devel-opments surrounding COVID-19, local business owners have done a com-mendable job ensuring es-sential services continue
nearly seam-lessly, while fol-l o w i n g t h e necessary CDC guidelines, and local and federal r e g u l a t i o n s . They’re deter-mined to get through this as safely as possi-ble, for the bene-fit of customer and employee alike.
This is a chal-lenging time for many, and the next few weeks will only show what this community is made of. Backing small busi-ness is essential during this time; we need to figure out a way to keep them above water. They do a lot to help our community — they em-ploy many, give back in countless ways and are a big part of what draws people to Citrus.
It’s imperative we support them before we lose them to the virus. If local small busi-nesses fail to recover, Citrus County will be an economic disaster area.
Congress passed the $2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Secu-rity (CARES) Act last week to provide relief and lessen the economic impact of corona-virus, which is a temporary Godsend many small busi-nesses will need to take ad-vantage of. Locally, kudos goes to the Chamber and SCORE for offering assis-tance in navigating the maze of aid available.
Once all local businesses reopen, we need to make it a priority to dine and shop local to assist in making them whole again.
THE ISSUE:Small businesses feel the effects of
COVID-19.
OUR OPINION:Support them now — Citrus
families and the local economy depend on it.
LETTERS to the EditorOPINIONS INVITED
n Viewpoints depicted in political cartoons, columns or letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the editorial board.
n Groups or individuals are invited to express their opinions in a letter to the editor.
n Persons wishing to address the editorial board, which meets weekly, should call Mike Arnold at 352-563-5660.
n All letters must be signed and include a phone number and hometown, including letters sent via email. Names and hometowns will be printed; phone numbers will not be published or given out.
n We reserve the right to edit letters for length, libel, fairness and good taste.
n Letters must be no longer than 400 words, and writers will be limited to four letters per month.
n SEND LETTERS TO: The Editor, 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429; fax to 352-563-3280; or email to [email protected].
There’s room to lower the tax rate
Out of the most recent county commissioners meeting, it seems that the county commissioners are rela-tively satisfied with their efforts to keep taxes low. Yes, they have lowered the tax rate each of the last few years, but what they’ve failed to realize is the amounts of reve-nue that have come into the county over the last couple of years, the as-sessed values of how the prop-erty values have gone up. There’s been a large amount of tax revenue that has come into the community over the last couple of years. At the same time, all of us are paying more in property tax. So, I kind of have to look at it this way: Not
only are we receiving additional funds from outside sources and Duke Energy and many other developments that are going on through Citrus County — and all
are a positive — bring-ing in tax revenue, but the commissioners fail to realize that because the property values have escalated at such a quick rate, we are now all paying more in taxes. I believe the com-missioners have the room to lower the tax rate even more, to level out the taxes that we’re
paying in property taxes and let the additional revenue that’s coming in from other sources soften the blow. We don’t need to have all the people in the county paying more in property tax at the levels that they’re pay-ing, considering that we have additional revenues coming in.
THE CHRONICLE invites you to call “Sound Off” with your opinions about local or statewide subjects. You do not need to leave your name, and have less than a minute to record. COMMENTS will be edited for length, libel, personal or political attacks and good taste. Editors will cut libelous material. OPINIONS expressed are purely those of the callers.
Hot Corner: HOARDING
n Thank you, Mr. Higbee, for your letter in the Chronicle (March 30) about people hoarding food for themselves and caring nothing about other people. Whatever happened to the way us old-timers were raised where we were taught to always lend a hand to those who needed it and to care about others instead of just ourselves. God must look down on the way our world is today and want to vomit — I know I do.
n Mr. Mulligan, you are a wonderful journalist. I look forward to your commentary every Sun-day. Maybe you could write to some of these people who are taking so much more extra food, canned goods and meat than they really nor-mally buy. Nobody needs 10 cans of corn, four chickens all at once and etc. It is a disgrace. They’re buying what somebody else won’t have a chance to get. You have a brilliant way of putting words together. Write something in the paper so that people will find a guiltily conscience. Buy in moderation. They don’t need how excessively they’re buying each item of food. It is terrible. I keep a very good pantry and freezer. I will not
buy in excess of five bottles of milk or four dozen eggs like I’ve seen other people do — never mind talking about the toilet paper, which is another disgrace. But the food is important to every citizen, not just the ones who run in the store ahead of everybody and grab everything in sight. It is a shame and it is not Christian. It is a terrible thing that these people are doing.
n I’ve lost all credibility to the people in Flor-ida that are using those tags hanging from the center of their car. They go into (stores) and they buy stupid five, 10, 15 bundles of bathroom tis-sue. For what? Do they think the world’s going to come to an end? What about the next guy? They don’t care about the next guy. As of what hap-pened to me and I noticed it today, it’s the last time I hold the door for any of those old people. I myself am one of them, but I was thinking of the next old person and they’re teaching me oth-erwise. Don’t they know that they’re ridiculous? This is going to blow over. Have faith in your fel-low man. Or am I the idiot? Hey, stay safe everybody.
Citrus County ChroniCle
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CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE
Founded by Albert M. Williamson
E D I T O R I A L B O A R DGerry Mulligan .......................................... publisherMike Arnold .....................................................editorCurt Ebitz ........................................citizen memberMac Harris .......................................citizen memberRebecca Martin ..............................citizen memberJeff Bryan ............................ managing editor, newsSarah Gatling ...............managing editor, copy deskGwen Bittner ................................community editor
The opinions expressed in Chronicle editorials are the opinions of the newspaper’s editorial board.
“You may differ with my choice, but not my right to choose.”— David S. Arthurs publisher emeritus
CHANGES TO LETTERS SUBMISSIONSThe Chronicle will not accept handwritten letters to the editor during Gov. DeSantis “stay-at-home” order.
Letters to the editor should be emailed to [email protected].
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Friday, april 10, 2020 A11Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
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NothiNg above p iNk l iNe
NothiNg below piNk l iNe
Teddy bear
Associated PressA teddy bear wearing a face mask hangs from a balcony Thursday in Mexico City, as many stay indoors amid the spread of the new coronavirus.
Pandemic has set the number of air travelers back decades
The number of Ameri-cans getting on airplanes has sunk to a level not seen in more than 60 years as people shelter in their homes to avoid catching or spreading the new coronavirus.
The Transportation Secu-rity Administration screened 94,931 people on Wednes-day, a drop of 96% from a year ago and the second straight day under 100,000.
The official tally of people who passed through TSA checkpoints exaggerates the number of travelers — if that is possible — because it includes some airline crew members and people still working at shops inside air-port security perimeters.
Historical daily numbers only go back so far, but the nation last averaged fewer than 100,000 passengers a day in 1954, according to figures from trade group Air-lines for America.
Pope hails priests, health workers as ‘the
saints next door’VATICAN CITY — Pope
Francis on Holy Thursday hailed priests and medical staff who tend to the needs of COVID-19 patients as “the saints next door.”
Francis celebrated the Holy Week evening Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica, which was kept off-limits to the public because of restric-tions aimed at containing the spread of the new coronavirus.
The same precautions forced the pope to forego a symbolic ritual traditionally observed on the Thursday before Easter — washing the feet of others in a sign of humility.
— From wire reports
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Senators block new virus aidStandoff doesn’t end pursuit of
more rescue fundsAndrew TAylor
And lisA MAscAroAssociated Press
WASHINGTON — Senators torpedoed quick passage of a new coronavirus aid package Thursday, with Democrats reject-ing a Trump administration re-quest for $250 billion to boost a small business payroll fund and Republicans refusing Demo-crats’ demand for another $250 billion for hospitals and states.
The standoff doesn’t end the pursuit of more rescue funds. Democrats and Republicans agree the aid is urgently needed and talks continue. But it rein-forces that Congress and the White House will need to find bi-partisan agreement.
“Nobody thinks this will be the Senate’s last word on COVID-19,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. “Let’s con-tinue to work together, with speed and bipartisanship. We will get through this crisis together.”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi declared the Senate vote merely a “stunt” as the country faces an “epic” crisis. She ridiculed the administration for trying to jam a $250 billion request through Con-gress with 48 hours notice with little data to back it up.
“Really?” Pelosi said on a conference call with reporters.
The stall comes as communities across the nation strain to meet health care needs and salvage local economies pummeled by the crisis. A new jobless report shows a whopping 16.8 million Ameri-cans are now out of work.
The massive infusions of fed-eral cash — the $250 billion sought by the administration would come on top of combined legislation already totaling about $2.5 trillion — are intended as a patch to help the $21 trillion U.S. economy through the current re-cession, which is causing an eco-nomic contraction and a spike in joblessness that is overwhelming many state systems for delivering unemployment benefits.
With Congress all but shuttered — and unlikely to return April 20,
as planned — lawmakers pledged to keep negotiating with the White House.
In the brief Senate session, Democrats rejected Trump’s re-quest for $250 billion to supple-ment a “paycheck protection” program for businesses.
McConnell and Treasury Sec-retary Steven Mnuchin say the program, which involves direct subsidies to companies to keep employees on payroll and pay company rent, is on track to quickly deplete its first $350 bil-lion infusion as businesses rush to apply for the aid.
Democrats are not opposed to boosting the payroll fund, but they want to ensure that the pop-ular program delivers benefits to businesses in minority communi-ties that are often under-served by traditional lenders.
16.8M Americans out of workWorldwide dead nears
95,000 from virusMichelle r. sMiTh,
chrisTopher rugAber And MArinA VilleneuVe
Associated Press
NEW YORK — A staggering 16.8 million Americans lost their jobs in just three weeks in a measure of how fast the corona-virus has brought world economies to their knees. Meanwhile, religious leaders around the globe Thursday urged people to celebrate Good Friday and Easter from the safety of their homes.
In other developments, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was moved out of intensive care at the London hospital where he is being treated for the virus. The 55-year-old leader had taken a turn for the worse early in the week as his coun-try descended into its biggest crisis since World War II.
Governments warned that the hard-won gains against the scourge must not be jeop-ardized by relaxing social distancing over the weekend. Across Europe, where Eas-ter is one of the busiest travel times of the year, authorities set up roadblocks and otherwise discouraged family gatherings.
A spike in deaths in Britain and New York and surges of reported new infections in Japan and in India’s congested cities made it clear the battle is far from over.
New York state reported a record-break-ing number of dead for a third straight day, 799. More than 7,000 people have died in the state, accounting for almost half the U.S. death toll of more than 16,000.
“That is so shocking and painful and breathtaking, I don’t even have the words for it,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.
But he added that there are hopeful signs, including slowdowns in the number of people being hospitalized, admitted to intensive care and placed on ventilators.
He said the onslaught of patients has not been as big as feared and hospitals are standing up to the strain so far. About 18,000 people were hospitalized, well short of the 90,000 hospital beds statewide, many of which were hurriedly lined up at a con-vention center and a Navy ship docked in the city.
Worldwide, the number of dead neared 95,000 and confirmed infections reached about 1.5 million, according to Johns Hop-kins University, though the true numbers are believed much higher, in part because of different rules for counting the dead and cover-ups by some governments.
Numbers released Thursday by the U.S. government showed that 6.6 million work-ers applied for unemployment benefits last week, on top of more than 10 million in the two weeks before that. That amounts to about 1 in 10 American workers — the big-gest, fastest pileup of job losses since the world’s largest economy began keeping records in 1948.
And still more job cuts are expected. The U.S. unemployment rate in April could hit 15% — a number not seen since the end of the Great Depression.
Sharon Bridgeman, 57, of Kansas City, Missouri, was laid off from her job two weeks ago at a nonprofit that helps home-less people and is still waiting to be ap-proved for unemployment benefits.
“I’m worried I may not have a job to go back to,” she said. “I’m also worried about the people I work with.”
In the U.S., the Federal Reserve an-nounced it will provide up to $2.3 trillion in loans targeted toward both households and businesses.
In many European countries, where so-cial safety nets tend to be stronger than in the U.S., government programs that subsi-dize workers’ pay are keeping millions of people on payrolls in places like Germany and France, though typically with fewer hours and at lower wages.
The head of the International Monetary Fund warned that the global economy is headed for the worst recession since the Depression. The United Nations’ labor or-ganization said the equivalent of 195 mil-lion full-time jobs could be lost in the second quarter, while the aid organization Oxfam International estimated half a bil-lion people worldwide could be pushed into poverty.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious- diseases expert, shot down hopes that warmer spring weather would bring an end to the crisis.
“One should not assume that we are going to be rescued by a change in the weather,” he said. “You must assume that the virus will continue to do its thing.”
Associated PressWorkers wearing personal protective equipment bury bodies in a trench Thursday on Hart Island, in the Bronx borough of New York. On Thursday, New York City’s medical examiner confirmed that the city has shortened the amount of time it will hold on to remains to 14 days from 30 days before they will be transferred for temporary internment at a City Cemetery.
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Section C - FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2020SceneCitrus County ChroniCle
Get your Citrus County entertainment and events news every thursday morninG in your email inbox by
subsCribinG to the free “on the town” newsletter at https://bit.ly/2As4YPn
Special to the Chronicle
Due to growing concerns for the health and safety of Nature Coast
Community Band musicians and audiences, the band has cancelled all of its rehearsals in preparation for the May 9 and 10 concerts.
With no rehearsals, there are no concerts. Conductor Cindy Hazzard is hopeful that when rehearsals are again possible, there will be enough rehearsals to prepare for the July 4 and 5 concerts.
Currently, both the National Centers for Disease Control and the Florida Department of Health recommend cancelling all gatherings of 10 or more people. With over 90 NCCB musicians and audiences of 500 to 1,000 people, NCCB re-hearsals and concerts far ex-ceed present guidelines.
NCCB rehearsal and concert venues do not allow for ade-quate social distancing of 6 feet.
The NCCB appreciates ev-eryone’s understanding these cancellations during this diffi-cult time. Please check the NCCB website (www.nature coastcommunityband.com) and further announcements in the Chronicle for updated information as to when our rehearsals and concerts will resume.
deepti hajelaAssociated Press
Within days, Vicktery Zimmer-man had figured out how to connect with friends and family
even as she and her husband shelter in place at their Chicago home.
There are the FaceTime calls. There’s the movie night (remote, of course) with another couple. There are plans for a game night. Whatever it takes to keep the 30-year-old self-professed extreme extro-vert and public relations specialist from, as she puts it, “spinning in circles.”
Justin Zimmerman, 32, her intro-verted husband, is bemused — and amused — by it all.
“Now it’s become a thing where peo-ple are FaceTiming us all day, every day to say ‘Hi,’“the doctoral student said, laughing. “I’m like, ‘You really don’t have to.’”
The self-isolation designed to arrest the coronavirus’ spread has turned the tables on many norms — like living life outside the four walls of home, gather-ing socially at the drop of a hat and hav-ing everyday social interactions with anyone from your local barista to the guy at the corner store.
But even in pre-virus times, there were people for whom those things were more pressure than pleasure: introverts, those who largely get their energy from inside themselves and selected interac-tions with people, as opposed to extro-verts, who obtain it from outside themselves.
The quarantines and distancing have upended that. It’s a relief for some intro-verts who now don’t need excuses for why they don’t want to be out — and,
equally, a struggle for extroverts seeking out social connection in a world where that’s suddenly a limited commodity.
Eric Bellmore, an avowed extrovert, found himself yelling a greeting across the road to someone he didn’t know when he went for a jog near his home. He just wanted a moment of interaction.
“It’s mind-boggling to grasp how much I need to be around other folk,” said Bellmore, 47, who works in IT in Mount Pleasant, Michigan.
“My wife actually said to me last week: ‘For someone like you, this must be hell.’”
It’s been a relief for David Choi, a 34-year-old Los Angeles musician who is an avowed introvert even as the de-mands of professional musicianship re-quired him to be networking and making the social rounds.
The demand to quarantine, he says, “gives you an excuse to stay home, which is what you want to do in the first place.”
The world generally has been a place where extroverts are rewarded and in-troverts get a side-eye, says Lisa Kaenzig, the highly extroverted dean of William Smith College. She has studied introverted learners for years.
But the quarantines have changed those assumptions, she says. While ev-eryone shares in the anxiety and worry over the virus, the actual demand of staying home and limiting social inter-action has felt like a boon to the intro-verts she’s spoken to.
“All of the things that make the world harder for them as introverts, the world is better for them right now. They’re adapting much more quickly,” she says.
One introvert she spoke to was actu-ally leery of the post-quarantine return
to socializing, Kaenzig said, not looking forward to being swarmed by effusive extroverts looking for hugs of greeting.
For some introverts, though, there has been a struggle with the idea that stay-ing home is a matter of government de-mand, that there’s no option of going to a cafe or coffee shop if they did want some human interaction.
Jackie Aina would often do just that to break up the monotony of working from home, where the makeup artist and on-line content creator already spends most of her time.
“Being able to go to the local coffee shop, it’s nice just to switch up the envi-ronment,” says Aina, 32, of Los Angeles.
“Now that control is being taken away,“ she says. “That’s very different than choosing when and how you get to stay at home.”
And of course, for those extroverts and introverts who share homes where they are being told to self-isolate, it’s created a new level of challenge: learn-ing to live with each other.
Extroverts have found ways to do many things remotely — video confer-ence calls for work and school or even lunch dates, regular check-ins with loved ones over phones or computers, sometimes to the bafflement of the in-troverts they live with.
Jackie Hardt, 34, of Buffalo, New York, recently used video conferencing to have a long coffee date with a col-league or a lunch date with friends. Her introverted husband, she says, doesn’t understand that the least bit.
“It would be very hard for him to make virtual happy hour or virtual cof-fee,“ she said. “He’d be perfectly fine not seeing his friends until this is all over. For me, that would be a lot harder.”
leanne italieAssociated Press
NEW YORK — Hopeful bird-song and foreboding sirens. Chiming church bells and bleating ferry horns.
The coronavirus crisis has drastically transformed the world in sound. The routine cacophony of daily life has calmed, lending more weight to the noises left behind. And in those mundane sounds, now so unexpectedly bared, many have found comfort, hope and dread.
Here in the U.S., in the grind of the pandemic, sound has be-come a shared experience, in joy and sadness. The eyes may be windows to the soul, but these days, as isolation per-sists, the ears feel tethered to our hearts.
“After 9/11, I remember we actually wanted to hear the
sound of ambulances on our quiet streets because that meant there were survivors, but we didn’t hear those sounds and it was heartbreak-ing. Today, I hear an ambu-lance on my strangely quiet street and my heart breaks, too,” said 61-year-old Meg Gif-ford, a former Wall Streeter who lives on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.
In European hot spots, there’s balcony singing. In New York, at 7 p.m. for the duration, the city ignites for a few mo-ments in whoops and claps as the homebound lean out their windows making noise together.
It’s not the sounds but the si-lence that has made us master eavesdroppers.
In Seattle, another early U.S. hot spot, fewer ferries means fewer familiar horns that nor-mally punctuate each day like
an extra clock. There are wor-ries there as well playing out in sound and silence.
Is that fire truck in the dis-tance rushing to help someone who can’t breathe? Will the noisy weekend crowds return to the city’s popular, now empty Space Needle?
Early in the American out-break, the Life Care Center in the Seattle suburb of Kirkland saw more than 129 people sick-ened and more than three dozen die from the virus, mak-ing it the epicenter before the insidious spread.
The sounds of sirens as ambu-lances turned up a hill to the nursing home brought on imme-diate dread for loved ones and others gathered outside. Weeks later, after the threat moved on, fewer ambulances made that turn, continuing to other destinations.
But where? The emergency is too big to know exactly.
Other sounds now soothe. As spring descends, birdsong is
prevalent.There’s the quirky squeak of
the American goldfinch, owl-like coos of mourning doves and the whinnying of the downy wood-pecker as Central Park offers avid urban birders some respite.
There are no services to an-nounce or ceremonies to mark
in locked down areas, yet church bells ring on, uplifting many of all faiths who barely took notice in happier — and noisier — times.
As the sick and dying multiply, the bells of today serve as a steadfast call to action: Keep listening.
Community Band cancels
May 9-10 concerts
Rehearsals on temporary hold
Associated PressVicktery Zimmerman works from her home March 27 in Chicago during the coronavirus-related order to shelter in place. A self-proclaimed extrovert, Zimmerman has come up with workarounds like video calls to help herself deal with the lack of social interaction.
Extroverts, introverts face quarantine challenges
Associated PressIn this Thursday, April 2, 2020, image made from video, a person is taken into an ambulance in the Brooklyn borough of New York. The sounds of sirens can be heard prominently in the city, where the number of deaths due to the new coronavirus continues to climb.
Pandemic in sound:
POSTPONING AN UPCOMING EVENT?n Community groups and
nonprofits are invited to announce the postponement and/or cancellation of upcoming events in the Chronicle.
n Type up your annoucement with as many details as possible and send it to the community email address at [email protected].
Hopeful birdsong, foreboding sirens fill the airSounds intensify amidst the quiet lull
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B2 Friday, april 10, 2020 TV and more Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
(Answers tomorrow)PURGE PRESS SHODDY DISMALYesterday’s Jumbles:
Answer: Even without a tuxedo, the porcupine was — SHARPLY DRESSED
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEBy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.
©2020 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
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FRIDAY EVENING APRIL 10, 2020 C: Comcast, Citrus S: Spectrum D/I: Comcast, Dunnellon & Inglis F: Oak Forest H: Holiday Heights
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NewsChannel 8
Extra (N) ‘PG’
The Blacklist “Twamie Ullulaq” (N) ‘14’
Dateline NBC (N) (In Stereo) Å NewsChannel 8
News
)(WFTV) ABC 20 7 20 News at 6pm
World News
Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’
Wheel of Fortune
Shark Tank (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)
Pandemic: What You Need to Know (N)
20/20 (In Stereo) Å Eyewit. News
Jimmy Kimmel
*(WTSP) CBS 10 10 10 10 10 10 Tampa Bay
Evening News
Wheel of Fortune
Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’
MacGyver (N) (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å
Magnum P.I. (N) (In Stereo) ‘14’ Å
Blue Bloods ‘14’ Å (DVS)
10 Tampa Bay
Late-Colbert
(WTVT) FOX 13 13 13 13 News News Ac. Hollywood
TMZ (N) ‘PG’
WWE Friday Night SmackDown (N) (In Stereo Live) ‘PG, D,L,V
FOX13 10:00 News (N) (In Stereo) Å
FOX13 11:00 News (N) (In Stereo) Å
4(WCJB) ABC 11 News ABC ET Inside Ed. Shark Tank (N) ‘PG’ Pandemic-You 20/20 Å News J. Kimmel
6 (WCLF) IND 2 2 2 22 22 Christian Fitness
Joyce Meyer
Joyce Meyer
Great Awakening with The Good Life Andrew Wom
Good News
The Three Ancient Nutrition
Great
8(WYKE) FAM 16 16 16 15 America Trends INN News Citrus Today
Sully’s Biz Brew Positively Paula ‘G’
The Chef’s America Trends Citrus Court
Citrus Today
< (WFTS) ABC 11 11 11 11 ABC Action News
World News
Inside Edition
The List (N) ‘PG’
Shark Tank (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)
Pandemic: What You Need to Know (N)
20/20 (In Stereo) Å ABC Action News
Jimmy Kimmel
@(WMOR) IND 12 12 5 The Goldbergs
The Goldbergs
Big Bang Theory
Big Bang Theory
Mom ‘14’ Å
Mom ‘14’ Å
Last Man Standing
Last Man Standing
Big Bang Theory
How I Met Family Guy ‘14’
Family Guy ‘14’
F(WTTA) MNT 6 6 6 9 9 Extra ‘PG’ ET FamFeud FamFeud NewsChannel 8 CSI: Miami ‘14’ Å CSI: Miami ‘14’ Å Seinfeld SeinfeldH(WACX) TBN 21 21 S.Channel The 700 Club Å Supernat. KSouza Ministries Paid Prg. Paid Prg. Faith Jentezen Faith Prince
L(WTOG) CW 4 4 4 12 12 Mike & Molly ‘14’
Mike & Molly ‘14’
Two and Half Men
Two and Half Men
Charmed “Search Party” (N) ‘PG’ Å
Dynasty “She Canceled...” (N) ‘14’
CW44 News (N)
CW44 News (N)
2 Broke Girls ‘14’
2 Broke Girls ‘14’
R(WVEA) UNI 15 15 15 15 14 Noticias Noticiero Rosa de Guadalupe Ringo (N) ‘14’ Amor eterno ‘PG’ Noticias NoticieroS(WOGX) FOX 13 7 7 Fox 51 Fox 51 Big Bang Big Bang WWE Friday Night SmackDown ‘PG, D,L,V FOX 51 News Dateline ‘PG’ Å≤(WXPX) ION 17 NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles NCIS: Los Angeles
(A&E) 54 48 54 25 27 Live PD “Live PD -- 04.04.20” (In Stereo) ‘14’ Å Live PD: Rewind (N) (In Stereo) ‘14’ Å
Live PD “Live PD -- 04.10.20” (N) (In Stereo Live) ‘14’ Å
(ACCN) 99 College Basketball From Feb. 29, 2020. ‘G’ College Basketball From Feb. 29, 2020. ‘G’ College Basketball From Feb. 29, 2020. ‘G’
(AMC) 55 64 55 ›››“Top Gun” (1986) Tom Cruise.
›››‡“The Karate Kid” (1984) Ralph Macchio. A Japanese handyman teaches a teenager to defend himself. ‘PG’ Å
››‡“The Karate Kid Part II” (1986, Drama) Ralph Macchio. ‘PG’ Å
(ANI) 52 35 52 19 31 Tanked “Chicago Bull Boom Box” ‘PG’
Tanked (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Tanked: Sea-Lebrity Edition “Those Tanks Are No Joke” Ordering fun tanks. (N) ‘14’
Tanked “Sweet Tank O’ Mine” ‘PG’ Å
Tanked “Shark Byte” (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å
(BET) 96 71 96 ››‡“Stomp the Yard” (2007, Drama) Columbus Short, Meagan Good. A troubled dancer enrolls in college. ‘PG-13’ Å
››‡“Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins” (2008) Martin Lawrence. A talk-show star returns to his Southern hometown. ‘PG-13’
(BIGTEN) 742 809 To Be Announced To Be Announced The B1G Show (N)
The B1G Show
To Be Announced
(BRAVO) 254 51 254 Shahs of Sunset ‘14’ Shahs of Sunset ‘14’ Shahs of Sunset ‘14’ Shahs of Sunset ‘14’ Shahs of Sunset ‘14’ “Sex and the City”
(CC) 27 61 27 33 Tosh.0 “Poppa Pipes” ‘14’ Å
Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å
Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å
Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å
Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å
Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å
Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å
Kevin Hart: Seriously Funny ‘14’ Å
South Park ‘MA’
South Park ‘MA’
(CMT) 98 45 98 28 37 Last Man Standing
Last Man Standing
Last Man Standing
Last Man Standing
Mom ‘14’ Å
Mom ‘14’ Å
Mom ‘14’ Å
Mom ‘14’ Å
Mom ‘14’ Å
Mom ‘14’ Å
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
(CNN) 40 29 40 41 46 Situation Room Erin Burnett OutFront Anderson Cooper CNN Special Report CNN Tonight CNN Tonight (ESPN) 33 27 33 21 17 To Be Announced TBA To Be Announced SportsCenter (N) (ESPN2) 37 28 34 43 49 SportsCenter (N) NFL Live Å To Be Announced To Be Announced Max (FBN) 106 149 106 99 41 The Evening Edit (N) Lou Dobbs Tonight The Evening Edit Wall St. WSJ Barron Wall St. WSJ Barron
(FLIX) 118 170 ›››“The Falcon and the Snowman” (1985) Timothy Hutton. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å
››‡“Beowulf” (2007) Voices of Ray Winstone. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ Å
››“The Mechanic” (2011) Jason Statham. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å
“The Reckoning”
(FNC) 44 37 44 32 Special Report The Story Tucker Carlson Hannity (N) Å The Ingraham Angle Fox News at Night (FOOD) 26 56 26 Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners
(FREEFORM) 29 52 29 20 28 ›››‡“Back to the Future” (1985, Comedy) Michael J. Fox. ‘PG’ Å
Family Guy ‘14’
Family Guy ‘14’
Family Guy ‘14’
Family Guy ‘14’
Family Guy ‘14’
Family Guy ‘14’
The 700 Club (In Stereo) Å
(FS1) 732 112 732 PBC Countdown To Be Announced To Be Announced MLB Whiparound (N) (FSNFL) 35 39 35 Motorcycle Race In Magic In Magic NBA Basketball From Feb. 28, 2020. In Magic World Poker
(FX) 30 60 30 51 ›››“Furious 7” (2015) Vin Diesel.
›››‡“The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013, Biography) Leonardo DiCaprio, Jonah Hill. A stockbroker develops habits of excess and corruption. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å
›››“Straight Outta Compton” ‘R’
(GOLF) 727 67 727 Feherty Feherty ‘14’ Å To Be Announced
(HALL) 59 68 39 45 54 “Christmas Under the Stars” (2019, Romance) Clarke Peters. ‘NR’ Å
“Christmas Town” (2019, Romance) Tim Rozon, Candace Cameron Bure. ‘NR’ Å
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
(HBO) 302 201 302 2 2 ›››“Casino Royale” (2006, Action) Daniel Craig. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ Å
››‡“Quantum of Solace” (2008, Action) Daniel Craig. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ Å
Real Time With Bill Maher ‘MA’ Å
To Be Announced
(HBO2) 303 202 303 ››‡“Unbreakable” (2000) ‘PG-13’
To Be Announced The Plot Against America ‘MA’ Å
My Brilliant Friend: The Story
›››“American Pie” (1999) Jason Biggs. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å
“Americn 2”
(HGTV) 23 57 23 42 52 Home Town ‘G’ Å (DVS)
Home Town ‘G’ Å (DVS)
Dream Home
Dream Home
Selling the Big
Dream Home
Dream Home
Dream Home
Dream Home
Dream Home
(HIST) 51 54 51 32 42 Pawn Stars A signed B.B. King guitar. ‘PG’
Pawn Stars “Boats and Bros” ‘PG’
Pawn Stars “Across the Pawn’d” ‘PG’
Pawn Stars (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)
Pawn Stars “Breakin’ the Bank” (N) ‘PG’
Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Å (DVS)
(LIFE) 24 38 24 21 ››‡“Joyful Noise” (2012, Comedy-Drama) Queen Latifah. ‘PG-13’ Å
››“Miracles From Heaven” (2016, Drama) Jennifer Garner, Kylie Rogers, Martin Henderson. ‘PG’ Å
“Faith Under Fire: The Antoinette Tuff Story” (2018) ‘NR’
(LMN) 119 50 119 “Nightmare Tenant” (2019) Lauralee Bell. A woman’s new tenant has a vengeful agenda.
“My Nightmare Landlord” (2020, Suspense) Caroline Harris. Premiere. ‘NR’ Å
“Friends Who Kill” (2020, Suspense) Natalie Brown, Sarah Fisher. ‘NR’ Å
(MSNBC) 42 41 42 The Beat With Decision 2020 All In With Rachel Maddow The Last Word The 11th Hour
24 April 5 - 11, 2020 Viewfinder Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
Mickey Rooney said, “Always get married early in the morning. That way, if it doesn’t work out, you hav-en’t wasted a whole day.”
There are other things it pays to do early — as in this deal. How should South play in six hearts after the lead of a low club or the diamond king?
South, with his minor-suit con-trols and a good fit, judged well to push into the low-point-count small
slam. (If you employ the Losing Trick Count, the South hand has only five losers: two clubs, one dia-mond, two spades and none in hearts, because you deduct one loser for a 10-card fit. That puts you squarely in the slam zone.)
South must take these 12 tricks: one club, one diamond, seven hearts and three spades.
After a club lead, it is not so hard. Declarer draws trumps, leaving
the queen on the board, takes dum-my’s top spades, ruffs a spade, re-turns to the dummy with a trump, ruffs another spade, goes back to the board with a diamond and cashes the spade seven, which is now high.
It is not so easy after a diamond lead because that removes a key dummy entry.
Now declarer, after drawing trumps with two of his honors, must lead a spade and play low from the board. Lose a trick early to get a winner later.
The opponents probably will try to cash a diamond, but South ruffs, plays a spade to the king, cashes the spade ace, discarding a club, and ruffs a spade.
Then he crosses to the dummy with a trump to the queen and dis-cards his last club loser on the spade seven.
Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe Viewfinder April 5 - 11, 2020 25
FRIDAY EVENING APRIL 10, 2020 C: Comcast, Citrus S: Spectrum D/I: Comcast, Dunnellon & Inglis F: Oak Forest H: Holiday Heights
C S D/I F H 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 (NBCSN) 448 26 730 Figure Skating Subban’s
AllTo Be Announced
(NGEO) 109 65 109 Lockup: Savannah: Extended Stay Å
Lockup: Oakland: Extended Stay Å
Lockup: Boston: Extended Stay (N) ‘MA’
Lockup: Wabash: Extended Stay (N) ‘PG’
Lockup: Cincinnati: Extended Stay Å
Lockup: Wichita: Extended Stay Å
(NICK) 28 36 28 35 25 Sponge. Sponge. The SpongeBob Musical: Live on Stage! Sponge. Sponge. Friends Friends Friends Friends (OWN) 125 24 103 Dr. Phil ‘PG’ Å Dr. Phil ‘PG’ Å 20/20 on OWN ‘14’ 48 Hours: Hard Evid. 48 Hours: Hard Evid. 20/20 on OWN ‘14’ (OXY) 123 44 123 Dateline: Secrets Kemper on Kemper: Inside The Mind Snapped “Notorious: Aileen Wuornos” ‘14’ Serial Killer
(PARMT) 37 43 37 27 36 Two and Half Men
Two and Half Men
Two and Half Men
Two and Half Men
››‡“Twilight” (2008) Kristen Stewart. A teen is caught up in an unorthodox romance with a vampire.
››‡“The Twilight Saga: New Moon” (2009) ‘PG-13’ Å
(SEC) 745 72 To Be Announced To Be Announced SEC Now (N) (Live)
(SHOW) 340 241 340 “Good Will Hun.”
›››‡“Green Book” (2018) Viggo Mortensen. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ Å
“Sword of Trust” (2019, Comedy) Marc Maron. ‘R’ Å
›››“Total Recall” (1990, Science Fiction) Arnold Schwarzenegger. ‘R’ Å
(SUN) 36 31 36 To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
(SYFY) 31 59 31 26 29 ››‡“The Hitman’s Bodyguard” (2017, Action) Ryan Reynolds. ‘R’ Å (DVS)
››“2 Fast 2 Furious” (2003, Action) Paul Walker, Tyrese. ‘PG-13’ Å (DVS)
Vagrant Queen “Nobody’s Queen” ‘14’
Futurama ‘PG’
Futurama ‘PG’
(TBS) 49 23 49 16 19 Fam. Guy Fam. Guy ››“Suicide Squad” (2016) Will Smith. ‘PG-13’ ››‡“Justice League” (2017) Ben Affleck. ‘PG-13’
(TCM) 169 53 169 30 35 ››‡“The Unsuspected” (1947)
Wizard of Oz: 50 Years of Magic
››››“The Wizard of Oz” (1939, Children’s) Judy Garland, Ray Bolger. ‘G’ Å
›‡“The Blue Bird” (1940) Shirley Temple. ‘G’ Å
“Chitty Chitty”
(TDC) 53 34 53 24 26 Building Off the Grid (In Stereo) ‘G’ Å
Gold Rush: Parker’s Trail (N) ‘G’ Å
Gold Rush (N) (In Stereo) ‘14’ Å All on the Line (Series Premiere) (N)
Outback Opal Hunters (N) ‘PG’ Å
(TLC) 50 46 50 29 30 Four Weddings ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé ‘PG’ 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days (N) ‘14’ 90 Day 90 Day Fiancé 90 Day
(TMC) 350 261 350 “Dropa” (2019)
“It’s a Party” (2018) Ego Nwodim. (In Stereo) ‘NR’ Å
››‡“Tyler Perry’s the Family That Preys” (2008) Kathy Bates. ‘PG-13’ Å
›‡“The Heart Specialist” (2006) Wood Harris. ‘R’ Å
“The Brothers”
(TNT) 48 33 48 31 34 Bones Body beside a garbage truck. ‘14’
Bones “The Blonde in the Game” ‘14’
››“Jack Reacher: Never Go Back” (2016) Tom Cruise. ‘PG-13’ Å (DVS)
››‡“Jack Reacher” (2012, Action) Tom Cruise. ‘PG-13’ Å (DVS)
(TOON) 38 58 38 33 Teen Teen Gumball Gumball Home Burgers Burgers Rick & American American Fam. Guy Fam. Guy (TRAV) 9 106 9 44 A Haunting ‘PG’ A Haunting ‘PG’ Ghost Loop “Sleeping in Terror” (N) ‘PG’ Paranormal Ca. Paranormal Ca. (truTV) 25 55 25 98 55 Jokers Jokers Tacoma Tacoma Hot Ones Hot Ones Hot Ones ››‡“The Longest Yard” (2005) Adam Sandler. (TVL) 32 49 32 34 24 Andy G. Andy G. Andy G. Andy G. Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Two Men Two Men King King
(USA) 47 32 47 17 18 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ‘14’
To Be Announced Chicago P.D. “Sisterhood” (In Stereo) ‘14’
Chicago P.D. “Profiles” (In Stereo) ‘14’
(WE) 117 69 117 Law & Order: Criminal Intent ‘14’ Å
Mama June: From Not to Hot ‘14’ Å
Mama June: From Not to Hot ‘14’ Å
Mama June: From Not to Hot (N) ‘14’
Mama June: From Not to Hot ‘14’ Å
Mama June: From Not to Hot ‘14’ Å
(WGN-A) 18 18 18 18 20 Blue Bloods ‘14’ Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man Last Man
BESTTONIGHT’S
8 p.m. on ^ (The Blacklist
As the team investigates a mysterious disappearance in the Alaska Triangle, this Blacklist case takes a decidedly personal turn for Agent Park (Laura Sohn) in a new episode called “Twamie Ullulaq.” Elsewhere, Aram (Amir Arison) turns to Red (James Spader) for help with finding out what really
happened to Elodie’s (guest star Elizabeth Bogush) hus-band. Diego Klattenhoff and Megan Boone also star.
8 p.m. on & *MacGyver
In the new episode “Code & Artemis & Nuclear & N3me-sis,” Mac’s (Lucas Till) friends all surround their teammate during his time of grief, but soon the real world inserts it-self via a fresh crisis. The Los Angeles power grid is taken hostage in a ransomware at-tack that results in a citywide blackout. As the crew springs into action, they’re stunned to discover that the code used in the attack was written by Riley (Tristin Mays) several years ago. Tate Donovan reprises his recurring role.
8:30 p.m. on (SHOW)
Movie: Sword of TrustAn excellent cast of comedy pros helps elevate director and co-writer Lynn Shelton’s amiable, character-driven 2019 comedy, which stars Jillian Bell as Cynthia, who receives a be-quest from her late grandfather
as the film opens. It turns out to be a valuable sword that her ec-centric departed relative always believed was hard evidence that the South actually won the Civ-il War. With her friend Mary (MIchaela Watkins), Cynthia meets with a pawn shop owner (Marc Maron) to find a buyer. Jon Bass and Dan Bakkedahl also star.
9 p.m. on # %Somewhere South
In a mouth-watering new episode called “Dumpling Di-lemma,” host Vivian Howard’s trip to the Mississippi Delta and farther south soon turns up evidence proving that not all dumplings are the same. Regardless of whether these doughy delights are filled with ground meat, chopped veg-gies or nothing at all, they are invaluable when it comes to stretching ingredients, not to mention the imagination.
9 p.m. on & *Magnum P.I.
It’s definitely do-or-die time for this reboot of the fondly re-membered 1980-88 Tom Sell-
eck crime drama as this remake returns to finish out it second season in a time slot recently vacated by another, more suc-cessful reboot: “Hawaii Five-0,” which ran for 10 seasons. In tonight’s midseason premiere, “Say Hello to Your Past,” Mag-num and Higgins (Jay Hernan-dez, Perdita Weeks) launch a frantic search for Kumu (Amy Hill) after she is kidnapped by an injured man accused of kill-ing his wife.
10 p.m. on (MAX)
Strike BackThe penultimate episode of this action drama finds Chetri (Varada Sethu) on the run and Carolyn (Lorraine Burroughs) in hot pursuit of them, forcing Novin, Wyatt and Coltrane (Alin Sumarwata, Daniel MacPherson, Jamie Bamber) to weigh personal loyalty against duty and self-preservation. Since the team is still blacklist-ed and left with few resources, S20 seeks help from some Russian allies to fight Russian foes, while the hunt for Zayef’s (Alec Secareanu) hard drive continues.
Jay Hernandez
Bridge PhilliP Alder
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
MORE PUZZLESn Find the daily crossword puzzle inside the Chronicle’s
classified pages, along with Sudoku, Wordy Gurdy and a word puzzle.
Dear Annie: I need assis-tance with family- related issues. I’m in my
50s, I have several siblings, my mother died several years ago, and I financially support my father. His only income is So-cial Security.
In my immediate family, I am the only one to have had a career where I was financially stable and secure. My broth-e r s / s i s -ters all w o r k e d off and on, most of their l i v e s ; however, they all relied on our par-ents for financial and mate-rial sup-p o r t . They and their children/grandchildren all received this support; I re-ceived none, nor did I request or need any. My parents were givers, to their detriment, as they never acquired any finan-cial stability or possessions for their future. No home, no re-tirement, no investments.
I had always told them that I would help take care of them if something happened to either one of them, if they needed me. A part of me always knew one of them would.
I take care of my father fi-nancially (emotionally, too) by paying his rent, some utilities and car insurance and any needs that arise. I have been doing this for years now. Herein lies my emotional tur-moil: I have siblings that have come to live with my father, out of their own needs. They help a little around the house and provide some assistance but I continue to pay the bills. I feel like I am now providing them with support and they are living off of me as well. My father continues to help chil-dren, grandchildren and great-grandchildren whenever he can or if they ask. I feel I am enabling the same financially reckless behavior that I felt he/they always had lived by.
I never received or asked for anything from my parents during my adult life. Now, after enduring my own life-changing event, the only one not to benefit from their generosity is the one left hold-ing the bag. I’ve rebuilt my life again, with the emotional sup-port of others.
Am I wrong to feel taken ad-vantage of? I feel like I worked my whole life to now pay for others’ lack of doing so. Am I obligated to my promise to my father (my life was different then)? I feel torn emotionally, not just financially. I love my father and my siblings, and I do not know how to stop this cycle without emotionally hurting them or crushing my-self. Is it wrong that I feel re-sentful? I worked and saved, nobody else did; now, because I did, I’m the only one paying. — Emotionally Torn
Dear Emotionally Torn: Re-sentment is not “wrong,” per se, but it is toxic — a thing to purge, rather than cling to. One simple way to lessen some of the resentment you’re feel-ing is to remember your free will in the situation: Your choice to financially support your father (and, by extension, your siblings) is just that — a choice, not an obligation.
Bankrolling the bunch is taking a heavy toll on you in more ways than one. It’s not just OK but necessary to re-visit the arrangement and set some terms. One of those terms might be that your sib-lings contribute toward rent for as long as they’re living there. They are all adults: If your stream of cash dries up, they can figure out how else to fill their pails.
Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com. To find out more about Annie Lane and read fea-tures by other Creators Syndi-cate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
Annie offersadvice
DEAR ANNIE
LOCAL SUPPORTn The Centers: 352-628-
5020.
n NAMI-Citrus hot line: 844-687-6264 (toll free)
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Friday, april 10, 2020 B3ComiCsCitrus County (FL) ChroniCLe
Peanuts
Pickles
Garfield
For Better or For Worse
Sally ForthBeetle Bailey
Dilbert The Grizzwells
The Born Loser Blondie
Doonesbury Flashbacks
Moderately Confused Rubes Dennis the Menace The Family Circus
Betty
Big Nate
Arlo and Janis
Frank & Ernest
Today’s MOVIES
“ V ’ Y R B T D V N U V R I , R I H V ’ Y I C U
S J D G J B U . V N B D J A E S J M J D K H R K ,
P E U V U T V I W U T R U ’ N A T R U X D R B J V N
R Z Z R P C E U . ” — U V Y U J P C A
P r e v i o u s S o l u t i o n : “ E v i l i s t h e r e s u l t o f w h a t h a p p e n s w h e n m a n d o e s n o t h a v e G o d ’ s l o v e p r e s e n t i n h i s h e a r t . ”
— A l b e r t E i n s t e i n
Today’s clue: X e q u a l s G
WJUF-FM 90.1 National PublicWHGN-FM 91.9 ReligiousWXCV-FM 95.3 Adult Mix.WXOF-FM 96.7 Classic HitsWEKJ FM 96.3, 103.9 Religious
WSKY 97.3 FM News TalkWXJB 99.9 FM News TalkWXCZ 103.3 Country
WYKE-FM 104.3 CountryWDUV 105.5 FM HudsonWJQB-FM 106.3 OldiesWFJV-FM 107.5 Classic RockWRZN-AM 720 Adult Mix
Local RADIO
LOCAL THEATER INFORMATION
Regal CinemasAll Regal Cinemas are closed during the coronavirus outbreak.
For more information, visit online at www.fandango.com.Fandango also provides some movie trailers, movie news, photographs
and editorial features.
The Valerie TheatreThe Valerie Theatre is closed during the coronavirus outbreak.
For more information, visit online at www.valerietheatre.org.
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B4 FRIDAY,APRIL 10, 2020 CLASSIFIEDS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE
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Affordable Handyman• FAST • 100% Guar.
• AFFORDABLE•RELIABLE • Free Est.
352-257-9508
CURB APPEALDecorative Landscape Curbing, Epoxy River
Rock, Reseals & Repair352-364-2120
WE DO WEEDING, and plant flowers & shrubsSMALL, THAT’S ALL
352-419-4739
AFFORDABLE LAWN CARE & CLEAN UPS.
Starting at $20. WE DO IT ALL! 352-563-9824
ALL Lawn Care/weeding, mowing,
trimming & yard clean up, (352) 601-1259
H & H Lawn Care PlusRegistered & Insured. Reliable & Prof. (352)796-8517 or 453-7278
CGH SERVICES“We Come To You”
Lawn Mower Repair & MORE! (352) 423-0363
4 ASAP PAINTINGCHRIS SATCHELL
30 yrs. Exp., Excel. Ref. Insured 352-464-1397
CITRUS HANDYMANSERVICES & FENCING
We have our bus. lic., $2 mil. liability Ins., & St Certification. Be Safe! Fair Pricing. Free Est.
352-400-6016
Get your mind out of the gutter! Cleaning
$25-$40 & Handyman Mark: 352-445-4724
Affordable Handyman• FAST • 100% Guar.
• AFFORDABLE•RELIABLE • Free Est.
352-257-9508
M&W INTERIORSBath, kitchen, floors,
walls, ceilings.Lic/Ins 352-537-4144
ANDREW JOEHLHANDYMAN
Gen. Maint/RepairsPressure Cleaning
0256271• 352-465-9201
Affordable Handyman• FAST • 100% Guar.
• AFFORDABLE•RELIABLE • Free Est.
352-257-9508
ROB’S MASONRY & CONCRETE Drive-
ways tear outs, tractor work Lic#1476
726-6554
ALL Tractor & Tree Work Land Cleared, Deliver dirt & rock,
1 time cleanup, Drive-ways (352) 302-6955
A-1 RepairsPress. Wash, Painting
(Int/Ext) 25 yrs, Ref, Lic #39765, 352-513-5746
COUNTY WIDEDRY-WALL 30 Yrs
Exp. Lic. #2875. All your drywall needs!! Ceiling
& Wall Repairs Popcorn Removal 352-302-6838
A PLUSELECTRIC TECH
TV Installs, Alarms,All Sound Systems,Security Cameras
746-3777 EG13000308
DUN-RITE ELECTRICSince 1978 � Free Est.
Lic. EC 13002699** 352-726-2907 **
SaltMarsh ElectricService changes/upgrades/ repairs
Lic./Ins. ER 13012391352-344-3810
CNA will care for the elderly. Avail: Any shift
day & night. Exc. ref. 423-470-5308
JEFF’SCLEANUP / HAULING
Clean outs / Dump runs, Brush Removal.Lic./Ins. 352-584-5374
BIANCHI CONCRETEINC.COM Lic/Ins #2579Reputable for 21 yrs.
352-257-0078
CURB APPEALDecorative Landscape Curbing, Epoxy River
Rock, Reseals & Repair352-364-2120
Danny Works ConcreteAll type of concrete work Resurfacing & PaintingCredit Cards accepted.Lic/Ins 352-302-2606
SMITTYSAPPLIANCE REPAIR
352-564-8179
20% OFF/ Customdrapes/sheers/cornices/
valances/shadesblinds/ verticals/ FreeQuote/ 352-533-4180
I LOVE TO FIX BLINDS!
All styles. Great prices, respond within 24 Hrs.
352-432-2212
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“news as it happens right at your finger tips”
ALL CLASSIFIED ADS ARE
NON-REFUNDABLE
INVERNESSBrand New Hm, 3/2/2, City wtr, No pets, No smoking, $1200/ mo
(352) 270-0202
INVERNESSLarge Home to Share
$500/ mo. Utilitiesincluded. Wifi & Cable. Handicap accessible.
352-419-5835
PUBLISHER’SNOTICE:
All real estateadvertising in this
newspaper is subject to Fair Housing Act
which makes it illegal to advertise “any
preference, limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, religion, sex, handi-
cap, familial status or national origin, or an
intention,to make such prefer-ence, limitation or
discrimination. “ Fa-milial status includes
children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal cus-todians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18.
This newspaper will not knowingly accept
any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law.Our readers are
hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised in this newspa-per are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of
discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777.
The toll-free telephonenumber for the
hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.
Investors Take Notice!
6 Unit Plaza - Fully Rented!
On 486- Lecantonear Wal-Mart
Appointment OnlyOwner Financing
$415K
352-212-1446
Your world first.
Every Day
vautomotive
Classifieds
UTILITY/BOAT TRAILERSmall size. Floral City $100 352-344-1355
WANTEDJUNK & ESTATE
CARSUp to $1,000. & MORE
(352) 342-7037
Mobile Home withfinancing by owner.DW 2br/2ba, in 55+
park. carport, screen lanai, W/D. Must pass credit & background Chk. (941) 201-7838
TIME TO BUYOR SELL
YOUR MOBILEIn A Leased Land
Park?
CALLLORELIELEBRUN
Licensed Realtor & Mobile Home Broker
Century 21Nature Coast,
835 NE Highway 19, Crystal River Fl,
Office 352-795-0021Direct 352-613-3988
BEVERLY HILLS$800
504 S Monroe St.2/1 with Florida Room
1 car garagewasher & dryer included
HOMOSASSA$1,500
21 Mangrove Ct. N3/2/2 Pool home
Includes pool maintenance
$1,8002 Shamrock Ct.3/2/2 Pool home
Includes pool maintenance
INGLIS$1800
362 Hudson St3/2/2 Waterfront Home with fenced in yard. Features a fireplace, screened porch
and shed. NO PETS
RENTAL MANAGEMENT REALTY, INC.
352-795-7368
For More Listings Go To www.CitrusCountyHomeRentals.com
00
0Y
9O
8
Can’t Work From Home?Private 400 SF
Furnished office in Lecanto w/
Electric & Wifiincluded
$700/ month352-212-1446
FANBrand name QuietAir -6ft portable fan, 110 volts, 1 horse motor, $350 352-206-1133
GAS FIREPLACE Pro com/ dark cherry/ gas fireplace. 26x12x38.
Logs included. Works great. Asking $400.00
352-628-7659
KN95 face masks avail $5,Volume Disc. Avail.call/text 352-423-1650
PROPANE STOVECOLEMAN camp-
ing stove 2 burners.only $30
352-464-0316
TOW BARDraw tite/ factory
made in USA/ Fixed Triangular Shape / $65 352-464-0316
BEDSIDE COMMODEBRAND NEWNever used-still has tags.
$40 352-464-0316
ELECTRIC SCOOTERJazzy model 1120. Gray/blue electric
scooter. Joy stick arm rest control. Used but
works great. $400352-628-7659
KN95 face masks avail$5, Volume Disc. Avail.call/text 352-423-1650
MANUALWHEELCHAIRwith footrests.
Used little only $100 352-464-0316
SHOWER CHAIR18” wide, goes in
the tub, w/ back rest.$30 352-464-0316
SHOWER CHAIRLARGE/ Aluminum
and fiberglass. strad-dles the tub,slide in.$35 352 -464-0316
STEEL ROLLATORHeavy Duty,
Excellent Condition,$75 obo
352-201-6754
TOILET SEAT RISERS2 - Regular size and
elongated, very nice. $35 each
352-464-0316
TRANSPORT CHAIR (SMALL WHEELS) very
light with footrests, nearly new only $75
352-464-0316
WALKERFour wheels, withseat and brakes.Great shape. $60
352-464-0316
PIANOBaldwin PianoGood Shape
$200 obo(352) 527-0838
ELECTRIC TREADMILL GOLDS GYM all digital speed time distance
and calories.only $100.00 352-464-0316
EXERCISE MACHINEELLIPTICAL No
electronic readout Get on it and go. $85
352-464-0316
Recumbent EXERCISE BIke distance,& speed.calories only$100.00 / 352-464-0316
DAYBEDTwin size with hidea-
way twin trundle bed, Excellent condition,
newer mattresses $175352-465-7506
Dining Rm Table w/ 6 chairs & matching
Hutch/ Very Beautiful $350 obo/ Grandfather Clock in Great Shape, just Overhauled $575 obo /Other misc. furni-
ture/ 352-527-0838
HEADBOARD White queen size $50 352-613-0529
Bob’s DISCARDEDLawn Mower Service � FREE PICK-UP �
352-637-1225
LAWN MOWER2006 Dixie Chopper
zero turn, Comes with many new blades, belts and spindle,Runs great. $1000
(352) 249-6114
LAWN MOWERCraftsman, 42” riding mower with bagger.
$250 or offer
1st CHOICEPEST CONTROL
Open Air Plant SALEFri 4/10 & Sat 4/11
9a-4p; Sun 4/12 9a-2p Flowering plants, Hanging baskets,
Palms, Bushes, Fruit trees (also Avocado, Mango & Banana), Blueberries, Vegeta-
bles, Annuals, foliage & MORE!
Best Prices & Quality,as always!
5340 W. Glenbrook St.Homosassa, FL. 34446
BED FRAMEMETAL ADJUSTA-
BLE full or queen size $40 352-613-0529
DEHUMIDIFIERWHIRLPOOL
good shape only $40 352-464-0316
GENERALMERCHANDISE
SPECIALS!
6 lines - 10 days(up to 2 items
per ad)
$1 - $200$11.50
$201-$400$16.50
$401-$800$21.50
$801-$1500 $26.50
352-563-5966Classified Dept.
ALL CLASSIFIED ADS ARE
NON-REFUNDABLE
DISHWASHERGE Black in good
condition. $100 352-613-0529
MicrowaveGE/ White/ Above
the Stove/ in Good Cond. $100
352-613-0529
SMITTYSAPPLIANCE REPAIR
352-564-8179
ONLINE ONLYAntique Auction,
Opens April 5By Appt. ONLY
dudleysauction.com352-637-9588
4000 S. FL Ave., Inv.Ab!667 Au2246
15% bp
Air CompressorSpeedaire/ asking
$160 (352) 527-3276
LADDERS20’ extension ladder $30/ electric 2 wheel
disc grinder $15 352-341-1649
Television32” Toshiba, has 2 HDMI ports, remote
control, Exc cond $90 352-613-0529
TELEVISION Sharp15” Flat Screen
withremote. $40
352-613-0529
Your world first
employment
Classifieds
ww.chronicleonline.com
Need a job
or a
qualified
employee?
This area’s
#1
employment
source!
LOOKINGfor a NewCareer?
Register today!
submit yourresume
Newopportunities
at yourfingertips!
Employmentin Citrus County
andsurrounding
areas
http://jobs.chronicleonline
.com/
Let us be yourone stop shop
forEmployment
needs.
Your job will be featured on Top
National Websites such
asINDEED.COM
and many MORE &IN PRINT
Call yourClassified
Representative for details at 352-563-5966
CITRUS COUNTY
CHRONICLEServing Our
County Since 1894
The Oldestbusiness
Supporting our Community
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“news as it happens right at your finger tips”
Today’sNew AdsCGH SERVICES
“We Come To You”
Lawn Mower Repair & MORE! (352) 423-0363
KN95 face masks avail $5,Volume Disc. Avail.call/text 352-423-1650
LAWN MOWER2006 Dixie Chopper
zero turn, Comes with many new blades, belts and spindle,Runs great. $1000
(352) 249-6114
Mobile Home withfinancing by owner.DW 2br/2ba, in 55+
park. carport, screen lanai, W/D. Must pass credit & background Chk. (941) 201-7838
PIANOBaldwin PianoGood Shape
$200 obo(352) 527-0838
CACTUSESCactuses galore! Come get them.
All sizes. 352-453-9909
Child’s canvas TP tentFree for a child only
Parent to pick up(352) 613-5152
Free Oak Firewoodcut to size
(352) 419-6410
FreeSize 13 Hearing aid
batteries(352) 419-5835
FREE... FREE...FREE...Removal of scrap metal a/c, auto’s, appliances
& dump runs. 352-476-6600
Garden hose with reel. You pick up(352) 563-5955
Local boat run SHRIMP$5.99 lb. or 5 lbs. for $25. Rio’s Blue Crab Shack 352-651-8801
Produce$2 a basket REGGIE’S FLAGSBuy 2 flags get a
basket freeBeside Arrow RV
7490 Suncoast HWY
HOUSEKEEPER/ CHILD CARE
WORKER
Homosassa AreaFull -Time
Looking for aHousekeeper able to do a small amount of Child Care as well.
Duties include:Cleaning &
Dropoff/pickupchildren from school.
Must have:Good driving record. Pass full background check. References for housekeeping, child care, and two
character references.Mon- Fri 8am-5pm
Salary/ base is $500 per wk with the
opportunity for more.
Send Resume & Copy of Valid Drivers
License to:
1624 NMeadowcrest Blvd., BOX 1970, Crystal
River, FL 34429
Tell that special person
Happy Birthday with a
classified adunder
Happy Notes.
Only $23.50includes a photo
Call ourClassified Dept.
for details352-563-5966
Today’sNew Ads
1st CHOICEPEST CONTROL
Open Air Plant SALEFri 4/10 & Sat 4/11
9a-4p; Sun 4/12 9a-2p Flowering plants, Hanging baskets,
Palms, Bushes, Fruit trees (also Avocado, Mango & Banana), Blueberries, Vegeta-
bles, Annuals, foliage & MORE!
Best Prices & Quality,as always!
5340 W. Glenbrook St.Homosassa, FL. 34446
BOAT14 ft. AluminumBoat25 HP Honda V-20Excellent Condition!
Homosas 352-651-1312
Dining Rm Table w/ 6 chairs & matching
Hutch/ Very Beautiful $350 obo/ Grandfather Clock in Great Shape, just Overhauled $575 obo /Other misc. furni-
ture/ 352-527-0838
Forrest River2012, Flagstaff V-lite34½ft. 2 slides with sway bar & hitchVG Cond $13,000
(352) 476-2818
KAREN ARCE352-634-5868
Full Time Realtor Since 2003!
Multi Million DollarProducer!
Discover the BESTWhen Buying or
Selling Your Home.
“Let Me Put MyExperience & Energy To Work For You!”
I Service Citrus County and The Surrounding
Counties.
FREE Home Market Analysis
ERA American Realty
Toplaceyouradcall:352-563-5966
Cla
ssifie
ds
Your H
ouse.
Your C
ar.
Your O
ld G
uitar.G
et it SOLD
Fin
d a job jobm
atchfl.com
![Page 17: VIRUS UPDATE Court document gives background on woman ...€¦ · fillet knives. There were three knife wounds to Worley’s neck, and smaller punctures across his body. Medical examiners](https://reader034.vdocuments.us/reader034/viewer/2022050213/5f5f8af755e2224c0b0410f8/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
FRIDAY,APRIL 10, 2020 B5CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CLASSIFIEDS
SAR011149
MICHELE ROSERealtor
“Simply putI’ll work harder”
352-212-5097isellcitruscounty
@yahoo.com
Craven Realty, Inc.
352-726-1515
Stefan StuartREALTOR
Let me help youfind your next home or sell your current
one.
352-212-0211
Century 21J. W. Morton
Real Estate, Inc.
� � � � �
� � � � �
Our office covers all of CITRUS and
PINELLAS Counties!
**FREE**Market Analysis
PLANTATIONREALTY
LISA VANDEBOEBROKER (R)
OWNER352-634-0129
www.plantationrealtylistings.com
LaWanda Watt
THINKING ABOUT
SELLING?Inventory is down
and we needlistings!!
Call me for a FreeMarket Analysis!352-212-1989
Century 21J.W. Morton
Real Estate, Inc.
Pick Jeanne Pickrel for all
your RealEstate needs!
Certified Residential Specialist.
Graduate of RealEstate Institute.352-212-3410
Call for a FREEMarket Analysis.
Century 21JW Morton
Real Estate Inc.
Need a
JOB?
www.chronicleonline.com
Classifieds
Employment source is...
IS A MOVE IN YOUR FUTURE?
For your next move, you deserve the best. Phyllis has sold real estate in 6 states for 25 years. Now exclu-
sivelyin Florida, See how
you can putHER experience to
work for YOUby contacting her
TODAY.
Phyllis E Garrett,Realtor
352-445-1393Coldwell BankerInvestors Realtyof Citrus County
KAREN ARCE352-634-5868
Full Time Realtor Since 2003!
Multi Million DollarProducer!
Discover the BESTWhen Buying or
Selling Your Home.
“Let Me Put MyExperience & Energy To Work For You!”
I Service Citrus County and The Surrounding
Counties.
FREE Home Market Analysis
ERA American Realty
Your world first
employment
Classifieds
ww.chronicleonline.com
Need a job
or a
qualified
employee?
This area’s
#1
employment
source!
BETTY J. POWELLRealtor
“ Your SUCCESSis my GOAL...
Making FRIENDS along the way
is my REWARD! “
BUYING ORSELLING?!
CALL ME:352-422-6417
ERA AmericanRealty & Investments
BOBBI DILEGO352-220-0587
ERA AMERICANREALTY
PLANNING A MOVE?
Put your TRUST in aQUALIFIED Realtor
FREE HomeMarket Analysis
26 yrs in Real EstatePut my
EXPERIENCEto work for you!
FRANCESPEREZGod BlessEveryone!
Your Realtorfor life waiting
to hear from you!
352-586-8885
Over 30 yrs exp.Specializing in
Buying & Selling.
Tropic ShoresRealty
SUGARMILLWOODS
Sellers & BuyersFRUSTRATED?
NEEDING HELP?CALL ME, NOW.
Hello I’m
Wayne CormierKey One
352-422-0751
“Have a great day and God Bless”
.. Nick Kleftis ..
Now is the time to consider listing your home, inventory is down and buyers
are ready.
Call me for a free market analysis.
Cell: 352-270-1032Office: 352-726-6668
email: [email protected]
MEADOWCRESTSPECIALIST
YOURNeighborhood
Realtor* * *
* * **Stay SAFE*
*Stay STRONG**Stay POSITIVE!*
DEBRA CLEARY...Also Serving
Pine Ridge7 Rivers Golf + C.C.
* * *
(352) 601-6664Tropic Shores Realty
Gerard “Jerry” BoveeRealtor
Multi Million Dollar Producer
THINKING ABOUT SELLING?
Let’s talk about aCASH OFFER!
Call or text metoday.
352-270-6038 CellParsley Real Estate
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“news as it happens right at your finger tips”
UNIQUE & HISTORICHomes, Commercial
Waterfront & Land“Small Town
Country LifestyleOUR SPECIALTY
SINCE 1989”
“LET US FIND YOU
A VIEWTO LOVE”
www.crosslandrealty.com(352) 726-6644
Crossland Realty Inc.
Mortgage Loan Originator
Get turned down for a Gov’t Loan Elsewhere? We’re still
financing USDA,FHA & VA.
Call me today!!Dianne Perkins 352-464-0719
NMLS #1410743
Equal Housing Lender
I put the REAL in REAL ESTATE!
JIM THE “REAL”MCCOY
CALL & GETRESULTS!
(352) 232-8971
Les J. Magyar,
REALTOR
“Simply PutIntegrity #1”
352-220-1786Lmagyar01@
gmail.comCraven Realty,
Inc.352-726-1515
MEADOWCRESTSPECIALIST
YOURNeigborhood
Realtor* * *
* * **Stay SAFE*
*Stay STRONG**Stay POSITIVE!*
DEBRA CLEARY...also Serving
Pine Ridge7 Rivers Golf + C.C.
* * *(352) 601-6664
Tropic Shores Realty
Select Mobile Home Sales
Helping Buyers Buy
&Helping Sellers
SellSince 1990
Michael Kessleris here to help!
(352) 650-4295
DEBTHOMPSON
* One call away for your buying and
selling needs.* Realtor that you can refer to your
family and friends.* Service with a smile
seven daysa week.
Parsley Real EstateDeb Thompson352-634-2656
debthompson.com
GARY & KAREN BAXLEY
GRI Realtors
Your ChristianRealtor
connectionto your
next transaction
352-212-4678 Gary352-212-3937 Karen
Tropic ShoresRealty
Your world first
employment
Classifieds
ww.chronicleonline.com
Need a job
or a
qualified
employee?
This area’s
#1
employment
source!
000Y876
CHEVY1933 Chevy Hotrod
350 Automatic, Steel body, A/C- MUST SEE!
$29K 352-342-8170
FORD1930 Model A
5 Window Coupe, 76 K mi./ EXCELLENT Cond. $16,000 352-795-3510
MERCURY1974 Cougar XR7 82K mi., Ex. Cond., 1 owner
$8900
BUICK1965 Electra 225
V8 wildcat, 45k orig mi, cold AC $13,500 OBO352-436-7485 aft 1pm
CHEVROLET1936 5 Window Coupe
350 V8, 10 bolt rear end, all steel body, all
power, cold A/C. $26,500 352-302-6979
CHEVROLET1971 Camaro RS
4 sp. Black. V8 & A/C. $22,000 obo orpossible trade.352-303-8226
TOYOTA2019 Camry SE
18K Mi. 32 MPG.Like new cond.
Factory warranty. Many options. Tech.
pkg. 18” alloys. $18,800 352-726-3730
or 352-422-7599
VOLKSWAGEN1998 Rail Buggyall new-rebuilt
$6500(352) 422-3669
Over 3,000 Homesand Properties
listed atwww.naturecoasthomefront.com
CADILLAC2004 XLR, hard top
conv, 48k mi.,new tires& batt. Call for price
(352) 726-0507
CORVETTE2007 C6 Coupe 26k mi /blade silver/ Show Car Perf. exh, navigation,
Sirrius radio, BU Cam, cold air induction, other goodies/ 30K or OBO
352-422-8068
FORD2013 Fiesta, 4D, 5sp.
75k mil./ Very economi-cal/ Sale or Trade for
sm RV
MERCEDES2006 4 Door Sedan
169K Mi. Silver, Never smoked in, exc. cond. 1 owner. $6000 OBO.
706-217-9507
MERCURY1999 Marquis, 137K ,
Runs Good, Everything works well! $2900
859-444-2078
SELLYOUR VEHICLE
IN THE
Classifieds
ONLY
$19.95for 7 days
$29.95for 14 days
$49.95for 30 days
$69.95Run ‘til it sells!!
* Call yourClassified
Representativefor details.
352-563-5966
TOYOTA2007 Sienna Limited All options, Tow Bar, Very Good Condition!$7500 320-212-2771
WINNEBAGO2017 Travel Trailer
Used 4 weekend trips in FL only. New roof,
new AC. Call forpictures. $20,000
518-929-4789
OVERBUILTMotorcycle Lift for
RV. Used on Motorhome for
Goldwing 12 volt winch. $1200 207-232-9833
TRAILER2018 Slingshot trailer
multiple motorcycles or compact car, $5,000
obo, 352-419-5053 or850-624-1308
WHEEL COVERSFour - 16”, Chrome.
$60352-465-7506
� Brand �new offer
~$69.95~
Run ‘til it sells
Applies to all vehicles, boats, RV’s, campers & motorcycles.
Call yourClassified
Representativefor details.
352-563-5966
WANTEDJUNK & ESTATE
CARSUp to $1,000 & MORE
(352) 342-7037
CHEVROLET2010 CAMARO SS
Only 34K miles, Black, Auto trans., Original adult owner. Garage
kept. LIKE NEW! $19,500 352-419-7897
� Brand �new offer
~$69.95~
Run ‘til it sells
Applies to all vehicles, boats, RV’s, campers & motorcycles.
Call yourClassified
Representativefor details.
352-563-5966
DAMON2011 Tuscany - 43 footBath & a half, King size bed. 44K mi. Exc cond
MUST SEE !!352-601-0310
FIFTH WHEEL2017 Heartland PioneerPI 276 -32ft./ 2 slides, Auto Leveling, Rear
Bunks, $24,500352-634-2247
Forrest River2012, Flagstaff V-lite34½ft. 2 slides with sway bar & hitchVG Cond $13,000
(352) 476-2818
GRAND DESIGN2018 Imagine 2500 RLSit/sleep 6. Queen size
suite. Sway bars & hitch, incl. 5 yr mainte-nance & tire warranty $20,000 352-212-2262
HEARTLAND2008 Big Country 5th Wheel, 32’, 2 Slides/
Newer tires/ Loveseat/T.V. 810-705-2539
Heritage GlenNEW 2018 #26BHKHLBunkhouse $18,995
with Warranty
REDUCED!!5th WHEEL HITCH
Reese 16K w/ square tube slider, ideal for
short bed truck $390, obo 352-382-3298
ALUMACRAFTMagnum 175 Dbl. HullBottom. Merc. 75 4
Stroke Tiller, Minnkota 80 LB. Thrust. Garage
Kept $9000 OBO 708-207-1116 or
352-249-7365
BOAT14 ft. AluminumBoat25 HP Honda V-20Excellent Condition!
Homosas 352-651-1312
CLEARWATERSKIFF 16 Foot. Centerconsole, electric start.
25HP Yamaha 2 stroke, tilt and trim.
24 volt trolling motor, Bimini top. Perfect condition! $7900
352-220-4752
DECK BOAT2000 Bayliner 21ft.
Merc. 220 HP 2000 hrs. $1000 317-902-2279
( Crystal River )
DECK BOATw/Aluminum
Tandem Trailer.2014 NauticStar 21’
150HP, 4 stroke Yamaha, less than
100 hrs. Garage kept! Health forces sale.
$24,500 OBO 352-400-1161
PONTOON BOAT2012 Viesta 16 ft 40 HP
Merc Big Foot, 4 S, Galvanize Trlr $8300 OBO, 352-476-1113
SAILBOAT1980 41’ Ketch Taiwan Built, center cockpit, Blue Water Cruiser,
Withlacoochee River, Inglis. $31,000 Charlie: 352-447-5171 Lv. Msg.
SCOUT 2007 17.5’Fbgl, CC, Bimini, Yamaha 4 Stroke,
90HP, Extra’s & Glvd trail’r. 561-633-5731 or
302-539-0865
YAMAHA17 FT, 2004 G3, 60 hp Yamaha, 4 stroke, Troll-ing, Hummingbird Fish
Finder & Bimini352-726-0415
FORD2002 F450 Lariat
141k mi, 7.3 diesel, Jake brake, 5th wheel body. Western hauler
$23,500 502-345-0285
2014 StarCraftAutumn Ridge Series 27ft. Very Clean, Like New! Asking $12,000
352-419-7071
Mike Czerwinski
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BOAT TRAILERNew EZ loader boat trailer. Boats up to
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DUNNELLONNorth Williams St
3000 SF MOL;Commercial building
on .042 acreFor sale or lease.
Call for detailsContact: Al Isnetto,Palmwood Realty.352-597-2500 x202
SASSER OAKS2/2 Split plan on 1/2 acre. No thru traffic.Secluded subdivision
Central location. $159,900 352-228-7400
Pritchard Island,Inverness waterfront
2B/2B condo (sgl level). New tile floors thru-out. Living/dining
combo w/vaulted ceiling & skylight.Spacious kitchen. In-condo laundry.
Master BR w/walk-in closet & new in-suite walk-in tiled shower.
Bath #2 w/walk-in tiled shower. Screened
lanai w/enclosed stor-age area. Boat dock on Lake Henderson.
Appliances included. $139,900
810-691-2741
KINGS BAY2 story home. 3,200 SF, 106 ft. sea wall &2 slips. Close to town
and gulf. Near Crackers.$349,900
352-563-9857
Small Home for BELLA & I
2BR/2BA w/ Garage & Lania on one side. I’d take a fixer upper. By the way, Bella is
my kitten &Love of my Life!
Priced under $99K.Don Sr.:
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![Page 18: VIRUS UPDATE Court document gives background on woman ...€¦ · fillet knives. There were three knife wounds to Worley’s neck, and smaller punctures across his body. Medical examiners](https://reader034.vdocuments.us/reader034/viewer/2022050213/5f5f8af755e2224c0b0410f8/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
B6 FRIDAY,APRIL 10, 2020 CLASSIFIEDS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE
Solution to Thursday’s puzzle
Complete the
grid so each row,
column and
3-by-3 box
(in bold borders)
contains every
digit, 1 to 9.
For strategies
on how to solve
Sudoku, visit
sudoku.org.uk
© 2020 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.
Level 1 2 3 4
4/10/20
6112-0410 FCRNPinkston Investments LLC 2020 CA 000078 A Notice of Action
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITIN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION
Case No. 2020 CA 000078 A
HSBC Bank USA, National Association, as Trustee for Fremont Home Loan Trust 2006-A, Mortgage-Backed Certificates, Series 2006-A
Plaintiff,vs.Pinkston Investments LLC; Mary Williams a/k/a Mary Dew a/k/a Mary Katherine Dew
Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION - CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
TO: MARY WILLIAMS A/K/A MARY DEW A/K/A MARY KATHERINE DEWLast Known Address: 53 Regina Boulevard Beverly Hills, Fl. 34465
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose a mortgage on the follow-ing property in Citrus County, Florida:
LOT 22, BLOCK 80, BEVERLY HILLS UNIT NUMBER FIVE, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 9, PAGES 2,3,4 AND 5, INCLUSIVE, OF THE PUB-LIC RECORDS OF CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA.
has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written de-fenses, if any, to it on Julie Anthousis, Esquire, Brock & Scott, PLLC., the Plaintiff’s attor-ney, whose address is 2001 NW 64th St, Suite 130 Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33309, within thirty (30) days of the first date of publication and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on the Plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter; oth-erwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the com-plaint or petition.
DATED on March 27, 2020.Angela Vick
As Clerk of the Court{{ COURT SEAL }}
By Amy HolmesAs Deputy Clerk
Published April 3 & 10, 2020 19-F02634
6115-0410 FCRN
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: ADVANCED TOWING gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 04/22/2020, 08:00 am at 4875 S Florida Ave. Inverness, FL 34450, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. ADVANCED TOWING reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids.
1FALP42TXSF103889 1995 FORD
Published April 10, 2020
6116-0410 FCRN
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: ADVANCED TOWING gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles on 04/25/2020, 08:00 am at 4875 S Florida Ave. Inverness, FL 34450, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. ADVANCED TOWING reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids.
3N1CB51DX1L493828 2001 NISSAN
Published April 10, 2020
6118-0410 FCRNPUBLIC NOTICE
The Citrus County School Board will hold an Administrative Hearing; 4:30 p.m., a Reg-ular Meeting and Public Hearing; 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, April 14, 2020 in the Board Room of the District Services Center located at 1007 West Main Street, Inverness, Flor-ida.
The purpose of the Administrative Hearing is to act upon proposed student expulsion(s). The Regular Meeting is to discuss and act upon other business that needs to come before the Board. The Public Hearing is to approve the Request to adopt the Attendance Boundaries of the 2020-2021 School Year; Approve the new Policy 2.29 Citrus County Police Department; and Approve the new Policy 3.403 Safe and Secure Schools - School Guardian.
If any person decides to appeal a decision made by the Board, with respect to any matter considered at this meeting, he may need a record of the proceedings and may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which rec-ord should include testimony and evidence upon which his appeal is to be based.
Sandra HimmelSuperintendent
Citrus County School Board
Published one time in the Citrus County Chronicle on Friday, April 10, 2020
6117-0410PUBLIC NOTICEFictitious Name
Notice under Fictitious Name Law. pursuant to Section 865.09, Florida Statutes.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the fictitious name of:
Chassahowitzka River Campgroundlocated at 9820 W Yulee Dr, Homosassa, FL 34448 in the County of Citrus, intends to register the said name with the Division of Corporations of the Florida Department of State, Tallahassee, FL.
Dated at Homosassa, FL, this 7th day of April, 2020./s/ Elaine B. MooreAdministratorPublished April 10, 2020
00
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YAMAHA2009 V Star 1100cc
Silverado. Black.7,973 mi. New tires,
Exc. Cond. Blue book $4,360 - asking $3,350
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Harley-Davidson2003 100th Aniv. EditionV Rod, Black & Silver,
Vance & Hines, 13,000mi, $4,950 obo
516-819-9196
Harley-Davidson 2008 Sportster Anniv.
Edition/ New tires, brakes, tune-up & oil change. $4500 OBO
352-341-0062
Harley-Davidson2019 Street Glide
Special, 2 Windshields,Hwy Pegs, 4” Rinehart,2300 mi. $22,900 OBO
508-360-6112
HONDA1989 Goldwing SE
1500 CC, Blue/green.Only 11,401 mi.,
bought brand new. Perfect cond. Hardly
driven. $8000 Firm.Tony: 352-527-8950
No answer leave msg.
HONDA1999, Shadow 750,
Only 8,400 miles, Excel-lent Condition! $1900
obo 920-507-1971
HONDA2001Goldwing GL1800
28,500 miles. Manyextras. Excellent cond.Ultimate touring bike. Black/chrome. $7950
352-270-8089
HONDA2009 Shadow 750 Exc. con. 1 owner, garage kept, Very low mi 3514$3600 561-777-6014
PLYMOUTH1934 Sedan, Chevy V8
Auto, 9” Ford Rear, Nice street rod.
$17,500 OBO603-660-0491
TRIUMPH1973 TR6, 4 spd, 6 cyl, 2 Tops, Red w/ BlackInterior $15,000 Firm
352-503-6859
FORD1992 Ranger pick-upfiberglass cap, sun-
roof, HAC, pwr wind, new tires, standard 4 speed, good cond.
needs nothing $2000
GOLF CARTElectric ParCar, used only 170hrs/ chrome
wheels/ plastic coverall/ Built-in charger.
TERRIFIC! $4,625 obo 352-527-0838
Can-Am Spyder2016, White, 4,705 mi,
Garage-KeptExcellent Condition!
$17,500 352-794-0352
Harley-Davidson‘08 FLHX Street Glide, Very Clean, Low Miles,
$8900 OBO352-277-9175