NATIONAL
January 28, 2008 | By Louise Roug, Times Staff Writer
At Adams Pawn, a middle-aged man in a tracksuit haggles with the shop's proprietor over a Winchester rifle. Shop owner Charles Harding shakes so violently from Parkinson's disease that he clutches the counter for support. But he gives the customer his best sales pitch. A $250 transaction like this could be the difference between a good day and a bad.
NATIONAL
January 29, 2008 | By Mark Z. Barabak, Times Staff Writer
A smiling Hillary Rodham Clinton waved from the front page of the Miami Herald on Monday after an evening of fundraising in Florida. The image of Barack Obama flickered on TV screens across the state, from the Panhandle to the high-rises lining South Florida's Biscayne Bay. But don't call it campaigning.
NATIONAL
January 29, 2008 | By Louise Roug, Times Staff Writer
While his Republican rivals fought hard in the week before today's primary, Mike Huckabee was forced to largely forgo this expensive battlefield. After his loss to Sen. John McCain in the South Carolina GOP primary Jan. 19, Huckabee arrived in Florida short of cash and having little luck finding more. He decided to conserve money by traveling less and advertising only on cable TV, limiting his visibility in the state.
NATIONAL
January 29, 2008 | By Seema Mehta, Times Staff Writer
As Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney has crisscrossed Florida trying to sway voters, he has promoted his business skills as vital to fixing the nation's economy. "We need to have a president who's actually had a job in the private sector to make sure the economy stays strong," he told hundreds of cheering supporters Monday in an airy airport hangar in this Panhandle beach community. "I'm that guy."
NATIONAL
January 29, 2008 | By Michael Finnegan, Times Staff Writer
It was a rare flash of the pugnacious Rudolph W. Giuliani whom New Yorkers love or loathe: In Miami's Little Havana, he recalled barring Cuban President Fidel Castro from a 50th-anniversary banquet for the United Nations. Why? "To make clear what I think of him -- what people should think of him," the former New York mayor told a roomful of elderly Cuban immigrants.
NATIONAL
February 13, 2008 | From the Associated Press
A prominent civil rights leader has told the Democratic National Committee that refusing to seat delegates from Florida and Michigan would disenfranchise both states' minority communities. In a Feb. 8 letter to DNC Chairman Howard Dean, NAACP Chairman Julian Bond expressed "great concern at the prospect that millions of voters in Michigan and Florida could ultimately have their votes completely discounted."
BUSINESS
February 16, 2008 | From the Associated Press
The importer of a Valentine's Day lollipop said it was voluntarily recalling the treats after metal fragments were found in at least two lollipops sold at central Florida stores. Sherwood Brands of Maryland, which imports the candy from China, said it was recalling all of its Pokemon Valentine Cards and Pops, which have been pulled from the shelves of thousands of stores across the country. About 20 lollipops were seized at Kathleen Elementary School in Lakeland.
NATIONAL
February 17, 2008 | By Carol J. Williams, Times Staff Writer
It has taken sweat, serendipity and five hours for Matthew Schwartz to find a single paw print of a Florida panther stamped in the swamp muck. He has bushwhacked through knee-high saw grass and saffron-colored love vine in search of the predator's milieu. But winds across the fields must be easterly, or planes headed to the Fort Lauderdale airport will chase the big cats into the remotest corners of the preserve. "There it is!"
NATIONAL
February 27, 2008 | By Carol J. Williams, Times Staff Writer
A transmission glitch at a West Miami power substation knocked out electricity Tuesday to as many as 3 million people across Florida, halting public transportation, snarling traffic and cutting air conditioning in homes from Key West to Daytona. Foul play was not involved, making the blackout mostly just "a massive inconvenience," Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Alvarez said.
NATIONAL
March 21, 2008 | By Mike Clary, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
A vacationer from Michigan out for a family boat ride in the Florida Keys died Thursday when a 75-pound spotted eagle ray flew out of the water and struck her in the head. Judy Kay Zagorski, 55, is believed to have been killed by blunt force trauma, according to Jorge Pino, a spokesman for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. "Out of nowhere, a spotted eagle ray pops up in front of the boat and collides with the victim," who was standing at the bow, said Pino.