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Port Orange City Councilman Don Burnette thrilled with alma mater UCF's Fiesta Bowl victory

University of Central Florida Knights 52, Baylor Bears 42

Port Orange City Councilman Don Burnetteat the Fiesta Bowl / Headline Surfer®UCF Knights win Fiesta Bowl / Headline Surfer®Photos for Headline Surfer® / Don Burnette, shown at left, is all smiles at the University of Phoenix, who along with his wife and several friends, flew out to Arizona to watch the UCF Knights win big in their first BCS Bowl, 52-42 over the Baylor Bears in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.

PORT ORANGE -- What a way for Port Orange City Councilman Don Burnette to kick off the new year.

Burnette was still celebrating his UCF Knights' big win over the Baylor Bears in the New Year's Day Fiesta Bowl hours after the game.

Daytona's New Year's Eve on Main Street: It is what it is

New Year's eve on Main Street in Daytona Beach, FL / Headline Surfer®Alchol on the street big feature of New Year's Eve Party in Daytona / Headline Surfer®Photos for Headline Surfer® by Greg Trujillo / The party wasn't as rockin' on New Year's Eve as it was a year ago with a less pronounced crowd, though alcohol sales in the middle of Main Street as shown in the nearer photo was the main attraction of promoter Al Smith's show, supplemented by taxpayer funding from the city of Daytona Beach, the Halifax Area advertising Authority and Volusia County government. 

DAYTONA BEACH -- Promoter Al Smith was less than pleased with the Headline Surfer® preview of his New Year's Eve party on Main Street based on the 24/7 internet newspaper's coverage of last year's event and the raw tone depicted in a series of videos of the decadence and drinking.

89. Daytona State College foreign-languages chair honored

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Top 100 Stories of 2013 Daytona Beach-Orlando Metro Area / Headline Surfer®

Daytona State College foreign language instructor Ray Cornelius honored / Headline Surfer®Photo for Headline Surfer® / Ray Cornelius of Daytona State College has been recognized for his foreign language skills.

DAYTONA BEACH -- Bienvenido a Daytona. That's Spanish for "Welcome to Daytona."

In German, you'd say," Willkommen a Daytona." In French, you would say, "Bienvenue à Daytona."

And in Portuguese, you'd say, Bem-vindo a Daytona.

Any confusion? Just ask Ray Cornelius, literally the dean of foreign languages at Daytona State College.

 

88. Sheriff: Nearly 5 dozen guns turned in during one-day amnesty at DeLand fairgrounds

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Top 100 Stories of 2013 Daytona Beach-Orlando Metro Area / Headline Surfer®

Kicks 4 Guns Sheriff's ptogram in DeLand / Headline SurferSheriff Ben Johnson / Headline SurferHeadline Surfer  photo / Nearly five dozen handguns have been taken off the streets of Volusia County in the 2013 Kicks 4 Guns program and that's exciting news to Sheriff Ben Johnson.

DELAND -- One of the handguns that had been reported stolen to a local police department in 2011, turned up in an annual turn-in-your-gun program with no questions asked.

And that was all Volusia County Sheriff Ben Johnson had to hear to make his day on Aug. 22, when 58 guns were voluntarily turned in to the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office in the annual Kicks 4 Guns crime-fighting program, which encourages citizens to turn in unwanted guns to law enforcement for safe and proper disposal with no questions asked.

87. Harvick wins Sprint Unlimited under lights at Daytona

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Top 100 Stories of 2013 Daytona Beach-Orlando Metro Area / Headline Surfer®

Kevin Harvick in victory lane at Daytona / Getty Images / Headline SurferPhotos by Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images for NASCAR / Headline Surfer® /

DAYTONA BEACH -- Kevin Harvick made his No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet as wide as he could in the final laps, holding off repeated challenges for the lead on his way to victory in the Saturday night, Feb. 16, Sprint Unlimited under the lights at Daytona International Speedway.

86. WROD-Radio's Tracy Dillon shines morning spotlight on food drive

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Top 100 Stories of 2013 Daytona Beach-Orlando Metro Area / Headline Surfer®

WROD on-air personality Tracy Dillon / Headline Surfer®Photo for Headline Surfer® / On-air personality Tracy Dillion brings sunshine to WROD, Daytona's oldest radio station,  which celebrated 66 years of on-the-air play in November.

DAYTONA BEACH -- The Friday morniong afet Thanksgiving WROD morning cruise host Tracy Dillon broadcasted live at Bellair Lanes, 2575 N. Atlantic Avenue, to strike out hunger. Listeners were asked to bring a canned good or non-perishable item to be donated to Second Harvest Food Bank.

Dillon also was celebrating the 66th anniversary of WROD-FM 104.7 dubbed "Hot Rod Radio," throughout the month of November. It is the oldest surviving Daytona Beach radio station, first launched in 1947, and featuring classics like "The Bob Hope Show" and  "The Firestone Hour."

The Dillon food drive spotlight comes in at No. 86 on the Headline Surfer® countdown of the Top 100 Stories of 201`3.

85. St. Augustine man gets 35 years in prison for scaring elderly woman & her dog with air pistol in robbery attempt

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Top 100 Stories of 2013 Daytona Beach-Orlando Metro Area / Headline Surfer®

Dustin Vann of St. Augustine was sentenced in October to 35 years in prison / Headline Surfer®Photo for Headline Surfer® / Dustin Vann, 27, could be locked up until 2047 for a slew of felonies that he was adjudicated guilty of committing including an armed robbery of an elderly woman after having been released from prison less than four months earlier.

ST. AUGUSTINE -- A 27-year-old St. Augustine man was sentenced in October to a total of 35 years in prison for his role in an attempted robbery and related charges involving an elderly woman hat occurred in St. Augustine in 2012.

Assistant State Attorney Chris Ferebee prosecuted Dustin Vann and said that the defendant tried to rob the victim woman when he pulled out an air pistol and threatened to kill her and her dog.

Taxes and regulation in the US in 2014

Create: Sat, 01/04/2014 - 14:29
Author: Ed Connor

ORMOND BEACH -- Chief Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once famously uttered what became a Keynesian mantra. "Taxes are the price we pay for Civilization" Few bothered to point out at the time that Justice Holmes worked in academia before he moved into taxpayer funded employment off which he lived comfortably for the rest of his very long life. He died in 1935 at age 94.