Page 15 - Florida Sentinel 2-6-18
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  Sports
Steph And Ayesha Curry Expecting 3rd Child
Stephen and Ayesha Curry and their daughters, will have a new baby in the house in a few months.
Steph Curry's wife, Ayesha has announced she's pregnant again!
Ayesha broke the news on Instagram saying, "Heyyyy how did this happen?! Curry party of 5. Feeling very blessed... and very sick. Yippie! #curryfor3."
New baby Curry is the cou- ple's 3rd child. The couple are parents to 2 daughters, 5-year- old Riley Elizabeth and 2- year-old Ryan Carson.
Steph and Ayesha were married in 2011. The couple met at a church camp when they were teenagers and the rest is history.
Colts' Edwin Jackson Killed After Being Struck By Suspected Drunken Driver
EDWIN JACKSON
Colts linebacker Edwin Jackson was killed early Sun- day morning after being hit by a suspected drunken driver along the side of Interstate 70 in Indianapolis, according to the Indiana State Police De- partment.
Jackson and another per- son, Jeffery Monroe of Avon, were stopped along the side of I-70 when Monroe, who was believed to be a ride-sharing operator driving Jackson, got out of the car to help Jackson, who was sick. The driver of a Ford F-150 drove onto the emergency shoulder and hit the rear of the car, striking both Jackson and Monroe, with one of the bodies landing in the center lane of I-70.
State trooper Ty Mays, who was in the area, reported to the scene after seeing the accident on the side of the road. In the process of slowing down, he hit the body of the victim who was in the center lane.
Ray Lewis, Randy Moss, Terrell
   BEAUTY UNLIMITED
TEYANA
Standing pretty as this week’s Beauty Unlimited feature is Teyana. Teyana hopes that her hard work and dedication will pay off and get her to the level she’s strived for her entire life. She also believes by staying focused and not accepting no for an answer, she will continue to progress toward her goal of complete success. Con- gratulations to Teyana as this week’s Spotlight feature.
  Seahawks' Clark Loses
It will be one of the youngest groups in the history of the Pro Football Hall of Fame as Ray Lewis, Randy Moss and Brian Urlacher were all selected Saturday for enshrinement in the class of 2018.
All three players were in their first year of eligibility and join Terrell Owens and Brian Dawkins as the mod- ern-era selections to be en- shrined. Those five players join longtime personnel executive Bobby Beathard (contribu- tor) and seniors committee nominees Jerry Kramer and Robert Brazile for enshrine- ment.
The Hall of Fame's board of selectors met Saturday, the day before Super Bowl LII, to select the class. The 15 modern-era finalists were trimmed to 10 and then to five. Those five fi- nalists were then voted on with a yes or no for enshrinement. The contributor and two sen- iors nominees were voted on separately with a yes or no.
The Hall of Fame's en- shrinement ceremony will be Aug. 4 in Canton, Ohio.
It was a day for the 1990s and 2000s NFL as Owens was the modern-era selection who had waited the longest, and he was in just his third year of el- igibility. Dawkins was in his second year of eligibility.
Lewis was the most deco- rated of the group as a 13-time Pro Bowl selection, a two-time Defensive Player of the Year and a Super Bowl MVP in his
RAY LEWIS, RANDY MOSS AND TERRELL OWENS
career as a Baltimore Ravens linebacker.
"I've been going a long time. And now I can finally rest," Lewis said. "I want to go fishing with a cigar now and just sit back. I don't want to work out every day now.
"Growing up as a child, I know what [a Hall of Fame middle linebacker] looked like -- Mike Singletary, Dick Butkus. Who dreams of being in that category, sitting with those guys?"
Lewis started 227 games in his career and was credited with eight 100-tackle seasons.
Moss, who played for five teams in his career, is second all time in touchdown recep- tions with 156 and had eight 1,200-yard seasons in his ca- reer. He played seven full sea- sons and part of another in Minnesota, site of Sunday's Super Bowl.
"The door knocked and I started getting excited," Moss said of Hall of Fame president David Baker alerting him he has been elected. "All the emo- tions caught the best of me be- cause it's been a long journey, and it ends in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Tears of joy."
Owens, Brian Dawkins, Brian
Urlacher Among 2018 HOF Class
     Father, Three Other Family
  Members In Fire
Seattle Seahawks defensive end Frank Clark said his fa- ther and three other family members were killed in a fire in Cleveland last week.
Clark tweeted the news Sunday and referred to it as an arson.
Clark also retweeted a Jan. 30 tweet from the Cleve- land Fire Department noting that the bodies of four victims from a fire on the city's east side have been located and re- covered.
"The entire Seahawks fam- ily is mourning with Frank Clark and his loved ones after their tragic loss," the team said Sunday in a statement. "Our thoughts and prayers will be pouring out to Frank and his family during their time of grieving."
Cleveland.com reported that the fire began at 1 a.m. on Tuesday, and investigators are
FRANK CLARK
trying to determine the cause of the fire. The report did not specify whether it was arson.
Family members identified the victims to Cleveland.com as Alfonso Lathan, Jr., 46; his 3-year-old son, Alfonso Lathan, III; his 8-year-old granddaughter, Nyiah Lathan; and his 44-year-old nephew, who was not named. Alfonso Lathan's wife, Gi- anna Lathan, jumped out of a second-story window to es- cape the fire.
 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2018 FLORIDA SENTINEL BULLETIN PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY PAGE 15
























































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