The Boca Raton Tribune Yo u r C l o s e s t N e i g h b o r
Number 283 • Year VI ENTERTAINMENT see page 8
“Sully” Accomplishes a “Miracle on the Hudson”
BOCA SOCIETY see page 8
Boca Black Hat Luncheon in Charolette’s Travels
SPORTS
see page 14
A Game of Comebacks
East /West Boca Raton, Highland Beach, Delray Beach, Deerfield Beach, FL
September 16- September 22 , 2016
Wayne Barton Study Center Co-Hosts Grocery Giveaway Thousands of residents are expected to attend a food distribution drive Saturday morning where several thousand pounds of fresh produce, chicken and other food items will be given away. The free giveaway, dubbed Food 4 Friends, will be at Village Academy, 400 SW 12th Ave., Delray Beach, beginning at 10 a.m. The parking lot will open at 9 a.m. Visitors are asked to enter in the north and south gates of the school. The food will be distributed on a first-come, firstserve basis and no one will be turned away. “There is so much need in this community,” said Leon Ruchlamer, board member of KOP Mentoring Network, which is organizing the event.
Story on Page 5
ADAM BOYAR reading THE BOCA RATON TRIBUNE
Celebrities Join Raymond James/Chris Evert Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic See Page 3 for full story
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BOCA RATON REIGIONAL HOSPITAL FIRST IN SOUTH FLORIDA TO OFFER NEW INNOVATION IN ENDOSCOPIC BIOPSIES Boca Raton Regional Hospital’s Stephen Steinberg, MD, is now performing biopsies on at-risk patients during standard endoscopy procedures to view internal tissues at the microscopic level instantaneously. Boca Regional was the first in South Florida and is the only hospital in Palm Beach County to offer Cellvizio ® to patients, which revolutionizes the diagnosis and treatment of certain cancers. Cellvizio, the smallest, flexible microscope in the world, is an optical biopsy technology that enables tissue within the human body to be viewed directly at the cellular level. It
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2 -Edition 283 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
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Local Olympic Swimmer, Anthony John (A.J.) Barbar who swam for his native Lebanon in the Rio 2016 Olympics, was the special guest during story time at the Boca Raton Library last week. The Boca Raton municipal election that will be held on March 7th 2017 already has a list of candidates. Earlier this year Mayor Susan Haynie filed to run for re-election. Council Member Scott Singer was reportedly considering a run for Mayor. However, early last week he filed to run for re-election to Seat A. On September 9, Boca Raton attorney, Andy Thomson, stopped by City Hall to file his preliminary paperwork to run for Seat B. He joins Andrea Levine O’Rourke and Emily Gentile, each of whom filed to run for Seat B. Andre O’Rourke will have her campaign kickoff party at The Wick Theatre on September 30th at 5:30pm Florida Atlantic University officially announced a $5 million gift from Phil and Susan Smith to establish The Phil Smith Center for Free Enterprise at FAU’s College of Business. The main tower at the College will be named Phil Smith Hall in honor of the FAU alumnus. Office Depot’s headquarters in Boca Raton has been awarded a gold recertification under the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership for Energy and Environmental Design. This is the sixth year the company headquarters, at 6600 N. Military Trail, has been LEED-certified. The Boca Raton Municipal Cemetery has been running out of graves to bury the dead. But now, a new solution may extend its capacity for many more years. City Council members this month will consider converting the cemetery’s unused walking paths into 1,172 burial plots. Of the 9,430 graves already at the cemetery, only 85 remain available for purchase. The city sells about 80 plots a year. Under a proposal, 8-foot walkways that extend north to south would be converted into additional plots, generating an estimated $3,762,120 in revenue for Boca. Any money that would be brought in by the sale of the proposed plots would go toward upkeep of the cemetery.
By : P e d ro H e i zer
Robb & Stucky celebrated its groundbreaking in Boca Raton with a ceremony attended by city officials on Tuesday, September 6. Robb & Stucky’s president Steve Lush and Vice President, CFO Eric Chien were also be in attendance, as well as the Robb & Stucky buying team and marketing department. Architect Matthew Kragh, representatives from Fisher Contracting Corp., and members of the Boca Raton Chamber of Commerce also took part in the event. The “season” has officially begun as Kelly Smallridge, president of the Business Development Board of Palm Beach County, welcomed a sellout crowd to the annual gala at the Breakers. It was an evening of renewal as friends got to visit and enjoy the BDB’s great event. Underlying the festivities was Kelly’s report on the continuing success of the BDB in attracting companies and jobs to Palm Beach County (exceeding the goals for last year). Welcome the newest member of the Boca Raton Police Services Department family, Officer Phillip Torsiello! Congratulations to Renata Rosa, Tony Beltran and Valeria Rodriguez on the grand re-opening of their Art of Dance studio. Located, now, at 151 SE 1st Ave in Downtown Boca Raton, the new location is bright a full of fun as Renata and company help their clients feel happy, energized and accomplished.
Robb & Stucky celebrated its groundbreaking in Boca Raton with a ceremony attended by city officials on Tuesday, September 6.
September 16 - September 22 , 2016
Boca Raton
The wait to experience Boca Raton’s new science playground is almost over, park officials say. Visitors to Sugar Sand Park at 300 S. Military Trail will have access to the playground Nov. 19 after about eight months of construction and an anticipated $1.8 million in project fees.
Local Olympic Swimmer, Anthony John (A.J.) Barbar who swam for his native Lebanon in the Rio 2016 Olympics, was the special guest during story time at the Boca Raton Library last week.
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“Surely God is my salvation; I will trust and not be afraid. The Lord, the Lord himself, is my strength and my defense; he has become my salvation.”
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General Information (561) 393-7700 Emergency 9-1-1 Police Department (561) 368-6201 Fire Department (561) 982-4000 City Manager’s Office (561) 393-7703 City Clerk’s Office (561) 393-7740 Utility Services (561) 338-7300 Recycling (561) 416-3367 PBC Animal Control (561) 276-1344 Parks & Recreation (561) 393-7810 Municipal Golf Course (561) 483-5235 Boca Raton Public Library (561) 393-7852 Florida Atlantic University (561) 397-3000 Lynn University (561) 237-7000
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Edition 283 - 3
The Boca Raton Tribune
Community
FAU to Host ‘The Thrill of the Vote: Celebrities Join Raymond James/ Chris Evert Pro-Celebrity Tennis Episodes in Democracy’ Exhibit Classic
Florida Atlantic University presents the exhibition “The Thrill of the Vote: Episodes in Democracy” from Tuesday, Sept. 20 through Wednesday, Nov. 30 in the Theatre Lab Gallery in Parliament Hall, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton campus. The gallery is open from Tuesday through Friday from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. and one hour prior to Theatre Lab productions. An opening reception and lecture, “Debate Tailgate,” will take place on Monday, Sept. 26 at 5:30 p.m. The opening and exhibition are free and open to the public. An election year offers the chance to plumb the depths of FAU Libraries’ collections to tell the unlikely story of participatory democracy in the United States. Hardly a natural state of affairs, the peaceful transition of power at the local, state and federal level is a rich topic for visual analysis. This exhibition will introduce a student-centered research project about how to tell the complex story of voting rights in the United States through works of art and popular culture. The exhibition includes rare books and documents, newspaper illustrations and cartoons, posters, broadsides,
pamphlets and other ephemera. Art history students also will showcase thematic suites of images and texts related to amending the Constitution, campaigning, women’s suffrage, voting rights, and contested elections. Related programing will include film screenings, readings, dramatizations, lectures and roundtables, all to charge the air with the importance of civic participation in the experiment of shared governance. The exhibition was organized by Karen Leader, associate professor in the Department of Visual Arts and Art History, along with art history students and Victoria Thur of the FAU University Libraries Special Collections. The exhibition was designed by Patricia ‘Z’ Koppisch, MFA candidate and senior designer of the University Libraries. Leader also will present the lecture, “Visualizing Democracy: Selections from the Special Collections of FAU” on Friday, Oct. 14 at 4 p.m. in the University Theatre on FAU’s Boca Raton campus. Tickets and more information on this lecture can be found atwww.fauevents.com or by calling 561297-6124.
TV personality/producer Randy Jackson and film/television actor Shawn Hatosy will be making their first appearances in the Chris Evert/Raymond James Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic, scheduled for November 18-20. The 27th annual charity event raises funds to combat drug abuse and child neglect in South Florida. Since retiring from the professional game in 1989 as an 18-time Grand Slam champion, South Florida philanthropist Chris Evert has raised more than $22 million through her charity tennis weekend. Evert annually enlists the help of her celebrity friends to support the fundraiser. Joining Jackson and Hatosy for the 2016 event are a group of actors who are past participants: Alan Thicke, Kevin McKidd, Timothy Olyphant, Jason Biggs and Maeve Quinlan. Singer/songwriter David Cook has also confirmed that he will attend the charity weekend. Jackson is a musician, producer and entrepreneur best known for his 12 years (2002-2014) as an "American Idol" judge and two years as executive producer of MTV's "America's Best Dance Crew" (2008-2010). Hatosy is currently starring as Pope in the TV series "Animal Kingdom" and also had a leading role in a five-year run as Sammy Bryant in the criticallyacclaimed "Southland" (2009-2013) TV series. Thicke first achieved notoriety as Jason Seaver in "Growing Pains," and is currently hosting a second season of the POP network's "Unusually Thicke."
McKidd is in his ninth season as Owen Hunt in "Grey's Anatomy" while former "Justified" star Olyphant recently appeared in “This is Where I Leave You”. Biggs co-starred with wife Jenny Moller in last month's release ofAmateur Night while Quinlan has a starring role in the upcoming November release Liquorice. The 2016 event will continue to feature a Tennis Pro-Am and Classic Cocktail Reception at the Boca Raton Resort & Club (Friday, Nov. 18); ProCelebrity Tennis sessions at the Delray Beach Tennis Center (Saturday & Sunday, Nov. 19 & 20); and the signature Charity Gala(Saturday, Nov. 19), an elegant evening of dinner and dancing that includes live and silent auctions at the Boca Raton Resort & Club. Chris Evert Charities partners with the Ounce of Prevention Fund of Florida, a public-private partnership blending state and private dollars and investing them in innovative, communitybased programs. The programs give Florida children a chance to live free from the ravages of drug abuse and neglect. Chris Evert Charities has also funded 41 scholarships that have assisted single moms in attaining college degrees. Chris Evert/Raymond James Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic premium seats range in price from $40 to $90 for both Saturday and Sunday sessions. Club seats with seat backs are $40 per day or $70 for the weekend and courtside box seats (rows 1-8) are $90 per day or $175 for both sessions. General admission tickets are $20 per session.
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September 16 - September 22 , 2016
4 -Edition 283 The Boca Raton Tribune EDITORIALS & LETTERS East/West Boca Raton, FL
The Boca Raton Tribune Founded January 15, 2010
DOUGLAS HEIZER, Publisher
Editorial C. RON ALLEN PEDRO HEIZER
Our Writers/Reporters and Columnists Charlotte Beasley
SKIP SHEFFIELD
Joshua Carlson
SYNESIO LYRA
Veronica Haggar
Online Edition PEDRO HEIZER Flavia Proenca
Business DOUGLAS HEIZER DINI HEIZER
EDITORIAL By C. Ron Allen
Help Snuff Out the “C-Word” The “C-word” is a topic I have tried for the last three years to avoid writing about. I have lost seven close friends to cancer since July 2013 and have nine others who have been diagnosed. But after two recent phone calls from two close friends, I cannot hold back my thoughts. Simply put, I am sick and tired of what this disease has done to our community. Like crack cocaine and AIDS it has destroyed lives and ruined families. Time is long overdue for researchers to come forward with a cure in America, as I am sure there is one somewhere. I am convinced that there is a correlation between our diet, the environment and cancer. On Sunday, I had dinner with a close friend who was recently diagnosed with prostate cancer. He has an upcoming consultation with his medical professionals to determine how to proceed. “There are so many questions. Right now, I am still in a state of shock,” he told me. What do I say to him? And just a month ago, another dear friend was diagnosed with Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia. Her initial symp-
toms were chest pains, which she thought stemmed from everyday stresses such as work, family life and not getting enough rest. But after the pain persisted a week or so, her husband convinced her to see a doctor. After a battery of tests, she was diagnosed with leukemia. I listened attentively, shook my head and again, was at a loss for words. After speaking with four friends who were diagnosed in the last 90 days, I find myself grappling for a way to appropriately respond. And although many have shared their thoughts and suggestions, of which I am grateful, I found solace in praying. In fact, I recently read that prayer is a more widely acknowledged today as a way to cope with cancer. All four told me their first reactions were of shock upon learning of the news. They all were in a state of perpetual denial. None of them ever thought that they would get cancer. After all, only one had a family history of cancer and they tried to do everything recommended to reduce cancer — they don’t smoke, they eat a well-balanced diet, exercise, etc. One said although he sometimes feels like he was running in a marathon he
will never win, he remains determined to finish. “I refuse to let it beat me,” he told me recently. Sometime last year before an exgirlfriend passed, we had a long conversation about her plight. As a journalist, she wrote extensively about her experience. She however shared some tips – what one should and should not eat, how to deal with the side-effects and how to politely tell others “I have cancer” without triggering an uncomfortable silence - in hopes that I would one day share them with my audience. Among everything she shared, I recalled her saying, regardless of your circumstance, make sure you live life fully, which she tried to do especially after her diagnosis. She tried to live a simple and meaningful life, she enjoyed those little moments that added up and created “real life”. “We never know how many of those sweet moments we have left so I’m all about making them count,” she once told me. Every once in a while I call upon our amazing community to help
out someone in need. We have done raffles for the March of Dimes, others to support the American Cancer Society or to send a student to a Special Olympics. Now I ask for your help in supporting a member of the KOPMN family – Bobby Cannata, chairman of our board of directors. Bobby has been the picture of perfect health for the past 20 years - until his doctor broke the news that morning, four months ago, that he had a rare and very aggressive cancer of his sinus cavity in his head called SNUC cancer. For the past four or so years, Bobby has been giving unselfishly of himself to his community through the KOP Mentoring Network, first as a board member then later as the chairman. He has juggled his schedule to be at my side for meetings when I needed his support, he has also given of his treasure and talent as a meticulous organizer. That is why I am urging you to read his story at http://www.theweberfoundation.com/ and do your best to help snuff out cancer.
POSITIVE LIVING By Dr. Synesio Lyra, Jr.
We Need Far More Than Just Entertainment! The most fulfilled lives belong to persons who maintain balance in all their doings. People need to put first things first. Everybody has duties to fulfill, help to extend to others, emergencies to meet, needs to fill, personal interactions to develop. Entertainment is truly valid, and a necessary ingredient in an individual’s full-orbed style, especially to reduce the impact of the many blows that life daily forces on every human. Entertainment is one of several important, valid components of a life well-lived. Nevertheless, humans can’t operate by entertainment alone. Responsibility must always precede the thrills of what we are entitled to enjoy in life. Prob-
lems become inevitable when a person makes of fun an indispensable god, fully present as the primary engagement in one’s daily activities. Such lack of balance most assuredly will destroy the very thrills being sought! Contemporary western society offers a plethora of entertainment, both licit and illicit, meaningful and superficial – everything that can meet lopsided interests and unbalanced tastes. As someone attentively recognized, society is being bombarded now, more than ever before, with “weapons of mass distraction.” Yet, while having fun has a legitimate place in any person’s experience, acting responsibly must always occupy
the first place. One has to determine and choose what priorities must lead the way; what urgency items must be fulfilled ahead of the enjoyment of legitimate fun, at the time-frames allocated for that purpose! Within the twenty-four hours which every day provides, people have enough time to apportion to manifold activities, of which work and fun feature prominently for every individual. The secret is to keep every function in proper perspective, recognizing what is negotiable and items that are not! In spite of countless possibilities for balanced living, too many persons still complain of being bored all the time.
This may stem from the fact that “we have too much to live with and too little to live for.” What is tested as a thrilling experience, quickly degenerates into a monstrous bore; expensive “toys” lose their earlier appeal; even healthy habits lose their charm and fail to meet people’s expectations after a while. To avoid inevitable, negative disappointments, people need a good dose of common-sense which, if well employed, can eliminate faulty choices and erroneous decisions. One’s distribution of time and planning of varied activities can aid one’s fulfillment of labor and leisure for each day!
Dr. Synesio Lyra, Jr. is a Florida resident who, for many years, was a professor at the post-graduate level. He is a writer, a sought-after conference speaker, a man who lived in five continents of the world, having received his education in four of them. When he resided in southern California, he wrote a weekly column for the daily “Anaheim Bulletin,” which was carried for about six years, until he moved to south Florida.
September 16 - September 22 , 2016
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Edition 283 - 5 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
Boca Police arrest carjacking suspects Detectives from the Boca Raton Police Services Department charged three suspects with carjacking and robbing two women late Thursday evening. The victims said they parked their car on Spanish River Blvd and began walking to the beach when they were approached by three males at around 11:00 PM. The victims said one suspect pulled out a handgun and demanded their purses and keys. The two other suspects took other property from the victims, including purses and sweaters. The three
then fled the area in the victim’s black Hyundai Elantra. Boca Raton Police dispatchers quickly put an alert out to surrounding communities and within an hour, Delray Beach police officers located and stopped the stolen vehicle. Three suspects were identified and a loaded handgun and the victim’s property were recovered. All three suspects were positively identified and charged with Carjacking with a Firearm and Robbery with a Firearm. A fourth person in the car was released.
Masked man claims he has bomb at Boca Raton Bank of America
The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office is searching for a masked man who they said robbed a Bank of America branch over the weekend in unincorporated Boca Raton. The robbery was reported about 11:40 a.m. Saturday at the bank in the 23000 block of State Road 7. Surveillance video shows the man walking into the bank with a bright
blue duffel bag with black handles. Deputies said he told employees that he had a bomb and demanded cash. The robber left with an undisclosed amount of money. No injuries were reported. Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-458-TIPS
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Wayne Barton Study Center Co-Hosts Grocery Giveaway
Thousands of residents are expected to attend a food distribution drive Saturday morning where several thousand pounds of fresh produce, chicken and other food items will be given away. The free giveaway, dubbed Food 4 Friends, will be at Village Academy, 400 SW 12th Ave., Delray Beach, beginning at 10 a.m. The parking lot will open at 9 a.m. Visitors are asked to enter in the north and south gates of the school. The food will be distributed on a first-come, first-serve basis and no one will be turned away. “There is so much need in this community,” said Leon Ruchlamer, board member of KOP Mentoring Network, which is organizing the event. “On any given day, many of our kids and their families in this community do not know where their next meal will come from. So, this is our way of helping them meet those needs.”
Two trucks are expected to bring more than 150,000 pounds of food from area distributors to the event. Volunteers will place the food on tables near the trucks and the residents will then able to “shop”, choosing items that they need. “If you coming, please bring your own bags or cart to carry the food,” said Wayne Barton of the Wayne Barton Study Center, which is supplying the food. Recipients of food will be required to sign up to volunteer for two or four hours with a local nonprofit organization or make a $6 donation. The nonprofits include KOP Mentoring Network, Milagro Center, Achievement Centers for Children and Families and Village Academy. KOP Mentoring Network, formerly Knights of Pythagoras Mentoring Network, is a character building, mentorship and gang prevention program designed to foster leadership, academic success and civic-mindedness in youth ages 7 to 17. Since 1991, the organization has mentored at-risk, high-risk and underserved youths in ways that lead to meaningful change in their lives. Saturday’s event is open to the public and is sponsored by the KOP Mentoring Network in partnership with the Delray Beach Police Department, CRA Media Group and Village Academy. For more information, call 561-665-0151.
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September 16 - September 22 , 2016
6 -Edition 283
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Edition 283 - 7
Obituary of
Helena Chamberlain Helena Chamberlain, age 78, of Boca Raton, FL, died on September 8, 2016. She was born in Hartford, CT on March 5, 1938 to the late Vendla Vogel and the late Fredrick Vogel. She was preceded in death by her husband, the late David R. Chamberlain. Surviving are: daughter, Susan Kirk of Social Circle, GA; son and daughter in law, David R. Chamberlain, Jr. and Tina Chamberlain of Merrimack, NH; and grandchildren, David Richard Chamberlain, III, and Matthew Chamberlain. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, September 17, 2016 at 11: 00 am at Rutledge United Methodist Church with Rev. Randy Byrd officiating. Meadows Funeral Home, Inc. was in charge of arrangements. Please sign the guestbook online at www.meadowsfuneralhomeinc.com.
Boca Raton Regional Hospital First in South Florida to Offer New Innovation in Endoscopic Biopsies Boca Raton Regional Hospital’s Stephen Steinberg, MD, is now performing biopsies on at-risk patients during standard endoscopy procedures to view internal tissues at the microscopic level instantaneously. Boca Regional was the first in South Florida and is the only hospital in Palm Beach County to offer Cellvizio ® to patients, which revolutionizes the diagnosis and treatment of certain cancers. Cellvizio, the smallest, flexible microscope in the world, is an optical biopsy technology that enables tissue within the human body to be viewed directly at the cellular level. It allows for the detection of anomalies that are invisible to the naked eye in various different organs, particularly in the gastrointestinal, urinary and pulmonary systems. To utilize Cellvizio, Dr. Steinberg threads the tiny microscope through a traditional endoscope. The detailed cellular look appears in real time on the screen under the administration of a contrast agent, allowing the physician to recognize typical features of healthy and diseased tissue. “With Cellvizio, we have a tool that provides microscopic images of the lining of the gastrointestinal tract and pulmonary
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tissue,” said Dr. Steinberg, Medical Director of the Pancreas & Biliary Center of South Florida at the Eugene M. & Christine E. Lynn Cancer Institute at Boca Regional. “This enables us to determine whether the tissue is benign or malignant, and helps us to guide treatment decisions in real-time. We now have more visual information about internal tissues than ever before.” Until now, areas that appeared abnormal during endoscopic procedures would be biopsied and sent to a laboratory for analysis. With Cellvizio the process is more precise, increasingly efficient and can accelerate the diagnostic and treatment process. The Cellvizio technology provides the opportunity to avoid complicated interventions, including eliminating a number of additional invasive procedures. It is also possible to direct patients more quickly towards the appropriate treatment. Boca Regional is only one of approximately 100 centers in the United States using Cellvizio. Cellvizio is cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in the gastrointestinal tract and lungs.
September 16 - September 22 , 2016
8 -Edition 283 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
Boca Society Happenings
Entertainment Charlotte Beasley
“Sully” Accomplishes a “Miracle on the Hudson”
Charlotte’s Travels
Photos by Charlotte Beasley
The Black Hat Diva’s enjoyed a family style Italian lunch in Coral Springs. The lunch consisted of bruchetta, pears
with tortellini, two pasta dishes, chicken marsala, eggpant parmigian and chicken piccata, plus gonoli’s and anisette cookies.
Charlotte Beasley and Stephene Hosey
Tom Hanks is a good guy who excels at playing good guys on the big screen. “Sully” is a prime example. Hanks went gray and grew a moustache to play veteran pilot Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger, who calmly landed U.S. Airway flight number 1549 in the Hudson River Jan. 15, 2009 after losing power to both engines after takeoff from LaGuardia Airport in Queens, New York. If you have ever flown into or out of LaGuardia, you know it is a white-knuckle experience. The airport is antiquated and surrounded on three sides by developments and the other side by a bay. I mention this because the main thrust of the story of “Sully” is not on the heroism of the pilot but the secondguessing on the alternatives to his drastic choice, which saved the lives of 155 people. Chesley Sullenberger was a veteran pilot with 42 years experience. Those who were questioning his judgment had never done air time themselves. They relied on computer simulations that indicated Sully could have returned to La Guardia after his engines were disabled by a flock of Canadian geese, or gone to the nearby Teeterboro, New Jersey Airport. Teeterboro was seven
Evelyn Bieber, Dr. Phyllis Perkins and Juli Zeno School of Nursing, Lynn Cancer Institute I had the pleasure and honor of to name a few. After spending five joining Boca Raton Icon, Christine Lynn minutes with this incredible woman, a for dinner a couple of weeks ago at the former nurse who is so caring, you are fabulous Trattoria Romana. Christine has totally mesmerized by her warmth and donated tremendously to the Boca Raton caring ways. What an honor… Community, Lynn University, Lynn
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September 16 - September 22 , 2016
Skip Sheffield
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miles away. LaGuardia was behind the skyscrapers of Manhattan. How a jet airliner, gliding without power could have made either of those destinations is nearly impossible. It is clear that director Clint Eastwood is on the side of Sully, versus the desk jockeys of the NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board). But an action movie needs conflict, and Sully and First Officer Jeff Skiles’ (Aaron Eckhart) resolute stand against government bureaucrats gives the movie a satisfying us-against-them feeling. In the final analysis, what Sully accomplished is truly a miracle, which he goes out of his way to call a group effort among New York ferry captains, fire department and police. Some people think New York is a cold, uncaring place, but in a crisis, everyone pulls together, which makes “Sully” a feel-good movie. Three stars
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Edition 283 - 9
The Boca Raton Tribune
columnists BARRY’S BUZZ
FAITH
By Barry Epstein
By Jim Mathis
The Boca Raton municipal election that will be held on March 7th 2017 already has a list of candidates. Earlier this year Mayor Susan Haynie filed to run for re-election. Council Member Scott Singer was reportedly considering a run for Mayor. However, early last week he filed to run for re-election to Seat A. On September 9, Boca Raton attorney, Andy Thomson, stopped by City Hall to file his preliminary paperwork to run for Seat B. He joins Andrea Levine O’Rourke and Emily Gentile, each of whom filed to run for Seat B. Boca Raton City Councilman Scott Singer filed Sept. 8 to run for his own seat, putting to rest rumors he might run for mayor against Mayor Susan Haynie, who has the chance to run again. Candidates have until January to file for the March 14 Municipal Election in Boca Raton. No one else has filed. Beginning next month, Boca Raton homeowners will see a $20 hike in their fire services fee. The City Council late Monday unanimously decided to raise the fee for homeowners from $85 to $105. The new fee will take effect Oct. 1 The Boca Raton Trump campaign office is now open at 5295 Town Center Rd, suite 200 on the NW corner with Military Trail and Town Center Road. Libertarian Gary Johnson says he’ll be on ballot in all 50 states. South Florida keeps getting more diverse and international, but New York still has a powerful grip on a region long known as the Big Apple’s “sixth borough.” This fall will be no different, with a wave of New York-infused food and nostalgia set to debut on the restaurant scene in Palm Beach County. The biggest name arriving is Junior’s, the Brooklyn restaurant famous for its cheesecake. Junior’s will open its first
Florida location at Mizner Park in Boca Raton in coming weeks. Later in the fall, noted South Florida restaurateur Burt Rapoport will launch Rappy’s Deli in Boca Raton, an homage to his family’s New York Jewish restaurant roots. And Brighton Beach Bagel & Bakery, an eatery featuring housemade bagels, smoked fish and deli meats, recently opened in Delray Beach. A park observation tower in place for 30 years has become so unsafe that park officials have decided to knock it down. The well-known lookout spot at Gumbo Limbo Nature Center reaches 40 feet, giving visitors an unobstructed view of the city. Over the years, however, rot has climbed its way up the wooden tower’s interior, leaving officials no choice but to demolish it. Fit Body Bistro, 10 E. Palmetto Park Road, Suite 102, Boca Raton, 561-6275747, FitBodyBistro.com, Husband and wife Chris Twardowski and Jen Antonuccio are fine-tuning their second fast-casual location since opening in May. They say they founded Fit Body in Jupiter three years ago to provide gluten-free, all-natural, 98 percent organic fare, using natural sweeteners and reverse osmosis for their beverages, including smoothies and juices. The Palm Beach Beach County School Board is accusing a debt collection agency hired to recoup money from parents of being a deadbeat itself. The School Board voted to sue the Florida branch of CheckCare, a national collection agency, saying the company owes the district $195,000. As summer fades into the rear-view mirror, gasoline demand is falling and prices have commenced their autumn decline. And this fall’s price drop began from already-low Labor Day weekend levels. Alert motorists could find bargains, however. The lowest prices in any city are typically found at big-box wholesale clubs such as Sam’s Club, BJ’s and Costco.
Repairing, Restoring, and Improving the Broken In my photo restoration business, I often see photographs that are stained, faded, or even torn into pieces. My job is to carefully put the pieces back together, remove stains and blemishes, and restore faded colors. In the process I use a variety of tools. Sometimes the tools are obvious, such as soap and water and a cotton swab. Other times I use highly sophisticated computer graphics software, such as Adobe Photoshop, to fill in cracks or even replace pieces that are missing. One of my great pleasures – professionally and personally – is being able to present to a customer a restored image that they believed was lost, beyond repair, whether of a loved one or a cherished memory. There is a metaphor here for everyday life, because often it is not just photos that are damaged. People’s lives are damaged as well, sometimes very badly. In one respect or another, this is true for all of us. Fortunately, we have a skilled craftsman named Jesus, who can examine the pieces of our lives, see what is damaged, discover what is faded or has been abused, and even find what is missing in our lives. Then, like a skilled photographic specialist, He can carefully go about putting things back as good as new. Using specialized software, I can work to make just about any photograph even better than new, invariably better than the client expected. I work meticulously so that which was neglected, damaged, or torn can become superior to the original. I like to tell my clients that not only can I repair damaged photographs,
but I also can improve them, even if they didn’t know there was anything wrong. In a far more profound, eternal way, every day God is doing the same type of work in our lives through His Son, Jesus Christ. He makes it His business to take lives that are damaged, broken, faded, or even have pieces missing, and put them back together, better than before. God delights in this restoration and renewal process. He declares this in the Old Testament of the Bible.“See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?…” (Isaiah 43:19). Then, as our relationship with Him grows, we are invited to experience a divine, everlasting transformation process:“Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind…” (Romans 12:2). As we focus on God and the Scriptures, we can become new people. Instead of cotton swabs, airbrushes and computer software, God uses love, forgiveness and reconciliation as His tools for transformation. Admittedly, I as a photo professional do not go around fixing every photo that I see. And God does not automatically repair broken lives. Each of my clients knows they have a problem photo, which is why they bring it to me to be improved. Once they have reached out to me, I do everything I can to solve their problem. In much the same way, God wants us to come to Him and admit that we are ready for the help that only He can give.
Heizer Media Group
Gallery 22 International
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September 16 - September 22 , 2016
10 -Edition 283
Two Boca Raton Rabbis Join Prestigious ThreeYear Sixth Rabbinic Leadership Initiative Cohort in Jerusalem From the Reform and Orthodox traditions, two South Palm Beach County rabbis have returned from their first summer residency in Jerusalem as part of Shalom Hartman Institute’s sixth Rabbinic Leadership Initiative (RLI). Following a rigorous selection process by the Institute, Dan Levin, Senior Rabbi at (Reform) Temple Beth El of Boca Raton, and Rabbi Josh Broide, a practicing Orthodox Rabbi who serves as Director of Community Engagement at the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County, were delighted to begin this prestigious, three-year intensive fellowship program. RLI brings together outstanding North American rabbis to immerse them in the highest levels of Jewish learning and equip them to meet contemporary challenges with increasing intellectual and moral sophistication. (southeast Florida regional participants from all cohorts listed below) For the next three years, Levin and Broide will be among the 28 sixth cohort RLI rabbis from around the country who will engage in extensive distance learning through video webinars, study, small group elective courses, and local projects, as well as in yearly summer and winter residencies at the Institute in Jerusalem. The main pillars will be Judaism and Modernity, Religious Pluralism, Jewish and Democratic Israel, Jewish Peoplehood, and Judaism and the World. Levin and Broide will explore “the multiple voices within our Jewish tradition that can help them find personal meaning and purpose for their unique rabbinic journeys,” said Miami-based Rabbi Berkun, Shalom Hartman Institute of North America Director of Rabbinic and Synagogue Programs. “The Institute provides an open space of pluralistic inquiry and intellectual risk-taking for rabbis to ask burning questions about their own spiritual and intellectual lives, as well as their communal leadership.” Rabbinic leadership has been a core mission of Shalom Hartman for more than 30 years. But unique to the Boca Raton-based Broide and Levin is their entering the fellowship in a local learning partnership as Orthodox and Reform rabbis. “RLI has been extraordinarily inspiring,” said Rabbi Levin on returning from the summer institute in Jerusalem. “In the Talmud, one argument is concluded with an amazing sentiment: ‘These words and those words are the words of the living God.’ The Hartman Institute seeks not simply for us to realize the holy wisdom in our texts, but also in the diversity of voices that make up the Jewish people. I am so inspired and blessed to learn with some of the most compelling and thoughtful scholars of our generation. And to study Torah for hours with an incredible cadre of colleagues from across the spectrum of Jewish belief yields a profound depth of understanding.” Rabbi Broide shared his colleague’s kudos for their summer month together. “With some of the greatest rabbinic and scholarly Jewish minds, and my first significant time studying with rabbis from other denominations, the summer institute
September 16 - September 22 , 2016
has been one of the most profound experiences in my life and possibly my greatest Jewish learning experience,” he said. “Our days began at 7:00 am and ended around 10:00 pm six days a week, but if felt like every lesson and program was so exciting that time flew by. Alongside learning from the rabbis, professors and colleagues, I learned more about myself – and how I can have a greater impact on our community through our Federation’s Deborah and Larry D. Silver Center for Jewish Engagement (CJE) - because it is the diversity of our community that will ultimately make us so much stronger.” Rabbis Broide and Levin both stated how much they look forward to studying together over the three years ahead, and to sharing what they learn with the community. “At Temple Beth El, the September Lunch and Learn program will be devoted to whetting our congregation and community's appetite for what the Shalom Hartman Institute has to offer,” said Rabbi Levin. Both rabbis are extremely grateful to an anonymous, generous local donor who understood the importance of their joining the RLI, and to the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County for facilitating their participation. They also credit another local rabbi with extensive RLI experience for inspiring them to apply. “I am quite happy that my colleagues Rabbi Broide and Rabbi Levin are participating in RLI, said Rabbi David Steinhardt, Senior Rabbi of (Conservative) B’nai Torah Congregation in Boca Raton. “I have been involved at Shalom Hartman for ten years and have hoped to see more local rabbis engage with the scholars and rabbis there. Since my three years in the second RLI cohort from 2004-2007, I have continued to return as a Rabbinic Fellow in the summers.” Another past RLI cohort participant echoed its immense value. “RLI was one of the most significant experiences of my professional life,” said Rabbi Jessica Brockman, also of Temple Beth El in Boca Raton, who was part of the third cohort in 2007-2010. “As a female Reform rabbi, to study in-depth with fellow Reform, Conservative, Reconstructionist and Orthodox rabbis was a unique opportunity, including the uninterrupted summer and winter immersions in text study in Israel. This program improved my text skills incredibly, but even more allowed me to use the lessons learned and the Institute’s grand thinking to create a better Jewish world of dialogue, understanding and study, and bring that back to my role at Temple Beth El.” “We live in a world where so much of our understanding and processing of information and knowledge is done in simple or very black and white terms,” said Rabbi Steinhardt. “The Shalom Hartman scholars reflect the breadth of Jewish scholarship and contemporary Israeli thought, presenting deep and nuanced ways of looking at the issues facing the Jewish people, Israel and the world. Creative and compassionate, open, passionate and aspirational, they reflect the best of rabbinic thinking.”
November 18-20
Proceeds from the event benefit the fight against drug abuse and child neglect in Florida.
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Edition 283 - 11
GRAND OPENING CONTINUES! orp.
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12 - Edition 283
The Boca Raton Tribune
c l a s sifie ds Health/ Medical
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September 16 - September 22 , 2016
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Edition 283 - 13 The Boca Raton Tribune CLASSIFIEDS East/West Boca Raton, FL
BOCA RATON TRIBUNE WORSHIP DIRECTORY
The Boca Raton Tribune
Free Classifieds For Sale
Luggage 5 Piece Set -American Flyer - Stand out Giraffe Print -360 degree spinner wheels Retail $279 Buy for $99 561-289-1873. West Boca WANTED: Coins, Stamps, Gold Jewelry, Sterling Silver, Collectibles, Antiques. We make House calls. Call: 305-505-1842
First Congregational Church of Boca Raton 251 SW 4th Avenue Boca Raton, FL 33432 Phone: 561-395-9255 Website: www.churchofbocaraton.org St. Paul’s Lutheran Church and School 701 West Palmetto Park Road Boca Raton, FL 33486 561-395-0433 Website: www.stpaulboca.com Center for Spiritual Living Boca Raton 2 SW 12 Avenue Boca Raton, FL 33486 561-368-8248 Website: Somboca.com Frontline Christian Center 901 W. Palmetto Park Rd Boca Raton FL 33486 561-706-5801 Website: www.frontlinechristiancenter.net First Baptist Church of Boca Raton 2350 Yamato Rd. Boca Raton, FL 33431 561-994-4673 Website: www.fbcboca.org Congregation Shirat Shalom PO Box 971142 Boca Raton, FL 33497 Services at Olympic Heights High School 561-488-8079 Website: www.shiratshalom.org
Electronics for sale: 3 Polk speakers (excellent) - $35 each Mitsubishi R25 amplifier (excellent) - $50 In Boca Raton: 301 412-7794 L’Ambiance HOA Community Yard Sale. January 30 ~ 8AM to Noon. Rain or shine. L’Ambiance Dr. and Verde Trail in Boca Raton. 332 NE WAVECREST CT, BOCA RATON 33432 Fabulous 1971 Cutlass Oldsmobile in great working condition. Juaninreid@aol.com ESTATE SALE 332 NE WAVECREST COURT. Fine china, crystal, clothes, appliances, tools. Sat,12/12 and 12/13 9:00 am-4. Juaninreid@aol.com YARD SALE- Saturday December 5th at 8am. 399 NE 23rd Street, Boca Raton. Comp Equip, Office Furniture/ supplies- clothes, microwave. More Blue sofa bed & matching recliner, formal cherry dining room table 6 chairs, headboard & night stand Photos email schmuckerc@gmail.com
Homes Sold In Boca Raton Sold Between 9/07/2015 to 9/13/2015
(561) 807-6305
Sold Date
Price
Addison Pointe at Boca Raton 6332 La Costa Drive J
9/9/2015
$159,000
ADDISON LAKES ADDISON POINTE
23041 Addison Lakes Circle 6324 La Costa Drive E
9/11/2015 9/9/2015
$287,500 $150,000
AMBERWOODS OF BOCA AMERICAN HOMES
21596 Redbay Road 9111 Bedford Drive
9/11/2015 9/11/2015
$269,900 $205,000
Avalon
9617 Parkview Avenue
9/10/2015
$600,000
Baywood
19557 Bay View Road
9/11/2015
$490,000
Boca Bath & Tennis
9/10/2015
$1,025,000
Boca Gardens
2040 NW 29th Road 9775 N Boca Gardens Circle N C
9/11/2015
$255,000
Boca Heights
11197 W Model Circle W
9/11/2015
$187,000
Boca Keys BOCA BAYOU
760 Glouchester Street 21 Royal Palm Way 21-503
9/10/2015 9/8/2015
$1,396,644 $150,800
Preschool in West Boca is seeking teacher for a full-time position. Send resume and contact information to info@pinitospreschoolboca.com
BOCA BAYOU CONDO BOCA COUNTRY ESTATES CONDO
10 Royal Palm Way 204 10560 Boca Entrada Boulevard
9/11/2015
$185,000
9/11/2015
$165,100
BOCA COVE
9430 Boca Cove Circle 204
9/9/2015
$68,000
FREE House sit/Pet sit. Retired Prof. couple. Avail.mid-Feb thru Mar 1,2,3,or 4 wks. Friends in Boca - will provide references. Mike & Anne
BOCA HARBOUR
724 NE 70th Street
9/9/2015
$620,000
BOCA INLET
701 E Camino Real 4-
9/9/2015
$560,000
BOCA ISLES SOUTH
10582 E Key Drive
9/11/2015
$563,000
BOCA MARINA
5286 Boca Marina Circle S
9/8/2015
$995,000
BOCA RATON SQUARE
1345 SW 12th Avenue
9/9/2015
$320,000
Sears Home Services Now Hiring Lawn Equipment Repair Techs * Small Engine Repair Techs* Email:Jasmine.Wilkins@searshomepro.com
BOCA RIO HEIGHTS
22366 Martella Avenue
9/11/2015
$465,000
BOCA TEECA
9/10/2015
$130,000
9/11/2015
$130,000
BOCA TOWERS
5700 NW 2nd Avenue 701 918 SW 9th Street Circle 204 2121 N Ocean Boulevard 503e
9/10/2015
$239,500
BOCA VERDE EAST
400 NE 20th Street B110
9/11/2015
$100,000
BOCAIRE GOLF CLUB
4792 Bocaire Boulevard
9/8/2015
$450,000
Century Village
4002 Guildford A
9/8/2015
$61,000
Century Village
1052 Newcastle C
9/10/2015
$68,000
School of Rock, Boca Opening Early 2016! If you love to teach music call now! skagan@schoolofrock.com or 561-430-2411
CENTURY VILLAGE
241 Brighton F
9/9/2015
$53,500
CENTURY VILLAGE
208 Mansfield E
9/11/2015
$35,000
CENTURY VILLAGE
265 Mansfield G
9/9/2015
$48,500
CENTURY VILLAGE
3013 Wolverton A
9/10/2015
$55,000
OxiFresh now hiring F/T General Manager. Email Resume to: brian@oxifreshboca.com.
CENTURY VILLAGE
3093 Wolverton E
9/9/2015
$53,000
CHATHAM HILLS
456 NE 29th Street
9/11/2015
$275,000
FictitiousName”BocaSpineandSport”at5601Nor thFederalHighwayBocaRatonFlorida33487thepartyisRichardRosenChiropracticP.A.
CLOISTERS
5826 NW 24th Terrace
9/10/2015
$510,000
CORAL BAY CORNWALL AT CENTURY VILLAGE CONDO
18253 Blue Lake Way
9/11/2015
$337,500
9/10/2015
$38,500
9/8/2015
$550,000
9/9/2015
$600,000
9/11/2015
$315,000
GLOUCHESTER HOUSE
1073 Cornwall D 5243 Deerhurst Crescent Circle 20290 Fairway Oaks Drive 262 17316 Boca Club Boulevard 1006 660 Glouchester Street 14205
9/10/2015
$65,000
HIDDEN VALLEY
74 Palamino Circle
9/11/2015
$327,000
HOLIDAY CITY
11155 Landsman Street
9/9/2015
$279,888
La Costa Del Mar Condo
6371 La Costa Drive 202 2001 N Ocean Boulevard 103
9/8/2015
$175,000
9/8/2015
$507,500
9/10/2015
$405,000
Lakewood
133 NW 10th Avenue 7754 Lakeside Boulevard 476
9/10/2015
$25,000
LA PAZ AT BOCA POINTE
7472 La Paz Place 304
9/8/2015
$148,000
LA VIDA
6160 La Vida Terrace
9/9/2015
$335,000
LAGUNA MISSION BAY
10621 Mendocino Lane
9/10/2015
$312,000
LAKE HOUSE SOUTH
875 E Camino Real 14-G
9/9/2015
$515,000
LAKES AT BOCA RATON
18965 Adagio Drive
9/9/2015
$350,000
LANDS END
791 Saint Albans Drive
9/10/2015
$361,000
LIBRARY COMMONS
44 NW 7th Street 44
9/10/2015
$415,000
MIZNER COURT
120 SE 5th Avenue 434
9/11/2015
$400,000
Monterey Bay/Boca Winds
22015 Altona Drive
9/10/2015
$339,000
PHEASANT WALK
4449 Brandywine Drive
9/8/2015
$422,500
Porta Bella
9/11/2015
$265,000
PRESIDENTIAL PLACE
800 Jeffery Street 206 800 S Ocean Boulevard Ph6
9/8/2015
$4,700,000
sandalfoot
1531 SW 65th Ter
9/7/2015
$112,500
SADDLEBROOK SANCTUARY PINES IN BOCA RATON
9429 Saddlebrook Drive
9/11/2015
$260,000
3939 NE 5th Avenue G101
9/11/2015
$220,000
SANDALFOOT BLVD ESTATES
10423 S 228th Lane
9/10/2015
$80,000
SANDALFOOT COVE SEVEN SEVENTY EAST CAMINO REAL
9073 SW 4th Street
9/11/2015
$179,900
770 E Camino Real 2
9/9/2015
$250,000
Shores
11036 Blue Coral Drive
9/8/2015
$569,000
SIERRA DEL MAR
7715 Kenway Place E
9/9/2015
$305,000
SIERRA DEL MAR
7777 Kenway Place W
9/10/2015
$302,500
Stonebridge CC
17713 Charnwood Drive
9/11/2015
$310,000
STONEBRIDGE
17610 Sealakes Drive
9/11/2015
$229,900
Thornhill Lake
6863 Bridlewood Court
9/11/2015
$185,000
TIERRA DEL SOL CONDO
250 NE 20th Street 230
9/10/2015
$90,000
TRIESTE AT BOCA
616 NE Rossetti Lane
9/11/2015
$500,000
VILLAGE AT BOCA RIO
8433 Boca Rio Drive
9/11/2015
$197,500
WATERBERRY
10820 Waterberry Drive
9/10/2015
$127,000
WINFIELD PARK
340 NE 24th Street 7459 Bondsberry Court 7459
9/9/2015
$262,500
9/8/2015
$200,000
For Sale Eye Exams New Office * Latest Technology Steven Friefeld, O.D. 3321 W. Hillsboro Blvd. Deerfield Beach Inside Visionworks 954-480-9180
Job Offer
FREE HOUSE SITTING, inc. Pet Sitters. Retired professionals available mid Feb thru Mar. 1-4 weeks. References in Boca.
Subdivision
BOCA TERRACE
DEERHURST (Boca South) FAIRWAY POINT FAIRWAYS
Boca Glades Baptist Church 10101 Judge Winikoff Rd. Boca Raton, FL 33428 561-483-4228 Website: www.bocaglades.org
La Fontana Lake Floresta
Advent Lutheran Church and School 300 E. Yamato Road Boca Raton, FL 33431 561-395-3632 Website: www.adventboca.org Revival Life Church 4301 Oak Circle Suite 11 Boca Raton, FL 33431 Services at Don Estridge Middle School 561-450-8555 Website: www.revivallifechurch.org Grace Community Church 600 W. Camino Real Boca Raton, FL 33486 561-395-2811 Website: www.graceboca.org The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Boca Raton 2601 St. Andrews Boca Raton, FL 33434 561-482-2001 Website: www.uufbr.org Saint Joan of Arc Catholic Church 370 SW 3rd St. Boca Raton, FL 33432 Website: www.stjoan.org St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church 100 NE Mizner Blvd Boca Raton, FL 33432 561-395-8285 Website: stgregorysepiscopal.org To have your church listed in the Boca Raton Tribune Worship Directory... Send your information to our mailing address at:
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September 16 - September 22 , 2016
14 -Edition 283
The Boca Raton Tribune
sports Former NBA Player Arrested in Boca Raton
Former NBA player Samuel Dalembert was arrested Sunday after he allegedly struck his girlfriend and her cousin, according to an arrest report. Police reports say Samuel Dalembert faces charges of felony battery and domestic battery. Boca Raton police were called to 800 Northeast Orchid Bay Drive after 911 dispatch reported someone had called and hung up at the address. When police arrived they met with the 7-foot, 270-pound Dalembert, whose demeanor officers described as “aggressive” in the report. According to the report says he hit his girlfriend and caused her to
fall backwards and placed his girlfriend’s cousin in a choke hold and head butted him. Dalembert became upset after finding out that his girlfriend was leaving for Orlando with their two children, said the report. The woman’s cousin told police he had to intervene to keep Dalembert from striking her, the report said. Dalembert then allegedly attacked the 26-year-old man, grabbing him by the neck and putting him in a choke hold, throwing him to the ground and head-butting him, said the report. The woman had an abrasion on her chin, a swollen lip, a small bruise on her forehead and an abrasion to her left shoulder, the report said. She told police that Dalembert has been “drinking excessively” and “not acting like his normal self ” recently. Dalembert played with the Philadelphia 76ers, Sacramento Kings, Houston Rockets, Milwaukee Bucks, Dallas Mavericks and the New York Knicks during a 13-year NBA career that ended after he played 32 games for the Knicks during the 2014-15 season.
A Game of Comebacks By: Stephanie Fonseca Photos By:Damon Higgins Boca Raton High School found itself in a shootout on September 2nd as they went back and forth versus Palm Beach Gardens in a game of comebacks. Quarterback Micah Leon led the Bobcats. Boca High was leading with a score of 21-7. But a 14 point lead wasn’t enough to discourage the Palm Beach Gardens Gators. The Gators fought back and led the Bobcats 28-24 at the end of the third quarter. A penalty with little time left on the clock was the achilles heel for Palm Beach Gardens, as the Gators gave up a penalty which left the Boca Bobcats at the 18 yard line. The Bobcats came out on top 30-28.
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