The Boca Raton Tribune Yo u r C l o s e s t N e i g h b o r
Number 329 • Year VII COMMUNITY see page 3
edgeMED Honored at Boca Means Business Luncheon
COMMUNITY see page 7
FAU Graduate Researching Potential Ebola And Zika Vaccines
SPORTS
see page 14
Lynn Men’s Soccer Opens Season Ranked No. 10 in the Country
East /West Boca Raton, Highland Beach, Delray Beach, Deerfield Beach, FL
August 18- August 24 , 2017
Ethan Allen Donates Furniture to Habitat for Humanity Ethan Allen, as part of its ongoing partnership with Habitat for Humanity, has donated a range of new home goods to Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County for resale in their three local Habitat for Humanity ReStores in East Boca Raton, West Boca Raton and Delray Beach. Last year, Ethan Allen donated close to 4,000 products to Habitat ReStores across the U.S. and Canada. This year’s additional donations should bring estimated total donations to 48,000 with a total estimated retail value of more than $19 million. “Creating happy homes is what we do best,” said Gary Mair, Design Center Manager at Ethan Allen’s Boca Raton Design Center.
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Gana to Compete at U.S. Amateur Championship Lynn University men’s golfer Toto Gana is set to tee it up in United States Amateur Championship beginning on Monday, Aug. 14, at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. The rising sophomore is one of 312 golfers that will compete for the United States Golf Association’s oldest championship tournament. He gained entry to the tournament following his victory in the 2017 Latin America Amateur Championship. Gana will tee off his first round from the 10th hole at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles on Aug. 14 at 12:57 p.m. PDT.
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2 -Edition 329 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
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INDEX
Community News.....p 3 Editorial.....................p 4 Columnists................p 9 Classified..................p 12 Sports........................p 14
“What you have learned and recieved and heard and seen in me - pactice these things, and the God of peace will be with you.” Philippians 4:9
Local company, edgeMED, was honored Friday afternoon as the first recipient of the “Boca Means Business” award at Pavilion Grille.
By : P e d ro H e i zer
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• Monday was the first day back to school to all Palm Beach County students. Welcome back to school. • Palm Beach State College is expecting another enrollment hike for the 2017-2018 academic year, and College leaders say they are prepared for the growth. The full-time equivalent (FTE) enrollment was up 2.8 percent for 2016-2017 compared to the previous year. That means that PBSC students, the majority of whom are part time, took far more classes. The student headcount also rose slightly to 49,303 students in 20162017, up from 47,893 in 2015-2016. • Local company, edgeMED, was honored Friday afternoon as the first recipient of the “Boca Means Business” award at Pavilion Grille. The award is the first of many to be awarded through the Boca Raton Tribune and the Office of Economic Development to Boca Raton-based companies which exhibit a grand impact on the local corporate community. • Modernizing Medicine plans to expand operations in the Boca Raton Innovation Center (BRIC) will add a total of 838 jobs by 2022. Modernizing Medicine is a Florida based company that specializes in healthcare information technology. The headquarters has anticipated more than 800 new jobs being created and a capital investment of more than $15 million in the Boca Raton community. • When Joshua Puchferran graduated from Florida Atlantic University, he revealed a secret that he’d been keeping for four years. Puchferran, 23, had been serving as FAU mascot, Owlsley, since 2013. Last week, he walked across the stage in his cap, gown and Owlsley feet to receive his master’s degree in accounting from FAU’s College of Business.
• Atlas Restaurant Group recently announced they will bring Baltimore’s popular Loch Bar to Mizner Park. The Loch Bar will be the second property owned by Atlas Restaurant Group in Mizner Park following Ouzo Bay, a greek, mediterranean restaurant. Expected to seat 200 patrons inside and 75 on the tavern’s outstretched outdoor patio, the 5,500-square-foot seafood restaurant is anticipated to open the end of the year. • While teaching microbiology in Nigeria in 2014, Olumide Adenmosun, 31, witnessed firsthand the deadliest Ebola outbreak in history and knew he had to help. Last week, Adenmosun graduated from Florida Atlantic University with a master’s degree in business administration and will return to Africa to research potential Ebola and Zika vaccines and therapeutics. • The Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education* Program at Boca Raton Regional Hospital’s Gloria Drummond Physical Rehabilitation Institute has been awarded continued recognition from the American Diabetes Association (ADA). The program was first awarded and accredited from the ADA in 1999. • White House correspondent and CNN contributor April Ryan will be at Florida Atlantic University on Tuesday, Sept. 19 at 2 p.m. as part of a panel discussing “Fake News and the Modern Presidency.” Ryan’s visit to FAU is part of the University’s fifth annual Robert J. Bailyn Symposium on the First Amendment which takes place each year to commemorate Constitution Day. The event will take place in FAU’s University Theatre on the FAU Boca Raton campus. Free parking is available in Garage II. A book signing will follow the lecture and books will be for sale at the event.
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
• Penny Morey was installed as Rotary Club Downtown Boca installs first woman president • A Palm Beach County network of education institutions under the umbrella of Florida Atlantic University was recognized by Google for its innovative approach to teaching through technology, the first in the state to earn the honor.
August 18 - August 24, 2017
Boca Raton
Florida Atlantic University (561) 397-3000 Atlas Restaurant Group recently announced they will bring Baltimore’s popular Loch Bar to Mizner Park.
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Edition 329 - 3
The Boca Raton Tribune
Community A Welcoming Start to a New Year edgeMED Honored at Boca Means Business Luncheon
By Evelyn Ross Monday marked the beginning of a new year for Palm Beach County schools, and students at three area schools were welcomed to handshakes, high fives, and encouraging words from community leaders and members. The event, dubbed “It takes a Village,” took place at Village Academy, Pine Grove Elementary and Carver Middle schools in Delray Beach. “We do the event so the kids can feel welcomed,” said Ron Gilinsky, a board member for KOP Mentoring Network, which coordinated the event. “They’re not just walking into class, but to an exciting fresh start. The kids absolutely loved it, and we were able to capture all of their excitement in the pictures we took.” Gilinsky, who has attended the first day event every year since it began three years ago, was among the 64 men who greeted the Village Academy students at 7 a.m. as they walked through the front door. Among the men present were lawyers, businessmen, CEOs, a doctor, and about 30 from Royal Life Centers, a local recovery community. “I feel special… like a hero,” said Christina Dennis, a fifth grader at Village Academy, shortly after she walked down the hallway lined with men on both sides. Vice Mayor Jim Chard said he hopes “this simple gesture” has
a long term impact considering education is the key to a fruitful career. “I think the 50 or 60 of us smiling, encouraging and welcoming the students [and teachers] back to their classrooms, had to be awe inspiring,” Chard said. “I think they realize, along with their moms and dads, that we had their back.” While Chard was at Village Academy, Mayor Cary Glickstein welcomed students back at Carver Middle School. Community leader Robert Dodd said he was pleased with the turnout at Carver as well as its impact. He encourages more community members to get involved with future events. “It is of great importance to support the youth in our community,” said Dodd, who also attended the event at Village earlier. “To see the joy on their faces when they came through the line gave me a great feeling inside that others should experience as well.” Representatives from the local Rotary and Kiwanis clubs were also in attendance at Village. John Fischer, president of the Rotary Club of Delray Beach, said the events showed their commitment to the children’s educational lives on the first day or school and throughout the school year. “I think our presence there this morning, will leave an indelible positive impression on their minds, that there are male role models out here that care about them, and wish them well, wish them to succeed, and support them,” Fischer said.
By: Michael Demyan Local company, edgeMED, was honored Friday afternoon as the first recipient of the “Boca Means Business” award at Pavilion Grille. The award is the first of many to be awarded through the Boca Raton Tribune and the Office of Economic Development to Boca Raton-based companies which exhibit a grand impact on the local corporate community. Before taking the podium in front of over 60 people in attendance, Boca Raton Mayor Susan Haynie praised the company for their achievements and stressed the importance of recognizing businesses which have contributed to the community. “We’re very serious about our economic development and job creation and when we have innovative companies like the one that we’re honoring today, it’s important for us as leaders to come together with other members of the business community and really lift up those who are succeeding here,” she said. Danielle Vennett, the managing director at Boca Raton Innovation Campus where edgeMED is headquartered, also shared the same sentiments. “They are there to make things
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better for their customers, their employees, the community and the world,” she said. “We are honored to have them on our campus. We are honored to be able to celebrate the growth that they’ve had and certainly we’re pleased that it’s happening here in the city of Boca Raton.” Mayor Haynie introduced edgeMED President Gary Dobel and Executive Vice President Scott Kurstin, who walked up to applause as they accepted the “Boca Means Business” plaque. Gary Kurstin, who founded the company in 1981, was also in attendance. “To have the inaugural award given to edgeMED, I thought was an immense honor for us and I was very proud of the team effort that it took to get us here,” Scott Kurstin said. Dobel moved to South Florida eight years ago and was impressed with the diverse population and growing trends in Healthcare IT. He said that those factors have helped multiply their employees by five over the past four years. “Boca Raton and South Florida, we’re on an upward trajectory as an innovation destination,” Dobel said. “We at edgeMED, we just grew up to be part of it. We look forward to many, many more years in this community and contributing to the phenomenal growth.”
August 18 - August 24, 2017
4 -Edition 329 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
Modernizing Medicine to Add Over 800 Jobs By: Bryanna Basilio On July 27, Governor Rick Scott announced that Modernizing Medicine plans to expand operations in the Boca Raton Innovation Center (BRIC) will add a total of 838 jobs by 2022. Modernizing Medicine is a Florida based company that specializes in healthcare information technology. The headquarters has anticipated more than 800 new jobs being created and a capital investment of more than $15 million in the Boca Raton community. “I am proud that Modernizing Medicine will be expanding in Palm Beach County to create more than 800 new jobs which will provide even more families a great career," said Governor Scott. "Companies like Modernizing Medicine are helping Florida become the best state in the nation for job creation while helping our unemployment rate continue to drop. Now, with the $85 million Florida Job Growth Grant Fund, we will ensure that even more job creators can grow and succeed in Florida.” Headquartered in Boca Raton near FAU, Modernizing Medicine was founded in 2010 by chief executive officer Daniel Cane and chief medical and strategy officer Dr. Michael Sherling and has grown to more than 550 employees. The company is quite unique as it empowers physicians with suites of mobile, specialty-specific solutions de-
signed to transform how healthcare information is created and utilized to increase efficiency and improve outcomes. Modernizing Medicine empowers physicians with a suite of mobile, specialty solutions that transform how healthcare information is created and utilized to increase efficiency. Modernizing Medicine’s data-driven, touch- and cloud-based products and services are programmed by a team that includes practicing physicians to meet the unique needs of dermatology, gastroenterology, ophthalmology, orthopedics, otolaryngology, pain management, plastic surgery, rheumatology and urology practices, as well as ambulatory surgery centers. “Modernizing Medicine is an IT powerhouse and a great Palm Beach County success story," said President and CEO of the Business Development Board of Palm Beach County Kelly Smallridge. "It provides hundreds of jobs and its success demonstrates that the county is an ideal location for technology companies to flourish.” “Modernizing Medicine has been a part of the City of Boca Raton's corporate community since 2012," added Mayor Susan Haynie. "With their recent acquisitions, and impressive and continued growth, we're proud that the Modernizing Medicine team has decided to remain headquartered in Boca Raton and create over 800 jobs in our City.”
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FAU Mascot Wears Owlsley Feet One Last Time When Joshua Puchferran graduated from Florida Atlantic University, he revealed a secret that he’d been keeping for four years. Puchferran, 23, had been serving as FAU mascot, Owlsley, since 2013. Last week, he walked across the stage in his cap, gown and Owlsley feet to receive his master’s degree in accounting from FAU’s College of Business. Puchferran grew up in Boca Raton and knew early on that he wanted to attend FAU. Both of his older brothers went to FAU, and his friend’s dad was a defensive coordinator for the football team. Puchferran even served as a ball boy for the football team as a teenager. “I knew I wanted to go to FAU from the beginning,” he said. “It was the only school I applied to.” During his first semester at FAU, Puchferran saw an advertisement looking for a student manager for the FAU mascot program. He thought it would be fun to attend football games and student events with Owlsley, so he applied and interviewed for the job. Instead of offering him the manager position, they asked him if he’d like to be Owlsley. “Another Owlsley had just left, so the timing was perfect,” he said. “I knew it was a great opportunity.” Since becoming an FAU mascot in October 2013, Puchferran has attended hundreds of student and athletic events, including traveling with the football team to their away games. He’s been to off-campus fundraisers, weddings and events at the Eleanor R. Baldwin House, the home of FAU President John Kelly. He says his favorite part of the job was spending time with students and kids. “I always enjoyed going over to FAU’s A.D. Henderson University School and meeting the elementary school students,” he said. “Their faces lit up when they saw Owlsley.” Jamie Ortiz, team advisor for the FAU mascot program, said Puchferran has been an important part of the program and strives to make it better every
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day. “If there was one person that I know who has the most FAU spirit, it would be Josh,” he said. “His dedication, passion and commitment to the program have created an environment of excellence, and we hope that the Owlsley program will continue to attract more students like Josh.” When he wasn’t in his Owlsley costume, Puchferran was involved in Campus Crusade for Christ and FAU Student Government. He served in the Boca Raton House of Representatives his freshman year and served as chief of staff for the Boca Raton campus governor his sophomore year. He said getting involved on campus was important to him since he was a commuter student. “So many students come to campus for class and then leave right after,” he said. “By serving in Student Government, I was able to meet people and have a true college experience.” Even with his busy schedule, Puchferran still managed to excel in the classroom. He is a member of FAU’s Accounting Scholars Program, where he finished his bachelor’s degree in accounting in three years and continued into the master’s program. He was an active member of Beta Alpha Psi, the honorary organization for financial information students, and worked as a graduate assistant for undergraduate accounting courses. “Josh is a warm, positive person who is quick to volunteer to help his fellow students,” said Angela Gaze, faculty advisor for Beta Alpha Psi and an instructor in FAU’s School of Accounting. “His contagious smile and easygoing nature make him a pleasure to work with.” After doing an internship last summer at Grant Thornton, one of the world’s largest accounting firms, Puchferran has accepted a full-time position with the company starting in January. “I’ve experienced FAU in ways that other students will never have the chance to do,” he said. “If you don’t get involved, then you are truly missing out.”
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Edition 329 - 5 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
Baltimore's Loch Bar Opening in Mizner
By: Bryanna Basilio Atlas Restaurant Group recently announced they will bring Baltimore’s popular Loch Bar to Mizner Park. The Loch Bar will be the second property owned by Atlas Restaurant Group in Mizner Park following Ouzo Bay, a greek, mediterranean restaurant. Expected to seat 200 patrons inside and 75 on the tavern’s outstretched outdoor patio, the 5,500-square-foot seafood restaurant is anticipated to open the end of the year. The Atlas Restaurant Group has stated the food menu will be expanded with hot and cold appetizers, sandwiches, entrees, and a raw bar with over a dozen and a half varieties of east and west coast
oysters that rotate daily. Not to mention Loch Bar has one of the largest whiskey collections in Baltimore along with serving over 50 local craft beers. Loch Bar’s interior will be designed by Patrick Sutton. Sutton’s vision illustrations the tavern with a classic nautical-influenced style furnished with marble tabletops, antique mirrors, tufted red leather banquettes, and lighting and brass accents, along with a small stage that will host live music seven nights a week. Ouzo Bay, Loch Bar’s sister restaurant in Mizner Park, has already received quite the positive fanfare in South Florida. With a 4-star review by the Sun Sentinel and named ‘Best Mediterranean Restaurant’ by Boca Life Magazine, the Atlas Restaurant Group has high expectations for Mizner’s upcoming chic seafood restaurant Loch Bar.
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August 18 - August 24, 2017
6 -Edition 329 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 MICHAEL DEMYAN
Our Writers/Reporters and Columnists Michael Demyan
Joshua Carlson
SYNESIO LYRA
Charlotte Beasley
SKIP SHEFFIELD
Samantha thompson
Business DOUGLAS HEIZER DINI HEIZER
Online Edition PEDRO HEIZER Flavia Proenca
EDITORIAL By C. Ron Allen
A Missed Opportunity to Erase Damaging Stereotypes When Joel Maldonado arrived at Village Academy to drop off his three children on Monday morning, he was overwhelmed by the sight of men, lots of them, standing in the hallway to greet kids on the first day of school. “It made me feel good to see that,” he said. “It made you feel like they care about the kids.” Like Maldonado, I agree that the message was loud and clear that the sea of men wanted to give them a hearty welcome and engorgement to do well. What I found troubling was that of the 64 men, only four were black. On a campus where close to 100 percent of the students are nonwhite, there should have been more than a handful of men who looked like them there. Let me make this clear, I appreciate and thank my white brothers for supporting us in this effort, especially those who have been there over the last three years and those from Royal Life
Center. I also found it disturbing considering that several of my black brothers told me via email a week earlier that they would be there. A few wives said they would have their husbands and sons there also. But when it was time to deliver, they failed our kids. I am embarrassed to admit but the mother may have been right when, before the event, she declared our men as being unreliable. When she asked me, “Why can’t we [women] come out to welcome them too? We have been mothers and fathers to them,” my response was that we wanted the kids to see black men in their rightful places: at the front door welcoming them back. When she learned of the dismal turnout, she simply quipped, “I told you those sorry a…s were not going to show up.” Brothers, we have to do better. We must do better if we want respect from our women, society in general and
our kids. There is a fundamental reason why it was important for you to be there en masse. Our children see white teachers every day, and study shows that black boys who had a black teacher or a black male role model during their elementary school years were less likely to drop out of high school. It also linked the presence of black teachers to kids’ expectations of attending college. Having been a mentor for more than 25 years, I have always maintained that if many of our black boys never see anyone who looks like them in authority in the classroom, chances are they will think, “Hey, college is just not for me”. Then they would not have an incentive to work hard in school. Just imagine how impactful it would have been that morning for those kids to see what the rest of their lives can be — not on TV, not on the Internet, but right there in front of them.
My black brothers often complain that when they see themselves portrayed in the media today, it is often in the form of a mugshot or a hashtag. But on Monday, they had a chance to dismantle the damaging stereotypes of Black men in America. It is a fact that those dominant and pervasive images provoke an inescapable infection on the nation’s psyche. Yes, it etches an imprint that distills the identity of black men to nothing more than “dangerous” and “uneducated.” But brothers, you fuel that notion when you are not in place to welcome our darling periwinkles back to school – especially when you do not have a plausible reason to be absent. If you do not do your part to reform these perceptions, the younger generation is bound to emulate you. C. Ron Allen can be reached at crallen@ delraybeachtribune.com or 561-665-0151.
POSITIVE LIVING By Dr. Synesio Lyra, Jr.
Wisdom is More Than Accumulated Information A wise person is a well-informed individual. Yet, the mere accumulation of information does not necessarily constitute wisdom. You may go to school for many years and learn all kinds of important and legitimate facts; you may devour important books and benefit from what you find in them. But wisdom is acquired differently and it entails other factors! Throughout my years I’ve encountered several persons who had an impressive academic baggage, but by observing their life and the decisions they often made, it was most obvious that they were devoid of true wisdom!
By the same token, I’ve also met quite a few people who had no academic credentials; some had not even finished elementary school. Nevertheless, in their dealings, in their demeanor, and by the results of many of their transactions, they demonstrated what wisdom entails. Ultimately, wisdom is the preferred path one should follow, the most important possession for one to acquire. It is reached through careful thinking, followed by sound choices led by that process. It entails gains as well as losses, additions but also subtractions! One cannot accept whatever is said or
written without first analyzing those ideas through a pre-established grid. Wisdom is reached by intelligent comparisons and contrasts; it demands solid discernment between a variety of options; it can never be attained without a prior understanding of the potential consequences of every action taken! Wisdom needs not to be limited to a small segment of the human race. It is available to any person regardless of age, anyone who seeks it diligently throughout life, and is eager to incorporate it in all the decision-making processes, and in every aspect of one’s daily living, in things
great or small! The Author of Life is also the Giver of Wisdom which He does not deny to anyone who diligently seeks it from Him. Like most products we utilize, it must be followed in accordance with the prescriptions offered, lest it ceases from being wisdom. It enables its practitioner to view life more realistically and to arrive at conclusions never before imagined. Among all credentials anyone could ever display, wisdom is the most essential and absolutely necessary!
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.
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Edition 329 - 7
FAU Graduate Researching Potential Ebola And Zika Vaccines
While teaching microbiology in Nigeria in 2014, Olumide Adenmosun, 31, witnessed firsthand the deadliest Ebola outbreak in history and knew he had to help. Last week, Adenmosun graduated from Florida Atlantic University with a master’s degree in business administration and will return to Africa to research potential Ebola and Zika vaccines and therapeutics. Adenmosun was born and raised in Nigeria and completed his bachelor’s degree at Bowen University before a friend recommended he attend FAU to further his studies. He finished a master’s degree in biological sciences at FAU in 2013, and returned to FAU in 2015 to study business. “I had been studying science my entire life, so I wanted to get an MBA to expand my skill set,” he said. “I wanted to learn the managerial skills needed to operate a biotech company.” While completing his business degree, Adenmosun was involved in a research project with a team in Africa to study the prevalence of Ebola virus in bat populations. The preliminary results were published in the Journal of Infection and Prevention Control, where Adenmosun was the lead author. The study caught the attention of the Nigerian government, and Adenmosun was recently awarded a $150,000 grant from the African Development Bank and the Nigerian Technical Cooperation Fund through the Directorate of Technical Cooperation in Africa to continue the research. “We are taking molecules from bats and trying to design therapeutics for
viruses such as Ebola and Zika,” he said. “We want to be better prepared for future resurgence of Ebola in Africa.” Adenmosun also was part of a team of African scientists working to develop a rapiddiagnostic kit that can diagnose Ebola faster. In 2014, very few labs in Africa had the equipment necessary to test for the virus, and results could take up to five days to get back. “With this test, you’ll get results back in less than 30 minutes,” he said. Outside of his work in Africa, Adenmosun is an adjunct instructor in general microbiology at FAU’s Davie campus and microbiology for health sciences at FAU’s Boca Raton campus. He also has been volunteering at Boca Fertility and hopes to become a board-certified clinical embryologist one day. He’s been conducting novel sperm characterization research with James Kumi-Diaka, Ph.D., an associate professor in FAU’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Science, and Waseem Asghar, Ph.D., an assistant professor in FAU’s College of Engineering and Computer Science. Adenmosun’s ongoing research on sickle cell sperm selection was recently published as a commentary in the Archives of Clinical Microbiology. “Olu is an exceptional individual and student,” said Asghar. “I’ve always found him to be self-motivated, hardworking and an intelligent researcher.” Following his graduation, Adenmosun will continue his research and work to establish his biotech start-up, Eurekan Biotech, in Africa. He plans to pursue a Ph.D. in biomedical sciences at FAU in the near future. “Many scientists do their science but it dies in the lab,” he said. “By getting my MBA, I’ve learned how to build relationships, get my research funded and put it to use in the real world, and I’m thankful FAU gave me the opportunity to do that.”
Boca Regional’s Diabetes Education Program Receives Recognition The Outpatient Diabetes SelfManagement Education* Program at Boca Raton Regional Hospital’s Gloria Drummond Physical Rehabilitation Institute has been awarded continued recognition from the American Diabetes Association (ADA). The program was first awarded and accredited from the ADA in 1999. The ADA Education Recognition effort is a voluntary process which assures that approved programs have met the national standards for diabetes self-management education programs. Accreditation and recognition criteria are sent for consideration every four years for granting excellence in diabetes education and positive patient outcomes. The staff at Boca Raton Regional Hospital’s Diabetes Center is dedicated to providing the most
comprehensive diabetes program to empower people with diabetes and their families with support and education. Program participants are taught, selfcare skills that promote better management from knowledgeable health professionals. Topics discussed include: the disease process, nutritional management, physical activity, medications, monitoring, prevention, detection and goal setting. “Our Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education Program focuses on high-quality education for patient self-care,” said Nancy Talio, RN, BSN, CDE, CPT, Director of the Program. “Through the support of our team and increased knowledge and awareness, the patient can assume part of their disease management responsibility. We are proud to have earned this recognition once again.”
White House Correspondent April Ryan At FAU White House correspondent and CNN contributor April Ryan will be at Florida Atlantic University on Tuesday, Sept. 19 at 2 p.m. as part of a panel discussing “Fake News and the Modern Presidency.” Ryan’s visit to FAU is part of the University’s fifth annual Robert J. Bailyn Symposium on the First Amendment which takes place each year to commemorate Constitution Day. The event will take place in FAU’s University Theatre on the FAU Boca Raton campus. Free parking is available in Garage II. A book signing will follow the lecture and books will be for sale at the event. Tickets are $25 and can be purchased at www.fauevents.com or by calling 561-297-6124. Tickets for FAU students, staff and faculty are free at the Box Office in FAU’s Student Union, Monday through Friday from 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. All FAU rate tickets must be picked up by Friday, Sept. 8 at 5 p.m. Ryan has a unique vantage point as the only black female reporter covering urban issues from the White House. She has been the White House correspondent for American Urban Radio Networks (AURN) since January 1997, covering three U.S. presidents. She also can be seen almost daily on CNN as a political analyst. Her books include “The Presidency in Black and White” and “At Mama’s Knee: Mothers and Race in Black and White.” Other panelists at the Sept. 19 event include Rick Christie, editorial page editor at the Palm Beach Post; Frank Cerabino, metro columnist at the Palm Beach Post: Rosemary O’Hara, editorial page editor at the Sun Sentinel, and Tom O’Hara, former managing editor of the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
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August 18 - August 24, 2017
8 -Edition 329
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Edition 329 - 9 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
PBSC Expecting Another Enrollment Hike Palm Beach State College is expecting another enrollment hike for the 2017-2018 academic year, and College leaders say they are prepared for the growth. The full-time equivalent (FTE) enrollment was up 2.8 percent for 20162017 compared to the previous year. That means that PBSC students, the majority of whom are part time, took far more classes. The student headcount also rose slightly to 49,303 students in 2016-2017, up from 47,893 in 20152016. Despite the economic turnaround and low unemployment rate, which typically lead to an enrollment decline at higher education institutions, Palm Beach State’s enrollment has continued to rise over the last several years. “We’re expecting an increase; we’re just not sure what it’s going to be,’’ said Richard Becker, vice president of administration and business services. “The last several years have been a struggle for schools to have increases, so we’ve been doing extremely well.” “We are setting a goal of a 4 percent increase over our enrollment in 2016-2017," said PBSC President Ava L. Parker, J.D. "I am hoping that we will get that through new students and retention.” To accommodate the growth, the College is working to ease parking concerns. For example, on the Lake Worth campus, the Security Office is coordinating with the Criminal Justice Institute to continue using the skid pad east of the campus for overflow parking. Students also can expect to see more foot patrol from security personnel, who will help guide them on campus and shuttle them to classes, said Security Chief John Smith. The College also has 37 new faculty coming on board this fall, including 10 resulting from the growth, and it is offering additional course sections. “We’ve planned for the gradual enrollment, which is healthy, by increasing the number of course sections strategically so that students that come to the College, especially at the last minute,
Ethan Allen Donates Furniture to Habitat for Humanity
will still have a reasonable number of choices for their schedule,’’ said Dr. Roger Yohe, vice president for academic affairs. A new pilot program has launched to help lessen the time students wait in line to get help at the Admissions, Financial Aid and Advising offices. Who’s Next, a cloud-based tracking program, sends students a text message when staff is ready to serve them. The program allows the College to monitor wait times to adjust staffing when needed. While it is a pilot program on the Lake Worth campus, Dr. Peter Barbatis, vice president for student services and enrollment management, said the goal is to expand it to all campuses. “They don’t have to stand there,’’ Barbatis said. “It will give students something else to do instead of just standing in line. They can go to the cafeteria. We’re really trying to change the whole experience for students.” He and other PBSC leaders attribute the enrollment growth to a myriad of reasons, including the College’s aggressive recruitment strategy. Among them, staff text and follow up with students who enroll but do not sign up for classes. The College also implemented strategic scholarships to assist students. “We’re using financial aid very strategically,’’ Barbatis said. “We’re helping students meet the gap between what they’re getting from federal financial aid and what they need for their classes. That’s the greatest impact we’ve had.” Yohe said the growth is because of Palm Beach County citizens’ belief that jobs that require higher skills lead to higher wages. “Our students coming to Palm Beach State realize that. It’s a way to a better life, given the changing economic conditions that face us. More of our jobs in Palm Beach County are high skills jobs, which lead to higher wages that will require some form of higher education.” Barbatis said he is pleased to see that students are also taking more classes. “We want them to take more credits because they get closer to the completion line.”
Ethan Allen, as part of its ongoing partnership with Habitat for Humanity, has donated a range of new home goods to Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County for resale in their three local Habitat for Humanity ReStores in East Boca Raton, West Boca Raton and Delray Beach. Last year, Ethan Allen donated close to 4,000 products to Habitat ReStores across the U.S. and Canada. This year’s additional donations should bring estimated total donations to 48,000 with a total estimated retail value of more than $19 million. “Creating happy homes is what we do best,” said Gary Mair, Design Center Manager at Ethan Allen’s Boca Raton Design Center. “We’re thrilled to help families achieve their dreams of homeownership, and we’re proud to support Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County’s work in our community.” Proceeds from the sale of products, which include a broad range
of furniture and accessories, including quality living room furniture, dining room furniture, bedroom furniture and home décor from classic to contemporary, will assist Habitat in its mission to help families achieve strength, stability, and self-reliance through shelter. “We are grateful for Ethan Allen’s partnership,” said Randy Nobles, president and CEO of Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County. “ReStore proceeds from the sale of this new furniture is what supports Habitat’s mission of partnership housing that gives families a ‘hand-up, not a hand-out’ as they achieve the ‘American Dream’ of homeownership.” Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County Chief Development Officer Kari Oeltjen shared it is a great partnership because “Ethan Allen builds quality furniture to last generations, Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County builds homes to do the same.”
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August 18 - August 24, 2017
10 -Edition 329
The Boca Raton Tribune
columnists ROBERT’S COMMUNITY REPORT
FAITH By Robert J. Tamasy
By Robert Weinroth • edgeMED was honored last Friday as the winner of the first “Boca Means Business” award presented by the Boca Raton Tribune in partnership with the City Boca Raton’s Office of Economic Development. The award recognizes Boca Raton-based companies for their valuable contributions to the city’s corporate community. Started in 1981 and headquartered in Boca Raton, FL, edgeMED’s core function is pioneering the use of technology and expert.services that enable healthcare providers deliver first-class patient care and financial results. From developing one of the nation’s first electronic billing systems to providing the most advanced software, revenue cycle management services and managed IT solutions available today, edgeMED is dedicated to improving the health of the entire healthcare community. • On Friday evening, the Realtors® Association of the Palm Beaches held its annual White Party, hosted by Jennifer and Marc Bell. Billed as the event of year, over 400 Realtors and Affiliates attended the 5th Annual White Attire Fundriaser hosted by the Realtors® Association of the Palm Beaches’ Young Professionals Network. • This year’s beneficiaries included the RAPB Pay it Forward Foundation which assists Realtors and their families who are in need of financial assistance and Rebuilding Together, a non-profit division of the Solid Waste Authority which helps to preserve affordable housing by rehabilitating the homes of lowincome homeowners including those that are elderly and veterans. Guests had full access to Bell’s entertainment space fully equipped with pin ball, video games, ski ball and much more. • It was a great showing of community support on Saturday as the BCFD Block Party Luau was held in historic Pearl City. The proceeds from the event will support the great work being done in our community by Habitat for Humanity South Palm Beach County. • This was the last weekend for the 2017 edition of the Summer in the City. On Friday night, it was the music of Bob Marley performed by Ruff House and the finale was a performance by the Symphonia Boca Raton played the music from A Space Odyssey. What an awesome lineup this summer -- can’t wait for next year! . • In a move that would seem to settle any questions about Office Depot’s future in Palm Beach County, the Fortune 500 retailer this week paid $132 million for its 625,000-squarefoot complex at 6600 N. Military Trl from its landlord. Equity Commonwealth said it collected rent of just under $17 million a year on the three-building complex, or about $27 per square foot. Office Depot is one of Palm Beach County’s most prestigious corporate citizens. Its headquarters employs 2,000 workers, and the retailer is one of only two Fortune 500 companies based in the county. • Local business boosters welcomed the real estate deal as a vote of confidence by Office
August 18 - August 24, 2017
Setting The Team’s Expectation
Depot on its future in Boca Raton. • This past Monday brought back the popular BCFD Boca’s Got Talent. Another great display of local talent was on display at the Dubliner as the event helped raise funds for the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation. Congratulations to all of the great performers. It was a pleasure to judge the event along with GBRCC CEO Troy McLellan and local recording artist, Maggie Baugh. Top honors for the evening went to Gavin Graber. • On Tuesday the Tower 155 sales team hosted the Downtown Business Alliance for lunch at their sales office at 124 E Boca Raton Blvd (adjacent to the construction site). Guest speaker, Derek Vander Ploeg gave a short history Boca Raton from its early development of lands originally acquired by ARthur VIning DAvis (ARVIDA) through its decision to redevelop a downtown that was blighted and headed in the wrong direction to today, the “New Boca,” vibrant and exciting. • On Tuesday night it was a double bill of fund raising events. We started our night at the inaugural event sponsored by the Boca Raton Police Foundation and hosted by Piñon Grill as part of Boca Chamber Festival Days. The Boca Police brought several robots and their mobile command post for addressing situations where a possible Bonn needs to be addressed, quickly and safely. The event was well attended and raised funds and awareness for the needs of the Boca Raton Police. • And then we were off to Saks 5th Avenue where Heather Shaw and John Tolbert hosted a Boca Ballroom Battle Celebration and Dancer Reunion Event which helped raise additional funds for the big event this weekend. • The 10th Annual Boca’s Ballroom Battle is the “Don’t Miss” charity event of the summer. The Ballroom is a local spinoff of the popular TV show “Dancing with the Stars”. The event is being held on Friday, August 18, 2017 at the Boca Raton Resort & Club from 6 - 10PM. All proceeds from the event benefit the George Snow Scholarship Fund. • Eight prominent community leaders have accepted our invitation to compete in a ballroom dance and fundraising competition. Paired with professional dancers from Fred Astaire Dance Studios, all of our community dancers have been given a series of dance lessons to perfect a routine, and then compete for the grand prize at an elegant cocktail reception and dance. The competitors have trained for 4 months! The winner will receive the coveted 1st place Fundraising “Mirror Ball” trophy. • Get some fresh air, exercise and join your neighbors on Saturdays. From 8-10AM it’s Free Fitness Saturday at Sanborn Square. Every Saturday come join the fun. Tai Chi presented by KUNG FU & TAI CHI of Boca Raton goes from 8-8:45AM and then its yoga, presented by YOGA JOURNEY from 9-10AM. Then it’s Zumba at the South Beach Park Pavilion from 10:30-11:30AM. Wear your sneakers, bring a water bottle and towel.
An important but often overlooked role of a leader is managing expectations for the team. This can involve individual expectations, such as performance, productivity, and goal-setting. But it also can pertain to organizational expectations, ranging from sales and profitability to corporate mission and values. To convey expectations requires being able to communicate not only what is expected of the team, but also why those expectations have been established and how they are to be achieved. This is often easier said than done, because it requires “buy-in” by individual team members, a mutual acceptance and commitment in striving to meet those expectations. Just because the leader thinks expectations are good and worthy of pursuing, that does not guarantee the team will agree. Well-established expectations share several key elements. These include being clearly expressed; measurable; realistic, and within reach, yet challenging. When I became a magazine editor for CBMC years ago, the publication was not highly regarded by the membership, its mission was unclear, and it was a true “periodical” because it was published only periodically. Once I settled into the job, I resolved to refocus the content of the magazine to make it more appealing to our members, redefine its purpose, and establish a firm schedule for producing the magazine on a consistent basis so readers would know when to expect it in the mail. Our team rallied around these expectations, we began pulling in the same direction, positive response to the magazine grew dramatically, and we were received awards from our peers for excellence. For models on how to set expectations for a team, there is no better place to look than the Bible. The Old Testament tells about Nehemiah who, after hearing
about the walls of Jerusalem being in great disrepair, surveyed the damage and then assembled a reconstruction team. From the start, his expectations were clear: “Then I said to them, ‘You see the trouble we are in. Jerusalem lies in ruins, and its gates have been burned with fire. Come, let us rebuild the wall of Jerusalem, and we will no longer be in disgrace’” (Nehemiah2:17). Jesus Christ, of course, proved to be the greatest team builder of all, and from the start He established clear, compelling expectations: “As Jesus walked beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen. ‘Come, follow me,’ Jesus said, ‘and I will make you fishers of men.’ At once they left their nets and followed him. When he had gone a little farther, he saw James son of Zebedee and his brother John in a boat, preparing their nets. Without delay he called them, and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men and followed him” (Mark 1:16-20). Such a response, given the strong family and vocational ties these men had, indicates they all sensed a cause they wanted to join. At the same time, Jesus did not sugarcoat the expectations or make them unrealistic. He was straightforward when he told them, “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). Even Jesus’ parting words were filled with expectations to inspire His followers: “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:19-20). There was no ambiguity in what He expected them to do.
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Edition 329 - 11
Boca Society Happenings
Charlotte Beasley
Charlotte’s Travels Brunch at Oceans 234 On Sunday my travels took me to Oceans 234 in Deerfield Beach where I was joined by dear friends, Christine Lynn and Francesca Daniels for a delicious Champagne Brunch and a beautiful view of the Ocean.
Black Hat luncheon at Anti-Aging Center
This month’s luncheon for the Black Hat Diva’s took place at the new Anti-Aging Center on E. Palmetto Park Road where the ladies were treated to a healthy luncheon and body sculpting demonstration by the owner of the center, Nina Pressman.
Tiger Bay Club Anti Terrorism Luncheon This month’s speaker at the Tiger Bay Club luncheon at City Fish Market was Capt. Mike Wallace who spoke about terrorism and ways to protect one’s self. With so much violence in the world today we have to have way’s to protect ourselves and one of the ways is learning to use our keychains for protection.
Steve Fox’s White Party at Che Restaurant
I attended Steve Fox’s Annual White Party at the Che Restaurant in Delray Beach where a very large crowd enjoyed a d.j. and dancing, appetizers and sangria, and a Chicken and Rice dinner. A lot of Boca familiar faces were in attendance at this fun event.
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August 18 - August 24, 2017
12 -Edition 329
The Boca Raton Tribune
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For Sale
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Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, Co. 80201
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Edition 329 - 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 Boca Glades Baptist Church 10101 Judge Winikoff Rd. Boca Raton, FL 33428 561-483-4228 Website: www.bocaglades.org 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
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
(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)
IT’S WORKING!
Boca Raton Community Church 470 NW 4th Avenue Boca Raton, FL 33432 Phone: (561) 395-2400 Website: www.bocacommunity.org
Electronics for sale: 3 Polk speakers (excellent) - $35 each Mitsubishi R25 amplifier (excellent) - $50 In Boca Raton: 301 412-7794
Homes Sold In Boca Raton Sold Between 9/07/2015 to 9/13/2015
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August 18 - August 24, 2017
14 -Edition 329
The Boca Raton Tribune
sports Lynn Men’s Soccer Opens Season Gana to Compete at U.S. Amateur Ranked No. 10 in the Country Championship
Lynn University’s men’s soccer team will enter the 2017 season ranked No. 10 in the nation, as announced in the United Soccer Coaches top-25 preseason poll. The Fighting Knights return nine starters off last season’s 14-2-2 squad, which claimed both the Sunshine State Conference regular season and tournament titles and earned an NCAA Tournament appearance. The SSC is well-represented in the preseason poll with four squads entering the top-25. Tampa comes in with the highest ranking, No. 8, followed by Lynn, newly-initiated SSC member Palm Beach Atlantic (14th) and Florida Tech (24th). Last year’s national champion, Wingate, sits atop the country at the No. 1 position, followed by the University of Charleston, Rockhurst, UC-San Diego and Adelphi in the top-five. The Fighting Knights return a bevy of heavy-hitters off of last year’s
program, including South Region and SSC Player of the Year Jack Watson as well as USC First Team All-American defender Niklas Tasky and First Team All-SSC goalkeeper Alexander Roth and midfielder Alun Webb. Lynn opens the regular season on Friday, Sep. 1, against AuburnMontgomery in a neutral-site match in West Palm Beach, Fla., but fans will get an opportunity to see the team for the first time on Wednesday, Aug. 16, at 7 pm when it hosts Florida Atlantic. The Fighting Knights will battle FAU in the first contest of the South Florida Showdown, a nine-game series pitting six NCAA Division I opponents against NCAA Division II Lynn University. Other programs involved in the #SoFloShow will be men’s & women’s basketball, baseball, men’s golf and men’s & women’s tennis.
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Lynn University men’s golfer Toto Gana is set to tee it up in United States Amateur Championship beginning on Monday, Aug. 14, at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. The rising sophomore is one of 312 golfers that will compete for the United States Golf Association’s oldest championship tournament. He gained entry to the tournament following his victory in the 2017 Latin America Amateur Championship. Gana will tee off his first round from the 10th hole at Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles on Aug. 14 at 12:57 p.m. PDT. He returns to Riviera CC on Aug. 15 for a 7:42 a.m. PDT tee time. Each of the first two rounds are stroke play, with the top 64 golfers advancing to match play on day three of the tournament.
In his rookie season at Lynn, Gana helped lead the men’s golf program to an NCAA Division II National Runner-Up finish with a stroke average of 72.33. He posted a 3-0-0 mark in match play at the Division II National Championships on his way to Golf Coaches Association of America Freshman All-America recognition. Gana is no stranger to elite competition, as the Santiago, Chile, native has competed in the 2017 Masters Tournament at Augusta National in April before playing in the NCAA Division II Championships in May and the 122nd British Amateur Championship in June. Gana’s first year with the Fighting Knights was a resounding success, as he checked in with a team-best stroke average and three top-10 overall finishes.
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Edition 329 - 15
Ross Cash Named FAU’s Golf Head Boca Raton Library Promotion Set Coach for Upcoming FAU Football Game By: Michael Demyan
Ross Cash has been named Florida Atlantic University’s head men’s golf coach, announced Pat Chun, FAU’s vice president and director of athletics. “As a member of the South Florida community for over 20 years, this is literally a dream job for me,” said Cash. “I am so thankful to Athletics Director Pat Chun and all of the senior staff that I met with in the interview process for giving me this opportunity. The path before me looks very exciting and I will work diligently to be a success here at FAU. My wife Heather and I, as well as our son Colby, are so excited to be part of the Owl family.” Cash comes to FAU after serving for four seasons (2013-17) as head boys’ golf coach at The King’s Academy in West Palm Beach, Florida, where he built a 138-24-1 record. While there, Cash was responsible for all facets of the varsity, junior varsity, middle school and elementary school golf programs. Cash was named the 2015 and 2016 Palm Beach Post Coach of the Year as well as the 2015 Sun Sentinel Coach
of the Year. In 2016 he was named the NFHS Florida State Coach of the year. Prior to King’s Academy, Cash guided the Lake Worth Christian boys’ team from 2011-13. He also maintained a book of over 300 students, as the Winston Trails Golf Club Teaching Professional from 2014-17, and served as the instructor for two AJGA Champions, 12 ranked junior golfers and the No. 7 ranked junior golfer in the world. From 2004-16, he served as the Villa Delray Golf Club Teaching Professional, and from 1996-98, he served as the First Assistant Golf Pro at Palm Beach Polo Golf and Country Club. He is an alumnus of the University of Virginia. “We are excited to welcome Coach Cash to Florida Atlantic University,” said Chun. “Coach Cash has built a reputation in South Florida as one of the best teachers and coaches in the game. He will have an immediate impact on our student-athletes and athletics department. We are fortunate to have him lead our program.”
Football season is not here yet, but as it quickly approaches, the Boca Raton Public Library has decided to partner with Florida Atlantic University for a special promotion. The library will be celebrating Love Libraries Day on Saturday, September 16 when the FAU Owls take on the Bethune-Cookman Wildcats. September is Library Card SignUp Month, so in celebration, those who sign up for a new library card will be able to buy tickets to the September 16 game for only $5. Current Boca Raton Public
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Library cardholders will also be able to get the same rate. The game will also host festivities for FAU’s Youth Day on the same day, so fans will have plenty of free games, activities and entertainment besides the typical tailgating before the start of the game. FAU’s football season is set to kick-off on Friday, September 1 at home against the Navy. They will then travel to Wisconsin the following week, before returning home for their second home game on September 16 at 8 p.m. To purchase tickets for the game or for more information, fans can call Evan Siegel at 561-297-0068.
(561) 693-6776 WE DO MORE THAN JUST TAKE OUT THE TRASH, CLEAN BATHROOMS, VACCUM AND MOP YOUR FACILITY
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August 18 - August 24, 2017
16 -Edition 329
B oc a The City of
Raton’s
in the City 2017 Music and Movies Under the Stars at The Mizner Park Amphitheater
FREE MUSIC Attendees of all ages can enjoy games starting at 6:30 pm. Hollywood Brewery’s Beer Garden open to those 21 and over at 6:30 pm. Beer Garden open during Tribute Band Concerts only.
Friday, August 4 @ 7:30 pm*
Saturday, August 12 @ 8:00 pm
A Tribute to Fleetwood Mac Dreams: Crystal Visions
The Symphonia Boca Raton A Space Odyssey
Friday, August 11 @ 7:30 pm*
A Tribute to Bob Marley Ruffhouse *School of Rock @ 7:30 pm; Tribute Band @ 8:00 pm
TICKETED EVENT Tuesday, August 1 @ 7:30 pm Straight No Chaser and Postmodern Jukebox Double Feature Presented by Live Nation
For Tickets Visit MiznerAmp.com
August 18 - August 24, 2017
www.bocaratontribune.com