The Boca Raton Tribune Yo u r C l o s e s t N e i g h b o r
Number 350 • Year VIII COMMUNITY see page 4
Boca Raton FC Partners with Rotary Club Boca Raton West
COMMUNITY see page 5
PBSC to host Afterschool/Summer Camp Job Fair Feb. 7
SPORTS
see page 11
Lynn Basketball Holds off Palm Beach Atlantic in Final Seconds
East /West Boca Raton, Highland Beach, Delray Beach, Deerfield Beach, FL
February 2 - February 8, 2018
Boca Raton Fine Art Show Announces Budding Artist Award Winners The 9th annual Hot Works Boca Raton Fine Art Show was held on January 27 & 28, 2018 in downtown Boca Raton, in Sanborn Square Park, on N.E. 1st Avenue and on East Boca Raton Road. Voted in the top 100 art shows in the nation for three years, this juried fine art and fine craft art show included 140 juried and professional artists whose art work was original and personally handmade. Many of the patrons commented “What a beautiful show. Thank you for bringing quality artists to the community.” As part of our commitment to bring art education into the community.
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2 -Edition 350 The Boca Raton Tribune COMMUNITY NEWS East/West Boca Raton, FL
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The 10th Annual Boating & Beach Bash for People with Disabilities will be held Sunday, March 4th, 2018, between 10:00 AM and 3:00 PM at Spanish River Park, 3001
• The 10th Annual Boating & Beach Bash for People with Disabilities will be held Sunday, March 4th, 2018, between 10:00 AM and 3:00 PM at Spanish River Park, 3001 • The Seat C race will put Deputy Mayor Jeremy Rodgers agasint Kim Do. • Seat D will be more of a battle. Candidates for the seat are Armand Grossman, Monica Mayotte, Paul Preste, and former City Councilmember, Michael Mullaugh. • The municipal elections will be held on March 13th. While there will be no early voting, you still have the opportunity to Vote by Mail by going online to the PBC Supervisor of Elections website. •Mark your calendars as the 9th annual “Flavors” event, hosted by the Junior League of Boca Raton, is right around the corner! This year’s event will include over 30 food vendors, our largest restaurant patronage to date, and feature an “around the world theme” that represents the very best culinary feats from each of the 7 continents – A truly global celebration! • A new elementary school could potentially be in the works for the City of Boca Raton. The City Council gave unanimous support to resolution 18-2018, which is a resolution from the City of Boca Raton supporting the establishment of a new public elementary school on city-owned land in the vicinity of Spanish River Boulevard, west of I-95 and east of north Military Trail.
Raton Airport. • Boca Raton Football Club is pleased to an-
nounce the return of Gabriel Bravo for the 2018 NPSL Season. The left-back returns to Boca Raton after a successful 2017 NPSL season which saw the 20-year old appear and start in seven NPSL matches, playing a total of 575 minutes in the NPSL season alone.
• The Palm Beach County Alliance for Mental Health held its 5th Annual Voice Awards Luncheon at Broken Sound County Club. The awards honor the commitment, action and service in mental health of a diverse group of individuals within our community. The event was sponsored by Boca Raton’s Promise, led by Alliance Chair, Rita Thrasher, and Ed Frontera and hosted by IAM1. • The Wings of Freedom exhibit has landed in Boca Raton. This interactive presentation of vintage aircraft used in WWII is part of a traveling exhibit presented by the Collins Foundation. The Collings Foundation is a non-profit, Educational Foundation, founded in 1979. The purpose of the Foundation is to preserve and exhibit rare historical artifacts and to organize and support “living history” events that enable Americans to learn more about their heritage through direct participation. The “Wings of Freedom Tour” has two goals: to honor the sacrifices made by our veterans that allow us to enjoy our freedom; and to educate the visitors, especially younger Americans, about our national history and heritage.
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
• Florida Atlantic University and the Latin American Training Center present the U.S. premiere of the film “Dear Ambassador,” which tells the story of the Brazilian ambassador who saved more than a thousand people, mostly Jews, in France during World War II. The film will be presented on Sunday, Feb. 4 at 2 p.m. in the University Theatre, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton campus, and is in Portuguese with English subtitles. Tickets to the film are $10 • The Boca Raton Airport Authority has completed a major safety enhancement with the completion of the new Engineered Materials Arresting System (EMAS) installation and airfield electrical upgrades at the Boca
February 2 - February 8, 2018
CITY DIRECTORY
BOCA RATON PUBLIC LIBRARY (561) 393-7852 FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY (561) 397-3000
Installation of Arresting System Completed at the Boca Raton Airport
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COMMUNITY Boca Raton Fine Art Show Announces Budding Artist Award Winners The 9th annual Hot Works Boca Raton Fine Art Show was held on January 27 & 28, 2018 in downtown Boca Raton, in Sanborn Square Park, on N.E. 1st Avenue and on East Boca Raton Road. Voted in the top 100 art shows in the nation for three years, this juried fine art and fine craft art show included 140 juried and professional artists whose art work was original and personally handmade. Many of the patrons commented “What a beautiful show. Thank you for bringing quality artists to the community.” As part of our commitment to bring art education into the community, a Budding Artist Competition is integrated into the show within a 10’x20’ area. Sponsored by Institute for the Arts & Education, students in grades 6-12 or ages 9-19 were encouraged to enter his/her original and personally handmade art that was publicly displayed in the art show the entire weekend. There was $250 in Budding
Artist Awards as students are exposed to the rules and entrepreneurship opportunity of doing something they love for a living – creating their art. The program brings families to the art show
and Robert Weinroth were part of the Budding Artists Awards Presentation held on Sunday, January 28 at 3pm. Special recognition was given to local art teachers including Hope Campbell
program. Participating artist in the show, Mixed Media Artist Zaki of Antwerp, Belgium was the Budding Artist Judge. Similar to the judging of the professional artist awards, the budding artists were judged based on originality, technique, and execution. Zaki provided an explanation as to why each student won his/her prize which provided an educational learning experience about art. 2018 Budding Artist Award Winners: One - $100 Best Budding Artist: Daniel Pan, Drawing, Age 15, Westglades Middle School
and exposes them to great art. Students are encouraged to speak with the professional artists in the show and ask them what inspires him/her. City of Boca Raton Council Members Andrea Levine O’Rourke
and Shelley Weiss of North Broward Preparatory School, Jennifer Schultz of Grandview Preparatory School, and Heather Schumulian of Hebrew Academy School in Margate who entered their students into this art-education
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Three - $50 Budding Artist Awards of Excellence: Savannah Carpenter, Painting, Age 13, Boca Raton Middle School Rebecca Fazio, Photography, Age 15, Grandview Preparatory School Sophia Vigne, Painting, Age 17, HomeSchooled, Boca Raton
February 2 - February 8, 2018
4 -Edition 350
Boca Raton Airport Air Traffic Control Tower Rehabilitation: Phase II to Begin
Last year the Airport Authority completed several substantial renovations to the Air Traffic Control Tower aimed at extending the useful life of the facility and creating an enhanced work environment for the controllers. These included: updates to critical systems, such as the roof, HVAC, bathroom plumbing, cab plumbing and certain fire line valves. The second phase of the Tower’s rehabilitation is set to begin in 2018. Phase II will include replacing the windows, replacing millwork and fixtures in the cab, and repairs to the millwork and fixtures in the training/break room. Eighty percent of funding for Phase II will be provided by a grant from the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT). The remaining 20% will be paid by the Boca Raton Airport Author-
ity’s (BRAA’s) 2018 Capital Improvement budget, which is comprised of revenue generated through land leases and fuel flow fees. Phase II is projected to cost $280,000, with $224,000 coming from the FDOT grant and the remaining $56,000 coming from the Capital Improvement budget. “Since the Tower began operations in 2000, it has played a vital part in the Airport’s role as a premier general aviation facility,” said BRAA Executive Director Clara Bennett. “Phase II will ensure that it remains a cornerstone of our operations.” This final phase of improvement is expected to be completed in the Fall 2018.
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Boca Raton FC Partners with Rotary Club Boca Raton West
Boca Raton Football Club has partnered with the Rotary Club of Boca Raton West on a two-year partnership in which Boca Raton FC will donate dictionaries to third-grade students in Boca Raton. The Dictionary Project brings together three local schools, Coral Sunset, Waters Edge, and Del Prado where a total of 500 students receive the own personal dictionary. “We are part of the fabric of this community,” explains President Douglas Heizer. “The idea for donating the dictionaries are so the children not only get their own dictionaries but also for them to see the value of volunteering, as well as the value of the Rotary club within the community.” Apart from donating the dictionaries, Boca Raton FC is also giving each third-grade student two free tickets to a Boca Raton FC home game during the 2018 NPSL season. The Dictionary Project begins in September, near the start of the school year, with members of the Rotary Club
going to the three schools and speaking to the kids about the importance of dictionaries, and the essay contest that they will participate in. In October, the Rotary Club hosts a party for the children in a local park with burgers, hot dogs, and all the fixings as they celebrate the top three students from each school and the best essay from each school, who will then receive an Amazon Kindle as their prize. For the next two years, as part of the partnership with Boca Raton FC, students will be encouraged to write an essay regarding soccer. “We at Rotary consider the Dictionary Project an important part of the efforts of our institution to promote literacy in the community and have a significant impact on these children,” said Rotary Club of Boca Raton West president, Vera Schäfer. “We are very thankful to Boca Raton Football Club for their partnership and generous donation which will grant this project to continue for the next couple of years”
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Boating Beach Bash to Celebrate PBSC to host Afterschool/Summer 10th Anniversary March 4th 2018 Camp Job Fair Feb. 7 The 10th Annual Boating & Beach Bash for People with Disabilities will be held Sunday, March 4th, 2018, between 10:00 AM and 3:00 PM at Spanish River Park, 3001 North Ocean Boulevard (State Road A1A) in Boca Raton. The Bash is the largest and oldest free, fun- day in America for those with special needs and their caregivers. Guests planning to attend are encouraged to pre-register at the event’s website, www.boatingbeachbash.com. The Bash annually welcomes 5,000 guests, assisted by 500 volunteers drawn from every sector of the community. Offerings include boat rides on the Intracoastal, a concert, dozens of exhibitors, games, beach activities, a complimentary BBQ lunch, the chance to meet Super Heroes and interact with miniature therapy ponies, children can play at the Kids Fun Zone or ride on a miniature train and go in the ocean with the assistance of physical therapists and members of the YMCA Water Safety Team. Additionally the Bash provides a Wellness Zone staffed by medical professionals from five area hospitals and students
from four medicals schools. These healthcare experts coach guests on how to live a more healthful lifestyle through noninvasive testing and information sharing. Best of all those with disabilities and their caregivers can have their medical questions answered by the Bash’s team of volunteer doctors and nurses. Even registered pharmacists will be available to discuss drug interactions. Additionally nutritionists will guide guests in creating more healthful eating habits, while professional yoga and meditation teachers will coach attendees in utilizing relaxation techniques to help manage stress, pain and other issues. Kechi Okwuchi, a rising star from last season’s AMERICA’S GOT TALENT, will perform at this year’s Bash. Ms. Okwuchi has overcome incredible physical and emotional challenges, along with dozens of surgeries, after surviving a fiery plane crash that killed all but two of the 109 passengers aboard her flight. Now she inspires others with her extraordinary voice and her compelling story. “We are so proud to reach this milestone in our history,” says Jay Van Vechten, Bash director. “This will be the first time we’ve ever held the event on a Sunday, but because of so many national holidays fall on weekends next March we found the first Sunday of the month to be the ideal time for us to celebrate this important anniversary. We look forward to welcoming everyone to this special day.”
Palm Beach State College is collaborating with public and private employers in Palm Beach County for the first Afterschool/Summer Camp Job Fair scheduled for Feb. 7. Teenagers and adults seeking employment opportunities in afterschool programs and summer camps will have access to more than a dozen employers with over 300 full-time and part-time positions to fill. The job fair will be held from 4 to 8 p.m. Feb. 7 at the Public Safety Conference Center on the PBSC Lake Worth campus, 4200 Congress Ave. PBSC is hosting the event in response to feedback from members of its Afterschool Business Partnership Council who said they need help filling the vacancies. Among the employers are the Town of Jupiter, the School District of Palm Beach County, the city of Boynton Beach
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and Doodlebugs Children’s Center. “We’re assisting our community partners meet a need to fill numerous positions while also helping anyone who is looking for employment,” said Luisa Brennan, program director of the Entry level and Afterschool Programs at PBSC. Palm Beach State College provides the state mandated training required to work in licensed childcare facilities, afterschool programs and summer camps. The training includes two 40-hour introductory child care programs that prepare students to work with children from either birth to 5 years or school age. For more information about these and other early child care and afterschool programs at PBSC, visit www. palmbeachstate.edu/programs/childcare. For questions about the job fair, call 561-868-4043 or email brennanL@ palmbeachstate.edu.
February 2 - February 8, 2018
6 -Edition 350 The Boca Raton Tribune EDITORIALS & LETTERS East/West Boca Raton, FL
The Boca Raton Tribune Founded January 15, 2010
DOUGLAS HEIZER, Publisher
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EDITORIAL By C. Ron Allen
January is National Mentoring Month, Will you Consider Mentoring a Youth? The sad, but not altogether shocking, news that one in three young people will grow up without a nurturing adult in their lives puts a new focus on the urgency of matching at-risk kids with a caring adult mentor. This month we are observing National Mentoring Month, and this week – Thursday to be specific – we paused to say “Thanks” to all the men and women who are helping a young person on his or her path to adulthood and beyond. As most of you already know, I have been a Pied Piper for mentoring for some time. I strongly believe in mentoring programs. I have seen, time after time, how introducing a caring adult in the life of a troubled youth can turn his or her life around. We, as adults, can create the perfect mentoring scenarios that
help young people hone decisionmaking and leadership skills. I think back on the time, not long ago, when we encouraged a group of recalcitrant high school boys to take on a leadership role in a project. Those boys poured their hearts in because we treated them as leaders rather than assume it was a quality they lacked. While we may not have called them mentors then, you and I can point to the coach, the neighbor and the caring adult who sparked and supported our personal and professional success. If you have not yet started, I urge you to consider becoming a mentor and giving our at-risk kids a real chance at a future. If you are already a mentor, keep charging! There will be times when you feel your effort is futile. Being a lifeline for young boys for more than three decades, I declare
that you are making a whale of a difference. Your caring attitude assures these young people that they do matter, that someone cares about them, and it tells them that they are not alone as they deal with the dayto-day challenges. Thanks to your supportive relationships, 55 percent of young people who were at-risk of falling off track are more likely to enroll in college, according to statistics compiled by the National Mentoring Partnership in Boston. Countless others will go on to be productive heads of their households, serve in the armed forces and most of all become respectful men and women. All because of your unselfish spirit. It is so crucial that our young people have a consistent, affirming adult presence in their lives. In 2018, KOP Mentoring Network
is committed to doing our part to make a long-term impact for our atrisk youth in South Florida. Earlier this month, we launched the STREAM3 Academy for young men and ladies in Riviera Beach. Thanks to our committed partners such as Microsoft, Center for Creative Education, Florida Power & Light, Royal Life Centers, Restoration Bridge, Chick-fil-A and the Riviera Beach Community Redevelopment Agency, we are exposing these young people to coding, digital photography and editing. Mentoring is a proven way to help our youths. Breaking the cycle of generational poverty and the societal ills it often spawns is in everyone’s best interest. We just need a few more people like you to do it. May we count on you to do your part?
POSITIVE LIVING By Dr. Synesio Lyra, Jr.
You Can Develop a Better Attitude! There are situations in life which are difficult to resolve. Even then, they are not impossible to eradicate. People cannot hold on to past miseries and expect a joyous present. Garbage cannot be accumulated for years without causing toxic, even fatal, effects on one’s self and on others. People cannot hold on to bad memories or to accumulated resentments and still demand happiness now. That won’t ever happen! The retention of poison anywhere shall always adversely affect the surrounding environment. A wise individual fully recognizes that there comes a time when
the only sane attitude is to exclaim: “Enough is enough! I must move on without being bound to all the extra baggage which I’ve allowed to accumulate in my life; the toxic levels I have permitted to develop are truly killing me and adversely affecting some of my relationships.” Any advance in life requires a final farewell to what cannot contribute to a healthy and meaningful present or future. Many times, even good things have to be left behind in favor of something much better which can contribute to a progressive life of meaning. Nobody can advance in any endeavor while chained to anything, especially to
unpleasant experiences of the past. The secret is to let go! Many people endure a miserable existence by holding grudges, by accumulating resentments, by retaining hatred to individuals and situations which caused them distress in the past. If retaliation, and an unforgiven spirit prevails, nothing shall ever be resolved, and the misery one already experiences shall only retain its grip and augment in its intensity. So, why remain in shackles for so long when true freedom can be your portion? There needs to be a greater sense of urgency in dealing with these matters, by people prone to
choose slavery instead of the enjoyment of full liberation. Nothing shall ever be resolved when a spirit of vengeance, accusation, faultfinding prevails. What one inwardly wants to see resolved will simply increase its hold on the person dominated by self-righteousness. Sadly, some people also go to their grave with unresolved issues which never required resolution to start with. Many fail to recognize that sometimes the obvious is not the actual. Furthermore, one’s point of view depends on one’s point of viewing. Avoid irrational thoughts, attitudes, and self-serving suspicions and unreal expectations!
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.
February 2 - February 8, 2018
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Edition 350- 7
The Boca Raton Tribune
OBITUARY
FLORIDA’S BIGGEST lobster mini-season dive PARTY!
Hope Miller Gray September 27, 1923-February 1, 2018 Hope Miller Gray -- a beloved wife, mother, “Granny,” and friend – passed away on Feb. 1 after a long and feisty life. Born on Sept. 27, 1923, in Baltimore, Maryland to parents Jack & Ann Miller, she was devoted to her family and was especially close to her siblings – big brothers Ted and Jerry, and younger sister/best friend Beverlee, all of whom passed before her. She was an Army civilian worker payroll clerk, helping America’s World War II efforts to defeat global evil. She moved to Florida, the state she loved as a near-native, in 1946 to raise her own family and was the mother of four by the time she was 27. After a divorce from Walter L. Sachs, she forever positively changed the lives of the entire family when she married Frank B. Gray, who became the most dedicated father whom Hope’s young children spent a lifetime learning from and loving. Among the greatest gifts she gave her children was the unflinching loving influence of parents whose names and roles defined being “Frank” and having “Hope.” As the passionate matriarch of a diverse family, her fierce love inspired three generations to reflect many of the values and virtues that she and Frank embodied. To many, she was a strong-willed, tough-but-loving person, enduring and thriving through any adversity -- and setting an example about solving problems as a way of life. Typical of “Hopie's” toughness (and stubborn ways): after three different hurricanes hitting Florida in her elder years -- the most recent, Irma -- she refused to leave her home. Even without power or hot water for weeks at a time, she ate tuna and crackers, took cold showers and sat by the light of lanterns -- but never gave up her homestead. A modern pioneering woman, she could have made it across the country in another era on any wagon train, even with spartan supplies. Among her many qualities: she was a world-class
fashion pacesetter, always turning heads by her inimitable sense of style and flair; she had an amusing, irrevocable penchant for profanity to accent any moment that needed it (and apparently there were moments in every day that needed it); and she had a limitless supply of unrelenting loyal love that special Moms always have. In recent years, she had been progressively, physically ailing, but her youngest daughter, Stephanie Sachs, selflessly served as the best medical angel who was Hope’s loving, dedicated, and attentive caregiver -extending and enhancing her life so much. Hope M. Gray is survived by her children, Stephanie Sachs; sons Richard Sachs; Ronald L. Sachs (Gay Webster-Sachs); daughter Suzanne Shapiro (Leonard Shapiro); grandchildren Samantha Sachs; Aimee Sachs; Julie Sachs Hunter (Walter “Pope” Hunter); Allison Sachs; Jeffrey Shapiro; Jennifer Shapiro; beloved cousin Flo Jacobsen; and many cousins, nieces and nephews. In her final days, in the tender care of Hospice By the Sea, Hope was serenaded by a music therapist with a Frank Sinatra (her favorite singer) song, “Fly Me to the Moon.” She took the song to heart. And, almost as if to welcome her transition, the night that she passed, the skies above radiated with the rarest of sights: a “Super Blue Blood Moon Eclipse,” that hasn’t occurred in more than 150 years. Typical of her wonderful sense of humor, Hope has long asked for this simple quote from her to appear on her headstone: "I told you that I didn't feel well." She is surely now in the embrace of God and her beloved husband, Frank B Gray. (In lieu of flowers, Hope and her family ask for donations to either the American Lung Association or to the ASPCA.)
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LAUDERDALE-BY-THE-SEA, FL
JULY 24-29, 2018 bag bug up to outs s per d 12 ide t a he k y eys!
Super hotel deals with low summer rates! Bring the family! Great beaches, pubs, shops and restaurants you can walk to.
Join The Great Florida Bug Hunt on July 25 & 26. $20,000 in prizes! No contest fee if you stay in LBTS!
Diveheart Benet Concert on July 28!
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February 2 - February 8, 2018
8 -Edition 350
FAU Appoints New Board of Trustees Members Florida Gov. Rick Scott has appointed Brent Burns and Brad Levine and reappointed Mary Beth McDonald to the Florida Atlantic University Board of Trustees. Burns succeeds Thomas Workman, Jr. who has served on the Board since 2008. Levine succeeds Daniel Cane, the current vice chair, who has served on the Board since 2013. McDonald, who has served on the Board since 2013, is the former mayor of the City of Vero Beach. She received her bachelor’s degree from FAU in 1974. In 2013, she was named a “distinguished alumni” by the Florida Atlantic University Alumni Association (FAUAA). Burns graduated from FAU with a bachelor’s degree in business administration in 1981. He was named the 2016 inductee to the FAUAA Hall of Fame. “It is an honor to return to my alma mater and serve on the Florida Atlantic University Board of Trustees,” said Burns. “I look forward to serving on the Board with my fellow trustees to ensure that FAU continues on its path to becoming America’s fastest-improving university.” Burns is currently the president and chief operating officer of JM Family Enterprises, Inc., a $14.5 billion diversified automotive company based in Deerfield Beach. JM Family is ranked No. 20 on Forbes’ list of “America’s Largest Private Companies.” It is also ranked No. 55 by FORTUNE® as one of the 100 Best Companies to Work For®, its 19th consecutive year on the list. As president and COO, Burns oversees JM Family’s three operating
business units – Southeast Toyota Distributors, LLC, World Omni Financial Corp. and JM&A Group – and leads the organization’s overall strategic planning and diversification efforts. Burns joined JM Family in 2000 with nearly 20 years of leadership experience in automotive operations and finance. Levine is currently the chief executive officer of Tellus, LLC, based in Deerfield Beach. He received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Florida and his master’s degree from Schiller University. He currently resides in Boca Raton. Prior to Tellus, Levine launched and scaled the second largest life and annuity insurance processor in the country and maintains a seat on the board as a main shareholder. His entrepreneurial commitment to building solutions for the healthcare and government industries led him to launch Tellus in 2013. “I am honored to have been selected by Gov. Scott and look forward to working with my fellow trustees, President Kelly and the entire FAU team to continue enhancing and building this great University,” said Levine. FAU’s Board of Trustees are a 13-member group responsible for costeffective policy decisions appropriate to the University’s mission, the implementation and maintenance of high-quality education programs, the measurement of performance, the reporting of information and the provision of input regarding state policy, budgeting and education standards. Recommended by the
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Edition 350- 9
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COLUMNISTS ROBERT’S COMMUNITY REPORT
FAITH By Rick Boxx
Avoiding Bitterness Over Workplace Failures
By Robert Weinroth • This past weekend it was the Saint Mark Greek Festival. It was a fun weekend of food, dancing, and “kefi” at the Church grounds on Yamato Road. Attendance was one of the largest since the festival began … OPA! • HotWorks.org presented the 9th Annual Boca Raton Fine Art Show™ on January 27 & 28, 2018 in downtown Boca Raton at Sanborn Square Park. Downtown Boca Raton was the perfect venue for a beautiful art show, featuring an exclusive collection of high-quality, original, and refreshingly unique artwork. On Sunday, the Budding Artist competition recognized several young artists from our community with ribbons and checks. It’s a great way to help young artists gain confidence in showing their works. • National Jewish Health held a dinner at Broken Sound Country Club. National Jewish Health is the only facility in the world dedicated exclusively to groundbreaking medical research and treatment of patients with respiratory, cardiac, immune and related disorders. For more information about National Jewish Health go to: www. NationalJewish.org • The US Holocaust Museum Dinner at Boca West Country Club celebrated the museum’s 25th Anniversary. The keynote speaker was a gentleman by the name of Benjamin Ferencz. What he lacked in stature he more than up for in intellect and grit. At age 27 Ferencz became the chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials and successfully convicted all 22 Nazi defendants he was assigned. He is a true hero of the Jewish People. • In its 9th year, the Junior League of Boca Raton held its Flavors of Boca at The Addison. This is one of the most entertaining boutique food and wine events in South Palm Beach County. Attendees enjoyed the finest fare and wine this side of delicious. A combination of celebrated chefs and restaurants participated. Coming: • Enjoy a cornucopia of events from now until April 18th at Mizner Park Amphitheater under the big tent! Join us for Boca Raton Seafood Festival, Avraham Fried, The Cowboy Ball, Boca Bacchanal, WPEC Health & Wellness Expo, the 2018 edition of the Festival of the Arts, and more. See the full list of upcoming events at: www. myboca.us/826/Mizner-Park-Amphitheater • On Saturday February 3rd and Sunday February 4th the Boca Raton Museum of Art hosts the 32nd Annual Museum of Art Festival in Mizner Park. The streets of Mizner Park will, again, be filled with a tremendous selection of art from across the country. One of a kind art will be available for purchase with a portion of the proceeds dedicated to the support of the museum’s
educational programming. The festival is open from 10AM to 5PM and is free and open to the public. • The Boca Raton Seafood & Music Festival follows the next weekend, (Saturday and Sunday February 10th and 11th) from 10AM–6PM. The ticketed event is a unique blending of food, music and visual entertainment offering a potpourri of delectable seafood creations and delicious drinks prepared by our city’s top restaurants combined with outstanding musical performances by local and regional musicians. General admission is only $5.00 • The City of Boca Raton and Downtown Boca are very excited to be hosting the 3rd Annual Italian Fest on Saturday, February 3rd. You are invited to be a part of this successful event that drew over 8,000 people last year and an even larger crowd is expected this year. There will be authentic live Italian entertainment. Activities for the children include rides, slides, and carnival games in addition to face painting. There will be plenty of food vendors. In fact, there’s something for everyone. Come out and join the fun! • The Original Florida Follies a non-profit charitable organization dedicated to helping children-in-need presents their 2018 show: “AGE IS JUST A NUMBER”. Performances on Sunday February 4th, 11th, 18th & 25th, 2:00pm at Olympic Heights Theater, Lyons Rd. in Boca Raton. This Broadway style revue features precision dance, singer Don Stansfield and DooWop group The Paradons. Performers include retired showbusiness veterans aged 60-94 years young, including former Radio City Music Hall Rockettes, Broadway dancers, Showgirls and more! Call for tickets: 954-445-4232 • “Dear Ambassador” a US Premiere tells the extraordinary story of Luiz Martins de Souza Dantas, who served as Brazilian Ambassador to Paris during WWII. A largely unsung hero, he defied his own government’s orders by granting hundreds of unauthorized visas to Jews and others facing imminent capture and death. Consisting of re-enactments, interviews with survivors, and archival footage, Dear Ambassador commemorates Brazil’s counterpart to Oskar Schindler and Raoul Wallenberg, and like them was posthumously awarded the title Righteous Among the Nations at the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Jerusalem. • South Florida International Fashion Show: Attendees will have the opportunity to meet the executive producers of the South Florida International Fashion week. The event benefits Fashion for a Cause. Grand Opening of the South Florida International Fashion Week in BOCA RATON will be held at Excell Auto Group (1001 Clint Moore Rd Boca Raton FL). Please follow the link below for VIP or General Admission tickets for the Boca Raton event on February 7th.
Years ago, my boss at the time appointed me to chair a taskforce to address a major problem in our company. For me, this became a political landmine, a classic no-win situation. My boss was likely hoping I would protect him from the possible fallout of the taskforce’s decision, but I did not. In its findings, the taskforce concluded the real issue was my boss’s approach to the problem we had been researching. Soon after my report was finalized and submitted, I received a demotion. My boss, who had been an advocate for me, became my enemy. For more than two years I fostered a toxic anger towards him. I felt unjustly treated and maligned. I had become the scapegoat for a problem of my boss’s own making. Seeking to strike back and gain a measure of revenge, every time I had an opportunity, I bad-mouthed this man to others. After carrying this weight of anger and bitterness, with no hope of the executive ever offering to correct the wrong he had done to me, I came to a startling, yet freeing realization: My anger had been hurting me much more than it had affected him. Even if my negative comments succeeded in diminishing my boss in the eyes of others, my anger was not appeased. Then I began to do something I should have considered much sooner – I determined to read, meditate on, and apply what the Bible teaches about anger, justified or not. For instance, Ephesians 4:26 teaches, “Be angry, and yet do not sin; do not let the sun go down on your anger, and do not give the devil an opportunity.” Thinking about his exhortation, it occurred to me that the sun had literally
gone down on my anger hundreds of times, and the festering bitterness I had continued to feel was giving the devil ample opportunity to undermine what God was trying to do in me and through me. Then I began pondering Matthew 6:15-16, in which Jesus states, “For if you forgive others for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions.” Those were hard words to read; as I pointed an accusing finger toward my one-time boss, it seemed the other fingers on my hand were pointing back at me. Pondering this, the Lord convicted me that since I had not forgiven my former boss, why should I expect God to forgive me for my many sins? I realized that in addition to forgiving my ex-boss – even if he never asked for it – I also needed to ask God to forgive me for many things, including my unforgiving spirit. To determine what God wanted me to do next, I read Matthew 5:23-24, in which Jesus says, “Therefore if you are presenting your offering at the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your offering there before the altar and go; first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and present your offering.” More than two years since my anger began, I finally started the process of reconciliation by calling my former boss – and asking his forgiveness. That did not fix what he had done, but at last I was free of the toxic anger and its devastating effects. Anger is an emotional cancer whose cure is forgiveness. Heizer Media Group
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SPORTS Boca Raton FC Adds Giovanni Amoroso for 2018 NPSL Season
As the 2018 National Premier Soccer League continues to inch closer, Boca Raton FC continues to add to its roster and is delighted to announce the signing of Giovanni Amoroso for the 2018 Season. The son of Boca Raton FC brand ambassador, Marcio Amoroso, Giovanni comes to Boca Raton FC from Brazilianside Ituano where the 20-year-old appeared in a number matches for the club in the span of seven months. “Giovanni is a hard-working young man with a lot of talent,” says head coach Jim Rooney. “He has been training with us for a few weeks now and his in-game awareness it top notch, along with his ability to create plays.” “I’m very excited to continue my career at Boca Raton FC,” added Giovanni. “I’m very thankful for the ownership group in their trust in me as we continue to build for a 2018 NPSL championship run.”
A gifted striker, like his father, Giovanni has also played for Guarani U17 (2012 – 2014), and Udinese Calcio of the Italian Serie A (2014-2016). “We are very excited with the addition of Giovanni to our 2018 NPSL family,” said club president Douglas Heizer. “Gio is a talented player and not only has a great attitude in the field but also outside of it, which is something we also look at here at Boca Raton FC.” Season ticket packages for Boca Raton FC’s 2018 National Premier Soccer League campaign at Atlantic High School Stadium are available now. With packages starting as low as $40 for a full season package, there’s no better deal than getting a Boca Raton FC 2018 Season Passes. For more information on Boca Raton FC season tickets please visit http:// www.bocaratonfc.com/2018-season-passes/ or email us at seasonpass@bocaratonfc.com
Lynn Basketball Holds off Palm Beach Atlantic in Final Seconds
By: Michael Demyan The Florida Atlantic University Owls were able to narrowly escape with a thrilling 63-62 victory on the road against the Rice University Owls Saturday, thanks to a three-point shot at the buzzer from Justin Massey. The game was tied at 60 with only a minute remaining before Rice’s Connor Cashaw sunk a jump shot with three seconds left on the clock. Down by two, Payton Hulsey grabbed the inbounds pass and tossed it to Massey, who quickly unleashed the ball from 35 feet out, sealing the victory. “It’s a shot he’ll remember for the rest of his life,” Rice head coach Scott Pera said. “Bishop (Mency) had a hand in his face. I don’t know how many of those you make, but he made it when he needed to and credit goes to them and they deserved to win.” FAU (10-11, 4-5 C-USA) has now won four of their last six games, but had lost the last two heading into Saturday. “These Saturday games are tough, but our guys stuck with it,” FAU head coach Michael Curry said. “The last two Saturday’s
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on the road (UTSA and Rice), we’ve made big shots at the end.” Rice (5-17, 2-7 C-USA) seemed to have the upper hand offensively to start the game. They made four of their first five attempts from beyond the arc, giving them a 12-9 lead. FAU kept the pressure on though and took command for the rest of the half, holding as high as a 10-point lead until Cashaw cut the gap to eight with a basket just before halftime. Rice’s strong offense came right back to start the second half however, quickly building a 12-3 run to take the lead. For the rest of the game, FAU sought to not let a win slip through their fingers. They trailed by six with 7:35 remaining, but slowly inched forward to a close, back and forth duel for the final six minutes. Ronald Delph, this week’s C-USA player of the week, led the team with 20 points and added five rebounds. He also passed Damon Arnette for sole possession of fifth place on FAU’s career rebounds list with 554. Massey put up 18 points of his own, including the game-winning shot. Gerdarius Troutman also finished in double digits with 10 points, including an important three-pointer which tied the game at 54. Another notables were William Pfister, who had 11 rebounds and Hulsey, who totaled five assists, seven rebounds and a steal. Cashaw led Rice with 16 points. FAU’s next stop will be back at The Burrow to host Louisiana Tech on Thursday at 7 p.m..
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