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Upcoming Concerts British Gems
Thu, Jan 13, 11 am, Mahaffey Theater
Star-Crossed Lovers
Wed, Feb 2, 11 am, Ruth Eckerd Hall Thu, Feb 3, 11 am, Mahaffey Theater Viva España
Wed, Feb 23, 11 am, Ruth Eckerd Hall
Classical America
Wed, Mar 16, 11 am, Ruth Eckerd Hall Thu, Mar 17, 11 am, Mahaffey Theater
Making Waves in Tampa Bay FloridaOrchestra.org 727.892.3337 or 1.800.662.7287
TARPON SPRINGS COMMUNITY TO DEDICATE NEW VETERANS PARK
Information and image from The Suncoast News Veterans honored veterans by dedicating a new park alongside Mayor Chris Alahouzos and U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis this past Veterans Day. Residents of the Meadows proposed Medals Park, which was built by Cove Communities, held a special service on Thursday, November 11 at 505 Anclote Boulevard in Tarpon Springs. The U.S. Coast Guard performed a flyover of the park, and 50 Pasco County schoolchildren from Trinity Elementary School were invited to sing the national anthem and the military medley. Event sponsors included Cove Communities, Humana, Chick-fil-A, Dunkin’ Donuts, Domino’s Pizza and Firehouse Subs. “The president of Cove Communities loves veterans, and he (Bilirakis) is putting this park together for us,” said Tony Ciulla, resident and Medals Veterans Club member. “It’s a place of sacred ground right now because of the veterans. It’s a tribute to our veterans who served our country.” Ciulla, who served for four years in the Marine Corps, said Veterans Day means honoring those who dedicated and sacrificed their lives for our country. He said he hopes the park will be a place of solemn reflection for its visitors and that those who spend time there can feel the community’s appreciation and involvement that went on to get it built. The park features benches and statues that represent a war hero carrying a wounded man from out of harm’s way, a combat soldier’s memorial and a soldier guarding flags. The park flies the flags of the five military branches, the U.S. flag, and the prisoner of war/missing in action flags. Around the park are black bricks inscribed with veterans’ names who live in the community and their family members. A plaque presented on the dedication day will read, “All gave some, some gave all, let us give to those who gave.”