Ormond Beach Observer

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ORMOND BEACH

YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

NEIGHBORHOOD

SPORTS

Paddle Stars prep for this weekend’s event; plus: Author honored.

Seabreeze’s Bayliff is back in business, after a year of injuries.

PAGE 13

OUR TOWN

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

NEWS

City considers shift of land at airport to expand business park. PAGE 3

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KEYS TO SUCCESS

past is prologue By Wayne Grant | News Editor

HISTORY FOR SALE The 1937 historic fire house on Granada was renovated in 2008.

Diane Johnson

Courtesy photo

+ Ormond woman donates peanut butter, jelly to HUM When Diane Johnson turned 70 years old this July, she didn’t want birthday presents. Instead she asked her guests to bring jars of peanut butter and jelly to give to local charity Halifax Urban Ministries. Johnson, director of the Song of the Coast Sweet Adeline Chorus, gathered 50 jars that birthday to HUM in hopes that she might encourage others to do the same with their birthdays.

+ Knights distribute $3,800 in grants The Tootsie Roll donation campaign has paid off! The Knights Prince of Peace Council 8791 recently made a few donations for its 2014 Campaign for Citizens with Disability Funds. The council donated $3,800 to the ARC of Volusia and the special education classes at Osceola, Tomoka, Pine Trail and Pathways elementary schools, along with Ormond Beach Middle School. In addition, a contribution was made to a statewide Knights of Columbus charity that helps people with disabilities. “Through the efforts of our council members and the generosity of area residents and visitors, we are pleased to again provide much needed funds to help local students and citizens with learning and developmental challenges,” said Harold Bennett, grand knight of Council 8791. “We would also like to thank Publix, Walmart and Winn-Dixie for giving us access to their storefronts and customers.”

SEE OUR TOWN / PAGE 2

Sometimes a person needs a home, but in this case a home needs a person, preferably someone with an interest in history. The historic Ormond Beach Fire House, 160 E. Granada Blvd., a 1937 Works Progress Administration project, is up for sale. Designed by Alan J. MacDonough, the architect for the Daytona Beach Bandshell, Holly Hill City Hall, Streamline Hotel and Peabody Auditorium, the structure ties Ormond Beach to the history of the area. It also reflects the look the city of Ormond Beach seeks, namely the coquina elements that were used for Andy Roma-

New piano opens more possibilities for acts at the PAC The concert grand was donated by an Ormond Beach resident.

traits to be featured in her upcoming gallery at the Unitarian

When the Friends of the Performing Arts Center asked Marc Schwartz, PAC supervisor, what the facility really needed, he told them a concert grand piano. It would make it possible for the facility to attract quality, symphonic orchestras, but a new one would cost $50,000. Alan Burton, a member of Friends, said the PAC has a piano, but it’s not a concert piano, and that makes a big difference. The Friends of the PAC is a group of volunteers that raises money for the facility. They have acquired microphones, sound boards, lights, etc., but nothing as significant as a piano. Until now. Lori Tolland, a member of the group, recently was visiting a friend who was downsizing to a smaller house in Ormond Beach. The friend, Janet Dannehower, said she did not have room for the 6-foot, grand Yamaha that she bought 12 years ago for her daughter to play. It was a 1977 model, manufactured in Japan. She told Tolland that she was thinking of donating it, and Tolland told her she knew the perfect nonprofit organization that needed it. “It’s all about being in the right place at the right time,” Tolland said. “She has a generous heart.” Dannehower said, “The opportunities it makes for the PAC makes me happy.” Burton said he has already talked to his contacts at Stetson University, and there are singers and pianists now interested in performing at the PAC. “Aspiring professionals and people on the high end of their music career won’t mind playing on this piano,” he said. “It will be used for

SEE PAINTER / PAGE 4

SEE PIANO/ PAGE 4

Wayne Grant

The historic fire house on Granada Boulevard is looking for an owner. no Park, the Sunoco Gas Station and the proposed new welcome signs. History buffs may be concerned about a change in ownership,

but there are a few protections for historic structures. The fire house was designated an Ormond Beach Historic Landmark in 1987, so there are

codes against altering the exterior and “destruction by neglect,” by not taking care of it. (A full explana-

SEE FIREHOUSE / 4

NO REGRETS By Emily Blackwood | Staff Writer Told by doctors she only had three weeks to live, Jeanie Deegan has used her positive attitude to continue to stay alive. Emily Blackwood

Artist: ‘If I’m dying in three weeks, why do I feel so good?’

Artist finds peace in her paintings after pancreatic cancer diagnosis. Jeanie Deegan sits in front of a hilly, beachside mural she painted on her living room wall. It’s covered

Wayne Grant | News Editor

with signatures from all her house guests — just one small hint of her hospitality. Her friends from

all over the county browse through her house in Ormond Lakes, picking up paintings and por-

INDEX Blackwood..............6 Calendar...............15

Classifieds ...........18 Cops Corner............8

Crossword.............16 McMillan................6

Real Estate...........16 Diversions.............17

Vol. 2, No. 46 One section


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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

+ Art museum hires curator for outreach Kristin Heron has joined the staff of the Ormond Memorial Art Museum as the curator of education and outreach. She will coordinate classes for adults and children, as well as community outreach programs with the Kristin Heron Boys and Girls Club, veterans, and Florida Hospital. Heron has a bachelor’s degree from Rollins College, in Winter Park, with a double major in studio art and music; an associate degree in graphic design technology from Daytona State College, and has completed coursework in printmaking at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She currently operates Kristin Heron Art and Design Studio, specializing in creative graphic design services for small businesses and whimsical fine art.

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

“In much of my recent work, I combine traditional techniques like painting, drawing, printmaking and collage with digital methods,” she said.

+ Check On Hold gives $36,000 to HUM Halifax Urban Ministries got the money they needed to stay open, just in the nick of time. Bill Schaeffer, CEO of Check On Hold, presented a check for $36,000 to the charity July 14. This donation came right after HUM announced it was not receiving a federal funding grant that supports the majority of the organization. Schaeffer has been a donor for three years and increased his donation due to HUM’s immediate need. These dollars will help support homeless prevention services to families with food, rent and utility assistance, meals to the homeless at the Bridge of Hope Hot Meal Program, homeless assistance at the HUM Center with laundry, showers, clothing, computer usage, case management, a medical clinic, and operating the HUM-Star Family shelter housing 24 families with children.

Courtesy photo

Sun Swirlz Yogurt and Smoothies celebrated a ribbon cutting June 27.

+ Smooth operation: Sun Swirlz celebrates ribbon cutting The Ormond Beach Chamber of Commerce helped one local yogurt and smoothie shop

cut that red ribbon. Sun Swirlz Yogurt and Smoothies held its ceremonial ribbon cutting with the chamber June 27. The business is located 132 N. Nova Road. Call 872-6060.

+ Garden club landscapes home for Habitat for Humanity A Habitat for Humanity house recently got a landscaping job, courtesy of an Ormond Beach club. The Tillandsia Garden Club of Ormond Beach created a garden design and purchased the trees and plants for a home on Palm Place on June 7. Working with Habitat for Humanity volunteers, eight garden club members finished the job. The members also took part in a dedication ceremony June 20. The Tillandsia Garden Club of Ormond Beach recently landscaped a home for Habitat for Humanity. Courtesy photo

Courtesy photo

Bill Schaeffer, CEO Check On Hold; Mark Geallis, Halifax Urban Ministries community development director; Rich Fitzmaurice, shelter manager; and Troy Ray, Halifax Urban Ministries executive director, pose for a photo with the check.

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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

friendly skies By Wayne Grant | News Editor

Airport land for business park?

The Airport Master Plan will be updated next year, with an option of transferring land.

The city is currently evaluating about 20 acres of airport property as a potential addition to the business park. The property, on the west side of the business park, is commonly referred to as “the old nursery property,” because the city operated a nursery there for about 15 years. The city decided having the nursery was “not worth it,” said Economic Developer Joe Mannarino, and ceased the operation a few years ago. The current business park is almost full. Only a 3.2-acre parcel is left, on West Tower Circle, and Mannarino said he has an interested party. The business park consists of 173 acres and about 1 million square feet of industrial space. Mannarino said the City Commission has asked staff to assess the nursery area for possible business park expansion. Adding the 20 acres would enable the city to develop and sell more land to businesses; about eight acres

The entire business park was once part of the airport. are wetland, which would not be developed. After the assessment of the property, the Aviation Advisory Board and the City Commission will decide whether to make a request to the Federal Aviation Administration to acquire the airport property. The city would be required to buy it at fair market value. “It’s a natural extension of the business park,” Mannarino said. The wetlands would prevent developing anything for aviation purposes, such as

Wayne Grant

taxiways or hangars. If developed, a road would be extended from the business park to Pineland Trail. At an Aviation Advisory Board meeting on July 14, Alan Jorczak, who runs a business in the park, suggested that an airport runway be extended through the site, rather than expanding the business park. He said a plane would be able to reach flying altitude before leaving the airport property, thus reducing noise over surrounding neighborhoods. A

longer runway would also attract businesses to the Ormond Beach area, he said. In an interview after the meeting, Mannarino said that in addition to the wetland issue, the property is too far south of any other improvements at the airport to be useful. He said the Aviation Advisory Board and City Commission could consider the future of the “old nursery” property in September. The airport master plan is set to be updated in 2015. A consultant will make recommendations to the city based on an analysis. At the Aviation Advisor Board meeting, Jorczak said it would be premature to take the land from the airport and turn it into the business park before the master plan is completed. The entire business park was once part of the airport. In 1960, the city bought the land from the FAA so that a business park could be developed.

INBRIEF + Commissioners to set tentative tax rate A taxing time is approaching for city officials, as a millage rate and budget must be established for next year. On July 29, the City Commission will have a workshop to discuss the operating budget at 5:30 p.m. in the commission conference room, which is located in the hallway that runs along the courtyard. At 7 p.m., in the commission chambers, the officials will have their first regular commission meeting since July 1, where they will set the tentative millage rate for property taxes for the coming year. City Manager Joyce Shanahan said city staff will have a recommendation for the rate for the commissioners to consider. She said the proposed budget will be released on July 24, and will be available on the city website, ormondbeach.org. The final budget will be approved in September.

+ Ormond man found dead on U.S. 1 John Jones, 50, of Ormond Beach, was found dead at 12:25 a.m. July 19, the apparent victim of a hit and run. His body was lying on the west shoulder of U.S. 1 at Lowndes Avenue. A Florida Highway Patrol spokesman said the man was struck by an unknown vehicle traveling in an unknown direction. There are no known witnesses. Anyone with information is asked to call the Highway Patrol at 407-737-2213.

STYLIN’ By Wayne Grant | News Editor

+ City seeks applicants for brownfield grants

Photos by Wayne Grant

Lisa Fehr styles the hair of customer Bryce Shay, a Seabreeze High School graduate now attending Florida State University.

Big city trend blows into town New ‘dry bar’ called Blown, at 73 Yonge St., gets hair back in shape for that big night out. Hair stylist Lisa Fehr said sometimes she would run into a customer in a store and they would say, “Don’t look at my hair!” It seems a person’s hair never again looks as good as the day they walked out of the salon. In her travels around the country, Fehr said she noticed new businesses called “dry bars” that took care of the problem. Women would stop in for a blow dry and style, and leave with great looking hair. She said she saw them in New York, Tallahassee, Gainesville and California, when she was visiting her children in college. (“At one time, I had five children away at college,” she said.) Fehr said the dry bars were always full of customers. So, she recently opened

Blown, a dry bar and nail studio at 73 S. Yonge St. It occupies the former location of Hair to Dye For, which she also owned. She blows the hair out, after washing, and then uses hot tools to curl or flatten, and hair products to style the hair. She also offers gloss, up-dos, conditioning and other options. “You can’t style your hair just by blow drying it,” she said. “The only thing we don’t do is cut it.” She said she will continue to color hair for her clients, but the main business at Blown will be a dry bar, manicures and pedicures. She expects business to be as good as it is elsewhere because it’s unique. “There’s a salon on every corner, but no dry bars,” she said.

Dr. Liz Morejon gets her first pedicure at Blown. “I’m going to come back and get another one,” she said. “Say you have an important business meeting, or you’re planning an evening out,” she said. “Or maybe you’re just having a bad hair day. If your hair is having a good day, then you’re

going to have a good day.” She expects special occasions to be an important part of her business. Call 481-8320 or find Blown dry bar on Facebook.

Money would help residents redevelop sites. The city of Ormond Beach is seeking input from residents and business owners who think they might qualify for a grant from the Environmental Protection Agency to clean up brownfield sites. A brownfield site is an abandoned or underutilized industrial or commercial property that has actual or perceived contamination and could be a potential site for redevelopment. Examples include junkyards, abandoned buildings, closed dry cleaning facilities, former gas stations, abandoned landfills, etc. The Brownfield Advisory Board will identify such sites with assistance of a consultant, Cardno TBE, of Clearwater. The city Brownfield Advisory Board plans to meet with residents and business owners on Aug. 12. To nominate a site, an applicant can find the form at ormondbeach.org/brownfieldform, or visit ormondbeach. org and click on “News and Announcements.” Forms are also available at the Joint Permit Counter in the Planning Department at City Hall. Deadline is Oct. 15. The city intends to seek a $400,000 grant in the 2015 grant cycle. The city can only work with property owners who have a desire to participate, according to a city spokeswoman. The ultimate purpose of the program is to redevelop properties and make them more productive.

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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

FIREHOUSE / FROM PAGE 1

Ormond Beach ROCKEFELLER GARDENS PARK 26 Riverside Drive

Overlooking the Halifax, Rockefeller Gardens is a spectacular riverfront park where a multitude of community events occur including Movies on the Halifax (generally the first Friday of each month), Art in the Park and much more! The historic site is host to many wedding ceremonies and receptions. 6 AM to 10 PM 386-676-3216

tion is available in Land Development Code 2-71, which can be found on the city’s website, ormondbeach.org.) Before the building could be demolished, the owner would need to get a Certificate of Appropriateness from the city Planning Board. To deny demolition, the board would need to show the building could be repaired (if necessary) and would be capable of providing a reasonable economic return. It’s also on the National Register of Historic Places, but the website states there are no limitations on what the owner does with the property. In addition to serving as a fire house, it’s been a polling station, hurricane shelter, municipal court room, Civil Defense observation post and World War II raid casualty station, according to historical information put together by its owner, Snell Legal. “It’s been a big part of the community,” said Greg Snell. Snell, who has joined a law firm in Or-

PIANO / FROM PAGE 1 all kinds of performances for umpteen years.” He said it will be available for any performance at the PAC. “It gives you a chance to do different things,” he said. “This gives a lot of flexibility for performing arts in Ormond Beach.”

lando and moved out of the fire house, is asking $1.15 million for the building, which he said is ready for a new owner to move right in. He received a Florida Preservation Trust award for restoring the building after buying it in 2006. “We spent $500,000 on renovations,” Snell said. All of the electrical, plumbing, insulation, doors, molding and more were replaced. “It’s like a building built in 2008,” he said. “It’s the kind of place where a business would do well. You really make a nice impression.” Snell was able to get property tax benefits after getting it on the National Register of Historic Places. He said it’s great for entertaining. “When we opened, we had 300 people there,” he said. There are two kitchens and a large conference room, in addition to offices. “It would be good to have someone who will keep it in shape, and let the people in now and then,” he said. “It’s a local treasure.”

Emily Blackwood

Artist Jeanie Deegan’s paintings will be on display beginning July 27.

PAINTER / FROM PAGE 1 Universalist Society at 1 p.m. Sunday, at 56 Halifax Drive N. “I never wanted to show my things,” Deegan said. “None of these paintings are mine; they belong to other people. I’m shy. I like to be background.” Deegan was able to devote time to painting as a stay-at-home mom. “I liked to color when I was a little kid,” Deegan said. “When my kids were little a friend invited me to take an adult education painting class. I wasn’t enthused when I went, but I fell in love with painting portraits. Immediately loved it. And the young boy that modeled for us bought my painting. That was the beginning.” After that, Deegan began painting portraits of historical figures. “I like the time frame of the Revolutionary War because I have the antiques in my house that go with it,” Deegan said. “James and Dolly Madison were among the first ones I painted. And she’s so funny looking, but people like her because she’s quaint.” Though Deegan has never had a desire to show her work, her recent diagnosis of pancreatic cancer leaving her only a few weeks to live has inspired a few of her friends to make her paintings public. “The doctors told me about a month ago that I only had a couple weeks to live,” Deegan said. “I said, ‘Well, how come I feel so good?’ I have pancreatic cancer, and it’s everywhere. But I don’t have any symptom. I feel better. In the beginning I had a lot of pain, but it’s gone away.” Thanks to Deegan’s positive attitude and experiments with holistic medicine, she said she’s been able to prove her doctors wrong. “When I last saw the doctor, he was all smiles and said, ‘I’ll see you in a month at the rate this is going,’” Deegan said. “I’m content with the way I’ve lived my life. When I have to go, I’ll go.”

He said they’ve designated funds to have all of the hammers refinished so the piano will be “just like new.” Burton said grand pianos can be rented for a performance, but it’s a “really big deal.” It’s a big job to move a piano, and after moving, they have to be tuned. wayne@ormondbeachobserver.com

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Wayne Grant

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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

5

FAITH By Wayne Grant | News Editor

Christian Healing Centers seek growth Organization hopes to have 1,000 centers throughout the world. Ormond’s location is just north of Airport Road, on U.S. 1. Daniel Murray has many stories of people being healed. He tells of a man with stagefour throat cancer who had been given four months to live by doctors. During a healing prayer, the man said he felt an “energy ball” hit his spine, and he saw darkness fly out of his throat. Doctors later verified the cancer was gone. “God is amazing,” Murray said. As drivers pass the bars, businesses and industry along busy U.S. 1, they are likely to miss the small Christian Healing Center building located just north of Airport Road. It’s there that Murray and a team of volunteers conduct prayers for the purpose of healing. People can make an appointment for a healing prayer 1-7

Daniel Murray

p.m. every Tuesday. There is no fee, but donations are accepted. There are four types of healing, Murray said, physical, spiritual, emotional and deliverance from evil spirits. Murray said he and the other prayer ministers listen to the person to find their need. For example, he said 75% of back pain is caused by “unforgiveness,” where a person has been wronged in the past and they are still carrying the grudge. “I was a chaplain at a hospital, and I know unforgiveness can make you sick,” he said. The center also offers the School of Healing Prayer. The school’s material says the goal of the school is to teach the theory of the healing ministry of Jesus and practical ways in the best way to pray. It says everyone has some degree of abilities in healing but others are more gifted. There are also special events. At 6:30 p.m. July 18, they are having Generational Healing, where they say they can help people overcome inherited diseases, curses, weaknesses and addictions. Murray quotes a chapter in Exodus that states, “The weaknesses and sins of the family are passed down to the children for four generations.” Murray, who also serves as a missionary to Central America, makes the point that a person must believe that Jesus Christ can heal them before healing

NEXT vs. UP!

About 700 people attended a healing event in March. can take place. He said he becomes an “empty vessel” when praying and “gets out of the way and lets Jesus to the work.” In March, he held an Only Believe Event, inviting people from throughout the U.S. for a healing meeting at the Plaza Resort and Spa in Daytona Beach. He said about 700 people attended and there was “an outpouring of the holy spirit.” He said afterwards there was gold dust on some of the seats. “God will sometimes spread gold dust,” he said.

Murray has a call-in radio program from 9:30 to 11 a.m. the first and third Thursday of each month on 91.5 WAPN. The Christian Healing Center is part of the International Christ Healing Centers, headquartered in San Antonio. The goal of the organization is to have 1,000 Healing Centers within the next few years. Murray said he has been invited to Titusville, where three Methodist churches, a Baptist church and a Presbyterian church sent a joint request to

Courtesy photos

have him start a healing center. Murray’s biography and information on the healing center can be found at christhealsus.com. The Christian Healing Center is located at 1028 N. U.S. 1. Call 679-9239, email ChristCenter2U@gmail.com or find them on Facebook. Murray said Jesus commanded the disciples to not only spread the good news but also to heal, and healing had a lot of importance in the early church. Email Wayne Grant at wayne@ ormondbeachobserver.com.

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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

observed By Brian McMillan | Executive Editor

PRESIDENTIAL FIRST PITCHES

“If we are to build a better world, we must remember that the guiding principle is this — a policy of freedom for the individual is the only truly progressive policy.”

1910, William Howard Taft First presidential first pitch in history. 1921, Warren G. Harding First time the Washington Senators lost a game with a president throwing out the first pitch.

Friedrich Hayek “Road to Serfdom,” 1944 Publisher / John Walsh, jwalsh@ormondbeachobserver.com Executive Editor / Brian McMillan, editor@ormondbeachobserver.com

1940, F. D. Roosevelt Roosevelt’s first pitch struck a Washington Post camera. Payback?

News Editor / Wayne Grant wayne@ormondbeachobserver.com Staff Writer / Emily Blackwood, emily@ormondbeachobserver.com Brian McMillan

Designer / Ximena Alfaro, ximena@palmcoastobserver.com

Cubby and Palm Coast Observer Office Manager Maureen Walsh watch Grant McMillan, 8, receive a ball from Glass Doctor Sales Manager and Vice President Chris Cassata after Grant and Walsh threw out ceremonial first pitches July 17, at a Daytona Cubs game.

Advertising Manager / Jaci Centofanti, jaclyn@palmcoastobserver.com Senior Account Manager / Kaitlin Kennedy, kaitlin@palmcoastobserver.com Account Manager / Sarah Hechler, sarah@ormondbeachobserver.com Classifieds / Randi Schaefer, randi@palmcoastobserver.com Account Manager / Susan Moore, susan@palmcoastobserver.com

First pitch for the ages, on Cubs Observer Night I’m pretty sure my son Grant made history recently, as the first person to ever throw out a ceremonial first pitch with fingers that were stained orange by Doritos. Normally, the first pitch is an BRIAN MCMILLAN honor for a dignitary or a celebrity (note the box with highlights of U.S. presidents carrying on the tradition). But on July 17, the Daytona Cubs might have been a bit desperate because they settled for someone whose only claim to fame (so far) was that he had his 8th birthday only three days earlier, on July 14. Grant was not alone, though. He was joined by Maureen Walsh, the office manager for the Observer. Her birthday was

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on that very day, July 17, and arrangements were made for her and Grant to throw out a first pitch together because it was also our annual Observer Night at Jackie Robinson Ballpark. Before the pitch, Grant said he wasn’t nervous, but I know that smile: He was nervous. “This is the second time I’ve ever been able to hold a Cubs baseball,” he said, alternately clutching the sparkling white ball and tossing it up in the air. Aside from being able to go out on the field, Grant said the best part was easy access to Cubby for an autograph. I have to admit that some of the mystique of the largeheaded silent mascot wore off for me as I saw Cubby lean over to a clipboard-toting young assistant and apparently whisper a request in her ear. She obliged, fixing his sleeves which had ridden up into his armpits. Then the emcee jabbered on a walkie-talkie, and, as if getting the OK to launch into

space, he waved for his brave astronauts to follow him out to the mound. It was to be Grant and Maureen’s finest hour. Grant threw his pitch first, and landed it with one large hop right to the catcher. Maureen followed with an almost identical pitch. The crowd went wild! And then the priceless moment: The catcher handed the ball back for keeps, and the look in Grant’s eyes was pure joy and admiration. The rest of the game was fairly ordinary, with hot dogs and bathroom trips and the sound of the real ball popping into the real catcher’s mit. “Can I get a Rita?” Grant asked me, referring to a shaved ice treat. I put him off successfully for the first three innings. “I’m still thinking,” I said. “Actually, I’ll probably be thinking for the next six innings, too.” Grant peered out at the scoreboard and bobbed his head as he counted the remaining innings. You can’t fool

1953, Dwight Eisenhower I like Ike, but blue doesn’t: Eisenhower’s first pitch struck an umpire’s leg. 1984, Ronald Reagan First time a ceremonial first pitch was thrown from the pitcher’s mound; previously, it was thrown from the president’s seat in the stands. 2011, George W. Bush One of the most emotional first pitches, before a World Series game in New York, after 9/11. Sources: Wikipedia, bleacherreport.com

Grant. He yelled at me, “Dad!” Later he passed around his ball and had other Observer pals sign it. I asked if he wanted me to sign it, too, and he looked down at the ball and shrugged. “My autograph is worth most of all,” I said. But apparently, Dad’s autograph is not cool. That’s what happens when you turn 8. Finally, it was time to leave. Another great time had by all at the ballpark. Look for our ads in the newspaper next summer, and come sit with us for Observer Night. We’ll be the people sitting about 10 rows up behind the dugout on the first-base side, reminiscing about those onehoppers from the real mound.

BIG KID NOW By Emily Blackwood | Staff Writer

A brief history of fake tans; or, how I learned to love sunscreen

Send sports events and story ideas to joey@ormondbeachobserver.com. Send news tips or letters to the editor to editor@ormondbeachobserver.com. Fax: 386-447-9963

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“I hate you.” My friend Haylie had no problem expressing her true feelings when I revealed my slightly darker skin at Bethune Beach this past Saturday. HayEMILY BLACKWOOD lie, who is Honduran, was paler than me and obviously peeved about it. In retaliation to my tan, she slathered on some lotion with what I’m assuming had a negative SPF and swore by the time she was finished, she would be darker than I was.

I’ve had this conversation with my girlfriends over a dozen times this past week. There’s something so fiercely competitive about bronzed skin that we ladies will do nearly anything and everything to get it. When I was in high school, I used to go to the tanning beds with a few of my friends. Not only was it a quick 15-minute nap to Tan-Land, but I could keep my color all year round. My chemistry teacher noticed the obviously unnatural (and most likely orange) glow of my group and soon gave a terrifying “Stop tanning or you’ll die” lecture. The very graphic nature of the skin cancer photos she showed us inspired me to quit the UV rays. It was the first time a PowerPoint presentation ever made me scream. Still I didn’t learn my lesson.

All throughout high school and college I jumped at any opportunity to get some sun. I’d lay out in my backyard after school or spend over six hours at the beach getting what I thought was supposed to be the appropriate amount of skin color for the season. Thankfully, my intentional tanning days ended due to boredom and not skin cancer. I realized there are better ways I could be spending my time than just lazily reading the same issue of Glamour magazine by my pool. Plus, I was sweaty. I hate being sweaty. Eventually I found my way to the self-tanner aisle at my local Walgreens, where dozens of bottles promise summer skin without dangerous risks. Fate led me to my soulmate (aka Jergens Natural Glow)

and I haven’t looked back. Though I’m no longer out searching for a “real tan,” I do spend some time outside. While it might make me smell like a tourist at Disney, I try to remember that sun screen is my very best friend. And when I do forget, like I did this past Saturday, I get a friendly reminder through my red and burning shoulders to bring it next time. So while you’ll be spending many of your summer days on the beautiful beaches we have so close home, remember to rub on a little SPF. If you need some motivation, I can always get my high school chemistry teacher to send you some nasty skin cancer photos. Trust me, it works. Email Staff Writer Emily Blackwood at emily@ormondbeachobserver.com.


ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

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8

ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

COPS

ORMOND

POLICE

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

CORNER

July 9

Just send more money 1:48 p.m. — First Block of Southern Pine Trail. Suspicious Incident. The victim said she met the suspect on an Internet dating site. The suspect said he was in the Army, stationed in Afghanistan. He said if she sent him $2,000, he would retire, come back to the U.S. and take care of her. After sending the money, she received a message saying he needed $250 for a plane ticket. She wired the money, but he did not arrive on the plane he was supposed to be on. He sent her a message saying his plane crashed, and he was injured. He said he needed to come back to the U.S. for proper medical care and he needed $250. Before she could wire the money, she received a call saying the suspect was in prison, and if she didn’t send $500, police would be sent to arrest her. The victim became suspicious and notified the police.

July 12

Car, or girl, trouble 10:11 p.m. — First Block of Dix Avenue. Suspicious Incident. The victim said he was in the bedroom talking on the phone with his girlfriend when he heard a noise outside his bedroom window. He went outside, and saw a car parked in the middle of the street. It appeared to be unoccupied and locked. He was going back into the house when he saw a shadow running on the east side of the house toward the vehicle. He yelled and went to the vehicle to

confront the person. When he got to the vehicle, he saw that it was his ex-girlfriend. He asked what she was doing, and she said she was visiting a friend down the road and had car trouble. She then started the vehicle. The victim said, “I thought you were having car trouble.” She said, “It just needed oil,” and drove away. An officer went to the girl’s residence. Her car was warm to the touch, but she said she had been home all night. There was no damage or footprints at the victim’s house.

July 12

Pedestrian strikes car 7:08 p.m. — 1500 Block of West Granada Boulevard. Suspicious Incident. The officer responded to a report of a disturbance in a parking lot. A woman said she was walking through the parking lot, pushing a shopping cart, when a vehicle struck her right hip. She said the driver yelled, “You’re going too slow.” A witness said they saw the incident and the car never came close to the victim. Surveillance video showed the vehicle did not strike the victim. The video showed that after the vehicle backed out, the victim walked backward and made contact with the vehicle. T h e v i d e o was entered into evidence.

July 14

Fancy meeting you here

Training day 12:51 a.m. — 1500 Block of North U.S. 1. False Report of a Crime and Leaving the Scene of a Crash. A Volusia County Sheriff’s deputy reported an abandoned pickup truck with front end damage at the railroad track crossing at Broadway Avenue. He said it appeared to be “clipped” by a train. A couple of minutes later, Ormond Beach police received a call about a stolen vehicle. The caller asked police to meet him at a gas station on U.S. 1. When police arrived, the suspect said he and his girlfriend had stopped at the gas station because the truck was overheating. They were walking to a friend’s house, but came back and saw the truck was stolen. He said his girlfriend must have dropped the keys by the truck. The officer took the girlfriend aside and asked her if the truck was the same truck that was at the railroad track, and if her boyfriend was falsely reporting the vehicle stolen. She said yes. She said he had been drinking and driving. The officer then told the boyfriend he believed he was lying, and the boyfriend said, “You’re right. Arrest me.” In a post-Miranda interview, the boyfriend said he did not remember why he hit the train. He said he had “two beers,” and didn’t know why he fabricated the story. The girlfriend said they were stopped for the train, and for an unknown reason, the suspect let his foot off the brake and drove into the side of the passing train. The suspect was arrested and transported to Volusia County Branch Jail.

3:36 p.m. — First Block of South Arbor Drive. Burglary. The victim set up cameras to be sure his roommate didn’t steal from him. He locked his door and left the house for about 20 minutes. When he came back, he found his roommate in his room. The victim said he had left his window open and the screen was now pulled off. The victim noticed his Samsung tablet was missing and told the roommate he wanted it back. The roommate said he did not have it. He then left the house with his backpack. The officer found the roommate walking down a street, and found the tablet in a nearby yard. The roommate admitted to the theft and was arrested.

July 21

Bomb squad called 8:22 a.m. — 200 Block of Cardinal Drive. Suspicious Incident. The officer responded to a business where a suspicious piece of pipe was found under a vending machine. A worker had placed it in trash can. The worker said it felt light, like there was nothing in it, but had “Go Daddy” written on it. It was a gray PVC pipe, about a halfinch in diameter and three inches long, and capped on each end. The Volusia County Bomb Squad detonated the pipe and there was no indication of explosives. A bomb detection dog checked the area. The business owner said he would turn over video evidence of the scene.

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Sports ORMONDBEACHOBSERVER.COM

OPPOSITE FIELD Joey LoMonaco | Sports Writer

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

can’t slow down By Joey LoMonaco | Sports Writer

Striding in the sand There’s a wide range of scenarios that any cross country coach must take into account pertaining to safety. Whether or not the high tide might sweep away one of your runners usually isn’t one of them. But Debora Diaz isn’t just any coach, and her Seabreeze girls aren’t just any team. They train on the hardened sands of Ormond JOEY LoMONACO Beach, and even host a meet on the beach featuring Mainland High School, New Smyrna Beach and others. “There’s not another high school that’s close enough for them to run to the beach and train,” Diaz said. “We could do it five days a week.” Around 8:30 a.m. on Saturday, two swatches of color — one white and one blue — broke through the heat mirage to the north, toward Grenada Boulevard. They belonged to Andrew Carpenter and Ken Piniero, who were the first two runners to cross the Seabreeze 5K Run’s finish line at Andy Romano Park (see photos on Page 12). The fundraiser’s proceeds will help the team finance its new uniforms as well as its end-of-the-year banquet. Thirty-five runners participated Saturday, up from 20 in last year’s inaugural event, Diaz said. The run wasn’t officially timed, although several runners kept stock on their personal watches. Carpenter and Piniero are distance runners for Embry-Riddle University. They met many of Seabreeze’s runners at a high school camp they hosted two weeks ago. “We knew these girls from camp, so we came out to support them,” Carpenter said. “We just wanted to support them for their upcoming season.” When Seabreeze’s season officially begins on Aug. 11, they’ll be out on the sand, doing intervals and training for the sport’s standard 3.1–mile meets. They run close to the water, because the soft sand higher up can cause ankle rolls and knee injuries, Diaz said. The benefit (of training on the beach) is definitely that cross country is off-road,” Diaz said. “It’s good training for our meets.” One of the drawbacks, she added, is full exposure — there’s no shade on the beach. I noticed one change from a typical cross county environ right away — my lens fogged up completely due to humidity from the water. Wiping it frantically with my polyester blend T-shirt proved futile. In a few minutes, the moisture levels balanced out, and photojournalism could resume. And the Sandcrabs need not worry about being swept out on a tide; Diaz lives beachside and monitors them like a hawk before each workout. Email Sports Writer Joey LoMonaco at joey@ormondbeachobserver.com.

Alyssa Bayliff poses on the beach near Andy Romano Park on Saturday.

Photos by Joey LoMonaco

Jury’s back: Bayliff is ready to run A full year removed from nagging foot injuries, Seabreeze High School senior Alyssa Bayliff leads a stacked Sandcrabs girls team into the 2014 cross country season. Alyssa Bayliff thought the searing pain in her foot was the result of tying her shoes too tight. But after four weeks of labored running, she went to the doctor, where she discovered the culprit was a stress fracture in the third and fourth metatarsals of her left foot. For the next four months, Bayliff — then a sophomore cross country runner at Seabreeze — crutched around in a boot, which she decorated with ribbons. She couldn’t run, obviously, but she attended every meet and rode the stationary bike. In her spare time, she kept in shape with cross training — stretching, swimming, biking, pushups. “Really anything I could,” Bayliff said. The resilience didn’t go unnoticed by Sandcrabs coach Debra Diaz. “It was hard for her, because really she loves to run,” Diaz said. “She doesn’t just run to get a scholarship or because she’s forced to; she enjoys running, she looks forward to it. That shows a lot of character. She’s just a great team member.” Character’s one thing, a run of bad luck is another. After those four months, Bayliff’s doctor told her it was OK to resume running. She started with a jog along Nova Road near her Ormond Beach home. “I was going really slow, jogging,” she recalled. “Almost like fast walking.” Less than a half-mile into her return to running, the unthinkable happened. Another stress fracture. This time in her Achilles insertion bone. Another eight weeks in a boot. It would’ve been easy to sulk after such a setback. But Bay-

liff employed exactly the opposite mindset. “I kept telling myself everything happens for a reason,” she said, “that it would make me a stronger runner. And it did. My teammates helped me.” This time around, the rehab was more measured. Bayliff could only run on the grass, and she had to alternate between walking and running in 20-minute intervals. Her next test was a four-mile run, which her doctor told her she had to complete in less than 40 minutes. She made it on the first try — barely. After missing most of cross country her sophomore year and all of track season the following spring, the early returns on her rehab weren’t encouraging. “Having that (four-mile test) be really difficult for me, I thought the season was going to be terrible,” Bayliff said. But on the contrary, Bayliff placed second and third at districts and regions, respectively, last season as a junior. At states, she posted a team-best 9:08 — a personal record by 30 seconds. In track this spring, she recorded Seabreeze’s only points in the state tournament with a mark of 11:26 in the 3,200-meter run. Her goal for this, her senior cross country senior campaign is to break 18 minutes — although she’ll settle for a time in the low 18s. “I think she’s going to be one of my top two runners,” Diaz said. The other binary in that pair is senior Josie Gray. She remembers Bayliff attending almost every practice while injured (she was busy with the in-car portion of driver’s ed for a while), and encouraging her teammates from the sidelines.

Bayliff recorded the best finish of any Seabreeze runner at last year’s state cross country meet. Her time was 19:08. “I learned that she’s really supportive,” Gray said. “You could tell she’s dedicated to the sport, because she didn’t let go or give up. We told her ‘It’s OK, you’ll be back, and you’ll be stronger.’” Much of the Sandcrabs’ strength this season lies in the

squad’s depth; at states last fall, Seabreeze’s top-four runners all finished with 20 seconds of each other. “I want everyone to do their best and be able to always interchange (spots), Gray said. “Not everyone has an amazing day each meet.”


10

ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

SIDELINES

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SPLIT DECISION

Photos by Joey LoMonaco

Andrew Carpenter (blue shirt) glances at his watch as he and Embry-Riddle teammate Ken Piniero cross the finish line of the Seabreeze 5K fundraiser.

+ Seabreeze football trio wins gold medal in Kuwait

Seabreeze grad Josh Stevens, rising senior Raushod Floyd and head coach Marc Beach won a gold medal with Team USA in the IFAF Under-19 World Championship, an international american football tournament. The team stayed in Kuwait City. Stevens rushed for 152 yards in the championship game, a 40-17 comeback win over Canada on July 17. In total, Stevens racked up 327 rushing yards and four touchdowns during the four-game tournament. Floyd hauled in six receptions for 69 yards. Team USA went 4-0, beating Mexico, Japan, Germany and Canada.

Ormond Beach Elks Lodge 2193 is hosting a four-man/woman scramble at 8:30 a.m. Aug. 30, at Riverbend Golf Club in Ormond Beach. The cost is a $55 donation, and all proceeds benefit Elks local charities. The event is open to all golfers, one professional per foursome. Partial team entries are accepted and unfilled slots will be held one week prior to the tournament date. Lunch will be served and a roving beverage cart will be available on the course. Make checks payable to: Elks Benefit Golf Tournament, P.O. Box 1355, Ormond Beach, FL, 32175, Attention: Golf Committee.

+ Father Lopez hires Drabczyk as new AD Father Lopez Catholic High School in Daytona Beach has hired Scott Drabczyk to replace the recently departed Trevor Berryhill as athletics director. Drabczyk most recently held the same position at Dr. Phillips High School near Lake Apopka. Drabczyk is a graduate of Bethune-Cookman and Stetson universities, where he earned his Bachelor of Arts in History and Masters in Educational Leadership, respectively. Drabczyk is a native of Palm Coast, and his parents live in Ormond Beach. He serves as an at-large director for the Florida Interscholastic Athletics Administrators Association, a statewide body whose stated mission is “to develop, enhance and preserve the educational values of interscholastic athletics.” The search is still ongoing for Berryhill’s replacement as head varsity baseball coach. He left in June for a position at Trinity Prep School in Winter Park. — Joey LoMonaco

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+ Elks Lodge to host 25th-annual golf tourney

Connor Rioux, 13, is one of the first runners to finish the race.


Neighborhood OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

PADDLE STARS By Emily Blackwood | Staff Writer

Ormond Beach family creates

national paddle board competition Whether it’s working on a landscaping business or a water sporting event, the Ganz family works better together. For the Ganz family, almost everything is a family affair. After working together to create a successful landscaping business, the family of five decided to take another direction this year and started Paddle Stars, a national paddle boarding race. Tommy Ganz Sr. and his wife, Barbara Ganz, got the idea for the event after watching their oldest son, Tommy Ganz Jr., become addicted to the sport a year ago. “It’s one of the fasting growing sports in the world,” Tommy Ganz Sr. said. “(Tommy Ganz Jr.) has been a surfer since he was kid. Going out on a paddle board, he just fell in love with it. Because of his real competitive nature, he took to the paddle board racing side and started racing all around country.” “I just hopped on one, and that was it,” Tommy Ganz Jr. said. He recently finished 34th at a world competition in California and is one of the top racers in the area. The family anticipates about 100 elite paddle boarders and 100 recreational paddle boarders to compete. The large draw for boarders could be Paddle Stars’ $10,000 cash prize. The two day event, held July 26-27, will take place at both City Island in Daytona Beach on the Halifax River and near the Ocean

Emily Blackwood

Ormond Beach residents Tommy Ganz Sr., Barbara Ganz and Tommy Ganz Jr., worked together as a family to create Volusia County’s first large paddle boarding competition. Walk center. Paddle Stars Race for the Cash includes free activities like a Special Olympics race, paddle board lessons and kids fishing lessons. Though the Ganz family is excited to see this event grow, they

admit there are unique obstacles when it comes to working with your family. “There’s emotional ties,” Tommy Ganz Jr. said. “There are times when everyone wants to do something different. When

you’re doing it together, there’s a team and you’re not really the boss. Sometimes it gets a little tough, a lot of screaming at the dinner table, but it all works out in the end.” Racers can register to compete

at www.paddleguru.com//paddlestars, and spectators are free. There will be board demos, equipment and vendor displays both days. Visit paddlestars.com. Email Emily Blackwood at emily@ormondbeachobserver.com.

all in the mind By Wayne Grant | News Editor

Author says intuition can help people handle stress of the ‘information age’

‘Speak words that benefit others,’ Peirce says. ‘Intuition flows when you see the glass half full rather than half empty.’ Daily, people are bombarded with information, often more than the mind can handle. Penney Peirce says it’s now necessary to let the right s i d e of the brain t a k e o v e r, where i n t u i t i o n rules, to handle the barrage of data. Penney Peirce “ W e c a n’t process everything,” she said. “We need a whole new

way of knowing. With the right brain you experience the truth of reality.” Her recent book, “Leap of Perception: The Transforming Power of Your Attention,” is a guidebook on how to use heightened perception to navigate today’s accelerating changes, and it recently won Book of the Year and Best Alternative Science Book at the 2014 Coalition of Visionary Resources Awards, which were presented at the International New Age Trade Show, June 28-30, in Denver. It’s the third book in a trilogy by Peirce, who moved to Ormond Beach from Northern California last fall to be near her 91-year-old

mother. The first two books were “The Intuitive Way: The Definitive Guide to Increasing Your Awareness” and “Frequency: The Power of Personal Vibration.” Peirce’s books are published in more than 25 languages. Peirce is the author of six books on the development of consciousness, intuition, dreams and personal and societal transformation. “Intuition expands what you are aware of,” Peirce said. “We need to think differently to solve today’s problems.” Peirce said that if a person experiences a repeat pattern, such as having bad jobs or bad relationships,

they should look at the situation internally, using the intuitive process. They may feel they don’t deserve to have a good job or a better relationship. She said once they get over that notion, things will change. She said we need to stop the internal dialog that goes on in our mind. “Be quiet, and be in the present, and centered in the body so you can perceive the moment,” she said. “You can only do one thing in the moment.” She said when you have intuition, you open your spirit. “It’s about slowing down. Put your attention on something, and it will reveal knowledge.” Visit penneypeirce.com.

PEIRCE’S TIPS TO IMPROVE INTUITION 1. Learn to identify your beliefs about the way the world works and who you are. Maybe there are other ways to be! 2. Be willing to experience every feeling that emerges in your body. It may lead to discovery. 3. Remember to consciously pause between actions. Feel the world from your body’s simple perspective. 4. Speak words that benefit others and the world. Notice what’s right with the world. Intuition flows when you see the glass half full. 5. Like a samurai, be alert and present in each moment. Be ready to act, without any biases. 6. Learn to check with your body to see what you instinctually want to do next. Intuition occurs in the NOW. 7. Let go of needing things to be nailed down in advance. You can still have a goals, but let it all be fluid.


14

ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

LIGHT THE LIGHTS By Wayne Grant | News Editor

It’s a family affair, at children’s theater Director has been leading workshop for 30 years.

The cast works on a big number for “The Music Man, Jr” to be performed on July 24. older ones will perform “The Sound of Music.” “They get training and have a good time,” she said. “They get to see what a Broadway show is and they learn how to audition.” This fall, the workshop will feature the Alumni Show they have every two years. People in their 30s, 40s and 50s, including some who now have children in the group, perform at the PAC to raise money for a scholarship fund that will help an underprivileged child take part in the program.

Photos by Wayne Grant

Victoria Oatway, who has the female lead in the show, gets ready for dress rehearsal with her mother, Beth.

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the performance itself. She said she makes an effort to keep kids from “getting too down” if they don’t get a part, and getting “a big head” if they get a big part. If a child doesn’t get a part they want, she explains it’s a matter of casting, and the winner may just be better suited for it. “We want them to be happy for each other,” she said. Beth Oatway, who has two children, Victoria and Derek, in the current show, said the experience builds confidence in the kids. “I wouldn’t have the confidence to go on stage and sing in front of people,” she said. Oatway said she has seen kids “really come out of their shell,” during the training, and she gives a lot of credit to Simmons. “She’s an awesome person who has endless patience,” Oatway said. “She makes it feel like a family. She’s done so much for the community.” In the summer camp, about 40 children are taking part from throughout the area. The workshop produces musicals throughout the year, and offers a variety of dance and theater classes from certified instructors. Some take part yearround, and some will take time off to play soccer or get involved in other activities, Simmons said. This fall, the younger kids will perform “Aristocats,” and the

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Backstage at the Performing Arts Center one recent morning, there was the typical chaos of dress rehearsal. The sound of children warming up their voices wafted from an upstairs room as arriving actors were finding their costumes and getting their hair styled. “It’s a creative process,” said Children’s Musical Theatre Workshop Director Cindy Simmons. Currently, the group is finishing up a three-week summer camp with a performance of “The Music Man, Jr.,” to be performed at 7 p.m. July 24 at the Performing Arts Center. Simmons has been turning hectic rehearsals into polished performances for more than 30 years. She and some others started the workshop at the Nova Recreation Center in 1981 with five students, called the Starshine Kids. They moved into the Performing Arts Center and became a 501(c)3 in the 1990s, and now about 300 kids per year get involved. The workshop is a family affair. Simmons’ daughter Crisi teaches ballet; daughter Jennifer, who works at an attorney’s office, is business manager; and son Stephen, who travels with a tour called Access Broadway, works on lighting and sound. Simmons said she tries to have a family atmosphere, and help the children in ways other than


ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

COMMUNITYCALENDAR

15

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

THURSDAY, JULY 24

Blood Drive — Noon to 5 p.m. at Avante, 170 N. Old Kings Road. Free Fandango movie ticket voucher for each donor.

Art of Healing — 3 to 4:30 p.m. at Ormond Memorial Art Museum. The class is open to those in medical situations, caregivers and family, and no experience is required. This workshop’s topic is to discover mindfulness through the arts. Start in the center of a circular Mandala-like design and build paper clay bowls. Reservations required. Call 676-3347.

As We Dance — 7 to 11 p.m. at The Ballroom, 1250 Hand Ave. DJ Bruce playing music favorites, swing and Latin. More information at theballroomormondbeach.com. Suggested donation: $10.

author Zora Neale Hurston and Everglades environmentalist Marjory Stoneman Douglas. $8 general admission, $5 for OBHS members and free for students under 18 years old. Call 677-7005.

making history By Wayne Grant | News Editor

SUNDAY, JULY 27

Blood Drive — 8 a.m. to noon at Christ Presbyterian Church, 1035 W. Granada Blvd. Free Fandango movie ticket voucher for each donor.

When was the last time you Did you know tha had your checked? hearing loss in

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SATURDAY, JULY 26

SCORE Workshop — 6 to 8 p.m. at Daytona State College, 1200 W. International Speedway Blvd., Daytona Beach, Building 110, Room 112. The workshop presents, “Newsletters and Announcements to promote your business.” Free. Registration is required at score87.org or call

Low Cost Pet Shots — 9:30 to 11 a.m. at A Pampered Pooch Groomer, 295 S. US 1. Heartworm prevention and flea control products will be available for purchase. All vaccinations are administered by a licensed veterinarian; clinic is licensed and permitted. Cash only for the shots and products. Proceeds benefit abandoned animals. Call 748 8993.

When was ANNUAL NGS I N E E R C S had yourq

Emily Blackwood

Bella Hogan, Liam Parker, Gabby Hogan, Patty Marshall and Denise Thompson had a nice spot to watch Brad Yates and MO’Mentum at the first Summer Sounds concert at Rockefeller Gardens.

Event offers stroll the last time yourisk o through history For the month of July we are

Daytona Beach Choral Society — 11 a.m. at Ormond Beach Presbyterian Church. The Daytona Beach Choral Society extends an invitation to persons interested in singing classical and semi-classical four-part harmony to meet their director and president. The group meets Tuesday evenings from September until May and presents two major concerts per year, one in the Holiday season and the other in the spring. Call 274-5604 or 307-7479.

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Tea Party Sunday Social — 2 to 5 p.m. at The Ballroom, 1250 Hand Ave. DJ playing ballroom, music favorites, swing and Latin. By donation. Call 407-970-1903.

TUESDAY, JULY 29

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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

OrmondBeachObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

BIZBUZZ

real estate | transactions By Wayne Grant | News Editor

Riverside Drive house is top seller A house across the street from the river was the top seller for the week of June 2228 in Ormond Beach. Howard and Sherry Bradley, of Trinity, sold 627 Riverside Drive to Thomas Hepprich and Karen Hoffman, of Ormond Beach, for $338,500. Built in 1952, the house has three bedrooms, two baths, a fireplace and 2,633 square feet. It sold in 1988 for $97,000.

Wayne Grant

Joe Clayton, general manager of Stonewood Grill and Tavern, Mike Drury, corporate chef, and Jeff Ash, president of Stonewood Holdings LLC, celebrate 15 years of business.

ORMOND BEACH

*John Adams, of Adams, Cameron & Co. Realtors, contributed to this report.

The Florida keys in Flagler! 3/2 Pool home on the intracoastal offers an updated design & extensive remodel in ‘07 w/newer kitchen that boasts 42” wood cabinets, granite counters & industrial ss appliances, extensive use of tile , plantation shutters, trex deck, summer kitchen, double dock, boat lift & incredible views $499,900. Call Bill Navarra 334-9991

POOL HOME

LAKE FRONT

Expect to be impressed by this one of a kind ocean-front estate home with guest house/quarters! This seaside beauty maximizes the ocean-views & boasts fine appointments throughout. Expansive balcony/decks & covered porches are perfect for relaxing with spectacular oceanviews. $850,000. Call Bill Navarra 334-9991

1450 W. Granada Bv., Suite 1 Ormond Beach, Fl 32174 Phone: (386) 667-SOLD

This Preakness II is in pristine condition. LR w/ panoramic view of the large lanai & sparkling pool. In this home you have both a formal DR as well as a kitchen nook & breakfast bar,FR features a gas FP, solar windows & sliding glass doors to the solar heated pool/spa and a screened lanai. High ceilings, & handscraped wood floors.$339,900. Call Bill Navarra 334-9991 GATED COMMUNITY

GATED COMMUNITY

The King Arthur! 5/4 Home was built for entertaining & architecturally stunning. The features include: soaring ceilings, hardwood floors, open kitchen,casual dining area, huge master w/ wic big enough for a king & queen. Huge travertine decked custom pool, flowing fountains & covered over-sized lanai.$550,000. Call Bill Navarra 3349991

Stunning contemporary 4/4 home w/ extensive use of Biltmore Estate wood flooring,soaring ceilings,formal dr, fr, fireplace. Super-sized bonus room appointed w/ granite topped custom wet bar,beer & wine fridge, full bath & balcony. Well manicured yard, large screened porch, 10 person stone hot tub waterfall & gas firepit. $550,000. Call Bill Navarra 334-9991

Breakaway trails! 4/3 Home features a large formal DR & LR perfect for entertaining, a large EIK w/breakfast bar & casual dining area which overlooks the FR with a FP. The large MS boasts double trey ceilings, access to the screened lanai & huge master bath with double vanity, garden tub/ separate shower. Huge screened lanai and spa. $335,000. Call Bill Navarra 334-9991

buzzduzz@aol.com www.buzzduzzz.com

Come see this 3BR, 2BA home located in Port Orange, close to Rt. 1, I-95 and shopping. Home includes high impact windows, EIK, newer appliances, berber carpet & 2 screened in porches & patio. Outside workshop, laundry and 2 garages. A buildable lot is included with this property. Sq. Ft. received from tax rolls. $80,000. MLS #551218. Call Addam Ralston 386-846-4474.

Canal front 4BR 2 1/5BA pool home. Over 3,300 sq ft of heated living area, open floorplan & plantation shutters. Dble front doors & vaulted ceilings w/ wood beams. Sunken living room w/ fireplace & stone accent wall. Updated kitchen, BAs & formal DR. Lg. Mstr w/ French doors & WLKIN. Sq. ft. received from tax rolls. $275,000. MLS#560978. Call Addam Ralston 386-846-4474

Well maintained concrete block home, near Intracoastal Waterway. 1/2 acre + lot. New A/C ‘13 with heat pump, New water heater ‘14, freshly painted ‘14, epoxy painted carport ‘14, roof ‘07. Lg. living/dining room combo, EIK. Lg. BRs at back of home. Indoor laundry w/ generator hook up. Sq. ft. received from tax rolls. $89,900. MLS#561316. Call Addam Ralston 386-846-4474

319 Palm Drive Intracoastal views, sun deck, covered lanai. Lg. LR w/ wood burning fireplace. KI/DR combo, Mstr w/ WLKIN, Elevator, mother in law suite. Pool, waterfront bar, gazebo, boat lift and boat house. Come by boat or land. All this only a mile to the beach. $475,000. MLS #560275. Call Addam Ralston 386-846-4474

8 Dorado Beach Ct. Come see this 5BR, 3BA, 2CG Ormond Beach Home. Bright and open floor plan with high ceilings. Large kitchen with center island. Kitchen opens up to living/dining room combo. Tile and carpet throughout. Outside you will find a back patio and large yard. Square footage received from tax rolls. $194,500. MLS#561312. Call Addam Ralston 386-846-4474

40 Acres! 1331’ of direct waterfront on the Tomoka Basin Enter the property at the Historic Fairchild Oaks. Winding canals & flat land. Great place to catch very large Reds, Snook and Trout. Also great area for crabbing. One of a kind property! Don’t miss out on this opportunity. Square footage received from tax rolls. $750,000. MLS#559557. Call Addam Ralston 386-846-4474

144870

HOMES ARE SELLING FAST! WE NEED MORE LISTINGS TO SELL!

144869

Call Bill Navarra, Broker 386-334-9991 For more information

Halifax Health has been recognized by the March of Dimes and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Florida district, for successfully reducing early elective deliveries without a medical reason before 39 completed weeks of pregnancy. “We joined in this very important safety initiative last year with a mission to educate the women of our community about the risks of scheduling deliveries early,” said Bonnie Wittman, administrator at Halifax Health.

Buzzy Porter, Realtor 386 - 405 -1000

INTRACOASTAL

OCEANFRONT

Bill Navarra, Broker 386 - 334 - 9991

+ Obstetricians, March of Dimes honor Halifax Health

CANAL & POOL

Robert and Judith Roystan, individually and as trustees, of Bath, New Hampshire,

Realtors Sold 4 the Cause, which conducts events throughout the year to raise money for Making Strides Against Breast Cancer, is looking for sponsors and players for their next event, the inaugural Realtors Sold 4 the Cause Golf Tournament. The event is planned for Aug. 2 at Riviera Country Club. Call Debbie Callahan at 299-5281 or Rose Roberts at 299-1175, or visit facebook. com/RealtorsSold4theCause. The group recently raised $4,067 at its annual Bingo Night for Breast Cancer, which attracted 160 players. In June, they raised $4,722 in a new event, the Beach Bike Cruise.

WATERFRONT

ORMOND-BY-THE-SEA

sold 128 Mariners Drive to Fred and Ileanna Richard, of Fairbanks, Alaska, for $245,000. Built in 1986, the house has three bedrooms, three baths, a fireplace and 2,025 square feet. It sold in 2004 for $250,000. Dorothy Kuhl, of Ormond Beach, sold 36 Beechwood Drive to Carl and Ellen Mumford, of Dixon, Illinois, for $144,000. Built in 1957, the house has two bedrooms, one bath and 775 square feet. It sold in 2013 for $85,000. Scott Parker, Kevin Parker and Daniel Gressang, of Ormond Beach, sold 17 Silk Oaks Drive to Richard and Robin DeCamp, of Ormond Beach, for $143,000. Built in 1962, the house has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,114 square feet. It sold in 2001 for $125,000.

Stonewood Grill and Tavern, 100 S. Atlantic Ave., celebrated 15 years of business July 17 with a ribbon cutting compliments of the Ormond Beach Chamber of Commerce. It was the first restaurant in the chain of 12 that now operate throughout Florida as part of Stonewood Holdings LLC. The owner is Gale Lemerand, who started the company along with two partners. Stonewood Holdings LLC is the parent company for the Peach Valley Café. The planned Peach Valley West, on West Granada Boulevard, should open by September, according to Brad Disch, district manager. It will be the sixth in Florida. He said the previous manager of Peach Valley Café on East Granada Boulevard, Jenny Sparacino, has been promoted to general manager and will run Peach Valley West. He said there has been a lot of demand for the new restaurant because of the popularity of the first one. “We can’t get it open soon enough,” he said.

+ Realtors plan golf tournament for charity

HISTORIC LOT

Carol Skou, of Volusia County, sold 1296 Sunningdale Lane to Thomas and Valerie Blasberg, of Ormond Beach, for $284,900. Built in 2001, the house has three bedrooms, two baths, a fireplace, swimming pool and 2,100 square feet. It sold in 2004 for $323,000.

Courtesy photo

OUTSIDE WORKSHOP

Plantation Bay

627 Riverside Drive

+ Stonewood restaurant celebrates 15 years

FRESHLY PAINTED

Howard and Sherry Bradley, of Trinity, sold 627 Riverside Drive to Thomas Hepprich and Karen Hoffman, of Ormond Beach, for $338,500. Built in 1952, the house has three bedrooms, two baths, a fireplace and 2,633 square feet. It sold in 1988 for $97,000. Kim Zechnowitz, of Ormond Beach, sold 1300 Overbrook Drive to Guy and Patricia Taylor, of Ormond Beach for $161,500. Built in 1980, the house has three bedrooms, two baths, a fireplace and 1,436 square feet. It sold in 1999 for $110,000.

Asked how a restaurant stays in operation for 15 years, Jeff Ash, president of Stonewood Holdings, said they have put emphasis on consistency, along with quality and value. He said they try to give customers a “fine dining” experience, by providing good service, but maintain a casual, “Florida grill” atmosphere. For the summer, they are bringing back menu items that were on the original menu 15 years ago. “We may add a couple to the menu because they are doing so well,” Ash said.

LARGE YARD

16


Diversions NEW IN THE OBSERVER: Arts and Entertainment, from St. Augustine to Daytona Beach

THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

PAINTING THROUGH FEELING | by Shanna Fortier | Community Editor

5 CAN’T-MISS SHOWS

PAULA FELICI

“INFERNO: A LONG WAY FROM DANTE” Where: City Repertory Theatre, 160 Cypress Point Parkway, Suite B207, Palm Coast

CREATING GOOD KARMA

When: 7 p.m. July 24, 25 and 26 Info: Directed by John Sbordone and Diane Ellertsen, the cast features young actors from the CRT summer workshop. Cast includes Leana Gardella as Lucifer, Kalie Evans as Dante, Christina Goodin, Xavier Ryan, Agata Sokolska, Shawn Friday, Phillipa Rose, Caitlin Eriser, Ashley Milus and Christian Galvis. Tickets are $15 and $10 for students. Call 585-9415.

Shanna Fortier

Paula Felici will display her works in a one-woman show at I am Art.

JOHN LEGEND Where: St. Augustine Amphitheatre, 1340C State Road A1A, St. Augustine When: Friday, July 25 Info: With special guest Marsha Ambrosius. For tickets, visit staugamp. sjcvenues.com or call 904-209-3759. “SLEEPING BEAUTY” Where: Daytona Playhouse, 100 Jessamine Blvd, Daytona Beach When: 2 p.m. July 26 and 27 Info: A rollicking musical comedy with lots of audience interaction presented by the Young Actors Company. Meet Queen Bea and King Bumble and the evil witch Carabosse. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for under 18. Call 255-2431 or visit daytonaplayhouse. org. SARA BAREILLES Where: St. Augustine Amphitheatre, 1340C State Road A1A, St. Augustine When: Saturday, July 26 Info: For tickets, visit staugamp.sjcvenues.com or call 904-209-3759. FALL OUT BOY Where: St. Augustine Amphitheatre, 1340C State Road A1A, St. Augustine When: Sunday, July 27 Info: With New Politics. For tickets, visit staugamp.sjcvenues.com or call 904209-3759.

Paula Felici will show her work at the I Am Art opening Saturday, July 26.

A

fter just five years of painting, Paula Felici, will be showing her work in a one-woman show at I Am Art. This month would’ve been the oneyear anniversary of Felici’s own gallery and social space, La Cosse Belle, which was located next to I Am Art in the Hammock. But when her rent was raised by 67%, Felici said she was forced to look for alternative locations to show her work. That is when Rachel Thompson Schiff, owner and curator of I Am Art, stepped in and offered Felici the chance to show her work at her gallery. “I just couldn’t believe her generous spirit,” Felici said while sitting in the gallery. “Quite frankly, I’m not sure if my art or I am ready for a one-woman show. And then someone as accomplished as Rachel asked me to do this. It’s really amazing.” Felici started painting after moving to Florida and retiring from a career in jewelry design. She said feelings and color are what inspire her to paint. “I don’t always have a preconceived notion of what I’m going to do,” she said. “You get into the zone, and there is this feeling that takes over you, and it sort of has a life of its own. Sometimes just the act of painting is inspirational.” The show’s name, “Good Karma,” comes from Felici’s tradition of connecting art with a cause. “I’m always doing things to try to incorporate good works with promoting the arts,” Felici said. “I feel it is important and I want to keep that tradition going. It’s been very rewarding.” But Felici was having a hard time picking a charity to partner with for the show, so instead, she has vowed to donate 10% of each sale to a charity of the purchasers’ choice.

Many of Felici’s paintings portray poppies.

IF YOU GO What: “Good Karma” Paula Felici, one-woman show When: Champagne reception 5-8 p.m. Saturday, July 26. Show runs through Aug. 20 Where: I am Art, 5915 N. Oceanshore Blvd., Palm Coast Felici is a self-taught painter. Linda Sanders said, “I think Paula has been very instrumental in the art community in this area. She’s a great representation of the talent we have here. Her artwork reflects the spirit of this woman and she truly deserves the good karma.”


for both. 386-445-3055 BABY CRIB / toddler bed, latex mattress,$ 199 / BO mint condition – Call/text Steve 386 627 6145

Items Under $200 For Sale Thursday, July July 24, 24, 2014 2014 2-ANTIQUE OAK flip-up seat student desks, $150 Thursday, for both. 386-445-3055

BABY CRIB / toddler bed, latex mattress,$ 199 / BO mint condition – Call/text Steve 386 627 6145 BERKLINE DOUBLE recliner loveseat in beige microfiber material. $82. (386) 447-9869 BICYCLES WESTERN Flyer Women's and Huffy Items For Sale Men's 26" LikeUnder New $50$200 each OBO 386-447-7060 2-ANTIQUE OAK flip-up seat student desks, $150 COCKATIEL AND cage $150. Cockatiel-6 months for old,both. large386-445-3055 cage w/casters-31" x 20-1/2" x 53"H,

BABY CRIB / toddler bed, latex mattress,$ 199 / 502-333-4625 BO mint condition – Call/text 386 Less 627 6145 COFFEE & two end tables in Steve chestnut. than

Items Under $200 For Sale 2-ANTIQUE OAK flip-up seat student desks, $150 for both. 386-445-3055 BABY CRIB / toddler bed, latex mattress,$ 199 / BO mint condition – Call/text Steve 386 627 6145 BERKLINE DOUBLE recliner loveseat in beige microfiber material. $82. (386) 447-9869

BERKLINE DOUBLE loveseat in beige 2 years old. $110 cash.recliner 386-246-0729 Items Under $200 For Sale microfiber material. $82. (386) Help Wanted DESK & chair $65, telescope 447-9869 & tripod $55, cd ASSISTANT POSITION Flyer with busy real estate broBICYCLES Women's and Huffy rack $20,TVWESTERN Karaoke-100 songs $59. kerage. 100 Plus Realty is hiring a licensed Men's 26" Like New $50 Group each OBO 386-447-7060 386-446-4873 Realtor assist our agents customer conCOCKATIEL AND cage $150.with Cockatiel-6 months DININGto TABLE w/leaf, 6-chairs. Table 55”lx37”w tact. Must enjoy talking with old, large cage w/casters-31" x"warm" 20-1/2"customers x 53"H, w/leaf 73”l. $200. Call Andy 386-503-2707 on the phone. Call Rus for details and interview: 502-333-4625 FISH TANK, Fluval Chi designer tank. 6.6 gallons 386-931-0520 COFFEE & two end tables in chestnut. Less than with all accessories. $50. 386-313-5754 2 yearsCondos/Apts. old. $110 cash.ac 386-246-0729 For FRIGIDAIRE WINDOW unit, 8000Rent btu’s, 2 years

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BICYCLES WESTERN Flyer Women's and Huffy Men's 26" Like New $50 each OBO 386-447-7060

COCKATIEL AND cage $150. Cockatiel-6 months old, large cage w/casters-31" x 20-1/2" x 53"H, 502-333-4625

COFFEE & two end tables in chestnut. Less than 2 years old. $110 cash. 386-246-0729

DESK & chair $65, telescope & tripod $55, cd rack $20,TV Karaoke-100 songs $59. 386-446-4873 DINING TABLE w/leaf, 6-chairs. Table 55”lx37”w w/leaf 73”l. $200. Call Andy 386-503-2707

DESK & chair $65, telescope & tripod $55, cd old, $145. 386-586-5722 rack $20,TV BEACH Karaoke-100 songs$30. $59.Krugs model HAMILTON ss. mixer EUROPEAN VILLAGE, Desirable End Unit on 386-446-4873 213 fold up slicer $30. 386-445-4736 2nd floor. One bedroom with walk in closet, DINING TABLE w/leaf, 6-chairs. Table 55”lx37”w 1&1/2 bath, walk in shower master bath. Full MEN’S & Ladies bike, $25 in each includes helmet. w/leaf 73”l. $200. Call Andy 386-503-2707 kitchen. Basic cable provided. Recently renovatBike rack, $35. Car ramps, $15. 386-446-9695 ed. TANK, Minimum 1& year multiple year lease FISH Chilease, designer tank. 6.6 gallons POWER LIFTFluval Recliner Chair by Golden. High availaall bleaccessories. .Excellent Tenant pays water & electric. Security with $50. 386-313-5754 Quality. condition. $200. Deposit $1,000.00, Monthly Rent $800.00. FRIGIDAIRE 386 585-4486WINDOW ac unit, 8000 btu’s, 2 years Contact Bob, 407-416-5388 old, $145.SIZE 386-586-5722 QUEEN Futon, $175. Excellent condition, FURNISHED FLAGLER suite, single model occuHAMILTON ss. in-law mixer $30. Krugs micro suedeBEACH or best offer. 386-439-6628 pancy, $750/month includes utilities, 213 fold up slicer $30. RAZOR 2-WHEEL kids386-445-4736 stand up electric scooter No pets/smoking. 386-338-2397 MEN’S & Ladies bike, $25 includes helmet. w/charger, new battery, $50.each 386-538-4842 Bike rack, $35. Car ramps, $15.$150. 386-446-9695 RECLINER, LEATHER brown, Dining/desk

?IV\ \W ÅVL I OZMI\ LMIT WV [WUM\PQVO aW]¼^M IT_Ia[ Homes For Sale POWER LIFTleather & Recliner Chair 386-437-3275 by Golden. High chair, brown look, $25. Quality. Excellent condition. TECHNICS ELECTRIC ORGAN$200. LZMIUML 386 585-4486 ***ATTENTION HOMESELLERS*** with storage bench $200 QUEEN SIZE Futon, $175. Excellent condition, (386)793-4397 WN' Maximize the value of your micro suede or best offer. 386-439-6628 TV STAND Dark wood/ glass up to 51" $100.

BERKLINE DOUBLE recliner loveseat in beige microfiber material. $82.Wanted (386) 447-9869 Help BICYCLES Women's and Huffy ASSISTANTWESTERN POSITIONFlyer with busy real estate broMen's 26"100 Like New $50 each OBO 386-447-7060 kerage. Plus Realty Group is hiring a licensed Realtor to assist agents customer conCOCKATIEL AND our cage $150. with Cockatiel-6 months tact.large Must enjoy talking withx"warm" old, cage w/casters-31" 20-1/2" customers x 53"H, on the phone. Call Rus for details and interview: 502-333-4625 386-931-0520 COFFEE & two end tables in chestnut. Less than 2 years old. $110 cash. 386-246-0729

Condos/Apts. For Rent

Wanted DESK & chair Help $65, telescope & tripod $55, cd rack $20,TV Karaoke-100 songs $59. ASSISTANT POSITION with busy real estate broEUROPEAN VILLAGE, Desirable Enda Unit on 386-446-4873 kerage. 100 Plus Realty Group is hiring licensed 2nd floor. One our bedroom with in closet, Realtor to assist withwalk customer conDINING TABLE w/leaf,agents 6-chairs. Table 55”lx37”w 1&1/2 Must bath, enjoy walk in showerwith in master Full tact. talking "warm"bath. customers w/leaf 73”l. $200. Call Andy 386-503-2707 kitchen. Basic Call cableRus provided. Recently renovaton the phone. for details and interview: FISH Chilease, designer tank. 6.6 ed. TANK, MinimumFluval 1 year multiple yeargallons lease 386-931-0520 with $50. 386-313-5754 Items Under $200 For Sale Care Services availall ablaccessories. e. Adult Tenant pays water & electric. Security DepositCondos/Apts. $1,000.00, Rent $800.00. FRIGIDAIRE WINDOW acMonthly unit,For 8000 btu’s, 2 years Rent Contact Bob, 407-416-5388 old, $145. 386-586-5722 NEED TIME FOR YOURSELF? HAMILTON BEACH ss. mixer $30. model FURNISHED FLAGLER in-law suite,Krugs single occuEUROPEANNEED VILLAGE, Desirable End Unit on A VACATION? 213 fold up slicer $30. 386-445-4736 pancy, $750/month includes utilities, 2nd floor. One bedroom with walk in closet, No pets/smoking. 386-338-2397 MEN’S & Ladies $25 each includes 1&1/2 bath, walk bike, in shower in master bath.helmet. Full

Bike rack, Basic $35. Car ramps, $15. 386-446-9695 kitchen. cable provided. Recently renovat*SENIOR DAY CARE Homes For Sale ed. Minimum 1 Recliner year lease, multiple year lease POWER LIFT & Chair by Golden. High available . TenantTERM-OVER pays water & $200. electric. Quality. Excellent condition. *SHORT NIGHT?Security Deposit $1,000.00, Monthly Rent $800.00. 386 585-4486 ***ATTENTION HOMESELLERS*** Contact Bob, 407-416-5388 QUEEN SIZE Futon, $175. Excellent condition, Southern Breeze Living, FURNISHED in-law suite, single occuMaximize ofLLC your micro suede orFLAGLER bestthe offer.value 386-439-6628 386-447-7405 pancy, $750/month includes utilities, home with a FREE Online RAZOR 2-WHEEL kids stand up electric scooter www.Southernbreezeliving.com No pets/smoking. 386-338-2397 Home Evaluation. w/charger, new battery, $50. 386-538-4842 Assisted Living Facility #AL12111 Call 386-445-8112 For Details RECLINER, LEATHER brown, $150. Dining/desk w w w.100PlusRealtyGroup.com Homes For Sale chair, brown leather look, $25. 386-437-3275 Cleaning TECHNICS ELECTRIC ORGAN ***ATTENTION HOMESELLERS*** with storage benchCLEANING. $200 ELIZABETH'S TIRED FROM (386)793-4397 WORKING ALL DAY? LET MEHOMES! PUT A SMILE ON BANK OWNED Maximize the value of your YOUR FACE WITH A CLEAN HOME. TV STAND Dark wood/ glass up to 51" $100. home with a FREE Online CALL ME AT 386-569-6151. TORO gas blower vac $35. 386-313-6655 Home FREE listEvaluation. with pictures! FREE ESTIMATES! TWO WHITE base table lampsFor with custom beige Call 386-445-8112 10% off 1st cleaning Details shades. condition. $25 each. w wExcellent w.100PlusRealtyGroup.com New Clients Only! 386-585-3014. www.PalmCoastRepos.com

kerage. &100 Plus bike, Realty$25 Group hiring a licensed MEN’S Ladies eachis includes helmet. Realtor to $35. assist our agents with customer conBike rack, Car ramps, $15. 386-446-9695 tact. Must enjoy talking with "warm" customers POWER LIFT &Call Recliner Chair by Golden. High on the phone. Rus for details and interview: Quality. Excellent condition. $200. 386-931-0520 386 585-4486 Adult Care Services

Rent QUEENCondos/Apts. SIZE Futon, $175. For Excellent condition, micro suede or TIME best offer. NEED FOR386-439-6628 YOURSELF?

RAZOR 2-WHEEL kids stand up electric scooter EUROPEAN VILLAGE, Desirable End Unit on NEED A VACATION? w/charger, battery, $50.with 386-538-4842 2nd floor.newOne bedroom walk in closet, 1&1/2 bath, walk in shower in master Full RECLINER, LEATHER brown, $150. bath. Dining/desk kitchen. Basic cablelook, provided. Recently renovatchair, brown leather $25.CARE 386-437-3275 *SENIOR DAY ed. Minimum 1 year lease, multiple year lease TECHNICS ELECTRIC ORGAN a v a i l a b l e . Tenant pays water & electric. Adult Care Services *SHORT NIGHT?Security with storage benchTERM-OVER $200 Deposit $1,000.00, Monthly Rent $800.00. (386)793-4397 ContactNEED Bob, 407-416-5388 FOR YOURSELF? TV STAND DarkTIME wood/ glass up to 51" $100. Breeze Living, LLC FURNISHED FLAGLER in-law suite, single occuTORO gas Southern blower vac $35. 386-313-6655 NEED A VACATION? 386-447-7405 pancy, $750/month includes utilities, TWO WHITE base table lamps with custom beige www.Southernbreezeliving.com No pets/smoking. 386-338-2397 shades. Excellent condition. $25#AL12111 each. Assisted Living Facility Items *SENIOR Under $200 For Sale 386-585-3014. DAY CARE

Homes For Sale

UNIDEN HAND held c.b. radio set of 2. like new. Cleaning *SHORT TERM-OVER NIGHT? $50. 386-586-3378

***ATTENTION HOMESELLERS*** WALL UNIT for $200. Excellent condition ELIZABETH'S CLEANING. TIRED FROM 386-569-4967 WORKINGSouthern ALL DAY? LET ME PUT A SMILE ON Breeze Living, Maximize the value ofLLC your YOUR EATER FACE WITH A CLEAN 4HOME. WEED gas trimmer. years old…needs 386-447-7405 home with a FREE Online CALL ME AT 386-569-6151. fuel filter replacement is gas tank. $25. www.Southernbreezeliving.com Home Evaluation. FREE ESTIMATES! 386-446-6091 Assisted Living Facility #AL12111 Call 386-445-8112 For Details 10% off 1st cleaning w w w.100PlusRealtyGroup.com New Clients Only! Appliances

Cleaning Autos For Sale

FRIGIDAIRE WASHER/DRYER combo, white, 2007 BMW$400 328i or best & Landscaping Lawn stackable, offer. AlmostService new. Please ELIZABETH'S CLEANING. TIRED Champagne, all power, sunroof, 104,000 FROM miles, call 904-322-0826 LAWN SERVICE Starting at $15.00! BANK OWNED HOMES! WORKING ALL DAY? LET ME PUT A SMILE ON super clean. Asking $10,500. 407-916-9006 -YOUR Lawn FACE Service WITH A CLEAN HOME. -CALL Landscaping Services Boats ME AT 386-569-6151. - Complete Property FREE list Maintenance with pictures! 1996 24’ Bayliner cruiser, inboard/outboard, ESTIMATES! FREE - Mulch & Rock Beds This week’s Crossword answers reconditioned. Includes boat trailer, 10% off 1st aluminum cleaning Pressure Washing asking $5000. 386-445-4382, 386-225-0893 New Clients Only!

www.PalmCoastRepos.com

Low Prices on Monthly Service! Palm West Home Realty, Inc Consignments &Landscape Lawn Service CallLandscaping Michael @ Savarese & Design FISH TANK, Fluval Chi designer tank. 6.6 gallons NEED EXTRA $$? Looking consign or sell any 386-246-2406 LAWN SERVICE Starting atto $15.00! with all accessories. $50. 386-313-5754 CREAM PUFF! ofLawn yourService quality -Trimming Specialsfurniture? Call 386-437-2771. 10a.m.-5p.m., Monday through Thursday. FRIGIDAIRE WINDOW ac unit, 8000 btu’s, 2 years -“Everything Landscaping Services but the Lawn” VIRTUAL TOUR old, $145. 386-586-5722 -Detailing, Complete Property Maintenance Trimming, Weeding, Mulch, Gutters, -Cleaned, Mulch &Pressure Rock Furnishings Beds Washing, Leaf Cleanups HAMILTON BEACH ss. mixer $30. Krugs model -386-263-7032 Pressure Washing Palmheld Westc.b. Home Realty, UNIDEN HAND set Inc of 2. like new. SWIVEL 213 fold up slicer $30. 386-445-4736 CHAIRS (2), with matching ottoman. Landscaping & radio Lawn Service $50. 386-586-3378 Ivory, tan, peach fabric, Jessica1585 Charles brand. 4 MEN’S & Ladies bike, $25 each includes helmet. 3 beds 2 baths sq.ft. Low Prices on Monthly Service! LAWN SERVICE Starting at $15.00! home with a FREE Online Taxi Service BANK OWNED HOMES! UNIT for $200. Excellent condition mos old, Excellent condition. Pd &$3175, sell HOUSE CLASSIFIEDS Bike rack, $35. Car ramps, $15. 386-446-9695 RAZOR 2-WHEEL kids$35. stand up electric scooter WALL TORO gas blower vac 386-313-6655 $144,900 Call Michael @ Savarese Landscape Design CREAM PUFF! Lawn Service Home Evaluation. 386-569-4967 $1500 for all. Can email pictures. 386-986-6868 w/charger, new battery, $50. 386-538-4842 $ LP # 109231 POWER LIFT & Recliner Chair by Golden. High TWO Call Landscaping WHITE386-445-8112 base table lampsFor withDeta custom ils beige - First 15 wordsServices ............................ 15 per week 386-246-2406 PRESLEY CHAUFFEUR SERVICES. TalkToTed! EATER gas trimmer. 4 years old…needs VIRTUAL TOUR Quality. Excellent condition. $200. - Complete Property Maintenance RECLINER, LEATHER brown, shades. condition. $25$150. each.Dining/desk WEED w w Excellent w.100PlusRealtyGroup.com ¢ FREE list with pictures! Trimming Specials Why just call a Taxi when youWanted can ride in a Each Add’l word ........................................ 50 Merchandise 386-503-1101 fuel filter&replacement 386 585-4486 - Mulch Rock Beds is gas tank. $25. chair, brown leather look, $25. 386-437-3275 386-585-3014. “Everything butTown the Lawn” Luxury Lincoln Car. Whether you are going Sunburst Realty 386-446-6091 OLD U.S. COINS AND CURRENCY Pressure Washing 15% discount for 4 week Run Detailing, Trimming, Weeding, Mulch, Gutters, QUEEN SIZE Futon, $175. Excellent condition, TECHNICS ELECTRIC ORGAN UNIDEN HAND held c.b. radio set of 2. like new. across town, out on the town, weddings, special www.PalmCoastRepos.com Highest possible prices for U.S. Coin or currency $ Cleaned, Pressure Washing, Leaf Cleanups micro suede or best offer. 386-439-6628 with bench $200 $50. storage 386-586-3378 Yellow color 5 per Week occasions or to the airport we have competitive collections-large or small. We buy them all. Also 3 beds 2 baths 1585 sq.ft. Low Prices on Monthly Service! Appliances Palm West Home Realty, Inc 386-263-7032 rates silver, while you with Your class.We are OWNED HOMES! $ RAZOR 2-WHEEL kids stand up electric scooter (386)793-4397 WALLBANK UNIT for $200. Excellent condition gold, and ride sterling. place or licensed, ours.home. $144,900 Call Michael @WASHER/DRYER Savarese Landscape & Design Border as low as 3 per Week FRIGIDAIRE combo, white, MOVE IN ready 1636 sq.ft. 2005 B-section Insured and PERMITTED. All Major Credit Cards. 2014 w/charger, new battery, $50. 386-538-4842 TV STAND Dark wood/ glass up to 51" $100. 386-569-4967 consultation. 386-852-3485 386-246-2406 Service stackable, $400 or best offer. Almost new. Please Free 3/2/2 Nice yard, Taxi room for pool. $137,500. 386-237-9677 blower vac $35. 386-313-6655 TalkToTed! CREAM PUFF! RECLINER, LEATHER brown, $150. Dining/desk TORO call: 386-492-2784 WEED gas EATER gas trimmer. 4 years old…needs call This week’s FREE list with pictures! Trimming Specials 904-322-0826 Text 386-793-4397 Cryptogram answers www.presleychauffeurservices.com chair, brown leather look, $25. 386-437-3275 TWO WHITE base table with$25. custom beige “Everything fuel filter replacement is lamps gas tank. but386-503-1101 the Lawn” 1. Arthur’s round table welcomed a notable guest: Fax: 386-447-9963 PRESLEY CHAUFFEUR SERVICES. VIRTUAL TOUR Sunburst Realty Help Tile Wanted shades. Excellent condition. $25 each. 386-446-6091 Detailing, Trimming, Weeding, Mulch, Gutters, TECHNICS ELECTRIC ORGAN Boats He got Why Sir justCircumference. call a Taxi when youwoefully can rideportly in a from Email: classifieds@ormondbeachobserver.com www.PalmCoastRepos.com 386-585-3014. Cleaned, Cleanups with storage bench $200 too much pi. Luxury Lincoln Town Car. Whether you are repairs, going Client Accountant Full Charge 1996 24’Pressure BaylinerWashing, cruiser,Leaf inboard/outboard, OPEN HOUSE JOE OCCHIPINTI Tile. Bathrooms, floors, Appliances Palmheld Westc.b. Home Realty, 386-263-7032 Includes aluminum boat trailer, across (386)793-4397 UNIDEN HAND radio setInc of 2. like new. reconditioned. town, out on the town, weddings, special 2. ASaturday, horologist specialized in the fabrication of tiny MAY Management Services August 2nd 3pm-5pm backsplashes, re-grouting. 386-237-3012. $50. 386-586-3378 FRIGIDAIRE WASHER/DRYER combo, white, asking or Ticket to St. the airport we have competitive MOVE3$5000. INbeds ready 1636 sq.ft. 2005 B-section He feltAugustine, razzed by a25FL. crowing competitor 386-445-4382, 386-225-0893 TV STAND Dark wood/ glass up to 51" $100. Lottery to First Registered Guests Free watches. Estimates. Licensed & Insured 2 baths 1585 sq.ft.home. occasions Service stackable, $400 or best offer. Almost new. Please 3/2/2 Nice yard,Taxi source for local Classifieds ratescalling while you with class.We room for pool. $137,500. him aride small-time operator.are licensed, TORO gas blower vacYour $35. 386-313-6655 WALL UNIT for CREAM $200. Excellent $144,900 PUFF!condition call 904-322-0826 Insured and PERMITTED. All Cards. Text 386-793-4397 immediately available to oversee and Consignments VIRTUAL TOMajor UAds R Credit Premium Box TWO WHITE base table lamps with custom beige 386-569-4967 Your sourcE For LocaL cLassiFiEd ads Position 386-237-9677 PRESLEY CHAUFFEUR SERVICES. manage the finances for multiple Homeowners TalkToTed! VIRTUAL TOUR shades. Excellent condition. $25 each. WEED EATER gas trimmer. 4 years old…needs NEED EXTRA $$? to can consign or asell any www.presleychauffeurservices.com Why just call a386-503-1101 Taxi Looking when you ride in Boats and Condo owners associations (HOA and COA) 386-585-3014. fuel filter replacement is gas tank. $25. of yourLincoln qualityTown furniture? Call 386-437-2771. Luxury Car. Whether you are going through the full cycle of Accounting. This position 1996 24’ Bayliner cruiser, inboard/outboard, Sunburst Realty OPEN through HOUSE 10a.m.-5p.m., Monday Thursday.special UNIDEN HAND held c.b. radio set of 2. like new. 386-446-6091 town, out on the town, weddings, includes volume General Ledger, Tile 4high beds, 3 baths. 2566 sq. ft . Journal reconditioned. Includes aluminum boat trailer, acrossSaturday, BEFORE THE CIA by Gary Cooker August 2nd 3pm-5pm $50. 386-586-3378 occasions or to the airport we25 have competitive Collections Financial Price Reduced to monthly $269,000 asking3$5000. JOE OCCHIPINTI Tile.and Bathrooms, floors, repairs, beds 386-445-4382, 2 baths 386-225-0893 1585 sq.ft. Free Lottery Ticket to First Registered Guests Entry, Appliances rates while you ride with class.We are licensed, Statements; experience is51386-237-3012. required. Experience Furnishings WALL UNIT for $200. Excellent condition 123 Pertaining to the 66 Extreme anger Olympics entrant backsplashes, re-grouting. $144,900 ACROSS Edited by Timothy E. Parker FRIGIDAIRE WASHER/DRYER combo, white, MOVE IN ready 1636 2005 B-section home. with Insured and PERMITTED. AllTO Major Cards. fund and/or accrual& accounting preferred. 386-569-4967 (Abbr.) Free kidneys Estimates. Licensed Insured SWIVEL CHAIRS (2),sq.ft. with matching ottoman. Consignments VIRTUAL R Credit 69U Rat’s residence 1 Kind of infection stackable, $400 or best offer. Almost new. Please 386-237-9677 3/2/2 tan, Nice yard, room pool. $137,500. computer skills using MS be Word & Excel. Ivory, peach fabric,for Jessica Charles brand. 4 Proficient 53 It can a stretch TalkToTed! WEED EATER gas trimmer. 4 years old…needs call 124 Emphasize 71 Total before 6 Prime meridian 904-322-0826 NEED EXTRA386-503-1101 $$? 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Please respond with St. accrual Augustine, FL. with fund and/or accounting preferred. time off 94 Bed linen, but not VIRTUAL TO UR Free consultation. 386-852-3485 Bullies might pick 17 99 “A or likely cware@mayresort.com onastory!” line at 41 to McIntosh, e.g.of your home Proficient computer skills using MS Word & Excel. resume Determine the value with FREE linen 386-503-1101 on them 101 Not spoken DFWP Customer service & available communication skills and are www.maymgt.com. Position to oversee 44 Rotation line Online Home 96 Some estate HOUSE CLASSIFIEDS Sunburst RealtyEvaluation. Group Inc w w immediately w.28PebbleBeach.com 18 Ruhr Valley city www.palmcoastobserver.com 102 Magnanimous essential the for the position. will manage finances forPreference multiple Homeowners www.palmcoasthomeinfo.com 45Visit Horse kin security workers 3 beds 2 baths 1585 sq.ft . be given Help Wanted 24 Slot machine LP # 109231 to candidates with 2-3 years experience. Min. 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ORMOND BEACH OBSERVER

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THURSDAY, JULY 24, 2014

1st Place | GENERA

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YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

SPORTS

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Flagler Surf Series splashes into local waves once again.

Churchgoers get out into the community for service. PAGE 14

Pryor defends 50% fail system; and, boardwalk extension?

Jonathan Simmons | Staff Writer

New charter school nixed

Mount Calvary Baptist Church will host its Dollars for Scholars workshop noon Monday, Oct. 21, at 75 Pine Lakes Parkway S. The workshop is sponsored by the Mount Calvary Baptist Church of Palm Coast Scholarship Ministry. Representatives from the United Negro College Fund and Flagler Schools will provide students and parents with information on available college scholarships and important tips on the application process. Lunch will be provided. Call 4475719 for registration.

SEE OUR TOWN / PAGE 2

heart to heart By Andrew O’Brien | Associate Editor

Easter Seals Volusia Flagler, an organization dedicated to aiding and educating those with disabilities, will not be able to open a pre-K charter school it had proposed for Flagler County. The organization’s proposal was defeated when the Flagler County School Board deadlocked, with Chairman Andy Dance and Trevor Tucker voting in favor, and John Fischer and Colleen Conklin voting against. One board member, Sue Dickinson, was absent. As a result of the tie, the motion failed. The proposal had been recommended by district staff. Conklin said she voted against the proposed charter school because she was concerned about its economic vi-

MIRACLE MARVINS Sheriff alters

SEE SCHOOL BOARD / PAGE 5

VIRGINIA TRIP

New hearts give brothers second chance.

I

t was a Friday night in June 2011, in New York, and 15-year-old Connor Marvin needed a sub in his soccer game. Brock, his older brother, came on the field to give him a breather. “He subbed me off, and my heart started racing after I sat down on the bench,” Connor said. A racing heart is not a problem for teenage soccer players — it’s normal. But not for Connor. When his heart acted up, so did his defibrillator — alerting him nine times that his heart was in arrhythmia and that it needed to be shocked to restart it. “I thought I was going to die,” he recalled. Connor, now a 17-year-old senior at Matanzas High School, was unusual on that soccer field because of his defibrillator, but he wasn’t unique. His brother had one, too, just six months earlier. And that likely saved his life.

Flatline — twice

It all began on a spring day in April 2008 in Elizabethtown, N.Y. Connor and Brock were having a catch in the front yard.

‘‘

It was four years of real high highs and real low lows.

INDEX Calendar ........... 26 Classifieds ........ 31

ing. Roscoe was licking his face. They tried talking to him, but he didn’t respond. Then Brock woke up. “He started screaming, and his eyes were rolled back in his head,” Connor recalled. The Marvins rushed Brock to the hospital, where he flatlined. Doctors and nurses said there was very little chance he would survive and that the hospital was too small to handle Brock’s medical emergency. He was flown in an emergency helicopter to another hospital in Vermont, where he flatlined again. Brock Marvin, 14 at the time, just had a heart attack. At the hospital in Vermont, doctors discovered he had dilated cardiomyopathy, a condition in which the heart becomes weakened and enlarged, resulting in the heart not being able to pump enough blood to the rest of the body. Options were limited, and so Smitty Marvin, Brock and Connor’s dad, set off on a quest to find an answer through research on the Internet. All advice led to one place: Boston Children’s

Andrew O’Brien | Assoc. Editor

personal policy after car scrape

e uren t a e i s F ’Br Despite not breaking any agency policies, Flagler County Sheriff Jim Manfre said he will change his personal policy after taking his agency-issued Dodge Charger on a personal trip over the summer to Virginia to visit his daughter and son-in-law. “My position has been from the very beginning that there’s only one of me, and I’m on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and I take that seriously,” Manfre said Tuesday. “So my car goes with me wherever I go for that very simple reason.” While in Charlottesville, Va., a U-Haul trailer struck the rear bumper on Manfre’s car. Agency policy requires that any time an agency vehicle is damaged, whether or not through a traffic crash, “it shall be documented on an incident

ort w O Sp ndre Smitty Marvin, father of Brock and Connor Marvin

Tired of tossing the baseball and having their dog, Roscoe, steal the ball so many times, Connor went inside. Brock stayed outside with the dog. Twenty minutes later and after hearing no response twice, Connor and his family went outside to check on Brock. They found him lying in the grass, not mov-

A

Cops Corner..........8 Crossword.......... 30

SEE MANFRE / PAGE 5

SEE MARVINS / PAGE 4

Neighborhood .... 19 Opinion ................6

Permits ............. 30 Sports ............... 13

Vol. 4, No. 71 One section

3rd Place 6 PalmCoastObserver.com

PALM COAST ObServer

SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 2013

A BED OF LEAVES by brian McMillan | Managing Editor

Friedrich Hayek “Road to Serfdom,” 1944 Publisher / John Walsh, jwalsh@palmcoastobserver.com Managing Editor / Brian McMillan, bmcmillan@palmcoastobserver.com Associate Editor / Andrew O’Brien, andrew@palmcoastobserver.com Community Editor / Shanna Fortier, shanna@palmcoastobserver.com Staff Writer / Megan Hoye, megan@palmcoastobserver.com Design Editor / Mallorie Bruce, mbruce@palmcoastobserver.com Advertising Manager / Jaci Centofanti, jaclyn@palmcoastobserver.com Account Manager / Kaitlin Murray, kaitlin@palmcoastobserver.com Account Manager / Sarah Hechler, sarah@palmcoastobserver.com Classifieds / Randi Schaefer, randi@palmcoastobserver.com Account Manager / Nicole Nuhfer, nicole@palmcoastobserver.com

The homeless will always be with us As I went out to the driveway to haul the recycling bins into my garage on Tuesday night, I took a moment to look at the heavens. I imagined the constellations guiding ancient shepherds and sailors home and thought how peaceful it would be to live without modern distractions. And then I thought about the people in our community who have no other option but to brIAN MCMILLAN stare at the stars. At the Bunnell City Commission meeting on Monday, officials discussed the complaints of some residents who would like to see the First United Methodist Church’s cold weather shelter, and the homeless population in the community, disappear. I have been to the Sheltering Tree before and seen the volunteers in action as they served food and provided clothing and sleeping arrangements for a room full of men and women. I can also sympathize with the Bunnell residents who live near the church and who are afraid of the ragged and desperate people who share

the streets with them. The consensus from the Bunnell City Commission was that the county government and the other cities should be asked to help. Eventually, perhaps, there can be another location, a permanent location, found for a homeless shelter. But that wouldn’t solve the problem. The residents around the church would be pleased if the problem were to be relocated across town, but soon the residents around the new location would create their own petition. The homeless will always be with us. As it stands now, the homeless are being served, in a small and inspiring way, not by government coalitions, but by a community of volunteers who believe that no matter what choices led to his personal catastrophe, the homeless man at the church doors needs to be treated with dignity and that he needs an arm around his shoulders even more than he might need a blanket on the few winter nights when the doors are allowed to open. What kind of community do we want to live in? One that believes in recovery and redemption for the down-and-out? Or one that fears the unknown and quietly tells the homeless man that he needs to return to his bed of leaves under the sparkling stars?

Account Manager / Wes Germano, wes@ormondbeachobserver.com Classifieds / Lilian Vargas, lilian@ormondbeachobserver.com Circulation Manager / Dave Brooks, david@horizonroad.com Office Manager / Maureen Walsh, maureen@palmcoastobserver.com

CONTACT US

OFFICe: 386-447-9723 FAX: 386-447-9963 The Palm Coast Observer is published twice weekly, on Wednesdays and Saturdays. It provides free home delivery to several neighborhoods in the Palm Coast area. The Palm Coast Observer also can be found in more than a dozen commercial locations throughout Palm Coast and at our office, 1 Florida Park Drive, N., Unit 103. If you wish to discontinue home delivery or if you wish to suspend home delivery temporarily, call David Brooks at 3385080.

+ Funding for schools should not come through special tax Dear Editor: Friends, Flaglerites and citizens, your School Board says, “Lend me your purses.” Recently, we have read where Flagler County is one of the greatest growing counties in America for construction employment. We have seen this before: The great bubble of 2003-08 led us into a terrible recession. As we enter into a new growth era, it would be wise if we did not contribute to a frothy situation that can only lead to more personal tragedy. Ten years ago, our School Board successfully campaigned for a special tax to keep up with a fast-growing school population. Those 10 years have expired. And now the

board asks the citizens to approve a double of that taxation when we have a declining school population. This vote would relieve the School Board of placing all elements of the education budget in a common basket for prioritized funding. The voted tax is free money to them, money they do not have to prioritize amongst all the contending requirements. They need not concern themselves with raising your taxes in any needy year because they have taken additional funds from your purse and can now whine for even more monies. So I say to you citizens, reject this special tax, reject relieving our elected officials from completing their required stewardship, enforce them to include all requirements properly prioritized in a budget, and to come up with an appropriate tax

Who Was the helper? Florence Howard, 72, was third in line to turn left from Palm Coast Parkway onto Old Kings Road on the afternoon of Saturday, April 6, when a deer crashed into her car. Howard, who lives in the W-section, was shaking and stunned as she watched the deer totter and die on the road. “I’ve never killed anything in my life,” she said later in a phone call. As the incident was unfolding, a young man, probably about 25 years old, came to her rescue. He pulled over, called the police and stayed with Howard until help arrived. He directed traffic. In the coming days, as Howard began dealing with her insurance company to get her car taken care of, one thought kept going through her head: “I was so upset I didn’t think to ask his name.” And so, if you’re the guy who helped Mrs. Howard, would you mind sending an email to jimhoward1956@cs.com? She’d like to say thank you.

rate to fund the necessary requirements each and every year. It is a slimy political move to avoid the normal budget process with a special tax, put before the electorate on an unusual date when only the hard core proponents will likely vote. Let them put their supposed need on a regular ballot when all our normal voters are likely to come to the polls. Reject this effort to fleece your purse! Skipper Hanzel Palm Coast

Mark YoUr CalenDarS!!!

| Commu nity Editor

THURSDAY,

OCTOBER

31, 2013

Horsesh pitchin oe way of lifg: A e

O’Brien

The club Tuesdays meets 9:30 a.m. and Thur On a sdays. in Flaglergorgeous Saturd

Observer AST PALM CO

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S

17, 2013 OCTOBER THURSDAY,

OD NEIGHBORHO

Churchgoers the get out into for community 14 service. PAGE

SPORTS

Series Flagler Surf local splashes into again. waves once

agent + Extension and receives state l awards Palm nationa

s 50% Pryor defend and, fail system; ion? boardwalk extens PAGE 3

D OL BOAR SCHOSimmons | Staff Writer

New charterd school nixe

Jonathan

OUR TOWN

Joe King

NEWS

Volusia Flagler, to Easter Seals ion dedicated an organizat educating those be aiding and s, will not with disabilitiea pre-K charter able to open proposed for Flaschool it had

by Trip Underwood Courtesy photo

gler County. ion’s proposal The organizat Flagler when the was defeated Board deadCounty SchoolChairman Andy voting locked, with Trevor Tucker Dance and John Fischer and in favor, and voting against. DickColleen Conklin member, Sue One board a result of absent. As inson, was motion failed. recthe tie, the had been proposal The staff. d by district ommende said she voted Conklin charter proposed against the was conshe school becauseits economic vicerned about

SEE SCHOOL

BOARD / PAGE

5

VINS Sheriff alters MIRACLE MAR personal

heart to heart

gn i s e

TRIPEditor NIA Assoc. VIRGIO’Brien | Andrew

ce. second chan give brothers New hearts

Coasters Flagler Mark Warren, Jason andII Kristin Agent e Pavlow his face. County Extension was licking t and Natural ing. Roscoe talking to him, but for Agriculture received a Brock They tried Resources, n of respond. Then he didn’t night in June Florida Associatio l Agents , and t was a Friday York, and woke up. County Agricultura in screaming his New in nt Award 2011, in “He started Achieveme rolled back Connor Marvin of excellence 15-year-old in his soccer his eyes were recalled. recognition sub service and needed a head,” Connor rushed Brock to any in extension at the his older brother, breaking The Marvins l programs game. Brock, field to give him a Despite not Flagler County educationa where he flatlined. of the the hospital, nurses said there came on the he will agency policies, annual conference my Manfre said after . Doctors and chance he would breather. Sheriff Jim me off, and sat association d personal policy was very little that the hospital “He subbed after I Dodge change his He also represente started racing National agency-issuedtrip over survive and to handle Brock’s Connor the heart at taking his bench,” Florida the a personal He was of County was too small down on Charger on to Virginia to visit Association emergency. helicopmedical l Agents in said. the summer and son-in-law. is not a problem emergency in Vera Agricultura flown in an A racing heart players — it’s and received from hospital his daughter Pittsburgh soccer has been another nt award. to again. ter for teenage “My position he flatlined time, that there’s not for Connor. national achieveme mont, where normal. But acted up, so did 14 at the on call the very beginning heart me, and I’m him Brock Marvin,attack. When his only one of day, seven days a or — alerting heart a + Mount Cavalry Vermont, just had a his defibrillat his heart was in in hours 24 seriously,” for that I take that “So my At the hospital d he had dinine times needed to week, and hosts Dollars and that it Tuesday. father of condidoctors discovere arrhythmia restart it. opathy, a Manfre said me wherever I go Smitty Marvin, Marvin to Scholars event lated cardiomy be shocked I was going to die,” car goes withsimple reason.” Baptist the heart becomes Brock and Connor Mount Calvary its Dollars tion in which enlarged, result“I thought for that very sville, Va., and host to ld seweakened Church will he recalled. rear While in Charlotte not being able a 17-year-o workshop noon struck the ing in the heart blood to the rest Connor, now for Scholars 21, at 75 High School, a U-Haul trailer car. enough Matanzas Oct. Manfre’s field at pump nior Monday, bumper on on that soccer requires that the baseball Parkway S. so the body. was unusual defibrillator, but Pine Lakes Agency policyagency vehicle limited, and Tired of tossing dog, Roscoe, of is sponhis an their Options were and Conbrother The workshop not because of any time unique. His months and havingball so many times, Smitty Marvin, Brock a quest to Mount Calvary whether or he wasn’t sored by the of Palm “it shall Brock is damaged, steal the set off on research too, just six traffic crash, saved his Connor went inside.the dog. nor’s dad, had one, Baptist Church p Ministry. through through a ted on an incident that likely with find an answer All advice led earlier. And Coast Scholarshi from the be documen stayed outside later and after on the Internet. life. / PAGE 5 Representatives Boston Children’s Twenty minutes twice, ConCollege Fund SEE MANFRE one place: no response proUnited Negro outside to Schools will day hearing family went / PAGE 4 Flatline — twice and Flagler and parents on a spring nor and his Brock. They found SEE MARVINS It all began Elizabethtown, vide students n on availto check on the grass, not movin 2008 were April in in with informatio and Brock him lying 4, No. 71 scholarships N.Y. Connor in the front yard. 30 Vol. able college tips on the having a catch Permits ............... 13 One section and important .... 19 process. Lunch rhood ............. application Sports Neighbo Call 447...6 ..........8 INDEX will be provided. . Opinion ............. Cops Corner 30 26 5719 for registration

I

‘‘

It was four years of real high highs and real low lows.

policy after car scrape

D ic uce h rapie Br G ll or

l era Mal v O SEE OUR TOWN

/ PAGE 2

Calendar ........... 31 ........ Classifieds

Crossword..........

to ho tier P s or

ortna F p S an Sh

Brav

Dear Editor: Activate the count down clock on all red light cameras. These are the blank spaces on the right side of the Walk-Don’t Walk signs. This way all drivers and pedestrians will know when the light is going to change to yellow! Walter and Carole Twyman Palm Coast

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water By Shann a Fortier

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“If we are to build a better world, we must remember that the guiding principle is this — a policy of freedom for the individual is the only truly progressive policy.”

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146268

+ Mount Cavalry hosts Dollars for Scholars event

Courtesy photo by Trip Underwood

‘‘

Mark Warren, Flagler County Extension Agent II for Agriculture and Natural Resources, received a Florida Association of County Agricultural Agents Achievement Award in recognition of excellence in extension service and educational programs at the annual conference of the association. He also represented Florida at the National Association of County Agricultural Agents in Pittsburgh and received a national achievement award.

PALMCOASTO

te Editor

e

SCHOOL BOARD

Connor Marvin (left) and his brother, Brock

oli anna f t r h Po S

Sports

FOR STA RTERS O’Brien | Associa

Andrew

Tom Marton

PAGE 3

+ Maze Days at Cowart Ranch

+ Extension agent receives state and national awards

to r ho ortie P o F

NEWS

OUR TOWN

Cowart Ranch and Farms is at it again! The Family Fall Festival kicked off Oct. 11. The family fun, complete with crop maze, hayrides, pumpkin patch and farm animals will run every Friday, Saturday and Sunday until Nov. 10. Hours are 5-10 p.m. Fridays, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturdays and 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sundays with the last ticket sold an hour before closing. The cost is $9, and kids under 4 are free.

hy p a gr

3rd Place

2nd Place

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2013

PAGE 10

2nd Place

1st Place

1st Place

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20


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