Sarasota Observer 1.30.14

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BUSINESS

Main Street businesses welcome ‘spicy’ new restaurant. PAGE 5A

OUR TOWN

Tim Jaeger is proud to be a Sarasota artist. INSIDE

transportation

NEWS

Low-speed circulator could bring more people to downtown businesses. PAGE 3A

by David Conway | News Editor

SCAT station could get new home A resident proposes moving the downtown SCAT transfer station to open the site to development, but staff report potential issues with the idea.

Courtesy photo

Pam Kelly and daughter, Shelby

+ Mission of love

Ernie Ritz’s home may come with a view, but he wants it changed. Ritz, who lives in a building at the southwest corner of First Street and Lemon Avenue, looks at his neighbor, the Sarasota

County Area Transit transfer station, as both a missed opportunity and a bad fit. The chairman of the city’s Downtown Improvement District says the city and county, both searching for ways to generate income without rais-

ing taxes, would benefit greatly from getting a new piece of downtown real estate on the tax rolls. “You look around the city and you start seeing all of this non income-producing property

ER nurse Pam Kelly was touched by the outpouring of support from her collegues at Doctors Hospital of Sarasota this month. Kelly and her daughter, Shelby, are traveling next week to an orphanage in Honduras to conduct physicals and teach orphange staff about diabetes, heart disease and CPR. In preparation for their mission, Kelly asked Doctors Hospital staff to donate supplies to the cause and they delivered — three boxes’ worth, including underclothes and medical supplies for the 35 children in the orphanage. “The response was amazing,” says Kelly.

owned by the county or the city,” Ritz said. “My idea was to start selling off some of the property that they own that’s not incomeproducing.” That includes the SCAT station, which he says is a prime piece of property zoned for a potential high-rise development.

SEE SCAT / PAGE 2A

BIRTHDAY BELLE

+ Chain of Command The Sarasota Power and Sail Squadron celebrated its 62nd “Change of Watch” Tuesday, Jan. 14. The Squadron’s new bridge officers are Cmdr. William Boos, Executive Office Lt. Cmdr. Margaret L. Barber, Administrative Officer Lt.. Cmdr. Robert B Holms, Education Officer Lt. Cmdr. Gary Wells, Secretary Lt. Cmdr. Sandy Kuskin and Treasurer Lt. Cmdr. Jose Garnham. The Squadron and its member volunteers have been teaching safe boating instruction and advance navigation courses since 1952.

+ Mrs. President Sarah Lodge has been announced the newest president elect of the Junior League of Sarasota. Lodge, a financial adviser, has been an active member of the Junior League since 2007 and will take office in June 2015. “I’m thrilled,” she says. “It’s a great opportunity and a great group of girls.” Lodge will follow current President Jessica Hays and President-Elect Amanda Gambert.

Harriet Sokmenseur

Charlotte Zwick celebrated her 105 birthday Saturday. Zwick’s party was held at her residence Bahia Oaks Lodge. She rode her new scooter, which was an early birthday present from family, into the dining room where guests sang and swapped stories. See more photos from Zwick’s birthday party on page 1B.

DEVELOPMENT

by Nolan Peterson | News Editor

Siesta Village rental units clear hurdle The new building at the former site of Napoli’s Pizza will include a ground-level retail space and three second-story transient accommodations. After months of permitting delays, a new mixed-use building in the Siesta Key Village received the OK to move forward from the Sarasota County Commission Tuesday. The move garnered the collective praise of Siesta Key Village business

owners and nearby condominium tenants. The site’s property owners, Jim Syprett and Jay Lancer, spent four years planning the project — located on the former grounds of Napoli’s Pizza, at 5242 and 5238

Ocean Blvd. The former Napoli’s Pizza building was demolished last summer, but Napoli’s recently reopened at a new location in the Village at 5240 Ocean Blvd.

SEE RENTALS / PAGE 13A

Courtesy rendering

The building at 5242 and 5238 Ocean Blvd. includes three rental apartments.

INDEX Opinion.................8A Classifieds .......... 9B

Cops Corner....... 15A Crossword............ 8B

Permits................ 5B Real Estate.......... 4B

Sports................ 17A Weather............... 8B

Vol. 10, No. 11 | Three sections YourObserver.com


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SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

LEMON AVENUE

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The current SCAT station is located at Lemon Avenue and First Street, next to Whole Foods.

SCAT / FROM PAGE 1A As it stands, he said, downtown traffic and the narrow driveways the buses must navigate make the current site a headache. “Talking to some of the bus drivers, it’s starting to get really busy,” Ritz “They’re starting to outgrow it, and it’s tight maneuvering there.” Ritz reached out to County Commissioner Carolyn Mason Jan. 22 to see if the County Commission was interested in his proposal, which would relocate the transfer station to a lot near the Department of Health at Ringling Boulevard and School Avenue. As it turned out, the commission had already directed staff to examine of facilitating that same move. Commissioner Joe Barbetta led the charge to investigate the feasibility of moving the transfer station. He agreed with Ritz’s assessment of the current location and thought a transfer station might better serve SCAT riders if it were adjacent to several county service providers. Just as importantly, he said, it was desirable to make the current SCAT site available for

purchase. “If we can put that parcel on the market or give an opportunity for a developer to come in, I think it would be really good,” Barbetta said. The County Commission’s staff report request was completed Dec. 18, but SCAT Director Glama Carter did not distribute it to county commissioners until after Ritz’s inquiry. Although Barbetta said he did not imagine there would be much opposition to moving the transfer station, the report outlines a series of issues that could arise if the station were relocated to the Ringling site. The Ringling parcel was considered as the site for the transfer station when it was constructed in 2002, after some people expressed concerns about the First Street and Lemon Avenue location. The report says city staff identified four main problems with the Ringling site that still persist today: bus operations, impacts to land use and access, parcel size and a parking shortage. If the station were moved 1 mile southeast — the distance between the two parcels — the timing of the current bus

system would be thrown off, with some routes not being able to complete their service within an hour and others arriving at the transfer station too soon. Restructuring the routes would be costly and require resources that are not currently available, the report said. In 2002, residents around the Ringling site were concerned about the effect the transfer station could have on traffic. The report says it is possible those concerns would resurface if the move was seriously considered. The report states that, although the new site could be more than twice as large as the proposed transfer station, it would still not adequately meet the department’s current and future needs. It also says that one of the foremost problems with the proposed site is a lack of parking. If moved, the station would occupy what’s currently a surface lot used as overflow parking for the adjacent parking garage, which would further limit parking in the area. Still, the report does not recommend against moving the transfer station if that is what the commission desires. Instead, it says, the board should hire an outside

firm to design a station that best fits the Ringling site and addresses the issues that come with it. Additionally, it says, the board should consider bringing in a firm to evaluate other potential sites to which the transfer station could be relocated. From the city’s perspective, this is largely a decision that is out of its hands — the county owns both the current and the proposed sites. City Manager Tom Barwin said the city would be interested in discussing the issue with the involved parties but, as of yet, it has not been approached. Barwin did say he could see the potential appeal of a new transfer station. “There may be some advantages in a location near the health department,” Barwin said. “Lots of people come into the county seat for services in that area.” Given the current economic state of the city and county, Ritz believes there is no reason that his neighborhood should not have a change of scenery in the near future. “All downtown really needs is a bus stop,” Ritz said. “To have that particular piece of land sitting there with buses coming and going all day long is just a waste.”

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

route running

by David Conway | News Editor

Proposed downtown circulator takes a preliminary test drive Two downtown stakeholders come together to drive an idea for free, accessible transportation for downtown visitors. The project plans to be privately funded.

David Conway

A proposed downtown circulator vehicle, provided by Cruise Car Inc., sits outside of the Palm Avenue parking garage before a trial run to test its battery life.

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A six-seat, low-speed golf-cart style electric vehicle circled through downtown Sarasota for six straight hours Monday. It may be a far cry from last year’s proposed trolley, but the unusual cart could signal an early step toward establishing a new transit system in the heart of the city. The cart was a trial run for a potential downtown circulator that would transport passengers to downtown hotels and businesses. Downtown Sarasota Alliance board member Peter Fanning and Downtown Improvement District Operations Manager John Moran formulated the idea two years ago; the idea stayed dormant until being revived at a recent City Hall meeting. Fanning said the configuration of Sarasota’s downtown — particularly the length of Main Street and the remoteness of major hotels — meant the transit option would be well suited for the city. “People say, ‘I park my car downtown, I go see something — I don’t want to drive another mile somewhere else and look for parking again,’” Fanning said. The plan was relatively modest — the carts used would be street legal, but the speed would top out at around 25 miles per hour. The proposal was a cheaper alternative to other proposed downtown circulator options, such as a trolley or streetcars. Although the city is still interested in discussing the possibility of a larger-scale downtown circulator, this effort would be privately funded. Fanning founded a charitable organization, called Main Street Connection Inc., to gather donations to pay for the program. The nonprofit group would run the circulator. The plan for Monday’s test ride — and the re-emergence of the circulator proposal — dates back about three weeks, according to Moran. A group of people — merchants, private individuals, representatives from the city and Visit Sarasota County — gathered at City Hall to discuss concerns relating to the construction of the State Street parking garage. At that meeting, people expressed a fear that the loss of the 139-space surface lot at State Street and Lemon Avenue would hurt business once construction on the garage begins in the summer. As solutions were discussed, one person mentioned a circulator to carry people from downtown parking locations to businesses near the garage. Moran, present at the meeting, brought up his proposal and started examining its feasibility. The proposed route focuses on servicing people staying at hotels adjacent to

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downtown, extending along Island Park Drive to the Ritz-Carlton, Sarasota, and down Boulevard of the Arts to Hotel Indigo and the Hyatt Regency. Although the route could still change, the philosophy behind it will most likely remain intact. “The idea was to be able to pick up and drop off people at the existing and proposed hotels,” Moran said. “Right now, there’s no convenient way to get around from those.” The first question Moran had to address was funding. To determine how to pay for it, he said, the first step was to find out how much the new transportation system would cost. That’s what led to Monday’s trial run of a vehicle, which Sarasota company Cruise Car Inc. provided. Bill Kics, a con-

tract manager with Cruise Car, drove the vehicle along the proposed route to determine how long the battery-powered vehicles will last before needing to be recharged. Moran said the goal was to get a fleet of vehicles that picked up passengers along the route every five minutes. He estimated the cost of the vehicles at about $13,000 each, and that around 10 might be necessary to ensure the level of service he imagined. “What we’re trying to do is avoid in-theday recharging,” Moran said. “Going to heaven, these things would last a whole workday.” The early results were inconclusive, Moran said. The total battery life of the vehicles was about six hours, and Kics said they were shooting for somewhere between eight and 10 hours. Kics said Cruise Car would look at adjusting the cars to try to prolong the lifespan of each vehicle. Afterward, the group will conduct another test drive. It’s still early in the process, but Fanning and Moran both said they were optimistic about the possibility of their vision coming to fruition. “We’re hoping that once we launch it, people will get behind it and promote it as something that’s attractive to people, that makes them want to come to Sarasota because it’s easier to get around and see the attractions throughout downtown,” Fanning said.

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NEWSBRIEFS + Michael Bloomberg to speak in Sarasota The Ringling College Library Association and Gulf Coast Community Foundation have teamed up to bring Michael Bloomberg to Sarasota this March. Bloomberg, who concluded his third term as mayor of New York earlier this month, will give an evening lecture at an event March 28 at the Sarasota Opera House. Ringling College Library Association Town Michael Bloomberg Hall Chairman Jay Logan said proceeds from the event would go toward funding construction of a new library at the Ringling College of Art and Design. The event is not a part of the Ringling College Library Association’s Town Hall series, but Logan helped book the event. The Ringling College Library Association has been working to bring Bloomberg to Sarasota for more than a year, Logan said, but it was only recently able to secure his presence as he was leaving office. “Given where we are in the campaign for the library, we thought this would be a good opportunity to help that project along in terms of the construction fund,” Logan said. “We hope the community will rally around that.” Logan said tickets for the event should be available some time in late February.

+ Princeton Review calls New College a ‘Best Value’ For the sixth straight year, New College of Florida received praise from the Princeton Review, as the school came in at No. 2 in the group’s 2014 rankings of the “Best Value” public colleges in the country. New College moved up one spot from last year’s rankings, which list the top 75

BRIEFS CONTINUED / PAGE 4A

MEETINGS AGENDAS

&

 Regular City Commission Meeting — 2:30 and 6 p.m., Monday, Feb. 3, Commission Chambers, City Hall, 1565 First St., Sarasota.  Sarasota County School Board Meeting — 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 4, Landings Administrative Complex, 1980 Landings Blvd., Sarasota.

Siesta Key Village Association Meeting — 8:30 a.m., Tuesday, Feb. 4, Daiquiri Deck Raw Bar, 5250 Ocean Blvd., Siesta Key.

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

Click the “Contests” tab on YourObserver.com, located in the upper-right hand corner of the homepage, to submit your sunrise, sunset or other weather-related photos, and it could be printed in an issue of the Observer!

+ Harmer drops ‘interim’ from his county job title

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The Sarasota County Commission moved Tuesday to offer Interim County Administrator Thomas Harmer a permanent job, praising the 55-year-old former fire chief’s job performance during his first three months in the county’s top administrative position, as well as his positive effect on county staff morale. The Hollywood native stepped in to lead Sarasota County as interim county administrator in October following the County Commission’s decision to remove former County Administrator Randall Reid from the post after less than two years on the job. Harmer’s interim title was supposed to last six months while county commissioners searched for Reid’s permanent replacement. Commissioner Joe Barbetta made Tuesday’s motion to strip “interim” from Harmer’s job title and offer him the job permanently. Harmer thanked the county commissioners for offering him the permanent role, adding that despite not having sought out the job of permanent county administrator, his “interest in the position has grown.” “I’m excited about the opportunity, and I’m looking forward to coming back to you with a proposed contract,” Harmer said.

Proposed roundabout

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public and private American colleges based on their academics and affordability. New College has placed in the top three each of the past six years, one of only three public schools to make the top 10 every year throughout that period. “We’re pleased that Princeton Review recognizes that year after year, New College has provided an education of the highest quality, at a cost that is significantly lower than that of almost all of the country’s leading colleges and universities,” New College President Donal O’Shea said in a release.

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+ Siesta residents question proposed Key roundabout Following mounting pushback from Siesta residents, the Sarasota County Commission announced Tuesday that it would take a look at a Florida Department of Transportation proposal to turn the intersection of Midnight Pass Road and Beach Road into a roundabout. County Commissioners Christine Robinson and Nora Patterson acknowledged that many Siesta residents were concerned that the proposed roundabout would add to traffic congestion on the Key and would do nothing to improve pedestrian safety at the site, which is a heavily trafficked thoroughfare for beachgoers using off-site parking for Siesta Beach. “It will be horrible during season, in my opinion,” Robinson said, referring to potential traffic back-ups at the intersection. “I’m hoping I’m wrong.” “I think this is really important; we are owed an explanation,” Patterson said, questioning FDOT’s rationale for converting the intersection. “I think it deserves a public discussion.”

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YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

eastern standard

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by David Conway | News Editor

Ker’s WingHouse adds kick to Main Street Nearby restaurant owners view the restaurant, set to open in April, as a sign the eastern end of the street is gaining new life.

Photos by David Conway

Owners along the 1900 block of Main Street believe the area is filling in and people are more commonly viewing it as a destination for entertainment. Murphy said it would be prudish to decry Ker’s WingHouse’s use of sex appeal concerning its waitresses, and said he embraced the idea of the area becoming a lively stretch of Main Street. Between the opening of the bar and music venue Old School last September and the forthcoming move of McCurdy’s Comedy Theatre to 1923 Ringling Blvd., Murphy said the eastern end of downtown was more commonly being looked at as a dynamic place to be. “As the economy is getting better and as the east end of Main Street is fleshing out a little bit, we’ve become a destination for entertainment,” Murphy said. “We’re looking forward to it being a very vibrant destination.” Although Murphy praised the area’s vibrancy, Ker still acknowledged the Main Street location was different from the restau-

In April, Ker’s WingHouse will occupy the building that formerly housed the Half Shell Oyster House. rant’s traditional sites — and said he welcomed any challenge. “We’re kind of going against

the grain,” Ker said. “I think going against the grain isn’t a bad thing.”

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1900 block of Main Street have begun meeting informally, and they agreed that the WingHouse would be a distinctive business that could draw traffic. “We’re just looking forward to it,” Murphy said. “I think the consensus is the more the merrier.” The eastern end of Main Street sits outside of the city’s Downtown Improvement District, and Murphy acknowledged that it’s seen less traffic than the area closer to the bayfront. Murphy said restaurant owners are meeting to help shine the light on their block and are discussing the possibility of working on joint marketing ventures together. “I think our sense is that we’re not in competition with each other,” Murphy said. “If we can cooperate, it’ll be good for everyone.” Despite Murphy’s belief that the eastern end of Main Street was eclectic enough for none of the businesses to be in competition with one another, Ker said he thought the addition of another more upscale restaurant in the area would be overkill. He felt his business offered a stark contrast, which would be beneficial to everyone involved. “Something different is good, sometimes,” Ker said. “It’s important in our business that you’re not like everything else.”

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Crawford Ker knows his restaurant — a chain sports bar that proudly touts its waitresses as its main attraction — will be an outlier in downtown Sarasota. He likes it that way. Ker’s WingHouse is moving into the building at 1991 Main St. that most recently housed the Half Shell Oyster House. With more than 20 locations in Florida, including Bradenton and Fort Myers, it was almost an inevitability that a restaurant would open in Sarasota, Ker said. Still, the former NFL player admitted the restaurant would stand out when compared to other, more high-end offerings in the city’s downtown. He said that was a good thing, from his perspective, because it means he is filling a void in an area that saw the Sports Page Bar & Grille close last spring. He believes that there’s an underserved market for his product, and that the location on the eastern end of Main Street is a perfect place to fill that void. “I know Sarasota is kind of a mix of people,” Ker said. “I saw a lot of high-end types of restaurants, but I didn’t see anything that would fit into our category.” In turn, those high-end restaurants welcome Ker’s entry into the marketplace. Sean Murphy, the owner of Eat Here, said the restaurant owners on the


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SARASOTA OBSERVER

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

by Nolan Peterson | News Editor

Siesta Key Chamber wades into Big Pass dredge debate The chamber joined a growing chorus on the Key that is pushing back against mining Big Pass for Lido Beach sand. The Siesta Key Chamber of Commerce The chamber’s move to formally opannounced its opposition to an Army pose the dredge follows a recent shift Corps of Engineering proposal to mine in businesses’ and homeowner groups’ Big Pass for Lido Beach sand in a state- strategies on Siesta Key to wait until the ment Monday. The release highlighted a Army Corps had released all of its data to rising tide of resistance to the take a stance on the project. $22.7 million, 50-year project But, the upcoming comIF YOU GO among Siesta residents and mission hearings and worries businesses. about the Army Corps filing The Siesta The chamber’s move came for permits have injected urKey Village one week after the Siesta gency into the perceived need Association will Key Association officially anfor more scrutiny of the corps’ discuss the Big nounced its opposition to the Pass dredgplans. ing project Army Corps’ proposal. Bankemper suggested that at a meeting The Sarasota County Comthe Siesta Key Village Associaat 8:30 a.m. mission will address the Big tion, which has not yet taken a Feb. 4 at the Pass dredge in March, spurring position on the project, will anDaiquiri Deck Siesta Key business owners and nounce its formal opposition to Raw Bar, 5250 residents concerned about the the dredge soon. Ocean Blvd., potentially negative impacts of “That would be all three entiSiesta Key. the dredge on Siesta beaches to ties on Siesta Key taking a posimount opposition to the projtion against the removal of sand ect and push county commissioners to from the shoal in Big Pass,” Bankemper intervene. said. “My sense is that there will be more to SKVA President Cheryl Gaddie said she come in support of our opposition as we would bring the Big Pass dredge up for near the date when this becomes part of discussion at the group’s Feb. 4 meeting. the County Commission’s agenda some “I’ll call for a vote to see how the memtime in March,” Siesta Chamber board bers feel,” Gaddie said. member and former Chairwoman Maria Gaddie agreed that opposition was Bankemper wrote in an email to the Sara- mounting on the Key against the Big Pass sota Observer. dredge, but she also conceded that not The Siesta Key Chamber, which repre- all of the information was yet available to sents the island’s businesses and com- take a definitive stance for or against the prises more than 500 members, moved to project. oppose the dredge by a unanimous vote “Nobody wants Lido to not have nourat a Jan. 16 board meeting. On Jan. 27, ishment, it’s not a possessive thing,” GadBankemper advised the County Commis- die said. “But this is our livelihood, this is sion of the chamber’s position. our beach. We just want to see the facts.”

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

YourObserver.com

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cleaner power by David Conway | News Editor

Merchants call for Main Street sidewalk cleaning A merchant group is asking the Downtown Improvement District to help clean sidewalks after two years of buildup.

Our gift of to you! David Conway

Merchants along Main Street are upset with the grime that’s built up on the downtown sidewalks.

a part-time worker to regularly scrub the sidewalks. Some board members suggested the merchants should find funding for the machine on their own; others said funds should be generated by charging more money for sidewalk café permits. Campian disagrees, asserting that cleaning sidewalks is one of the responsibilities of the DID. “If you look at their website — the summary of their charter, the very first item of what they’re supposed to do includes washing the sidewalks,” Campian said. Unable to reach a consensus, the DID will continue its discussion at a future meeting. Until then, Campian is holding out hope that a more thorough cleaning routine can be established on Main Street.

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The sidewalks on Main Street haven’t been thoroughly cleaned for almost two years now, a fact that doesn’t sit well with Sarasota Downtown Merchants Association member Ron Campian. Campian, the co-owner of Kennedy Gallery & Studios, has been pushing for more than a year for a more rigorous cleaning regimen along Main Street. The city has fallen behind on its efforts to clean downtown streets due to contractor issues, and Campian no longer trusts the city to tackle the maintenance on its own. That’s why on Jan. 21 Campian appeared before the city’s Downtown Improvement District, requesting the group facilitate the purchase of a scrubbing machine. Although the city is putting out a request for proposals to perform a deep cleaning on the sidewalks every six months, Campian believes it’s necessary to perform more regular cleaning, as well. “When you have dirty carpets, you call in the carpet cleaning company,” Campian said. “In between calling them in, you run a vacuum cleaner.” Campian acknowledges sidewalk cleaning isn’t an issue that’s at the front of many people’s minds, but he believes that’s because they’ve become accustomed to a lower level of service. He said that people walking on dirty sidewalks — particularly after a $1.9 million Main Street improvement project last year — is obviously a problem that needs to be addressed. The DID board balked at spending up to $25,000 to purchase the cleaning machine, after which the SDMA would hire

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

Observer opinion | our view SARASOTA

“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.” Friedrich Hayek “Road to Serfdom,” 1944

Editor & CEO / Matt Walsh mwalsh@yourobserver.com Publisher / Lisa Walsh lwalsh@yourobserver.com Chief Digital Officer / Emily Walsh ewalsh@yourobserver.com Executive Editor / Kat Hughes khughes@yourobserver.com Deputy Executive Editor / Jessica Luck jluck@yourobserver.com Managing Editor / Randi Donahue rdonahue@yourobserver.com News Editors / David Conway, dconway@yourobserver.com Nolan Peterson, npeterson@yourobserver.com Community Editor / Harriet Sokmensuer harriets@yourobserver.com Managing Editor/Diversions-Season / Stephanie Hannum, stephanie@yourobserver.com Arts & Entertainment Editor / Mallory Gnaegy mgnaegy@yourobserver.com Black Tie Assistant Editor / Heather Merriman hmerriman@yourobserver.com Managing Editor/Design / Nancy Schwartz nschwartz@yourobserver.com Design Editor / Nicole Thompson nthompson@yourobserver.com Director of Advertising / Jill Raleigh jraleigh@yourobserver.com East County Advertising Manager / Lori Ruth lruth@yourobserver.com Sales Manager / Penny DiGregorio pdigregorio@yourobserver.com Sales Manager / Rosemary Felton rfelton@yourobserver.com Senior Advertising Executive / Laura Ritter lritter@yourobserver.com Advertising Executives / Robyn Didelot, rdidelot@yourobserver.com Patti Duff, pduff@yourobserver.com Laura Fernandez, lfernandez@yourobserver.com Beth Holman, bholman@yourobserver.com Beth Jacobson, bjacobson@yourobserver.com Robert Lewis, blewis@yourobserver.com Suzanne Munroe, smunroe@yourobserver.com Brand Marketing Manager / Leslie Gnaegy lgnaegy@yourobserver.com Sales Coordinator/Account Managers / Lori Downey, ldowney@yourobserver.com Susan Leedom, sleedom@yourobserver.com Rachel Livingston, rlivingston@yourobserver.com Classified Advertising Sales Executives/ Maureen Hird, mhird@yourobserver.com Deedie Parker, dparker@yourobserver.com Director of Creative Services and Information Technology / Kathy Payne, kpayne@yourobserver.com Assistant Creative Services Manager / Brooke Schultheis, bschultheis@yourobserver.com Advertising Graphic Designers / Monica DiMattei, mdimattei@yourobserver.com Marjorie Holloway, mholloway@yourobserver.com Jim Knake, jknake@yourobserver.com Luis Trujillo, ltrujillo@yourobserver.com Director of Digital Sales / Kathleen O’Hara kohara@yourobserver.com Interactive Art Director / Caleb Stanton cstanton@yourobserver.com Digital Marketing Consultant / Brandon Steinert bsteinert@digitalobservermedia.com Digital Content Producer / Alex Mahadevan alexm@yourobserver.com Chief Financial Officer / Laura Keisacker lkeisacker@yourobserver.com Controller / Lisa Schwenk lschwenk@yourobserver.com Office Coordinator / Donna Condon dcondon@yourobserver.com

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A gift for Crist: marijuana Former Gov. Charlie Crist — the guy who also was once known as “Chain Gang Charlie” for his tough stance on crime — received a huge boost to his 2014 gubernatorial campaign this week when the Florida Supreme Court approved the wording of the proposed medical marijuana amendment for the November statewide ballot. Talk about deviously crafty. That would be John Morgan of “Morgan & Morgan, for the people” fame. Here’s how it went: Morgan hired Crist at Morgan & Morgan after Crist’s governorship and U.S. Senate run ended. Crist officially jumped teams, became a Democrat and, surprise, decided to run for governor as a Democrat. So then the question became: How? How to beat incumbent Republican Rick Scott? How to persuade Democrats and independents who still may not like Crist, much less Scott, to come out to vote in an off-year for Crist? How to motivate them? The answer: Voila! Weed. Morgan masterfully began underwriting much of the efforts to get the medical marijuana amendment on the ballot. He has said he was doing it out of compassion for his brother, who was injured many years ago in an accident, has suffered excruciating pain and also found relief from the use of marijuana. And while that may be true, it’s also clear that Morgan’s compassionate motivations would have a much larger effect — in dollars and in votes — on Morgan’s law partner’s gubernatorial campaign. Brilliant. Here’s why: For one, heretofore, Gov. Scott has opposed the medical-marijuana amendment. If he sticks with that position, he’ll likely lose every pot-smoking voter — Republicans, Democrats and independents alike. And there are a lot of them. What’s more, don’t kid yourself. In spite of the always devoted senior vote, who may be most likely to oppose the amendment, the medical marijuana amendment will motivate tepid younger voters. It will pass. Count on it. Florida has become part of the national marijuana wave. We can expect the amendment to have strong support from the liberal daily editorial boards and from bigmoney donors who have been financing legalizing marijuana in other states. Not only will money continue to come from Morgan, we can expect substantial amounts for TV campaigns to come from billionaire financier George Soros and the Drug Policy Alliance, a drug-legalization organization on whose board Soros sits. Unknown at this point is whether the late Peter Lewis, a Coconut Grove resident and former chairman of Progressive Insurance, left money in his will to back medical-marijuana campaigns. Lewis, a medical-marijuana user himself, over the past decade and a half contributed between $20 million and $40 million to legalizing medical marijuana. He died in November. But even without Lewis’ money, you can bet Morgan and Crist’s media masterminds will use the medical-marijuana amendment to Crist’s advantage. We can see the TV campaign now: The fa-

KEY COMPONENTS OF THE MARIJUANA AMENDMENT The following are excerpts from the full text of the proposed medical-marijuana constitutional amendment, with our commentary interspersed in italics. For the full text of the amendment, see: http:// election.dos.state.fl.us/initiatives/fulltext/ pdf/50438-2.pdf BALLOT SUMMARY: Allows the medical use of marijuana for individuals with debilitating diseases as determined by a licensed Florida physician. Allows caregivers to assist patients’ medical use of marijuana. The Department of Health shall register and regulate centers that produce and distribute marijuana for medical purposes and shall issue identification cards to patients and caregivers. Applies only to Florida law. Does not authorize violations of federal law or any non-medical use, possession or production of marijuana. KEY DEFINITIONS (1) “Debilitating Medical Condition” means cancer, glaucoma, positive status for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), hepatitis C, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Crohn’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis or other conditions for which a physician believes that the medical use of marijuana would likely outweigh the potential health risks for a patient. Editor’s comment: You can imagine unscrupulous physicians seeing a financial opportunity in prescribing “medical marijuana” for flimsy ailments and getting kickbacks from authorized sellers. One of the questions for the Legislature will be: How to police the physicians’ prescribing and dispensing of marijuana. (5) “Medical Marijuana Treatment Center” means an entity that acquires, cultivates, possesses, processes (including development of related products such as food, tinctures, aerosols, oils or ointments), transfers, transports, sells, distributes, dispenses or administers marijuana, products containing marijuana, related supplies or educational materials to qualifying patients or their personal caregivers and is registered by the Department. Editor’s comment: If voters approve the amendment, the Legislature will be expected to define in more detail what constitutes a “medical marijuana treatment center.” Your garage? (7) “Personal caregiver” means a permous photo of Crist embracing Obama and a (disingenuously) sincere, emotional Crist telling viewers how everyone should have access to marijuana for medical use. We know from the past, Crist will do

THE CASTAWAY by Jorge Blanco

son who is at least twenty-one (21) years old who has agreed to assist with a qualifying patient’s medical use of marijuana and has a caregiver identification card issued by the Department. A personal caregiver may assist no more than five (5) qualifying patients at one time. An employee of a hospice provider, nursing, or medical facility may serve as a personal caregiver to more than five (5) qualifying patients as permitted by the Department. Personal caregivers are prohibited from consuming marijuana obtained for the personal, medical use by the qualifying patient. (9) “Physician certification” means a written document signed by a physician, stating that in the physician’s professional opinion, the patient suffers from a debilitating medical condition, that the potential benefits of the medical use of marijuana would likely outweigh the health risks for the patient and for how long the physician recommends the medical use of marijuana for the patient. A physician certification may only be provided after the physician has conducted a physical examination of the patient and a full assessment of the patient’s medical history. Editor’s comment: Policing physicians and marijuana dispensers and sellers will be the issue here. You can envision the Legislature spending more tax dollars to hire more law-enforcement snoops to monitor physicians. (c) LIMITATIONS. (1) Nothing in this section shall affect laws relating to non-medical use, possession, production or sale of marijuana. (2) Nothing in this section authorizes the use of medical marijuana by anyone other than a qualifying patient. (3) Nothing in this section allows the operation of a motor vehicle, boat or aircraft while under the influence of marijuana. (4) Nothing in this law section requires the violation of federal law or purports to give immunity under federal law. (5) Nothing in this section shall require any accommodation of any on-site medical use of marijuana in any place of education or employment or of smoking medical marijuana in any public place. (6) Nothing in this section shall require any health insurance provider or any government agency or authority to reimburse any person for expenses related to the medical use of marijuana. whatever it takes. After what Crist and Morgan are about to unfold on Floridians, we may all need that medical marijuana. The gubernatorial campaign is going to be dreadful.


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

more than meets the eye

9A

by Nolan Peterson | News Editor

Sarasota man goes inside the ‘Hermit Kingdom’ Sarasota resident Hakan Sokmensuer was part of a small group of tourists who accompanied Dennis Rodman and his team of NBA legends to Pyongyang, North Korea, earlier this month.

Courtesy photo

What changes did you notice in North Korea in the interval between the rule of Kim Jong Il and Kim Jong Un? It wasn’t a bustling city, but it wasn’t like it was four years ago; it wasn’t as terribly bizarre as it was back then. There was color in the way people dressed. It was the middle of winter, and people were dressed like in any big city in a third-world country. When I went years ago, they all dressed similarly, blandly. There was actually an expression of color this time. There were also many, many new buildings. This time there were 25- or 30-story condos lining the highways that looked like they could have been in Sarasota. Everything on the prior trip was all the same kind of bland communist architecture. And, this time, there were actually cars on the road.

Hakan Sokmensuer and a local hold hands on National Day Sept. 9, 2009. Sokmensuer says it took three shots before the man cracked a smile.

Sokmensuer encountered a country that appeared to have dramatically evolved in four years. But, like all aspects of North Korean life, Sokmensuer soberly explained, the changes were a facade. The North Korean people, he said, still live in a “cult-like” state where one misspeak could potentially provoke the ire of the country’s new leader. Sokmensuer discussed his trip with the Sarasota Observer. The following are edited excerpts of the conversation.

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We hear a lot of bizarre stories coming out of North Korea, how much should we believe? Everything you read in the press is true. What sticks out as a good example of the bizarreness of North Korean life? In the morning, in the capital, which is one giant Happy Kingdom facade, there are these old cars with giant speakers on them. They park on the street corners, playing extremely loud (communist) party songs, to tell people to work for the fatherland. That goes on between 6:30 and 8 a.m. That’s in the capital city. Could you imagine that in downtown Sarasota?

You’ve been around the world and have experienced many foreign cultures— how is North Korea unique from every other place you’ve visited? It really was unique. It really felt like a mind-control cult. I’ve been to other communist countries, and the people might be poor or sad-looking, but they were never like that cult-like. It was just a weird feeling — but not as much as it was four years ago.

Describe your impression of the North Korean people. These people are trained to believe certain things from birth, but they’re not robots. They’re hungry; they want to raise income from any possible source. They’re normal human beings like we are,

Do you plan to go back? Not anytime soon.

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Do they seem oppressed, scared? Yes. If you say something they can’t comment on, their face just goes blank. You can never ask them a typical gotcha question. But they’re not robots; they know they’re under a yoke. And it’s very peculiar because they know they’re living under difficulty, but it wasn’t like they were looking at you under the bill of a hat like they’re trying to telegraph something to you. It was not like Russia during the communist years.

shipped as a deity like his dad was.

Have the peoples’ attitudes toward the “Dear Leader” changed? Here’s a good barometer for how things have changed: What I noticed last time was that every topic they discussed somehow was punctuated with an attribution to the “Dear Leader” and his benevolence. “The horizon is a gift from the great leader,” they would say. This time there was none of that. The new leader wasn’t wor-

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Hakan Sokmensuer never planned on going back to North Korea — until an unexpected, irresistible opportunity knocked the week before Christmas. A tourism company emailed the 55-year-old Sarasota resident an invitation to parallel a trip by Dennis Rodman and a team of NBA veterans to the capital city of Pyongyang for an exhibition basketball game. It was a historic opportunity that Sokmensuer, a world traveler, could not pass up. So, the retired airline services business owner, along with his 18-year-old daughter, Sophia (a Pine View graduate), journeyed to North Korea from Jan. 6 through Jan. 9, along with a group of foreign tourists, including six Americans, for a unique glimpse at one of the world’s most buttoned-up societies. “We were the first American tourists to be in the same room as Kim Jong Un,” Sokmensuer said. “It was an incredible opportunity, and it came to fruition.” Sokmensuer’s first visit to North Korea — which former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton once referred to as the “Hermit Kingdom” — was in 2009. He was curious to see how much the country had changed since 31-year-old Kim Jong Un assumed the title of “Dear Leader” following the 2011 death of his father, Kim Jong Il.

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12A

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

by David Conway | News Editor

Homeless man’s art causes stir at City Hall Commissioner Susan Chapman wants art out of a roundabout, but police say the man behind the art is not violating any laws.

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Drivers who travel past Ringling Boulevard and Pineapple Avenue are liable to see a number of drawings sitting on the brick pavers that circle the center of the roundabout, a source of frustration for City Commissioner Susan Chapman. That artwork belongs to a homeless man identifiable at City Hall by just his first name — Ian. Intermittently, Ian sits at the roundabout with a bag of his belongings and five or six drawings, clamped to the notebooks in which they were composed. Chapman said she constantly gets complaints from residents about his presence in the center of the intersection. City Commissioner Suzanne Atwell has also said she’s received inquiries about Ian’s presence, and Chapman thinks the city is falling short in addressing the issue. One problem Chapman has encountered is that, in the eyes of the Sarasota Police Department, Ian is not doing anything wrong. City ordinances prevent people from interacting with vehicles to sell goods or panhandle, but the SPD does not believe Ian is violating those ordinances. To Chapman, Ian’s presence is causing obvious hazards. It’s distracting to drivers she said, and no crosswalks lead to the center of the roundabout because it’s designed for vehicles, not pedestrians. “The apron around the roundabout is not a walkway,” Chapman said. “It’s a traffic circle where bigger vehicles go if they can’t navigate the circumference of the roundabout.” Chapman said she spoke with Ian at the beginning of the year, and he defended

David Conway

Ian’s artwork, along with some other belongings, sits at the roundabout at Ringling Boulevard and Pineapple Avenue.

his presence. When Chapman followed up on that encounter with city staff, they informed her that SPD agreed with him. “He told me he’s just selling his product just like Art to Walk on at Palm Avenue,” Chapman said. City Attorney Robert Fournier said if Chapman was concerned about the risks created by his presence at the intersection, there could be grounds to formulate an ordinance to prevent that activity. Chapman said she does not want to see Ian arrested but wants him to be provided with a way to better his situation. As it stands, it appears to be out of her control. “It’s frustrating — it’s difficult,” Chapman said. “Ian obviously needs some sort of supportive environment, which he doesn’t have, which local government has limited ability to deal with.”

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

RENTALS / FROM PAGE 1A The new 10,000-square-foot building will feature ground-floor retail space as well as three rental units on the second floor. Gidget’s Coastal Provisions, a high-end clothing and gift store, will occupy the retail space under the ownership of Trudy Wigelsworth, wife of Siesta Key Crystal Classic founder Brian Wigelsworth. The new building’s second story will comprise three transient-use accommodations, which the county classifies as residential units that are allowed to be rented or leased for periods of less than 30 days and are considered a commercial use under the applicable zoning ordinances. The building, which Siesta Key architect Mark Smith designed, departs from traditional property use in the Village — and it also departed from both county and Siesta Key Overlay District zoning rules, which required commissioners to approve a special permit exception for the project to advance. The property is currently zoned under Commercial General and Siesta Key Overlay District restrictions; the retail use is permitted under those rules, but transient accommodations require a special exception. Smith said the permitting process “hit a snag” last summer, but he and the property owners decided to press on with construction, anticipating their special exception request would ultimately be approved. With the building fast approaching completion, however, Smith said that plans were in the works to use the secondfloor accommodations as storage space if the permit request remained in limbo. Village business owners and nearby condominium residents welcomed the County Commission’s Tuesday approval of Smith’s request, citing the benefits of more diversity among Village properties and the possibility of a détente between some Village restaurants and a nearby condominium in a longstanding feud over noise complaints.

Peter van Roekens, a resident of Terrace East condominiums, which border the Siesta Village, praised Smith’s proposal at Tuesday’s County Commission meeting. He said the new structure’s high walls had already dampened the transmittal of live-music from the neighboring Siesta Key Oyster Bar, potentially defusing a perpetual squabble between Terrace East and some Village establishments over noise. “Anytime you can replace a bar with retail in Siesta it’s a great idea,” van Roekens said. “We think highly of this project, and we’d like to support it.” Syprett and Lancer own the two properties on either side of the site, home to the Siesta Key Oyster Bar and the Daiquiri Deck Raw Bar. Parking concerns and a prior specialexception permit for the site were the primary obstacles to Tuesday’s request. Napoli’s Pizza operated on the site according to another, separate special-exception permit from 2001, authorizing a restaurant or bar to operate on the site despite inadequate available parking. Smith assured commissioners that the previous special-exception permit would expire following the award of Smith’s latest request. “If for some reason the retail shop went under and a restaurant wanted to go in there, they would need 23 parking spaces,” Smith said. According to the special permit application Smith submitted, the new building will have 10 parking spots — one more than the minimum of nine required to accommodate the rental units. Siesta Key Village Association President Cheryl Gaddie praised the commission’s decision, adding that, although she was in favor of additional retail space in the Village, the new building did not mark a trend toward fewer restaurants and bars along Ocean Boulevard. “I don’t think we have enough retail, and the addition of any new retail space in the Village is a real positive,” Gaddie said. “I also think it would be a bad thing if all the bars and restaurants went away — there’s magic in moderation.”

Sarasota

13A

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

THE GOOD NEWS // How donors, volunteers and beneficiaries connect

JUDY ALEXANDER

It all began 14 years ago, with a phone call. Judy Alexander, CEO of the local nonprofit Every Child Inc., received a call from a friend who worked at Booker Elementary, who was panicked that some of the children would not have backpacks and proper school supplies for the new school year. Alexander reached out to the community and, in just a few months, she raised enough money to buy backpacks and school supplies for all the students living in low-income housing. “The backpacks really got Every Child Inc. started,” she says. “Children who start off the school year without backpacks and school supplies are starting out immediately at a disadvantage, and that’s not right. What every parent wants for their child, we should want for all children. I think everyone should have the same opportunities.” Today, Alexander continues to run the nonprofit organization to meet the need she sees among local children. She organizes back-

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“The need here is becoming more and more evident. The community is known for its arts, and there was this assumption for many years that because it’s a relatively wealthy community, every child had all his needs met. We’re learning more and more that that’s not the case.” pack drives, holiday parties, food drives and the annual Cinderella and Her Prince project, which raises money for prom dresses and tuxedo rentals for underprivileged students. She hopes to continue to increase awareness of the poverty that exists in Sarasota. “The need here is becoming more and more evident,” says Alexander. “The community is known for its arts, and there was this assump-

YOUROBSERVER.COM/THEGOODNEWS // Hear more from Judy Alexander about how Every Child Inc. impacts children.

Every Child Inc. provides prom dresses and tuxedo rentals to low-income students. tion for many years that because it’s a relatively wealthy community, every child had all his needs met. We’re learning more and more that that’s not the case.” One of her favorite components of the nonprofit involves providing children with free books, which she incorporates into nearly every activity. As one of the

smaller nonprofit organizations in Sarasota, she says the workload can be a lot, but seeing the children’s reactions makes it worthwhile. “It’s just helping to meet the need,” she says. “And as long as it still exists and the support keeps coming, I’ll continue to do it. It’s hard to describe, but it’s a wonderful feeling.”

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

COPS

SARASOTA

JAN. 26 DOLLARS AND SCENTS 9:30 p.m. — 2300 block of Sixth Street. Burglary-Structure. A man said he spent the night at another house, and when he came home, he realized another person had been in his apartment. The suspect took about $150 and a bottle of cologne from his bathroom. The man said a group of people was outside in his neighborhood and made a passing comment about the man’s collection of firearms. The man moved his gun collection to another place after the comment, and he said he believes that was the motive for the burglary.

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7:45 p.m. — 900 block of Beach Road. Theft. A man said he was waiting at a bus stop when his ex-neighbor approached him. The ex-neighbor asked the man if he could have a yogurt, and the man said no. The ex-neighbor went through the man’s grocery bag, took an orange yogurt and ran across the street.

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RISE AND GRIND Noon — 2000 block of Ringling Boulevard. Suspicion Person. A complainant

SIGN OF THE CRIMES 10:06 p.m. — 4900 block of North Tamiami Trail. Dispute/Fight. An employee at a hotel said a man came to the property and started causing a disturbance. The employee said the man jumped a fence to get inside, pulled parking signs out of the ground and threw a huge rock through the back window of a vehicle. The employee said he did not know the man, other than that his first name was Nick or Pablo. Officers were unable to locate the man.

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

COMMUNITYCALENDAR An Evening for Healthy Start — begins at 6 p.m. at Sarasota Architectural Salvage, 1093 Central Ave. Enjoy an evening out with snacks, drinks and friends while benefiting Healthy Start’s work to support pregnant women and new families in the community. Tickets are $20 per person. For more information, call 3737070.

FRIDAY, JAN. 31 Kiltie Band annual Sousa Concert — runs from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at Riverview High School’s Performing Arts Center, 1 Ram Way. Riverview High School’s Kiltie Band will perform the music of John Philip Sousa. The band will perform in full Scottish dress. Admission is a $5 donation. For more information, call 923-1484.

20th annual Sarasota Highland Games and Celtic Festival — runs from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Sarasota County Fairgrounds, 3000 Ringling Blvd. Celebrate Scotland’s heritage with pipes, drums, Highland dancing and athletic events. Tickets are $12 in advance; $15 at the door; and children 12 and under are admitted for free. For more information, visit sarasotahighlandgames.com.

SATURDAY, FEB. 1 Early Cardiovascular Disease Risk Assessment Symposium — runs from 7:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.

Yvette’s Free Bayfront Fit Camp — begins at 9 a.m. at the corner of Bayfront Drive and Gulfstream Avenue, underneath Unconditional Surrender. This free fitness camp offers a workout for all fitness levels by the bay. For more information, call 3767599. Conservation Foundation of the Gulf Coast ‘Big Year’ Presentation — starts at 3:30 p.m. at Conservation Foundation of Gulf Coast, 400 Palmetto Ave. The Sarasota Audobon Society and CFGC host naturalist Matt Stenger, who will present “In Search of Birds and the Meaning

Where great pools begin

James Joyce Birthday Celebration — runs from 2 to 4 p.m. at The Crocker Memorial Church, 1260 12th St. The James Joyce Society of Sarasota presents a program prepared by Dublintrained Joycean Kevin O’Halloran. Admission is free, but donations are appreciated. For more information, call 377-1146.

MONDAY, FEB. 3 Meet the Sky — runs from 7 to 8 p.m. at Siesta Key Beach Pavilion, 948 Beach Road. Explore the night sky with other sky observers. See constellations, stars and planets through telescopes provided. This event is free for all ages. For more information, email Eve Plews at infor@fullspectrumhealth.com

TUESDAY, FEB. 4 All Day Movie-Thon — runs from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at The Glenridge Performing Arts Center, 7333 Scotland Way. Spend the day watching movies with breakfast, lunch and snacks provided. This fundraiser bene-

SATURDAY, FEB. 8 ABC Boat Safety Course — runs from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Sarasota Power Squadron, 2814 Hyde Park St. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation sanctions this boatsafety course. It is a two-Saturday course, which takes place Feb. 8 and Feb. 15. Cost is $45. Water training is included, but optional. For more information and for reservations, visit sarasota-boating. com.

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at the Longboat Key Club, 220 Sands Point Road. The public is welcome to attend afternoon sessions on various topics, beginning at 1:45 p.m., for free. Registration for health care providers is $85. The public must pre-register to attend. For more information and to register, visit cardiologycenter.net/pages/registration.

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16A


Sports

YOUTH | HIGH SCHOOL | GOLF | SENIORS | COMMUNITY | TENNIS

5

SOCCER Rams boys soccer captures first district title in a decade. PAGE 18A

YOUROBSERVER.COM

HIGH

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

new look by Jen Blanco | Sports Editor

MOMENTS OF THE WEEK

Booker senior shortstop Pat McKenzie looks forward to playing on campus for home games.

1

The Riverview High boys soccer team captured its first district title in 10 years with a 1-0 victory over St. Petersburg in the Class 5A-District 8 championship Jan. 24.

2

Lone senior Charles Taylor scored his first points of the season during the Out-ofDoor Academy’s non-district basketball game versus Lakeside Christian Jan. 27 on Senior Night.

3

Lisa Hoffman scored 28 points to lead The Out-of-Door Academy girls basketball team to a 49-17 victory over Sarasota Military Academy Jan. 24.

4

Ryan McMahon scored 17 points to lead the Cardinal Mooney High boys basketball team to a 50-38 victory over Lemon Bay Jan. 24 on Senior Night.

5

The Sarasota Christian boys soccer team earned a berth in the regional tournament after beating ODA 3-0 in a Class 1A-District 7 semifinal match Jan. 22.

HOME-FIELD

ADVANTAGE

This spring, Booker High School will unveil its new baseball and softball fields, tennis courts and rubberized track, among other upgrades. For the past three years, Booker High shortstop Pat McKenzie has bounced around from field to field looking for a place to call his own. Without a stadium on campus, the Tornadoes baseball team has always played its games on the road — using Babe Ruth Little League, Twin Lakes Park and Ed Smith Stadium as home bases, of sorts. But that’s all about to change this season. This spring, Booker will finally have the home-field advantage it has been seeking with the addition of its new on-campus baseball and softball fields. “It’s great,” McKenzie says. “I’ve played at a lot of different fields, and this is the best field I’ve played on for a home field.” For the first time in school history, the Tornadoes will not only be able to practice but also will be able to play their home games at their own school. “I couldn’t wait, and now the wait is finally over,” McKenzie says. “All of our friends can just walk outside and come see us play instead of having to travel across the county to watch us play.” Booker broke ground on its new baseball and softball complexes in September. Formerly the site of the Tornadoes’ makeshift football and soccer practice fields and a Sarasota County warehouse building, the new complexes feature new fields, bleachers, scoreboards, batting cages and dugouts, among

Courtesy photo

The Booker Tornadoes will unveil their new baseball stadium during a Preseason Classic tournament Feb. 4 and Feb. 7 at the school. other amenities. In addition, the stadiums are equipped with new state-of-theart lights, which are guaranteed to last 25 years and gradually progress in brightness as it gets darker outside. “It’s pretty neat,” Booker Athletic Director Rod Dragash says. “You won’t even notice the lights came on until you are sitting out here for a while.” The new baseball complex has already had an impact on the players. Last season, 12 players came out for the team. This season, 30 players came out for baseball, allowing Booker to field a JV team for the first time in nearly eight years. “It’s just the opportunity to have their own field on campus and

have other students come out and watch them play finally,” baseball coach Jeremy Schmidt says. “We’ll be able to utilize the full practice time at the facility and have the opportunity to work on the little things that we weren’t able to work on before. “This is probably one of the top fields in the area,” Schmidt says. “They should feel fortunate for what they’ve been given, and now it’s their job to take care of it for the people who come after them and play.” The Tornadoes will unveil their new stadium during a Preseason Classic tournament Feb. 4 and Feb. 7. The tournament will feature Booker, Cardinal Mooney, Southeast and Bayshore, with games slated for 4 and 7 p.m. both days.

Booker High junior David Klos practices on the school’s new tennis courts. Booker will hold its regular season home-opener Feb. 21 versus St. Stephen’s. “It’s definitely nice,” Dragash says. “Everything is brand-new. This is going to help us build up our baseball enrollment because kids will want to play here. These kids all definitely appreciate it.” During the transition, Booker’s football and soccer teams and the marching band all were forced to share practice time on the school’s football field. In addition to the new baseball and softball complexes, Booker also installed new tennis courts, new shot put and discus areas and a scaling wall. Booker also repaved its track. The rubberized track meets the new track standards, specifically for hurdles, which will be implemented in 2015. The school also hopes to have a new pole vault in place by the end of February, which will allow it to host district and regional track meets. “It’s definitely been worth the wait,” Dragash says. “This campus almost looks like a little university now because it’s all open. Not every kid comes here for athletics, but we’re giving them more incentive to come to a beautiful campus. All we can give them is an opportunity and help them make the best choice with their opportunity.” Contact Jen Blanco at jblanco@ yourobserver.com.


18A

H U N D R E D

S O U T H

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

WEEKLYROUNDUP

REDEFINING URBAN LUXURY T H R E E

SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

P I N E A P P L E

RIVERVIEW VS. PINELLAS PARK SOCCER The Riverview High boys soccer team defeated Pinellas Park 3-0 in a Class 5A-District 8 semifinal match Jan. 22. With the win, Riverview played host to St. Petersburg Jan. 24 in the district championship, where it captured its first district title in 10 years with a 1-0 victory on penalty kicks. Riverview midfielder Greg Atkin scored a goal for the Rams in the second half of their 3-0 victory over Pinellas Park in the Class 5A-District 8 semifinals Jan. 22.

Sarasota Christian senior Kelsey Murphy dribbles the ball past a pair of the Out-of-Door Academy midfielders.

SARASOTA CHRISTIAN VS. THE OUTOF-DOOR ACADEMY SOCCER The Sarasota Christian girls soccer team edged past The Outof-Door Academy 1-0 in the Class 1A-District 7 semifinals Jan. 16. With the win, the Lady Blazers earned a berth in the regional tournament and advanced to the district championship Jan. 17, where they fell to St. Stephen’s 1-0.

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TAKING RESERVATIONS | PRE-CONSTRUCTION PRICING Prices and features subject to change without notice. Offer void where prohibited by law. ORAL REPRESENTATION CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS MAKE REFERENCE TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY FLORIDA STATUTES § 718.503. TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE.

Cardinal Mooney’s Alex Turner and Booker’s Rodolfo Esqueda battle for possession during their district semifinal match.

The Cardinal Mooney boys soccer team defeated Booker 3-0 in a Class 2A-District 11 semifinal match Jan. 21. With the win, the Cougars earned a berth in the regional tournament, which begins Jan. 30.

CONTEST Enter for your Chance to Win (2) Travel Tickets* from one of the Following Carriers:

by Jen Blanco | Sports Editor

Hillcroft/Ten Oaks triumphs over Regent Hillcroft/Ten Oaks defeated Regent 10-7 in the RollsRoyce Tampa Bay Cup & Merrill Lynch Jan. 26 at the Sarasota Polo Club. Trailing 5-3 after the second chukker, Hillcroft/Ten Oaks scored in each of the final four chukkers to hold off Regent. Brent Mirikitani scored six goals to power Hillcroft/Ten Oaks. Mason Prim and Shane Rice each scored three goals to lead the way for Regent. Mirikitani was named the Most Valuable Player. Mirikitani’s brother, Jamie, received the Best Playing Pony award for his horse Lilly’s performance in the fifth chukker. Teams return to action at 1 p.m. Feb. 2 in the MGA Insurance Group Cup, which will feature a team spirit tailgate theme.

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1. Everbank pledges to keep the yield on your account in the top 5% of competitive accounts as tracked in the Bankrate.com National index™ of leading banks and thrifts. 2. Yield Pledge Money Market is a variable rate account. Our current ongoing yield may change without notice. EverBank invites first-time Yield Pledge Money Market account holders to enjoy a six month Bonus Interest Rate and New Account First-Year APY offer on their new account. The Bonus Interest Rate that is offered at account opening remains fixed for the first six months and applies to balances up to and including $50,000. If you have a balance over $50,000, those additional funds will earn the variable ongoing APY which may change at anytime-even during the first six months. As required by law, we are disclosing a blended APY that combines the Bonus Interest Rate with the current ongoing rates to provide an estimated annualized figure, the New Account First Year APY, based on your average daily collected balance. However, this blended APY is not the exact APY that you would actually receive because the current ongoing rate will change periodically over the remaining 6 months of the First Year. The New Account First-Year APY for balances from $50,001 to $10,000,000 is best expressed as a range and higher balances are accepted. The minimum deposit to open the account is $1,500. Interest rates and Annual Percentage Yields mentioned are accurate as of 6/20/2013

dan.dilascia@intervestintl.com

1. Everbank pledges to keep the yield on your account in the top 5% of competitive accounts as tracked in the Bankrate.com National index™ of leading banks and thrifts. 2. Yield Pledge Money Market is a variable rate account. Our current ongoing yield may change without notice. EverBank invites first-time Yield Pledge Money Market account holders to enjoy a six month Bonus Interest Rate and New Account First-Year APY offer on their new account. The Bonus Interest Rate that is offered at account opening remains fixed for the first six months and applies to balances up to and including $50,000. If you have a balance over $50,000, those additional funds will earn the variable ongoing APY which may change at anytime-even during the first six months. As required by law, we are disclosing a blended APY that combines the Bonus Interest Rate with the current ongoing rates to provide an estimated annualized figure, the New Account First Year APY, based on your average daily collected balance. However, this blended APY is not the exact APY that you would actually receive because the current ongoing rate will change periodically over the remaining 6 months of the First Year. The New Account First-Year APY for balances from $50,001 to $10,000,000 is best expressed as a range and higher balances are accepted. The minimum deposit to open the account is $1,500. Interest rates and Annual Percentage Yields mentioned are accurate as of 6/20/2013


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

SIDELINES

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

+ Sailors place seven at Bidwell Invitational The Sarasota High wrestling team finished third at the 20-team Ryan Bidwell Invitational Jan. 25 and Jan. 26 at Lemon Bay. Seven of the nine Sailor grapplers who attended the tournament placed in their respective weight classes. Freshman Chance Sharbono (113 pounds), junior Gerad Ross (182) and senior Toby Baker (220) each won

GAME TO

WATCH GIRLS BASKETBALL

JAN. 30 The Out-ofDoor Academy vs. Bradenton Christian (5 p.m. district semifinal at Cardinal Mooney)

STANDOUT

PLAYER

first place. Baker also was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Wrestler. With the win, Sharbono set the freshman wins record. He’s currently 55-4 heading into this weekend’s district tournament. Baker posted his 159th career win and is one win away from tying the Sailors all-time win record. Yosbeil Garcia, Chris Giuffre, Steven Mercadante and Matthew Beck also placed.

+ Lady Cougars advance to region semifinals The Cardinal Mooney High girls soccer team blanked Cape Coral Oasis 5-0 in a Class 2A-Region 3 quarterfinal match Jan. 23. Rose Amato, Anna Brusco, Jill Polk, Lauren Ravazzoli and Alex Byers all scored for the Lady Cougars. Goalkeeper Lexi Barbour recorded the shutout. With the win, Cardinal Mooney played host to Bishop Verot in a regional semifinal match Jan. 28.

+ Sarasota tops Booker in OT The Sarasota High girls basketball team held on to beat Booker 49-42 in overtime Jan. 23. Shelby Miller scored 15 and hauled in seven rebounds to lead the way for the Lady Sailors on Senior Night. Camille Giardina added 12 points, five assists and seven rebounds. Zharia Grable finished with 11 points.

Connor Steinfeld

Wrestling Sarasota Military Academy

5

JUST THE

KUDOS + Sarasota Military Academy Boys Basketball Junior Carter Akins scored 13 points and grabbed six rebounds to lead Sarasota Military Academy to a 73-51 victory over The Out-of-Door Academy Jan. 24. Junior John Beckman added 12 points and eight rebounds. Sophomore Alex Telfair had 11 points. The Eagles followed up their win with a 77-54 victory over St. Petersburg Keswick Christian Jan. 27. Akins led SMA with 16 points, four rebounds and four blocks. Telfair added 12 points, eight assists and four steals. Isaiah Bryant finished with 10 points, four blocks and five steals. Lauren Chaplin and Cellexia Foster each scored 11 points for Booker.

+ Cougars best the Indians The Cardinal Mooney High boys basketball team edged past Venice 49-41 in a non-district game Jan. 22. Justin Najmy finished with 13 points, four steals and three assists, and Blair Perry added 12 points and five rebounds to lead the way for Cardinal Mooney. Matt Hueston added 11 rebounds for the Cougars. The number of weeks Steinfeld missed with a dislocated elbow during his freshman season two years ago.

100

19A

STATS 9

The number of goals the Sarasota Christian girls soccer team allowed in its Class 1A-Region 3 quarterfinal loss to the Community School of Naples Jan. 23.

15

The number of points and rebounds that Emmanuel Lambright scored and grabbed during Sarasota Christian’s 6342 victory over St. Petersburg Catholic Jan. 27.

14

The number of shutouts the Cardinal Mooney girls soccer team has posted so far this season after beating Cape Coral Oasis 5-0 in a Class 2A-Region 3 quarterfinal match Jan. 23.

7

The number of wrestling teams, including Sarasota High, that will compete in the Class 2A-District 10 meet Feb. 1 at Braden River.

152

The weight class Steinfeld is wrestling in this season.

The number of career wins Steinfeld has after winning the Ryan Bidwell Invitational Jan. 25 and Jan. 26 at Lemon Bay.

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20A

SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

the finest services of real estate Betsy Sublette, Assistant 941.284.8483

Daniel Volz, Assistant 941.893.3757

Cheryl Loeffler, MBA Realtor 941.302.9674 Premier Sotheby’s Top Producing Agent

GOLDEN GATE POINT FROM $3,495,000 AQUA offers eight beautifully appointed full-floor residences directly on Sarasota Bay ranging from 3,800 to 6,700 square feet under air, each with a private two-car garage and an individual boat slip. With a full-time concierge, luxurious state-of-theart amenities and proximity to downtown, AQUA redefines elegance, prestige and gracious living.

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Light, bright and furnished Beachplace residence with views of the Gulf. Beautifully updated.

Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered service marks used with permission. Each office is independently owned and operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.

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Neighborhood B U S I N E S S | C L A S S I F I E D S | E A S T L I F E | R E A L E S TAT E | G A M E S | T R AV E L | W E AT H E R

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

REAL ESTATE

SARASOTA SCENES WEATHER

Buccaneer Bay home sells for $1.71 million.

Dads and daughters enjoy dinner and a show on date night.

PAGES 4-5B

Friends of Zwick wish her a

PAGE 3B

BIRTHDAY GIRL

Sunset shot captures the golden hour. PAGE 8B

by Harriet Sokmensuer | Community Editor n Dick and Cornelia Matso e ott arl Ch nt Au h wit

“I hope for her to be truly happy,” says neighbor and close friend Norma Clark.

says fellow Bahia Oaks Lodge resident Jeffi Infield.

says Elizabeth Colbert on Zwick’s kindness. mensuer Photos by Harriet Sok

“I hope I’m as well as she is at that age,”

“She helps make this place like a family,”

“She’s a lovely little lady, and now she has new wheels,” says Betty Larkey.

“I hope I can be as nice and graceful as she is,” says Paul Barger.

Charlotte Zwick celebrates her 105th birthday in style.

It only took a Charlotte Zwick a week to learn to drive her new scooter.

Surrounded by friends, family and neighbors, Charlotte Zwick celebrated her 105th birthday Saturday. Zwick’s party was held at her residence, Bahia Oaks Lodge. Zwick made an entrance into the dining room on her new scooter — an early birthday present from family. Her guests danced, sang and swapped stories. Zwick was born in 1909 in Buffalo, N.Y., and grew up in Cleveland. There she worked in fashion retail at department stores Bonwit Teller and The Halle Brothers. Zwick says her favorite fashion eras were the ’50s and ’60s because the styles were new, exciting and colorful. Zwick is known for her colorcoordinated outfits, love of Ferragamo shoes and scarves and her outgoing personality. “She puts a smile on everyone’s face,” says her niece-in-law Cornelia Matson. In the 1920s, Zwick met and married Cleveland lawyer Ben Zwick, and although they didn’t have any children, the Zwicks remained close to their families. “We had the best time whenever Aunt Charlotte chaperoned,” said her nephew Dick Matson. “She was the ‘cool aunt.’”

Ben and Charlotte Zwick spent summers fishing, sailing and swimming in Cape Cod, Mass. When Zwick moved in 1974 to Sarasota after her husband died, she lived with her sister, Leonore Matson, at Sea Places on Longboat Key and at Bay Plaza. When Leonore died in 1996, Zwick continued to live at Bay Plaza, where she served guests her famous homemade macaroons. She lived on her own at Bay Plaza until last spring, when she moved to Bahia Oaks Lodge. The dark-chocolate-lover looks forward to maintaining her positive outlook on life. “I think your attitude is the most important thing you own,” she says.


2B

NOW OPEN Restaurant and Tiki Bar on the water

SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

winners

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

by Harriet Sokmensuer | Community Editor

Siesta Chamber names 2013 business winners The Siesta Key Chamber of Commerce held its annual luncheon and awards ceremony Tuesday, Jan. 28, at Ruth’s Chris Steak House.

DINNER SPECIALS

OD S EAFO FR E S H DAI LY M E NT is Twinkle 9pm N I A T E NTE R ht House Band R ig DINNE Friday N NCH & 0am U L , T FAS to 2:0 8:00am B R EAK

Monday Turkey Dinner $899 Tuesday Steak & Potatoes $899 Wednesday Tacos $199

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Burger and Beer $5.50 2-5pm everyday

: PON more COU o 0 $1 r ase of

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Rhonda Wiggins

WEDNESDAY Corona & Margaritas

SHINING STAR — Lisa and Denny Peterson, of Jonny's Free Ride

e.com s u o h t 11 obsBoa .312.91

THURSDAY Landshark Lager FRI-SUN Bloody Mary’s

Psychologist Lisa Mowrey with Kay Kouvatsos, of Village Café. Village Café was awarded the Large Business of the Year award.

Small Business of the Year winner Mark Smith, of Smith Architects, and Aledia Tush, of CB’s Saltwater Outfitters, Business Person of the Year

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COMMUNITY PARTNER OF THE YEAR

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— Gold Coast Eagle Distributing BUSINESS PERSON OF THE YEAR

— Aledia Tush, of CB's Saltwater Outfitters

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SMALL BUSINESS OF THE YEAR —

Smith Architects

Photos by Harriet Sokmensuer

LARGE BUSINESS OF THE YEAR — 132202

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Incoming Siesta Key Chamber Chairwoman Alana Tomasso with outgoing Chairwoman Maria Bankemper

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

3B

SARASOTA SCENES Visit YourObserver.com to see additional photos from these events.

>> Kiwanis Club Daddy-Daughter Date Night >> Sarasota Bay Estuary Program Air Potato Hunt >> SPARCC Volunteer and Donor Celebration >> St. Boniface Fish Fry Friday

Jane Krombeen, Mission Avenue Studio owner Bernabe Somoza, Luisa Goldman and Marilyn Buzzard at Safe Place and Rape Crisis Center’s donor and volunteer celebration Jan. 23 at Mission Avenue Studio. Rick Levine and his daughter, Paris, at DaddyDaughter Date Night.

Ashley Wang collects air potatoes Saturday in Arlington Park. Sarasota Bay Estuary Program and Around the Bend Nature Tours co-sponsored the pickup of the invasive plant species. Doug Finfrock and Marsha Rhoades pick up their plates at St. Boniface Episcopal Church’s annual Fish Fry Fridays dinner Jan. 24. The event takes place every Friday through April.

Right: Grace and Eldon Johnston strike a pose at the Kiwanis Club’s inaugural DaddyDaughter Date Night Saturday at Florida Studio Theatre. .

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Update on Siesta Beach Improvements Project

Thursday is fishing with the girls. Join the Club and enjoy: • A full fleet of cruising, pontoon, fishing • and ski boats • No maintenance, cleaning or hassle • Easy online reservations

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Thursday, February 6 , 2014 at 4:30PM th

DATE

941-349-1311

Time

Time

Time

1/30 Thu 07:06 AM L 01:13 PM H 06:05 PM L 11:41 PM H 1/31 Fri 07:45 AM L 01:38 PM H 07:01 PM L

Full service bar & drive thru package window

(Located on south side of building). Free hot dogs steamed in Sauerkraut ready at noon every Saturday!!! Open 7 days a week ~ 365 days a year 10:00 A.M. ~ 2:30 A.M. Weekly Sunday 12 noon ~ 2:30 A.M. 90318

Time

2/1

Sat 12:33 AM H 08:21 AM L 02:03 PM H 07:57 PM L

2/2

Sun 01:25 AM H 08:54 AM L 02:29 PM H 08:55 PM L

2/3

Mon 02:18 AM H 09:25 AM L 02:59 PM H 09:58 PM L

2/4

Tues 03:17 AM H 09:55 AM L 03:33 PM H 11:07 AM L

2/5

Wed 04:28 AM H 10:25 AM L 04:12 PM H

SOURCE: NOAA New Moon

First Qtr.

Full Moon

Last Qtr.

JAN. 30th

FEB. 6th

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MONTHLY MEETING

The public is always welcome with your questions for our guests

Sunday is fun with the family...

Psychic Voice Vibration Readings

Carolyn Brown, General Manager, Parks and Recreation, Sarasota County

Katie Hayes, Anno Swain and Diane Muldoon at SPARCC’s celebration. SPARCC supporters, volunteers and donors enjoyed hors d’oeuvres, cocktails and art.


4B

SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

real estate | transactions

By Adam Hughes | Research Editor

Home in Buccaneer Bay sells for $1.71 million The Landings Treehouse

The following residential real estate transactions took place between Jan. 13 and Jan. 17. A home in Buccaneer Bay tops all transactions in this week’s real estate. U.S. Bank, trustee, sold the home at 7342 Captain Kidd Ave. to Jeffrey and Wendy Cohen, of Sarasota, for $1.71 million. Built in 2005, it has five bedrooms, five-and-a-half baths, a pool and 5,184 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $3,465,000 in 2005.

Donald and Dorothy Stuart, of Sarasota, sold their Unit 30 condominium at 1497 Landings Lake Drive to Eric Greenstein and Beverly Smith, of Sarasota, for $295,000. Built in 1981, it has three bedrooms, two-and-a-half baths and 1,912 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $230,000 in 2010.

SIESTA KEY

Roberts Point Road

SARASOTA

Comerica Bank sold the home at 3993 Roberts Point Road to Perrone and Associates Inc. for $1.45 million. Built in 1995, it has five bedrooms, four-and-a-half baths, a pool and 4,151 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $879,600 in 1995.

Sarabande

Myron Ash, trustee, of Sarasota, sold the Unit 43 condominium at 340 S. Palm Ave. to Wayne and Deborah Seitl, of Sarasota, for $1,275,000. Built in 1998, it has two bedrooms, two-and-a-half baths and 2,437 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $595,400 in 1998.

Cherokee Park

Leslie Malkin, of Sarasota, sold two homes at 1742 North Drive to Martin Schlosberg, trustee, of Hollywood, for $630,000. The first was built in 1949, has three bedrooms, two baths, a pool and 2,406 square feet of living area. The second was built in 1966, and it has one bedroom, one bath and 364 square feet of living area. They previously sold for $550,000 in 2008.

Marquee En Ville

John Tassotti, of Sarasota, sold his Unit 128-E condominium at 235 Cocoanut Ave. to Marc and Janet Epstein, of Chicago, for $595,000. Built in 2006, it has two bedrooms, three-and-a-half baths and 2,290 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $315,000 in 2010.

Sarasota Bay Club

Sarasota Bay Club LLC sold the Unit 306

Harriet Sokmensuer

This home, located at 7342 Captain Kidd Ave., has five bedrooms, five-and-a-half baths, a pool and 5,184 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $3,465,000 in 2005. condominium at 1301 N. Tamiami Trail to Myron Ash, of Sarasota, for $450,000. Built in 2000, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,546 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $520,000 in 2006.

The Island

Stanley Forwand, of Nokomis, sold his Unit E-2 condominium at 2129 Michele Drive to Virginia Perret-Gentil, of Sarasota, for $352,600. Built in 1985, it has two bedrooms, two-and-a-half baths and 1,583 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $270,000 in 2010.

Palmer Square West

Barbara Chase, trustee, sold the Unit 28 condominium at 3685 Square W. Lane to Gerald Kruczynski and Rosemary Ruggiero,

of Sarasota, for $350,000. Built in 2005, it has three bedrooms, two-and-a-half baths and 2,741 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $459,900 in 2005.

Weber

1016 Caloosa LLC sold the home at 1016 Caloosa Drive to James Burgin and Lynda Burgin-Vahl, of Sarasota, for $320,000. Built in 1951, it has two bedrooms, oneand-a-half baths, a pool and 1,822 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $500,000 in 2009. Robert and Linda Moore, of St. Joseph, Mich., sold their home at 965 Caloosa Drive to C. Joseph and Gael Bilder, of La Grange Park, Ill., for $300,000. Built in 1955, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,480 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $51,000 in 1981.

Windward Passage

Rue Dickens, of Venice, sold her Unit E-11 condominium at 4708 Ocean Blvd. to Debra Garro, trustee, of Sarasota, for $850,000. Built in 1981, it has three bedrooms, three baths and 2,277 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $332,000 in 1981.

Terrace East

Mark McCann and Donald Paxton, of Sarasota, sold their Unit 502 condominium at 5300 Ocean Blvd. to 502 Terrace East LLC for $800,000. Built in 1973, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,375 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $990,000 in 2005.

Midnight Cove

Todd and Lisa Poste, of Naples, sold the home at 6342 Midnight Pass Road to Unit 413 condominium at to White Sands Holding LLC for $742,000. Built in 1977, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,214 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $665,000 in 2011.

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Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-544-7031

FAMILIAR FACES. EXCEPTIONAL SERVICE. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSHIPS. Showcase your property to over 6,500 affiliate branches in 52 countries. 140 Riviera Dunes Way # 1203 #A3991178 $529,000 Sarah Mcguire

7422 Periwinkle Dr #A3987021 $3,995,000 Lenore Treiman

Palmetto 941-349-3444 941-809-1478

3414 Old Oak Dr #A3991222 $480,000 Christine Del Monte

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-266-6733

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-356-9642

8779 Midnight Pass Rd # 405 #A3991361 $469,000 Marlene & George Marshall

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-539-8850

3806 Saint Girons Dr #C7051775 $450,000 Jennifer Calenda

Punta Gorda 941-505-5555 941-916-0798

2521 Waterview Ct #A3989439 $449,000 Bibi-Ann Allard PA

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-685-0422

1687 Eagle Nest Ct #A3991074 $445,000 Kim Eskew

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-587-5999

4660 Ocean Blvd # 2 #A3990830 $399,000 Gloria Totti-Cervoni

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-544-7746

3136 Bispham Rd #A3991043 $399,000 June Mceleavy

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-228-8139

2831 River Pines Way #A3990872 $385,000 Karen Chandler

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-544-4919

6350 Midnight Pass Rd # 722 #A3990343 $359,000 Lynn Ludecke

Siesta Key 941-966-8000 941-961-8632


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

TOP BUILDING PERMITS These are the largest city of Sarasota and Sarasota County building permits issued for the week of Jan. 13 through Jan. 17, in order of dollar amounts.

m i c h a eBeacham lsaunders.com Deborah Explore now on your phone or tablet. 440 Gulf of Mexico Dr. • Longboat Key

Permit

Applicant

Amount

1766 Cherokee Drive 1822 Orchid St. 1809 Flower Drive 714 45th St. 541 Norsota Way 4395 Sarasota Ave. 1971 Datura St. 2728 Martin St. 2400 Walker Circle 1385 S. Tuttle Ave.

Renovations Windows Demolition Re-roof Mechanical Re-roof Fence Re-roof Re-roof Re-roof

Steven Mamus Matthew Miller Larry Steinhart Paula Patecky Laurence Saslaw, trustee Dana Rickard Patrick Cook Catherine McRoyan Handy Wooten Jr. Gilberto Perez

$28,000 $22,175 $14,000 $13,280 $12,300 $10,000 $8,869 $8,780 $7,695 $6,490

SARASOTA COUNTY Address

Permit

Applicant

Amount

5306 Siesta Cove Drive 6934 Belgrave Drive 6143 Belina Court 1083 Derian Place 7207 Wood Creek Drive 1621 Field Road 1364 Point Crisp Road 2821 Forest Lane 1417 Landview Lane 359 Renoir Drive

Alterations Renovations Pool Pool/deck Remodel Pool/spa Foundation Addition Pool/deck Re-roof

Richard Brown James Mitchell, trustee Chris Pelletier James Fralin Raymond Le Meur Michael Voigt Harry Goodan, trustee Brenda Bryan John Zablackas Sophie Zaloom

$80,000 $63,942 $46,352 $45,107 $35,970 $35,000 $30,000 $29,200 $28,500 $25,150

941.376.2688

Recognized as a top producing individual agent in Michael Saunders & Company’s Longboat Key offices, ranking in the top 2% in 2013 among more than 3,400 Sarasota County realtors, and for the eighth year in a row, earning the Five-Star Customer Satisfaction award, Deborah’s customers speak highly of her expertise, tenacity, and commitment. Uniquely positioned in the luxury market, her average sale price is over $1.8 million and the second highest in 2013 among Sarasota’s top 100 Realtors. Specializing in luxury waterfront sales from Casey Key to Longboat Key, Deborah’s passion for matching her customers with the right property, then negotiating to a smooth and successful closing, are the key attributes that make her the first choice among the savviest buyers and sellers.

CITY OF SARASOTA Address

5B

6633 Gulf of Mexico Drive MLS# A3989550 $22,000,000

Source: Sarasota County; city of Sarasota

2505 Casey Key Road Anthony Bogosian, Dennis Bogosian and Donald Bogosian sold their Unit A-6 condominium at 6140 Midnight Pass Road to Horizons West A6 LLC for $497,000. Built in 1967, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,068 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $48,000 in 1975.

433 Meadow Lark Drive MLS# A3981613 $5,995,000

YOUROBSERVER.COM // Go online

Bay Tree Club

Robert and Debra McDermott, of Sara-

4901 Bella Terra Dr #N5783037 $339,900 Helene Johnston

MLS# A3971580 $7,900,000

Venice 941-493-2500 941-486-8224

524 Belvedere Ct #C7051486 $317,500 Sheila Meeks

to read more real estate transactions.

Punta Gorda 941-639-0000 941-661-2257

332 Monet Dr #A3991255 $309,500 Linda Bastian

Nokomis/North Venice 941-966-8000 941-321-6203

4087 Shell Rd #A3987243 Michael Hays

3536 Bayou Louise Ln #A3990510 $13,000 Lisa Shope

1540 Hillview Dr #A3991062 $5,250,000 Kim & Michael Ogilvie

Siesta Key 941-966-8000 941-228-3518

Siesta Key 941-552-4200 941-320-8022

7375 Mara Vista Dr # 29 #A3971620 $4,800 Lisa Gullick

3262 Savage Rd #A3990533 $264,500 Kristine Niehaus

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-376-1826

931 Blue Heron Overlook #A3969034 $3,499,000 Nicole Dovgopolyi

Osprey 941-966-8000 941-356-5849

3810 Flamingo Ave #A3986497 $2,525,000 Pamela Charron

Siesta Key 941-951-6660 941-993-3388

7440 Manasota Key Rd #A3989429 $2,350,000 Melba Jimenez PA

Englewood 941-951-6660 941-356-3970

401 S Palm Ave # 301 #A3983343 $1,950,000 Lenore Treiman

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-356-9642

1265 Riegels Landing Dr #A3991014 $1,800,000 Kristina Talkie & Judy Arreola

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-266-8658

9961 Eagle Preserve Drive #D5796239 $1,000,000 Ellen Baker & Michael Hollenbeck

Englewood 941-473-7750 941-268-4999

7014 Dominion Ln #A3991277 $939,000 Karen Cash Greco

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-376-4950

RE N TA L

1257 S Portofino Dr # 63 #A3991003 $290,000 Mary Sauve`

RE N TA L

Englewood 941-473-7750 941-380-0153

RE N TA L

2980 N Beach Rd # Gv8 #D5796324 $299,900 Marci Storey/Debi Benson

$4,245,000

Sarasota 941-552-4200 941-321-6973

1567 Waterford Dr #N5780320 Robin Sullivan

Venice $3,500 941-552-4200

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-376-1717

Mid Longboat 383.5502 • South Longboat 383.7591 • St. Armands 388.4447 • Main Street 951.6660 Palmer Ranch 966.8000 • Siesta Key 349.3444 • Venice 485.5421 • Englewood 473.7750

Lakewood Ranch 941-966-8000 941-504-6927

131915

Horizons West

sota, sold their Unit 208 condominium at 8635 Midnight Pass Road to Josiane and Patrice Tijoux, of Quebec, Canada, for $489,900. Built in 1970, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,160 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $490,000 in 2007.


VENICE’S WATERFRONT LANDMARK SINCE 1976.

6B

SARASOTA OBSERVER

STONECRAB CLAWSARE EXPRESS YOURSELF Sarasota resident heals HERE! YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

by Randi Donahue | Managing Editor

AWARD-WINNING

WINE LIST

127131

OVER 1000 SELECTIONS MODERATELY PRICED OVER 30 WINES BY THE GLASS

with art-therapy process

OUTSIDE DECK OPENING SOON!

While on a trip to Africa, Kimberly Benson conducted research on the effect of art on teenage girls in the village.

1968 T C D 9 4 1 . 4 8 4 . 9 5 5 1

w w w. c r ow s n e s t - ve n i c e . c o m

Casual Waterfront Dining

e h T At

! k e e Cr

Fresh local seafood served in a casual atmosphere. IT’S A SARASOTA TRADITION!

e M t ee

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Broiled • Steamed • Baked Blackened Grilled • Cajun • Combo Pots • Fresh Seafood Platters • Seafood Pasta • Chicken Steaks • Soups & Salads (941) 925-4444

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www.creekseafood.com CONSISTENTLY VOTED AVAILABLE DOWNSTAIRS

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9 4 1 . 4 8 4 . 9 5 5 1

BRINGING ITALY TO SIESTA1968 KEY T C D, V Sun.-Thu:4-10pm Fri-Sat: 4-11pm Happy Hour: 4-6pm daily. 9 4 1 . 4 8 4 . 9 5 5 1 Reservations Recommended • 5104 Ocean Blvd. 941-349-1423 • www.cafegabbiano.com

LUNCH & DINNER marina V EDAILY N I C E ’ SCASUAL WAT E Rrestaurant F RO N T L A N D M A R K SINCE 1976. TAVERN MENU AVAILABLE DOWNSTAIRS

tavern

MOTHER’S DAY tavern

LUNCH & DINNER marina restaurant DAILY CASUAL TAVERN MENU AVAILABLE DOWNSTAIRS

RESERVATIONS LUNCH & DINNER DAILY by phone or online CASUAL TAVERN MENU w w w . c r o wDOWNSTAIRS snest-venice.com MOTHER’S DAY AVAILABLE RESERVATIONS www.crowsnest-venice.com by phone or online

SIESTA KEY

A 27 Hole Executive Golf Course... just 2 miles from Siesta Key’s South Bridge!

This beautiful 27 hole course is a favorite for local golfers. We are family (and kid) friendly, inexpensive, and very convenient. Gulf Gate Golf Club is the perfect place for your next golf outing. Enjoy the beautiful lake views and nature while playing or simply rest at the Bar.

Men’s and Women’s rental clubs available. Open 7 am–6 pm Sorry, no Credit Cards.

2550 Bispham Road, Sarasota

921-5515

COME

THE KEY’S BEST HAPPY HOUR AND DINNER SPECIALS! Serving Daily 11am-9pm • Happy Hour 3-7pm Indoor & Outdoor Dining. Enjoy our Covered Patio 8865 Midnight Pass Rd., Siesta Key 941-349-2280

GROW WITH US!

SIESTA KEY’S MOST AFFORDABLE KID FRIENDLY SEAFOOD RESTAURANT! Open Daily for Lunch & Dinner • 1200 Old Stickney Point Rd. 941-349-3885 • www.captaincurts.com HAPPY HOUR DAILY • LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 2-For-1 Daiquiris 3-7pm • Lunch Specials Mon.-Fri. 5250 Ocean Blvd., Siesta Key • 325 John Ringling Blvd., St. Armands 300 W.Venice Ave,Venice 941-349-8697 • www.daiquirideck.com

YEAR ROUND SATURDAY’S • 8AM-1PM • SOUTH PARKING LOT OF SCTI AT PROCTOR & BENEVA Shop local for your Fresh Produce, Plants & Orchids, Olive Oil & Fresh Baked Bread, Food & Ice Cream Trucks, Perry’s BBQ, Brooklyn Knish, Baked Goods, Beignets, Soy Candles & Soaps

SEAFOOD, BURGERS & MORE Lunch Mon. - Fri. • Dinner Mon. - Sat. • Sun. seasonally Locally Owned & Operated • 1920 Hillview St., Sarasota 941-952-0045 • www.hillviewgrill.com

LIVE MUSIC • EASY ACCESS LOTS OF PARKING • PET FRIENDLY Like us on Facebook

ky’s Shar on the pier

127324

VENICE SOUTHSIDE VILLAGE

other villages. Benson’s curriculum involves a four-day series. Each day focused on a different art project and includes painting to music, using clay in the dark, making mandala and flower of life projects and drawing self-portraits. Throughout her trip, Benson conducted group discussions and noticed an increase in the girls’ confidence after each project. “(By the end of the trip) they had tears in their eyes telling me that they felt free and more motivated to achieve their goals,” says Benson. Villagevolunters.org has adopted Benson’s model for art therapy and plans to use it as an initiative offered through its program going forward. Looking back on her trip, Benson says she feels as though the girls helped her more than she helped them. “I discovered the most important thing in my life is the relationships with myself and other people,” she says. For more information, visit villagevolunteers.org.

w w w. c r ow s n e s t - ve n i c e . c o m

NEW ENGLAND SEAFOOD AT ITS BEST! Mon.-Thurs. 11:30-9 pm, Fri. & Sat. 11:30-9:30 pm Open Sundays 5-9pm • 5157 Ocean Blvd. 941-349-2323 • www.sarasotalobsterpot.com

FOOD AND FUN FOR ALL AGES Lunch & Dinner Served from 11:30 am Live Entertainment 7 Days a Week • 1600 Harbor Drive S. 941-488-1456 • www.sharkysonthepier.com

Courtesy photo

Girls from the Kandaria Village participate in the collaborative painting-to-music exercise.

132311

THE

BEST

VENICE’S BEST RESTAURANT

Kimberly Benson’s journey into healing arts began while she was enrolled at Ringling College of Art and Design. After seeing a poster advertising classes in art therapy at a school in Wisconsin, the illustration major was intrigued. Soon after, she enrolled in a psychology class at the State College of Florida, Sarasota-Manatee. She loved it so much that in 2002, after she graduated from Ringling, she immediately pursued her master’s in mental health counseling. In February, she’ll complete her doctorate in counselor education and supervision at Argosy University of Sarasota. Then, this spring, she’ll obtain an expressive-arts certificate from Expressive Arts Florida, an art therapy-training school based in Sarasota. Benson’s own experience with art began at an early age. In second grade, she would interrupt class to show off the funny-looking creatures she’d drawn to escape her academic challenges in math, science and reading comprehension. “Art was my place where I knew I couldn’t do anything wrong,” says Benson. Her experience of unknowingly using art as therapy ultimately inspired her to pursue the expressive healing technique. As Benson started to plan for her dissertation two years ago, she decided her topic would be the effect of art therapy on teenage African girls. In mid-December, through villagevolunteers.org, a non-profit organization that works in partnership with programs in rural villages, the Sarasota resident traveled to the West African village of Kandaria, in Kenya, where she spent two weeks conducting research with girls, many of whom were victims of abuse and sex trafficking. While there, she created a curriculum to give others the opportunity to facilitate the same expressive-arts process she used in

FOR INFORMATION & VENDOR INQUIRY GO TO WWW.CENTRALSARASOTAFARMERSMARKET.COM

132101

marina restaurant tavern


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

Dalton

7B

YOUR NEIGHBOR | Tina Beer

KEVIN A. DALTON, Realtor® 941-918-0570 | 941-928-9106 cell stoneygolf@verizon.net

REMAX ALLIANCE GROUP | 2000 Webber Street | Sarasota

Tina Beer sits with Gemma after an afternoon walk.

STONEYBROOK GOLF & C.C.

SENSATIONAL FIRST FLOOR 1661 SQ. FT. Abbey Veranda overlooking the 17th green & fairway. 2BD/2BA + Den, beautifully turn-key furnished and decorated. Sprawling tiled flrs, wet bar, enclosed lanai, garage, golf equity incl., tennis, fitness, clubhouse. OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-4PM 9590 High Gate Dr. #1916........$279,900 WONDERFUL, BRIGHT, CHEERY, WELL MAINTAINED 2BD/2BA TURN-KEY 2nd Flr. Condo with great golf views! Condo features tiled flrs, including Lanai, above average furnishings, soft Florida colors, new AC, full golf membership incl., near pool, assumable rental income in place for 2014 season. Tennis, fitness, Clubhouse.....................................................$144,900

Harriet Sokmensuer

ophy from Vanderbilt University, she took a job as a teaching assistant. Although she intended for the job to help her pay for college, she enjoyed teaching college students so much she remained in education for the next three decades. In 1984, she strayed from college education and bought the Prew Academy, a private school in Sarasota. Beer was the head of the middle and high school for three years. In 1987, Beer returned to college education and started out as a registrar at Ringling College. Today, Beer walks 5 miles a day with five or six dogs. Staying active and supplying love and care to her furry clients is important to her. Beer credits her strong work ethic to enjoying what she does. “I love work,” she says. “If you can work at what you’re good at and what you enjoy, then that’s a fulfilling life.”

IN HER OWN WORDS: “I love this neighborhood. I like that it is an old neighborhood with

Your Air Conditioning, Electric, and Plumbing Experts.

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CAROLE SAMUELS

Bonded, Insured & Licensed in the State of Florida with the AHCA NR#30211323 & HSC 5023

132268

Seventy-two-year-old Tina Beer already retired once — and she doesn’t plan to do it again anytime soon. “Boredom is my worst nightmare,” says the New York City native. Beer retired from Neighborhood: Ringling College of Art Bayview Acres and Design as dean of its liberal arts program Your neighbor in 2007 but quickly since: 1986 became bored and decided to help a friend with his pet sitting and dog walking business. She bought that business last spring. “I never really stopped working,” she says. This is not the first time Beer has found herself in an unexpected career situation. While she was studying in the late ’60s and early ’70s to obtain her master’s and doctorate degrees in European history and philos-

ONE OF THE BEST VIEWS IN COUNTRY CLUB! 2BD/2BA furnished Veranda overlooking 3rd green and lake. Tile, new carpet, tiled lanais, newer appliances, cathedral ceilings, well maintained, golf equity incl., tennis, fitness, clubhouse, walking trails................................................................................................$188,000

132266

FANTASTIC 1661 SQ. FT. END UNIT Abbey Veranda located on the 7th fairway. This beautifully decorated and turn-key furnished Veranda has been extremely well maintained and features tile floors, chair rails, enclosed tiled lanai, dry bar, walk-in closets, new AC system, garage + more. A full golf equity incl., tennis, fitness, clubhouse, walking trails..................................................................................$274,900


8B

SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

OBSERVER WEATHER

Do you love taking photos? We want your best photos of sunrises, sunsets, rainbows, etc. Submit your local weather photos for a chance to have your photo published in the paper! See all of the winning photos each week by visiting The Observer’s Facebook page. TEMPERATURES

Record Temperatures High

Low

High

Low

Wednesday, Jan. 22

58

Thursday, Jan. 23

65

39

85 (2006)

27 (1985)

36

87 (1990)

28 (1985)

Friday, Jan. 24

64

44

85 (1967)

29 (1960)

Saturday, Jan. 25

65

46

85 (2012)

32 (1940)

Sunday, Jan. 26

66

53

85 (1990)

30 (1968)

Monday, Jan. 27

72

60

84 (1974)

30 (1985)

Tuesday, Jan. 28

76

53

84 (1974)

26 (1986)

AVERAGE GULF WATER TEMPERATURE: 56 SUNRISE / SUNSET

RAINFALL Wednesday, Jan. 22

0.00

Thursday, Jan. 23

0.00

Friday, Jan. 24

0.00

Saturday, Jan. 25

0.00

Sunday, Jan. 26

Sunrise

Sunset

Thursday, Jan. 30

7:18a

6:10p

Friday, Jan. 31

7:17a

6:10p

Trace

Saturday, Feb. 1

7:17a

6:11p

Monday, Jan. 27

0.05

Sunday, Feb. 2

7:16a

6:12p

Tuesday, Jan. 28

0.00

Monday, Feb. 3

7:16a

6:13p

Year-to-date: 2014 2013 0.98 in. 0.12 in.

Tuesday, Feb. 4

7:15a

6:13p

Wednesday, Feb. 5

7:15a

6:14p

Month-to-date: 2014 2013 0.98 in. 0.12 in.

MOON

 Marites Acaylar-Alderman submitted this sunset photo, taken over Sarasota Bay.

PHASES

Scan the QR code on your smartphone to submit your weather photos! Or visit YourObserver.com and click on the “Contests” tab.

O B S E RV E R C RO S S WO R D

ACROSS

Edited by Timothy E. Parker

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Jan. 30 New

Feb. 6 First

Feb. 14 Full

JUST FACE IT by Richard Auer DOWN

79 Bambi’s dad, e.g. 83 One way to be 1 Neutral vowel forgiving sound 90 “Much ___ About 6 Cutting the Nothing” mustard 91 Cambridgeshire 10 Vegas casino razed isle in 1996 92 Word on a sale 15 Bit for Fido sign, often 18 The Ram, 93 “If the ___ fits ...” astrologically 94 Fixture for home 19 Alex Haley mixologists miniseries 96 Pertaining to the 21 Send a message, in feel of a surface a way 99 Islamic religious 22 Charles the leader Grammy winner 101 Puppies’ cries 23 Shell out far more 102 Between the wings than one had 105 Kosovo hoped peacekeeping 26 Econ. measure for group a country 106 Give great pleasure 27 Ugly duckling’s to mother 28 Primitive dwellings 107 Felon on provisional release 29 Feels poorly 110 It’s made to be 30 Mammal fur broken, 32 E.T. crafts proverbially 34 Floor measure 35 Tigers and tabbies 112 Without a stitch on 114 Woody vines 36 Ringo on the 115 “The Postman drums Always Rings 39 Opposite of good Twice” character 42 Cravings 116 Common gifts for 44 From Oslo dads 45 Words before date 118 Indian butter and record 122 “To the max” suffix 46 Aspirin target, 123 Evict forcefully sometimes 127 Pub drink 50 Police datum 52 Infamous emperor 128 “Masterpiece Theatre” host 54 Canary, for one Alistair 55 Deep, as a voice 129 Clear a frosted 56 Carnaval site windshield 57 Certain toast 62 Fuzz-covered fruit 130 Zoroastrian sect member 64 Have regrets 131 ___ Plaines, Ill. 65 Small child 132 One who’s quite a 66 Coffee additive feller? 67 Panamanian, e.g. 133 Rigged out; dressed 74 Lampoon 134 Smacked, in 77 Worthless cloth Scripture 78 Make a boo-boo

1 Easy dupes 2 Stick in one’s ___ (cause resentment) 3 Informal greeting 4 Mother’s stand-in 5 A silent butler may hold it 6 Builds a fire under 7 Pugilistic affair 8 Captain Kirk’s records 9 Ordinal number ender 10 Inscribed stone markers 11 Beards growing on farms? 12 Hero of “The Matrix” 13 Western villain 14 Prepared, as for a daunting task 15 Bach’s music maker 16 Chain of mountains 17 Does clerical work 20 Play the lead 24 It’s between pi and sigma 25 Went in haste 31 “Web Therapy” actress Kudrow 33 Baked this morning 34 It’s a real eyeopener 35 Intensely hot 36 Lewis Carroll creature 37 Decorative gateway in Japan 38 Archer’s weapon 40 Plywood layer 41 Urban additions? 43 Ankle-knee connector 47 Horsefly 48 Georgetown player 49 Decorative pitcher 51 Sea eagle 53 Power failures 54 Small amount of food 58 It can be monotonous 59 Funny DeLuise 60 Olympic-jacket letters

Feb. 22 Last

61 Enters a race 63 Clicked-on item 68 Immature salamander 69 Aesthetically pretentious 70 “Di-dah” lead-in 71 Warm up, as leftovers 72 Hothead’s emotion 73 Ship’s employees 74 Proofreader’s “leave it” 75 Cry like a baby 76 African antelope 80 Raga rhythmmaker 81 Cope with change 82 Prickly highland plant 84 Lawn-game item 85 Growing out 86 Earthenware crock 87 River that starts in the Swiss Alps 88 Prolonged unconsciousness 89 ___ up (excited) 95 Pre-text communique 97 Cel character 98 Open, as a gate 100 Having deep pockets 103 Farmer, essentially 104 Prefix with bond or dollar 107 Say “Not guilty” 108 Usher’s post 109 Fixed prices 111 Praise 113 Agency that entertains GIs 115 Soda nickname 116 Labor strenuously 117 Machu Picchu native 119 Villain’s opposite 120 Word that used to precede Germany 121 HOMES component 124 Sudoku component 125 PI 126 Alternative to FedEx

01-30-14


Thursday, January 30, 2014

Items Under $200 For Sale ADVERTISE YOUR MERCHANDISE with the total value of all items $200 or less in this section for FREE! Limit 1 ad per month, 15 words or less. Price must be included next to each item. No commercial advertising. Ad runs 2 consecutive weeks in 1 Observer. (No phone calls please.) (Please provide your name and address) Email ad to: classified@yourobserver.com Online at: www.yourobserver.com Or mail to: The Observer Group P.O. Box 3169 Sarasota, Fl 34230 BOWFLEX: SPORT Model. Like new, $199 or best offer. 941-921-2626. BUSH BOOKCASE: cherry & wood laminate, 17"wx73"hx13"d. Like new, $50. (941)504-0165. COFFEE TABLE: 36" round umbertone hardwood, excellent condition, 60 yrs., any decor, $125. 941-922-6468. COMPUTER: DUAL 1.8GHz HT Dell, refurbished $60, 941-756-6728 KEYBOARD: CASIO LK40/LK42. 61 keys. $60 obo. 941-484-2483.

Tabletop,

LOVESEAT: PALE yellow, converts to twin bed, perfect condition, $60.00. 309 212 6205.

Boats ChitwoodCharters.com Cruise or Fish Hyatt Sarasota Docks 32’/53’ Yachts - 2hrs./2 months 941-383-5232

Furnishings BRAND NEW Serta Mattress Sets. 50-80% OFF. King, $290. Queen, $150. Full, $140. Excellent value! Won’t last! Call (941)387-4810.

Garage/Moving/Estate Sales COMMUNITY GARAGE SALE. RIVER PLACE, BEACONS COVE, CYPRESS BEND, WALKERS COVE. Located end of Tara Blvd off of SR 70 Exit 217. Saturday, 2/1/14. 8a.m.-2p.m. COMMUNITY SALE: Saturday, February 1st, 8a.m.-2p.m. Glen Oaks Estates. Beneva, just south of 12th Street. TRAVEL - MOVING SALE BY JOHN. Suite 4960, Landings Shopping Center. Behind Sweet Tomatoes. Saturday 8am-2pm. French chairs, desks, bookcases, files, wall cabinets, travel posters, frames, lamps, travel memorabilia.

MASSAGE TABLE, 28" high, with non-adjustable aluminum legs. $30. 941-685-7374.

Merchandise Wanted

MEN’S TUXEDOS: size 44, black, satin collar, blue, notched collar. Excellent. $45 each OBO. 941-953-5222.

CASH FOR Old Military Items. Swords, uniforms, insignia & old guns. Call 941-416-3280.

MICRO-FIBER COUCH, red, $150. Coffee table, $50. Both in good condition. 941-284-7785. PHOTOGRAPHER’S BACKDROP: Aluminum and felt, 8’x5’. Like new with electric motor. $199 obo. 941-953-4186. PLANTATION SHUTTERS: white, for Front Door Sidelights, 70 1/4hX13w. Brand New. $199/set. 941-355-8705. POWER JUICER: Jack LaLanne. Barely used, includes operating manual, power juicing recipes guide, $35. 941-822-7566. QUEEN PALM Trees: Eight large, $25.00 each. U dig and move. 924-5093. RINGLING COSTUME piece: vintage, rhinestone crown, worn by bareback riders. Good condition. $195. 941-554-4530. SEWING MACHINE: Sears Kenmore 150 computerized w/attachments and cabinet. Perfect ! $100. OBO. 941-925-0905. SINGER MACHINE: Vintage 1929 with original manual, working condition, $149. 941-544-8385. SONY CAMCORDER and accessories, great condition, $120; Sony 100 disk CD Player, $75; 941-866-0232. TELEPHONE: CORDLESS Panasonic Talking Caller ID. Excellent condition. $25. 941-924-8327. TRESTLE TABLE. Solid oak , tile tabletop, 4/solid oak w/upholstered seats side chairs, $200. 941-914-1615. WWII LUFTWAFFE Aircraft Spotters Book/Pics, 1942. Excellent condition. $165. 941-735-1452.

Autos For Sale 2003 MERCEDES E320. Beautiful classic black, leather, garage kept, 125,000 miles with another 125,000 to go! Call 349-4835 to see, $11,999. 89’ VOLVO 740 GLE: 100,500/miles, white, excellent condition. Great second car. Must sell. $2800 o/b/o. 941-383-5005. Hawley Motors II 5741 Pinkney Ave. 941-312-5890 2003 Cadillac DeVille 64K/miles, like new, $7988 2006 Toyota Corolla LE only 43K/miles, 5/speed manual. Reduced! $7988 1998 BMW 323 IC convertible, 79K/miles, $6988 2010 Suzuki SX4, AWD, 21K/miles, brand new, $10,988. 2003 Nissan Xterra, like new, 70K/miles, $8988 2004 Toyota Camry LE, leather, 87K/miles. Reduced! $8488 2006 Toyota Corolla LE, 102K/miles, automatic, like new. Reduced! $6988 2007 Nissan Altima S, clean, dependable transportation, $8988, 2005 Honda Civic LX, Automatic, Coupe, Special Edition, excellent shape, 85K/miles, $7988

SENIOR LOOKING to purchase precious metals, time pieces, coins, jewelry and antiques. Please call Marc, 941-321-0707.

Storage STORAGE FACILITY Boat/ RV/ Trailer. Secure facility, low monthly rentals, Clark Rd area. 941-809-3660, 941-809-3662.

Business Opportunities JAN PRO CLEANING FRANCHISE: $950 Down Required, Financing Available for growth, Includes customers. Earn up to $10,000 Month+. Call 941-907-8141.

Help Wanted ACT! MODEL! NOW! Looking for new faces for print, motion pictures, TV commercials. Children, adults, senior. 813-902-1722. P/T SALES position available: 18-24 hours average per week. Gift shop located on Siesta Key. Retiress welcome. 727-244-5906.

Help Wanted

Condos For Sale

P/T TYPISTS Needed Not a work from home position www.sbsgrp.com

PELICAN COVE. Beautiful update just completed on this 2BR/2BA in this highly regarded waterfront community. This ground floor unit comes fully furnished with no spared expense and perhaps is the nicest unit available for $225k. Call Siesta Beach Realty today for your preview @ 941-993-5722.

Positions Wanted CAM, CFCAM, CMCA, AMS, PCAM designations seeking 300+ units in HOA or Condominium to manage. Real Estate licensed. Excellent references. Please contact: pnbresume@yahoo.com or 941.685.0500.

Commercial Property For Rent

Homes For Rent

EXECUTIVE SUITES: South Tamiami Trail, Gulf Gate area. Full service conference room. 3 Room Suite available. One month free rent. Wireless internet and utilities included. From $250/mo. Call 941-923-6050.

LUXOR MHP $450/mo-1 bed/bath mobile homes. 55+ community. No Pets. 5811 14th St. W. Bradenton. Sarasota Real Estate Assoc., Inc. Greg Nowak 941-809-6034

Condos/Apts. For Rent PALM AIRE. Fabulous Golf/ water views. First floor, 2BR/2BA condo, W/D in unit, closet space galore. $1200/mo. First. Last. Security. Eileen, 732-740-9398. SIESTA KEY $880 and up. Reserve Vacation Rentals, NOW! 1, 2, & 3 bedroom units. Weekly, Monthly, Seasonal and Annual. Furnished/Unfurnished. Call Siesta Key Realty, 941-349-8900 or visit siestakeyrealtyrentals.com SIESTA KEY Condo: 1BR, furnished, walk to beach, shopping, restaurants. Pool, laundry, on ground floor. Available March and April. Pictures available. 586-344-0020. SIESTA KEY: 2BR/1BA, furnished, waterfront, pool, laundry, all amenities. No pets. Non-smoking. Beach, shopping. $1500/mo. Annual. $2500/mo. Seasonal. 941-349-5417, E-mail: shirley@cros.net

Condos For Sale BAYWOOD COLONY Apartments. 1BR/1BA. Semi-furnished. Convenient to beach, shopping. Small pet. $55,000. Owner 941-922-3955 or 941-960-3955. BROADWAY PROMENADE: Downtown, Built 2007. Bayview. 2BR/2BA, 2 garage spaces. Furnished. $247,000. Owner occupied. 941-993-3351.

WE BUY CARS. TOP $$ PAID FOR YOUR VEHICLES. Call Hawley Motors, 941-923-3421.

RENTERS

Stop Paying Your Landlord’s Mortgage. Free Report reveals How Easy it is to Buy Your Own Home.

www.OwnYourOwnHomeFl.com Free recorded message 1-800-691-0148 Re/Max Alliance Group

Manufactured Homes FULLY FURNISHED Manufactured Home 2BR/2BA. Ideal location, attractively priced. Walk across the street to the community swimming pool and clubhouse. Sit in the front lanai and enjoy the lake view and a Sarasota sunset. Located in Park East Club at 8435 Carrie Lane. An active 55+ community. Adjacent to shopping mall, dining and movie theaters. $29,900. Call Carolyn at 941-924-2455.

Open House WATERFRONT: SPECTACULAR VIEWS: Sat., February 1, 11:00a.m.-3p.m., 840 Tarawitt Dr. $1,239,000. 941-650-9761.

Real Estate Wanted

FREE! What every Real Estate buyer or seller needs to know! Go to: www.yourmarketupdate.com LARGE VILLA: 2BR/2BA, beautiful, waterfront, 55+ community. Boat dock. $229,900. 941-925-2330 or 941-927-9533.

WANTED SEASONAL Rental: 3 1/2 months December 15th, 2014 through March 31, 2015. 2BR/2BA, Internet, land phone. Non-smoking. 317-341-0404, mbfleming05@gmail.com

SIESTA SUN ON SIESTA KEY: 2 units for sale, $189k and $199k. Gulf side, fully furnished, heated pool, good rental income, on-site management. Call Siesta Beach Realty, 941-993-5722.

CLASSIFIED LINE AD PRICE 62/' www.yourobserver.com $

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First 15 words ............. 17.50 per week Each Add’l word ...............................50¢ 15% DISCOUNT for 4 week Run Yellow color $5 per Week Border as low as $3 per Week Reserved Space Space

Call: 955-4888 LP Reserved

Email: classified@yourobserver.com Online: www.YourObserver.com

YOUR SOURCE FOR LOCAL CLASSIFIED ADS This week’s Crossword answers

HOUSE CLASSIFIEDS LP # 56733

2014

This week’s Cryptogram answers

OVER 30 VEHICLES IN STOCK ALL CARS SERVICED “LIKE NEW” Financing Available

Autos Wanted

WHISPERING SANDS. Gulfside, renovated villa. $412,000. Village, beach walk. 2-3BR/2BA, garage, W/D. 941-487-7869. Owner.

Your source for local Classifieds

1. When asked what position he would like or be able to do, he said he thought he would be a good fit for replacing the CEO. 2. When the interviewer questioned his primary interest in the position, he was ready with these questions of his own: time off? bonuses? vacations? health club?


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

www.yourobserver.com Cleaning

A Lending Hand, Inc.

WANTED LUXURY ANNUAL RENTALS For Qualified Waiting Clients Contact - Sarasota Luxury Rentals 941-225-1356 email: info@sarasotaluxuryrentals.com Personalized attention with professional honest advice. 25 Years Experience - References available

Room For Rent

Provides home healthcare from as little as 4 hours to 24/7 care. For more info Phone: 941-809-3725 License #230506 & #30211577

PROCTOR/SWIFT AREA. Efficiency, private entrance, quiet, unfurnished, full bath, small kitchenette, large deck. $590/mo. + deposit. Annual. Siesta Key Realty 941-349-8900.

COMPANION TO Elderly: Errands, doctor appointments, light housekeeping and cooking. Monday through Friday 8-2. 941-924-9791. COMPASSIONATE, FEMALE caregiver from Japan, 10+ years experience w/bathing, cooking, cleaning. Let me care for your loved ones. Yasuko: 941-323-3538.

Vacation/Seasonal Rentals AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY, beachfront seasonal rental penthouse and direct Gulf front. Totally renovated. Absolutely gorgeous. South end of Longboat. $6000/mo. Sylvia Babineau, My Realty Co. 941-504-0551.

IN-HOME ASSISTED LIVING. Why leave the safety, beauty and comfort of your own home to receive professional, affordable and compassionate care? You don’t need to! ElderCare Services provides complete customized care perfectly tailored to suit your needs and lifestyle. Services include, but not limited to, homemaking, transportation, running errands, meal prep., medication supervision, 24/7 medical staffing, and more. Please call 377-4465 for more info. or visit us on the web @ eldercaresarasota.com. Licensed, bonded and insured. Lic.#30211372

GORGEOUS WATERFRONT 2BR/2BA Apartment. Best Siesta. 2 Months Miniumum. Rent Negotiable. Condo Application. 941-350-0947. LANDLORD ALERT!! We have Tenant’s!!! Wanted: 1-3BR Homes/Condos, Furnished or Unfurnished. Siesta Key Realty Incorporated, 941-349-8900, www.siestakeyrealtyrentals.com

RN OF 37 years will help you or your husband in your home. Call 561-886-7863.

PEPPERTREE BAY, Siesta Key: 2BR/2BA, upstairs unit, Gulf views. Turnkey furnished, garage. Available April, May & June. Reduced rate. Lisa Beach Agent, 941-374-9133 or E-mail: llblab@aol.com

GULFSIDE A/C & Heating, LLC. SALES & SERVICE, FREE ESTIMATES! 10 MINUTE RESPONSE. Visa/MC/Disc. Lic. #CAC1816929 941-962-6863.

Waterfront Property

Auto Transport

WATERFRONT “Million Dollar View” - FSBO. Go to: www.tarawittdrive.com Brokers paid. Check it out.

SHIP YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR SUV anywhere in the United States. Great rates, fast quotes. Call Hawley Motors, 941-923-3421.

Adult Care Services

Carpentry

"LET ME HELP with errands, transportation, organizing, home watch and more. Non-medical assistance for peace of mind and more free time. Call Amy Zeusler 941-364-8071. Online www.letamyhelp.com"

CARPENTRY & REMODELING. Serving Sarasota since 1982. Exterior siding and wood rot repairs. Interior alterations, trim work and doors. Kitchen installations. Drywall repairs. Built-in cabinets and bookcases. CALL RON VOIT 941-228-7601

Air Conditioning

AIR CONDITIONING

Stop Paying Retail!

20 YRS. EXPERIENCE CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE 726-1802 LIC/ INS

HOUSE CLEANING, housekeeping, pet sitting, window washing. Excellent services by European couple. 941-350-8072.

ALL TYPES OF MASONRY Specializing in concrete driveways, pavers, decorative concrete, stone work, patios. Call for free and honest estimates. 941-525-2435

LIDIA’S PROFESSIONAL CLEANING. Licensed and insured. 20 years experience with excellent references. Residential, Offices, Commercial. 941-376-0920. ND SPARKLE. We are a family business experienced in both home and office cleaning great rates. Call for a quote. 941-330-4466. Email: norgrasi@hotmail.com SUNSHINE CLEANING: Residential and Commercial. 15 Years Experience. Great References and Prices. Call Rita 941-536-3751.

Computer Services COMPUTER SUPPORT. Expert Trainer/Consultant for Email and many applications. Senior specialist. U.S. Coast Guard retired. Printer Ink Savings 40% plus. SEE: www.pcselftrain.com 781-789-7847. COMPUTER TECHNICAL Support. H/W & S/W problems solved. Virus/Malware removal; data recovery; Networking/ Internet Issues; Upgrades; A+, Network+ Cert. Tech. Navy trained electronics tech veteran. 941-225-0046. OWN A MAC/iPHONE/iPAD? MacTutor has 21+ years experience teaching Apple products. I speak English, not “Geek”! (941) 812-3887 www.FLMacTutor.com

Furniture Repair ALBERTO’S REFINISHING Of Fine Furniture, Antiques, Gold Leaf, Cane, Rush, Upholstery. Quality Work. Call: 941-296-5427.

Home Improvement/ Remodeling MITCHELL HANDYMAN. Painting, Carpentry, Tile, Pressure Cleaning. Total Home Improvements, Repairs. Small and large! 941-284-8488.

62/'

Masonry

Painting/Wallpapering CARLO DATTILO PAINTING. Licensed & insured. Interior/ Exterior painting including drywall repair and retexturing. Wallpaper installation & removal, pressure washing. Residential & commercial, condos. Honest & reliable. Free estimates. 941-744-1020. 35+ years experience. CUSTOM PAINTING, Wallpaper Removal. Quality work at a reasonable price. Free Estimates. Established 1978. Call Daniel at L.L. Armstrong Contracting. Lic./Insured. 941-323-5074. RICK STEAKLEY PAINTING. Interior/Exterior. Pressure Washing. Wallpaper Removal. Drywall Repairs. Reasonable. Reliable. Professional. 30+/years experience. References available. Free Estimates. Lic./Ins. 941-228-7605, rlsteakley60@gmail.com

Pet Services DOGGY HOTEL/GROOMING. 24 Hour Daycare. FREE Daycare with groom (we are the best). 3925 Brown Avenue behind Sleep King. doggyhotel.net 941-554-4620.

FIND IT! in the

CLEANING

Sharon M. Guy, P.A.

1,580* 1,795* $ 2,125* $

Call Liz for the Best Price Move Ins/Move Outs

House/Condo/Office Cleaning Carpet & Floor Care FREE ESTIMATES Lic. # 46264

Mercy’s Cleaning Service

552-5766

130639

$

Sharon M. Guy

1-800-340-7050 • CELL 941-704-9413 *Other sizes and efficiencies available. Installation from $500-$700. FPL Participating Contractor. Permit Extra.

ALTERATIONS/UPHOLSTERY

Commercial and Residential Best Prices in Town

Office in Palmer Ranch 8586 Potter Park Drive, Sarasota, FL 34238

Team Up Today With Classifieds 941-955-4888

Frank Beck Upholstery Honesty • Integrity • Quality • Value

Full Service Scratch & Dent or Collision Service We do it all. We get it right! Paintless dent repair & detailing too!

Call Gary Auto Body & Paint Inc. 941-923-2564

130417

ESTABLISHED 1975!

ALUMINUM heav e NS OF 130829

Ph. 376-4228 singleturtle@aol.com

3687954-01

DeaD on TargeT The Observer Service Directory Call 955-4888 to reserve your space.

BEAUTY

Insured

Licensed • Free Estimates

4541 Clark Road, Sarasota

131580

Hours: Monday-Friday 9am - 3pm • Weekends by appointment

724-1395

Cell (941)

• One Time, Weekly, Monthly • Res./Comm. • Move Ins/Outs • Carpet Cleaning • References • Free Est. ★ Very Affordable Rates ★

AUTO SERVICE

Allow me to do my very best for you!

We Use Organic Products

ADDY’S CLEANING SERVICE

Home Furnishing Restoration and Upholstery Specialist!

In shop free estimates Pick up and delivery services available

Classifieds

www.yourobserver.com

Law Office of

LIC# CACA44874

941• 925 • 2447

PROFESSIONAL TILE & MARBLE INSTALLATION

WILLS, TRUSTS, PROBATE, ELDER LAW

Wholesale-to-the-Public Central Air & Heat

Gulf Gate Village 6568 Superior Ave., Sarasota, FL 34231

STEVE ALLEN FLOOR COVERINGS

BRAZILIAN CLEANING Service by Maria. Residential/ Commercial. Meticulous Cleaning. Excellent References. Free Estimates. Reliable. Lic./ Ins. 941-400-3342. FREE ESTIMATES! Call Dotty, detailed cleaning. 24 Years Exp. Lic./Ins. Residential/Commercial. Looking for year-round customers! We accept all major credit cards. Dotty, 941-321-6645.

ATTORNEY

Integrity AC

2 ton 13 Seer Tempstar ST. Cool with heat 3 ton 13 Seer Tempstar ST. Cool with heat 4 ton 13 Seer Tempstar ST. Cool with heat

Home Improvement/ Remodeling

BETTY’S HOUSECLEANING Service. Residential and Commercial. High quality cleaning. Reasonable rates. Licensed. References. Call 941-650-6180. BLUE FISH CLEANING INC. 941-705-3812. Insured, Bonded. Affordable reliable home cleaning, $60, 2 cleaners, 2 hours.

130830

Adult Care Services

130831

Real Estate Wanted

131583

10B Classifieds

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 THE SARASOTA OBSERVER/ Thursday, January 30, 2014

130418

10B

LLC

European Facial • Waxing Permanent Make-up / Lashes Call 24/7 for Appointment

941-329-6466

COMPUTER

Speaks German & Polish

2345 Bee Ridge Rd., Sarasota, FL 34239 Present ad and receive 10% OFF heavensofbeauty.simplybook.me

Yoder Aluminum Inc. 15505 Lemon Fish Dr. Bradenton, FL 34202 Office 941-650-9790

SMS Mobile Marine Service GPS/Fishfinder Installation • Outboards I/O’s • Inboards Call for appointment • 941-232-3523 CERTIFIED & INSURED

130420

Dustin Yoder yoderaluminum@gmail.com

DOCKSIDE BOAT REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE

131865

Yoderaluminum.com

132012

“Specializing in 6” Seamless Gutters”

BOAT SERVICES


11B Classifieds 11B

SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

www.yourobserver.com

ELECTRIC

IRRIGATION

LIGHTHOUSE ELECTRIC

A FULL SERVICE IRRIGATION COMPANY

of Sarasota

Maintenance - Repair -Installation

Friendly, Expert Computer Repairs

20 any irrigation

130710

$ OFF repair over 100

941-888-2988 FREE ESTIMATES rainscape.com

955-4888

KITCHEN/BATH REMODELING

THE GRAB BAR GUY

FURNITURE REPAIR

PATIO REPAIRS, INC PATIO REPAIRS FurnitureSales Sales &&Repairs Furniture Repairs Cushions • Slings • Re-powdercoating #USHIONS s 3LINGS s 5MBRELLAS

130711 38056

941-504-0903

/54$//2 &52.)452% %80%243 s 777 0!4)/2%0!)23 .%4

GLENN KROECKER

HANDYMAN

130718

954-1878

(cell) 780-3346 Licensed & Insured

CONCRETE

3680493-01

Free Estimates

FREE

INSTALLATION

GRAB THIS DEAL

Buy 1 grab bar & get 1 FREE LANDSCAPING & LAWN X INCREASE PROPERTY

A Private Company Serving the Palmer Ranch Area Since 2007

VALUES

X CREATE AN AESTHETICALLY PLEASING AMENITY

X SERVICES TO FIT YOUR

CUSTOM WOODWORKING LAKE & POND SERVICES

Sarasota Gate & Access

www.APOFL.com

130865

PRO Sliding Glass Door Repair “FIX IT - DON’T REPLACE�

YOUR DOORS WILL SLIDE LIKE NEW 130714

• Installation • Access Control • Maintenance • System Design

CHALMERS DRYWALL

www.nativesonlandscape.com

Experienced • Insured • Worker’s Comp LIKE US ON FACEBOOK 1121 LEWIS AVE, SARASOTA, FL 34237 JOHN L. BLASER/OWNER

WorkS for you!

WE ONLY CLEAN DRYER VENTS WE USE SPECIALIZED EQUIPMENT

• Repair • Remodel • New Construction Licensed/Insured • Free Estimates

Call 955-4888 to reserve your space.

Are You Having Dryer DifďŹ culties? • Dryer hot but clothes still wet after (1) drying cycle? • Dryer gets hot to the touch or doesn’t heat up at all?

131588

LAWN CARE

Take a simple test to see if your vent is clogged. Unhook your dryer vent & compare drying time.

CALL 24/7 • RESIDENTIAL SPECIALISTS FOR ALL YOUR ELECTRICAL NEEDS!

Residential

941-705-5468

Lyon

941.538.7274

Home Watch Services 131317

‘Peace of mind is priceless’ Weekly Services from $15 (941) 928-0391 Karen@the-lyons.com

Commercial

13205

• Detailed house monitoring services • Visits can be carried outWeekly/Bi-monthly or Monthly • Interior/Exterior inspections - Photos emailed to you

R O8VYE EARS

• References supplied

1

FLAT MONTHLY RATE PRICING

(941) 706-5569

CURT’s Lawn Service

• Airport pick-up and drop off • Housekeeping services if required

Clean Professional Reliable Affordable

OF G ALL SERVIN OUNTY FOR OTA C S A R A S

130375

3680109-01

3687676-01

ELECTRIC

•Landscape Design/ Renovation/Installation • Xeriscape Experts/ Native Plants • Organic Gardening & Fertilizing • Sod Repair • Drainage Solutions • Seasonal Clean Up, Remulch • New Pavers & Paver Repair

The Service DirecTory

941-349-4455

DRYWALL

780-3788 • 822-0436

941-378-2700

365-2407

FAST SAME-DAY SERVICE

130719

www.proslidingglassdoorrepair.com

CALL TO SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT WITH ONE OF OUR LICENSED AND INSURED TECHNICIANS

Now Offering Full Service Lawn Maintenance

DOORS

Call Mark 941-928-2263

SPECIFIC LAKE & POND NEEDS X FREE QUOTE

129631

Licensed & Insured

ESTIMATES!

130421

Reasonable Prices

918-8587

www.drgrabbars.com

Watching your home when you’re away

Servicing the Sarasota area since 1999

Also Laying Stone

FREE

Cell #809-7311

132019

Driveways • Sidewalks

941-966-0333

HOME SERVICES

Michael Koch Concrete, Inc.

“No Job Too Small�

966-5094

24/7 SERVICE 131584

3675768-01

Always reachable at

• NO JOB TOO SMALL • SCREEN REPAIRS • PAINTING/DRY WALL • TILE REPAIRS • & MUCH MORE!

DECORATIVE SURFACES FOR: PATIOS, POOL DECKS, DRIVEWAYS, ENTRYWAYS

Licensed • Insured Lic. #25393

Your Bathroom Safety Specialist

HOME REPAIR SERVICE

Custom Surfaces Inc. • POLY-PEBBLE / EPOXY • TEXTURED CONCRETE • RESEAL & REPAIRS • INTERLOCKING BRICK PAVERS Free Serving Sarasota 355-1148 Estimates Since 1979 SARASOTA • BRADENTON • VENICE

957-4762 (cell #) 504-3168

129989

922-3157

“OUR ESTIMATES & ADVICE ARE FREE�

STEVE PANEBIANCO

130833

Patios - Driveways - Sidewalks

Licensed Lic. #38333 References

132049

Since 1967

Residential Concrete Specialist

130374

) Carpentry ) Indoors ) Remodeling ) Ceramic Tile ) Water & Fire Damage ) Kitchen/Baths

LACIVITA CONCRETE

State Lic. CR CO25291

Free Estimates Lawn & Landscape Maintenance

373-9299

Lic. & Ins.

724-2945

130378

3204 Gulf Gate Dr., Sarasota (Across from the Library)

rain sensors

$

in the Service Directory Call today to reserve your space

SALES & SERVICE NEW & REFURBISHED NETWORKING DSL AND CABLE SETUPS TRAINING BACKUP & RECOVERY SETUP, INSTALL, UPGRADE AFFORDABLE RATES

VIRUS & SPYWARE EXPERTS! LAPTOP REPAIR SPECIALISTS

Lic. #ER0013984

15% OFF

130924

Grow your business

PC & LAPTOP REPAIR

On Site or In Shop

377-2272

131872

3690387-01

Franklin Kenny • Electrical Contractor

130925

COMPUTER

131312

THE SARASOTA OBSERVER/PE THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 Thursday, January 30, 2014


SARASOTA OBSERVER THE SARASOTA OBSERVER/ THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 Thursday, January 30, 2014

www.yourobserver.com

PET SERVICES

MO V I N G

Pet Care

Dave McCarthy

LOCAL - LONG DISTANCE FREE ESTIMATES

• Over 13 years experience

Specializing in Re-Roofing & Repairs All Work Guaranteed

Disposal Special $179.95 Installed Reg. Price $229.95 Installed

128876

PAINT JOB BOYS LLC

Family Owned & Operated • Third Generation Master Plumber All Major Credit Cards Accepted www.GeneralPlumbingSarasota.com

941-923-8140

• Interior Painting • Popcorn Ceiling Removal • Wallpaper Removal • Textured Finishes • Drywall RepairReplacement

͕͘͝Ǥ͖͚͝Ǥ͔͛͝​͔

top2bottompressurewashing.com

ȁ ȁ ȁ ȁ ȁ

Licensed & Insured

925-8448

A Limb OnService Out Tree

130369

FREE ESTIMATES

130385 132087

Specializing in Palm Trees • Tree Trimming & Removal • Yard Clean Up Family Owned & Operated

(941) 737-4305

Licensed & Insured

NATIVE CUT TREE SERVICE

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12B 12BYourObserver.com Classifieds


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

13B

The Grand Club

in the heart of Siesta Key

Gulf and Bay Club is the premier gulf front gated community on over 30 acres with 780 feet of beach frontage right on world famous Siesta Key beach. Amenities include 3 heated pools (including a lap pool), 8 tennis courts, 6 dry saunas, a fitness center with spa, an expansive clubhouse with library and computer room, racquetball and basketball courts and multiple barbecue areas with picnic tables.

5760 Midnight Pass Rd,#d-605

Fully furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo with updated updated appliances and newer carpet. Great View. Priced at $649,000

Sales Office Open Sundays 12-4PM

Monthly Rentals Available

Gulf & Bay Club Realty, LLC Licensed Real Estate Broker Judy Arreola, 5730 Midnight Pass Road, Sarasota, FL 34242

Sales & Rental Manager

BEACHES, BOATING & BISTROS

Spacious 4BR/4BA on Palm Island. New kitchen, master bedroom & bathroom. New boat lift on Grand Canal. Heated pool and spa, private Waterfront Tiki Bar. Lovely tropical view across the canal. Huge bonus area on lower level. Palm Island is an Island on a Island and a short walk to World Famous Siesta Beach & Siesta Village. The Perfect Home or Investment property for the discerning buyer. $889,900 MLS#A3979580

Thomas Fastiggi

Kristina Talkie, GRI, REALTOR 941.266.8658 Broker kristinatalkie@michaelsaunders.com GRI,GRS,LTG,Broker Associate

/CEAN "LVD s 3IESTA +EY &, s GRI,Realtor

KEY WEST STYLE ON GRAND CANAL

3BR/2BA built in 2005. Sip a glass of wine by your outdoor Tiki Bar in the pool/spa area. Huge lower level bonus area, pool shower and a 4 car garage for all your toys. With an open floor plan; gourmet kitchen featurs a huge pantry; large rooms; elevator, wood burning fireplace; vaulted ceilings; walk-in closets; a beautiful master suite; pool shower; This home is a must-see on wonderful Palm Island, an “Island on the Island�. $1,675,000 MLS#A3990080

DEEDED BEACH ACCESS

Only 45 steps to the BEACH!!! Large rooms and volume ceilings. Extensive wrap around decks. The top floor elevation of 16.28 ft allows for very reasonable insurance premiums. You are walking distance to renowned local dining and a marina.Next door is Turtle Beach Park with kayak and boat launch facilities. This home is a must see. Check out your private beach access!!! $794,900 MLS#A3986065

To View these or other area properties,

kristinatalkie@michaelsaunders.com www.judyarreola.com Your Golf to Gulf Real Estate Professionals ARREOLA/TALKIE Ip et, ...The sIt nullamcTeamonsequis They KNOW yOUR NeighbORhOOd

NEW LISTING

NEW LISTING

NEW LISTING

ad magna aut adionulla consequ

1265 Riegels landing dRive $1,800,000

ipsumsandre doWelcome to Riegels Landing, a conummolore gated community del just minlore in 50-foot henibh eum eugiam utes from Siesta Keyeleniat Beach! TWO docks on protected sailboat water,quipit Newly wisl resurfaced pool. Comfortable layout utatetummy nonsectet for family living or entertaining, with a large master suite, a volorcombo, incillandre duikitchen tie feugiating living/dining room an efficient with dinette area, 2 large bedrooms for family guests, 3 modo full baths,odan etueraessis amordolore elevator, & a huge bonus area downstairs. MLS#A3991014 olum vercipisi.

140 aVENIDa VENECCIa #a $975,000

Perfection on Siesta Key... Condo/townhouse only 1.5 blocks to Siesta Key Beach & Siesta Key Village! 3BR/3.5BA built in 2007 Ip withet, travertine granite counters, solid sIt floors, nullamc onsequis maple cabinets, stainless steel appliances, sleek aluminum ad Loggia magna aut adionulla consequ railings, covered complete with wood ceiling, floor & recessed lighting, a coveted 1 conummolore car garage & a private ipsumsandre delelevadotor! Family room, light/bright dining room, MLS#A3991311

lore eleniat in henibh eum eugiam quipit wisl CirCle utatetummy nonsectet 5221 Far Oak $415,000 volor incillandre dui tieand feugiating Behind the gates of Turtle Rock with preserve lake views. 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, a gorgeous Suite with preserve etueraessis amMaster dolore modo odviews, a fantastic layout that will work for couples or families, olum vercipisi. huge family room/kitchen combo with lots of light, this split plan includes 2 spacious bedrooms and separate bath for family or guests. A short drive to Siesta Key Beach, fabulous shopping, theatre and fine dining. MLS#A3990102

REDUCED

Call Dan Miller at 941-376-7442 ddm1@comcast.net

Broker Broker

941.349.3444

Judy Arreola, www.judyarreola.com 941.349.3444 judyarreola@michaelsaunders.com Kristina Talkie, 941.266.8658

DIRECT BEACH FRONT ON SIESTA KEY

The closest property to the beach currently on the market on Siesta Key. just steps to the cool white quartz sands of Siesta Beach and less than 50 feet to the Mexico. The Northernmost beachfront parcel on Beach Road with no buildings next to it for panoramic views. Beautiful 4 level contemporary modern art deco style townhome/home with elevator. Each of the three levels in the main living areas boast a 35 foot balcony to relax with your favorite libation and watch the sun set over the Gulf. $5,795,000 MLS#A3989404

GRI, CRS, LTG, BROKER/ASSOCIATE

judyarreola@michaelsaunders.com

941-349-3000 www.gulfandbayclub.com

Marc Turgeon,GRI

Tropical Realty, Tropical Sands Sands Realty, Broker

5780 Midnight Pass Rd,#B-608

Best value at Gulf and Bay Club. 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo with sweeping views of beach and comlpex . Reduced to $589,000

Meet Your Local Realtors...

Ip CALLE et, sIt nullamc onsequis 4472 SERENA $349,000

Highly soughtad after in the Villa enclaveconsequ of 42 resimagna autPalmeras adionulla dences in Prestancia. 3BR/3BA overlooking 15th fairway and ipsumsandre conummolore del dophenominal views. Dream kitchen with Quartz counter tops. lore eleniat in henibh eum eugiam Bathrooms & kitchen update with Price Pfister fixtures. Large living room with full facing of the lake &nonsectet golf course. quipit wisl views utatetummy Oversized 2-car garage. New barrel roof in 2011. Hurricane incillandre dui tie feugiating proof garage volor door and windows. MLS#A3987146

etueraessis am dolore modo od132314 olum vercipisi.

We are Sarasota Area Real Estate professionals ready to help you. If you are considering buying a new home or contemplating selling your present home, Call one of us today! Iva Fadley Dane PA,TRC Cell: Cell: 941.350.8001 Office: Office: 941.955.1500

Specializing in Island Properties The Boerner Team

BrokerAssociate Associate Annemarie Boerner Broker Broker Associate

941.350.9408

Annemarie.Waterside@comcast.net Realtor Joseph Boerner Realtor Realtor

“Service With Excellence� IvaFadley@tampabay.rr.com IvaFadley@tampabay.rr.com

ÂŽ ÂŽ ÂŽ

941.726.1723

JM.Boerner513@gmail.com

ReMAX Alliance Group, 5140 Ocean Blvd. Siesta Key, Sarasota,FL 34242 ReMAX ReMAXAlliance AllianceGroup, Group,5140 5140Ocean OceanBlvd. Blvd.Siesta SiestaKey, Key,Sarasota,FL Sarasota,FL 34242 34242

Marianne LeBar

Stacy Liljeberg

CLHMS, AHWD, CRS, CIPS,PMN, RELO, SFR,TRC, RSPS CLHMS, CLHMS, AHWD, AHWD, CRS, CRS, CIPS,PMN, CIPS,PMN, RELO, RELO, SFR,TRC, SFR,TRC, RSPS RSPS

Direct 941.650.0337 Direct

*VOTED FIVE FIVE STAR STAR BEST BEST IN IN CLIENT CLIENT SATISFACTION* SATISFACTION* *VOTED Member of of NAR, NAR, FR, FR, SAR, SAR, CRS CRS Member *Life Time Time Member Member -- All All Children’s Children’s Hospital Hospital Guild* Guild* *Life

Gabi@RealtyinSarasota.com www.RealtyinSarasota.com

941.544.6103

Michael James

www.sarasota4you. www.sarasota4you.com

michaeljames@michaelsaunders.com

cinrog@gmail.com cinrog@gmail.com

hedge hedge your your bet bet at: at: www.cindirogersre.com www.cindirogersre.com

Owned And Operated By NRT Incorporated Owned OwnedAnd AndOperated OperatedBy ByNRT NRTIncorporated Incorporated

Brian Dunn

“Your Everything Everything Real “Your Real Estate Estate Source� Source� www.BrianDunnRealtoR.com www.BrianDunnRealtoR.com New Construction Construction && Remodeling New Remodeling Specialist Specialist licensed Contractor Contractor CRC047939 licensed CRC047939

941.650.0482

5218 Station Way, Sarasota 34233 5218 5218Station StationWay, Way,Sarasota Sarasota34233 34233

941.685.6649

Margo MacKenzie PA Cell: 941.350.2349 Matching People & Properties Worldwide Margo@@MargoMackenzie.com www.FloridaSunshineLiving.com

Louise Tessier PA

Serving you since 1990 Cell: 941.266.4514 Office: 941.955.1500

ltessier@aol.com

Siesta Key Specialist

ABR, SFR SFR Cindi Rogers ABR, 941.302.6375

Gabriele Charity

stacyliljeberg@michaelsaunders.com Voted Five Star Best in Client Satisfaction For Eight Consecutive Years

“Serving “Serving Sarasota Sarasota County for 20 years�

“Your Best Bet for Real Estate Success�

941.587.9288

shirleydab@comcast .net

Building Bridges...between European and U.S. Buyers and Sellers

Susan Matteoli, GRI, GRI, ABR ABR 941.356.1335 SusanMatteoli@michaelsaunders.com SusanMatteoli@michaelsaunders.com

Shirley Dabringhaus,Broker Selling Sarasota Since 1988

RealtorÂŽ, GRI

“Raising the the Bar Bar in “Raising in Real Real Estate Estate Services� Services� www.SarasotasBestHomes.com www.SarasotasBestHomes.com

Ich spreche Deutsch Je parle Français

941-724.4034

Joyce Naegele, PA 941.586.7959 941.349.3444

joycenaegele@michaelsaunders.com

Juergen Stahl

Helene Hyland Sales Associate 941.349.4411 (Office) 941.685.2274 (Cell)

Building Bridges...between European and U.S. Buyers and Sellers

helenehyland@comcast.net www.SheSellsSiestaKeySarasota.com Coldwell Banker on the Key

941.928.4847

Juergen@RealtyinSarasota.com www.RealtyinSarasota.com

Team Dunn

Lin and Maurice 941.809.2154 941.238.8119

lindunn@michaelsaunders.com mauricemeneger@michaelsaunders.com

Need Help?

Expert in Condo Sales for Snowbirds

Pat Reid Bachert 941.586.9766 patsellssrq@aol.com

Owned And Operated By NRT Incorporated Owned OwnedAnd AndOperated OperatedBy ByNRT NRTIncorporated Incorporated

Cynthia Brock GRI, E-Pro

Broker Associate/18 Years of Experience

941.400.6237

cynthia@teambrock.com

Tropical Sands www.sarasotabeachlife.com

Ethel Lovelace Harvey Lovelace Kaitlin Kuhn

TheEthel Lovelace Team

941.586.7390

EthelLovelace@michaelsaunders.com www.SarasotaUSA.com

Bob Ruiz & Sheri Lasley

Siesta Key Specialists 941.544.3299 RobertRuizrr@aol.com

941.400.4186

SheriLasley@aol.com Visit our web site at www.SiestaKeyNow.com

The Th


14B

SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

#1 Agent in the Siesta Key Office for 23 years!

Betsy

de MANIO

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

Escape the Cold! It’s Time to Own Your Own Piece of Paradise Magnificent Contemporary Bayfront Estate!

852 Siesta Drive

Realtor®

office: 941-349-2922 cell: 941-914-5540 betsy@betsydemanio.com

Siesta Key Beachfront and Just Blocks from Siesta Key Village

500 Beach Road #1

• 6 En-suite Bedrooms plus office, 7.5 baths, 5,646 SF • 2 Roof top decks with panoramic views of the • Spectacular Bay views from almost every room! Bay and Downtown Sarasota • Bayfront pool & spa, big boat dockage and lift • Built in 2006 this home is made to entertain! • Facing south with views down the bay MLS A3989646 $3,630,000

Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate 5145 Ocean Blvd., Sarasota, FL Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate Owned and Operated by NRT,LLC

• 2,491 SF, 3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths, 4 Car Garage. • 1 of 3 freestanding condos that make up Siesta • Community pool and private walkway to beach. Beach House. • 15’ x 20’ bonus room! • Gulf Views! • Open kitchen with breakfast bar. MLS A3983728 $1,999,000

Voted Sarasota Magazine’s Five Star Agent “Best in Client Satisfaction” 8 Years in a Row Coldwell Banker - International President’s Premier Agent

Unobstructed Gulf Views

Expansive gulf front on Siesta Key 26 Sandy Hook Road

NEW LISTING

Luxury at its finest is now available...

Fabulous property with a Carribean flair!

Fabulous gated 3BR/3BA built in 2004. Two level condo has gorgeous full gulf views. Two Master Suites, Guest Room, Owner’s office and private elevator. 3,247 sf, over 2,000 sf of outdoor living.3CG. Beach access directly across the street, roof top terrace. gulf side pool. MLSA3985714 $2,499,000

4bed/3.5ba full Gulf front home located in the highly sought after Estate area of the key. Lusciously landscaped grounds,dual gates/ driveways, gulf sidepool,newer concrete seawall& more!Full sunset views 365 days a year! (property subdivided into 3 lots for multiple development potential). MLSA3987243 4,245,000

Michael Hays

“Let me help you find your dream home....”

Realtor®

941.376.1826

278 feet of Gulf Frontage!

Shown by Appointment

Built in 2003 - 5,033 SF Anchor Builders built Home with Custom Quality Amenities, 4BD/4BA +pool bath and powder room, Summer Room/Outdoor Kitchen with Fireplace, Office, Elevator, Open Floor Plan, 5 Balconies, Central Vacuum, Wine Room. Heated Pool/Spa, Fire Pit, 10+ Car Garage, Crown Molding, Elevated 40’ Ceilings, Built-ins, Private Deeded Beach Access, Tropical Plantings, Panoramic view of the Gulf. Seeing is Believing!! MLS#3984182 $6,800,000 Ron Stahl 941 374 1671 Ron Stahl Realty rstahlrlty@aol.com 132317

Discriminating Tastes Require Uncompromising Results You Expect More …

ERIC TEOH

941-735-2199 Eric@teamrenick.com

MICHAEL RENICK

941-400-8735 Mike@teamrenick.com

For Buyers & Sellers

Anna Maria Island • Bird Key • Bradenton • Bradenton Beach • Holmes Beach • Lido Key • Longboat Key • Sarasota • St. Armands • Siesta Key ED

ST T LI JUS

First floor condo with a view of the Gulf! $295,000

No stairs to climb as you enter this unit. Lots of potential with this two bedroom, one bath condo. First floor view of the Gulf. Perfect for an Investment Property, Second Home, or a Vacation Getaway. Seaplace Assoc. Longboat Key Condo MLS#: A3990198

T JUS

Anna Maria

$1,368,000

Based Income Property – 5 Units Spectacular Ocean views from every apartment - corner lot! Great opportunity to live in one unit and make money renting the other units This is a must see for any experienced or new investor! Current Tenants have expressed a desire to remain MLS#: A3988421

Windward Bay

$379,000

Longboat Key Canal Front Villa Fully Furnished, Move-in ready 3BD, 2BA, Split Plan Attached Carport, Separate Inside Utility Room Windward Bay Offers: 2 Pools, 2 Tennis Courts, Fitness Ctr. 2 Marinas with available Boat Docks MLS#: A3978884

D

UCE

RED

OUR HOUSE AT BEACH

$499,000

Siesta Key… Florida living at its finest! This 2 bedroom/2 bath condo looks out over the gorgeous beach. This unit offers many updates/upgrades. Whether you are looking for a primary home, second home or a great investment opportunity, you have found it here! MLS# A3989534 IVE T ACTNTRAC O /C

W

Unit is priced to sell! Two bedroom, Two Bath unit Boat Slips available for rent on property. Perfect for an Investment Property, Second Home, or a Vacation get away. Windward Bay Assoc. Longboat Key Condo MLS#: A3990197

www.TeamRenick.com

Cute! Cute! Cute!

$399,000

This is the one you have been looking for! Seaplace Assoc. Longboat Key Condo (G6 Building) Partially Updated, Move-in ready 2BD, 2BA Seaplace Offers 2 Pools, 1 Kiddie Pool, 2 Hot Tubs, 3 Tennis Courts, and more! MLS#: A3985138

Direct Gulf View!

$430,000

Great Price! Covered Parking! Great Opportunity! Seaplace Assoc. Longboat Key Condo (G6 Building) Many Updates, Move-in ready 2BD, 2BA Offered Turnkey Furnished, Seaplace Offers 2 Pools, 1 Kiddie Pool, 2 Hot Tubs, 3 Tennis Courts, and more! MLS#: A3987966

Like us on facebook.com/TeamRenick

Gorgeous Condo

$499,999

2BR/2Bath fully Renovated Condo with a Great Gulf View! Granite in the Kitchen & Bathrooms, Stainless Steel Appliances Upgraded Cabinets Throughout Seaplace Assoc. Longboat Key Condo (Top Floor, Desirable M1 Building) Offered Turnkey Furnished MLS#: A3989071

131407

Penthouse Level condo with a view of the Bay! $329,000


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

Judie Berger

Trust THE REALTOR WITH PROVEN RESULTS

open sunday 1-4 PM open sunday 1-4 PM

13211 Palmers Creek Terrace - $1,755,000

Luxurious Executive Country Club Estate Home on private preserve lot. 5-6 beds/5.5 baths, spectacular pool & spa

5450 Shadow Lawn Drive - $795,000

Remodeled Siesta Key waterfront home near the beach on the Grand Canal. Coastal-inspired interior with 3 beds/2 baths

15B

recently sold

new listing

449 Canal Road - $1,295,000

5303 Cape Leyte Drive - $995,000

Waterfront Key West-inspired townhome, 3 beds/3 baths, boat dock, private pool and lanai, great investment property.

Waterfont pool home on the Grand Canal near Siesta Beach, 4 beds/3 baths, pool and 2-car garage.

SOLD

SOLD

709 Treasure Boat Way - $1,550,000

5505 Cape Leyte Drive - $655,000

Custom 4 beds/3 baths Siesta Key waterfront pool home. Exquisite appointments, large patio, and outdoor kitchen – perfect for entertaining

105’ Siesta Key waterfront, minutes to Siesta Beach, terrazzo floors, 3 beds/2 baths, 2-car garage

Your

Top producer on SieSTa Key - premier SoTheby’S inTernaTional realTy a leader in SaraSoTa reSidenTial SaleS VoTed SaraSoTa magazine’S FiVe STar agenT “beST in clienT SaTiSFacTion” 7 yearS in a row Specializing in luxury marKeTing and negoTiaTion diScreeT conSulTaTionS

x 1229 Point Crisp Road - $2,850,000 x 7508 Midnight Pass Road - $2,275,000 x 709 Treasure Boat Way - $1,550,000 x 701 Treasure Boat Way - $1,390,000 x 1718 Bayview Drive - $1,175,000 x 1245 Sea Plume Way - $1,150,000 x 524 N. Spoonbill Drive - $1,150,000 x 452 Canal Road - $1,140,000 x 5415 Azure Way - $1,100,000 x 7220 Proctor Road - $1,000,000 x 1529 Eastbrook Drive - $999,500 x 222 Osprey Point Drive - $950,000 x 1240 Northport Drive - $935,000 x 631 Waterside Way - $925,000 x 1529 Key Royale Drive - $890,000 x 757 Siesta Key Circle - $880,000 x 625 Tremont Street - $820,000 x 618 Owl Way - $800,000 x 1919 Grove Street - $745,000 x 5440 Avenida del Mare - $745,000 x 757 Tropical Circle - $730,000 x 1226 Sea Plume Way - $680,000 x 550 Commonwealth Drive - $670,000 x 5585 Contento Drive - $665,000 x 3210 Old Oak Drive - $665,000 x 5505 Cape Leyte Drive - $655,000 x 5300 Ocean Boulevard #903 - $650,000 x 5770 Midnight Pass Road, 502 - $641,000 x 8528 Woodbriar Rd - $550,000 x 13217 Bridgeport Crossing - $515,750 x 5128 Windward Avenue - $500,000

Expert

Siesta Key

941.479.3880

Judie Berger

PA, ABR, GRI

Judie.Berger@SothebysRealty.com

HOMESOFSARASOTA.com Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered service marks used with permission. Each office is independently owned and operated. Equal Housing Opportunity. 132328

Building Bridges ...between European and U.S. Buyers and Sellers 8 Winslow Place Buttonwood Harbor Longboat Key

Stunning 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, light & bright home with huge windows to bring awesome water views from every room. Resort style pool with spa and pergola and wonderful tropical landscaping on beautiful Cranes Bayou. Large boat dock with excellent boating water. Only minutes to the Intracoastal and no fixed bridge to the Gulf. Beach access across the street. Close to the new Publix and only minutes to St. www.8Winslow.com Armands and downtown Sarasota. Price: $2,600,000

www.4762Watermark.com

4762 Watermark Lane, Turtle Rock, Palmer Ranch

Wow! For privacy and views this is the best! A grand 2 story custom home in a spectacular setting overlooking the lake and preserve of Turtle Rock. 4BR, 3BA plus 2-half baths, office, formal living and dining rooms, dream kitchen with stailesss steel appliances, Jenn-Aire gas cooktop and grill, granite counter tops and custom cherry cabinets. Price: $749,000

Gabriele Charity Rudi Weiss 941.685.6649

Mail@CharityWeiss.com

2024 Alameda Ave Whitaker Bayou Sarasota

Exquisite, newly built custom home. The influence of the West Indies combine with the finest materials gives this home truly a one-of-a-kind feeling. Whitaker Bayou offers wonderful water views and great boating water. Built with the highest quality it offers 4 Bedroom, 4 ½ Baths plus den. The Master bedroom is on the upper level with a private sundeck. Pool & spa, boat dock and ramp, plus a garage for jet skis and kayaks and more. Price: $1,925,000

www.PalmPlaceCondo.com

755 South Palm Ave, #202, Sarasota

www.2024Alameda.com

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

Local philanthropist’s office is pink with passion. PAGE 12

FOOD

Guests enjoy ‘Forks & Corks’ at The Grand Tasting. PAGE 14

ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT | COLORFUL LIFE

“I refuse to listen to people who say there’s nothing here,” Tim Jaeger says.

BLACK TIE

The Circus Arts Conservatory Gala PAGE 15 by Mallory Gnaegy | A&E Editor

Photo by Mallory Gnaegy

Jaeger rules the

ROOST Other artists have big-city dreams, but Tim Jaeger sees Sarasota as a blank canvas. ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT COVER STORY CONTINUED ON PAGE 2


2

DIVERSIONS

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: COLORFUL LIFE

by Mallory Gnaegy | A&E Editor (continued from page 1)

JAEGER RULES

THE ROOST Other artists have big-city dreams, but Tim Jaeger sees Sarasota as a blank canvas.

A

rtist Tim Jaeger spent a few summers living in a 900-year-old chateau/ vineyard/ and animal sanctuary in southern France beginning in 2008. In a conversation about his career, Jaegar mentions this almost as an afterthought, yet the experience was considerably influential. It’s why he started painting roosters, the series for which he’s most well known. Ah, the mark of a prolific artist. Jaeger posts up on a red chair where he is drinking coffee from a blue plastic cup in his garage-turned-studio-space off University Parkway. Jaeger is a Sarasota-based artist thriving in this city — and he’s proud to paint it red, blue, yellow or any other color he chooses. Behind him are four canvases painted with loose sketches

Photo by Mallory Gnaegy

“It takes a lot of work to survive as an artist; you have to go triple time in order to go single time,” Tim Jaeger says.

of Sarasota Ballet dancers; he is just beginning to work on them — one of his many projects. Jaeger dons bright yellow flip-flops in 50-degree weather and his gray Tshirt and jeans are as paint-splattered as a Pollock. He explains that the owners of the chateau split their time between France and Sarasota, where they met Jaeger at the now-defunct Canvas Café in Towles Court — Jaeger was the gallery director at the restaurant/gallery. The couple covered his expenses in France as a commission for two of his works and a wine-bottle label. “I was the artist guy walking around the south of France drinking wine and painting animals,” he says with a laugh. His studio was on an overgrown portion of the property in Montret, France. Occasionally, he’d buy a rooster at the market, take it back to his studio and let it roam around while he painted it. The animal sanctuary’s collection of roosters grew to more than 30 while Jaeger lived at what he lovingly refers to as “the most heavenly art jail.” There wasn’t a phone, computer or TV, and Jaeger doesn’t speak French — the

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3

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT perfect parameters for cranking out 40 to 50 paintings a month. This relationship is exemplary of the kind of networks Jaeger has built since moving to Sarasota from Kentucky in 1998, when he started his education at Ringling College of Art and Design. It’s why the charismatic artist’s name is all over Sarasota. “There’s always something I’m doing,” he says. Jaeger just painted one of the six pianos featured in the Arts and Cultural Alliance of Sarasota County’s public art project. Go figure, there’s a rooster on it. He works at Selby Gallery helping with the day-to-day operations of the teaching gallery. He curated the “All in the Family” exhibit at The Ice House and will curate the David Budd retrospective there this spring. He founded Sarasota Visual Arts, an online visual art news source relating to Sarasota and surrounding communities. He’s represented by State of the Arts Gallery. His work is featured at trendy restaurant Indigenous and at former Sarasota chef Derek Barnes’ new establishment in Bradenton. And he just joined the Public Art Committee. Out of all his activites, Jaeger is particularly excited about his new collaborative series featuring Sarasota Ballet dancers. Jaeger gets up from the chair and flips through a series of black-andwhite photographs he took at their rehearsals for John Ringling’s Circus Nutcracker. He points to a photo of two boys snacking on Cheez-Its in the corner during rehearsal. He shows

another of two dancers having a conversation — one is nonchalantly en pointe. He turns these photos into sketches and then into paintings. Right now, he’s working on a painting of one dancer fixing the broken strap of another dancer’s costume. He’s hoping to break down the persona of the perfect ballerina by focusing on their daily lives. He has wanted to do this project combining visual arts with the performance arts for awhile. “I think it’s really all tied together in the end,” he says. “When we work as a community, we can share experiences and ideas and we just get stronger.” Jaegar says it’s difficult to succeed as a fine artist. It’s a myth that someone is going to stumble across your studio and find you — young artists need to do the legwork. Jaeger worked four or five jobs to supplement his income when he first graduated in 2002; he did everything from hanging paintings, to dog-sitting and creating logos for guns. He hates it when people ask him why he doesn’t live in a big city. “We have the resources here,” he says. He advises younger artists to plug in to the arts scene and meet people. He doesn’t understand why they’d want to go to a big city — the blank canvas for success is here. Plus, he says, there is a beach, a nice downtown, impeccable food, the sunshine, a community of enthusiasts and great organizations that support the arts. “Why would I want to move?” he says.

"CS # 15" (36 inches by 48 inches) available at Indigenous Restaurant

A sketch of one of the Sarasota Ballet pieces Jaeger is currently painting.

From left: "Moment of Pause" (48 inches by 60 inches); "CS # 6" (36 inches by 48 inches); and "Backstage in Violet" (48 inches by 60 inches) all on display at State of the Arts Gallery.

YOUROBSERVER.COM // See a video of Tim Jaeger talking about his new series featuring Sarasota Ballet dancers.

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DIVERSIONS

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

CALENDAR

A&E EDITOR’S PICKS THURSDAY, JAN. 30

‘Last Lists of My Mad Mother’ 8 p.m. at The Players Theatre Runs through Feb. 9. Tickets $15. Call 365-2494. Masterworks Series: ‘Colors of Love’ Sarasota Orchestra 8 p.m. at Neel Performing Arts Center (Thursday) 8 p.m. at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall (Friday and Saturday) 2:30 p.m. at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall (Sunday) Tickets $30 to $84. Call 953-3434.

FRIDAY, JAN. 31

‘The Colors that Surround Me’ Exhibit by Bettina Sego Harmony Gallery at the Beatrice Friedman Symphony Center On display through March 3. Call 953-4252.

ART

by Mallory Gnaegy | A&E Editor

FESTIVAL

MUSIC

DANCE

“SARASOTA SUNDAY” BY ROBERT BAXTER

Sousa Concert 7 p.m. at Riverview Performing Arts Center Donation $5. Call 923-1484. Program Four: Balanchine, Tuckett and Ashton Sarasota Ballet 8 p.m at FSU Center for the Performing Arts Runs through Feb. 3. Tickets start at $30. Call 359-0099, Ext. 101.

SATURDAY, FEB. 1

7th annual Grand Ovation Noon at Main Street, Lakewood Ranch. Free. Call 757-1548. Recital Series: Ritz Chamber Players Artist Series Concerts of Sarasota 7:30 p.m. at Historic Asolo Theater Runs through Sunday. Tickets $25 to $45. Call 360-7399.

‘R. Luke Dubois — Now’ The Ringling On display through May 4. Call 359-5700.

Winterfest at the Park 10 a.m. at Philippi Estate Park Free. Call 379-0951.

Jazz at Two: Kitt Moran, vocalist The Jazz Club of Sarasota 2 p.m. at Unitarian Universalist

Asolo Rep’s ‘American Family Reunion’ 7 p.m. at Asolo Repertory Theatre Call 351-8000.

SUNDAY, FEB. 2

SP

STLAIYLINLG

AROUND TOWN

P

Church of Sarasota Tickets $7 to $12. Call 366-1552.

S CHEECF’IAL

FRAMES

THEATER

‘Pageant’ runs through Feb. 2, at The Players Theatre. ‘The Whipping Man’ runs through Feb. 2, at Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe.

MEDIUM

Oil on canvas. (28 inches by 36 inches)

ON DISPLAY ...

“Nouveaux Two Déjà-vu” is on display from Feb. 7 through March 3, at Dabbert Gallery, 76 S. Palm Ave. “It’s a combination of my sketchbook observations and my imagination. In this particular painting I used sketches (I made) in Santa Barbara, Calif., in Sarasota and France. They are all cobbled together. And

Theatre. Runs through April 5. Tickets $19 to $42. Call 366-9000.

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5

Great Performer Series: East Coast Chamber Orchestra Sarasota Concert Association 8 p.m. at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall Tickets $40 to $75. Call 955-0040.

‘Daddy Long Legs’ 8 p.m. at Florida Studio

JACK DUSTY’S MARKET ENTRÉE WHERE: Found at Jack Dusty’s

first birthday celebration, 1111 Ritz Carlton Drive.

EGO DESIGNS TRUNK SHOW

‘ARTmuse Program: Lisa Hoke’ runs through Feb. 4, at Historic Sarasota High School.

if the painting requires things, when I need them, I go through my sketchbook and find them. (I used sketches) from the corner of Palm Avenue and Main Street where there is an outdoor café. I have lunch there quite often and I make sketches of people going by and I used that in my sketchbook. The trees in the background and some of the architecture is from Santa Barbara, and there’s probably some French stuff in there, too.”

TUESDAY, FEB. 4

Meet the Artists of ‘Il Travatore’ 5 p.m. at Sarasota Opera House Tickets $15. Call 328-1300.

Photo courtesy Joe Sedik

‘Boeing, Boeing’ runs through Feb. 2, at Venice Theatre.

‘The Prima Donettes’ runs through Feb. 7, at Florida Studio Theatre. ‘Delval Divas’ runs through Feb. 9, at Island Players. ‘Thurgood’ runs through Feb. 22, at Florida Studio Theatre. ‘Other Desert Cities’ runs through Feb. 26, at Asolo Repertory Theatre. ‘Philadelphia, Here I Come!’ runs through Feb. 27, at Asolo Repertory Theatre. ‘Vanya & Sonia & Masha & Spike’ runs through April 13, at Asolo Repertory Theatre. ‘Poems, Prayers and Promises’ runs through April 20, at Florida Studio Theatre.

WHAT: Jack Dusty’s Market Entrée (vegetarian, $23).

greens atop a cooked red-pepper puree.

INGREDIENTS: The cooked puree

INGREDIENTS SOURCED FROM:

Faithful Farms, Worden’s Farm, Simply Organix and Suncoast Food Alliance

and vegetables vary each week. In this salad is bulgur wheat, watermelon radish, edible dirt and baby

R. Luke Dubois - “Now” WHEN: Friday, Jan. 31 to Sunday, May 4

FEBRUARY 6TH - 8TH 10AM - 6PM

WHERE: The Ringling COST: $25 New York based artist R. Luke Dubois’ exhibit, “Now”, will be the first solo exhibit at the Ringling. The exhibition is an exploration of pop culture by mining data and transforming it into visual art.

DESIGNER ELLEN GIENGER WILL FLY IN WITH HER HAND PAINTED / DYED SILK ENSEMBLES FOR EVERY OCCASION. HORS D’OEUVRES & WINE WILL BE SERVED

For a list of local ev ents, or to submit your own, visit ThisWeekI nS

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: BACKSTAGE PASS

5

by Mallory Gnaegy | A&E Editor

John Goodman passes Sarasota Concert Association baton IF YOU GO East Coast Chamber Orchestra East Coast Chamber Orchestra is a collective of musicians from renowned orchestras and chamber groups from around the world. They play less than 10 concerts a year. When: 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 5 Where: Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, 777 N. Tamiami Trail Cost: Tickets are $40 to $70 Info: Call 955-0040 or visit scasarasota.org.

Mallory Gnaegy

“The board is in good hands with the new president, Joy McIntyre,” says John Goodman, former president of Sarasota Concert Association. formances sell out. In 2003, he joined the board, and in 2005 he became president. As president, he’s proud the organization was always in the black — even through the recession. He’s also proud that it is an amiable board full of people willing to serve a great deal of time. The challenges the group faces are the same with other classical-

music groups around the country — namely, attracting a younger audience. He also thinks it is becoming more difficult to fill a season with household names in this genre because there is not the same exposure to classical music as 30 years ago. He hopes it can continue without having to sacrifice the original intention of focusing on classical music.

“We shouldn’t sell out,” he says. “Either we have to find an audience for the real thing we are offering or don’t offer it.” He doesn’t think all of the board members agree with him on this aspect, but he doesn’t want to be a backseat driver. For now, he’s content in letting his friend Joy McIntyre run the ship — it’s in good hands, he says. His plea is that people spread the word about what he thinks is an exceptional series. “I think that the (people) who value SCA need to promote it,” he says. “It’s one of the very rich cultural organizations in the city, and I think we’d be very poor without it both for the Great Performers Series and for Munchtime Musicales.”

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a.m. Feb. 27 at the Longboat Key Club. Tickets are $95. When Goodman first moved here from Boston in 2002, tickets to the series were hard to come by. He could only get them from a friend on the board. He says some people still have the belief that tickets are hard to get, but he promises it is not as difficult today, though a few of the per-

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If you ask John Goodman what his favorite Sarasota Concert Association performances have been, he’ll rattle off a list of concert pianists. He sits in his home at Plymouth Harbor, where he speaks about enjoying the concert by Grammy-winning artist Emanuel Ax, the unique recitalist Marc-André Hamelin as well as Lang Lang, one of the most recognizable names who have performed in the series. The former president of Sarasota Concert Association’s past career was teaching music theory and composition at Boston University School of Music — it’s no wonder the pianist gravitates toward those like himself. He’s been playing since he was 3 years old. For the past 69 years, Sarasota Concert Association has brought contemporary classical-music performers from around the world to perform in its Great Performers Series at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall. Tickets range from $40 to $75, or less if you purchase a subscription series. Its mission is to provide as inexpensive tickets as possible. It also hosts Munchtime Musicales, a series of free community concerts featuring local artists. Goodman was the president of SCA for eight years. In April, the association named Joy McIntyre as its new president. She was Goodman’s friend and former colleague from Boston University since 1987. SCA is honoring his service at a luncheon featuring a performance by Metropolitan Opera baritone Jason Stearns at 11:30


6

DIVERSIONS

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: SPOTLIGHT

by Mallory Gnaegy | A&E Editor

Sarasota Orchestra and Gloria Musicae give a behind-the-scenes look All eyes are on Maestro Andrew Lane, Sarasota Orchestra’s Pops Series conductor. He raises his hands cueing Sarasota Orchestra, the three guest Broadway artists and chorus, Gloria Musicae. It’s Thursday Jan. 23, the day before Sarasota Orchestra’s first Pops Series concert “Broadway Bound.” The show is sold out both nights at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall. There’s a drum kit, an electric guitar and an electric bass. Musicians don jeans for rehearsal, and musician jokes are cracked between playing and singing. It’s the kind of thing you don’t typically get to see. Every musician learned the familiar show tunes before rehearsing with his or her respective groups (as any professional musician would).

Though, it came a little easier for the guest vocalists who have performed some of the music hundreds of times. For instance, Susan Egan, the original Belle in Broadway’s “Disney’s Beauty and the Beast” who also starred on Broadway as Millie in “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” sang a few songs from this repertoire. It was the same for the other two guests artists, Gary Mauer and Christiane Noll. The musicians had different scores from the vocalists, who had different scores from the vocal ensemble, who had a different score from Andrew Lane — but with a few little pencil marks, it came together nicely. The hardest part of the process was getting the show tunes out of the musicians’ heads once the concert ended.

IF YOU GO Sarasota Orchestra Pops Series: Satchmo, Fats & The Duke When: 8 p.m. Friday, March 28 and Saturday, March 29 Where: Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall, 777 N. Tamiami Trail Cost: Tickets $32 to $69 Info: Call 953-3434 or visit sarasotaorchestra.org. Gloria Musicae: A Night at the Opera When: 7 p.m. Sunday, March 16

Artistic Director Joseph Holt of Gloria Musicae

John Miller, principal double bass

Where: First United Methodist Church, 104 S. Pineapple Ave. Cost: Tickets $31.50 Info: Call 955-7676 or visit gloriamusicae.org.

 Maestro Andrew Lane directs Sarasota Orchestra  Guest artist Gary Mauer at Thursday's rehearsal

James Ranson, Esther Dickmann, Alan Corey, Trine Bolling and Lynne Mesky of Gloria Musicae

Photos by Mallory Gnaegy

Daniel Jordan, principal violin

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// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: HIGHLIGHTS

7

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Untitled head by Jun Kaneko

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Season of Sculpture opens an exhibit of small works by Mallory Gnaegy | A&E Editor Sculptural work similar to those lining Sarasota’s bayfront adorns the exterior entrance and lobby of the Sarasota HeraldTribune building. The exhibition, “Small Works,” opened Jan. 22; it features work from the eight artists currently on display in season seven of Sarasota Season of Sculp-

ture. The artists include Heinz Aeschilmann, Hans Van de Bovenkamp, Robert Chambers, Rick Herzog, Linda Howard, Jun Kaneko, Jae-Hyo Lee and Boaz Vaadia. In addition to the bayfront artists, the exhibit includes two local artists, David Peterson and Jerry Soble. Richard Herzog, Linda Howard, Peterson and Soble were present at a reception Jan. 22. The exhibit will run through May 30.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: HIGHLIGHTS ‘VANYA AND SONIA AND MASHA AND SPIKE’ OPENING NIGHT Benefiting Asolo Repertory Theatre Friday, Jan. 24, at Asolo Repertory Theatre

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 John Lucas with Glo and Richard Reber

Howard Millman and Carolyn Michel

The table décor at the VIP pre-show party for “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike.”

Jessica and Octavio Ortiz

Photos by Heather Merriman

Body FX The future is here!

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Saturday, February 1 at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, February 2 at 7:30 p.m.

In the Historic Asolo Theater at The Ringling Museum of Art

R I T Z C H A M B E R P L AY E R S

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Kelly Hall-Tompkins Violin Tahirah Whittington Cello Terrance Patterson Clarinet

after

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Friday, February 7th 7:00pm Saturday, February 8th 7:00pm

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With additional support from Iberia Bank, WUSF Public Media, and Spotlight Graphics

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

9

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: REVIEWS

THEATER // ‘Other Desert Cities’

Courtesy photo

“Other Desert Cities” runs through Feb. 27, at the FSU Center for the Performing Arts, 5555 N. Tamiami Trail, Sarasota. Call 351-8000 or visit asolorep.org for more information. Call it the boiling-frog trick. Put the frog in the pot and turn up the heat. Do it slowly, and the frog never notices. Baitz’s play starts out in sitcom land. Slowly, slowly, it takes you into the boxing ring — as it should. A good play is like a prize fight. The playwright announces the contenders. In this corner: a liberal writer. In that corner: her oldschool Republican parents. Fight! The fight feels rigged at first. You get the sense the playwright tied Lyman and Polly’s hands behind their backs to make them easy targets for Republican bashing. Lyman is a Hollywood actor who specialized in death scenes and found a second life as a rightwing policy flack. J. Kenneth Campbell plays him with the right note of Ted Baxter slickness. Polly (Lauren Klein) is a Texas fireball with an acid wit and an absolute conviction that the right way and her way are the same thing. Mom and Dad feel like upscale Archie Bunkers; strawmen, designed to be dislikable. And, boy, does Brooke dislike them. Her memoir indicts them for her brother’s suicide — a bomb she drops at Christmas. Brooke’s body language indicts

them, too. Lucy Lavely plays this character as a smoldering mass of need, hurt and anger. But, in her passive-aggressive way, Brooke is just as combative as her mom — and the fight goes on. Brooke’s brother, Trip, and her aunt stay safely behind the ropes while making color commentary. Trip seems to be the only one with any sense in the Wyeth family. Benjamin Williamson plays him with the knowing sneer of a young Jack Nicholson. Brooke’s addled Aunt Silda has her own kind of sense. It’s an intermittent intelligence, flickering on and off like an old neon sign. Caroline Michel gets into this character’s skin. Her performance is a comic, crowd-pleasing delight. The Wyeth bout unfolds in the arena of a mid-century modern manse crafted by Judy Gailen. This family may be miserable, but they live in a really cool house. So, who wins the fight?

That would be telling. At root, fights about politics are fights about philosophy. There’s an obvious philosophical counter to Brooke’s blame: Your brother had blood on his hands. Blame him, not us. It’s the obvious thing to say, but her parents never say it. Strawmen, right? Wrong. What I assumed was dishonesty was a feint. Baitz cleverly tricks you into buying Brooke’s damning judgment of her parents. He gets you on Brooke’s side. He manipulates you into believing the character assassination of a book you haven’t read. Then he hits you with his final sucker punch. I won’t spoil it. But I will say: The arguments of the Left and Right can feel as scripted as championship wrestling. Each has its stock cast of good guys and bad guys. Each has its standard rants. But the human heart is more complicated than that. The human family is, too. — Marty Fugate

YOUROBSERVER.COM // Read Marty Fugate’s review of “Philadelphia, Here I Come!” and Popcorn Bob’s Movie Magic reviews.

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America has been the arena for a running brawl between the Left and Right since before Upton Sinclair was in diapers. For some, the factional fight is a family feud. The Asolo Rep’s production of Jon Robin Baitz’s “Other Desert Cities” introduces us to one such family. Meet the Wyeths! They’re an HBO sitcom-worthy grab bag of dysfunctionality. They’re living in Palm Springs — and learning lessons about life and love. Aunt Silda is a happy dry drunk. Mom and Dad are two rock-ribbed Reagan Republicans named Polly and Lyman. Their son, Trip, produces a cheesy reality TV show. Their daughter, Brooke, is a writer who just can’t make it in the real world. Baitz (a Hollywood refusnik) draws us in with happy sitcom rhythms. It’s a trick. You put your guard down — then he hits you. Dark material surfaces, written material. After a long bout of writer’s block and a spell in a mental institution, Brooke is about to publish a tell-all memoir spilling a painful family tragedy all over its pages. Back in the 1970s, Brooke’s older brother, Henry, helped some Weather Underground-variety radicals blow up an Army recruiting center, burning a janitor alive in the process. According to Brooke’s memoir, Henry came to his parents for help. They rejected him, and he killed himself. Brooke’s book blames her parents and their rigid Republican values. Liberal hope fiend that she is, Brooke wants her parents’ approval before she publishes this book. She does not get it. Director Greg Leaming gets it. He unpacks Baitz’s dense text and makes you feel like you’re looking at real human beings interacting in space and time. A good play doesn’t feel like a play; it feels like eavesdropping. In Leaming’s hands, that’s what you feel. That, and a sense of tension. It’s a tough trick to pull off, but he does it.


10

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: REVIEWS

CIRCUS SARASOTA

WONDERSTRUCK PRESENTS

MUSIC // Haifa Symphony Orchestra of Israel

Friday, Feb 7 – Sunday, Feb 23, 2014

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The Circus Arts Conservatory is a 501(c)3 non-profit performing arts educational organization

Remember the teacher you had in high school who informed the class he was going to “mark on a curve” to put everyone in the best possible light? That’s what I’m going to be doing in this review of the recent Haifa Symphony Orchestra of Israel concert performed at the Van Wezel. By any standards of musical excellence, this ensemble must be considered a community orchestra; one that hopes to become professional but, for now, is more of an amateur group that loves to make music. Founded in 1950, the orchestra — according to the program notes — “has become the focal point of musical life in Haifa and the north of Israel.” It has several thousand subscribers “of all ages” who attend its six subscription programs. And the orchestra has done great things for the community: reaching out to children, holding master classes and offering the people of northern Israel opportunities to hear the great music they love. Last week’s concert in Sarasota was the orchestra’s first performance of its first American tour, and it tried extremely hard to live up to the sparkling image Americans have of Israeli musicians. The Israel Philharmonic, for instance, isn’t exactly chopped liver. The Haifa musicians succeeded primarily in showing us they are amateurs in the best sense of the word: They love music and they love to play. Led by Professor Boguslaw Dawidow, the ensemble’s principal guest conductor, the program was traditional: overture, concerto, symphony. Starting with Weber’s Overture to “Euryanthe,” the musicians showed little bite in their tone and several problems with intonation as well as entrances in every section. The same difficulties showed up in

Tchaikovsky’s passionate B-flat major Piano Concerto with soloist Roman Rabinovich. The brass was too loud; the strings weren’t together; the forte sections of the work drowned out the pianist; and there was little collaboration between the soloist and conductor. The wonderful pizzicato strings that open the second movement were sloppy and, again, the bite that’s so important in plucked playing was missing. Rabinovich, who seems like a musical young man with a decent technique (he’s listed as having been a child prodigy and winner of a couple of prestigious competitions), was not up to the demands of the concerto and played with little understanding of the style and little musical definition. The orchestra seemed a little more comfortable with Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7. Perhaps it had played it more often or had more rehearsal time with the work. Still, there was little attention to dynamics and a general lack of energy, and there were many wrong notes and inaccurate entrances. Even the rests were perfunctory. Composers write rests into music with the idea that those silences are part of the tapestry of sound. In the hands of Dawidow and the Haifa Symphony, the rests were merely empty spaces, making the music disjointed and superficial. However, the two (yes, two) encores the orchestra played were probably the best parts of the concert. Starting with an excerpt from “Schindler’s List,” featuring the excellent viola soloist Avshalom Sarid, we heard a ravishingly beautiful sound and a sense of style we had not heard in the earlier works. A fun reading of “Stars and Stripes,” though barely audible because of the rhythmic clapping from the audience, encouraged by the conductor, was rousing and heartfelt. It’s terrific that this orchestra has the support to tour. The more its musicians play for different audiences, the more they’ll learn and, we hope, the better they’ll get. Love of music-making is what counts. Should that love be foisted on a public paying top dollar? That’s the subject of a different column. — June LeBell

Taste Of& FASHION TheSHOW Keys Fine Italian Jewelry Trunk Show

February 5th to 17th

Presented By The Longboat Key Garden Club - Not Your Mother’s Garden Club: An Eco-Friendly Philanthropic Organization -

For the first time in the United States, Dr. Giuseppe Rajola, one of the world's foremost authorities on coral and pearls, will host these special events in partnership with TreborStyle.com.

What: Restaurants From The Keys Present Tastings, 2 Glasses Of Complimentary Wine Or Soft Drinks;

February 6th, 6 to 8 p.m.

Fashions Modeled From Main Street Traders

Meet the Designer Cocktail Reception & Runway Show

PARTICIPATING RESTAURANTS: Blue Dolphin Café Bridge Street Bistro Café L’Europe Chart House Crab And Fin Dry Dock Restaurant Waterfront Grill Harry’s Continental Kitchen Lido Beach Grille

Lido Beach Holiday Inn Longboat Key Club And Resort Longboat Hilton Beachfront Resort Mar Vista Dockside Restaurant & Pub Old Salty Dog Sarasota Yogurt Company The Feast Tommy Bahama Restaurant

Models: Phyllis Black, Felipe Cava, Clyde Chapelle, Edith Barr Dunn, Juan Florensa, Victoria Jacobson, Andy Lappin, Jeff Mayers, Ben Moussa, Kip O’Neil, Richard Perlman, Fanny Younger

February 7th, 11 a.m. Sciacca Coral - Its History and Mystery

February 7th, 1 p.m. Pearls - The Creation of a Gem Presented by

All events are free and open to the public.

Emcee: Matt Walsh

Ten percent of proceeds to benefit:

Where: Longboat Key Club And Resort, Harbourside When: 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, February 5 Why: Proceeds Support Environmental Scholarships To College Students, Grants, Educational Programs And Camp Scholarships Awarded By THE LBKGC

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Southgate Mall by Macy’s & Saks

TreborStyle Jewelry, Dimmitt Automotive Group, Lamborghini of Sarasota, BMW of Sarasota, Anne Touraine Scarves, Buonafide Foods & Wines, T. Georgiano’s, Hearts Desire, Baby Quasar Skincare, madeby gallery, UCP of Southwest Florida, South Florida Museum, Home Resource, Girls Inc. of Sarasota and many more.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

YourObserver.com

11

// ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT: REVIEWS

BOOKS // ‘The Goldfinch’ by Donna Tartt

TRUNK SHOW

antiques scamming, love affairs, unrequited love, the anxiety of harboring a stolen painting or the fact that everything in the novel seamlessly leads back to said painting; the events of Theo’s early life are tied inextricably to the life of Carel Fabritius through a tiny piece of art he made in 1654. Near the end of “The Goldfinch,” Theo writes, “Whatever teaches us to talk to ourselves is important: whatever teaches us to sing ourselves out of despair. But the painting has also taught me that we can speak to each other across time,” which is precisely where painting and story merge. — Alexis Orgera “The Goldfinch” is available at Bookstore1, 1359 Main St., Sarasota. Call 365-7900.

Top 10 fiction titles at Bookstore1 this month:

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4 • 11:00am - 5:00pm

1. “The Goldfinch” by Donna Tartt 2. “Slow Man” by J.M. Coetzee 3. “The Dinner” by Herman Koch 4. “The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed out the Window and Disappeared” by Jonas Jonasson 5. “City of Thieves” by David Benioff 6. “Life After Life” by Kate Atkinson 7. “Me Before You” by Jojo Moyes 8. “The Language of Flowers” by Vanessa Diffenbaugh 9. “The Lowland” by Jhumpa Lahiri 10. “The Secret History” by Donna Tartt

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I once sat in front of a J.M.W. Turner painting for a good hour — the play of light on light, a glint on the sea, a nostalgic yellow dappling prismatic thunderheads. Something happens in your chest — a tightening or a loosening — when you witness a beautiful thing. I was reminded of this elusive pleasure while reading “The Goldfinch,” Donna Tartt’s third novel, in which a painting by the same name engulfs everyone in its path, including this reader. “The Goldfinch” painting is just that, a tiny goldfinch chained to its feedbox against a pale wall, but it informs the novel’s entire action and ethos — even as the painting, itself, remains hidden for most of the book. “The Goldfinch” novel is a lot more: a boy involved in a tragic museum bombing in which his mother dies. A boy who grows up motherless and confused and in possession of a painting he should not have. A boy who feels the weight of the painting equally to the weight of his survivor guilt. A boy who loses everything, including his way, and meanders into manhood, where he begins to come to terms with his life. I’m making “The Goldfinch” sound pretty lofty, but the story, itself, is plain good, and Tartt’s descriptive powers are stunning. From the moment Theo describes his mother as casting “a charmed theatrical light about her so that to see anything through her eyes was to see it in brighter colors than ordinary,” I was in. Theo’s journey takes him from New York City to Las Vegas, and back. After his mother dies, he lives with the wealthy family of a school friend, then with his scheming gambler/addict father in Las Vegas where he meets an unforgettable and essential-to-the-plot Russian boy named Boris, then back to New York City to stay with a magical character named Hobie, from whom he learns the antiques trade. There is even a stint in Amsterdam. I haven’t mentioned Theo’s pill addiction,

ASOLO REPERTORY THEATRE

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FEBRUARY 1, 2014 @ 7:00 PM

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TEMPLE BETH ISRAEL

567 BAY ISLES ROAD, LONGBOAT KEY

TICKETS: $10 RSVP IS REQUIRED JFEDSRQ.ORG/EVENTS.ASPX

By Brian Friel, Directed by Frank Galati Bernard Balbot & Christian Conn; photo by Cliff Roles

Defiant Requiem tells the little-known story of the Nazi concentration camp, Terezin. Led by imprisoned conductor Rafael Schächter, the inmates of Terezin fought back ... with art and music. Through hunger, disease and slave labor, they hold onto their humanity by staging plays, composing opera and writing to record the horrors around them. Now, through soaring concert footage, powerful survivor recollections, cinematic dramatizations and evocative animation, DEFIANT REQUIEM brings the incredible story of this artistic uprising to life.

Andrew Sellon; photo by Frank Atura

341.351.8000 | ASOLOREP.ORG

QUESTIONS?

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Lucy Lavely; photo by Gary Sweetman

By Christopher Durang, Directed by Peter Amster 131376

By Jon Robin Baitz Directed by Greg Leaming

Edgar and Hanna Krasa, survivors of Terezin concentration camp, will speak after the event. Stuart Eizenstat, Chairperson of the Defiant Requiem Foundation, will be introducing the program.

CONTACT LEN STEINBERG AT 941.552.6301 OR LSTEINBERG@JFEDSRQ.ORG


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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// HOME&GARDEN: PINK POWER

by Heather Merriman | Black Tie Assistant Editor

Local philanthropist’s home office embraces with a As a city full of self-starters, entrepreneurs, retirees and active volunteers, Sarasota has an abundance of home offices. But the office in Charlie Ann Syprett’s home — from its pink walls to its portraits of Elvis — offers a one-of-a-kind place for creativity. harlie Ann Syprett may have left her days of practicing law behind, but she has by no means slowed down. Currently, Syprett is the Sarasota Film Festival development director and a consultant for Strategic Philanthropy, among other things, so it’s imperative for this busy lady to have a home office of her own. Syprett’s famous pink office is located in the back corner of her and her husband, Jim’s, Old Florida/Key West-style home on Siesta Key. The space, which represents all that makes Syprett who she is, has stunning views of the bay. “It was a no-brainer,” says Syprett about choosing which room would be home to her office. There were two other rooms available to use when she was choosing her office — one definitely had a man-cave feel and the other had a large closet, but good storage space had nothing on the breathtaking view. “Sometimes I even step out on

 The one thing that is sure to always be on Syprett’s desk: a cup of coffee. “Stop me before I volunteer again,” is the saying on this particular mug — the irony. door porch are also useful for airing out the smell of the glue gun when Syprett is crafting. Along with nonprofit management and fundraising, Syprett’s office doubles as a craft room. In fact, in September Syprett put together the 22 auction baskets for Legal Aid’s Lawyers and Legends event, merging both her creative talents and her passion for philanthropy.

Why pink?

Charlie Ann Syprett’s home office has stunning views of Sarasota Bay. the porch and sit on the couch to take a phone call or to do some

reading — it’s the perfect spot to get some peace and quiet,” says

Syprett. The sliding doors to the out-

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Syprett’s home office initially had a garden theme, but was “always easing toward pink,” as she puts it. In 2007, she redesigned the room and embraced the pink full force. “Pink is my favorite color,” she explains. “I didn’t want it to look like law — beiges, dark woods — I wanted it to have a vibrant, happy look.”

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

13

// HOME&GARDEN

Always on her desk: A cup of coffee and a photograph of her and her husband, Jim Most functional item: Pottery Barn craft table How she describes her office: “Girly girl” Her favorite item: “My Boston terriers”

 Syprett’s girlfriends gave her this “To Charlie Ann, Love Elvis” photograph she has hanging in her office. When making the decision to paint the room pink, Syprett’s husband was in shock, but not as shocked as the painter. “He (the painter) kept saying, ‘This room is pink,’” she recalls. As for Jim, he’s grown to like the room ... sort of. “He likes the fact that I like it,” she says. Photos of her friends and family, Boston terrier collectibles, notes from her grandchildren and gifts friends have given her (such as the life-size Elvis Presley cutout and an Elvis photograph with the words “To Charlie Ann, Love Elvis”) fill her home office as décor but, more importantly, as inspiration. “It keeps you grounded. It reminds me of who I was, who I am and who I will be,” she says.

 “I’ve had Boston terriers since I was in the fourth grade,” says Syprett. Bella is her fifth Boston terrier. Bella’s zebra-print bed is in the office.

 Syprett painted the borders of the walls in her office with chalkboard paint and writes messages to her granddaughters.

The most important aspect of a home office: “Organization — it’s an evolving process. It really can’t be decided how to design your space until you sit in it and use it — you know how you work and what will work for you,” says Syprett. She alters her organization and the overall function of the room depending on the project. In the center of the room is Syprett’s craft table. The table, which she ordered from Pottery Barn Teen, has storage bins on either side — she keeps what she needs for current projects in the three core bins in the table. “From project to project, I tailor my office,” she says. Lighting also plays a big factor in the functionality of a home office. The natural light from the outside coming in through the sliders played a huge part in her choosing the room (along with the view). When choosing the lighting for her office, Syprett experimented with three different fixtures before deciding on one. “It needed to look good and have bright light,” she says. Most important work done in her office: “The work I did for ‘We are Sarasota,’ when I was on the diversity committee — I gave birth to the concept in this room,” she says. Syprett, who tends to become an insomniac when working, created the entire blueprint for the program while working in her office one

 The lighting above Syprett’s craft table is both decorative and functional, producing the bright light she needs for working. night. From that concept, Syprett is now using film as a platform to promote her work with diversity and inclusiveness. Proudest DIY: Syprett loves to paint — along with painting the desk (by herself) in the room, she added a chalkboard border on the walls and to the backboard on her desk. She writes quotes and sayings on the chalkboard relative to what’s going on in the world and what she likes.

 Syprett’s desk workspace — “Pope Francis is a rock star,” is the latest saying she wrote on the chalkboard.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// FOOD&COOKING: HIGHLIGHTS FORKS & CORKS: THE GRAND TASTING Benefiting The Ringling Museum and All Faiths Food Bank Sunday, Jan. 26, at The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art courtyard

Kelly Bierwirth, Lisa Shepard and Jessica Ortiz

Nina Consolo, Chris Enger and Brooke Wyman Kevin Chadwick and Jill Olnstein

Adam Negroski, Chris Zametz and Jake Deloach

George Kehrt opens a bottle of Champagne for guests. Edie and Kevin Sullivan

Photos by Heather Merriman

YOUROBSERVER.COM // Experience the sights and sounds of Forks and Corks: The Grand Tasting online.

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Join the SCA at a special celebratory luncheon honoring past president John Goodman, Thursday, February 27, 11:30 a.m., at the Longboat Key Club. Metropolitan Opera baritone Jason Stearns will perform. Luncheon tickets are $95. For tickets and information, call 941-366-0582.

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at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall


Black Tie

INSIDE: Catholic Charities Ball PAGE 19

YourObserver.com

Dolly Jacobs-Reis and Pedro Reis with Sally Schule

Debra Sandefur, Uta Christ-Janer, Bello Nock, Tana Sandefur and John Sandefur

THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

Robin Eurich and Karen Bell

by Heather Merriman | Black Tie Assistant Editor

Photos by Heather Merriman

Nikki and Jim Nilon

Vinje Dalh and Ralph Gorenstein

The lights shined brightly as Circus Sarasota’s Big Top transformed into a magical celebration Friday, Jan. 24. The colorful lights and festive centerpieces created by Victoria Bloom set the perfect tone for The Circus Arts Conservatory Gala 2014. Guests paid attention to the suggested attire, “Circus glamorous with sensible shoes,” making this gala one of the most visually fun of the year. Among some of the attire worn at the event, Sally Schule was seen wearing a stunning and sensible coatdress and skirt paired with Stuart Weitzman boots. Suzette Jones added a Tommy Hilfiger bow tie necklace that she found in her 11-year-old daughter’s dress-up trunk to her colorful leggings and blazer outfit and Joseph and Michelle Caulkins

Julia Barieda and Ian Laidlew

came dressed as circus ringleaders. During the reception, more than 350 guests enjoyed cocktails and interactive circus fun while listening to The Kara Nally Band. Joey Panek emceed the evening after Co-Founders Pedro Reis and Dolly Jacobs-Reis welcomed guests. Lauren Walsh chose the winners for this year’s costume contest — The Rev. James and Nikki Nilon won best costume, left. The circus entertainment throughout the evening, including The Poema Family, Sailor Circus students and The Alexis Brothers, was mind-blowing, and guests also enjoyed a video showing old footage of “Queen of the Air” Dolly Jacobs-Reis and her father, Lou Jacobs, adding a touch of sentimental history to the evening.

Ida Zito and Mary Anne Robinson

Joseph and Michelle Caulkins

Bernie and Lauren Walsh

BLACK TIE COVER PHOTOS CONTINUED ON PAGE 17


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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// BLACK TIE: COLUMN

BLACKTIE&TALES

by Black Tie Staff

Larry and Shane Hietbrink walk theFLASH: catwalk FASHION PERSPECTIVE HOT A collaboration of fashion, jewels and footwear, hosted by local style experts, took place for three days last week at Diamond Vault. “The Perspektive Trunk Show” is an annual event, brought to Sarasota by fashion stylist Kelly Augustyniak. This year, Augustyniak approached Tatyana Sharoubim (T. Georgiano’s) and Michael Chokr (Diamond Vault) about collaborating for the event. Sally Trout, Suzette Jones and Laurie Jenkins were spotted at the VIP reception Tuesday, Jan. 21, at Diamond Vault. Debbie Maltese, Shelley Sarbey and Karen Nylinger all made purchases during the trunk show.

Photos by Heather Merriman

The Perspektive Trunk Show hosts Tatyana Sharoubim, Michael Chokr and Kelly Augustyniak

Sally Trout and Laurie Jenkins

S TIDBIT

They know where they’re going … The Observer has exclusively obtained the names of Girls Inc.’s Celebration Luncheon “She Knows Where She’s Going” honorees. The April 3 luncheon, chaired by Lindsey Nickel de La O and Kristine Nickel, will honor Ariane Dart, Susanne S. Wise, Courtney Wise Snyder, Erika Wise Borland and Whitney Wise Verdoni and “Girl of the Year” Rachel Mallett. For more information,

Photo by Stephanie Hannum

Bello Nock mentee Johnny Rockett and his lady, Tina Winn, left

UNDER THE BIG TOP

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ho dat? … More than one of her friends totally failed to recognize Nikki Nilon in her spectacular clown costume at the Circus Arts Conservatory gala, though she says she and hubby, Jim, only decided to dress up at the last minute. Heads up! … There were two men with extraordinary hairdos at

the gala: the carrot top Bello Nock who we all know and love, and a young man whom he mentors, Johnny Rockett. Nock knockout … The hottest item in the lively live auction was the “Exclusive VIP experience with Bello,” which went for $12,000 — not once, but twice.

call 366-6646, Ext. 207 … A good name is worth more than riches … Community AIDS Network is naming its Sarasota facility in honor of Mary Ann Robinson, celebrating her many years of unstinting generosity to the organization going back to the days when HIV/AIDS was feared and misunderstood. The official naming event is private — a by-invitation-only reception March 26 at the clinic … The curious case of Nancy Markle … Many of the guests at Nancy Markle’s Jan. 25th birthday party asked

her, “What birthday is it?” They all got the same answer: “I decided to count backwards and I am now 1 year old.” BFF Lillian Richman, who threw the party, was fully aboard and put a large candle in the shape of that numeral on the cake shared by more than 30 friends and family. Guests included Renee Sheade, Harold Ronson, Julie Tanner, Cheryl Loeffler and Len Garner, Elaine Keating and Sid Katz, Joy Server, Ralph and Nancy Cohen and the recently wed Doug and Marcy Greer.

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Thursday, February 13, 2014 Fashions provided by SPARCC’s Treasure Chest 10 a.m. Check In and Boutique Shopping Opens | 11:30 a.m. Luncheon & Fashion Show

The Ritz Carlton Sarasota 1111 Ritz Carlton Drive | $95 per person | Complimentary Valet Parking Courtesy Emcees The Bermuda Mavericks-Les McCurdy and Ken Sons For reservations please visit www.sparcc.net or call 941-365-0208 ext.106 “A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BEOBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL FREE WITHIN FLORIDA 1-800-435-7352. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE.” REGISTRATION NUMBER CH580 132034


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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// BLACK TIE COVER PHOTOS

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(continued from page 15)

Pat Johnson and Janice Tibbals

Kathleen Dean, Eva and Leif Lindfors and Susan Forness

Photos by Heather Merriman

 Dr. Laurie Walmsley  Suzette Jones and Richard Dorfman

Lisa Daily and Denise Chu

Ray Peper

Sailor Circus students perform.

Jemma Wynne January 30th & 31st 11 am to 5 pm

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and Saturday February 1st from 10 am to 1 pm June Simmons Jewelry @ The Met 35 South Blvd of the Presidents St. Armands Circle Sarasota Tel 941.321.1737


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THE PERFECT GIFT FOR YOUR

SWEETHEART

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// BLACK TIE: CAMERA READY 25TH ANNIVERSARY CATHOLIC CHARITIES BALL

Social Dance Club | Competitive | Ballroom | Latin

Benefiting Catholic Charities Diocese of Venice Inc. Saturday, Jan. 25, at The Ritz-Carlton, Sarasota

131941

We provide the champagne, flowers, and a dance lesson. You provide the love.

2272 Main Street, Sarasota 34237

| dynastydanceclubs.com

941-955-8558  Haven Beach and Sally Antonio

 Carol and Carl Ritter

Photos by Heather Merriman

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Jeff and Kathleen Troiano with Gina and Mike Roven

WHAT’S HAPPENING

This Week In Sarasota For a list of local events or to submit your own, visit ThisWeekInSarasota.com/calendar

m u s i c •t h e a t e r n i g h t l i f e •b l o g s trivia • food • drink c a l e n d a r f a s h i o n •a r t s d a n c e •e v e n t s LV7345

Damon Gilliland and Leanne Sharpenter

Wendy and Shaun Merriman

Roland and Sabrina Gibson with Bishop Frank Dewane


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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

YourObserver.com

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// BLACK TIE

SALE! January 30th – February 6th

SALE!

One FREE pack of fun paper with any purchase

(with purchase)

(limited quantities)

5 SCARVES

$

(while quantities last)

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One FREE ball of scarf yarn

Beverly Ryan, Mary Murray and Jack Miller

Kathy and Ed Cahill

100 CENTRAL AVE. | SUITE 1026 | SARASOTA, FL | 941.957.0300

REMODELING, ADDITIONS & CUSTOM HOMES

PERFECTLY CRAFTED HOMES

Full Service Design & Construction Extensive Condo Experience Excellent References

Co-Chairs Mary Keanely-Barbetta, Bridgett Spiess and Julie Delaney

WATTS HUMPHREY Florida Lic. No.CGC1506235

WWW.BLACKTURTLE.COM 941.400.8576

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curious• livable• art

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Katy and Mark Walker


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eurydice The Booker High School VPA Theatre Department Proudly Presents:

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// BLACK TIE: CAMERA READY LEGACY LUNCHEON DONOR CELEBRATION FEATURING RETIRED GEN. CRAIG MCKINLEY Benefiting Goodwill Manasota | Tuesday, Jan. 21, at Michael’s Wine Cellar

February 12-15 | 7p.m.

tickets: Adults: $15, Seniors: $10, Students: $5 call Judy Piercy at 941.355.2967, ext. 65215 or go online to www.vpabooker.com

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 Retired Gen. Craig McKinley, David Bassett and Bob Rosinsky

TEA SEA for the

Gloria Moss, Steve Baseman and Marian Moss

Sheriff Tom Knight, Maverick Johnson and Sandy Young

Advancing Women and Philanthropy in the Pursuit of Science

Friday, February 21, 2014 2:30 – 5:00 pm

The Resort at Longboat Key Club Harbourside Dining Room Hats Encouraged Individual Tickets: $100/pp 1955 Founding Table Sponsors: $1,955 Corporate Sponsorships Available Photos by Heather Merriman

Ben Knisley, Kelly Gardner and Tracy Settle

All proceeds benefit the science, education and outreach of Mote Marine Laboratory.

Dennis Stover, Dr. Arthur Guilford and Mark Keller

VOICES OVER THE BAY LUNCHEON FEATURING KEY CHORALE

For information regarding sponsorship and tickets contact Erin Knievel at 941.388.4441 Ext. 415 or eknievel@mote.org 131890

Benefiting Van Wezel Foundation and Key Chorale | Wednesday, Jan. 22, at Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall

CABARET SUBSCRIBE NOW ER V

Featuring songs: “Take Me Home Country Roads,” “Big Yellow Taxi,” and “You’ve Got A Friend”

“Engaging”

- Sarasota Herald-Tribune

“Colorful” - Total Theater

the

Liz Power and Susan Haefner. Photo by Maria Lyle.

-Total Theater.com

Dominick Cicco and Sarah Hund. Photo by Brian Braun.

“Musicianship of the highest order”

O HELD

 Marty Vowels, Margie Lee and Lota Mushaw

Prima Donnettes

Richard Storm and Joseph Caulkins

Bob Fernander and Anita Kincade

by Richard Hopkins and Jim Prosser

“Delivered... with great spirit” - Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Richard Hopkins, Artistic Director

Sponsored in part by the Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, the Florida Council on Arts and Culture, and the State of Florida.

366-9000 �oridastudiotheatre.org

1241 N. Palm Avenue, Downtown Sarasota

132006

TOO DARN HOT Karl Newkirk, Gloria Bahaj, Ricky Newkirk and Ali Bahaj

Photos by Heather Merriman


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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

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// BLACK TIE: CAMERA READY

 Errol and Patty Klem with Terri and Don Matchett 129047

 Jake Broen and Alexis Branzei

Fifty Shades of Blue

ForFor Your Viewing Pleasure Your Viewing Pleasure

For Your Viewing Pleasure For Your Viewing Pleasure ForFor Your Viewing Pleasure Your Viewing Pleasure

Brushed Copper Front Prisma Console Brushed Copper Front Prisma Console

Pamela Hughes and Michael Evers

Always Blooming

One OneFish, Fish, Two Two Fish Fish

One Fish, Two Fish One Fish, Two Fish One Fish, Two Fish One Fish, Two Fish

Celadonfrom from Chang Chang Mai Celadon Mai Celadon from Chang Celadon from Chang Celadon from Chang MaiMaiMai Orchids CeladonSilk from Chang Mai

Brushed Copper Front Prisma Console Thai Silk Pillows Brushed Copper Front Prisma Console Brushed Copper Front Prisma Console Wave TidalWave Tidal Brushed Copper Front Prisma Console

Craig and Cathleen Wilson

Tidal Wave

Wave Tidal Wave Your Tidal Mad Man Will Love It Wave Tidal

FORKS AND CORKS VIP KICKOFF Benefiting The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art and All Faiths Food Bank Thursday, Jan. 23, at Suncoast Motorsports

5’ Driftwood Chandelier 5’5’Driftwood Driftwood Chandelier Chandelier 5’ Driftwood Chandelier 5’ Driftwood Chandelier 5’ Driftwood Chandelier

Tropicool Evergreen Tropicool Evergreen Tropicool Evergreen Tropicool Tropicool Eclipse Copper Media Cabinet Evergreen Evergreen Tropicool Evergreen

One of a Kind

Two’s Company

Photos by Heather Merriman

 Erin Marvin, Christina Fraser and Peter Acker

Wicker Lotus Chair Chair Wicker Lotus WickerWicker Lotus Chair Lotus Chair Wicker Lotus Chair Wicker Lotus Chair

Silk Orchids Silk Orchids Silk Orchids Silk Orchids SilkOrchids Orchids Silk

Sat 10:00-5:00 Sun Open Mon— Mon— Sat 10:00-5:00 Sun11:00-5:00 11:00-5:00 1312 Tamiami Trail N., Sarasota, FL 34236 941-951-9222 Mon— Sat 11:00-5:00 1312 Open Tamiami Trail N.,10:00-5:00 Sarasota, FLSun 34236 941-951-9222 Open Mon— 10:00-5:00 Sun 11:00-5:00 Mon— SatSat 10:00-5:00 Sun 11:00-5:00 1312 Open Tamiami Trail N., Sarasota, FL 34236 941-951-9222

Open Mon— Sat 10:00-5:00 Sun 11:00-5:00

Mon—Sat 10:00-5:00 Sunday 11:00—4:00

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Bring in this this ad ad and andget get$10 $10off off$50 $50 Bring Bring in this ad and get $10 off $50 Bring in this ad and get $10 off $50 Bring inthis this ad$100 and get get $10 off $50 Bring in ad and $10 off $50 $20 off $100 and $100 off $500 purchase $20 off $100 and off $500 purchase Rattan Dining $20 off $100 and $100 offoff $500 purchase $20 off $100 $100 off $500 purchase Driftwood Table Lamp and $20 off $100 and $100 $500 purchase $20 off $100 and $100 off $500 purchase WEST INDIES HOME COLLECTION WEST INDIES HOME COLLECTION WEST INDIES HOME COLLECTION WEST INDIES HOME COLLECTION 1312 Tamiami Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34236 941-951-9222 1312 TrailN., N.,HOME Sarasota, FLCOLLECTION 34236 941-951-9222 WEST INDIES WEST INDIES HOME COLLECTION 1312 Tamiami Trail N., Sarasota, FL 34236 941-951-9222 WEST HOME COLLECTION 1312INDIES Tamiami Trail N., Sarasota, FL 34236 941-951-9222

Verdi’s American Home Janet Ginn, Phil Delaney, featured speaker Darrell Ayers and Roxie Jerde 1/30/14

ANNUAL LEGACY SOCIETY RECOGNITION LUNCHEON Benefiting Community Foundation of Sarasota County Friday, Jan. 24, at The Ritz-Carlton, Sarasota

Winter Opera Festival February 8–March 23, 2014 International Soloists | Historic Opera House | Tickets start at $19

Photos by Heather Merriman

 Beverly Sutton, Ginny Dreher and Gordon Lenci

Il trovatore

The Barber of Seville

VERDI part of the verdi cycle

Feb. 8–Mar. 22

ROSSINI

Feb. 15–Mar. 21

The Flying Dutchman WAGNER Mar. 1–23

Jérusalem VERDI part of the verdi cycle

Mar. 8–22

Sarasota Opera House 61 N. Pineapple Ave., Sarasota, FL 34236

Ellen Berman and Flora Major

Dottie Baer Garner and Jolene Tepedino

SEASON SPONSOR

Paid for in part by Sarasota County Tourist Development Tax revenues. Sponsored in part by the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture.

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(941) 328-1300 | SARASOTAOPERA.org


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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

// BLACK TIE: CAMERA READY 30TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS GALA Benefiting United Negro College Fund Friday, Jan. 24, at Hyatt Regency Sarasota  Margie Lee and Lota Mushaw

 Katie Raymond, Maks Lototskyy and Sarah Haworth

Carrie Hulen and Steve Heyman

GREAT GATSBY INTERACTIVE DINNER

Gwen Atkins, Shirley Shaw and Judith Williams

Co-Chairs John Colon and Sherry Paramore

Benefiting Sarasota Manatee Association for Riding Therapy (SMART) | Friday, Jan. 24, at Fête Ballroom Photos by Heather Merriman

Marguerite Jill Dye and Duane Finger

CELEBRATING 1 YEAR OF HELPING 255 PEOPLE BOUNCE BACK!

Linda Filtsch and Bob Kopec

Catherina and Jason Bartz with Mike and Rachel Adams

Photos by Amanda Sebastiano

Our whimsical, happy art will make you smile!

Art and Gift Gallery

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941.388.3700

Historic Downtown Village 1861 Fruitville Road • Sarasota Visit us on Facebook for special offers and schedule of upcoming art classes!

Bounce Back Rehab • Luxury Setting • Caring Staff • State-of-the-Art Equipment

CALL 941-355-6111 TODAY A Not-for-Profit Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation Facility accepting Medicare, Insurance and Private Pay Patients

Cordially invites you to join us and Travcoa for an Afternoon Tea

Showcasing an Exclusive Presentation on Travcoa’s World Luxury Tours, Cruising, and Private Jet Tours for the discerning traveler. Meet with Cathy Holler of Travcoa to learn about their extraordinary programs, including the Ultimate African Safari by Classic DC3!

5381 Desoto Road, Sarasota, FL 34235 (Just East of Honore on Desoto Road) Marketing@HawthorneVillageofSarasota.com • www.HawthorneVillageofSarasota.com License #SNF130471051 EOE

941.388.4421

Additional savings on Travcoa Journeys for all who attend

SERVING SARASOTA & THE KEYS SINCE 1962 • 388-4421 www.starmandstravel.com

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WHEN: Thursday, February 13, 2014 TIME: 3:00 p.m SPACE IS LIMITED You Must Call to RSVP by Feb. 10:


DIVERSIONS

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

23

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

GRAND At

L a k e wo o d

Ranch

Art. Music. Dance.

Saturday

February 1, 2014 Noon to 4 p.m.

Main Street

at Lakewood Ranch Presented by:

Come spend the day enjoying the sights and sounds of some of the area’s top performance groups. The 7th annual Grand Ovation makes its return to Lakewood Ranch Main Street with three stages and an amazing line-up of talent. A delightful mix of street festival and concert hall, this celebration of the arts is not to be missed! Explore the shops and boutiques of Main Street. Dine at cozy restaurants and cafés. Discover street vendors and local non-profit groups. Includes free children’s crafts and the Mote Marine touch tank. Seating is provided. No coolers please. Free admission. Free parking.

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For more information, visit www.LWRevents.com


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