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October 30, 2009

Lifelong Learning Committee planning symposium at Delray Beach Public Library

The Lifelong Learning Committee began meeting in May to plan a season of weekly discussions starting with a Nov. 14 symposium featuring five panelists at the Delray Beach Public Library.

The Delray Beach Public Library Lifelong Learning Center will be hosting the “The Pursuit of Happiness and Exploration” featuring five local panelist authors and journalists from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Nov. 14. The symposium event kicks off the Lifelong Learning Center Season at the library, and will feature Ann Bocock, host of WXEL radio show the “Florida Forum;” Frank Cerabino, Palm Beach Post columnist and author the book “Shady Palms;” Marilyn Charwat, a psychotherapist, lecturer and hypnotherapist; Yanatha Desouvre, a best-selling author; and poet and Robert Watson, , a professor at Lynn University, author, and media commentator giving views on politics to local TV news outlets and CNN. Cost of the symposium is $15, which includes a continental breakfast and coffee.
The symposium will be the kickoff to Lifelong Learning weekly courses on history, music, art and worldly affairs. Library Director of Communications Bonnie Stelzer said the symposium is also a place where residents can get a taste of what Lifelong Learning has to offer and ask questions. Due to limited seating at the symposium, registration is required, brochures are available at the Delray Beach Public Library, 100 W. Atlantic Ave., or for more information call the library at 561-266-0798 or visit www.delraylibrary.org.

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Diamond Club, an elderly support group at Temple Emeth seeks to boost membership

(From left to right) Florence Meshulam, Pauline Graber and Irene Fisher work on hats for children with cancer at the Diamond Club, a social group meeting at Temple Emeth for seniors 75 and older.

The requirements are members have to be age 75 and older, and they ask for voter identification cards at the Diamond Club, a support group meeting for seniors every Monday morning at Temple Emeth in Delray Beach. Resident Sandy Klein started the group some 30 years ago when she noticed her aging mother becoming very bored after moving from the northeast to Delray Beach.

“The Diamond Years are richer than the Golden Years,” Klein said.

The group has now evolved into a social gathering at the beginning of every week where participants hand iron “Cool Caps for Cancer Kids” at a craft table, clip coupons for U.S. Navy personnel and their families stationed overseas, and even express opinions and views on current events before breaking for breakfast snacks and coffee.

Irene Fischer works at the “Cool Caps” table every Monday morning, and said she enjoys her volunteer job and helping others.

“I iron designs on the hats and arrange the pattern. Then they go to the homes of children suffering from cancer,” Fischer said.

“I started it for mom over 30 years ago. I was sitting in the temple thinking how can I entertain her and peers that were bored? Two members became four, four became eight…” Klein said.

But, Klein said the Diamond Club is in serious need of new members due to the fact most of the 100-plus members the group shared in its heyday have passed on. Now, the group hovers around 60 members and is non-sectarian.

“It’s like a cruise ship in the fact that we want to accompany every new member and their interests. This keeps them busy and serves a purpose; it’s a need we’re fulfilling for the elders,” Klein said.

For more information call Sandy Klein at 561-732-2129 or Lauryn Moret-Glass at the Ruth Rales Jewish Family Services at 561-852-3333. Temple Emeth is located at 5780 W. Atlantic Ave., call Temple Emeth at 561- 498-3536.

(From left to right) Florence Meshulam, Pauline Graber and Irene Fisher take a minute off from working on hats for kids cancer patients at the Diamond Club, a social group meeting at Temple Emeth for seniors 75 and older.

(From left to right) Feder Fay, Rose Dinoff, Myrna Schwartz and Ida Bemben clip coupons for U.S. Navy personnel stationed overseas at the Diamond Club, a social group meeting at Temple Emeth for seniors 75 and older.

Shirley Glassman (standing up) gets ready to voice her opinion at the Diamond Club current events group, which also meets every Monday morning at 10 a.m. at Temple Emeth.

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October 29, 2009

Library starts Teen Advisory Board

(From left to right Back Row) The new Teen Advisory Board consists of:Dosina Peterson, Jinia Deshommes, Carla Thelot, Ricky Morriseau, Rose Lamartine, (Second Row): Lichermine Val, Joseline Milleu, and (Front Row): Akeria Burgess-Moss.

Teenagers now have a stronger voice at the Delray Beach Public Library with the formation of the Teen Advisory Board. Loanis Menendez-Cuesta, reference and young adult librarian, said until now the library didn’t possess an advisory board for teens and that “we’re still looking for members.” TAB participation will help to form future teen services at the library and also conduct reviews, program committees, activities, planning and be a place where students can obtain community service hours.

“We also discuss books, magazines, teen issues and programming,” Menendez-Cuesta said.

She said TAB will also meet to share reviews of books, software, magazines, music, websites, and present ideas for a teen summer reading program.

Menendez-Cuesta said membership requirements for TAB are as follows: open to ages 13 to 17; must attend monthly meetings; willing to review publications for an online newsletter; participate in discussions; and treat others with respect.

“We had an ice cream social last week and are about to plan more teen programming,” Menendez-Cuesta said.

TAB will meet monthly from 4 to 5:30 p.m. on the second Tuesday of each month at the Young Adults Teen Cyber Center located on the southeast corner of the second floor at the Delray Beach Public Library, 100 W. Atlantic Ave.

For more information call Loanis Menedez-Cuesta at 561-819-6299 or e-mail loanis.menendez@delraylibrary.org

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October 27, 2009

FAU graduate student Landon Sessions is the author of a new book titled "Living Bipolar"

Boca Raton resident Landon Sessions is an FAU Sociology graduate student and the author of a new book titled “Living Bipolar.” Sessions recently sat down for an "On the Spot" profile to talk about the book, his past experiences living with bipolar disorder and his future as an author who helps others.

Can you tell me about the book “Living Bipolar?”
“I started the book about a year ago. I had to suffer for years
because I didn’t know what was wrong… It’s a combination of my story
and a how-to-manual using five principles. Each story in the book
highlights one of the principles. ‘B’ is for behavior and behavior is
vital because as a bipolar
person I must be aware of how my behavior affects the people in my
life, whether it be family, friends or work.”

Is it a solution-based book? Did you interview people with bipolar disorder?

“It’s a solution-oriented book, a one-stop shop for people with
bipolar disorder. I interviewed parents with bipolar children, four
people living with bipolar and a husband with a bipolar wife.
Education is important; the point of this book is a manual for
parents, family or friends, managing the one they love’s bipolar
disorder.”

When were you first diagnosed with bipolar disorder?

“I had a manic episode in 2000. When I was younger I regulated the
bipolar disorder with drugs and alcohol. I was living in Atlanta at
the time and had to leave there (due to problems with drugs and
alcohol). At age 21 I was diagnosed. I came to Florida Atlantic
University and started a communications degree program. I was put on
medicine for the bipolar disorder, but in order for the medicine to
work I had to quit drugs and alcohol. I’ve been sober for nine years
now.”

Are there any positives about being bipolar?

“The best thing is that people with bipolar take on big tasks. In
writing this book or college work that can be a big positive.”

What’s your goal in life?

“I want to be an author/advocate for people with bipolar.”

When will the book hit the stands?
“Well it’s about 275 pages right now and I’m at the literary agent
phase. I hope to get it out as soon as this process allows me to do
so.”

Visit Landon Sessions blog: at www.landon_livingbipolar.blogspot
For more information on “Living Bipolar” call Landon Sessions at 561-414-9684

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October 23, 2009

Blessing of the Pets scheduled for Sunday at First Presbyterian Church

From left, Associate Pastor Reverend Aaron Janklow, Deacon Alexandra Harris and Boo Bear the dog.

First Presbyterian Church of Delray Beach’s Blessing of the Pets event is Sunday, Oct. 25, and Associate Pastor Rev. Aaron Janklow will be giving blessings in the church’s courtyard at 4 p.m.

“After a short 15-minute service there will be The Blessing of the Pets. It’s about what each pet means to our lives; that’s why we bless them. We’re expecting a great turnout,” Janklow said.
Janklow said that all finned, furry and feathered pets and their owners are invited to the Blessing of the Pets.

“Our pets provide us with unconditional love and what better way to commemorate them and remember St. Francis of Assisi’s love for all creatures then with a special blessing for our adored animals,” Janklow said.
Janklow also said a special guest will be welcomed at the hour-long event. The Special Narcotic Investigative Forces (S.N.I.F.) dogs will attend the event with their handlers.

Also an offering will be held to benefit the Deacons’ Scholarship Fund, assisting church members in their pursuit of higher education.
For more information call 561-276-6338 or visit www.firstdelray.com.

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October 15, 2009

Delray Medical Center emergency room nurse helps save man on airline flight

Mari McGarry and her husband David recently helped an unconscious man with in-flight nurse training on a Delta Airlines flight from Atlanta to West Palm Beach.

After boarding a plane from a recent nurses conference in Baltimore, Delray Medical Center emergency room nurse Mari Hoover McGarry was already in life-saving mode as she was sitting in her seat on a Delta Airlines flight recently from Atlanta to West Palm Beach. When she heard a call from the flight cabin asking for any doctors or nurses to come to the forward portion of the plane, without hesitation McGarry and her husband David McGarry, a registered nurse at the V.A. Hospital in West Palm Beach, unbuckled their seat belts and headed forward. There they met up with a doctor and flight personnel who took them to a man suffering from syncope, a brief loss of consciousness and posture caused by a temporary decrease in blood flow to the brain.

“He was unconscious so we got him into a wheelchair and into the galley of the airplane where we administered oxygen and started an IV. He had been vomiting and had low pulse and blood pressure,” Mari McGarry said.

Ironically, the McGarry’s had in-air medical training to work from.

“In 2002 we attended a conference, the Southeast Seaboard Emergency Symposium for in-flight emergencies,” David McGarry said.

The training paid off when after a case of vomiting the man came to and regained consciousness.

“That day was a true testament as to why I’m proud to be an emergency nurse. It was incredibly rewarding to receive thanks from the flight crew and pilot, and especially from this man’s wife. I’m so thankful that my training has prepared me for this kind of situation,” Mari McGarry said.

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October 14, 2009

International Day of Climate Action in planning stages for Atlantic Dunes Park

Greenpeace and the Palm Beach County Environmental Coalition are planning a local gathering from 3 to 4 p.m. Saturday October 24, at Atlantic Dunes Park, 1600 S. Ocean Blvd., to voice action and bring attention to the growing carbon footprint by humans. Palm Beach Community College speech professor Bobette Wolesensky, Barry Silver, the co-chairman for the Palm Beach County Environmental Coalition and Delray Beach resident Jason Feldman, hope to gather 350 sign-waving local activists to shed light to world leaders that will attend the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark in December. Feldman said the number 350 is significant because 350 parts-per-million of carbon in the atmosphere is the goal for the group. He said, “We’re hovering around 390 ppm and it’s rising.” At 3:50 p.m. the group will join hands for 350 seconds.

“We’re asking people to make a poster, flag or banner that epitomizes hope or shame for climate change. Think riding a bus or a community garden for hope… Think polar bears being forced away from melting ice caps for shame,” Wolesensky said.

Wolensky is calling the get together a “flash mob.”

“We chose a part of the beach that isn’t as busy. It’s more about getting the word to our world leaders because if they don’t get it right the tipping points will be noticeable very soon,” Wolesensky said.

For more information call Bobette Wolesensky at 815-354-1641 or email at: bwolesensky@comcast.net or call Jason Feldman at 516-581-1245 or email at: j.d.feldman76@gmail.com

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October 13, 2009

Police issue Silver Alert for adult man possibly affected by Alzheimer's

The Delray Beach Police Department has issued an urgent news release on a missing adult from the city. Ernest Brown is 5-foot, 6-inches tall and weighs 135 pounds. Brown resides at 230 NW Seventh Ave. and was born March 9, 1928. He's missing and authorities aren't sure what type of clothing he was wearing.

Brown drives a white 1996 Ford F-150 pick-up truck with Florida tag N49 0ME.

Brown may be suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. In the past, during bouts of suspected Alzheimer's, he's driven off south to Broward County and another time north toward Orlando and Orange County.

Delray Beach Police Department Public Information Officer Jeffrey Messer said in an e-mail:

"Mr. Brown has been entered into NCIC and is in the Florida Silver Alert system.
If anyone comes in contact with him please contact the law enforcement agency for that area."

Anyone with any other information on this case is asked to call Det. Jason Jabcuga at 561-243-6220.

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Mystery Scavenger Hunt planned for Oct. 22 in Pineapple Grove Arts District

(From left to right) Actors Robin Brooke, Dan Gonzalez, Matt Logan and Lori Dolan will be dishing out clues from 7:30 tp 9 p.m. in a "Mystery Scavenger Hunt" all over the Pineapple Grove Arts District.

Do you have a clue and like to participate in solving mysteries? Then, get involved in the free “Mystery Scavenger Hunt” that will take over the Esplanade at Pineapple Grove, from 5:30 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 22 during Art & Jazz on the Avenue. Lori Dolan of “Actors With a Clue: specializing in Murder Mysteries and Interactive Shows for Any Group, Any Time!” has been working closely with the Downtown Marketing Cooperative, sponsor of the free event, and six Pineapple Grove businesses that will hold special clues to unlock the gift treasure, a Delray Beach gift card.

“We’ve had about 40 people sign up in pre-registration and will be capping the scavenger hunt at 200 people. Everyone will be involved in the Scavenger Hunt including six actors. Participants will be completing tasks in order to get clues,” Dolan said.

Those who wish not to participate are still encouraged to come down to Pineapple Grove to “watch the mayhem.”

A total of six businesses will be involved in the “Mystery Scavenger Hunt.” Those businesses include: Murder on the Beach Bookstore, Powerbarre, Kismet vintage & designer clothing, Conversation Pieces, Beads on the Avenue and Blush Beauty Salon.

Pineapple Grove Marketing Director Stephanie Immelman calls the “Mystery Scavenger Hunt” a “great marketing tool to showcase what businesses in Pineapple Grove have to offer.”

“Mystery Scavenger Hunt” starts at 200 NE Second Ave. Suite 101. From 5:30 to 7 p.m. registration will take place; from 7 to 7:30 p.m. the mystery overview and instructions will be given and from 7:30 to 9 p.m. the scavenger hunt will take place at the six businesses and all over Pineapple Grove’s Northeast Second Avenue.

To register for the Pineapple Grove Mystery Scavenger Hunt visit www.loridolan.com/awac or call Lori Dolan at 561-207-8947 (office), 561-573-2257 (cell) or visit: www.loridolan.com for more information.

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October 12, 2009

Villages at Delray rental housing takes off with help of federal stimulus money

This artist rendering from the Auburn Group shows the "green space" bordered by one-, two- and three-bedroom housing from $750-$1,000 per month in the city's southwest corridor. The $27 million project was green lighted with a recent city commission vote.

In past years the blighted Carver Estates neighborhood has been vacant, but with a recent 3-2 city commission vote in favor of allowing Villages at Delray Beach developer the Auburn Group a chance at $27 million in federal stimulus money the prospect of a new 192-unit rental neighborhood on Southwest 12th Avenue could become a reality by fall 2010. The issue has divided city staff and residents alike. Some residents question if the project will be successful, and the Community Redevelopment Agency, Planning and Zoning Board and two city commissioners have serious questions if the Villages at Delray Beach project can benefit the city.

Based in Delray Beach, Auburn Group Vice President Cito Beguiristain said they consider themselves part of the community. He said the neighborhood won’t be blight, but home to teachers, police and fire personnel, restaurant workers, construction workers, tradesmen and their families. Beguiristain also said the project will create jobs, job training and spike the local construction economy he said soars toward 25 percent unemployment. He said in the future many developments across the nation will mirror Villages at Delray.

“The Treasury Department and President Obama want to use this development as a model,” Beguiristain said.

For more information call the Auburn Group at 561-243-6800.

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October 8, 2009

Pompey Park to host free practice ACT and SAT Tests

Pompey Park will be hosting free practice testing for ACT and SAT tests from 8:30 a.m. – 2 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 10 at the Pompey Park Recreation Center located at 1101 NW Second St. in Delray Beach. Pompey Park Recreation Supervisor David Ricks said the tests are free and said all students need to bring is pencils and a calculator. The free practice testing is geared for students in grades 8-12.

Ricks said students will receive a score for their practice tests just two weeks after taking the test. He also said the focus is on comprehension so local students can achieve a higher “success rate” when they do take the ACT and SAT tests that count toward their college admission. Ricks also said Pompey Park staff will review sections in future meetings with students, an offer he said will help students improve sections they had difficulty with on the practice tests.

For more information, or to register, call Rhonda Williams at 561-243-7356 or e-mail at williamsr@ci.delray-beach.fl.us.

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October 7, 2009

John Lennon exhibit to benefit Old School Square

The Old School Square Gymnasium has been transformed into a venue of peace and love. A new exhibit is celebrating the “Montreal Bed-In for Peace” this week leading up to a birthday bash on Friday, Oct. 9, what would have been John Lennon’s 69th birthday. For a $2 donation, patrons can stroll through displays of Lennon’s guitars, a reenactment of the actual “Montreal Bed-In for Peace” hotel room and 30 large framed photographs taken by Gerry Deiter, a photographer working for Life and Time Magazines during his assignment to cover the week-long bed-in. A student art exhibit is also included in the program.
The owner of the exhibit, which is titled: “Give Peace a Chance: John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Bed-In for Peace,” is Joan Athey of Vancouver, British Columbia. Athey said she met the photographer Deiter by chance.
“We met sitting at a bar called the Victorian. He told me about the photographs and when I saw them I said this is a living thing, something that can live on for many more to see,” Athey said.
She said Deiter told her the story of because of the Vietnam War coverage at the time, the photos were never used in magazines. Athey said she quickly bought and had the photographs framed, providing help to Deiter, a struggling photographer at the time.
The “Give Peace a Chance: John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Bed-In for Peace” exhibit benefits Old School Square Cultural Arts Center. A mural, “Three John Lennon’s Portraits” will be auctioned off at the “The Big Lennon Birthday Bash” from 7 to 10 p.m.with a live music by Aldo Morales "910" on Friday, Oct. 9 at the Old School Square Gymnasium, 51 N. Swinton Ave.
Victoria Ann Rehberg, president of ArtVision Exhibitions, also associated with the project, said a second mural will travel with the exhibit to future locations.

“Give Peace a Chance: John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Bed-In for Peace” exhibit hours are
noon-9 p.m. Oct. 7-8; noon-5 p.m. and 7-10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 9; noon-10 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 10; and noon-6 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 11.

For more information call Old School Square at 561-243-7922 or visit www.oldschool.org.

(From front to back) Mural painters Thomasyn Freeman (light blue sundress), Sharon Koskoff (pink) and Papa Ruby Koskoff paint the John Lennon mural that will be auctioned to benefit Old School Square.

Lennon's guitars.

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October 6, 2009

Delray Beach Fire Rescue to douse future fires through education

Sparky is determined to keep Delray Beach residents safe during Fire Safety Month.

Delray Beach Fire Rescue personnel have booked nine events in observance of “Fire Safety Month,” observed nationwide throughout the month of October. The effort is to educate children and residents about fire safety. In Delray Beach “Fire Safety Week” is being held Oct. 4-10, followed by eight visits to local schools and one church visit during Oct. 22 - Nov. 6. The programs scheduled are focused on city students, but Fire-Rescue Public Education Specialist Lt. Trisha Dunkelmann said anyone can benefit from fire safety information.

“The city's Fire-Rescue Department is committed to educating the community about fire safety information, the key to avoidable injuries or death. We’re dedicated and determined to reach as many children as possible regarding the dangers of fire by visiting local schools and teaching students the importance of fire safety,” Dunkelmann said.

The fire safety information outreach programs begin at 9 a.m., Oct.21 at Cason United Methodist Church, 342 N. Swinton Ave., and are geared for community members, families and residents searching for fire safety information. Over the next two weeks, , Dunkelmann and fire-rescue personnel will visit a total of nine schools and academys.

“Every class will get a fire safety lessons followed by an opportunity for students shoot water from the fire hose,” Dunkelmann said.

For more information call Fire-Rescue Public Education Specialist Trisha Dunkelmann at 561-243-7356 or by e-mail at dunkelmann@ci.delray-beach.fl.us

The schedule for Fire Safety Month:

9:30 a.m., Oct. 8, Fire Chief David James will be reading to the children as part of the Literacy Coalition of Palm Beach County “Read for the Record.”at Katie’s Kids Learning Center, 1429 NE Third Ave.

9 a.m. Oct. 21 at Cason United Methodist Church, 342 N. Swinton Ave.
10 a.m. Oct. 21 at Trinity Lutheran School, 400 N. Swinton Ave.
9 a.m. Oct. 22 at Pine Grove Elementary School, 400 SW 10th St.
2:30 p.m. Oct. 22 at Youthland Academy, 675 Auburn Ave.
8:45 a.m. Oct. 28 at Bar and Ferg’s Academy, 200 Sterling Ave.
9 a.m. Oct. 29 at Banyan Creek Elementary, 4243 Sabal Lakes Road
3 p.m. Oct. 29 at Kids World, 219 N. Dixie Highway
8:45 a.m. Oct. 30, S.D. Spady Elementary, 901 NW Third St.
9 a.m. Nov. 6, Orchard View Elementary, 4050 Old Germantown Road

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Delray Beach Tax Collector's Office is closing for maintenance work

A scheduled air-conditioning system upgrade will close the Palm Beach County Tax Collector’s Delray Beach office at 501 S. Congress Ave. from noon Friday, Oct. 9 until 8:15 a.m. Tuesday, Oct. 13. Jennifer Mahoney, strategic communication enthusiast for Tax Collector Anne Gannon’s office, said five other tax collector offices in Palm Beach County will serve residents' needs and that a tax collector pay-online kiosk may be the best option for Delray Beach residents.

Mahoney said encourages people to pay online, if possible at www.taxcollectorpbc.com, and added if residents do want to make a drive to see tax collector personnel in person, the closest office would be 3551 S. Military Trail in Lake Worth. The four other tax collector offices are located 301 N. Olive Ave. in West Palm Beach; 200 Civic Center Way in Royal Palm Beach; 2976 State Road 15 in Belle Glade; and 3188 PGA Blvd. in Palm Beach Gardens.

For more information or questions call the tax collector customer service center at 561-355-2264. Palm Beach County Tax Collector Anne Gannon can be reached at 561-355-2804, and Strategic Communication Enthusiast Jennifer Mahoney can be reached at 561-355-4271.

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October 5, 2009

Pompey Park to hold Adult Literacy Class

Pompey Park Recreation Center will be hosting Adult Literacy Class programs from 6 to 7 p.m. on Wednesdays Oct. 7-28 and Nov. 4-11. Audra Wells Mark will be teaching the classes, which focus on business writing, vocabulary, reading and writing skills, mathematics, Greek and Latin, PowerPoint and presentation skills.

“I will be teaching brain-based lessons that will maximize learning potential, Wells-Mark said.

Mark holds a bachelor’s degree in Elementary Education, a master’s degree in Management & Administration, a specialist’s degree in Brain Research and Organization and is working on a doctoral dissertation.

“I’m a Boynton Beach resident but I do most of my teaching in Delray Beach. I do school and tutorial teaching (K-8) and teach adults. I use music and rhythms to help people refresh their old skills. I’m working with the city to help people with learning and get people ready for job advancement,” Mark said.

She also has a website at www.newinnovations.us.

Cost to sign up for the four-week term of classes is $40 for Delray Beach residents and $60 for non-residents.

For more information call Pompey Park at 561-243-7356, or visit Pompey Park at 1101 NW Second St. Audra Wells Mark can be reached at 561-767-5528.

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October 2, 2009

Free bagel giveways day after game if Giants or Jets win and patrons know final score

If the National Football League’s New York Giants and New York Jets continue to win games, the Original Brooklyn Water Bagel Company owner Steve Fassberg says he’ll give restaurant patrons who can produce the final score the day after the game, a free bagel.

“I just hope they both go 16-0. I’m not scared about giving away free bagels,” Fassberg said.
With the Jets and Giants a combined 6-0 on Sundays this year, Fassberg knows come Monday morning to have a lot of bagels ready. He said there’s no need to redeem a ticket or stub, just produce the final score if the Giants or Jets win at the Original Brooklyn Water Bagel Company, 14451 S. Military Trail, in Delray Beach.

The “Jets, Giants Win: FUGGETABOUTPAYING!” promotion started week one of this year’s NFL season when Fassberg noticed a large number of his restaurant patrons were donning New York Jets and Giants jerseys and apparel. Fassberg, an avid New York Jets fan, said he would like to do a promotion with the Miami Dolphins team, but there’s a bit of a problem with starting that promotion.

“We could do this promotion with the Miami Dolphins but we wouldn’t be giving away any bagels,” Fassberg said of the Miami Dolphins who started the season winless at 0-3.

For more information on the “Jets, Giants Win: FUGGETABOUTPAYING!” promotion, call the Original Brooklyn Water Bagel Company at 561-455-7491.

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About This Blog

Dave DiPinoDave DiPino
David DiPino joined Forum Publishing Group in August 2006. As a reporter for the Delray Forum, David covers community news and writes a dining column twice a month that focuses on restaurants in South Palm Beach County.

He also is one of the writers of the twice-monthly Hometown Downtown column that looks at events, celebrations, and organizations in Delray and Boynton Beach. He freelances for the Sun-Sentinel during high school football and basketball seasons.

David spent 12 years working in the restaurant industry, and did just about every job in the back of the house, including line cook, sous chef, and dessert chef. A Florida native who lives in Jupiter, he studied Multimedia Journalism at Florida Atlantic University, where he obtained a bachelor’s degree. David enjoys playing the guitar, golf, boating and snorkeling during his free time.

Contact him at ddipino@gmail.com or 954-621-5000.

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