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February, 2010 – An Interview with Author Kathleen Kent

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Cultural Corner

 

An Interview with Author Kathleen Kent

 

By Marla Schwartz

 

The thing is – history is malleable, whether we want to believe it or not.  And the fact of the matter is – there’s a lot about America history that’s difficult to accept, let alone understand.  But what if someone bore witness, in effect and then wrote about one of these particular events in time?

Kathleen Kent. Photo by Deborah Feingold
Kathleen Kent. Photo by Deborah Feingold

In essence, this is what author Kathleen Kent has done in her debut novel, The Heretic’s Daughter (Little, Brown).  Kent was one of the many gifted authors to grace South Florida with her presence at the Miami Book Fair International 2009.

Kent is a tenth-generation descendent of Martha Carrier, one of the first women convicted in the Salem Witch Trials, which is the subject her novel.  This beguiling tale will no doubt be gobbled up by readers of historical fiction, but people who truly treasure reading about parental love and self-sacrifice in the face an overwhelming sense of collective madness will most definitely relish this novel.

 

The novel explores the plight of the Carrier family who are first generation colonists in New England.  They had hoped to escape the plague of smallpox in their homeland, but inadvertently brought it along with them to the new world.

 

Kent’s novel is narrated by Sarah, Martha’s spirited teenage daughter, who valiantly takes us through the horrors of this particular time in America’s early history.

 

The Heretic's Daughter by Kathleen Kent
The Heretic's Daughter by Kathleen Kent

 

 

 

Kathleen Kent was able to take time out of her busy schedule to answer a great deal of questions for AROUND WELLINGTON readers:

 

QUESTIONS FOR KATHLEEN KENT

 

AROUND WELLINGTON:  I understand that while growing up you heard stories about your ancestors who were executed because they were found guilty of being witches during the Salem Witch Trials.  At which particular point in time did you realize that the story of the Carrier family would make a great piece of historical fiction?

 

KATHLEEN KENT:  Fortunately, I grew up with the stories of Martha Carrier, my grandmother back nine generations who was hanged as a witch in Salem in 1692, and the Carrier family’s involvement with the witch trials.  From the time I was about eight-years-old, I remember my mother and grandmother telling me, not only stories of the witch trials, but anecdotal tales of 17th century life, passed down from generation to generation.   By the time I was in college, I had wanted to put that history and those family legends into novel form.  But it took many years before I had the time and resources to write a book-length retelling of Martha’s life.  I spent 20 years living and working in New York in various commercial enterprises and was “on the runway” to fifty before I began the research and writing that became The Heretic’s Daughter.

 

AW:  Obviously, the Carrier family was caught up in unfortunate times … but why did people in colonial times hang others as “witches?”

 

KK:  It’s hard to imagine, as modern, rational thinkers, the time and place that was Puritan New England, where there was no separation of church and state, where you were guilty until proven innocent and where women were targeted as witches because of their mental instability, their position in society, and their combative dispositions, especially if they stood in opposition with the “Town Fathers.”  In order to understand the Puritans’ actions and motives, it’s important to understand that these were transplanted Europeans, strangers in a strange land, who believed literally that the Devil was alive and well and living in New England.  Death was always close at hand, through disease, childbirth, Indian raids, and these people lived in superstitious dread and had a firm belief in the Invisible World.   The theologians conducting the trials, examinations and executions of the witches were using a source book from the Middle Ages, the Malleus Malleficarum, which could explain any wart or birthmark as proof of the Devil’s Mark.

 

AW:  Do you see any common elements in your book that can be compared to modern times?  Such as HIV/AIDS or the current swine flu pandemic?

 

KK:  Unfortunately, there are parallels to the witch trials still relevant today.  In every culture there are, for example, fundamentalist groups who refuse to engage in the civilized discourse, who do not adhere to due process of law, who suppress free speech and free expression, and who strive to oppress the weakest members of society; often women and children; persecuting those who fall outside of narrowly defined patterns of “the norm”.  Arthur Miller of course wrote “The Crucible” to illuminate the McCarthy era witch trials, and there are groups of individuals still today, in this country, who are censored and excluded for having differing religious views, ethnic origins or sexual orientations.  We’re still as a species trying to overcome millions of years of the self-protective, xenophobic response to “The Other.”

 

AW:  Do you have a favorite historical novelist?  If so, who is it and why?

Kathleen Kent. Photo by Marla E. Schwartz
Kathleen Kent. Photo by Marla E. Schwartz

 

 

KK: I have always loved Charles Dickens for his universal stories and for his timeless characters.  His use of storytelling to illuminate great societal wrongs was always so inspiring.  John Irving wrote that Dickens was “unafraid of sentimentality—of anger, of passion, of emotionally and psychologically revealing himself.”  I really like that in an author.

 

AW:  I understand you admire Annie Dillard’s work. When did you first discover her work and have you ever had a chance to meet her?  How has her fiction influenced your own writing?

 

KK:  I first discovered her when I read Pilgrim at Tinker Creek over twenty years ago.  I remember being in awe of her elegant, lean observations of nature and thinking, “if only I could write like that!”  I keep her books, including The Writing Life, and For the Time Being, in the nightstand next to my bed and read them over and over again. Unfortunately, I have not had the opportunity to meet her, but if I had the chance, I’d leap at it.

 

AW:  In the novel, Martha punishes her five children with a spoon they’ve dubbed the Iron Bessie.  Is this a fictionalized account of such punishment?

 

KK:  Iron Bessie is a figment of my imagination.  But I do have my grandmother’s cherry wood mixing spoon, given to me by my mother.   Blessedly, the only thing my grandmother ever whipped with the spoon was heavy cream.

 

AW:  Is there anything you wanted to include in your novel but couldn’t do it?

 

KK:  Originally, the novel was written in two parts, the first part being The Heretic’s Daughter.  Fortunately, the second part has been re-worked and will be published now as a prequel—about the life of Martha’s husband Thomas; a man who family legend and local Massachusetts’ lore said lived to 109, was over 7 feet tall and was one of the executioners of King Charles I of England.

 

AW:  If someone today accused you of being a witch – what would you say?

 

KK:  Thank you!

 

AW:  Tell me about the accolades your book has received?

 

KK:  The book is now being published in over a dozen countries and won the David Langum award for historical fiction last year.  The reviews have been mostly wonderful, although I try pretty hard to not focus too much on the reviews, but rather on the positive reactions of the readers who love historical fiction

 

AW:  Is there anything else you’d like to add?

 

KK:  Only that my grandmother used to say, “Sweetie, there are no such things as witches. Merely ferocious women.”

 

 

Marla E. SchwartzA native of Toledo, OH and a graduate of Kent State, Marla E. Schwartz has been a professional journalist since her teenage years and is a Senior Writer for Miami Living Magazine, and a freelance writer for CRAVINGS South Florida in Aventura, as well as Around Wellington Magazine and Lighthouse Point Magazine.  An avid photographer, her images have appeared in numerous Ohio publications, as well as in Miami Living, The Miami Herald, The Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel and The Palm Beach Post.  She has had numerous plays published and produced around the country.  Her short play, America’s Working? was originally read at First Stage in Los Angeles and in the same city produced at the Lone Star Ensemble.  It was then produced at Lynn University in Boca Raton, FL and then taken to an Off-Broadway playhouse by its producers Adam and Carrie Simpson.  Her piece, The Lunch Time Café, was a finalist for the Heideman Award, Actors Theatre of Louisville.  Feel free to contact her at: meschwartz1@hotmail.com.

 

 

February, 2010 – Cardiovascular Fitness

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Health & FitnessCheryl Alker

 

Component II – Cardiovascular Fitness

 

by Cheryl Alker

 

In our November issue of Around Wellington, we discussed the five components of physical fitness and gave you some great advice on the benefits and how to achieve flexibility. This month we are dissecting the intricacies of cardiovascular fitness.

First of all, what is it? Well, the definition of cardiovascular or cardiorespiratory fitness is the efficiency of the heart, lungs and vascular system in delivering oxygen to the working muscle tissues so that prolonged physical work can be maintained. A person’s ability to deliver oxygen to the working muscles is affected by many physiological parameters, including heart rate, stroke volume, cardiac output and maximal oxygen consumption.

Simply put, it means that when you start to walk, run, cycle or swim, how efficient are your lungs at taking in oxygen? Delivering it to the heart (via your blood)? And then pumping it around the body to the working muscles?

 

Efficient distribution of oxygen is vital to the length of time you can continue your cardio workout. Lack of oxygen leads to fatigue and muscle soreness.

 

How do you know if you are working at a level where you can maintain that vital supply of oxygen?

 

A simple calculation will give you your answer:

·      Take your age.

·      Subtract this amount from 220 (the approximate amount our heart beats in one minute at birth).

·      Take 50% and 85% of this figure.

 

This is your training zone; and for efficient fat burning cardiovascular training, you should keep your heart rate between these two figures. Towards the lower (50% – 65%) if you are beginning your training and fairly new to exercise and moving towards the higher (70% – 85%) as you body starts to adapt to your training program.

 

For example, if you are 40 years of age:

 220 – 40 = 180

50% of 180 = 90

85% of 180 = 153

 

Your training zone is, therefore, between 90 and 153 beats per minute.

 

If you are using a piece of gym equipment for your cardiovascular training, you can easily monitor your heart rate by placing your thumb on the pad provided. If not, investing in a heart rate monitor that you strap to your chest whilst exercising will keep you on track; of course, you can do it the old-fashioned way. Take your own pulse at the wrist, arm or neck over a six-second period and add a zero or over a ten-second period and multiply by six.  

 

How often should you train? Guidelines indicate between three to five times per week. If possible, vary your cardiovascular training. Working continually on the same piece of equipment or only running, cycling or swimming can seriously increase your risk of an overuse injury.

 

How long should your session last? Individuals with lower fitness levels should aim to maintain their heart rate within their target heart rate zone for a minimum of 20-30 minutes. This can increase to as much as 45-60 minutes as fitness levels increase.

 

Beyond the 45-60 minute mark there are diminished returns. For all that extra effort, the associated benefits are minimal.

 

This also applies to many athletes. Beyond a certain point they run the risk of overtraining and injury. There are exceptions; however, typically the ultra-long-distance endurance athletes.

 

When will I see results? In terms of the duration of the program as a whole, research suggests a minimum of six weeks is required to see noticeable improvement and as much as a year or more before a peak in fitness is reached.

 

So there you have it, everything you need to know to ensure a safe and effective fat-burning cardiovascular program. Now all that’s left is for you to JUST DO IT!  

 

Cheryl Alker specializes in flexibility training, core strength and postural alignment, working with a select clientele across Palm Beach County. Her company, Stretch Results International, certifies health professionals in her results-based stretching program, educates consumers through public speaking and offers private or class consultations to clients who wish to lose their muscular pain and gain flexibility to achieve full and active lifestyles. For more information, please call Cheryl at (561) 889-3738 or visit www.stretchresults.com.

February, 2010 – Florida’s Strawberry Festival

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Travel with TerriTerri Farris

Celebrate a 75 year tradition – Florida’s Strawberry Festival

By Terri Farris

As the Winter Strawberry Capital of the World, strawberries are part of the everyday fabric of Plant City, Florida – and the biggest event in this community each year is none other than the Florida Strawberry Festival!  This celebration of the strawberry harvest began 75 years ago when the Plant City Lions Club decided to organize the first festival.  Since that date, the Florida Strawberry Festival has grown from a community event to an annual destination for thousands.  

Strawberry ShortcakeGrowing up in Plant City in the 1970’s I have wonderful memories of the Strawberry Festival Parade held on the Monday of each festival.  I marched in this parade many times with my junior high and high school bands.  All the schools close for this event as well as most businesses.  Some other memories I have of the festival are lining up for a serving of the strawberry shortcake made by the local Catholic Church and sampling the delicious strawberry pies made by the Plant City High School Band students and boosters.  In fact, we used to volunteer to “stem” strawberries in the days prior to the festival just to get out of class – of course we had red fingertips for the next week – but it was worth it! 

Although the Florida Strawberry Festival was originally organized to celebrate the strawberry harvest, it has much more to offer than food.  There are numerous competitions including a Baby Parade where little ones are dressed up and showcased on decorated “mini” floats.  For young women, there is a beauty contest where local beauties compete for the coveted title of Florida Strawberry Queen.  The queen and her court represent the community at festival events and throughout the year. 

There are some unique competitions as well for the livestock such as the “Best in Show” for prized steers.  And what festival would be complete without a Lamb Jumping Contest and Racing Pigs? You do not want to miss these little porkers snorting their way to the finish line!

Lamb Jumping Contest
Lamb Jumping Contest

The Neighborhood Village at the Strawberry Festival is the place to find award-winning cakes, pies, cake decorating demonstrations, beautiful quilts and other crafts including scrapbooking. There are numerous exhibits throughout the festival grounds to provide something for everyone to enjoy.

No festival would be complete without carnival rides and booths and the Florida Strawberry Festival provides plenty of those on the Midway. You can win your sweetheart a teddy bear and then take her on the Ferris wheel for a kiss. You can also “lose your strawberries” on a topsy turvy thrill ride or take the little ones on the Merry-Go-Round. 

The Florida Strawberry Festival always draws an amazing line-up of entertainers for the nightly shows – no, I am not referring to the racing pigs!  Performers for prior years have included country music greats Vince Gill, Tobi Keith and Lee Ann Womack. The line-up for 2010 is no exception offering headliner entertainment by Sarah Evans, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Roy Clark, Patty Loveless, REO Speedwagon and comedian Bill Engwall to name a few.  Debbie Reynolds will be on hand on Tuesday evening to entertain for the designated “Red Hat Ladies” day.

Florida Strawberry Festival Senior Day
Florida Strawberry Festival Senior Day

In addition to the designated Red Hat Ladies day, the Florida Strawberry Festival has designated a special day honoring our country’s servicemen, firemen and police officers – “American Heroes Day”.  Other special days include Kids’ Day, Senior Days and a Moonlight Madness special for late night carnival rides. 

This year’s festival will be held March 4th through March 14th.   Advance tickets are available online beginning February 4th.  For more information on special events or to purchase advanced tickets visit their website:  www.flstrawberryfestival.com

Sometimes when you return to events from your past they seem smaller – less significant.  That was not the case for me when I revisited the Florida Strawberry Festival.  This 75-year-old festival is more than a celebration of the harvest – it is a celebration of community – a strawberry pie sized slice of Americana!

Florida Strawberry Festival Parade
Florida Strawberry Festival Parade

 

 

Terri is a freelance writer with regular columns on travel, chocolate and bar reviews.  She is busy each month visiting new places to bring unique travel destinations and events to you.  Yes, it is a sacrifice – but she is willing to do that for her readers!  You can see more of Terri’s writing at www.examiner.com where she is the National Chocolate Examiner and at www.barzz.net.  You can contact Terri at tfarris60@hotmail.com.

February, 2010 – Battlestar Galactica’s The Plan and Caprica

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The Space RoomAnna Sanclement with husband John and baby Emma

Everything Sci-Fi & a Little Astronomy

 

Battlestar Galactica’s The Plan and Caprica

A Beginning and an End

 

by Anna Sanclement

 

Most Battlestar Galactica (BSG) fans were left saddened last year as the show came to an end, a not very stellar one. However, a little glimmer shone for many as word came of one more BSG movie titled “The Plan”. Additional hope arrived in the form of a new series that was set to begin early this year with the name of “Caprica”, the beloved city that was ceremoniously bombed out of existence at the beginning of the BSG series.

 

Caprica promised to deliver many answers regarding the beginning of the end of the 12 Colonies and humanity, which was portrayed on the BSG series. On the other hand, The Plan was to give another angle as to how things went down as seen from the side of the Cylons (the man-like machines that humans built, whom they entered a war with when they destroyed most of human civilization).

 

So, this month, we will dissect both of these and I will give my two cents on both.

 

The Plan – What it Delivered

 

This last BSG movie was highly anticipated by fans and promised to divulge some aspects of the mysteries that the series had raised throughout its run. However, to my personal belief, I didn’t feel The Plan was a strong movie at all.

 

It felt like it was half made up from regurgitated material and another half from a bunch of new Cylon footage that did not really have much of an effect. It did not possess the shocking new truths that it should’ve delivered.

 

It was nice to see the beloved characters once more, but even they seemed washed out as their scenes were repetitions of what had already been seen. The Plan seemed to center mostly on the Cylons–granted that was the premise of the movie. But the ‘plan’ was not much of a surprise at all. It was not what should have been expected from the creators of a great series such as BSG.

 

Caprica – What Will it Bring?

 

This new BSG spin-off goes back to where it all began for the Cylons, about 50 years before “the fall” of the 12 colonies. The series will unfold how it all started regarding the Cylon’s belief in one God and their need to be treated as individuals.

 

The pilot episode, which was released on DVD last May, was quite good and very promising. The actors were proficient and it was nice to see the tie-ins to BSG in the form of Caprica City, and more personally, with William Adama as an eleven-year-old boy.

 

The first episode did more than enough to leave us intrigued with what will come next. It was full of suspense and teasers of what the Cylons are. Many story arcs were started that show potential for becoming interesting; the two main families have quite a lot of additional issues on top of the main ones regarding their killed daughters. Caprica is set to be a good show and one that should be on any sci-fi fan’s watch list for sure.

 

So, in conclusion, the ending of BSG with the Plan was less than stellar and quite a shame. Meanwhile, the “beginning” of the BSG realm looks like it has a lot of good in the making. Caprica should a good new show that hopefully will end in a better direction than its BSG predecessor did.

 

Sky events this month, February of 2010:

 

The Last Quarter Moon happens on Friday the 5th, and then the New Moon occurs on Saturday the 13th. The Last Quarter Moon will be on Sunday the 21st with the Full Moon occurring on Sunday the 28th.

 

February brings a great opportunity to spot the asteroid Vesta.  It should be visible to the naked eye from dark locations and with binoculars it will be easy to see from the suburbs and more lighted areas.

 

The asteroid reaches opposition on Thursday the18th when it will be at magnitude 6.1. Vesta can be found by looking towards the constellation Leo the Lion, which can be found looking towards the northern sky. Leo is also about 6 degrees east-northeast of the bright star Regulus.

 

Orion, Sirius and the Pleiades, are now seen high in the sky at around 9:00 pm in most locations of the northern hemisphere. Opportunities to spy Orion’s nebula continue to be available nightly, with just a small telescope or even binoculars. Just one viewing of this great sight is worth it if you can manage it.

 

Mars is now quite apparent in its bright reddish –1.2 magnitude. Look for it in the eastern horizon as it rises at twilight. It is high in the eastern sky at around 8:00 – 9:00 pm. Mars reached opposition on January the 29th, so it still appears quite large in the sky and will continue to do so for some time.

 

Saturn rises at around 10:00 pm and is at its highest in the sky at about 3:00 to 4:00 am. With a telescope you should be able to see its rings tilted at 5 degrees from edge-on to Earth. Jupiter is now low in the southwestern sky at twilight and sets at around 7:00 pm.

 

Look on up and smile!

 

For more sky events log on to: www.astronomy.com and http://space.about.com/od/computerresources/tp/2009MaySkyGuide.htm

 

You can read other articles and tips by Anna on these websites:  

 

http://baby.lifetips.com/

http://www.helium.com/users/484623

http://www.examiner.com/x-6503-Ft-Lauderdale-Science-News-Examiner

http://www.associatedcontent.com/user/354312/anna_sanclement.html

http://www.suite101.com/profile.cfm/annasanclement

http://anna-sanclement.net 

 

Anna Sanclement writes from home and has recently started to write articles for various Internet sites. She has also finished a novel and has written many stories and a movie script, just for fun.

 

 

February, 2010 – Adam and Carrie Simpson at Lynn University

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PROFESSORS ADAM AND CARRIE SIMPSON

 

Bringing the Best in Drama to Lynn University

 

By Marla E. Schwartz

 

“Innovative, energetic, kind, influential, intelligent” and the word “brilliant” also comes to mind when describing the husband and wife team of Adam and Carrie Simpson, assistant professors in the Lynn University’s Eugene M. and Christine E. Lynn College of International Communication Drama Program based in Boca Raton, FL.  Adam also happens to be the Chair of the Drama Program.

 

Adam Simpson
Adam Simpson

 

 

Adam walks the-walk as a drama teacher, as his students know they have a bonified actor on their hands.  Not that working in the “fame” track is his aspiration, but South Florida does have opportunities and his talent has enabled him to enlarge his sphere as a professional actor.  For example, he was a featured actor on a segment of America’s Most Wanted and last February appeared in an episode of Burn Notice that films in Miami.  He and Carrie feel it’s important to not only teach their students about the field of acting, but to work in the industry, as well.

 

These roles models have done something more important than dare I say running just another drama department in this country, as their unique vision has helped to shape Lynn’s Drama Program into a one-of-a-kind experience merely by their experiential style of teaching.

“We believe you learn by doing, not by talking about doing,” Adam said.

Carrie Simpson
Carrie Simpson

A year ago they began a new curriculum within the department that they hope will take place every three years by taking their students to perform Off-Broadway in New York City. The process begins by putting out a call for script submissions and then choosing the scripts they feel will be a nice fit for their students.  In fact, some of the scripts presented in Boca were changed up a bit, and this allowed Adam and Carrie to not only direct their students, but perform with them, as well.  Audience members thoroughly enjoyed themselves at both productions.

 

 

Adam was born in Evansville, Indiana and raised in this area since he was a little boy, and Carrie was born and raised in Harrisburg, PA, attended the University of Pittsburgh and then attended Florida Atlantic University’s graduate school. 

“And the rest is fate,” Adam said.

“We met at FAU, I was in graduate school and he was an undergrad. That’s Adam’s favorite part about the story, doing productions together,” Carrie laughed.  “We became best friends and we were together a lot and then  – well, we didn’t necessarily have a formal first date, because we were on set and always together.”

“In fact, and we were just on a cruise recently and where some couples were contestants on the shipboard version of THE DATING GAME,” she explained.  “There were three couples on stage. One couple had been married 57-years, another couple had dated for years before getting married and another couple that was together 20-years. They were asked to recall their first date was and every single couple got it right. And we sat there and we were laughing because neither of us could figure out what was our exact first date. We can figure out significant moments, but it wasn’t necessarily when the first date happened.  I mean, the couple that had been married 57-years remembered where they went, what they wore, what they ate, and even how much they spent.”

There’s no doubt that this loving couple has a good thing going.  Hmmm.  Since it’s near Valentine’s Day, do you think they believe in soul mates?  Do they believe that they are each other’s soul mates?

“Yes, of course,” Carrie said.

“Absolutely,” is Adam’s response.

But so much for that lovely-dovey thing they got going on, they’re busy college professors!

The first weekend in February they will host Lynn’s third annual 24-Hour Theatre Project, where students, write, produce, direct and perform original plays in one 24-hour period.  This year local playwrights were invited to participate in this successful event.

Basically on Friday, February 5, the actors, directors and playwrights will meet.  Adam and Carrie will provide a selection of titles that nobody will have seen (except for them) ahead of time and then original plays will be created based on these titles. A pow-wow takes place, the playwright writes the script. The next morning everyone gets back together and the actors and directors have the entire day to memorize and rehearse the scripts. These plays will then be produced when the curtain rises at 7 PM on Saturday, February 6 in the Lynn Student Center Auditorium.

In the field of acting, “you cannot only bring half of your energy or half of your life to your work. It doesn’t work. You won’t work again if you do that,” Adam explained. “The 24-hour theater project helps the students learn how this is accomplished.  It teaches them to be motivated, to try really, really hard, and to think on their feet, to be forcefully creative.  It’s a tough business that requires you to go from zero to 60 in a heartbeat.”

“It’s free … just come by and have some fun,” Adam said. “Each play will be about ten minutes tops, no more – and it can’t be more then ten-minutes because there’s no way anybody could remember all those lines.  The number of plays range anywhere between six and nine plays.”

If you haven’t been to Lynn before – the directions are easy:

Interstate 95 (from the North)

  • Exit I-95 on Yamato Road.
  • Turn right (West) on Yamato Road.
  • Turn left (South) on Military Trail.
  • Campus is on right after first traffic light.

Interstate 95 (from the South)

  • Exit I-95 on Palmetto Park Road.
  • Turn left (West) on Palmetto Park Road.
  • Turn right (North) on Military Trail.
  • Campus is on the left, approximately 2-1/2 miles.

Florida Turnpike

  • Exit Turnpike on Glades Road, Boca Raton exit.
  • Turn left (East) on Glades Road
  • Turn left (North) on Butts Road.
  • Turn left (North) on Military Trail.
  • Campus is on left after second traffic light.

“The 24-Hour Theatre Project is an event that institutions across the country do, places such as schools, professional theatre companies, community theaters do it. The Naked Stage, down in Miami does it,” Adam explained.  “And Carrie has been doing it since she was an undergraduate at the University of Pittsburgh – it’s something that has been going on for a long time across the country and essentially it’s one day where we create brand new theatre and present it to the community.  It’ll be a collection of shorts.  It’s always a blast and has about 70 people involved, including, actors, playwrights, directors, crew members, it’s a load of fun and a great time to come out and celebrate the creativity of the people in the Lynn community.”

It was a fun experience as a college student and it’s something different, you’re not in rehearsals for a long time, you get to meet a lot of people, and just work under the gun in a slightly stressful but fun environment,” Carrie pointed out.  “It’s very creative and exciting so when I got down here and I said to Adam, we should do it.  And then one year we finally did.  The students look forward to doing it again the next year, some want to come back and direct, and then they can’t decide what’s more fun to be the actor or the director, because they kinda like both ends.  This year we may invite students who have already graduated and live in the area to come back and participate in it this year.”

Adam and Carrie have created something very special for the Lynn Community and have been at it five years now and they show no signs ever wanting their dreams jobs to end.  They’re always busy guiding their students into the next project at hand.

“Right now we’re working on creating short films with the students.  There are three groups of students and they’ve been making short films based on the scripts they wrote in the fall,” Carrie explained.  “These movies premiered on Wednesday, January 20.  It was the first time for many of them to be involved in making films and it has been fun.  They were out on location shooting and attended a premiere gala event where all the students got dressed up.  We rolled out the red carpet and had fake paparazzi, so they felt like movie stars. Hopefully, at some point these films will be posted online.”

And there’s no breather.

“After that, we’re continuing our Play Reading Series that’s run out of Jan McArt’s office, where we produce four plays in this series each year, mostly by local playwrights.  Mark Della Ventura, who is also writing for the 24-Hour Theatre Project, has his play Is There a Chance slotted to be read next in the series, on February 3 at 7:30 PM,” Adam said.

The next play in the series, Marriage Counselor, by David Sirois will be read on March 10, 2010.  The readings take place in the Amarnick-Goldstein Concert Hall and the tickets are $10 each, benefiting the university drama program.  Tickets for groups of 20 or more are $7 each.  Jan McArt’s Theatre Arts Guild members are free, but must make reservations in advance. To purchase tickets, call the theatre box office at 561-237-9000.

“Then we have a student directed production that we’re going to produce that students are submitting for approval right now and that’ll take place in mid-March,” Adam pointed out.  “And then we’re doing a play called ‘Project Nuremberg’ which is a new project that we’re writing right now, basically – many months ago, we discovered in our library we have the original transcripts from the Nuremberg Trials.  The University got together with a whole bunch of different organizations; local Temples, Rabbis, and we decided to put on a big function based on these transcripts.  There are lots of different aspects to it.  And our participation involvement in the presentation is to create a play based on the trials.  We begin production on it the first week of February and the show will have a private premiere and then it’ll open on Wednesday, April 21 – 24th.”

The semester ends the first week of May.  ‘Project Nuremberg’ will end one week before final exams and then after the final exams the kids go home.  But the funny thing is – the students in Lynn’s Drama Program, they don’t want to go home, they really want to stay.  No wonder … look who is leading them into their professional lives – Adam and Carrie Simpson.  Any student would be lucky to have them as mentors.  And any parent, grateful to them for their mentorship.

Ah-hah.  Wait just a moment.  “We do teach acting classes in the summer,” Adam said.  “But we don’t have any productions.”

In fact, Adam and Carrie begin planning their agenda for the following year in March.  They always have something clever up their sleeves.  Just you wait and see. “Right now we’re waiting for more details to come out about the new black box theatre and then we’ll start planning our season around that bit of information.”

As always, look for more unique programming from this admirable couple!

For more information, go to:  www.lynn.edu.

 

=================

Marla E. SchwartzA native of Toledo, OH and a graduate of Kent State, Marla E. Schwartz has been a professional journalist since her teenage years and is a Senior Writer for Miami Living Magazine, and a freelance writer for CRAVINGS South Florida in Aventura, as well as Around Wellington Magazine, Lighthouse Point Magazine, and Pandora.  An avid photographer, her images have appeared in numerous Ohio publications, as well as in Miami Living, The Miami Herald, The Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel and The Palm Beach Post.  She has had numerous plays published and produced around the country.  Her short play, America’s Working? was originally read at First Stage in Los Angeles and in the same city produced at the Lone Star Ensemble.  It was then produced at Lynn University in Boca Raton, FL and then taken to an Off-Broadway playhouse by its producers Adam and Carrie Simpson.  Her piece, The Lunch Time Café, was a finalist for the Heideman Award, Actors Theatre of Louisville.  Feel free to contact her at: meschwartz1@hotmail.com.

February, 2010 – The Future’s Greatest Challenge

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Teen TalkEvan Baumel

The Future’s Greatest Challenge

By Evan Baumel

 

When the Cold War ended in 1991, many Americans were optimistic about the future. No foreign country was capable of challenging the economic, social, and political supremacy of the United States. However, as soon as the “Iron Curtain” had fallen, another cold war had begun, this time within America itself. Eventually, a “culture war” erupted that spread throughout the nation. Debate over even the smallest of issues, such as the effects of television on children, sparked strong passions in liberal and conservative corners. Even today, there is a lack of mutual understanding on both sides of the spectrum.

I have noticed that, over the past two decades, the Democratic and Republican parties have embraced the far-left and far-right ideologies, respectively. To me, this is the greatest threat to the foundations that have supported this great country. A clear example of this would be the health care debate during the summer of 2009. Rather than focus on the merits or faults of the legislation being considered, several right-wing Republican groups and prominent figures immediately dismissed the initiative as “socialism.” The Democratic base was not helping itself either. At one Democratic meeting, the organization tried to vote on a resolution urging President Obama to continue to support the “public option”. Almost immediately, far-left hecklers disrupted the meeting, favoring a more radical “single payer” system, which would only allow the government to run health care (legitimizing the far-right’s argument). The meeting became so chaotic that the session had to be dismissed.

I view political extremism as a threat because I know that pragmatic individuals founded this country through compromise. The founding fathers (and mothers) who created this government based it on a few common principles. They agreed on the grounds that this country would be a democratic republic, where the leaders are chosen and take orders from the people. Basic rights such as freedom of speech and religion were not to be infringed. The press would not be censored, affirming Thomas Jefferson’s quote that “when choosing between a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I would rather choose the latter.”

Even a few decades ago, the divisions between the parties were not as prevalent. In Barack Obama’s The Audacity of Hope, he recalls the first meeting he had with the longtime Senator Robert Byrd. Mr. Byrd remembers that when he first came to the Capitol, it was not uncommon for Democrats and Republicans to discuss the issues together. As president, Barack Obama tried to reach out to the Republicans, but the Republicans did not cooperate (the Democrats did the same with George W. Bush).

I have found that the greatest American leaders, such as Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt, were usually political moderates. When they needed to solve a problem, they would hear from both sides before making a decision. If anyone wishes to truly solve the nation’s ailments, he or she needs to ignore the partisan bickering and instead listen to every side of the debate.

As the future generation, we must make it our mission to cooperate with people who hold different views from ours. So far, I have seen great progress. At Wellington High School, the Young Democrats and Young Republicans clubs often hold joint meetings for non-partisan speakers. They see it as an effort to reach across the aisle and share ideas that could lead to a better future. It is my hope that the leaders of the next generation refuse to play the same politics as usual and work together to build a better future for our country.

Evan Baumel is a senior at Wellington High School. He’s involved in Debate, National Honor Society, Key Club, politics and writes for the school newspaper.

February, 2010 – Downfalls of the Dumb and Reckless

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As I Was SayingAlan Williamson

 

Downfalls of the Dumb and Reckless

 

By Alan Williamson

 

       According to reliable sources, when Humpty Dumpty had a big fall it left a kingdom shell shocked for months. Richard Nixon fell mightily, too, as those who figuratively “fall” from power do. Just ask Jim and Tammy Bakker. They had a fall from grace and power, an impressive feat for two otherwise underwhelming famous fallers.

          More recently, disgraced golfing great Tiger Woods kept finding new rock bottoms to hit on his epic fall as the story unfolded that he was cheating on his wife with not one, not two, but multiple mistresses over the course of several years. Mel Brooks once said that “tragedy is when I get a paper cut; comedy is when you slip on a patch of ice and fall down an embankment.” Narcissism aside, Mr. Brooks is a wise observer of life’s peaks and valleys.

          These reflections on falling in all its humbling, tragicomic spectacle came the day after a good old-fashioned face-first fall while running on a paved pedestrian path at the park. Like so many big falls involving humans, it happened with uncanny coincidence right after I nonchalantly overruled the voices of reason and common sense in favor of my own visionary powers as master of my universe.

          Sure, I saw that my left shoelace had come untied, posing an element of danger that could theoretically result in sudden failure to maintain a buffer between my head and the ground. But as long as I’m aware of it, I rationalized, I’m still in control of the situation. Besides, I was almost done with my run and it would be a shame to stop short just to tie a stupid shoelace.

          My ingenious plan seemed to be working flawlessly as I neutralized the loose lace through Zen-like mental awareness and the grace and purity of my running stride. And then it happened. I fell hard and without warning – unless you count my lip getting pinned between the asphalt and my front teeth a warning. In the millisecond it took to pound the pavement with every part of my body except my feet, I knew I was about to become the “after” in a sobering before and after gallery of shoelace-related accident victims.

          As I spooned myself free from my pancake-like embrace with the pedestrian path, a voice rang out.

          “Are you alright?”

          Looking up, I saw a parking lot security guard on patrol in his golf cart who was surveying the carnage of another senseless act of shoelace bloodshed. Perfect, I thought. Because falling down on a sunny afternoon on smooth ground with no obstructions in sight just isn’t as special if there isn’t someone there to see it.

          “I think I’m okay,” I answered tentatively, checking to see if my teeth were where I usually keep them.

          “You went down like you were shot,” the roving security guard noted, barely able to conceal his gratitude for my providing him with a “happening” to share with his wife over dinner.

          “Just a nasty spill,” I assured him. “The only thing injured is my pride.”

          “Your pride looks like it’s bleeding,” he observed. “You want me to call for help?”

          “No, that’s not necessary,” I asserted, pronouncing myself well enough to limp back to my car.

          As I gradually began to take stock of my God-given goodies, I saw that I had the kind of damage that – had I been a car – I could have driven away from the accident scene. I just needed to drive slowly and find a body shop that could put skin-colored paint where mine had come off.  

          Having instinctively thrown my hands out between my face and the rapidly approaching asphalt, I now had several less layers of skin on various parts of my hands and knee.  What you quickly discover is that the loss of several layers of skin has a tendency to make you ooze blood. This tends to make you philosophically divide your life into two distinct periods. There’s the good old days when you had an ample supply of skin, and the living hell that is your life now as a big blood-oozing clod.

          In the end, I was lucky. My teeth were intact behind a fat lip and my wounds began to scab and heal in the passing days. But having fallen hard in the literal sense, I’ve gained wisdom that can benefit even those who have fallen figuratively from their perches of power and grace. To put it succinctly: In the journey of life, those who stay humble seldom stumble. And it’s good to keep your stupid shoelaces tied.      

 

Alan Williamson is an award-winning writer with 27 years in the field of true fiction (advertising). A practical man who knows that writing for a living is risky going, he has taken steps to pursue a second, more stable career as a leggy super model. Alan can be reached at alwilly@bellsouth.net.

February, 2010 – Lost in the Inbox Shuffle?

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Ultimate Productivity

Claudine Motto, Organization Expert
Claudine Motto, Organization Expert

 

Lost In The Inbox Shuffle? 7 Tips to Write Emails That Stand Out

 

By Claudine Motto

 

Writing emails that quickly and successfully communicate your message is a skill at the heart of effective business communication.  Whether you’re communicating with co-workers, clients, or supervisors, writing an effective email can make the difference between your email being opened and being ignored.  Here are 7 tips to help get your message across:

 

1. MISSION: SUBJECT LINE: Your mission is to craft a subject line that tells the recipient what you want from them, and by when.  What do you need them to DO?  Keep it concise yet descriptive of what’s inside.  A well-crafted subject line helps you find emails quickly later, too.

 

2. SHORT AND SWEET: Ideally an email will touch on one important issue at a time. The key is to effectively communicate that one key issue briefly, and clearly.  Keep paragraphs short, and use bullet points – you have just a few seconds to grab the person’s attention.

 

And when you think you’re done, make it shorter: take a quick look for any “filler” information you can eliminate – keep only the most relevant details.

 

3. BOTTOMS UP: If your email gets opened, the reader will most likely quickly skim the first few sentences – make them count.  Summarize the content of the email, or repeat what you’re asking them or needing them to do, and by when.

 

4. KEEP IT SIMPLE: Avoid or keep to a minimum extravagant fonts, colors, bold, and italics – simple and clean makes it easier for the reader to focus on the message, and not on the frills.

 

5. KNOW YOUR RECIPIENT: Don’t turn the reader off – if you don’t know the person well, use formal greetings and salutations until you have a better sense of how to address them.  With more established relationships, less formal greetings and casual language is acceptable and can create a sense of rapport.

 

Emails are essential in business communication and are a reflection of you and your business – keep them professional.

 

6. DON’T OVEREMAIL: Sending email takes just a few keystrokes, making it tempting to send one each time you have a thought or question about something.  Respect other people’s time – save the tidbits and combine them into one email – people will appreciate it, and you may even find the answer on your own in the meantime.

 

7. THANKS BUT NO THANKS: If you don’t need to hear back, or the email is for information only, say so – it can save the person from replying with just “thanks” or “you’re welcome.”

 

The simpler and more concise your emails, the less time you’ll waste writing them,  the less time the recipient will waste reading them, and the more likely they’ll be to open messages from you.  Plus, you’ll ensure the main point gets across – efficient, and effective.

 

2010 Claudine Motto, All Rights Reserved. 

Productivity Coach and Professional Organizer Claudine Motto helps home office geniuses, entrepreneurs, and independent professionals get organized and in control of their workload so they can reach their goals with less struggle and less stress. She offers one-on-one coaching and group training programs – please visit http://www.vistalnorte.com or call 561-641-9500 for more information, to sign up for her monthly newsletter, or to schedule a complimentary 20-minute consultation.

 

 

 

February, 2010 – Valentines I Will Not Send

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Cantankerously YoursWendell Abern

 

Valentines I Will Not Send

 

By Wendell Abern

Dear Bleeding Hearts,

          Yeah, yeah, I know.  Valentine’s Day.  Candy.  Flowers.  Cupids.  All that mushy garbage.

          Every year at this time, I ask myself if my idol, Ebeneezer Scrooge, would deign to send a valentine to anyone.  Clearly, the answer is no.  And I couldn’t agree more.

          In fact, I believe there are some people, companies and institutions who deserve to be omitted from anyone’s valentine list.  I made a list of my own such non-recipients, and it came to 3,462.  For purposes of this column, I have whittled my undeservers down to a manageable five.

          1 – My local super market.

          Wonderful place.  Wonderful selection.  Love going there.

          Until I get in line to pay, and the cashier leaves to go fetch cigarettes for a customer who doesn’t want to wait in the Customer Service line.

          I have mentioned this infuriating practice to all of the store’s managers, complaining that they go out of their way to pander to cigarette users.  They all mouth the company line:  “Sir, we care for each customer equally well.”

         

Well, my store recently installed a suggestion box.  I have been stuffing it with complaints and suggestions every time I shop.  I use different handwritings, different pens, different names, and even deliberately misspell words.  Some of my latest efforts:

          “Who runs this place?  Oh wait, I know.  The same guy who used to run AIG.  Harriet S.”

          “I hate this place!  Your ads say shopping here is a pleasure, and then I wait while some clown sends the cashere for cigarettes.  That’s pleasure by you?  You want pleasure, send your casheres to my boyfriend.  Jennie M.”

          “14 minutes at the deli counter for six slices of ham; 4 minutes waiting for someone to acknowledge my presence at the chicken station; 3 minutes in line to pay; 21 minutes in your store to buy two items.  Just thought I’d thank you for speeding me through your lines and making my trip here such a pleasure.  Jerry G.”

          I was certain no one actually read the suggestions, until last week. 

I was standing in line behind a muscular, good-looking young man, and as he paid, the cashier smiled at him and said, “Are you Jennie’s boyfriend?”

            2 – Ikea.

          Wonderful ads.  Great catalog.  Reasonable prices.  Couldn’t wait to go and size up the place.

          Will never go there again.

          I walked in and a young man offered me a Swedish meatball.  Delicious.  I told him I wanted to look at some furniture.  He directed me to an upstairs escalator.

          On the second floor, I wandered through room after room, looking at chair after sofa after cabinet, and becoming more and more confused by the selection. 

          I had been walking for at least a half-hour and decided I’d had enough.  I started back the way I’d come; with my crack sense of direction,

I couldn’t find the escalators.  I decided to ask an employee how to get back downstairs. 

I couldn’t find an employee.

          I stopped next to a woman and asked, “Is there a salesperson around here somewhere?”

          “What, salesperson?  They don’t have those.  They got nine thousand cashiers and a guy gives out meatballs.”

          I thought, I’m never escaping.  I’m going to have to live here.  I stopped a guy heading my way and told him I couldn’t find the way out.

          He said, “Hey, don’t tell me your problems, Charlie.  I’ve been here since Tuesday.”    

          An elderly woman saw me start to quake, and came to my rescue.  “Just follow me,” she said, escorting me to the escalators.

          “I hope you have something to calm your nerves,” she said as I stepped on the down escalator.

          “I will in a few minutes.  A jumbo hot dog.”

          “That’s not such a good idea.”

          “Okay, two jumbo hot dogs.”         

By that time, the escalator had reached the ground floor.  I ran to the exit doors.

          3, 4 & 5 – Karen, Emily and Nancy.

          Three wonderful women.  Beautiful.  Compassionate.  Thoughtful.   Caring.  Very bright.  Lots of fun.   

          Except they don’t know how to eat.

          These three ladies invited me to have lunch with them after services  one recent Sunday (Unitarian Universalist congregation:  River of Grass). 

Lunch with three beautiful women!  Terrific idea!  Very flattering!  I did feel a little weird, however, when we walked through Toojay’s Deli and I “disappeared.”  See, you follow three beautiful women through a restaurant,

 you suddenly become The Invisible Man.  I mean, no one in that restaurant knew I was there; in fact, no one even knew I existed.

          When we ordered, things got even worse.

          Karen began by asking for a Reuben Sandwich without corned beef.

          “What!” I shouted.  “You can’t do that!  That’s like ordering a cheeseburger without the burger!”

          “Pay no attention to him,” Karen told the waitress.  “Bring me the Reuben with the cheese, the sauerkraut, the Russian Dressing, everything; just hold the corned beef.”

          I segued into my most effective churlish frown until Emily ordered. 

A chicken salad plate.   I felt somewhat mollified.

          “But substitute tofu for the chicken,” Emily said.

          “What!” I yelled.  “What, tofu?  This is a deli, for God’s sake!  You’re supposed to leave here with heartburn and a cholesterol problem!”

          “Pay no attention to him,” Emily said, smiling at me sweetly.  I scowled in return.   

          Then Nancy ordered a chef’s salad with no bacon and no turkey.

          “Help!” I yelled.  “Somebody, help!  I’m trapped in a booth with aliens from the planet Vegetarius!”

          “Pay no attention to him,” Nancy said.  “Bring me the honey mustard dressing on the side.”

          The waitress turned to me and said, “What can I get you, sir?”

I said, “I’d like a Seaweed Casserole.  Hold the lily pads.”

          In unison, Karen, Emily and Nancy said, “Pay no attention to him.”  Then Karen said, “Bring him a brisket sandwich on rye with a latke.  That should keep him quiet for a while.”

          Nancy said, “We want to keep him quiet for a while, we better order two latkes for him.”

          They all smiled sweetly at me.

          Later, as I finished my second latke, I thought … I’m eating lunch with three beautiful women!  I’m the luckiest guy on the planet!  And even though they don’t know how to eat properly, I can’t wait to do it again.

          However, I refuse to send any of them a valentine.

          Cantankerously Yours,

          Wendell Abern

Wendell Abern can be reached at dendyabern@comcast.net.    

February, 2010 – For the Love of Pets

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Pet TalkFrances Goodman

 

For the Love of Pets

by Frances Goodman

 

Love, love, love. What is it really?

Aside from the romantic view, here is one description found in the dictionary:

“Affectionate concern for the well-being of others….”

Noted author Eric Fromm went to great lengths to define it in his book, The Art of Loving.

Although I disagree with much of his overall philosophy, I do like his definition of what real love must include:

Care (about), Responsibility (toward), Respect (for) and Knowledge (about) another.

Note that emotion is not in the list. Nor are the attributes of the recipient. According to Fromm, these are all things that should emanate from the character of the one who does the loving.

Pets and people who receive this kind of love are most fortunate.

 

Unconditional

Then there’s the special kind of love that dogs give us — the unconditional kind.

In other words, a steadfast loyalty that is also based on the character of the giver rather than the receiver.

An accepting love that simply is.

English author Jerome K. Jerome is remembered for putting it this way:

“A dog never makes it his business to inquire whether you are in the right or in the wrong, rich or poor, silly or wise. Come luck or misfortune, good repute or bad, he is going to stick to you.”

 

More on Dogs

Here are more quotes on the subject:

From Celia Haddon, English pet columnist and author: “A loving friendship, formed over thousands of years, flourishes between dogs and human beings. Dogs have left the hunting pack of their ancestors and become members of our human world.”

From M. Acklam: “We give dogs time we can spare, space we can spare and love we can spare. And in return, dogs give us their all. It’s the best deal man has ever made.”

Here are some excerpts from “Dog Haiku.” It came in one of those emails that circulate among pet lovers:

“How do I love thee?

“The ways are as numberless as

“My hairs on the rug.

“Dig under the fence — why?

“Because it is there. Because it’s

“There. Because it’s there.

“Look in my eyes and

“Deny it. No human could

“Love you as much as I do.”

 

Meow!

When it comes to cats, not too many humans have been motivated to write about the unconditional love of cats. However, they are quite capable of giving non-judgmental loyalty and affection, even though a few conditions may be attached.

Here are some thoughts from those who have had cats and loved them:

“One small cat changes coming home to an empty house to coming home.” – Pam Brown.

And from Cleveland Amory, author of The Cat Who Came for Christmas:

“As anyone who has ever been around a cat for any length of time well knows, cats have enormous patience with the limitations of the human kind.”

Here’s wishing you real love – the ability to give it as well as the good fortune of receiving it.

 

Frances Goodman is a professional dog trainer and pet care writer who lives in Royal Palm Beach. Got a question? Email her at fhpettalk@hotmail.com. Or click her ad below to visit her website, www.mypetnews.com.

For Obediance Training, call (561) 792-8224.