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Test Taking Tips

By Jaiden Lagalo-Blinston

With the school year coming to an end in just a few months, students in high school will be rushing in to school (or out of school) to take their final exams. We all know that feeling before a test in which we try to scramble all the information into our memory at once. It’s important that students try their absolute best, but this can lead to a lot of stress and can affect test scores. Throughout the past couple years I have found out about some helpful study tips from my teachers and online that have personally helped me survive.

Here are 4 helpful studying tips:

Exercise. Yes…. I know… it’s terrible, but according to Research conducted by Dr. Chuck Hillman of the University of Illinois “20 minutes exercise before an exam can improve performance”. I don’t understand how this works but I tried this when I was in 8th grade studying for my Honors Earth and Space Science tests and oddly enough I felt better and less stressed, which brought my grades up significantly.

  • SPEAK OUT LOUD! IT’S CRAZY BUT IT WORKS. When you repeat a definition or formula out loud you are more likely to remember and apply it to the test or exam you are taking. When saying it out loud, your mind can create little tips or rhymes that can help you in the long run. For example, I remember when I was in 2nd grade and I needed to know my times table and for some reason I had a very hard time with it. My mother always told me to try to make a song or a rhyme to help me, so I used “6 when on a date with 8 and came back with 48”. Looking back on it now, it’s a little corny but it got me that A.
  • Listen to some music by Mozart. My science teacher last year told our class that if it helps you to listen to music while studying then do it, but listen to classical music. But it doesn’t have to be just classical music, it can be any type of music that you are not used to.  So instead of getting a song that you know stuck in your head, you’ll get the dates on your history quiz right. I did a science project in elementary school where I did math problems and read a book while listening to classical and rock music, and I found that I worked better when listening to classical music.
  •  Study! Study! Study! I know how annoying studying can be and trust me with things like social media and just plain procrastination, it can be hard. So with simple study tips like making flash cards, writing notes and having a study session with your teacher or friends can be very beneficial.

In the past, I have struggled a lot personally with trying to figure a method that best works for me. I feel like teens are pressured so much in school, especially because exams and standardized state tests are around the same time of year. I know how it feels to come home completely burnt out and having about two hours of homework and on top having extracurriculars. Everyone in high school is doing great, as long as you try your best and study! So whether you use the stereotypical “chew a piece mint gum while you study and chew the same flavor on the test” trick or just standard flash cards, just know that teens may not always recognize or realize that the hard work you put in now will help you in the long run. And TRUST me, no one expects you to get a A on every test, exam, quiz or whatever silly assignment your school gives you. Believe in yourself and you will get through it.

Whose Trash is it Anyway?

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By Bryan Hayes

Every morning, I wake up and go to the fitness trail to work out and fuel my soul with the fresh Florida air.  Today, as I walked up to do push ups, I saw a bottle.  It was but one lonesome bottle laying there lifeless on the wood chip covered ground, surrounded by the most beautiful trees, water, and all the wonders that the majestic south Florida park provides.

With curiosity, I watched one person after another walk by this empty water bottle and wondered why no one picked it up and threw it away.   I pondered why there are no recycling bins in the park.  And, I wondered why someone left it there on the ground in the first place.

It was but one bottle, so what is the big deal, right?   It is actually a beautiful metaphor for life. While we only see it as but a single problem, it is interconnected with so many others.

“Why should I bother?” She asked. “It is not mine.”  

Therein lies the philosophical question of whose bottle is it, does it matter whose it is (or was), because once it is left behind, whose bottle is it now? 

And, to echo that sentiment, he proclaimed.

“It’s not my problem.” He continued. “It is just one bottle.  What’s the big deal anyway?”   

That is a common statement I hear over and over again, and to respond to that, I only needed to go around the lake to the playground area where my intention was to do calisthenics, but something else caught my attention.   In the sand, there was a red plastic cup.  Then, another and another.  

Chances are there was a children’s party on Sunday, which included both plastic cups and juice drinks in plastic packaging, and their trash strewn across the playground.  At first, it did not look like much, but the more I walked the more I found.   Not only did I discover these, but also a plastic plate, and other rather interesting leftovers including someone who had cleaned up after their dog, but left the bag laying on the ground. 

Why?

As I was meandering through the playground picking up trash, there was a rather intriguing scene simultaneously with a gentleman with a metal detector searching for treasure.   How much treasure can be found in a children’s play area, I am not sure.  I did find it intriguing that he continued to go around, over, and beside the trash that was laying next to where he was working but did not touch any of it.

Why?

This is but one playground, but it is not an isolated incident.  Much the same event played out the day prior while at the beach.  In fact, my friend asked me, “Do you think all of this is one day’s worth, two day’s or a week?”   How many other parks, and beaches are there just in the area?

We encounter things in our life everyday that may or may not be ours, but it should be cleaned up, and yet how often we do leave it to someone else?  How often do we turn the other way?  And, how often do we find someone else is to blame?

The answer to why is rarely an easy one, because there are many variables and layers to the question.  Why does anyone choose to do, or not do, anything?

Instead of attempting in vain to solve that, and the many mysteries of the world, we can only ask ourselves that question in order to get the real answer to why.  And take the first step by picking up the stray water bottle or plastic cup that litters a beautiful area. 

Unicorn Children’s Foundation

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Unicorn Children’s Foundation Gets Down with Motown

The Unicorn Ball “Get Down With Motown” gala at the The Polo Club of Boca Raton on Feb. 16th, 2019.
Michael & Heather Fairs, Gail Wasserman, Felette Branch, Nicole Flier, Marianne Conigliaro. (Photo by MagicalPhotos.com / Mitchell Zachs)

Boca Raton, FLFebruary 16, 2019 – On Saturday, February 16, 2019, The Unicorn Children’s Foundation, along with co-chairs Julissa Caballero and Phillip DiPonio, hosted its Unicorn Ball: Get Down with Motown at the Polo Club of Boca Raton.  The evening was a resounding success, and funds raised will create cradle to career pathways to help people with autism, attention deficit disorder and other special needs excel in their communities.

Haley Moss, a South Florida woman who was admitted to the Florida Bar 21 years after she was diagnosed with autism, was honored with the prestigious Occhigrossi Family Youth in Service Award. “I am completely honored and very, very excited to keep spreading the message and hoping to inspire and bring hope to Boca Raton and our surrounding area,” Haley proclaimed. The award recognizes young people who are doing exceptional work to increase acceptance, support and opportunities for individuals challenged by special needs.

Guests were treated to a live performance by Carlos De Antonis, America’s Got Talent contestant and world-famed opera tenor. The event consisted of an exciting live auction including 7th-row tickets for Elton John’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour in Sunrise in March, and an exclusive Opera Chef Experience by Carlos himself. Another exciting live auction item was a Marilyn Monroe print on brushed metal, worth $25,000 by artist, Arthur J Williams. He was there at the event telling his fascinating story of his journey of being one of the greatest counterfeiters of modern history to now being a professional artist. During the After Party, a live band performed all of the classic Motown hits, where everyone danced and enjoyed delicious Motor City soul food.

A portion of the proceeds from this event will benefit Unicorn’s very exciting new program: the Special Percs CaféTM, a café that will provide vocational training and employment options for young adults with special needs.  Unicorn hopes to create a path for these individuals to become more valued, accepted and included within the community through meaningful employment options in a competitive high-demand industry, as well as give their lives meaning and purpose one cup at a time. Guests had the exclusive opportunity to take home a one-of-a-kind Special Percs Café mug donated by FarFromBoring, and the FIRST bags of “Coffee for a Cause” Unicorn Dream Makers Blend by Mammoth Coffee Roasting Co. If you couldn’t attend the event but would like to donate towards the launch of Special Percs CaféTM or purchase a bag of coffee, please visit UnicornChildrensFoundation.org/SpecialPercs.

A big THANK YOU to this year’s sponsors: Gail Wasserman Family Foundation, Sunshine Health, Silvana & Barry Halperin, Stanley & Marilyn Barry, Angela Fisher, Skyjet, Saks Fifth Avenue, Wyndham Boca Raton, Club Managers Association of America- Florida Chapter, Boca West Children’s Foundation, TD Bank, Gregory’s Fine Jewelry, Mammoth Coffee Roasting Company, D3 Advertising, Motiv8, The Winebow Group, Palm Bay International, Republic Distributing Company, Simply The Best Magazine, Toshiba Business Solutions, The Happy Printer, FarFromBoring, Cakeballs Inc., and Oceans234.

With 1 of every 6 children affected by some form of intellectual or developmental disability, most of us have experienced the challenges first-hand or know someone who has.  There are a wide range of opportunities to be involved; to connect and learn more about the Unicorn Children’s Foundation please visit www.UnicornChildrensFoundation.org

About the Unicorn Children’s Foundation

Unicorn Children’s Foundation is a non-profit organization providing education, awareness and funding opportunities to organizations for special needs children in an effort to help them excel in the community.  For millions of special needs children with developmental, communication and learning challenges, finding a cure is like chasing a rainbow in that a cure remains elusive. The Unicorn Children’s Foundation is expanding the collective special needs community to help acknowledge, celebrate and integrate the special qualities possessed by neurodiverse children with Autism, ADHD, Bipolar, Asperger’s, Dyslexia and other learning disorders.

Listening to Your Body Too Much?

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By Dr. Jonathon Chung, Keystone Chiropractic

The Downside of Listening to Your Body Too Much

Historically I’ve been a big advocate of being “in-tune” with your body. For the most part, I do think that a generally healthy person can benefit from developing a better awareness of what their body is experiencing. It’s a good guide for adapting your training and developing a meditative practice like breath awareness.

In recent years, I’ve come to the conclusion that there are situations where a patient can be TOO in-tune with what their body feels, and this perception of what their body feels can actually create fear, apprehension, and further harm to their mental state and quality of life. Today we’ll discuss some of these types of situations and what a patient can do to help themselves break a negative connection with their own self-awareness.

When Listening to Your Body Goes Wrong

There’s a lot of research that shows that paying attention to inner body activities can be extremely beneficial for you. Things like being aware of your breath, meditation, counting your heart beat are all tools used in yoga and mindfulness practices that really help people a lot!

The concept of listening to your body has been popularized in the circles of fitness. It’s a phrase used to guide people in sport or exercise to recognize when their body may not be in the best state to complete a task.

It involves feeling out different aches or pains, observing where the body seems to be putting a restriction on movement, or just an inner awareness of fatigue. It’s supposed to be a guide against overtraining and possibly develop an awareness of impending injury. In cases where this is an otherwise healthy person with no history of chronic pain problems, it serves a good purpose.

However, in my experience seeing patients with chronic pain daily, a heightened attention and awareness of their own pain can be very counterproductive to a patient’s recovery and progression. Let’s talk about why.

Being In-Tune With Body Pain

It’s natural for your brain to pay attention to areas of your body that are in pain. It’s one of the ways your body protects itself whenever it has suffered an injury like a sprained ankle or a large cut on your hand. By avoiding contact of the injured body part, you are allowing your body to temporarily immobilize an area so that the natural healing responses can have time to fix the damaged tissue.

This is a necessary and completely normal response to physical injury. While this is a big generalization, the healing time for various tissues is shown in the graphic below. You can see that most minor muscle and ligament injuries can take a few days to heal while moderate to severe injuries can take several months.

Image Credit http://drcalebburgess.com/ and Instagram @drcalebburgess

So even in a worst-case scenario where you have an unstable injury that needs surgery, it takes about 2 years for a tissue to heal completely. If we know that these are the general healing times for people, then what explains the pain patients can feel for several years?

However, for some people there can be problems that develop in neurological pathways that perceive pain. What seemed like a simple, straight forward injury leads to chronic or persistent pain that lasts long beyond the normally allotted time for tissues to heal.

The problem in these cases is that many of these patients will avoid movements or activities to protect an area of injury that may not need protection and avoidance. So there ends up being a cycle of injury, stopping exercise, followed by deconditioning from lack of exercise leading to more risk of injury and pain.

The brain can learn to fear movement to avoid pain creating a vicious cycle often seen in persistent pain patients.

This is the result of treating the pain issue as a muscle or joint problem, when it’s really a brain and neurologically rooted problem. The kicker is that while avoiding movement is necessary for true joint injuries, avoidance may actually make a persistent pain problem in the brain even worse.

Many times when someone suffers with persistent pain issues that have no diagnosable injury, being too aware of your body’s painful triggers can be detrimental to healing and recovery.

Pain Science

One of the more popular concepts in pain science is the idea that chronic pain can develop from factors known as hypervigilancecatastrophizing, and fear-avoidance.

  • Pain Hypervigelance – “when there is an excessive tendency to focus on pain or somatic sensation, or an excessive readiness to select pain-related information over other information from the environment.” [1]
  • Catastrophizing – “an concept where people show exaggerated thoughts and descriptions of the negative consequences of pain featuring magnification, rumination, and helplessness” [2]
  • Fear-Avoidance – a model of chronic pain that describes how people develop and maintain chronic pain as a result of attention processes and avoidant behavior based on pain-related fear. [3]

Those are nice academic definitions, but what do they mean for us? A lot of it comes down to being really fixated on how bad the pain is and avoiding anything that might be associated with the pain. And we now know that the fixation and avoidance behavior can reinforce maladaptive patterns in the way the brain is working.

So it is to say that being too focused on your pain when you are trying to heal can reinforce the cycle of staying in chronic pain.

Fostering an Anti-Fragile Mindset

One of the big things that drew me to chiropractic was a philosophical idea that the body is strong and has a remarkable ability to heal itself. It’s a mindset that I’ve had growing up while playing sports where my coaches would see someone get injured and they’d always say to just walk it off.

Obviously it’s not something you want to do with an unstable or serious injury like major sprains or a concussion. However, for things like scraping our shins, getting hit by a pitch in the back, pulling a muscle, or having a mild ankle sprain this approach trained our young minds to:

  • Understand that the pain will go away on it’s own in time
  • That our body and mind is strong enough to will away pain
  • That we aren’t fragile

Ultimately, we came away with the mental state that we will feel better and pain goes away with time. This also meant that we were pushed towards our normal activities as quickly as possible.

As a chiropractor, a big part of my job is to foster a sense of strength and resiliency in my patients. It means that I want my patients to foster a sense of independence from their pain. That means I don’t want my patients to fear doing activities or to be dependent on any intervention whether that’s a drug, massage, or even chiropractic adjustment. I want my patients to never need me, but they can certainly count on me to be there when they want to be better.

Nuance

So before anyone takes my points to the extremes, let me just say this.

  • Mental state won’t cure every pain
  • Don’t avoid doctors, especially with serious injury/illness
  • Many people will still have chronic pain even without a sense of fear avoidance and catastrophizing.

So with that out of the way. Mental state can be a powerful influence on the development and resolution of pain, but it can be really, really difficult. When we know there no longer a risk of worsening an injury, in order for patients to make the next step in their recovery, we have to engage them in doing the normal activities that they have avoided.

That might mean lifting some moderately heavy objects, bending their back forward, turning their heads, or getting back into exercise. Yes, sometimes that means we have to make patients revisit their pain and forcing their brain and nervous system to adapt and stop fearing it.

It means they have to stop listening to their body for a bit, and actually push through the false alarm signal so they can adapt.

It’s not easy, and it doesn’t happen quickly. But when patients are able to get there, the whole world opens up again, and we can start to pop the bubble that they’ve lived in because their brain is free again.

Dinosaurs Invade

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Dinosaurs Invade Palm Beach Again, Only This Time Bigger, Badder and With More Teeth!

Get ready to dig up some of the most interesting creatures this world has ever known! The Dinosaur invasion is back at the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium in Palm Beach! Only this time they are bigger and badder, since making an appearance more than 5 years ago!

Step back to a land before our time and witness 20 different species of animatronic dinosaurs from the Tyrannosaurus Rex to the Velociraptor, unlike anything you’ve ever seen! My husband and I took my 6-year-old boy and 2 year-old girl to see the exhibit firsthand and it definitely aimed to please!

When you walk in, these larger than life re-creations take your breath away and as you meander through the exhibit. Not only are you transported to a time when humans weren’t even close to making an appearance, but you travel through different countries to learn about which species made their home in certain areas of the world. It was quite the incredible educational experience, that taught our little ones about what dinosaurs ate, to how much they weighed and their place of origin. This time around there’s an eerie hallway that leads out to the unexpected. The most giant alligator you have ever laid eyes on, a T-Rex that will literally give you the chills to think something so large and frightening ever roamed the earth to begin with and a number of interesting creatures, I for one had never seen before. The kids had a blast in the sand pit, digging for fossils and brushing the bones in an effort to piece to together which monsters made their way through through the earth millions of years ago. Definitely a major upgrade from the first exhibit!

“Guests will get an up-close view of the amazing creatures, while learning about the most recent discoveries in the world of paleontology. We want to ‘open every mind to science,’ and this is the perfect way to get visitors excited with this part of history,” said President of the SFSCA Lew Crampton. It most definitely got us excited about a time when these smart and quick-witted creatures dominated the world for well over 150 million years, until an asteroid wiped them out of existence.

However, scientists believe dinosaurs aren’t totally extinct and many of their descendants are among us today. We had such a great time walking the exhibit and getting a chance to experience the recent improvements to the science center, we can’t wait to go back! Why not take this chilling and thrilling tour for yourself and make up your own mind? Catch the exhibit before it stomps out of here now through April 21st.

The exhibit is presented by Palm Beach Illustrated, The Palm Beach Post, WPBF Channel 25, Estrella TV, Outfront Media, Gast Construction Group, Quantum Foundation, B/E Aerospace and The Tourist Development Council of Palm Beach County and Discover the Palm Beaches.

-Briana D’Andrea

momgirlblog.com

IG: @brianadandrea

Brainy Days 2019

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FAU Brain Institute Announces ‘Brainy Days 2019,’ a Celebration of Neuroscience Sponsored by Palm Health Foundation

JUPITER, Fla. (February 25, 2019) – Florida Atlantic University’s Brain Institute is proud to announce “Brainy Days 2019,” a celebration of neuroscience throughout the month of March sponsored by Palm Health Foundation. From understanding autism, addiction and Alzheimer’s disease to exploring how the brain processes violent behavior, researchers hope to engage, empower and educate the public on brain diseases, promote brain wellness and ultimately reduce the stigma associated with brain disorders.

The programs kick off on Friday, March 1 at 5 p.m. and go through Saturday, March 30 at various locations around Palm Beach County. For a full schedule of events, visit http://ibrain.fau.edu/brainydays/.

“The ‘BrainyDays’ program represents a focused opportunity for Brain Institute scientists and their trainees to move out of the laboratory and connect with members of our community, young and old, concerning the many exciting developments in brain science and medicine,” said Randy D. Blakely, Ph.D., executive director of FAU’s Brain Institute and a professor of biomedical science in FAU’s Schmidt College of Medicine. “Our activities range from hands-on science experiences with kids to health-oriented lectures for adults, and everything connected with brain science, in between. Neuroscience is in a state of great ferment, with fascinating new technologies and insights emerging daily. We have a lot of fascinating stories to tell, and excitement to pass along to the next generation.”

“Brainy Days” is funded in part by a generous grant from Palm Health Foundation, an organization committed to supporting research that reduces the risk, advances science and finds cures for brain disease. Jupiter Medical Center, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, Els Center of Excellence, and the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium provided additional support.

            “Palm Beach County is well-poised to become a hub for advancing brain health with incredible assets like the FAU Brain Institute. At Palm Health Foundation, we are working with our partners to realize the exciting potential of neuroscience and brain health, right here in our own backyard,” said Patrick McNamara, Palm Health Foundation president and CEO.

“Brainy Days”exemplifies FAU’s commitment to providing the community with the knowledge needed to maintain brain health and lower one’s risk for brain diseases. Scientists at the FAU Brain Institute are committed to conducting world-class research, the development of cutting-edge technologies, and training the next generation of neuroscientists. 

For more information on “Brainy Days,” contact Nicole Baganz, Ph.D., director of community engagement and programming of FAU’s Brain Institute, at BI-Outreach@fau.edu or 561-799-8100.

– FAU –

About the FAU Brain Institute:

Inaugurated in 2016 on the John D. MacArthur Campus in Jupiter, Fla., the FAU Brain Institute, supports research, education and community outreach among more than 100 faculty level researchers at FAU and its affiliate research centers. One of FAU’s four pillars that guide the University’s goals and strategic actions, the Institute seeks to unlock the secrets of brain development, function and plasticity and how the mechanisms uncovered can be compromised to drive devastating brain disorders. From the study of neuronal development and signaling to investigations of brain diseases including addiction, autism, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s disease, researchers from FAU’s Brain Institute seek to generate knowledge that benefits society. For more information about the Institute and its members, visit www.ibrain.fau.edu.

About Florida Atlantic University:
Florida Atlantic University, established in 1961, officially opened its doors in 1964 as the fifth public university in Florida. Today, the University, with an annual economic impact of $6.3 billion, serves more than 30,000 undergraduate and graduate students at sites throughout its six-county service region in southeast Florida. FAU’s world-class teaching and research faculty serves students through 10 colleges: the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, the College of Business, the College for Design and Social Inquiry, the College of Education, the College of Engineering and Computer Science, the Graduate College, the Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College, the Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, the Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing and the Charles E. Schmidt College of Science. FAU is ranked as a High Research Activity institution by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The University is placing special focus on the rapid development of critical areas that form the basis of its strategic plan: Healthy aging, biotech, coastal and marine issues, neuroscience, regenerative medicine, informatics, lifespan and the environment. These areas provide opportunities for faculty and students to build upon FAU’s existing strengths in research and scholarship. For more information, visit fau.edu.

About Palm Health Foundation:
Palm Health Foundation is Palm Beach County’s community foundation for health. With the support of donors and a focus on results, the foundation builds strong community partnerships, respects diverse opinions, advocates for its most vulnerable neighbors and inspires innovative solutions to lead change for better health now and for generations to come. The foundation supports health equity for Palm Beach County residents of all backgrounds, heritage, education, incomes and states of well-being. Palm Health Foundation has invested more than $78 million in Palm Beach County health since 2001. For more information about Palm Health Foundation, visit palmhealthfoundation.org or call (561) 833-6333.

Screen On The Green: “Ralph Breaks the Internet” (PG)

SCREEN ON THE GREEN
Friday, April 12, 2019
Ralph Breaks the Internet (PG)
7– 10 p.m. FREE | The Great Lawn, 100 Clematis Street, West Palm Beach, FL 33401
**Due to Daylight Savings Time, the event start time will be 7 PM.**

Video game bad guy Ralph and fellow misfit Vanellope von Schweetz must risk it all by traveling to the World Wide Web in search of a replacement part to save Vanellope’s video game, “Sugar Rush.” In way over their heads, Ralph and Vanellope rely on the citizens of the internet — the netizens — to help navigate their way, including an entrepreneur named Yesss, who is the head algorithm and heart and soul of trend-making site BuzzzTube.

Outdoor movie watching has never been more inviting than on the West Palm Beach Waterfront. Monthly, on the second Friday of the month, the City of West Palm Beach turns the Great Lawn into an open-air theater – movie and included views of the stars and sea are both FREE. Guests are encouraged to bring a blanket or chair and snuggle up for the featured films, which include newly released hits and throwback favorites. The evening starts at 6 p.m. with family-friendly activities on the lawn and then continues with the movie at sunset. After hours, please call 561-822-2222 for information on event cancellations.

CULTURE & COCKTAILS to Host Conversation with Art Collector Christine Aylward – March 11

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CULTURE & COCKTAILS At The Colony

To Host a Fascinating Conversation Between

Art Collector Christine Aylward and

Author/Editor Daphne Nikolopoulos

Monday, March 11

(Lake Worth, FL – February 20, 2019) The Cultural Council of Palm Beach County today announced that the popular seriesCULTURE & COCKTAILS returns next month with its penultimate fascinating conversation this season at The Colony Hotel Coral Ballroom, located at 155 Hammon Avenuein Palm Beach.

March 11

ART ATTACK

A Conversation with art collector Christine Aylward

Born and raised in China during the Cultural Revolution, Christine Aylward came to the US in 1986. Since moving to Palm Beach 20 years ago, she and her husband have taken an interesting path in learning and collecting art, focusing on Asian Contemporary. She is a former trustee of Norton Museum of Art, a current board member of SITE Santa Fe in Santa Fe, New Mexico and a Collectors Committee member of The National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC.

Interviewed by Daphne Nikolopoulos, Author & Editor-in-Chief of Palm Beach Illustrated

This season’s final CULTURE & COCKTAILS will be:

April 8

PLATTER CHATTER

A Conversation with legendary broadcaster Dick Robinson

The owner of Legends Radio in North Palm Beach, Dick Robinson launched his broadcasting career in 1958 in Massachusetts and the first song he ever played on-air was Who’s Sorry Now by Connie Francis. In the six decades since, Robinson has carved a stellar career that blended working for and owning radio stations, founding the Connecticut School of Broadcasting (the nation’s oldest and largest group of broadcast media schools), founding the nonprofit Society for the Preservation of the Great American Songbook, and launching the syndicated radio/TV show Dick Robinson’s American Standards by the Sea. This conversation is sure to attract some surprise musical guests.

Interviewed by Rich & Jill Switzer, celebrated cabaret performers and co-hosts of The Morning Lounge on Legends 100.3 FM

CULTURE & COCKTAILS is generously sponsored by The Roe Green Foundation, Roe Green, Founder, also The Gardens Mall, Clo & Charles S. Cohen, First Republic Bank, the law firm of Haile, Shaw & Pfaffenberger, P.A., and Woolems Luxury Home Builders.Additional support for the series is provided by the Palm Beach Daily NewsLegends Radio, and PR-BS, a Boca-based public relations firm.

Please Note:

Admission to each CULTURE & COCKTAILS event is $75 per person in advance and $85 at the door, and FREE for members of the Cultural Council ($250 level and above). All proceeds go to support the nonprofit Cultural Council of Palm Beach County. For membership information, please contact Debbie Calabria at 561.472.3330.

Each event will run from 5 to 7 pm, with registration and cocktails from 5 to 5:45 pm, and the “Conversation” from 5:45 to 7 pm, including audience Q&A. The Colony will serve complimentary beverages and an array of specially prepared hors d’oeuvres before each CULTURE & COCKTAILS conversation.

People interested in attending CULTURE & COCKTAILS can RSVP before each event by calling the Cultural Council at (561) 472-3330.

About the Cultural Council of Palm Beach County:

The Cultural Council of Palm Beach County is the official support agency for arts and culture in The Palm Beaches, Florida’s Cultural Capital®. The Council provides grants to cultural organizations and professional artists, advocates for art and cultural funding, enhances local arts education, offers support services to foster growth of the sector and promotes cultural tourism.

The Cultural Council also serves as a venue for exhibitions and performances featuring artists who live or work in Palm Beach County, and provides additional programming at its headquarters in the historic Robert M. Montgomery, Jr. Building in Downtown Lake Worth. Also on the property are the Roe Green Uniquely Palm Beach Store featuring hand-crafted items by local artists; the Jean S. and Frederic A. Sharf Visitor Information Center, a VISIT FLORIDA-designated Florida Certified Tourism Information Center; and the Project Space, an open-air garden for live music and large-scale sculpture.

The Cultural Council is open to the public from 10 am – 5 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. For more information, including a complete calendar of cultural activities in The Palm Beaches, visit palmbeachculture.com.

South FL Fair awards $45K in scholarships

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South Florida Fair Awards $45,000 in Scholarships

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – (Feb. 14, 2019) The South Florida Fair has awarded $45,000 in scholarships to 26 area high school students this year. Selected from more than 120 applicants this year, the winners’ scholarships ranged from $1,000 to $4,000 and can be used at any accredited institution of higher learning.

Established in 1982, the South Florida Fair has awarded more than $649,000 in scholarships. The winners were announced in the categories of general, arts and entertainment, agriculture, and band during an awards ceremony in Yesteryear Village during the fair. Families, the scholarship committee, South Florida Fair dignitaries and elected officials from many of the winners’ hometowns attended.

Each scholarship applicant met individually with the committee for a personal interview as part of the process. Students from high schools in Palm Beach, Broward, Hendry, Martin and Okeechobee counties were eligible to apply. The fair’s scholarship committee selected the winners based on the students’ grades, need and a short essay written on the topic, “As a graduating senior, what advice would you give yourself as an incoming freshman?”  

The committee members were Chairwoman Becky Isiminger, Vice Chair Rob Pendleton, Annis Manning, Tim Childers, Lee Glaze, Glenn Jergensen, Robi Jurney, Dan Lewis, Stephanie Mitrione, Rob Pendleton, Bill Sneed, Patrick Franklin, Mabel Datena, Donna Winterson and Tiffany Faublas.

This year’s winners are: Lily Forte of American Heritage School Boca/Delray; Chase Correia and David Young of Atlantic Community High School; Ryan Parker of Cardinal Newman High School; Nyla Chute and Jaylynn Moreno of Clewiston High School; Kalei Sutton of Clewiston Christian School; Christian Arango, Angel Lopez and Alex Shaw of Dreyfoos School of the Arts; Alexia Panier of William T. Dwyer High School, Chase Dixon and Kennedy DesRochers of Glades Day School; Sky Henderson and Nick Quagliaroli of Jupiter High School; Marley Estornell of Lake Worth Christian School; Edana Scalf of Okeechobee High School; Kendall Willis and Maura Wilson of Royal Palm Beach High School; Faith Cotter of South Fork High School; Riley Meve and Jonah Smith of Wellington High School; and Holly Moritz, who is homeschooled.

Photo of Scholarship Winners – Front row from left: Angel Lopez, Kennedy DesRochers, Kalei Sutton, Jaylynn Moreno, Christian Arango, Lily Forte, Holly Moritz, Maura Wilson, Ryan Parker, Riley Meve, Edana Scalf, Kendall Willis, Faith Cotter, Nyla Chute, Marley Estornell. Back row from left: Jonah Smith, David Young, Chase Correia, Alexia Panier, Sky Henderson, Chase Dixon, Nick Quagliaroli, Alex Shaw.


Mounts Botanical Garden Awards 2019 Horticulture Scholarships to Four PBSC Students

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Mounts Botanical Garden Awards 2019 Horticulture Scholarships to Four PBSC Students 

(West Palm Beach, FL – February 14, 2019) Friends of the Mounts Botanical Garden today announced the recipients of this year’s Horticulture Scholarships, all of whom are studying Environmental Horticulture at Palm Beach State College:

+ Lindsay Friedman ($1,000 scholarship), who is in her fourth semester studying Landscape Management and Nursery Horticulture, and wants to eventually earn a doctorate in Plant Medicine. “The Horticulture Program at PBSC has opened my eyes wide and I really want to make a difference,” she says.

+ Samantha Robels ($1,000) says studying horticulture “allows me to see the intricate connection between us and the world surrounding us. It sheds light on the significance of maintaining balance and compromise, the true meaning of progression, and the honor of being sentinels to this microcosm we call our home.”

+ Jeremy Celso ($500) took his first horticulture class while a freshman at Jupiter High School and is now in his second year at PBSC majoring in horticulture. “The future of agriculture is in our hands and I wish to be part of that,” he declares.

+ Austin Frye ($500) also started studying agriculture at Jupiter High School and is now pursuing an AS degree in Landscape and Horticulture Management. “My goal is to help nurseries increase the amount of tropical plants; specifically, the wide variety of palms and gingers,” he says.

To qualify for the annual Mounts scholarships, applicants had to be enrolled in PBSC’s Environmental Horticulture Program, maintain a 3.0 grade point average and have three recommendations, including one from a professor in the program.

Now on Exhibit at Mounts Botanical Garden

CUTTING CORNERS:

A Stickwork Exhibition

Daily – 10 am to 4 pm

Mounts The Great Lawn

FREE for members; $10 for nonmembers; $5 for children ages 5-12

This awe-inspiring new eco-exhibition is part of the Garden’s 40th Anniversary Ruby Jubilee celebration and runs through June. Located in the Great Lawn area of the Garden, this interactive, environmental exhibit features an original, massive,stickwork sculpture designed by internationally acclaimed artist Patrick Dougherty and created on site through a “community build” by 106 volunteers utilizing 30,000 pounds of willow. The exhibition invites visitors to wander through, admire, and become part of a living art experience.

Note: Tickets are available for purchase at www.mounts.org or at the Garden’s main gate. To schedule a group tour, call 561-233-1757.

About Mounts Botanical Garden of Palm Beach County:

With a mission to inspire and educate through nature, Mounts Botanical Garden is Palm Beach County’s oldest and largest botanical garden, offering gorgeous displays of tropical and sub-tropical plants, plus informative classes, workshops, and other fun-filled events. The Garden contains more than 2,000 species of plants, including Florida native plants, exotic and tropical fruit trees, herbs, palms, bromeliads and more. Two recent additions to Mounts include Windows on the Floating World: Blume Tropical Wetland Garden and the Zen-like Garden of Tranquility. Mounts Botanical Garden is a facility of the Palm Beach County Extension Service, which is in partnership with the University of Florida and Friends of the Mounts Botanical Garden. Mounts is located at 531 North Military Trail in West Palm Beach.

Mounts Botanical Garden is open daily (except Palm Beach County recognized holidays) from 10 am to 4 pm. For more information, please call 561.233.1757 or visit www.mounts.org.