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October, 2013 – The phrase, “Air costs,” is not an oxymoron

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Wendell Abern - Cantankerously YoursCantankerously Yours

The phrase, “Air costs,” is not an oxymoron.

By Wendell Abern

Dear Fellow Breathers,

Last week, before driving over to Naples, I decided to fill my gas tank and my tires.

I went to my local station which provides air from what looks like a sawed-off gas pump. The air hose is attached to the other side of a car vacuum machine (courtesy of Commercial Vacuum, Inc.). The machine requires $1.25 (quarters only) for a three-minute vacuum.  The air is free.

Rather, it used to be.

To my utter astonishment, I now had to pay 75 cents for air.

I had to pay for air!

I took a deep breath and looked around, curious to see if anyone would come charging at me, insisting I pay for the air I was inhaling. I was safe. No one lurking.

I fed the machine its three quarters, simultaneously unleashing a stream of epithets rarely heard outside of locker rooms or divorce courts.

I was paying for air!

I decided to see if my station was some kind of exception, and checked out five other stations. I discovered that Commercial Vacuum has a competitor! At two stations, a company called Ase Communications was also charging 75 cents for air and $1.25 for the vacuum. Two others had the same air/vac pump as my station. The fifth was offering free air … but their pump was broken.

The phrase, “Air costs” was no longer an oxymoron!

On my 90-minute drive across Alligator Alley, it became clear to me what the future holds. One can easily envision headlines, articles and television news reports in the coming months and years:

January, 2014, from the Miami Herald.

GRAD STUDENTS SUE AIR/VACUUM COMPANIES

Two recent graduates from the University of Miami recently filed an anti-trust  lawsuit against Commercial Vacuum, Inc. and Ase Communications, accusing the air-vac companies of being “air criminals,” and claiming they are in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Law.

“These companies have established a monopoly on the distribution and provision of air,” the students’ attorney told reporters on the steps of the South Florida federal building. “My clients are confident they can supply air to automobile and bicycle owners at half the price the current corporations are charging, but every device they have developed to do so infringes on the patents held by their competitors.”

When contacted, lawyers for both companies scoffed, deeming the lawsuit “infantile,” and sent each of the grad students a box of Pampers.

March 2014, from the Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel.

AIR SUPPLY VS. AIR SUPPLY

Three Chicago suburbanite retirees, who recently incorporated a new enterprise under the name, “Air Supply,” were immediately hit with a lawsuit by the soft rock group of the same name.

“This is a clear case of exploitation,” a spokesman for the musical group contended. “It is shameful, outrageous and, we believe, illegal.”

“Of course it’s an exploitation!” the fledgling corporation’s lawyer responded heatedly. “Of course my clients wanted to capitalize on the name. But what are these songbirds crying about?  We’re giving them mountains of free publicity!  Twelve- and fourteen- and sixteen-year old kids didn’t even know they existed until my clients re-ignited their popularity! This is absurd. All those musicians provide is  music, all my clients provide is air. The plaintiff’s lawsuit is idiotic.”

The attorney also denied as a vicious rumor that his clients intended to override the singing group’s website audio segments with Lawrence Welk recordings.

June 2014, from NBC network news.

The Department of Transportation, recently named as federal oversight regulator of air prices, announced today that the cost of air has hit a new all-time high, with the national average price now at $2.38 per fill-up.

“As we prepare for the busy summer travel season,” a department spokesman told NBC, “we expect to see a twenty-five to thirty-five cent increase across the country.”

The DOT report does not include the state of Florida, where figures remain inconclusive because so many consumers cannot remember where they obtained their air or how much they paid for it.

December 2014, local news

Well, it used to be that “air war” meant a battle between fighter planes. But two Pompano Beach mothers, Karen and Susie, have given a whole new meaning to the phrase, thanks to the air enterprises their daughters recently began.

We cannot give last names at this time, but it seems that Karen’s daughter, an enterprising ten-year old, branched out from her lemonade stand with an air fill-up station, filling bicycle tires with her own air pump for fifteen cents per fill-up.

When Susie’s daughter, a close friend and also ten years old, saw the kind of success Karen was having, she set up a competing stand across the street, offering a BOGO:  fill one tire for ten cents, get the other tire filled free.

Karen’s daughter responded by giving away free balloons at her stand.  That’s when the mothers got involved.

Karen confronted Susie in the produce section of a neighborhood Publix super market. “My daughter was there first!” Karen complained loud enough for all shoppers to hear. “Your daughter could have set up her station a block away.”

“Oh, please,” Susie shouted back. “This is just free enterprise. My daughter can set up her stand anywhere she wants.”

The argument became very  heated, and before store security could restore order, Karen had launched a barrage of tomatoes, and Susie was retaliating with heads of Romaine lettuce.

No one was hurt, but when asked about the melee, one security officer said, “I got a little nervous when the one was going to stab the other with a carrot.”

*        *        *

By the time I arrived in Naples, I had conjured up a dozen more scenarios.  At this point, all I can do is wonder if we will all end up paying as much for air as we do for water.

Cantankerously Yours,
 
Wendell Abern

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

October, 2013 – Shoulders

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Shoulders


by Naomi Shihab Nye

A man crosses the street in rain,
stepping gently, looking two times north and south,
because his son is asleep on his shoulder.

No car must splash him.
No car drive too near to his shadow.

This man carries the world's most sensitive cargo
but he's not marked.
Nowhere does his jacket say FRAGILE,
HANDLE WITH CARE.

His ear fills up with breathing.
He hears the hum of a boy's dream
deep inside him.

We're not going to be able
to live in this world
if we're not willing to do what he's doing
with one another.

The road will only be wide.
The rain will never stop falling.

– See more at: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/23314#sthash.PQnqMZV2.dpuf

October, 2013 – The Stoning

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As I Was SayingAlan Williamson

The Stoning

By Alan Williamson

 

       The human body is a mysterious thing. One minute it can be lying comfortably in bed without a care in the world. The next, it can be mimicking the feeling of a knife in the back, causing its owner to stagger into a bathroom, clutch a towel rack like a boxer on the ropes, and debate whether to die quietly or cry out to others.

But what exactly should I yell?

“I’ve been stabbed – please come quickly!” (That wasn’t really accurate, and the request for assistance felt halfhearted.)

“Someone help me – it’s an emergency!” (Using the universal someone allows everyone to tune out, and one man’s true emergency is another man’s search for toilet paper.)

“Help – I’m in pain!” (This is a plea that lacks context, inviting a range of off-target responses from “Can I get you some antacids?” to “Here’s my therapist’s card – she’s easy to talk to and very affordable.”)

By the time I finished debating what to yell the pain had subsided. So I took some aspirin, continued on with my morning, and chalked it all up to a strained back muscle.

Bad diagnosis, Dr. Alan.

On average each year, kidney stones are responsible for more than 600,000 emergency rooms visits in the U.S. Two nights after my mysterious back pain first surfaced, I became part of that stone cold stat.

“You have a 7 millimeter kidney stone in your right ureter,” the ER doctor confirmed.

“Is that considered big?” I asked, not sure if I should picture a poppy seed or popcorn.

“Anything below 5 millimeters usually passes on its own,” he explained. “Above 5 millimeters and it’s less predictable.”

He had that right. After those first few hours in the ER, I was hospitalized for three days; put on IV fluids, morphine and nausea meds; released from the hospital with new pain meds; given home care instructions to flush the stone out naturally; and endured four days of excruciating discomfort and nausea as the pain would ramp up before the next doses of meds could be taken. And still, the stone loitered stubbornly in my ureter making my life a living hell.

Finally, a week after my trip to the emergency room, my urologist scheduled me to undergo shockwave lithotripsy, a procedure where you’re hooked up to a machine that generates high intensity sound waves to shatter the stone into smaller pieces inside your urinary tract. Sound like fun? Not unless you consider your body a video game battleground where the one who bags the biggest rock collection wins.

“How’d it go?” I asked back in the foggy ambiance of the recovery area. “Did the shockwaves work?”

“The stone wouldn’t shatter that way, but I nailed it,” the urologist reported with the cocky air of a video game scoring champ.

“You used a nail?” I probed uncomprehendingly, still dopey from the anesthesia.

“I put in a catheter and attacked it arthroscopically,” he clarified.  “After I pushed it back into your kidney, it fragmented into a pile of powder and gravel.”

“Clutch move,” I murmured. “Sorry I slept through it.”

My post-procedure homework assignment was to carefully strain my urine for a week so I could bring in my game-winning gravel for analysis. I don’t mean to brag, but after handing over a sample for the lab tests I had enough left over to start my own line of kidney stone jewelry and collectibles.

The brochure the doctor gives you says that once you’ve had one kidney stone there’s about a 60 to 70% chance you’ll have another. The good news is that you can greatly lower the odds of recurrence by taking certain preventative steps. Having been through one stoning and lived to tell about it, I’m in.

Reduce animal proteins? Done deal.

Cut down on sodium? No sweat.

Watch my oxalate intake? A-okay.

Drink enough water each day to fill the killer whale tank at Miami Seaquarium? Gulp … I’m working on it.

Hey, if it will dilute my urine enough to keep crystals from gradually building into a rock-like mass that can send me back to kidney stone purgatory, I’m all for it.

Which reminds me. I need to find a bathroom. Wait, who am I kidding? With this kind of fluid intake, I need to find every bathroom.

###

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.  © 2013 Alan Williamson.

October, 2013 – Green Pockets

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Living GreenJathy Garcia

How to Convert Green Energy into Green Pockets

By Jathy Garcia, Hi-Tech Plumbing

“Going Green”, a term that is way over used; however, one that has a huge impact on our pocket.

Isn’t everything energy efficient these days? You would think so, and perhaps at some level most things are now a days. However, how to interpret these formulas and understand to what level the energy savings really are, seems to require a Ph.D.

If you are shopping for a hot water heater, there are many things to consider, such as gas or electric, traditional or tankless, or how many gallons is sufficient for our use? These are all great and relevant questions. However, the big question is, how do I interpret the answers to make a logical decision?

To make sense of the labels that we find on water heaters, we must understand what they are measuring. A water heater’s overall efficiency is measured by comparing the amount of energy that is coming into the heater to the amount of energy that it is putting out. An EF rating generally ranges from low (ie. 0.5) to high (ie. 2.0). The higher the number, the more efficient it is. Be sure that the gallon capacity is appropriate for the number of people that live in your home, which is normally clearly labeled. And finally, be sure to check your available space. Water heaters come in various sizes; lowboy, medium & tall are the most common. They may also slightly vary in width & height by manufacturer. You surely don’t want to purchase a unit that will not fit into your existing space, so take proper measurements & take in consideration some extra work space is needed to accommodate the heater & solder pipes effectively.

Hi-Tech plumbing is a local plumbing contractor in the Wellington/ Royal Palm Beach area who specializes in all facets of plumbing service utilizing the latest & up-to date technology. For more information visit our website at www.hi-techplumbing.com or call our office at 561-790-6966. And remember Don’t fret… just call Hi-Tech!

October, 2013 – Charleston, SC…A Haunting Halloween Destination

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Travel with Territerrimarshallsm

Charleston, SC:  A Haunting Halloween Destination

Story by Terri Marshall, Photo by Gregory Holder

Horses clip clop along cobblestone streets.  At the market, Gullah women mind tables filled with exquisitely woven sweet grass baskets – a craft that dates back to the days of slavery.

Lovely antebellum homes with spacious verandas line shady avenues.  Churches of every imaginable faith peacefully co-exist in this genteel community.

You’ll find shrimp and grits, fried green tomatoes, crab cake po-boy’s, barbecue and tomato pie on the menu in local eateries.  This is Charleston, South Carolina – the Low Country.   It’s a town so charming you may never want to leave – and neither did many of its dearly departed.

Picture 007

Charleston is believed to be one of the most haunted Southern cities in the country.  It’s no wonder considering much of it is built on graves.  There are tombstones on top of tombstones in the parking lot of the Old Bethel Methodist Church.  Gravestones of Charleston’s early African -American settlers were moved to make way for adjacent houses.  Old Bethel, built in 1797 – 1798, is the third oldest church building in the city. Originally both African-Americans and whites attended the Old Bethel, but in 1880 the building was given to its black members.  Slavery denied people fundamental recognition as human beings. As a result, the headstones of many enslaved people recorded only a single name.  Today, you will find these tombstones tossed on top of each other in the parking lot.

Picture 018

Ghost reports are commonplace here.  In fact, the Charleston police have received so many calls about a distressed woman dressed in black trapped inside the upscale Southern eatery, Poogan’s Porch tucked away on Queen Street that authorities disregard new reports. The woman is believed to be the ghost of Zoe St. Armand, who owned the house in the early 1900s and went mad after the death of her sister.

Even the restaurant’s namesake, a Wheaton terrier, Poogan, who died in 1979, is said to still be running through the dining room brushing the legs of children as they dine with their parents.

Don’t think for a minute the hotels are immune from spirit sightings.  Book a room at The Mills House hotel on Market Street and you may run into Confederate soldiers running up and down the halls looking for water to put out the flames of the fire of 1861 that damaged the hotel while it was being used as a Confederate base during the Civil War.  Robert E. Lee himself has been rumored to make an appearance now and then.

While you are strolling the streets of Charleston, duck into Philadelphia Alley and you may very well encounter a spirit or two.   This secluded passageway tucked away just off Market Street between Cumberland and Queen Streets is commonly known as “Dueler’s Alley” – with good reason.

Picture 012

In the early 1800’s in the American South, dueling was the way disputes were settled.   As you might imagine, many of those duels led to the death of one of the participants.  In Charleston, this alley was the sight of many of those untimely deaths leaving a host of spirits roaming the area a bit unsatisfied with life’s ending.

To really explore all the ghostly details and get your chill on just in time for Halloween, book a walking ghost tour with Bulldog Tours.  Knowledgeable licensed tour guides lead you through the historic streets, cemeteries, back alleyways and churches on 1 1/2 hour walking tours of Charleston’s dark side.

You’ll hear fun and chilling stories of Charleston ghosts, haunted houses, voodoo, and Low country superstitions. Choose from a haunted pub crawl where you can drink away your fears as you hear stories of ghostly encounters.

Picture 022

The cemetery and dungeon tour is the only Charleston ghost tour with access to a pre-revolutionary era dungeon.  You will also have access to cemeteries where you can photograph gravesides and search for orbs in your published photos later – if you dare.

Picture 021
Poogan’s Porch

If you really want to feel your skin crawl, join the behind the scenes tour of The Old City Jail which housed some of Charleston’s most infamous criminals, 19th century pirates and Civil War prisoners. The Old City Jail was in operation from 1802 until 1939 and most of the building’s original structures remain intact including the cells and warden’s quarters. The Haunted Jail Tour takes you through the cells, hallways and into the places where Charleston’s worst criminals lived and died.  The faint of heart or those who easily cry should just skip this tour and opt for the haunted pub crawl – at least you will have spirits to help you ward off the other spirits.

When your tour is done, go order yourself some shrimp and grits – it will take the chill off and make you feel better.  Trust me.  See www.bulldogtours.com

*****

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. Also, check out her blog atwww.trippingwithterri.comYou can contact Terri at terri.marshall60@gmail.com.

 

 

 

 

October, 2013 – 3D Mammography

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Ask the DocsDr. Eric Baumel at Independent Imaging

The addition of 3D Mammography  (tomosynthesis) to conventional digital mammography results in a 30 percent reduction in the overall recall rate

By Eric M. Baumel, MD

Breast tomosynthesis, also known as 3D mammography was approved by the FDA on February 11, 2011.

Breast tomosynthesis minimizes the effect of overlapping breast tissue by having the X-ray tube and detector moving in tandem, acquiring the images at different angles. These images are then combined to create a three dimensional picture that can be manipulated by the radiologist when reviewing the mammograms. At the current time, the tomosynthesis images are acquired at the same time as the conventional 2D mammograms.

Using conventional mammography, about 10 – 15% of women are called back for additional imaging. Tomosynthesis reduces the need for many of these call backs, because the initial studies with tomosythesis will be free of overlapping structures.

Another benefit is the improved imaging in women with mammographically dense breasts, because of the elimination of viewing the overlying tissues above and below the areas of interest.

Because of the 3D information included in obtaining the tomosynthesis images, the relative position of a suspicious area in the breast can be more precisely identified in all three planes.

A recent large study of tomosynthesis was published online July 30, 2013 in Radiology by Brian M. Haas, M.D. and colleagues, from the Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Conn.

The addition of tomosynthesis to conventional digital mammography resulted in a 30 percent reduction in the overall recall rate.

“All age groups and breast densities had reduced risk for recall in the tomosynthesis group,” Dr. Haas said. “Women with dense breasts and those younger than age 50 particularly benefited from tomosynthesis.”

Lower recall rates help reduce patient anxiety and also reduce costs from additional diagnostic examinations, Dr. Haas said.

Tomosynthesis has one significant drawback: a radiation dose approximately double that of digital mammography alone. However, Dr. Haas noted that new technology approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration could reduce the dose.

Eric Baumel, MD is the Medical Director at Independent Imaging where 3D Mammography is available.  He has also authored an iPhone app called “Radiology Toolbox” (which has been downloaded more than 60,000 times all over the world). He has recently co-authored an app called “Pediatric Toolbox,” along with Dr. Amy Aqua of Simo & Bruck Pediatrics. See related “AW Spotlight” story this month (October, 2013) about Independent Imaging.

 

 

October, 2013 – Mario the Baker; Hearty Italian Comfort Food for Fall

Saucy SarahThe Florida Foodie

Mario the Baker; Hearty Italian Comfort Food for Fall

1007 State Rd 7 (441)   Royal Palm Beach, FL  
Phone: 561-798-4030

By Saucy Sarah

I love Italian food, but the majority of mid-priced Italian eateries in the county leave me yearning for consistent, delicious Italian favorites. I dream about the little mom & pop place in Boynton I used to love to go to—its doors now closed forever—as I search for a place that can deliver quality pizza and great entrées. Well, I think I have found such a place in Mario the Baker, located right in front of the Regal Cinema on 441. Mario the Baker has historical roots in North Miami where they first opened with great success. Now the family has moved their operation up here to Royal Palm Beach and we all can be happy they did!
Mario's Pizza
Mario’s Pizza

Mario’s pizza ($13.00/ Large) is thin, crispy and has just the right amount of char on the bottom, letting you know the pie cooked in a proper pizza oven and at a proper temperature. We chose classic pepperoni as our topping, which was meaty and flavorful without being spicy. Mario’s sauce is of a very high quality as well. There is no high acidic tang nor is it too sweet, but tastes of fresh tomatoes that way it should.

The Caprese salad ($7.95) is one of the simplest ones you will find. Halved cherry tomatoes tossed with boconccini mozzarella, a sprinkle of fresh basil and a drizzle of olive oil. I was not asked if I wanted any salad dressing, so be sure to request it if you want it. Don’t expect any lettuce garnish either!

The Caprese salad at Mario's
The Caprese salad at Mario’s

My biggest test when it comes to a good Italian restaurant is the classic entrees. We selected the baked lasagna ($9.50) and the baked cheese ravioli ($9.50) – two dishes that seem to fail to live up to my expectations time after time. I have to say, I was pleasantly surprised and delighted that both dishes proved to be stellar. The lasagna was light and had good meaty flavors that married well with the fresh sauce and creamy ricotta. It was far ahead of the many dense, dry, bricks I’ve sampled all over the county. I am a big cheese ravioli snob and I have to say I have found my favorite at Mario’s. Their ravioli swimming in red sauce, baked under a thick layer of cheese is hard to resist. The filling was light and the pasta appeared to be fresh.

Baked Cheese Ravioli at Mario's
Baked Cheese Ravioli at Mario’s

One of the highlights at Mario’s; the garlic rolls ($3.50/doz) and the Marinara sauce ($2.00/ Lg). Pair the two of them together and it is almost a meal in and of its self. The rolls are always garlicky, but not overpowering, with a nice chewy exterior and soft, fluffy interior. Their marinara sauce is thick with juicy chunks of tomatoes and just the right amount of spice. The best part: the whole cloves of roasted garlic they add, giving the sauce a heady and unique flavor that is truly addictive. Tear off a chunk of bread and mop up that glorious sauce. You may not want to order anything else!

Garlic Rolls and Marinara Sauce at Mario's
Garlic Rolls and Marinara Sauce at Mario’s

Mario the Baker has my vote for best all-around Pizzeria and Italian fare restaurant. There is a level of commitment to quality, freshness, and consistency at Mario’s that is rare amongst our seemingly endless choices in Italian dinning here in Palm Beach County. Take the family for a big Friday night dinner out or order in for the big game. Either way, you can expect a great meal at a great price.

In her previous life, Sarah, a Palm Beach County Native, spent ten years working in various high-end eating establishments around South Florida. She is currently a fiction thesis candidate in the MFA program at Florida International University where she also teaches creative writing and rhetoric. If that is not enough, Sarah is also the owner of Cakes by Sarah, a local custom cake shop. Sarah lives in Lake Worth with her husband and two beautiful boys. “Food, fiction, and family are my life.”

October, 2013 – Culture 101

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Cultural Corner

Culture 101

By

Lori Hope Baumel

01_Abstract of Head in The Clouds

Abstract Panorama photo of Head In The Clouds installation by STUDIOKCA at Governor’s Island, NY    iPhone Artistry by Lori Baumel © 2013

For more information about Head In The Clouds see studiokca.com

“Earth without art is just eh.”

– Clayton Cubitt

Everyone needs an introduction to the arts. If you’re a novice whose upbringing consisted of other interests, like sports, then there probably wasn’t enough time in your youth to concentrate on both. Although, personally, I notice that there is a strong correlation between those who enjoy sports statistics to those who have a solid knowledge of musical pop culture. Maybe it’s the “rock concert in the sports arena” attraction. I don’t know. That is my own personal observation.

What I DO know, is that there are people who have never picked up an instrument, never entered a museum and haven’t drawn a picture since kindergarten.  There are more people who would recognize the iPhone marimba alarm tone than recognize the first four notes of Beethoven’s 5th symphony. This is not a crime. It’s simply a question of exposure. Once you are exposed to the arts, the interest often follows.

Being well rounded or “cultured” does not mean acquiring season tickets to the opera or symphony or annual passes to the all the museums. The first step toward expanding your cultural spectrum is a willingness to expose yourself to the simplest aspects of the arts. If you are old enough to read this, then it is important to be aware of and embrace the artistic tools you have within reach.

Becoming Well Rounded

 


For example, most of us are now fortunate to have a camera (and video camera) in our cell phones. Poof! You are now a photographer. Do you find yourself taking more photos than making phone calls lately? If there is a moment you want to remember, like a beautiful sunset, do you photograph it? If so, then the artist within you is stepping out. Did you know that there are hundreds of photography apps that can help you crop, edit and enhance those pictures? If you further expand your knowledge by learning more about the tools in your camera you are on the way to becoming an artist. Let us begin…

Three simple steps for taking a better photograph:

 


1: If you are photographing people, make sure that there are no poles or trees directly behind your subject. Otherwise it looks like those objects are growing out of their head(s).

2: Don’t always place your subject in the center of the photo. Put your subject slightly to the right or left of the center. It often looks best to include some background in the picture to help tell the story. On most cell phone cameras, you can often tap on the screen to make sure your subject is in focus. It’s worth the extra second to do so. Experiment with your camera. Take photos at unusual angles. Have fun with it.

3: Always save your photos to a back-up device. Then, get creative. In this digital age, photo and video editing software is extremely easy to use. You can pop together a slideshow or video right on your cellphone, tablet or computer. Then, you can post your video to a PRIVATE link on YouTube and share it with your family. If you are not sure of how to post a video on YouTube, ask any 15 year old, they’ll show you how to do it.

Read something new

 


Intellectually stimulate your mind. After you are done with the business or sports section of the newspaper try looking at the arts section. See if there’s a film, concert or free festival coming up that you might attend.

If you like to read and you predominantly read nonfiction, toss it up and try some fiction for a change or vice-versa. Books are “mind movies.” They relieve stress; take you to places you never dreamed of. Digital publications and eBooks are becoming just as popular as paperbacks.  The library has eBooks that can be borrowed and downloaded to a tablet at no charge. Check out your local library website or visit one and a librarian can help you set up the eBook download process. Finally, if you like to multitask, download some audiobooks or podcasts to listen to in the car or at the gym.

Listen to a type of music that
you normally wouldn’t listen to

 


Again, the library is an excellent source for borrowing CD’s. If you’re a country music fan, perhaps you might give some cool jazz a chance. If you like film scores or game music you might want to try listening to some Stravinsky, Rachmaninoff or Phil Glass.

I often play a musical roulette game. Every time Starbucks offers a free music download, I add it to my iTunes library regardless of whether or not I think I would like it. You can always delete it, right? Well, I can’t tell you how much those free tunes have expanded my horizons. Upon hearing Starbucks freebies by Florence and the Machine, Bruno Mars and Zoey Deschanel, I went ahead and downloaded their entire albums.

Museums are not limited to just paintings…

 


Most museums have traveling exhibits from around the world. I’ve seen marvelous exhibits on furniture design, automobiles, fashion and most recently, Legos! Museum curators are aware that social media is tough competition. The often-humdrum practice of moving from painting to painting has changed. Many special exhibits are paired with apps containing information to further enhance your experience.

If you haven’t been to a museum since you took a field trip in the third grade you might want to give it another try. Both adult and children’s museums have become more interactive. My children used to love the Fort Lauderdale Museum of Discovery and Science. It was always worth the trip down there. Locally, The South Florida Science Center and Aquarium will be undergoing a 4.9 million dollar expansion that is sure to dazzle Palm Beach County residents of all ages. This month, there are new exhibits starting in venues from St. Augustine to Miami. Cultural sites have changed over the years. Do your homework! Find a traveling exhibit that will interest you. All it takes is a willingness to get out there and have an open mind.

Learn An Instrument

 


This is a subject that I will delve into more detail in another column. But for now, consider learning a musical instrument at a local music studio like Village Music or the nearest community school. If time is limited, take an online class or simply buy a “how to” book (i.e. Kazoo for Dummies). Please remember that the human voice is considered an instrument as well. In my opinion, mastering a musical instrument is the ultimate achievement in becoming a culturally well-rounded individual.

Travel!

 


However you can do it. Take a car, an RV, bus, train, plane or boat. Just travel. Don’t wait. Set a budget. If you have children, go with your children or leave them with a sitter.

Visiting other parts of the state, country and world has changed my perspective on every aspect of my life. When you experience the customs within other cultures; how they dress, what they eat, their history, how they treat their fellow citizens, it ties everything together. Travel has enabled me to “get it.” After all, what do painters paint? What do we photograph or draw? Why do they create? Creativity is a reflection of an artist’s cultural surroundings and how they perceive it, or it is a commentary on how they wish to improve it.

There you have it. The suggestions above are the first semester of Culture 101.  This semester does not have a four month or four year timeline. You can take whatever time you need to complete the course. Personally, I hope I never complete the class. It is a life long task that makes each and every day a true cultural adventure.

Live… Go… Do!

Top Five List For October 2013

1) Read:

Wired Magazine

 


For over 20 years my husband and I have subscribed to every issue of WIRED magazine. WIRED is a full-color monthly American magazine, published in both print and online editions, that reports on how emerging technologies affect culturepolitics and the economy. It also covers business, lifestyle and thought leadership. Thought leaders are individuals or firms that are recognized as authorities in specialized fields and whose expertise is sought and often rewarded. Aesthetically, I particularly enjoy the feel of the magazine and the beautiful paper it is printed on. It’s available at Barnes and Noble and most newsstands. Peruse at least one issue. I assure you, you will not be disappointed.

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“Wired has put a smorgasbord of images on its cover since issue 1.1 hit the stands in May 1993. They’ve run the gamut from Stephen Colbert to Lego figures and deep thoughts on the end of the web. The one thing they’ve shared in common is innovative, eye-catching design — from the loud neon hues of the 1990s to the quiet minimalism of the 20th anniversary issue. To commemorate that anniversary, community editor Brian Mossop worked with Wired’s video team to compile every cover — nearly 250 of them — in a 30-second video celebrating our first two decades. Enjoy!”

– Wired Magazine Website

To see this incredible video go to:

http://www.wired.com/underwire/2013/05/video-20-years-wired-covers/

2) GET GOOD SEATS… NOW!

There is plenty of fine entertainment coming into town. It is important to get your tickets to your favorite performances now; otherwise you’ll end up in the “nosebleed” section of the theater. Plus, you’ll get the best seats for your money. Last month’s article included the brochure to the Kravis Center (see the September 2013 Cultural Corner article in the archive at the bottom of the page). This month I’d like to focus on more affordable, yet top notch 2013 – 2014 season performances at:

The Duncan Theater

 


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Classical Café, Juke Box Music, Comedy, Children’s Theater and more…

This season also includes the following internationally renowned dance companies:

Pilobolus, Koresh, Ririe-Woodbury & Paul Taylor

Check out the Duncan Theatre brochure at:

http://www.palmbeachstate.edu/theatre/documents/2013-2014duncanwebbrochure.pdf

For more information go to:

www.duncantheatre.org

3) There’s so much variety and talent at…

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The Lake Worth Playhouse

Featuring Theater, Independent/Foreign Films and more…

View the entire 2013 – 2014 season calendar of events at:

www.lakeworthplayhouse.org

4) Explore:

The Cultural Council of the Palm Beaches

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WOW. What a calendar of events! Fully explore the Cultural Council’s outstanding website and view all there is to do right here in our own county.

Go to:

www.palmbeachculture.com

5) It’s a whole new world at…

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Mickalene Thomas - Photo: Ms. Thomas
Mickalene Thomas                                   Photo: Ms. Thomas

On September 14th, 2013 I was privy to view the installation of the Norton’s new lobby mural by Mickalene Thomas. Not only did I get to slip in through the back door (the museum was closed due to the setup of new exhibits), I was able to get an inside look at the artist at work. Thomas explained that her lobby collage is a combination of mixed resources: photos, paints and other materials that help her bring her “hand back into the art.” At the time of this writing, the collage was a work in progress (yet untitled). We will all have to visit the Norton museum to see the finished product!

Rather than try to explain further, I assembled a video of photos I took at the press conference preview. In addition, I scored the video’s music soundtrack. Enjoy!

Mickalene Thomas Installation Video soundtrack scored and performed by Lori Hope Baumel © 2013

September 17, 2013 – August 31, 2014

“The third site specific artwork for the Norton Museum lobby has been created by Mickalene Thomas (b.1971, Camden, New Jersey). She is best known for her elaborate figurative paintings, which expand ideas of beauty through compositions inspired by sources as varied as popular culture, 19th century French painting, and the collages of Romare Bearden. Following a residency at Monet’s home and garden in Giverny, she has continued to examine the elements and complexity of both domestic interiors and landscape through fractured perspectives signaled by patterning and seductive, decorative materials.  Thomas has consistently worked with deconstructing and reassembling photographic images in her own collages, which often serve as reference for her paintings.  This will be the first mural-sized artwork Thomas has created outside of New York. The installation is made possible by the generosity of Vanessa and Anthony Beyer.”   – Norton Press Release

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Lori Baumel Lori Hope Baumel and her husband Eric Baumel live in Wellington and have three grown children. Their eldest, Sam, 27, is a media producer and conceptual artist who currently resides in (extremely hipster) Brooklyn, NY. Her younger children, Evan and Rachel, wrote the Around Wellington “Teen Talk” column in previous years. Rachel, 24, lives and works in Boston, MA and Evan, 21, is a senior at American University in Washington DC. Eric has practiced radiology in Wellington since 1991. His many talents include artist, cook, photographer and, recently, medical app developer. You can learn more about Lori at
www.loribaumel.com
and read her blog at
www.grownupcamp.tumblr.com.

 

September, 2013 – From the Peace Ceremony in Wellington, FL

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September, 2013 – World Peace Celebration in Wellington, FL

Presented by the Wellington Rotary Club and the Village of Wellington

Videos by Krista Martinelli

 

 (Above – a brief interview about the peace ceremony with Dr. Wes Boughner and Larry Kemp of the Wellington Rotary Club)

 (Above” – “We Are the World,” sung by The Traditions at Palm Beach Central High School, with choral instructor Scott Houchins. At the 8th Annual Peace Ceremony in Wellington, FL.)

 (Above – “Let There Be Peace on Earth,” sung by The Traditions at Palm Beach Central High School, with choral instructor Scott Houchins. )

(Above – The ending of the 8th annual Peace Ceremony in Wellington, presented by the Wellington Rotary Club, was the beautiful release of doves into the air. Dr. Wes Boughner who coordinates the peace ceremony every year is letting the doves go here. Note: please forgive the videographer – it was a very bright day and hard to track the doves in the sky…but you will see them anyway in this video. 🙂  The doves circled the area 12 times before flying from Wellington back to their home in Loxahatchee, FL. Doves provided by Eternal Doves of Florida). 

The 8th annual peace ceremony was held at the Wellington Rotary Peace Park on Saturday, Sept. 21st, 2013. Coinciding with the U.N. World Peace Day, this celebration took a few moments out of everyone’s busy weekend to celebrate peace. Festivities included the color guard, a reading of “May Peace Prevail on Earth” in eight different languages, songs about peace by the Traditions (of PBC High School), a peace pole dedication, and awards for best peace poster, best peace poem, best student mediator and more. A special award “The Wellington Rotary Community Peace Award” was given to Bill and Melinda Gates, new residents of Wellington, FL. This is a beautiful ceremony, organized by Dr. Wes Boughner, Larry Kemp and others, ended with the release of doves into the air.  For related photos, see our “Photo Galleries” page or visit our AroundWellington.com Facebook page.

September, 2013 – Palm Beach Zoo Gala 2014

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Announcing the Wildest Event of the 2014 Palm Beach Season

Palm Beach Zoo News

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

 

Media Contact:

Angela Cruz Ledford

Media Relations Manager

aledford@palmbeachzoo.org

(561) 547-WILD x222 (o)

(318) 512-7464 (c) or (561) 962-1413 (c)

 

PALM BEACH, Fla. — Event organizers have announced the theme for the Palm Beach Zoo’s annual gala, to be held January 31, 2014, at The Breakers in Palm Beach. “The Garden in the Wild” theme will be in celebration of all things living at the Zoo. Cocktails begin at 7 p.m., with dinner and dancing to follow beginning at 8 p.m.

 

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Officials hope the fund-raising event will help further the Zoo’s mission of protecting wildlife and wildlife habitat, and inspiring others to value and conserve the natural world.

James Berwind is serving as this year’s Chairperson. Michele Kessler is Honorary Chairperson. Thomas C. Quick and Whitney Bylin are Event Chairs, and Samantha Storkerson is Auction Chairperson.

 

The “Green Team” will help to spread the Zoo’s conservation message. It includes Palm Beach landscape architects, Mario Nievera & Keith Williams, who will collaborate with wildlife photographer, Budge Jamison, on this year’s gala invitation. Floral master, Tom Mathieu, will design centerpieces both lovely and live, that will be returned for planting at the Zoo.

 

Individual tickets are $750 each, and junior tickets (for individuals 40 and under) are $500 each. For more information, contact Pam Viscusi at pviscusi@palmbeachzoo.org, or (561) 533-0887 ext. 285.

 

 

About the Palm Beach Zoo

The Zoological Society of the Palm Beaches exists to protect wildlife and wildlife habitat, and to inspire others to value and conserve the natural world. We advance our conservation mission through endangered species propagation, education, health and wellness, field research, and conservation medicine. Our sustainable and responsible business practices and local, national and global partnerships enable the Palm Beach Zoo to support national and international conservation, species survival, and habitat preservation.

The Palm Beach Zoo is a located at 1301 Summit Boulevard in West Palm Beach, Florida. The Zoo is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every day except Thanksgiving and Christmas. For more information, visit www.palmbeachzoo.org.

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