§
H o m e
Reading
7:30 p.m.
Elmira
7:05 p.m.
A w a y
M a r c h
2 8
A p r i l
1
A p r i l
3
A p r i l
4
at
Elmira
7:05 p.m.
VS.
Reading
7:30 p.m.
vs.
Reading
7:30 p.m.
vs.
South
Carolina
7 p.m.
Signing up to participate in the Gulf Reef
Fish Survey becomes mandatory April 1
Attention G ulf reef fish anglers:
You’ve asked for better data and the
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FW C) has listened and
taken action. Now the FWC needs your
help.
Signing up to participate in the Gulf
Reef Fish Survey becomes mandatory
April 1, so sign up today. The easy, no-
cost process will help the FWC paint a
clearer picture of how many people are
targeting Gulf reef fish, like red snapper
and gag grouper, and what anglers are see
ing on the water.
The Gulf Reef Fish Survey is for
anglers (including those 65 and older)
fishing in the Gulf of Mexico (excluding
Monroe County) from a private boat, who
plan to harvest, possess or land any of the
following reef fish: red and vermilion
snapper; gag; black and red grouper; gray
triggerfish; greater and lesser amberjack;
banded rudderfish; and almaco jack.
Those fishing from a for-hire vessel are
not required to participate in the Gulf Reef
Fish Survey.
Anglers under 16 years of age and
those fishing from a vessel that has a ves
sel recreational fishing license also do not
need to participate.
To
sign
up
online,
visit
License.MyFWC.com, enter your date of
birth and one of the required “Lookup
Method” identifiers (Social Security num
ber, FWC customer ID or driver’s license
number) and click continue. If you are a
new customer, you may have to create a
customer account before you proceed to
the next steps.
Once you are in the system, click
“Purchase a License.” Add the no-cost
Gulf Reef Fish Angler to your cart (found
under “Saltwater Fishing”) and then check
out. Make sure to print a copy to take with
you when you are fishing.
You can also sign up in person at tack
le shops, sporting goods stores and your
local tax collector’s office, or by phone at
1-888-FISHFLORIDA (347-4356).
Renewal will be on an annual basis,
just like any one-year license.
Are you a Florida resident 65 or older
and exempt from needing a recreational
saltwater fishing license? No worries!
You are not required to purchase any other
license, such as a recreational saltwater
fishing license, or pay any other fees to
participate.
When signing up online, you are still
required to click “Purchase a License,”
but signing up as a “Gulf Reef Fish
Angler” is no-cost. You can also sign up
in person at any tackle store or tax collec
tor’s office.
Through this program, researchers will
be able to better determine how many peo
ple in Florida are fishing for reef fish in
the Gulf of Mexico.
Many of those who sign up for the Gulf
Reef Fish Survey will be contacted by the
FWC and asked if they would be willing
to provide information about their Gulf
reef fish fishing activities.
The G ulf Reef Fish Survey will
improve recreational data collection, giv
ing the FWC a more realistic picture of
what is happening on the water and allow
ing for more informed fisheries manage
ment decisions.
Participants who are contacted by the
FWC and do provide information about
their Gulf reef fishing activities will be
entered into a drawing to win an annual,
five-year or lifetime recreational saltwater
fishing license.
Want to know more about the Gulf
Reef
Fish
Survey?
Visit
M yFW C.com/Fishing
and
click on
“Saltwater,” “Recreational Regulations”
and “Gulf Reef Fish Survey.”
Report your news to THE ISLAND REPORTER:
Monday Hours
6:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
■ 7:00 a.m. 50/50 Cardio-Sculpt
■ 8:30 a.m. Cycle Zone
■ 9:00 a.m. Shallow Water Aerobics
■ 10:00 a.m. Zumba
■ 10:30 a.m. Deep Water Aerobics
■ 12:00 p.m. Basic Yoga
■ 5:30 p.m. BOSU Pilates
Tuesday Hours
6:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
■ 7:00 a.m. 50/50 Cardio-Sculp
■ 8:00 a.m. Slow Flow Yoga
■ 8:30 a.m. Cycle Zone
■ 9:00 a.m. Deep Water Aerobics
■ 10:00 a.m. Power Sculpting
■ 10:30 a.m. Water Pilates
■ 12:00 p.m. Zumba Basic
■ 5:30 p.m. Cycle Zone
Wednesday Hours
6:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
■ 7:00 a.m. 50/50 Cardio-Sculpt
■ 8:30 a.m. Cycle Zone
■ 9:00 a.m. Shallow Water Aerobics
■ 10:00 a.m. Zumba
■ 10:30 a.m. Deep Water Aerobics
■ 12:00 p.m. Power Yoga
■ 5:30 p.m. Restorative Yoga
Thursday Hours
6:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
■ 7:00 a.m. Cycle Zone
■ 8:00 a.m. Slow Flow Yoga
■ 8:30 a.m. Cycle Zone
■ 9:00 a.m. Aqua Jogging
■ 10:00 a.m. Power Sculpting
■ 10:30 a.m. Water Pilates
■ 12:00 p.m. Aquaritis
■ 12:00 p.m. Zumba Basic
■ 5:30 p.m. BOSU, Ball & Strength
Friday Hours
6:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
■ 7:00 a.m. Low-Interval Training
■ 8:30 a.m. Cycle Zone
■ 9:00 a.m. Shallow Water Aerobics
■ 10:00 a.m. High Energy Low
Impact Aerobics
■ 10:30 a.m. Deep water aerobics
■ 12:00 p.m. Basic Yoga
Saturday Hours
8:00 a.m.-5 p.m.
■ 8:30 a.m. Cycle Zone
■ 9:00 a.m. Deep Water Aerobics
■ 10:00 a.m. Power Sculpting
■ 11:00 a.m. Power Yoga
Sunday Hours
8:00 a.m.-5 p.m.
■ 11:00 a.m. Vinyasa Row Yoga
Weight room, tennis, gym, water slide,
features pool, splash pad and lap pool use.
Sanibel Recreation Center is located at
3880 Sanibel-Captiva Road. Daily, week
ly and annual memberships are available.
For more information call the center at
(239) 472-0345 or visit our web site at
www.mysanibel.com.
2015 youth baseball / softball
season registration now open
Registration for the 2015 Youth Baseball / Softball Season at the Sanibel Ball
Fields is now open. For more information and to register visit www.sanibel-
sports.org.
The City of Sanibel is not sponsoring or endorsing this event.
The Sanibel Recreation Center is located at 3880 Sanibel-Captiva Road. Daily,
weekly, semi-annual and annual memberships are available.
For more information call the Sanibel Recreation Center at (239) 472-0345 or
visit our web site at www.mysanibel.com .
captiyasanibel.com
Pag
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B
W
ee
k
o
f W
ed
nes
day
,
Marc
h
25,
2015
_____
b
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e
e
z
e
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w
sp
a
p
e
r
s.
c
o
m
_______________
Is
la
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d
R
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p
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r
te
r
Isl
an
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p
o
r
te
r
__________
c
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_______________
Wee
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W
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dne
sd
ay.
March
25
,
2015
B
Page
5
2
S a n ib e l Isla n d vote d to p vacatio n d e stin ation for fam ilie s
From
p icturesque
shell-covered
beaches, to the sparkling waters o f the
G ulf of Mexico, The Beaches o f Fort
Myers & Sanibel continues to excite
and inspire vacationers.
Fam ily Fun M agazine announced
today that Sanibel Island was voted No.
1 overall family vacation destination.
The destination has recently received
a variety o f awards and accolades from
som e o f the travel in d u stry ’s m ost
notable publications, which showcase
just how special visitors find the area.
FamilyFun Magazine: Sanibel Island
Tops M ultiple Lists for Fam ilies in
Third Annual Travel Awards
Sanibel Island was voted as one of
the Top 10 Tourist Towns in the U.S.,
as
well as a Top
10 R egional
Destination (the South), and a Top 10
O verall Vacation D estination in the
m agazine’s third annual Travel Awards,
which surveyed 2 ,0 0 0 parents about
their all-tim e favorite U.S. vacation
destinations.
In the battle for the title o f Best
Florida Beach, L over’s Key State Park
came in at num ber 10, with the editors
noting “the isolated cluster o f islands
that make up the park holds unspoiled
beaches that birds love as much as sun-
w orshippers.”
■ Arthur From m er’s Budget Travel:
Fort Myers Beach Voted as One of
A m erica’s Coolest Small Towns.
■ Fort M yers Beach made the top 10
list in Arthur Frommer Budget T ravel’s
annual
“A m erica’s C oolest Sm all
Towns” contest, which celebrates the
culture, history, natural beauty and old
fashioned
charm o f sm all
towns
throughout the U.S.
■ B ow m an’s Beach Crowned Best
Beach for Seashells in Florida
Editors from the travel guide hub,
F o d o r’s T ravel, nam ed B ow m an’s
Beach on Sanibel Island the best for
shelling in Florida.
Letters to the Editor
From page 22
immediate interventions for cardiac prob
lems. Some of them may be friends. Next
time - pray not
it could be me.
Lee Memorial Health System is the sole
provider of cardiothoracic (CT) surgery in
Lee County and its CT surgery division is
one of the busiest in Florida. It has been a
center of excellence for minimally invasive
heart surgery and has comprehensive fol
low-up programs. But Drs. Paul DiGiorgi
and Brian Hummel think it could do better,
and have a vision for a new cardiothoracic
surgery center that will take the next leap
forward in optimizing patient care.
On March 13, Darryl Pottorf and Mark
Pace of Captiva hosted a gathering at the
Robert Rauschenberg house, brought
together by their common interest in cardiac
care. It included doctors and staff from Lee
Memorial, former cardiac patients, philan
thropists and community leaders. The goal
was to start spreading a vision of the next
level of cardiac care, including innovations
in techniques and services that improve
patient care. This includes increased focus
on preoperative measures (“rehabilitation,”
not just rehabilitation), and on the integra
tion of multiple disciplines to evaluate and
minimize risk. Kat Epple, a talented flautist
and longtime friend of Bob Rauschenberg
and the hosts, played wonderful flute music.
The expanded CT Division, to be called
the Center of Innovation, will be located in a
10,000+ square foot space at HealthPark
and is intended to be the major center for
advanced cardiac care in southwest Florida.
To achieve the vision, advocates for the cen
ter understand that financing must come
from non-government sources such as
research grants and philanthropy from pri
vate investors, corporations and foundations.
Our community has stepped up to chal
lenges like this in the past. Everyone is invit
ed to learn what part they might play in
translating this vision to reality. Potential
roles include philanthropic gifts and refer
ring patents, clinicians and others interested
in improving healthcare and surgical servic
es.
For more information please contact Dr.
It's Our Annual Spring Fling Sale!
Save An Additional
10
% Off
O ur W onderful Selection Of
Already D iscounted Furniture!
Save
10
%
On Lamps, Rugs, Bedding,
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Sale Applies To In Stock Items Only, No Special Orders, and Cannot Be
I Applied To Previous Purchases. Promotional Rugs, Lexington, Stanley and
Matouk Are Excluded From Sale. Now Through April 4.
SANIBEL HOME FURNISHINGS
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Paul DiGiorgi, or Dr. Brian Hummel at
(239)343-6341.
Sandy Teger
Sanibel Island
Dangerous concerns
on bike trails (tinkerbells)
To the editor;
The trail rules and common sense require
that an audible warning is given before pass
ing someone. (A startled trail user can result
in an accident).
Most trail users will announce “Passing
on the Left” before passing. They announce
their warning loud enough to be heard and
acknowledged BEFORE passing. If there is
a group of riders planning to pass, the warn
ing should include the number planning to
pass. Unfortunately a number of un
informed riders believe that their handlebar
bells (tinkerbells) provide a warning!
The tinkerbell is a toy, not a warning.
■ The bell sound is easily drown out by
wind or traffic noises.
■ The sound is non-directional. It could
be from a bike in front or behind, or from an
area along side the trail.
■ The sound is high pitched, which is
difficult to hear for many older persons.
■ The ringing bell does not always indi
cate someone plans to pass, nor does it tell
you how many plan to pass. Some children
enjoy ringing their bell just for fun.
A warning must be heard, understood
and acknowledged to be a meaningful warn
ing. This is not possible with a tinkerbell. A
simple verbal warning, before passing, is an
appreciated courtesy which prevents acci
dents and makes trail travel safe and enjoy
able for all.
“But I rang my bell” offers little consola
tion when you are in a hospital bed recover
ing from a crash you caused.
Ray Chesner
Sanibel Island
Project
From page 30
forward in our efforts to restore the
Everglades. Moving water south through
the Everglades is critical for wildlife, and
keeping it out o f the Caloosahatchee and
St. Lucie Estuaries is vital to protecting
these important waterbodies.”
The total cost of the 2.6 mile Bridge
Phase of the project is estimated to be
$144 million. Governor Scott has com
mitted up to $30 million/year over three
years or $90 million total for this project.
In
addition
to
long
term
investments, the department is working
with
the
South
Florida
W ater
Management District and local partners to
take aggressive action on both coasts to
improve the quantity, qual
ity, timing and distribution
of water in Florida.
Governor Rick Scott’s
2 0 1 5 -2 0 1 6
“KEEP
FLORIDA
W ORKING”
budget provides a total of
$1 5 0
million
for
Everglades
restoration,
including $20 million for
Kissimmee River restora
tion.
The “KEEP FLORIDA
W ORKING” budget also
creates a dedicated source
o f revenue for Everglades
restoration that provides
more than $670 million for
ecosystem restoration over
the next four years and
more than $5 billion over
the next 20 years.
This means that during
the Governor’s second term
alone, South Florida’s fam
ilies will know the state has
the ability to fund its share
o f the restoration of the
Kissimmee River and the
construction of the C-43
and C-44 reservoirs - proj
ects
that will
provide
almost 100 billion gallons
of storage to protect Florida
estuaries.
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Pag
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B
Wee
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edn
es
day
,
M
a
rch
25,
2015
_____
b
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e
z
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n
e
w
sp
a
p
e
r
s.
c
o
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_______________
Isl
a
n
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R
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p
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Isl
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n
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R
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p
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te
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__________
c
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ib
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l.c
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_______________
Wee
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W
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M
arc
h
25,
20
15
M
Page
54
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A pp lew o od Bacon • S outhern Style C heese G rits • Biscuits & Sausage G ravy
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Easter Sunday Buffet 10:00AM-3:00PM
$ 2 9 .9 9 p er person • $12 kids 6-12
Children under
5
free (limit
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Easter D inner 3:30 PM - 10:00PM.
Serving: Lunch Ham - 4 p m • D in n e r 4 p m - 10pm
H app y h ou r Ham - 7 :0 0 p m daily w ith a Live music N ig htly
Sunday Brunch Buffet 10 am -2 :0 0 pm
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(W inkler and Gladiolus) across the street from W inn Dixie.
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with minor exceptions $2,595,000
—
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M
arc
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25,
2015________
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"Marijuana, I believe,” said the visitor.
“You mean to tell me that my Amazon
cousins were stoned? If I inhaled some dope
I’d crawl along at five feet an hour
also. Who put them on pot?”
"It was prescribed by the jungle voodoo
doctor,” the visitor said.
The alligator made a sudden lunge for the
insect mud pie and devoured it in one mas
sive gulp.
“Please do not construe my acceptance of
your gift as a bribe. I shall make an inde
pendent, objective decision. So let me ask
you this. If I chose to maintain the dirt roads
in this community could I also get stoned?”
The visitor was confused. It hadn’t
occurred to him that his community alligator
might be tempted by marijuana.
“I assume so. I really hadn’t thought
about it. But if marijuana was used in the
Amazon experiment, I see no reason why
that wouldn’t be the case here.”
“And if I voted for paved roads would I
have access to other types of recreational
drugs as well, like Alka Seltzer, Allegra,
Phillips Milk of Magnesia and a touch of
cocaine?”
The visitor could see the wheels spinning
in the alligator’s peanut-sized brain.
“Sure. If you vote for paved roads we’ll
get you whatever you want.”
Just then, another community resident
stormed in.
She said:” I overheard this entire conver
sation and I will bring you up to our com
munity inquisition board. You have violated
community code 609 which prohibits brib
ing wildlife. This is not how democracy is
supposed to work.”
The alligator interceded.
“Hold on, both of you or I will eat you
here and now. Your friend here has been
most objective about presenting the pros and
cons of paving. Here is your dilemma, both
of you. If you can’t reach an agreement
between the two warring factions, I will
leave this community and become the pet
alligator of a more compatible group of res
idents.
“I’ve been in your community for many
years now and I’ve never seen such friction
among neighbors. You decide. Either make
this discussion friendlier or away I go.”
The pro-paver and anti-paver now under
stood the damage that had been done to the
community. Tears rolled down their
faces. They faced each other and vowed
before the alligator to prevent it from leaving
their community. They hugged each other
and left the alligator’s office discussing
alternatives to paving, such as planting
banana peels on top of the dirt roads.
The alligator in turn began to hallucinate
about the roads. Paved roads meant racing
past the cars, and unpaved roads meant mel
lowing out on pot.
Paved roads
From page 4
ing?” A1 asked.
S o u t h w e s t F l o r i d a
SUSTAINABILITY SUMMIT
L
Q U A L I T Y O F L I F E F O R T O D A Y & T O M O R R O W
^ APRIL 30, 2015 • 8AM TO 6 PM
H A R B O R S ID E EVENT CENTER | D O W N T O W N FORT MYERS RIVER DISTRICT
M aster o f Ceremony:
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♦
♦
Another triumph for Lab Theater
This play is destined for
soldout houses the way their
“Cabaret” was. “Same Time
Next Year” by Bernard
Slade is one of my longtime
favorites. It was a Tony
Award nominee in 1975,
and it did win the Drama
Desk Award for outstanding
new play. I suspect many of
you will rem em ber the
movie with Alan Alda and
Ellen Burstyn. What a gem
that is.
This feel-good play starts
with a delightful, almost
whimsical idea. A man and a
woman,
strangers,
meet
somewhere
near
San
Francisco, and end up in a
one-night stand that will
impact their lives forever. What fun it is
hear them try to figure out what happened.
They are not serial adulterers. And with
the joys of live theater, you become very
attached to the mess and the delights they
get themselves into.
Well, the first time was so agreeable,
they decide to meet again next year for a
romantic time away from their spouses
and their children. Both of them really
doubting the other one will show up. But
show up they do, and the playfulness
between them just gets richer and richer.
You’ll probably think, as I did, this is Neil
Simon at his best.
So what happens is that for 24 years
they continue to meet. When they do, they
always start with two stories each must
tell. The stories are about their real wife
and real husband. One story is always
something mean and ugly their official
mate did in the previous year, and one
about something particularly sweet, kind
and good the mate did. Oh, 1 could feel
people in the audience thinking what sto
ries would they tell if asked. How truthful
can they be?
Now the genius of the play is that from
year to year the society changes and they
change, too. A clever device is that the
scene for the next year is introduced by
some radio news current to that year. It
starts with F.D.R. at the end of World War
II. Another year we hear Kennedy.
Another time we’re into the Vietnam War,
then Nixon resigning, and Gerald Ford
assuming the presidency. There’s one
about one of the Bushes and Iraq. These
audio flashes were done so skillfully they
advanced the story, giving it an extra edge
of surprise, delight and truth.
Those production values stem clearly
from the team director Scott Carpenter
built. Annette Trossbach, artistic director
at The Laboratory Theater of Florida, sur
rounds herself with genuine talent, loyal
to the mission of what community theater
can do. Carpenter really delivered. Hats
off, too, to Lois Kuehne who was respon
sible for the fully detailed set of the seedy
hotel, and also for her superb vintage cos
tumes that really painted what was going
on in each of the ensuing years the couple
comes back to the hotel. The playbill cred
its
Rosie
DeLeon
and
Matthew
DeNoncour for what they brought to the
excellent light and sound tech.
The cast was perfectly
picked. James Recca as
George, tall and lanky awk
ward and decent, hardly your
everyday seducer, wore his
role like it was written for
him. And the very talented
Tammy Richardson who
plays Doris had this smile
that killed you, and made her
Catholic background fit like
badly taught Baltimore cate
chism.
You will see all of that.
The two of them together
were so good they charmed
that audience into one of the
loudest standing ovations of
the season.
Brace yourself for sur
prise after surprise. Quit try
ing to guess how it’s going to turn out, and
get into the shoes o f each of them as they
face the guilt and duplicity back home.
And the chemistry in that hotel room.
There are many touching moments. It’s
wrapped in laughter, but it is all real.
I ’ll tell you just one of the great
moments. It won’t ruin it for you. One
year things are bad with both marriages,
and Doris gives her best friend the hotel
room phone number. George picks up the
phone and it’s D oris’s husband. Very
aggressively the husband asks, “Who are
you?”
The tension mounts. George, half pro
tecting Doris, honestly explains “I ’ve
been Doris’s friend for twenty years.”
Trapped in a new commitment to be total
ly honest, he adds. “W e’ve met each year
at this time.”
Those of us in the audience know that
Doris has used as an excuse to meet
George each year that she was going to a
Catholic retreat north of San Francisco.
When Doris’s husband yells, “W hat’s
your name?”
What did George say?
You’ll have to go find out for yourself.
I urge you to get yourself to the box
office as fast as you can, because this is
one of the best examples I know of a play
that brings a lovely “Feel Good” evening
to its audience, but at the same time raises
some really important issues to confront
that audience.
Let’s start with adultery. Or issues
about getting old without ever finding
yourself or topics about fighting for what
you really, really want from a marriage.
The talk home in the car was certainly
lively.
“Same Time Next Year” runs only
until March 28. Tickets will be hard to
find. Call the box office, the sooner the
better, at (239) 218-0481. Or order on
the
w ebsite
at
laboratorytheaterflorida.com. You will be
so glad you saw this play.
The next attraction at Lab Theater will
be “The Diary o f Anne Frank” April 10-
May 2. I’m told that some performances
of it are already sold out. No wonder.
They do exceptionally good work down
there at Woodford Avenue where it meets
Second Avenue in Ft. Myers.
I might see you there. I liked it so
much, I'm going try and catch it again!!
S id n e y B. S im o n
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Page
57
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Captiva Briefs
South Seas revised
proposal online
The revised South Seas proposal has
been submitted to Lee County for review.
To download the package, look for the
link on the home page of the Captiva
Community Panel website, captivacom-
munitypanel.com . Com m ents on the
South Seas proposal should be send to the
following Lee County staff members who
are in charge of the plan review:
■ Nettie Richardson, principal planner
— NRichardson@leegov.com.
■ Pam Houck, zoning director —
PHouck@leegov.com.
To submit those comments to the
Captiva Community Panel, carbon-copy
them to kengooderham@gmail.com for
distribution.
Captiva Community
Panel to meet April 14
The Captiva Community Panel will
hold its regular monthly meeting on
Tuesday, April 14, beginning at 9 a.m. in
Chadwicks Square at South Seas Island
Resort. This meeting is open to all inter
ested islanders and the public.
Among the agenda items:
■ Discussion o f the Captiva Plan
update.
■ Panel discussion on issues and
action surrounding the South Seas master
plan amendment.
■ Review of proposed amendments to
the panel bylaws.
■ Discussion of panel priorities.
■ A Captiva Erosion Prevention
District update.
■ A Captiva Fire District update.
■ A Hurricane Preparedness and
Response Committee update.
■ Other business as necessary.
In addition, the panel will hold a public
workshop on the Captiva Plan right after
the panel meeting, in the same room. This
will be an opportunity to review the initial
draft language for the plan, which is post
ed online at: http://www.captivacommuni-
typanel.com/pdfs/021115capPlanUpdate.
pdf.
This plan update will go through a
number of reviews, but this is your best
opportunity to comment on the proposed
language before the panel finalizes it for
submission to the county for approval. We
encourage all interested Captivans to
review these goals and policies and share
your thoughts with panel members. Can’t
attend a meeting? Send comments at cap-
tivacommunitypanel@gmail.com.
Public participation is invited and
encouraged. The next Captiva Community
Panel meeting will tentatively be on May
12. Information and background docu
ments are available at captivacommunity-
panel.com.
CEPD meets April 15
The Captiva Erosion
Prevention
District will hold its next monthly board
meeting on Wednesday, April 15, at 1
p.m. in the Wakefield Room at Tween
Waters Inn. Call the district at 472-2472
or go to http://mycepd.com/ for further
information.
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Captiva man to be awarded European
country’s highest civilian honor
Karel Aster survived WWII horrors, promoted international goodwill
By CRAIG GARRETT
cgarrett@breezenewspapers.com
A Captiva man who survived the horrors of captivity will
be honored by a European nation in April for his citizen con
duct after time as a prisoner of war, for his contributions to
society and the promotion of goodwill.
Karel Aster will receive the Gratias Agit award from the
Czech Republic April 23 at the Captiva Civic Center. The
central European country’s ambassador to the US, Petr
Gandalovic, is expected to present the award at a 5 p.m. cer
emony. Mr. Aster is from a small village in the former
Czechoslovakia but has lived in Illinois and Florida since
1945. He was a Czech national with
the US War Department in the 1940s.
Mr. Aster’s immediate family will
be in Captiva April 23. Two family
members on his behalf received the
award in the Czech Republic last June.
At age 95, Karel Aster wasn’t up for
the long trip.
Czech
authorities,
however,
“rolled out the red carpet, made is feel
like the heroes,” said Michael Murray,
whose wife Jenny is Mr. Aster’s
grand-daughter.
The
Murrays,
islanders and others will help honor
Karel Aster in Captiva.
Karel Aster was a successful shoe wholesaler retired full
time to Captiva in the 1990s. As a youth he was sent by a
Czechoslovakian shoe company to the US in the 1930s. The
award he receives in April is bestowed to those “working for
the benefit of the whole society, for the promotion of friend
ship among nations and for the promotion of the good name
of the Czech Republic in the world,” paperwork released by
the Czech Republic states. The award is similar to the US
Medal of Freedom.
“It’s very nice,” Aster said of the award.
Karel Aster came to the world’s attention much like mil
lions of others in war. At his release from a Japanese prison
er camp near Nagasaki in 1945, at 6 feet tall he weighed 90
pounds, had lost his teeth and the sight in his left eye, all due
to malnutrition, beatings and slave labor. Harsh memories,
lost comrades and nightmares haunted him for decades, as
well.
But in another sense Karel Aster was different. He was
n’t a soldier, wasn’t persecuted for race or faith. He was sim
ply a young man in the wrong place in the worst time in
modem history. He was a Czechoslovakian in the
Philippines helping to begin production on behalf of the Bata
Shoe Co. The European firm had sent Aster to the US in
1939 after training in shoe manufacturing. His job was to
assist in World’s Fair shoe exhibits. Things in the meantime
were dissolving with the Nazi government rolling over its
neighbors, bullying the world, conjuring new ways to horri
fy-
Bata in 1940 elected to set up production of leather and
canvas shoes in Manila. Aster and other staff shipped over to
the Philippines in 1941.
In a memoir of his ordeal compiled into “Recollections of
My War Years,” Aster wrote: “None of us had any worries
or concerns that the war (in Europe) would affect us there.
We had full faith that the company management knew what
they were doing.”
The Czech shoe company, of course, had no clue the
Japanese would violate Pearl Harbor, the Philippines, much
of the eastern world late 1941. In short order Aster and his
shoe company comrades as civilians inducted into the US
Department of War were in the custody of Japanese troops,
in the small Bataan Peninsula province. He was paraded in
CRAIG GARRETT
Karel Aster on April 23 will receive the Czech
Republic’s highest civilian honor.
the so-called Death March, or what the Japanese termed the
Victory March.
“The first Japanese soldier whom I encountered the next
day,” Aster wrote of the May 1942 introduction to an entire
ly new and cruel life, “set a bayonet against my chest and
yelled ‘PESO. PESO!” probably the only non-Japanese
words he knew,” noting the soldiers were pilfering the dead
and robbing the living. And that was a high point.
From there. Aster’s life devolved into an even darker
hole. Over the next three years, he and thousands of others
were starved, beaten, left to forage as slave laborers building
rail lines, runways or in coal mines, stooping to haul 200-
pound beams in 4-foot tunnels. Thousands in custody died
from disease, malnutrition, shot for escaping, even murder.
Some gave up and succumbed, he wrote in his memoir.
Others endured but died aboard transport ships heading to
Japan at the war’s end. The ships were torpedoed or bombed
by American troops.
One of the most striking of Aster’s memories is of the
war’s final days. Having survived a 1944 ordeal in the belly
of Japanese transport ship with some 700 others, “where we
no longer behaved as human beings,” he and his comrades
were assembled in the camp just outside Nagasaki. The
Japanese commander stepped up to his platform and spoke
through a translator to the ragged and starving men. His tone
was subdued.
“He said that the fighting had stopped, the war was over
and that we were all friends again,” Aster wrote. “We
returned in silence and relatively good order to our quarters,
but we were no longer saluting and bowing to the guards.
The war was finally over and ended.”
Aster’s memoirs of his captivity were written first in a let
ter to his parents in October 1945. He wouldn’t see his
Czech family until December 1959. The Russians con
trolled the country until 1989. Over the balance of his life.
Aster founded and was successful with Karel Aster Shoes, a
wholesaler in Chicago. He married in 1961. He retired to
See HONOR, page 60
Karel Aster
at age 20.
Reading their writes
There is much left to be read at the Captiva Memorial
Library
“Bellman and Black”
by Diane Setter-field
“Caught up in a moment of boyhood competition,
William Bellman recklessly aims his slingshot at a rook
resting on a branch, killing the bird instantly. It is a small
but cruel act. and is soon for
gotten. By the time he is
grown, with a wife and chil
dren of his own, William
seems to have put the whole
incident behind him. It was
as if he never killed the thing
at all. But rooks don’t for
get...Years later, when a
stranger mysteriously enters
William’s life, his fortunes
begin to turn — and the terri
ble and unforeseen conse
quences of his past indiscre
tion take root. In a desperate
bid to save the only precious
thing he has left, he enters
into a rather strange bargain,
with an even stranger part
ner. Together, they found a
decidedly macabre business. And ‘Bellman and Black’ is
bom.” *
‘The Sisters Weiss”
by Naomi Regen
“In 1950s Brooklyn, sisters Rose and Pearl Weiss
grow up in a loving but strict ultra-Orthodox Jewish fam
ily, never dreaming of defying their parents or their com
munity’s unbending and intrusive demands. Then, a
chance meeting with a young French immigrant turns
Rose’s world upside down, its once bearable strictures
suddenly tightening like a noose around her neck.
Defiantly, she begins to live a secret life that shocks her
family when it is discovered. Out of guilt and an over
whelming desire to be reconciled with those she loves,
she finally bows to her parents’ demands that she agree
to an arranged marriage. But the night before her wed
ding, she commits an act of defiance so unforgivable it
will exile her forever from her innocent young sister, her
family, and all she has ever known. Forty years later,
pious Pearl’s sheltered young daughter Rivka suddenly
discovers the truth about the family outcast, her Aunt
Rose, now a successful photographer. Inspired, but naive
and reckless, she sets off on a dangerous adventure that
will stir up the ghosts of the past and alter the future in
unimaginable ways for all involved.” *
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