Judge says principal fired over Holocaust email should be rehired

In our August edition, freelance journalist Jan Engoren wrote about new state legislation mandating the school curriculum about both the Holocaust and the little-known 1920 race riot in Ocoee, Florida. The law, H.B.1213, co-sponsored by state Senator Lauren Book (D-Plantation), was spawned in part by an April 2018 incident in which a Boca Raton high school principal emailed a parent: “Not everyone believes the Holocaust happened.”

William Latson, then principal at Spanish River Community High School, was fired from the post he had held since 2011. Shortly after the Parklander began circulating through Broward and Palm Beach counties, however, on August 13, Florida Administrative Law Judge Robert S. Cohen ruled Latson should be reinstated. So, while it may be old news by the time you read this, in the interest of fairness, we felt it necessary to follow up with the judge’s ruling.

Judge Cohen ruled that Latson should be rehired and reassigned to a post in the district “commensurate with his qualifications.” The judge’s written ruling also recommended that Latson receive back wages.

The Palm Beach County school district “failed to prove that Latson engaged in misconduct in office, incompetence, or gross insubordination by a preponderance of the evidence. No just cause for his suspension or termination exists, but a reprimand and reassignment are warranted,” the judge wrote.

 

By Richard Battin

SoFlo Gardening: September 2020

What to Plant

Annuals/Bedding plants: Try ageratum, celosia, zinnia, and wax begonia for color in the fall.

Bulbs: Add color, texture, and patterns to the garden with the many varieties of elephant’s ear (Alocasia spp.), calla, narcissus, and zephyr lily.

Herbs: Plant Mexican tarragon, mint, rosemary, and basil.

Fruits & Vegetables: It is time to establish strawberry plants. Veggies to plant now are broccoli, carrots, cabbage, collards, and many others.

What to Do

Lawns: Continue to monitor the lawn for signs of insect damage. Fall armyworms, chinch bugs, mole crickets, and sod webworms are still active this month.

Fertilizer Bans: Numerous municipalities in South Florida prohibit the application of fertilizer to lawns and/or landscape plants during the summer rainy season (June–September). See if such an ordinance exists in your area.

Vegetable gardens: Prepare the fall vegetable garden if not done in August. Using transplants from your local garden center will get the garden off to a fast start, but seeds provide a wider variety from which to choose.

Perennials and bulbs: Divide and replant perennials and bulbs that have grown too large or need rejuvenation. Add organic matter to planting beds and monitor water needs during establishment.

Irrigation: Check that irrigation systems are providing good coverage and operating properly before summer rains taper off.

Citrus: Fertilize citrus with a balanced fertilizer either this month or in October. Use controlled-release nitrogen because rain will not leach it from the soil too quickly.

Source: University of Florida IFAS Extension

Facebook offers practical, fun, nostalgic groups

Me: I’ll take Frivolous Facebook groups for $1,600, Alex.

Alex: The name of this group includes this word that means throwing someone out a window.

Me: What is defenestration?

Alex: You have just doubled your score, Richard, to an even eight million dollars, a new Jeopardy record.

Sit on that Ken Jennings.

Actually, there are two Facebook groups with defenestration in their name: “The Defenestration Zone,” with 8 members, and “Defenestration Magazine,”

with a whopping 114 members (All membership counts are as of June 4). Neither group has anything to do with throwing people out windows.

But this column isn’t about frivolous Facebook groups or pages like “Accomplishing Something Before the Microwave Reaches :00.” Or “Badly Stuffed Animals,” or “Boobquake,” (2,700 members, but it’s not what you think.), or “Physics doesn’t exist, it’s all gnomes,” of which there are at least five separate groups ranging from three to 2,600 members.

However compelling those groups and pages might be, we’re going to turn away from this tomfoolery and examine Facebook groups that our readers can actually use.

Many are useful: “Parkland Residents Community Forum,” “Moms of Coral Springs,” “Jewish Community of Boca Raton.”

Some are fun or hobby related: “Foodies of South Florida,” “South Florida

Fishing,” “South Florida Butterfly & Hummingbird Gardening.”

Others are nostalgic or history oriented: “Historic Florida,” “Florida Pioneering

A postcard of downtown San Jose, “back in the day.”

Families,” “Exploring Florida’s Historic Places and Abandoned Sites.”

I grew up in Santa Clara and San Jose, California. I’ve been away since 1980, more than 40 years. I’ve joined groups dedicated to people’s memories of both towns. I enjoy seeing photos of places I frequented long ago and lament reading about favorite haunts that are gone.

I love seeing photos of First Street in San Jose from the 1950s when I was very young, zooming in to try to recognize stores where we shopped, restaurants where we ate, the Fox Movie Theater

where my sister and I saw “Journey to the Center of the Earth” in 1959.

These virtual visits to my past put me
in a kind of ethereal time machine; one poignant recollection rolling into another; mind mementos of toy stores, Polly Parrot shoes, Superman comics, and 30-cent hot dogs from a tiny place on San Antonio Street.

I do, however, have caveats. It’s not all
a pleasant walk down memory lane. Repetition is a problem. Group members who don’t visit often post photos that already have been posted a dozen times, and caption them like they’re brand new. “Who remembers Frontier Village?” comes up at least once a week in the San Jose Memories group. “Who remembers the El Rancho Drive-in, the Spartan Drive-In, the San Jose Drive-In?”

Even more annoying for those
getting along in years are “memories” that haven‘t aged properly. As a septuagenarian, reading “Hey! Who remembers the 1980s?” just pisses me off. Or the ubiquitous “back in the day,” and they’re talking about something that happened in 1995. “Hey! Remember Wednesday? Those were the hours, weren’t they?”

Whatever you’re looking for on Facebook, it’s easy to find. There’s a magnifying glass at the top left of the page. Type in “Coral Springs garage sales,” or “Parkland politics,” “Winooski Vermont” or “Rawlins Wyoming,” “Roller Derby,” or “Nash Metropolitans.” You’re on your way. Second star to the right and straight on till morning.

 

By Richard Battin

editor@theparklander.com

FTC warns COVID cure claimants

Before we get to the dozens of warning letters the Federal Trade Commission has sent out to companies promising a variety of questionable Coronavirus remedies, we owe a sincere apology to the people of China. 

Thousands of Chinese immigrants entered this country in the mid-1800s to help build the Transcontinental Railroad. Some brought with them the oil of Chinese water snakes. Rich in omega-3 fatty acids, it was actually helpful in treating arthritis and bursitis. In other words: It really worked.

“As word of the healing powers of Chinese snake oil grew,” NPR wrote in 2013, “many Americans wondered how they could make their own snake oil. Because there were no Chinese water snakes handy in the American West, many healers began using rattlesnakes . . .”

Under the fraudulent shade of a faux umbrella strode one Clark Beauregard Stanley, aka The Rattlesnake King, circa 1897. I made up that middle name. He just seemed to need one.

Stanley reached into a sack, plucked out a snake, slit it open and plunged it into boiling water. When the fat rose to the top, he skimmed it off and used it on the spot to create ‘Stanley’s Snake Oil,’ a liniment that was immediately snapped up by the throng that had gathered to watch the spectacle

– Joe Schwarcz, Director, McGill University’s Office for Science and Society

Okay, stick with me now. In the first place, Chinese snake oil contains almost triple the amount of the soothing ingredient as rattlesnake oil. So, there’s that. And in the second place, the first place doesn’t make a spit of difference anyway because The Rattlesnake King’s snake oil was missing one key ingredient: Snake oil. Any kind of snake oil. So put that in your neti pot and breathe deeply. Before I move on to Covid-19 cures questioned by the FTC, masks that are paid for but never received, and even fake coronavirus test sites, let me finish my explanation of the expression “snake oil salesman.” It’s worth the wait.

The expression “snake oil salesman”, meaning purveyors of patent medicines and other miscellaneous and sundry quackeries, didn’t come to the attention of lexicologists until 1917. Other words that came into common use that year include “acquired brain injury”, “bubblehead”, “chowhound”, and “congresswoman”. 

About that last one, Jeannette Rankin entered the U.S. House of Representatives in 1917 as the first woman in Congress. They called her “the lady of the house.” And, yes, that will be on the test.

. . standing on a street corner in hell right now, making suckers of the damned, telling them there’s nothing like snake oil for a bad burn

Eugene O’Neill, ‘The Iceman Cometh’

While there are, indeed, legitimate test sites in Palm Beach and Broward counties, the Federal Trade Commission warned in late April that nationwide “there’s no shortage of scammers setting up fake COVID-19 testing sites.” While none has been reported in Florida so far, “fake sites can look real, with legitimate-looking signs, tents, hazmat suits, and realistic-looking tests. 

“And the damage these fake testing sites can cause is very real. They aren’t following sanitation protocols, so they can spread the virus. They’re taking people’s personal information, including Social Security numbers, credit card information, and other health information – all of which can be used for identity theft and to run up your credit card bill.”

If you’re not sure a site is legitimate, the FTC advises, check with your local police or sheriff’s office. “If a legitimate testing site has been set up, they should know about it. And if a fake testing site is operating, they’ll want to know about it.”

Crooked creatures of a thousand dubious trades
That breed like gnats from the débris of war;
Half-cracked herb-doctor, patent-medicine man
With his accordion and his inked silk hat;
Sellers of snake-oil balm and lucky rings

Stephen Vincent Benét, ‘John Brown’s Body’

Florida may not have any fake test sites, but a number of companies in the state have been issued warning letters by the FTC about questionable advertising claims.

The web site of a Bradenton “church” offered a “Miracle Mineral Solution” (MMS) intended to “cure, mitigate, treat, prevent, or diagnose Coronavirus.” 

MMS, for those of you not up on your “miracle minerals” is chlorine dioxide, (CIO2), consisting of one chlorine atom and two oxygen atoms. That’s your basic fourth-grade chemistry. Right?

There are, in fact, limited legitimate internal uses for diluted chlorine dioxide, like some mouthwashes. The FTC, however, questions other claims the website made for MMS, a “protocol” the organization called an “official sacrament.”

An 85-year-old man suffering “various serious” Coronavirus symptoms, the company claimed, was given “a liter bottle of water which had 20 activated drops of MMS added to it.” 

“He was instructed to take a sip from the bottle every five minutes, but not to let it go past 10 minutes.” After alterations to the dosage the elderly man “is recovering quickly — 90% improved. The rest of the family who also took MMS are now fully recovered.” Wow.

Elsewhere in Florida, a St. Petersburg company was warned by the FTC about claiming that stem cell therapy can treat or prevent Coronavirus.

Another Florida company claimed that a “Chinese medical team report successful treatment of Coronavirus patients with high doses of Vitamin C.” Intravenous Vitamin C is one of the more common targets of FTC warning letters. 

A Fort Lauderdale company, with branches in Boca Raton and West Palm Beach was making similar claims on its website but dropped them as soon as it heard from the FTC.

A Naples-based acupuncture and other health solutions firm was marketing a “COVID-19 Homeopathy Treatment Kit” claiming they were “effective for 80% of people.” I only hope the kit contained more of the health solutions stuff than do-it-yourself acupuncture needles.

“Black Seed Oil,” was the cure of choice of another Florida company, whose site claimed it is “believed to be the miracle cure for all diseases except death.” Wow. Really? I’m sure those afflicted with cancer or heart disease or other fatal ailments would love to hear about it.

Of course, questionable or unproven COVID treatments aren’t restricted to Florida, or even the United States. They are as virulent as the actual virus.

In Athens, Maine, for example, an “herb farm” received a letter from the FTC questioning the preventative quality of its “HERBAL ALLIES.” Among them: (Take this down.) “hyssop, burdock, astragalus, Japanese knotweed, chaga, reishi, birch polypore and red raspberry leaves.” 

Red raspberry leaves, huh? Raspberries? Well, I know a few companies that deserve a really, really big one.

Anyone? Anyone?

SoFL Gardening June 2020: What to Plant

What to Plant in June

Annuals/Bedding
Plants:
Annuals that can take full sun during the increasingly hot summer months include celosia, portulaca, vinca, and some coleus.  

Palms:
Summer’s warm, rainy months are the perfect time to plant palms. Make sure not to cover the trunk with soil.  

Herbs:
Plant heat-loving herbs, including basil, ginger, summer savory, cumin, Mexican tarragon, and rosemary.  

Vegetables:
Plant tropical vegetables, such as boniato, calabaza, and chayote this month.  

What to Do

Pests:
Monitor the landscape and garden weekly for harmful insects. Knowing which insects attack a plant can aid in identification and treatment.
See
Landscape Pest Management: edis.ifas.ufl.edu/topic_landscape_pests

Irrigation:
Watch for drought stress and water as needed if rainfall has been spotty. Focus on new plantings and follow watering restrictions. When rains begin, shut down the irrigation system. 

Propagation:
Produce more plants by air layering, grafting, division, or cuttings.
See
edis.ifas.ufl.edu/topic_garden_propagation

Palms
and
cycads:
Watch for nutrient deficiencies or other problems and use an appropriate treatment.
See
edis.ifas.ufl.edu/topic_palm_care

Pruning:
Lightly prune summer-flowering shrubs, like hibiscus, oleander, and ixora, during the warmer months to increase blooming.  

Fertilizer
bans:
Numerous municipalities in south Florida prohibit the application of fertilizer to lawns and/or landscape plants during the summer rainy season (June–September). See if such an ordinance exists in your area.

Lawns:
Check frequently for damaged areas and keep insects in check with early treatment. Determine whether yellow and brown lawn patches are caused by chinch bugs, disease, or lack of water. Take time to determine the cause so your remedy is effective. Rejuvenate areas where grass does not grow well by replacing it with versatile groundcovers. 

Soil
solarization:
Clean up your vegetable garden and solarize the soil for 4–6 weeks to kill pests and disease.
See
edis.ifas.ufl.edu/topic_soil_solarization

Source:
University of Florida IFAS. Extension

Do not forget them…

In Flanders Fields – John McCrae

In Flanders Fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie,
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high,
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.

 

“In the spring of 1915 bright red flowers began poking through the battle ravaged land across northern France and Flanders (northern Belgium),” Barbara Maranzani wrote for history.com. 

“Canadian Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae, who served on an Allied artillery unit, spotted a cluster of the poppies shortly after serving as a brigade surgeon during the bloody Second Battle of Ypres.

“The sight of the bright red flowers against the dreary backdrop of the war,” she continued, “inspired McCrae to pen the poem, “In Flanders Fields,” in which he gives voice to the soldiers who had been killed in battle and lay buried beneath the poppy-covered grounds.”

The United States was not to enter the war for another two years, in April 1917. It was the month and year my father was born in Buffalo, N.Y. It was exactly one year before my wife’s father was born in St. Louis, MO. Archie and Bob.

Both served bravely in World War II: My wife’s father building hospitals for injured soldiers across Europe; my father at the controls of an M4 Sherman tank prowling Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia. My wife’s mother, Pearl, born in Chicago in 1923, also served overseas in the U.S. Army during the war. That’s where Pearl met Bob.

Archie, Bob and Pearl were part of what Tom Brokaw called “The Greatest Generation.” They were among those who returned to their families.

This month we honor all the men and women who didn’t make it home, who gave up their lives in too many wars.

Earlier this year, before Covid-19 struck, Memorial Day events had been planned in communities throughout Broward and Palm Beach counties.

The “better part of valor,” however, as Shakespeare’s Falstaff reasoned in Henry IV, Part I, might still have us in stay-at-home mode at the end of the month.

One hundred years ago the country was still trembling from the devastation of the Spanish Flu. It killed an estimated 675,000 Americans between 1918 and 1920, more than were killed during the Civil War.

It was that same Civil War that sparked Union General John Logan to establish “Decoration Day” on May 30, 1868 to honor the estimated 620,000 who died in the four-year struggle. The name was later changed to Memorial Day and set for the last Monday in May.

One hundred years ago there were Memorial Day celebrations throughout Florida — in Tampa, Miami, Orlando — but at least one nearby city chose a different path.

“No Plans For Observance of Memorial Day,” read a headline on the front page of the Palm Beach Post, May 18, 1920.

“No preparations are under way for observance of Memorial Day,” the story read. “There is no post of the G.A.R and no organization of the Confederate Veterans or Spanish War Veterans” planning events for the day.

The G.A.R. was the The Grand Army of the Republic, the fraternal organization composed of veterans of the Union Army, Navy, Marines and the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service who served in the American Civil War.

After World War I Memorial Day was expanded to honor Americans killed in all wars. It became an official federal holiday in 1971.

This year, this month, again for “the better part of valor,” the Indianapolis 500, traditionally held on Memorial Day, has been postponed to August 23.

Still in its infancy a century ago, the race was held as scheduled on Monday, May 31. It was the race’s eighth running at The Brickyard.

Gaston Chevrolet, brother of the man who started the Chevrolet car company, won the race, posting an average speed of 88.6 miles per hour. The average speed at the 2019 race was 175.8 miles per hour.

Whatever Memorial Day events are allowed this difficult year and whomever you’re with, the Parklander joins all of you in honoring those brave men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice for their country.

Richard Battin, Editor

We are the Dead. Short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved and were loved, and now we lie,

In Flanders fields.

 

Wikipedia page on Memorial Day

Wikipedia page on In Flanders Fields

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