LEGAL APPROVAL
,-
NO. -""3064
,NOTICE OF LAND USE CHANGE
NOTICE OF ZONING CHANGE
': lhe CIty of Boynton Beach proposes to change the land use and rezone the land within the area sho..", on the map in this advertisement.
',PGbIlc"-inQsonlt.ese proposals will be held before the Planning and Zoning Board on December 10, 1987 at 7:30 p.m. in the City Commission
Chambers at Pilteland Plaza. 211 South Federal Highway, Boynton Beach, Florida.
.: Pvbllc.heorinGt 0/1 these proposals will also be held before the City Commission on December 17, 1987, at 7,30 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the
',agMlCla permits, in the Commission Chambers at Pineland Plaza, 211 South Federal Highway, Boynton Beach, Florida.
.
APPLICANT,
AGENT,
OWNER:
City of Boynton Beach
Carmen S, Annunziato
Shooters of Boynton Beach, Inc,. Watersedge
Homeowners Assoc., .\,ames K. Abbot. Douglas J,
Stowers and Borbara D, Stowers,
Plstrick R. Hans, Edward R. Tinari and
Francis R. Tinari. John T. and loretta Haines.
J,P, and James Laudicina and Elizabeth Laudicina,
Robert B. Taylor Jr., Michael N. and Cheryl A.
Jarvis, S. and Josephine G, Stillpass, Robert G,
Emmell et 01., Lisa Landis, N.W, and Cynthia S.
Greenhouse, Kathleen N. Eaton, Robert l. and
Judy R. Herold
I: ~
PROJECT NAME:
IItioPOSED USE:
LOCATION:
Wafersedge and adjacent parcel
Multiple family housing and other R-3 uses
2100 block of North Federal Highway
AMEND FUTURE LAND
USE PlAN From: Local Retail Commercial
REZONE: To: High Density Residential
From, - C-3 Community Commercial
, TO, - R-3 Multiple Family Dwelling
REQUEST,
RESTAURA..~T
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<opies of this/and use amendment and rezoning application are available for review by the public at the City of Boynton Beach Planning Depart-
)Mnt. at 200 North Seocrest Boulevard, Boynton Beach.
.....lnterested parties are notified to appear at said hearing in person or by attorney and be heard. Any person who decides to appeal any decision
:of !he Plallning and Zoning Board or City Commission with respect to any matter considered at these meetings will need a record of the proceedings
.."d for web purpose, may need to ensvre that Q verbatim record of the proceedings il made, which record Includes the testimony and evidence
~ which the appeal is to be baud.
~.H: November 23, December 4,9, 1987
BETTY S. BORONI, CITY CLERK
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
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nd u1:h ~r fll1lil hayc oile 'Olt tla}' In Dflr. unler. lhey fhall by law appoint a t1dTaelll IIIlY'
, . uenct of the firn elc:'aion lhey nlll t\'i. lIdl. $. .' uoure !hall be the jucl~e of the eleCUbllS, relutnk lintl ()\1:\lillhlltt
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denl' tempore.
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s. Wfien Iilirnl
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, I he toneurtetlt
s don"t deserve special benefits
ELLEN GOODMAN
were drunk during their eligible
years. They complain that under
the VA guidelines, disabled veter-
ans would have had longer to apply
for these benefits. But the VA calls
alcoholism "willful misconduct."
So these two have accused the VA
of illegally discriminating against
them on tpe basis of their handicap,
The case raises major questions.
Is alcoholism a disease? Is an alco-
holic disabled in the sense that, say,
a paraplegic is? Does he or she
deserve an extra hand from soci-
ety, a special ramp into life? Must
we then agree that alcoholism is a
legitimate excuse for misbehavior,
even for a crime?
In a curious parallel, the presi-
dent's pal Michael Deaver is using
alcoholism as a defense against
perjury charges. He was too sick to
know what he was saying. The dis-
ease, not the man, done it.
These lines between sick behav-
ior and bad behavior are not al-
ways clear, Leonard Glantz of Bos-
ton University's School of Public
Health offers another example: "If
you have a brain tumor and attack
me because of this tumor, is it fair
to .send you to jail? Most people
would think not. But if you ran me
down with a car because you were
in the throes of alcoholic delusion
should you go to jail? Most people
would say yes,"
Our ambivalence toward alco-
holism may be entirely appropri-
ate, even accurate, We are often
comfortable labeling alcoholism as
a disease. There is medical evi-
dence to match the terminology.
The semantics also fit our social- .
policy desires. If alcoholics are
"sick" instead of bad, they need,
indeed deserve, help.
At the same time, we know that
alcoholism has an element of
choice. You can't just say no to
cancer, But you can say no to a
drink. The cure is not in the hands
of a surgeon. It is in the hands of the
"victim,"
We can label alcoholism a dis-
ease to help those who are in need.
But we shouldn't accept it all a
defense when alcoholic behavior
threatens the community,
If Deaver had blacked out on the
highway and slammed into another
car, we would not have forgiven his
behavior on account of drunken-
ness, Nor should we forgive perjury
on these grounds.
As for the veterans demanding
their handicapped rights, I don't
think we should extend benefits to
alcoholics that are denied to the
sober. Remember that these two
veterans have gotten their disease
under control. They didn't do it"by
making excuses,
.
Ellen Goodman is a columnist
for The Boston Globe, . .,
, ,~
..
lins the prisoner of Zemach Stree~
ago to make
He trekked
path under
ld scattered
down to the
e safety and
Iltes away,
,veral dozen
'ernment of-
cepted their
shook hands
~ suit with a
:ie. A black
s expression
ues. His skin
that seldom
ty red razor
eyes looked
rave site, but
his two daughters took his arms to help him
make the slow walk up and down the hill.
In an hour it was over, The Peugeot carried
him back to 1 Zemach S1. The crowd - solemn
disciples, the tight-lipped plainclothesmen, the
voracious Israeli photographers jockeying for a
last shot - drifted off. Menachem Begin's year-
ly pilgrimage to the grave of Aliza, his wife of
43 years, was over,
But not his mourning, It has been five years
since Aliza died, 51./2 years since the invasion of
Lebanon, four years since he told his colleagues,
"I cannot go on." Stepping down as prime minis-
ter, he retreated to the splendid isolation of his
residence where he has lived ever since in a self-
imposed exile of shadows and memories, the
prisoner of Zemach Street.
.
The daf before Begin's cemetery visit, Is-
r~elis marked another significant event. i~ their
~ent history, It was the 10th annive~ry of
.~ ~
the late Anwar Sadat's epoch-making trip..:to
Jerusalem, There were speeches and dinners
and symposiums, sober reflections laced with
bittersweet nostalgia, a longing for the days of
big men and bold rhetoric. Menachem Begin
was one of those men, a crucial if recalcitrant
participant in the passion and the glory of Camp
David, Yet his name seldom came up in the
observances. When they did mention it, Israelis
spoke of Begin as they spoke of Sadat: in the
past tense,
Yet Menachem Begin lives. The former
prime minister reads the newspapers every
morning, answers the phone, sees relatives and,
on occasion, old friends. His secretary says he
has ventured outside his well-kept apartment in
Jerusalem's western suburbs exactly nine times
the past four years - four times to visit Aliza's
grave, five for treatment by his personal physi-
cian at a nearby hospital.
Please see BEGIN~4E