Christmas comes early to Alexandra Saab’s home in Pinecrest. Right after Halloween, Saab and her mother bring out the Christmas lights and begin to create the Winter Wonderland that thousands of people come and visit throughout the Holiday season.
“It takes a month to put them up,” Saab says. “We turn them off around the third or fourth of January.”
The family has been putting up the 250,000-light display for the past 16 years. In the last few years, the display has helped raise money for St. Jude’s Hospital. “My cousin, when he was little, had a brain tumor, when he was three or four. He’s 10 now,” she says. “St. Jude’s was great. After that, we started collecting donations.”
The Saab house is located on Southwest 104th Street and 60th Avenue, near Pinecrest Elementary. Saab says the lights are easier to take down than put up, but putting them away is an ordeal.
“We rent a U-Haul,” she says. “When my brother went to the University of Miami, we had his fraternity brothers helping us; but not anymore.”
While it all sounds like it would be too much to handle, Saab says she likes working on the display.
“I find it very exciting when we put them up,” she says. “And to collect the donations is amazing. Every night we get donations. Even in this time of economic despair, people are willing to give.”
Putting up the light display is a family affair. Saab says one grandfather’s role is fixing broken light sets.
“Even when we changed from regular to LED, he learned how to fix the LED lights,” she says.
The LED lights do help them conserve some electricity, but the family’s electric bill goes up a few hundred dollars because of the display.
“Before LED, you couldn’t blow dry your hair or play video games at night because the power would go off,” she says. “We have a new electric box just for Christmas lights.”
The display does not stay stagnant. Each year they get new figures to add to those already being shown.
“Our neighbors bring us new figures. I guess they don’t want us to stop,” she says. In fact, she says, if they don’t start work on the display, neighbors come over to see what’s going on with the lights.
Saab is a senior at Palmetto High where she the school’s Silver Knight nominee in the Vocational Technical category.
“I’m big in television production at the school,” she says. “Last year we received the Excellence Award for Daily Broadcast at a national competition. This year on the national level we won a couple of awards, one called Sweet 16. You have 16 hours to put together a broadcast based on one word.”
She comes by her broadcast talent by way of her father, who was a radio DJ in Miami and still does voice over work. Saab is also a member of the school’s water polo team and she was on the swim team.
Outside of school, she plays beach volleyball and belly dances. She has 1,500 community service hours, including hours from working on the Mr. Panther event this year. Her community service and strong academics have earned her several college scholarship offers, including one from the University of Miami. Where ever she goes, she wants to end up in dental school and specialize in Oral Maxillofacial Dentistry.



















Running in general election different than primary
I really don’t think the U.S. Senate race in Florida is an “anyone can win” threeway race. Everything “was” nice and cozy for both Kendrick Meek and Marco Rubio as long as Charlie Crist stayed in the Republican Party.
Rubio had the upper hand and short of some disastrous revelation would have coasted into the November elections. Independents were up for grabs.
True, Rubio has the American Express debacle potentially hanging over his head. But I don’t think it will have much of an impact. Contributors to the Republican Party of Florida are more interested in having their man elected to office than they are about a ruckus over improper spending of political contributions.
Meek currently has total control over the Democratic primary. He has a few opponents but they are underfunded and have the same problem as Meek, but to a far less extent. They basically are unknown north of Palm Beach County.
The entry of Jeff Greene, a billionaire from Palm Beach County into the Democratic race can cause a primary race problem for Meek inasmuch as Greene plans on dumping millions of his own dollars into the race. Not being beholden to any power structure or lobbying groups will appeal to a number of voters.
Gov. Crist’s long anticipated move out of the Republican Party, becoming an Independent, or as he calls it a “NPA” No Party Affiliation, is creating financial problems for Crist as many of the dollars he has in his campaign war chest will be going back to contributors angered by his move.
Crist’s move will take votes away from Meek as a number of registered Democrats are concerned that Meek will not fair well in North Florida. In the general election, they may turn to Crist, who is more of a Democrat than many elected Democrats sitting in Washington, DC.
For the life of me I can’t understand the Republican position on the stimulus package embraced by Crist a year ago when President Obama visited our state and received a warm welcome from the the governor. It is a good political move by Rubio, but in my opinion rings hollow because the Republican-controlled Legislature in Tallahassee not only embraced Obama’s stimulus money, but proudly used it to balance the state’s budget.
Simply said, without the stimulus dollars some $800 billion in all, we would be seeing many more cuts in services in next year’s budget. There just isn’t enough revenue to cover all of Florida’s needs. Without Obama’s stimulus dollars, the Republican Party would have had a tough time explaining even deeper cuts in services without any increases in taxes.
It would appear that if Crist can quickly reassemble a statewide team of supporters and can cover the dollars he will loose to the far right Republicans then he should be our next senator from Florida.
Crist doesn’t have to face the difficult task of moving his campaign to the middle of the political spectrum come the general elections. Republicans must appear to be to the right of the Tea Party to win their primary. Democrats must be to the left of the old Labor Party to win their primary. Once the primary races are settled, the winning candidates must pull to the middle of the political road to win the general election. Crist is lucky. He already is there.
We appreciate your opinions on this column whether in agreement or disagreement. Please send your comments to (fax number) 305-662-6980 or email to < letters@communitynewspapers.com >.
The opinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of this newspaper, its editors or publisher.