May 26, 2016 - halstonmedia.com

Transcription

May 26, 2016 - halstonmedia.com
North Salem’s only weekly newspaper mailed to every home and business.
Thursday, May 26, 2016
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Vol. 2 No. 8
OLD SALEM FARM SPRING HORSE SHOWS
McLain Ward, the triple-crown winner of the shows
BY FAITH ANN BUTCHER
EDITOR
McLain Ward’s performance at
the Old Salem Farm Spring Shows
illustrated why he is considered to
be on the short list of athletes that
will be on the U.S. Olympic Jumping Team during the 2016 Summer
Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Ward,
who resides in neighboring Brewster, won all three adult Grand Prix
competitions that were held during the two-week show. With each
competition, he placed first with a
different horse.
On May 15, Ward won the
$50,000 Old Salem Farm Grand
Prix on the back of HH Carlos Z.
On May 20, Ward and Rothchild celebrated a homecoming on
the Grand Prix Field at Old Salem Farm. It was at the Old Salem
Farm Spring Horse Shows in 2008
that Ward jumped his first class
aboard the then-7-year-old Belgian
Sport Horse gelding. In honor of
the anniversary, Rothchild - now a
seasoned 15 years old - carried him
to win the $35,000 Grand Prix of
North Salem that Friday afternoon.
“Everybody knows I didn’t want
him; I thought he was crazy,” said
Ward. “He was hot, a little bit special, but careful!” said Ward with a
smile. “He does his job. He is who
he is, and I always say he’s a little
like my dad. I love him to death and
PHOTO: FAITH ANN BUTCHER
McLain Ward and Tina La Boheme in their winner’s presentation with ringmaster Alan Keeley, Ellen and
Kamran Hakim representing Old Salem Farm, Kyle Olson, Heather Jaffar, and Alex Fridell, Vice President
of The Kincade Group.
he’s amazing in every way, but some
days…”
Ward and Rothchild topped the
45 horses that contested in a course
designed by Alan Wade. Of the 10
horses that advanced the jump-off,
only four were double clear and
Rothchild topped the list with a
time of 43.81 seconds over the
short course.
“Alan Wade is my favorite course
designer in the world,” Ward said. “I
BUSINESS & REAL ESTATE
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CLASSIFIEDS
23
HEALTH & WELLNESS
14
LEISURE
20
OPINION
SPORTS
8
17
seconds. Leslie Howard produced
the first double-clear effort with
Gentille van Spieveld in 48.34
seconds. Ward returned on Tina la
Boheme, a 9-year-old Selle Français mare owned by Ward in partnership with Artie Hawkins, and
stopped the clock clear in 44.62
seconds. The time was enough to
take the win, bumping Howard to
second.
Ward finished third with Rothchild, and Marilyn Little took
fourth aboard Clearwater, with the
final rail of the jump-off down in
42.28 seconds. Filip de Wandel of
Belgium capped the top five with
his own Gentley after also pulling
the final rail of the short course and
crossing the timers in 43.87 seconds.
While the crowd that gathered on the banks of the Grand
Prix Field at Old Salem Farm on
Sunday afternoon was expecting
another win from veteran Rothchild, what they got was a headturning performance from one of
the younger horses in Ward’s string.
Ward and Hawkins, who is an accomplished hunter rider and trainer in his own right, purchased the
mare in November before developing her throughout the 2016
season in Florida.
think he knows this field quite well. during the May 22 $130,000 EmI think he had a great class, a lot of pire State Grand Prix, Rothchild
four-fault rounds, a nice number in and Tina la Boheme. He collected
the jump-off and we thought the first and third-place ribbons.
right winner. We had beautiful conWard and Rothchild were the
ditions, which is always nice. We’re trailblazers over Wade’s first-round
in the second week, but I think the track and were later joined by five
footing is holding up well, which is more horses, including the eventual
always a concern on the turf.”
class winner, Tina la Boheme.
Ward, who is ranked fourth in
In the jump-off, Rothchild sufthe world by Longines Rankings, fered an unfortunate rail to settle
April_16_bannerad_Halston.qxp_Layout 1 4/4/16 12:44 PM
rode two horses into the jump-off for four faults and a time of 40.49
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Page 2 – North Salem News
The Staff
EDITORIAL TEAM
FAITH ANN BUTCHER
EDITOR: 914-246-2691
[email protected]
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SPORTS EDITOR: 914-302-5236
[email protected]
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VP OF SALES AND MARKETING:
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VP OF BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT:
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Thursday, May 26, 2016
WARD
FROM PAGE 1
“Artie is a very dear friend of my
dad’s and a great horseman,” Ward
said. “Last year, he said he’d like
to invest in a horse, so we bought
her when she had just turned 8
years old. It’s a really exciting day
to do this and a little bit special for
me for it to work out. Sometimes
you buy a young horse for a family friend and a great horseman and
you have the best intentions, but it
doesn’t always go the way you want.
She looks like a really nice horse.”
After proving that she has what
it takes to jump against international-caliber horses and riders,
Tina la Boheme is facing a promising future with Ward.
“I hope to have another really
nice grand prix horse next year,” he
said. “This is how we make them.
You have to put in some work, but
you have to start with talent like
she has.”
Ward won the blue ribbon with
Tina la Boheme, but was pleased
with how Rothchild jumped in
both rounds of competition. He
added that Old Salem Farm is the
ideal venue for seasoned horses like
Rothchild, as well as developing
ones like Tina la Boheme.
“This is an important event; it’s
FEI [Federation Equestre Internationale- sanctioned], good prize
money, and a great venue,” he said.
PHOTO: FAITH ANN BUTCHER
McLain Ward on Tina la Boheme as they come off of a jump during
the first round of the $130,000 Empire State Grand Prix at Old Salem
Farm in North Salem.
“Rothchild is a great old friend of
mine and a winner. I thought he
was a little bit unlucky today not
to win. It was a cheap rail, and he
jumped phenomenal. But, that’s
sport.”
The upcoming Olympic Games
in Rio de Janeiro are dictating
Ward’s current schedule and consuming his early-season plans,
but his hope is to save Rothchild
for future events. Most immediately, he will compete at the Devon
Horse Show before joining Ward’s
other mounts HH Azur and HH
Carlos Z to show in Europe.
“He’s obviously the back-up for
the Olympic Games. It’s no secret
that HH Azur is the horse that
we’re thinking for the Olympics,
but it’s still a few months [away],”
Ward said. “We’re making his
schedule so that if he were needed,
he would be ready to go. It’s a lot
to ask of a horse his age, and we
would probably prefer not to, but I
do think he can handle it. I try to
go up and down with him a little
bit. I don’t give him a steady diet
of five-star events. I do a three-
star like this, up to a five-star, then
back.”
When asked about Rothchild’s
consistency over the past eight
years with Ward in the tack, he
responded, “He is a very careful
horse, and I think that’s made his
career long.”
With an obvious knack for winning at Old Salem Farm, Ward
admits that his horses strive at the
venue, which is just a few miles up
the road from Ward’s home base in
Brewster.
“[Rothchild] has done very well
on the field,” he said. “I find that
a really massive field like Spruce
Meadows eats him up a little bit.
He’s an ‘adder’. I have to take time
in front of the jumps and in those
giant rings it’s hard to always be
adding and make the time allowed.”
Ward is next competing with
HH Azur at the CSIO show
known as Piazza di Siena in Rome
on May 26-29.
As for determining who will be
part of Team U.S.A. in Rio, the
U.S. Equestrian Federation will
compile a short list of 10 athletes
based upon rankings, 2016 World
Cup Final performances and other
criteria, from which four athletes
and horses, plus one traveling reserve athlete and/or horse will be
elected to the U.S. Olympic Show
Jumping Team.
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Thursday, May 26, 2016
North Salem News – Page 3
Local students awarded for Holocaust remembrance art
BY GABRIELLE BILIK
STAFF WRITER
Artworks featuring vivid depictions of the human race’s
most horrific human rights violations lined the halls leading up
to the Somers High School auditorium Wednesday, May 4, for
the Somers Holocaust Memorial Commission’s “An Evening
of Remembrance.” Among these
pieces were works created by students from North Salem High
School for the Fred Bachner Student Project Awards.
The annual event, dedicated to
honoring the memories of those
who lost their lives during the
Holocaust, included performances by the Ridgefield Conservatory
of Dance and the Somers High
School band, choir and orchestra
in addition to an address and performance by the keynote speaker
and cantor Deborah KatchkoGray of the congregation Shir
Shalom in Ridgefield, Conn.
Awards were given to students
from North Salem High School
and Somers High School.
Winners from North Salem
High School were as follows:
first prize: Kelly O’Toole, second
prize: Julianna Cervoni and third
place was a tie between Daniella
Jacobsen and Zachary Prisciandaro.
First prize winner Kelly O’Toole
Danielle Jacobsen said her project was inspired by the thousands
of people who defied the Nazis to help save lives during the
Holocaust.
Third prize winner Daniella
Jacobsen’s project.
Second Prize winner Julianna Cervoni chose to portray Jewish people wiht tattoos covering their face in
her project, to convey the attempts by the Nazis to take away their identities.
Zachary Prisciandaro, one of the third place winners of the Fred
Bachner Student Project Awards, said he made his painting “dark
and haunting” to portray the atrocities committed by the Nazi Party
during the Holocaust. “I painted this to remind people to never forget
the innocent people that lost their lives to the Holocaust.”
Third prize winner Zachary Prisciandaro’s painting.
PHOTOS: GABRIELLE BILIK
Page 4 – North Salem News
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Croton Falls, the heart of Love Holds Life connection
2014.
In addition to the usual
nausea, vomiting and hair
Issa Issa, the owner of the
loss, Elyssa experienced anShell Station and mini mart
other permanent side effect
in Croton Falls is a man
of the treatment, diabetes.
with a heart. After a chance
“That one is kind of hard
meeting between a woman
for us,” said Elyssa’s mother,
whose daughter was newly
Leticia, “I have to restrict
diagnosed with cancer in
her, with the Type 2 diabe2013 and Richard Senato,
tes. At her age, it’s hard to
president of the charity Love
get her to comply.”
Holds Life outside his store,
The Yonkers High School
Issa made a commitment to
student says after those
do everything he could to
treatments, she has been
help the family with its nonmonitored every six months
Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagfor a recurrence of the nonnosis.
Hodgkins lymphoma and
“Richard did a lot of his
has remained cancer-free
fundraising at my store.
and able to enjoy her favorWhen I first heard that the
ite sports—volleyball and
daughter of a woman who
track and field. “I was really
works in the area was afhappy my Mom met him
fected, I knew I wanted to
(Richard Senato) and he
do something for them,” Issa
was able to help us,” Elyssa
said.
said, “I was really thankful
In Spring 2013, Leticia
for everything, including
Dos Santos of Yonkers was
the prayers!”
working at the Croton
“When you first hear
Falls Post Office, when she
the word cancer, you get
stopped on the way home
so down. But with people
to get gas at the Shell Staaround you, who you meet
tion located on Hardscrabble
along the way, we were just
PHOTO BY SUE GUZMAN so thankful strangers came
Road in Croton Falls. It was
there she ran into Senato From left: Issa Issa, Elyssa Thomas, Leticia Dos Santos, Richard Senato celebrate more than $17,000 raised for
to support us. So we saw a
who was outside collecting Elyssa Thomas at the Shell Station and Mini Mart in Croton Falls.
lot of positive things hapmoney on behalf of another
pen.” Dos Santos explained.
young girl who was battling stage ing through Elyssa’s illness was a charity was raising money for a biopsied the lump and diagnosed
The Love Holds Life Chilfour cancer at the time. Dos San- really trying time. I’d go to work, local girl with stage four cancer her with Stage 2 non-Hodgkins dren’s Cancer Foundation is lotos then shared her own story then I’d stay with her overnight in the area. He said he promised lymphoma and she began a gru- cated at 2345 Route 52, Suite 2F
with him about her daughter, in the hospital. At one point I Senato and that girl’s family that eling series of ten chemotherapy Hopewell Junction, NY 12533.
Elyssa Thomas. Three months had to apply for the Family Leave he would do all he could at his treatments that ended in March www.LHLny.org
later, Senato reached out to Dos Act in order to be able to get paid gas station or family member staSantos and pledged to provide while I took care of her during tions in Yorktown, Shrub Oak,
the family with financial aid, as her treatments.” The money they Buchanan and Peekskill to help
Elyssa became the charity’s 11th received was used for bills and ex- them during a trying time.
sponsored child.
penses the family incurred while
Elyssa was his next focus. Issa
Dos Santos said she was trying to get Elyssa well again.
set up a jar complete with her
shocked to receive the call from
Issa says he originally met photo and story at the front regSenato, who promised help in Senato at his Croton Falls Mini ister and was thrilled when peothe form of financial aid. “Go- Mart when the Love Holds Life ple in the community made generous donations, “Anybody with
spare change would give. People
DRIVEWAYS &
in this town are always more than
COMMERCIAL PAVING
willing to help,” he said.
• ASPHALT SEALING
Senato agreed, “We eas• GRADING & WATER
ily raised more than $10,000 for
DRAINAGE • MILLING
Elyssa here at this store alone.
• INFRARED ASPHALT
Yonkers Raceway Police also
REPAIR • APRONS
sponsored her, as well as Outhouse Orchard in North Salem.”
• EXCAVATION
He said in his final push at the
• SNOW PLOWING
Croton Falls Shell Station and
Mini Mart, he was able to raise
$3,000 more before writing the
We are currently giving estimates
final check to the young girl’s
family, bringing the total number
for the 2016 blacktop season!
raised between 2014 and 2015 to
$17,296.63.
Elyssa was just 13 when she
noticed a lump on the side of
her neck and paid a concerned
PHOTO PROVIDED
visit to her pediatrician. After
New York Yankee Manager Joe Girardi pays a visit in December
a round of antibiotics, the lump 2013 to Elyssa during one of her stays at the Maria Fareri Children’s
still hadn’t gone down and Elyssa Hospital in Valhalla.
Quality you can DRIVE ON!
was referred to a specialist who
BY SUE GUZMAN
STAFF WRITER
CALL US TODAY!
(914)242-PAVE (7283)
(845)225-9522
Thursday, May 26, 2016
North Salem News – Page 5
North Salem School Budget Passes
trustees Katherine Daniels, Jennifer
Binette and Deborah D’Agostino
were all re-elected to new three-year
Residents in North Salem on terms that will begin July 1. The
May 17 approved a new spending votes were 463, 444, and 417 replan for the 2016-2017 school year. spectively. Challenger Kurt Guldan
The $41,148,851 budget with a .58 garnered 363 votes. There were
percent tax levy increase totaling three write-in votes, one each for
FILE PHOTOS
$210,554, passed 498-175.
Kathy Daignault, Richard T. Miller
From left: Katherine Daniels, Deborah D’Agostino and Jennifer Binette were all re-elected to new threeThe budget, which increases and John Vassack.
year terms on the North Salem Board of Education.
spending by $305,431 over the
D’Agostino says she’s looking
2015-2016 school year, keeps class forward to continuing the projects
sizes small, maintains quality in- she has been part of during the past
structional leadership and sustains few years such as the digital learning
Authorized Dealer
the mission, all as outlined as goals plan, facilities master plan and misby superintendent Dr. Kenneth sion work. “At the top of my wish
Freeston.
list,” she said, “is optimizing the use
During the budget process, of technology as a learning tool. We
Freeston announced that an extra have some initiatives in this area
$143,000 in Gap Elimination Ad- and I would like to see us begin to
Mahopac Location onLy
justment funding was received from implement them.”
the state this year, something he put
Daniels, a longtime board memback into the budget for use for a ber and former president, said she is
possible extra teacher, if needed, in looking forward to continued sucorder to maintain small class sizes. cess with the district’s mission as
The board voted not to automati- well as the school district’s third visit
cally hire a teacher, but instead em- from the Tri-State Consortium, a
power Freeston over the summer group of high performing districts
to do so, if student enrollment in- in N.Y., N.J. and CT that has been
creases, warranting the hire. If it is monitoring North Salem’s progress
not used for a teacher, the money with its mission. “I see our mission
coaster
would go back into the school’s work as educational reform at bestBrosMer
Powerlift
general fund.
-thoughtful, purposeful, organic and
REG. $599
The 2016-2017 school budget innovative. I am looking forward
Over 200
includes more than $5.3 million in to the implementation of world
Fabrics
spending for special education and language beginning in elementary
pupil personnel services, a 7.27 per- school with the goal of graduating
at
Star ting
cent increase over the previous fiscal bilingual students, as well as the
year. Officials plan to create a 6:1:1 completion of some much-needed
special education class in the up- facilities improvements,” Daniels
coming school year that the district noted.
would make available to disabled
In addition, a proposition auDylan DuraBlenD
Darcy rocker
students from outside districts, thorizing the North Salem Cenrocker recliner
recliner
something that could serve to bring tral School District to bond for
REG. $499
REG.
$399
in additional revenue in the form of $744,403 for transportation uptuition.
grades was approved 483-189.
The North Salem Central School The proposition will allow for the
Ad15:Layout
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Chevy Suburban
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Also last Tuesday,
incumbent eras Page
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BY SUE GUZMAN
STAFF WRITER
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Page 6 – North Salem News
Thursday, May 26, 2016
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Thursday, May 26, 2016
Kayak Trip
The North Salem Recreation
Department has organized a Memorial Day Weekend kayak trip
on the Hudson River. Mountain
Valley Guides, the premiere kayak
outfitter on the Hudson Valley,
is offering a Family Kayak Tour
and a BBQ on a Sandbar Island
on Saturday, May 28 from 10:30
a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in Cornwall,
N.Y This three-hour adventure is
perfect for families with kids ages
8 and older, but all ages are welcome! After working up an appetite paddling, your guides will lead
you to our own private sandbar island for a tasty summertime BBQ
and summer fun. All equipment,
instruction, and guides provided.
Adults $45, Children (under 12)
$35. Participants under 18 must
be accompanied by a parent/
guardian over the age of 21. Contact the Recreation Department
at (914)669-5665 to sign-up.
‘How to Bury a Saint’
Bocce, meatballs, nerve and
ritual are all in the mix in “How
to Bury a Saint,” a new play written by Janice Maffei and directed
by Schoolhouse Artistic Director
Bram Lewis makes its debut June
2 at the Schoolhouse Theater in
Croton Falls. The fictional “dramedy” is set in Mahopac and tells
the story of three generations of
the Colasuanno family—ItalianAmericans with roots in Calabria.
Show times June 2-19 are
Thursdays through Saturdays at 8
p.m. and Sundays at 3 p.m. Individual tickets for main stage productions are $38. Senior citizen
discount tickets are $35 and student tickets are available at $15.
They can be purchased online at
www.schoolhousetheater.org or by
calling the box office at 914-2778477. The Schoolhouse is located
at 3 Owens Road, Croton Falls,
NY, just off exit 8 on I-684.
The Art of Making
Sushi
Enjoy the Art of Making Sushi
with Yoshimi Arai at the Hammond Museum in North Salem
on Saturday, June 4 at 11 a.m.
Learn the fine art of Japanese culinary culture. Special instructions
and demonstrations will be given
on the art of Japanese food presentations with insightful tips fornatural and balanced meals. Enjoy
the experience of preparing your
own Japanese lunch with fresh
sushi rolls and miso soup. Learn
the techniques for sushi rice and
California rolls (ura-maki) along
with cooking tips and etiquette.
$25 for museum members, $30
for non-members and $15 for
children under 12. Reservations
are required. For reservations, call
Lorraine Laken (914) 669-5033.
North Salem News – Page 7
Memorial Day parade, ceremony
The Town of North Salem
is now preparing for one of its
biggest events of the year, the
annual Memorial Day parade,
which begins at 10 a.m. Monday,
May 30, according to Post 1866
American Legion Cmdr. Herbert F. Geller.
The parade to the grounds
of the Exceptional Children’s
School on Route 22 will include
more than 12 units in its line of
march. It will organize at 9:45
a.m. on Oak Ridge Road. It will
begin at 10 a.m. on Route 116,
where it will proceed to Route 22
and up the hill to the memorial
at the Exceptional Children’s,
where the ceremony will be held.
Legion Commander Geller will
begin the ceremony with an
opening address. Music will be
provided by the North Salem
Middle School/High School
Band under the direction of Steven Austin.
North Salem Town Supervisor Warren Lucas will again be
the guest speaker on the Memorial Day theme to honor the men
and women who fought and died
for our nation. Reverend Timothy Wagner of the Croton Falls
Community Church will deliver
the Invocation and the Benediction. North Salem Boy Scouts
and Girl Scouts will raise and
lower the flag for the ceremony
and bugler Alan Keller will play
“Taps.” James Hauser will read
the roll call of North Salem’s war
dead.
A memorial wreath will be
placed on the monument by the
Croton Falls Fire Department
in honor of Phillip Adams who
died in the Vietnam War. The
Post 1866 wreath, which honors all of the war dead, will be
placed by Jeri Ann Geller and
Nisa Geller on behalf of Ellen
Wenis, president of the North
Salem American Legion Auxiliary and Gloria Geller, secretary.
Another wreath will be placed at
the North Salem Town Hall in
honor of the North Salem residents who served in World War
I and General Jonathan Wainright, U.S commander in the
Philipines in 1942, who dedicated the monument in 1920.
The following organizations
and individuals will participate
in the parade:
Supervisor Warren Lucas,
Town Board members Peter Kamenstein, Stephen Bobolia, Amy
Rosmarin, Martin Aronchick,
Chaplain Reverend Timothy
Wagner, Town Clerk Veronica
Howley, Receiver of Taxes Karen
Roach, Judges Ralph Mackin
and John Johnston, the Croton
Falls Fire Department headed
by Fire Chief Jason Blauvelt, the
North Salem Volunteer Ambulance Corps headed by President
Kurt Gulden, North Salem Boy
Scouts Troop One with Scoutmaster Anthony Gianchetto,
Boy Scouts Troop 4 with Scoutmaster Richard “Trip” Balch,
North Salem Girl Scouts with
Scoutmaster Janice Helwinkle,
North Salem Cub Scouts with
Scoutmaster Alicia Kaye, North
Salem Baseball/Softball Association with President Jeffrey
Waldron, North Salem Soccer
Club with President Andrew
Hlushko, North Salem Youth
Lacrosse Club with President
Jack Shaugnessey, North Salem
Model “A” Auto Club, Francis Tuoti and the 1935 Packard
Norman Holloway.
The North Salem Police Department headed by Police Chief
Thomas Howley will provide
traffic assistance. After the ceremony, everyone is invited to the
ballfield where hot dogs and refreshments will be served.
Opinion
Page 8 – North Salem News
I
I
It’s Memorial Day,
it’s summertime!
n the words of Country
crooner Kenny Chesney, “It’s
a smile, it’s a kiss, it’s a sip
of wine ... it’s summertime!” Ok,
we know Summer doesn’t officially begin until the Summer
Solstice-but we favor the school
of thought that says Memorial
Day Weekend is the unofficial
start of the summer season.
So as you head into your holiday weekend, join us in celebrating summer’s start with these
celebratory diversions:
North Salem Memorial Day
Parade (North Salem): It’s a
North Salem tradition and a
Memorial Day must! This is
our favorite way to kick off the
season as we pay homage to our
hometown heroes, who gave the
ultimate sacrifice. The Parade
starts at 10:00 a.m. on Monday
May 30th, at Oak Ridge Road
and Rte 116 and ends at the
WEC with a moving ceremony.
Then follow the crowd down to
Purdy’s Field for a hot dog and
cold beverage.
Why We Love It: Because
it’s short, sweet, and yet so very
meaningful.
Family Kayak Trip &
Barbeque on the Hudson
(Cornwall, NY): On Saturday
May 28th, it’s fun in the sun on
the Hudson River as Mountain
Valley Guides leads this 3-hour
beach to watch this awe-inspiring air show which displays the
pride and professionalism of the
United States Navy and Marine
Corp! May 28th and May 29th.
For more information, visit:
ALI JACKSON-JOLLEY
www.airshow.jonesbeach.com.
& MARYANNE D’AMATO
Why We Love It: Because we
can pay tribute to the brave men
and women of the U.S. Navy,
take in a world-class air show,
kayaking adventure which
and work on our base tan. That’s
includes a barbecue lunch on
time well spent!
a private sandbar island, that
Rye Beach and Playland
is ideal for families with kids
(Rye): Rye Beach opens for
8 and above. All instruction,
the season on Memorial Day
equipment and seasoned tour
weekend, and on Sunday May
guides are part of the package.
29th-after catching some raysTo register, call the North Salem you can check out the Veteran’s
Recreation Department at (914) Appreciation Day and Memorial
669-5664 ($45 for adults, $35
Tribute Ceremony at Playland
for kids under 12).
(11:30 a.m.- 4:00 p.m.). All
Why we love it: Because we
veterans and military families are
can’t think of a better way to
being offered free parking, a free
kick off the summer than with a barbecue buffet, and unlimited
family adventure on the mighty rides! Please note you must preHudson!
register to receive this offer. For
Blue Angels Air Show at
more information, visit: www.
Jones Beach (Wantagh, NY):
veterans.westchestergov.com
The legendary squadron which
Why We Love It: Because we
never fails to deliver a breathtak- think this is an outstanding way
ing performance arrives at Jones to remember our fallen heroes
Beach for Memorial Day week- and military families! Plus, it’s a
end! Get there early because,
fun way for civilians to spend the
while the event is free, parking
day while having the opportufills up fast (usually by 11:00
nity to thank our service families
a.m.). In the past over 200,000
in person.
spectators have come out to the
FAITH ANN BUTCHER, EDITOR
DEBBIE CAMPBELL, ADVERTISING MANAGER
FAITH ANN BUTCHER, PRODUCTION MANAGER
Editorial Office: 845-803-1288
Fax: 845-617-8508
[email protected]
BAILEY COURT, 334 ROUTE 202, UNIT C1S
SOMERS, NY 10589
©2016 HALSTON MEDIA, LLC
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Boys State, the
path to politics
am the Post Commander of
the North Salem American
Legion Post 1866. Our post
is always busy during the month
of May when we get ready to
celebrate Memorial Day, this
year on May 30 and plan the
annual parade. The American
Legion also recently selected
candidates to attend Boys State
at SUNY College in Morrisville,
N.Y.
Boys State is a special program initiated by the American
Legion in most of the United
States. It is not a military program even though the Legion’s
function is assisting former
military veterans. Instead it really is designed as an incentive
to get veterans to participate in
government.
During the past 40 years
since the North Salem Post was
founded, we have sent at least
one boy from the North Salem
school district to Boys State
every year. There is a Girls State
and we sent one girl to this program a few years ago. We would
send more girls if we get more
applicants.
The program involves an
election for a make believe legislature and other officials including a governor. The boys stay at
the college during the five days
that the program is held. Our
American Legion Post pays all
the expenses including transportation.
SEASONED
WORDS
HERBERT F.
GELLER
We have appointed two boys
to attend the program this year.
They are North Salem High
School junior students Matt
Brown and Jake Leicht.
There is a military aspect
to the program. Two former
Marines supervise the rooms at
the college where the boys will
stay during the program. “They
are not bad guys,” one boy said
who attended the program “but
they make you get up in the
morning and march to breakfast
and classes.”
Sports are also an essential
part of the program. They play
baseball and other sports and
get a lot of physical exercise
along with the mental exercise
involved in learning about
government.
One important benefit of the
program is that it provides a
chance for North Salem boys to
meet other boys from all over
the State. Some lasting friendships have occurred. Many
successful politicians, including
former President Bill Clinton,
have attended Boys State and it
helped them in their careers.
Letters to the editor and op-ed submissions may be edited. The views
and opinions expressed in letters and op-eds are not necessarily those
of North Salem News or its affiliates. Submissions must include a phone
number and address for verification. Not all letters and op-eds will
necessarily be published. Letters and op-eds which cannot be verified
or are anonymous will not be published. Please send your submissions
to the editor by e-mail to [email protected].
For more information, call the editor at 845-803-1288.
OPINION
Thursday, May 26, 2016
O
ne morning as I went
to make the bed, I
peeled down the covers
to smooth out the sheets and
saw something very disconcerting.
There, on my side of the
bed, about halfway down, was
a large dark spot. Upon closer
examination, the dark spot
revealed itself to have legs. And
upon even closer examination,
the dark spot revealed itself
to be legs attached to a large,
smushed spider.
“OH! MY! GOD!!!” I
howled.
I recalled a spider lurking in
the corner of the ceiling the
night before, but seeing as it
North Salem News – Page 9
The itsy bitsy bedmate
slumbering body, he became
the victim of a snore and run.
LOST IN
Had I been one of those
SUBURBIA animal advocates that wouldn’t
harm a fly, or a spider, as the
TRACY
case may be, I would have felt
BECKERMAN
terrible. But I am not. I am
one of those animal lovers who
like soft and fluffy things, but
wasn’t a Tarantula or a Black
detest, no… loathe, no… am
Widow Spider, I figured I could totally freaked out by anything
let it lurk if it wanted to, and I
with more eyes than a Mr.
rolled over and went to sleep.
Potato Head toy and enough
However, lurking on the
legs to be the sole player on a
ceiling and climbing into bed
soccer team.
with me were two very differWhen I was a little girl and
ent things. And from the look
I would discover a spider in my
of it, he not only climbed into
bedroom, I would drag one of
bed with me during the night,
my brothers into my room to
but as he crawled around my
take the spider out “for a ride.”
Happily Ever After
But today there was no one in
the house except the dog to
come rescue me from a monster
spider, albeit a dead one, so I
was basically alone to ponder
how I felt about having a spider
in my bed while I slept. Bruce
Springsteen, I would have been
OK with. A giant spider? Not
so much.
Of course, the big issue at
this point was not dwelling
on what happened during the
night, but what to do now with
the ginormous, hairy, smushed
spider in my bed? Should
I remove it from the sheets
before I washed them? I don’t
think I had the guts to pick it
up, even if I used enough paper
towel to bury a Yak. Should I
just take the sheets, spider and
all and throw them directly in
the washing machine? What if
it fell off the sheet while I was
stripping the bed and landed
in my hair? I’d probably freak
out and shave my head. Then I
would be known everywhere as
the Bald Spider Lady.
See, now this is why people
drink.
I finally decided to get a
magazine and use it to flick the
spider off the sheet and onto
the floor, and then vacuum it
up.
Summoning up all the courage I could muster, I shimmied
across the bed, got the magazine right up against the spider,
and then flipped it to the floor.
But before I could grab the
vacuum, the dog bounded over
to the dead spider…
And ate it.
Problem solved.
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OPINION
Page 10 – North Salem News
Thursday, May 26, 2016
The benefits of cursive writing
STRONG
LEARNING
DR. LINDA
SILBERT
Dear Dr. Linda,
Our fifth-grade son’s handwriting is horrible.
We can’t read a word he
writes, not even on homework
assignments. He can’t read
them either once he’s home.
He only prints, and when he
does, it looks like a chicken
walked across the page. The
school psychologist told us
that he has dysgraphia, a
writing disorder. She recommended that he be classified
with a learning disability and
be allowed to take notes on his
laptop and use the computer to
write all his papers. This means
he’s never going to learn cursive, even though I think our
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school doesn’t teach it anymore
anyway.
Aren’t we doing him a great
injustice not having him learn
to write so people can read
it? How’s he going to sign his
name? Do you have any suggestions?
-Caroline
Dear Caroline,
I happen to agree with you.
Many teachers also agree with
you. In fact, research has shown
that students who write notes
in cursive vs. printing and
typing do better on tests and
remember the material longer.
Also, students like your son
who have dysgraphia, seem to
write neater and spell better
when they write in cursive.
Recently, in my tutoring
practice, I introduced cursive
writing to a third-grader and a
seventh-grader, both of whom
had severe dysgraphia. Not
only did their handwriting
improve and become more
readable, they were able to
create stories and complete
homework with greater ease.
In both cases, their teachers
picked up on it and encouraged
them to write in cursive. Once
it became second nature to
them, their handwriting issues
were no longer that much of a
problem.
What happened to these two
children shouldn’t be a surprise.
What researchers have found is
that, “Both tracking and movement control require much
more engagement of neural resources in producing cursive or
related handwriting methods
than in hand printing, because
the movements are more complex and nuanced. Thus, learning cursive is a much greater
neural activator, which in turn
must engage much more neural
circuitry than the less demanding printing” (Psychology
Today, February 2015).
In other words, writing in
cursive engages more parts of
the brain. It’s also easier for the
dysgraphic child because each
word is a unit unto itself—no
picking up and putting down
the writing instrument for
each letter. This way the child
doesn’t have to remember
Photo Submissions
separate strokes, which means
fewer reversals. By learning
cursive, our children will also
be able to read cursive, too.
Think of how many of our old
documents are in cursive—for
example, The Declaration of
Independence.
But, the most important
finding is that cursive writing,
even printing, engages more
neural paths than keyboarding.
Because of that, children with
dyslexia, a reading disability,
also seem to do better when
they learn to write in cursive.
In fact, years and years ago,
Anna Gillingham, one of the
founders of the Orton-Gillingham methodology widely used
to help dyslexic readers, advocated teaching cursive from the
beginning of first grade.
With that said, many argue
that children with dysgraphia
and dyslexia are better off not
having to write at all and only
use computers. Many teachers agree with this view. “Most
teachers would agree that, aside
from extended time, having
access to a computer and all of
its possibilities is probably the
most significant accommodation a dyslexic student can
leverage to improve academic
performance” (Yale Center for
Dyslexia and Creativity, 2016).
There is no getting around
the fact that the keyboard has
opened up the world for dysgraphic and dyslexic children
and adults. However, writing
stimulates more parts of the
brain than keyboarding does,
and the benefits are far greater
in my opinion. As the International Dyslexia Association
states, “Never forget: Writing
exercises the brain, keyboarding the fingers” (International
Dyslexia Assoc., April-May
2015).
In short, I recommend that
you teach your son both cursive
writing and eventually keyboarding. This way he’ll have
the best of both worlds.
-Dr. Linda
Dr. Linda can be reached at linda@
stronglearning.com.
Photos submitted to North Salem News need to be highresolution. Images that are submitted at a low resolution
cannot be published. Submit photos to North Salem News by
the Thursday before the next publication date. Submissons can
be emailed to [email protected] or mail it
to North Salem News, Bailey Court, 334 Route 202, Unit C1S,
Somers, NY 10589. Send a self-addressed stamped envelope if
you’d like your photo returned.
OPINION
Thursday, May 26, 2016
I
North Salem News – Page 11
End of endorsements?
s this the end of endorsements, or at least presidential endorsements, as
a credible, influential form of
journalism?
There’s been a buzz building
lately about how the endorsements of even prominent
politicians for their candidate
of choice are landing not with
a bang but a whimper.
Ironically, in this fraught
presidential election year, it’s
the absence of endorsements
by party leaders that seem to
be more newsworthy than the
announcements of same.
What about newspapers? In
this digital day and age, should
those bulwarks of freedom
of speech continue the timehonored practice of publishing
endorsements of presidential
candidates? Let me count the
ways why I vote no.
Several years ago in the
digital newspaper Huffington
Post, John T. Woolley, professor of political science at the
University of California Santa
Barbara, argued against what
he facetiously called “the ‘smart’
North Salem Day
Camp at Mt. Lakes
A five-week outdoor experience for children entering pre-kindergarten through seventh grade.
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Campers will have the chance
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go fishing in our lake, and participate in hikes on one of the many
woodland trails. Older campers
(fourth grade and up) will receive
Archery lessons each day as well
as time on our lake in one of our
many canoes, kayaks, or rowboats.
Campers will swim in our pool
every day. Specials events include
pizza day, ice cream sundae day and
barbecue day.
Day camp will run from June 27
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There will be no camp on July 4 and 5.
For more information, contact:
[email protected]
Full-Session registration is under way. Late fee of $75 added
after May 13. Please go to app.
campdoc.com/register/northsalem to register a camper, apply for
the CIT Certification Program,
or apply to be a part of our staff.
Tuition can be paid by e-check on
our registration site, or by cash or
check at our office.
sarily differ from my point of
view. He was commenting on
presidential elections per se.
BRUCE
Here are a few reasons newsTHE BLOG paper endorsements arguably
BRUCE
are “an ineffectual relic of a
APAR
bygone era.”
1) The legacy of newspaper
endorsements is rooted in
an age when the only forms
of local news gathering and
view” that dismisses editorial
distribution were ink-andendorsements as “an ineffectual paper and good, ol’ unreliable
relic of a bygone era.” A wise
word of mouth. Voters needed
choice of words, for that’s just
all the guidance they could get
what they are.
to make an informed decision.
Titled “In Praise of Newspa- Today, there’s a bottomless well
per Endorsements,” his article
of information online to help
cited “two main benefits” — 1) determine which candidate
they teach us how to weigh
floats your boat, or sinks it.
complex evidence; 2) they help Anybody who needs a news
to clarify a president’s mandate. outlet to advise him or her on
Come to think of it, Profes- which candidate to support is
sor Woolley does not necesnot making much of an ef-
fort to educate, and think for,
himself.
2) Why is it a good or noble
idea for newspapers to continue endorsing candidates when
broadcast news channels – TV
and radio – don’t, and neither
do most digital media. What
makes the delivery system of a
newspaper right for endorsements when TV, radio and
Internet news organizations
find it wholly unnecessary, if
not inappropriate?
3) With advertising revenue
ever tougher to capture for
print newspapers of every size,
publishers have grown anxious
about going out of their way to
give advertisers — in this case,
political candidates — reason
not to advertise. Plus, there’s
the risk of alienating business
advertisers who support a can-
didate not endorsed. The risk
far outweighs the reward.
What has come to be accepted as the norm of newspaper
endorsements since forever no
longer is pertinent in today’s
multimedia-industrial complex,
where other channels of news
never have issued endorsements, at least explicitly.
Media and marketing specialist Bruce Apar, also known as
Bruce The Blog, is co-founding
president of volunteer group
Yorktown Organizations United.
He is chief content officer of
Pinpoint Marketing & Design, a
certified Google Partner agency.
Follow Bruce the Blog or Hudson Valley WXYZ on social
media. Reach him at bapar@
pinpointmarketingdesign.com or
(914) 275-6887.
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Page 12
North Salem News – Thursday, May 26, 2016
Homemade
canine
treats by
Bandit Bites
Page 13
Despite the wet weather, the annual Book, Bake and
Plant Sale/ Library Fair, which was held May 7 through
May 8 at the Ruth Keller Memorial Library in North
Salem was a success. It featured plants from local gardens, used books, local vendors, kids’ activities and more.
The Library Fair was filled with a wide range of great
books for people of all ages, and family fun throughout
the day. There were homemade baked goods including:
cake, cookies and muffins. The plants were from some of
North Salem’s best gardeners.
Vendor Stacy
Blauvelt
shows off her
creations at
the annual
Ruth Keeler
Memorial
Library plant
and book
sale.
Vendor Sara Andrews of Peekskill sells her handcrafted products at
the annual Ruth Keeler Memorial Library plant and book sale.
(L-R) Aleia Rizzo, (back)
Epiphany Spear, Charlotte
Coughlin paint pots for
Mother’s Day at the
annual Ruth Keeler
Memorial Library plant
and book sale.
The band Goat
Rodeo of North
Salem provides
musical
entertainment
for attendees
at the annual
Ruth Keeler
Memorial
Library plant
and book sale.
(L-R) Jordan and
Preston horse around
in the Croton Falls
Fire Department
utility truck at the
Ruth Keeler Memorial
Library’s annual book
and plant sale.
These young entrepreneurs were selling crafted jewelry at the Ruth Keeler
Memorial Library annual book and plant sale.
Young Roberto with 1st Asst. Fire Chief Dan
Dreyer of the Croton Falls Fire Department, test
out a fire hose at the Ruth Keeler Memorial
Library annual plant and book sale.
(L-R) Tim Purdy
and Frank
Curtis cook
up culinary
delights at
the annual
Ruth Keeler
Memorial
Library plant
and book sale.
Mary and Mark Head and Bandit the dog represented the PQ Garden Club at the
annual Ruth Keeler Memorial Library plant and book sale.
(L-R) Jonathan Blauvelt,
Christopher Tarrant
and Jordan Blauvelt of
North Salem Boy Scout
Pack 1 at their booth at
the annual Ruth Keeler
Memorial Library plant
and book sale.
North Salem resident Marcia Spear of The Town Sopier
sells her handmade soaps, creams and body products
at the annual Ruth Keeler Memorial Library plant and
book sale.
PHOTOS: SUE GUZMAN
Page 14 – North Salem News
BY GRACE DUFFIELD
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Time to change habits
study shows it can take more time to
change habits. According to the Health
It could be overwhelming to concenand Fitness Journal (May/June 2016),
trate on everything you do. That’s why we a new habit can take 18 days to up to 8
develop habits -- those automatic routine months.
behaviors that we repeat regularly without
To change a habit we must first define
considerable thought. Research indicates the problem. What is the habit you want
that as much as 40% of a person’s actions to change? Look at the reasons you started
are habits, as opposed to conscious decithe habit and the payoffs for continuing it.
sions. And it may take longer to change
Perhaps you sit at the dinner table drinking
them than we have been told.
or eating simply because you want to relax
before loading the dishwasher. Determine
NOT ALWAYS 21 DAYS
if there is another way to get the payoff.
Be patient. Contrary the time span of
Perhaps you have decaf tea as you sit.
21 days we’ve been told for years, a recent
Habits generally don’t stand alone. They
GUEST WRITER
Thursday, May 26, 2016
rely on cues, triggers and are parts of chains
of behavior. Look at the cues and triggers
that elicit the response. Think of environment. What is the situation? Are you alone
or in a social setting? What is your emotion? When does the behavior take place?
of satisfaction. Missing your 7 hours can
increase Ghrelin, the appetite -inducing
hormone. Or perhaps you binge drink
alcohol to ward off stress. You may need to
learn stress management tools.
Also less obvious, may be when you
crave junk food because you ate something
CHAINS OF BEHAVIORS
high on the glycemic index. Remember,
We have simple chains and complex
restaurants know that if you eat the bread
chains of behavior. A simple chain behav- when you arrive, you are more likely to eat
ior is connected in place and time. You eat dessert. Eating foods with high fructose
junk food because it is the first thing you
corn syrup can influence your eating well
see when you open the cupboard. Or the
into the future. Studies done at both
behavior may be part of a complex chain.
UCLA and Yale found that MRI scans
You eat from the vending machine because show brains misfire after eating high frucyou missed breakfast. You stop at a fast
tose corn syrup.
food restaurant because you have a tight
schedule - the first behavior that needs to CAMOUFLAGE
be improved is planning. When you are
You can change unwanted habits by
already famished is the worst time to try
camouflaging and sandwiching them in
to change.
the new behavior. If you want to eat more
It is easier to change a behavior link
veggies and less pasta, camouflage them
early in the chain. Replace an early link
by adding veggies to foods you already
to eating healthier: add healthy food to
like. Try pasta primavera. Sandwich in the
the shopping list. Resist the junk food
new behaviors, try to avoid being sedenmachines by eating breakfast. Avoid eating tary, by parking further away from shops.
poorly when you are rushing by preparing
And finally, if you fall off the horse and
healthy snacks ahead of time.
revert to your old habit… get right back
on.
LESS OBVIOUS LINKS
Grace Duffield, owner of Personal Best
Sometimes there are less obvious links
35 Plus, has seven fitness certifications
in the chain of behaviors. Perhaps you
-- among them ACE Personal Trainer and
eat fattening food because you lack sleep.
ACE Health Coach. Contact her: 914-276That can occur because sleep decreases
2611 or [email protected] or check
the hormone Leptin, which sends signals
out her website PersonalBest35Plus.com.
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HEALTH & WELLNESS
Thursday, May 26, 2016
S
North Salem News – Page 15
Exciting advances in body contouring
ure, you know about
liposuction, tummy tucks
and arm lifts.
But did you know that
advances in body-contouring
techniques have greatly improved your experience as a patient? Here, I explain the many
ways you benefit from progress
in this specialty.
Recent advances in body
contouring have been driven
by patient-centered concerns.
Think dramatically faster recovery, less discomfort post-surgery, significantly less scarring
and minimized surgical risk.
Probably the benefit most appreciated by patients? The huge
decrease in downtime following
surgery. Improved techniques
have sped up recovery times
from weeks to days and months
to weeks.
One improvement is in the
type of anesthesia used. While
formerly, you would have
received general anesthesia, today’s body-contouring surgeons
use a local anesthetic called
tumescent anesthesia. Added
to fluid, it is injected into the
area to be treated. You benefit
from tumescent anesthesia in
many ways: its effects last for
matic to tissue, quickening your
recovery. When liposuction is
used to remove fat from an area
that needs skin-tightening, you
decrease the amount of skin to
be removed, so scars are smaller
and less tight.
Liposuction has traditionally
involved the suctioned removal
of fat from an area. During
healing, the skin tightens up
to assume the new contour.
Now, lasers are used to tighten
the skin’s undersurface during
surgery so that post-op, the
skin becomes taut faster, with
less trauma. This means better results with less downtime.
Dr. Michael Rosenberg
While recovery takes between
12 hours following surgery, so
two and three weeks, most
you experience considerably less people return to work by the
post-op pain; its use minimizes third day after surgery.
blood loss during surgery, for a
Popular procedures are the
safer experience; you avoid the
abdominoplasty (“tummy
usual risks of general anesthetuck”), arm lift and thigh lift. A
sia; and by virtually eliminating tummy tuck eliminates a bulge
post-op grogginess, tumescent
by lifting tissue, pulling it into
anesthesia speeds your recovery. the new position, and suturAnother exciting advance is
ing. Sometimes the abdominal
the continuing trend toward
muscles are also tightened.
supplementing traditional
Today, liposuction is used to
body-contouring surgery with
remove fat in the area, thus
liposuction and lasers. Because minimizing the amount of skin
a laser uses heat energy and is
removed. That results in less
highly focused, it is less traupain, smaller scars and faster
recovery. This body-contouring
procedure usually involves an
overnight hospital stay, and
you’ll be back to work in one to
two weeks.
The standard arm reduction
or lift involves removing excess
skin from the armpit area toward the elbow and tightening
the skin, creating a scar down
the back of the arm. Today, liposuction is used to remove fat,
reducing the amount of loose
skin. The skin is then pulled
up to the armpit so scarring
is hidden. The latest thigh lift
also incorporates liposuction
for greater safety, less scarring
and faster recovery. After an
arm and thigh lift, you can
be back to work in one week.
While there is an immediate
visible difference after all three
procedures, you’ll enjoy the full
results in about three weeks.
Today, body-contouring
surgeons are maximizing the
patient’s own contribution to
safety and results. So surgeons
are making sure patients quit
smoking before a procedure,
as both anesthesia and healing
require good blood flow everywhere in the body. Surgeons are
also advising patients to wait
until they’re at a weight they
can maintain before having a
body-contouring procedure, to
avoid subsequent weight gain
and more loose skin.
While it can’t solve personal problems, body cosmetic
surgery can be the answer to: “I
feel young and I’m active, but I
don’t look the way I feel.” If you
go in with that attitude, body
contouring can be a fantastic
boost to self-esteem.
Choose a surgeon boardcertified in this specialty, with
extensive experience. At the
Center for Plastic Surgery at
Northern Westchester Hospital, specialized surgeons and
anesthesiologists work with
highly experienced nurses in
a hospital setting that offers
patients comfort, privacy and
pampering combined with the
safety, expertise and advanced
technology of a surgically
sophisticated hospital.
Dr. Michael Rosenberg is director
of the Institute of Aesthetic Surgery
and Medicine at Northern
Westchester Hospital and the
hospital’s associate medical director.
Complete Breast Health
What women need to know about breast density...
Ask the doctor
Q: At what age should I begin getting
mammograms?
Bonnie Litvack, MD, FACR
Director, Women’s Imaging
Northern Westchester Hospital
A: Once a woman turns 40, the American Cancer Society
and most recognized medical authorities recommend
she start getting yearly mammograms. But mammograms
aren’t uniformly sensitive in all women. Between 40 and
50 percent of women have dense breasts – fibrous tissue
as opposed to mostly fatty tissue – and that density can
obscure potential problems.
nwhbreastinstitute.org/DrLitvack
Learn more about breast density
and mammograms at
www.nwhbreastinstitute.org
Many women aren’t aware that breast density is an
issue. New York State requires doctors to notify women,
in a letter, when their mammogram reveals this is the
case. Do not become alarmed if you get this letter. It
simply means that you should have a conversation with
your doctor about your overall breast cancer risk.
Q: Why is it important to know
if I have dense breasts?
A: Dense breasts can make mammograms less sensitive,
and they may also contribute to cancer risk. You’ll need to
speak with your doctor about your individual lifetime risk
and thoroughly evaluate your risk factors. To determine
your risk, your doctor will ask you about your family history
of breast and ovarian cancer, your age when you had
400 East Main Street | Mount Kisco, NY 10549
914.666.1200 | www.nwhc.net
your first period, whether you have children, when you
had your first child, and any history of chest irradiation,
among other potential risk factors. The good news is that
for many women with dense breasts, their risk won’t be
elevated enough to warrant any changes in screening.
Q: What if I’m high risk?
A: Women who are at high risk (greater than a 20-25%
lifetime risk) and who have dense breast tissue should
have annual screening breast magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) in addition to a mammogram. MRIs are
very sensitive and can pick up some cancer missed on
a mammogram.
Q: Shouldn’t all women, regardless of their
breast density, get a Breast MRI?
A: There are many false positives with Breast MRI, which
is why it is only recommended for women who are at
high risk as they will derive the most benefit. Regardless
of your breast density, make sure you get your yearly
mammogram and discuss your risk factors for breast
cancer with your physician.
Did you know?
Having dense breast tissue may increase
your risk of getting breast cancer.
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Page 16 – North Salem News
Thursday, May 26, 2016
BRIEFS
June Support
Groups for Women
with Cancer
• Breast and Ovarian Cancer Support Group: Wednesday,
June 1, 7 p.m. at Northern Westchester Hospital.
• Breast and Ovarian Cancer
Support Group: Thursday, June
2, 7 p.m. at the Support Connection Office in Yorktown.
• Advanced Stage or Metastatic Breast Cancer Telephone
Group: Monday, June 6, 8 p.m.
1-800-532-4290.
• Ovarian Cancer Telephone
Group: Wednesday, June 8, 8
p.m.
• Young Women’s Support
Group: Wednesday, June 8, 7
p.m. at the Support Connection
Office in Yorktown.
• Support Group for Women
Living with Recurrence: Friday,
June 17, 12:30 p.m. at the Sup-
port Connection Office in Yorktown. For women living with
recurrence of breast or ovarian
cancer, with advanced stage and/
or metastasis.
• Breast Cancer Support
Group: Monday, June 20, 7 p.m.
at New York-Presbyterian/Hudson Valley Hospital.
• Breast and Ovarian Cancer
Support Group: Tuesday, June
28, 7 p.m. at the Support Connection Office in Yorktown.
Teams sought for
Somers Relay for Life
The Somers Relay For Life
Committee is recruiting teams
from local families, businesses,
schools, places of worship and the
community as a whole to participate in the annual Relay For Life
of Somers on Friday, June 17, at
the Somers Intermediate School
campus.
Relay For Life teams are com-
Andrea Kropf, O.D.
Comprehensive Eye Care for Your Family
Extensive Experience in Pediatric Eye Care
FOR ADULTS
Thorough eye exams are essential for
eye health.
- Catch problems before symptoms
emerge or worsen.
- Glaucoma & Cataract Evaluations…
and lots more.
FOR KIDS
Vision affects learning. Make sure your
child’s eyes are examined and any
problems addressed.
- Specialized Pediatric Eye Exams.
- Vision Therapy.
- Contact Lens fittings.
Free skin cancer
screening set for
June 15
Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in the U.S.
with more than 8,500 Americans
diagnosed each day, according to
the American Academy of Dermatology.
Melanoma, the most serious
form of skin cancer, has seen its
rates double from 1982 to 2011,
with an estimated 144,860 new
cases projected for 2016.
Putnam Hospital Center, in
cooperation with the American
Academy of Dermatology, will
host a free, skin cancer screening
from 4:30 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday, June 15, in the hospital’s
Wagner Cancer Pavilion, 670
Stoneleigh Ave.
Three dermatologists on the
medical staff at Putnam Hospital
Center will conduct the screenings.
Space is limited so registration
is required. No walk-ins will be
accepted.
For more information and/
or to register, please call Health
Education Coordinator Sarena
Chisick at 845-279-5711 ext.
6263 (TTY 1-800-421-1220) or
Putnam Humane Society
Dr. Andrea Kropf
914.302.6877 | www.AndreaKropfOD.com
293 Rt. 100, Suite 208, Somers, NY
Dr. Sean M. Rooney
Children & Adult Orthodontics
54 Miller Road
Mahopac NY, 10541
845-621-1222
Shockey is a very handsome 9 year old boy with
the warmest brown eyes.
He was a very loved
family member until
his mom became too ill
to care for him. He was
always by her side, and
she says he loved his
walks and playtime too.
Shockey knows all of his
basic obedience, and will
make a great companion.
He would love a home
without other pets. Can
you open your heart and
home to this sweet boy?
Shockey
Kaizer
Scanning Technology
www.rooneyortho.com
mitted to help save more lives from
cancer by raising funds for the
American Cancer Society. Dollars
raised help the American Cancer Society save lives by funding
groundbreaking cancer research,
providing free information and
critical services for people with
cancer and supporting education
and prevention programs. Teams
and individuals can learn more
and sign up for the Relay For Life
event by visiting relayforlife.org/
somersNY.
Each new team brings the
American Cancer Society one step
closer to saving more lives. Visit
relayforlife.org/SomersNY to register a team, join an existing team
or to make a donation.
Cancer survivors and their caregiver are invited to attend the Survivor Dinner, which begins at 5:30
p.m. in the Somers Intermediate
School cafeteria. Please RSVP to
914-397-8803 if you plan to attend.
The committee is in need of
community volunteers to help out
late afternoon with the survivor
dinner and event setup. Please consider volunteering for this community event. Call Meghan McGrady
at 914-397-8803 for more information and to volunteer your time.
Kaizer is a stunning black male
cat with the sweetest and most
loving personality. If you’re
looking for a playful and snuggly boy, Kaizer could be your
purrfect cat! He’ll roll over and
reach out to all who pass by and
affectionately purr when given
attention. He’s about 4 years old
and hasn’t had the easiest life.
He came to the shelter with an
old leg injury and tested positive for FIV. He can go to a home
with other FIV+ cats, or be just
as happy as your one and only
loving kitty. He’s doing great
now and can’t wait to find a
family to wrap his paws around.
Putnam Humane Society, Old Rt. 6, Carmel; 845-225-7777
www.puthumane.org; Open 7 days a week from 10am-4:30pm
via email schisick@health-quest.
org.
Drug Crisis in Our
Backyard to hold
seminars on alcohol
and drug abuse
Drug Crisis in our Backyard
in collaboration with NCADD
Putnam, Putnam Family and
Community Services, Arms
Acres, St Christopher’s Inn, CTC
Putnam and Putnam County will
co-host a community education
series titled “Focus on Alcohol
and Substance Abuse” on June
1, 8 and 15, at Putnam Hospital
Center in Carmel. The purpose of
the series is to offer the public information on the issues concerning alcohol and substance abuse,
available resources for heathy
family functioning and prevention, treatment and recovery options.
This will be offered as a threepart series of one-hour sessions as
follows:
• June 1- Understanding the
Addicted Brain
• June 8- Resources for Healthy
Family Functioning
• June 15- Treatment, Recovery and Prevention Options
“The collaboration of these
very knowledgeable and experienced organizations will allow us
to provide our audience with a
thorough overview of these complex and often confusing issues.
It is imperative for us as a community to understand substance
abuse in order to effectively survive its devastating effect on our
families and our community,”
said Susan Salomone, executive
director of Drug Crisis In Our
Backyard.
Drug Crisis in Our Backyard
is a nonprofit community action
organization founded in 2012 by
the Salomone and Christiansen
families who each lost a child to a
heroin overdose. The group’s mission is:
• To promote awareness of the
rampant use of prescription and
illegal opiates in our communities
• To bring recognition that
drug addiction is a brain disease.
• To assist individuals who are
addicted or at risk and their families to find help and resources.
• To identify and implement
measures that hold the medical
community accountable for over
prescribing opiates.
• To seek legislation mandating prescription monitoring by
prescribing physicians and pharmacies.
For more information visit
drugcrisisinourbackyard.org.
Sports
Thursday, May 26, 2016
North Salem News – Page 17
North Salem feasts on Irvington in quarters
Tigers’ season ends in semifinals with loss to defending champ Bronxville
BY DOMINICK DEPOLE
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
After a mediocre first half of
the season, North Salem surged
in the second half and found its
groove heading into sectionals.
The Tigers rolled past fifthseeded Irvington with with a
convincing 17-2 thumping in the
Section 1 Class C quarterfinals
on May 20.
“Sometimes it takes a little
while for the girls to jell throughout the season,” North Salem
coach Christine Werlau said.
“We had some difficult games
in the beginning of the year. It
taught them something. We
have been working on the simple
things, and we kept it simple today. Everybody has a role and we
are communicating much better.”
The fourth-seeded Tigers
picked up right where they left
off after knocking off Pleasantville in the first round, not
missing a beat from the opening
whistle. Their new and improved
high-octane offense proved too
much for Irvington, zooming
past the defense for a score almost every time.
“Starting off the season we
would just stand there and watch
some players,” freshman Grace
Curran said. “But as the games
went on we started working together by moving off ball and
cutting.”
Curran cut her way to netting five goals for the game.
Lydia Werlau racked up six goals
and assisted one. Paige Werlau
played a balanced game, tallying four goals and three assists.
Katie Wagner and Amy Fetterolf each scored a goal too. Julia
D’Innocenzo passed for two as-
Muiread Heffernan carries across
midfield.
Grace Curran heads for the cage against visiting Pleasantville in the opening round.
sists and Haley Vermette pitched
in with one assist.
“Some of the younger girls
have stepped up and gotten more
comfortable with what their role
is on the team,” coach Werlau
said. “Next they will have an even
bigger role. This is getting kids
like Lydia, Katie, Amira Flayhan,
Amy and Grace to the next level.
A lot of the younger players play
multiple positions too, which is
awesome.”
Paige Werlau fights through a double team.
North Salem’s revised defense
also continues to bring them success. The energetic bunch chased
down several loose balls and created havoc for the Bulldogs during the entire game. The Tigers
gathered 12 groundballs and intercepted five passes.
“We changed our defense midway through the season,” coach
Werlau said. “We found that we
were not having even matchups
in man-to-man, so we addressed
that by going to a zone and giving everybody an area that they
are responsible for.”
Defensive play is something
that has been focused on more as
the season has progressed.
“We have been working on defense more now than we usually
have,” defenseman Muiread Heffernan said. “We also have new
plays on offense that focus on
what each girl can do well. Say a
girl is really good at feeding the
Lydia Werlau controls while being pressured
against the Panthers.
ball, then she would be the one
doing that.”
For defenseman Olivia Marino, it’s all about getting down
pat the right strategy.
“We definitely now know more
about each other now,” Marino
said. “We compensate for each
others’ faults and we have been
communicating in our zone. Our
goalie clears have also gotten a
lot better. Everyone is getting out
and creating space for the midfielders and attack to come in.”
The host Tigers defeated No.
13 Pleasantville 11-7 in the first
round on May 18. Curran netted
five goals, while Lydia and Paige
Werlau each had three goals. Kiere McCarthy made nine saves.
North Salem fell to host
Bronxville 15-4 in the Section 1
Class C semifinals on May 23.
Katie Wagner passes.
Photos: Rob DiAntonio
Page 18 – North Salem News
Sports
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Tigers pounce on Hamilton in semis
BY DOMINICK DEPOLE
Pennacchio tosses two-hitter in complete game shutout
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
A monstrous first inning set the tone for secondseeded North Salem in it’s 11-0 drubbing of visiting
No. 3-seeded Alexander Hamilton in the the Section
1 Class C semifinals on May 23.
“It was our intention to make the first the most
important inning,” North Salem coach Bob Mittelstadt said. “We’ve been flat and slow getting out of
the gate on Monday’s. We made sure today that we
stayed focused. We threw the kitchen sink at them.
We bunted, we hit the long ball and we stole.”
The Tigers walloped the ball around for five runs
in the bottom of the first. A pair of errors off balls hit
by Haley Donovan and Kayla Harris combined with
a walk by Anastasia Pennacchio got one run across to
set up catcher Casey Harmon’s two-run triple.
“We’re all about doing as many things as possible
to get runs on the board,” Mittelstadt said. “We just
wanted to come out with all we had and just go right
at them. We knew that they could be dangerous if
they stayed close.”
Harmon drove in five runs on the day and crushed
a two-run homer to left-center field. She roped a
single too.
Third baseman Alina DiMella tripled to start the
game and was plated by right-fielder Claire Bonzani’s RBI groundout. Bonzani also looped two basehits and scored two runs. She dashed home after a
See softball page 19
File photos
Catcher Casey Harmon had five RBI and socked a two-run
homer in the semifinal win.
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North Salem senior Anastasia Pennacchio tossed a twohitter in an 11-0 win over Hamilton in the Section 1 Class
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SPORTS
Thursday, May 26, 2016
North Salem News – Page 19
Tigers run at
county meet
North Salem’s track and field teams
competed at the Westchester County
Championships this past weekend at
Mount Vernon High School.
Nick Kowgios led the way with a 14th
place-finish in the 800 meters in a time
of 2:06.13. In the 4x800-meter relay, the
team came in 10th in 8:44.23. In the
1,600 meters, Evgeniy Batuyev placed
19th (4:42.31) and Mike Selzer was
28th (4:46.17). Ben Leicht was 22nd in
the 3,200 meters (10:25.03) and Sean
Vincent was right behind him in 25th
(10:29.06).
Ben Leicht and Sean Vincent come around a
turn in the 3,200-meter race as they compete
in the Westchester County track and field
championships.
PHOTO: VIC MCGEE
aversano’s
restaurant • bar • catering
SOFTBALL
FROM PAGE 18
wild pitch to tally one of the runs.
Harris drilled an RBI single up
the middle in the fifth and lined
a double. First baseman Dom
DeAngelis shredded two singles.
North Salem made great contact on offense, only striking out
one time as a team for the entire
game.
“Everyone is doing their part
and we are working together really well,” senior star starting
pitcher Pennacchio said. “As well
as I can pitch everyone can play
the field positions. It feels great
having everything come together
at the end of the season.”
Pennacchio cleared the way
for the Tigers, allowing no runs
over seven innings pitched. The
right-hander fanned nine batters
and only let up two hits on the
big stage.
“Anastasia pitched her best
game of the year,” Mittelstadt
said. “She threw harder than she
has in a while and had command
of all her pitches. She is very confident in her ability and the defense playing behind her.”
The senior even bashed a solo
home-run to dead centerfield
in the third inning. Pennacchio
reached base in all four of her
plate appearances. It will be her
first time playing in the section
finals after making the semifinals
for the past two years.
“It feels incredible especially
for senior year,” Pennacchio said.
The Tigers have now clawed
their way to nine wins in their
last 11 contests after starting the
season winning two of eight.
“We played some really tough
teams early on which hardened
our resolve,” Mittelstadt said.
“We got our act together and we
have been able to play better defense.”
Hamilton’s porous defense
committed six errors. The young
Tigers have been buckling down
on their fundamentals as the season has developed.
“It’s all about not beating yourselves,” Mittelstadt said. “We’ve
been better at that lately. We start
five sophomores and a freshman,
so we are still evolving.”
This season is North Salem’s
first in Class C in over 10 years.
Only four teams made the playoffs, as the Tigers (12-8) will
square off with fourth-seeded
Haldane for the Championship
on Friday, May 27 at 4 p.m. at
North Rockland High School.
The Tigers beat Haldane in
both meetings this season, including a 12-3 hammering on
the road. Though the Blue Devils
have already pulled off one upset
in their 5-1 victory in the semifinal over top-seeded Tuckahoe.
“We need to have all 21 girls
working together as a team unit
to win the game,” Pennacchio
said. “We’re solid now and we’re
just gonna go for it all.”
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Page 20 – North Salem News
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Think outside the backyard barbecue box
While backyard barbecue menus are often dominated by hot dogs and hamburgers, hosts can expand
that menu however they see fit. For example, fried chicken is a natural complement to popular backyard
barbecue fare,ß such as potato salad and fresh watermelon.
Store-bought fried chicken can suffice in a pinch, but hosts who want to go the extra mile and offer
a delicious homemade meal can prepare the following recipe for “Kansas City Fried Chicken” courtesy
of Neal Corman’s “Virgil’s Barbecue Road Trip Cookbook” (St. Martin’s Press).
Kansas City Fried
Chicken
Serves 4 to 6
Ingredients
1⁄2 cup buttermilk
1⁄2 cup hot sauce
51⁄2 tablespoons Fried
Chicken
Spice Mix (see below), divided
2 tablespoons kosher salt
2 4-pound whole roaster
chickens, cut into 10 pieces
each
5 cups all-purpose flour
21⁄2 cups canola oil
Directions
1. In a large mixing bowl,
thoroughly blend the
buttermilk, hot sauce, 2
tablespoons of the Fried
Chicken Spice Mix, salt, and 1
cup cold water.
dredge in the flour mix. Shake
off the excess flour and slide
into the skillet.
2. Press the chicken pieces
into the marinade. Place in a
covered container (ensuring
that the chicken is covered
with marinade), and refrigerate
for 24 hours.
minutes on each side, or
until the internal temperature
reaches 165 F. Fry the
chicken in batches, being
careful not to crowd the skillet
and to maintain the right
temperature.
3. Thoroughly combine the
flour with 31⁄2 tablespoons of
the Fried Chicken Spice Mix in
a medium bowl.
4. In a large and deep pan, or
an electric skillet, add enough
canola oil to fill the pan onethird full. Heat the oil to 350 F.
5. Set the marinated chicken
next to the bowl of flour, close
to the skillet. Remove a piece
of chicken from the marinade,
allow any excess to drain, then
6. Fry the chicken for 4 to 5
7. Remove the fried chicken to
a sheet pan covered with three
or four layers of paper towels.
When all the chicken has been
fried and dried on the paper
towels, allow to cool slightly
before serving.
Fried Chicken Spice
Mix
Makes 2 cups, plus 2
tablespoons
Crossword
CLUES ACROSS
1. Groan
5. Engine additive
8. Atomic mass unit (abbr.)
11. One-time emperor
13. Martial art __ chi
14. Extinct algae
15. The leading performer
16. Autonomic nervous system
17. Pirate who went by “Chico”
18. Encourages
20. Small tactical munition
21. One-time Tribe closer
22. North, Central and South
25. Repossession
30. Conveys air to and from
the lungs
31. A renowned museum
32. One hundred (Italian)
33. Synchronizes solar and lu
nar time
38. Calendar month (abbr.)
41. They bite
43. The Mets played here
45. About opera
47. Wings
49. I (German)
50. Sportscaster Brett
55. Wild mango
56. The woman
57. Afflicted
59. Look furtively
60. Large integer
61. Spiritual leader
62. Keeps us warm
Ingredients
seasoning
6 tablespoons kosher salt
1 tablespoon dried oregano
6 tablespoons sweet paprika
1 tablespoon dried sage
5 tablespoons onion powder
1 tablespoon chili powder
5 tablespoons garlic powder
3 tablespoons dry mustard
Directions
3 tablespoons cracked black
pepper
Thoroughly blend all of the
ingredients in a medium
mixing bowl and transfer to a
covered container. Keep in a
cool, dry place until needed.
1 tablespoon ground cumin
1 tablespoon dried thyme
1 tablespoon poultry
Fun By The Numbers
Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle
will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen
your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test!
63. Type of account
64. Cheek
CLUES DOWN
1. Helps you get there
2. Plant
3. Apron
4. Everybody has one
5. Conditions of balance
6. Fit
7. Island in Lake Michigan
8. True firs
9. Operates
10. Approves food
12. Tell on
14. __ mater, one’s school
19. Low prices
23. Brazilian river
24. Et-__
25. Supervises interstate com
merce
26. Occurs naturally
27. Sprinted
28. Shock therapy
29. Decide
34. Lodging
35. Singer DiFranco
36. Kazakhstan river
37. 1920’s woman’s hat
39. Corpus __, Texas city
40. Helps kids
41. Tires have this
Here’s How It Works:
Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into
nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must
fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once
in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which
the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided
in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve
the puzzle!
42. Physical attraction
44. Goddess of wisdom
45. Made of wood
46. The top
47. Automatic data processing
system
48. Exchange
51. Swiss river
52. Prejudice
53. Napolean came here
54. Big guys grab these (abbr.)
58. Mickey’s pet
Puzzle solutions on page 23
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Business & Real Estate
What the
unemployment
report tell us about
the economy
Markets slumped for the third
week as global concerns pressured investors again, and domestic data painted a modest picture. For the week, the S&P 500
lost 0.40%, the Dow fell 0.19%,
the NASDAQ dropped 0.82%,
and the MSCI EAFE (Emerging Markets) fell 3.19%.
April’s job report showed investors that the labor market
continues to improve, adding
160,000 jobs last month. However, the gains were far below the
consensus estimate of 200,000
new jobs. However, the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 5.0%, one estimate
of the underemployment rate—
measuring discouraged workers
and part-timers who want fulltime work—fell to 9.7% from
9.8% in March. That’s good news,
because it means that workers
who have struggled in the recovery may finally be catching up.
However, it’s not all good
news. A separate private industry
report found that job cuts surged
35.0% between March and April
as firms let go of workers. Over
250,000 pink slips were handed
out between January and April,
the largest number since early
2009. Though the beleaguered
energy sector is driving layoffs,
shifting consumer preferences are
also causing retail and computer
companies to cut jobs.
Further analysis of the job
gains also showed that much of
the fastest growth in hiring is
coming from low-paying indus-
tries like retail and hospitality.
The lack of high-paying job opportunities is reflected in wage
growth numbers. Since 2005, the
median weekly wage across all
jobs has increased by just $176.
Wage gains are even slower in
low-paying industries and for
workers with less education.
Economists suspect that slow
wage growth is contributing to
sluggish consumer spending and
slower economic growth. When
foreign demand drops, economic
growth depends more on domestic spending. However, there are
signs that growth may be picking
up; in April, wages grew 2.5%
from the previous year.
Will wages pick up enough
this year to drive more purchases
of big-ticket items? We’ll have to
see.
Looking ahead, it’s unclear
whether domestic economic data
will drive away global woes. Realistically, we’re likely to see both
soft and strong data in the weeks
to come that will hopefully push
stocks higher again once earnings
season is over.
Ken Mahoney is a
FinancialAdvisor in North Salem,
a registered broker with Aurora
Capital LLC, aregistered brokerdealer with the US Securities
and Exchange Commission,
memberFINRA/MSRB/SIPC and
a financial contributor on CNBC.
If you have questions or concerns
about your portfolio, please contact
Ken at 914-277-8809.
It’s your mortgage on the line.
North Salem News – Page 21
Be a team player
The ability to communicate,
interact and work collectively
with others is both a professional and personal asset. But
in certain ways, the reliance on
technology has made working
as a team more complicated.
People have grown accustomed
to spending large quantities of
time alone working at computers or on phones and tablets,
potentially compromising their
ability to work directly with others when the need arises.
According to Monster.com,
when it comes to choosing a
candidate for a new job or promotion, employers consistently
say they want a team player.
That means it’s advantageous for
professionals looking to further
their careers to brush up on their
team-building and social skills.
So what does it mean to be
a team player exactly? The following are some traits of team
players.
• Meets deadlines: People
working together on a project
have their own unique responsibilities regarding such projects.
It’s important that the end result
is produced on time; otherwise,
the entire group pays the price.
Employees who care about their
teams consistently meet their
deadlines, making things easier
for their fellow team members
as a result.
• Adapts easily: Team players
are willing to adapt to change
and take others’ suggestions.
Professional flexibility and
openness to ideas are important traits, as you just may learn
something from team members
when you try things their way.
• Listens attentively: In order
for a team to function, every
member has to listen to what
his or her coworkers are saying.
This also includes being recep-
“
tive to criticism without lashing
out. Listening can sometimes be
more important than speaking.
• Communicates clearly:
Team players effectively communicate their thoughts and
ideas. This includes using language that is constructive, honest and respectful.
• Participates frequently: Even
when his or her own work is
done, a team player does not shy
away from taking on the tasks
of others to ensure a project is
completed on time. This also can
include offering tips or pointers.
• Happily shares the spotlight:
Never the glory hog, a team
player is content to stand in the
spotlight alongside coworkers.
Team players make sure everyone is involved and recognized
equally, and even take their
share of the blame when things
go awry.
JOSEPH TOCK
AND I HAVE
WORKED
ON NUMEROUS
BUSINESS
DEALS AND
HE HAS NEVER
FAILED ME.
”
- M.B.
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Page 22 – North Salem News
BUSINESS & REAL ESTATE
Thursday, May 26, 2016
Does a joint bank account contain a right of survivorship?
most important factor in determining whether a joint account
GUEST
is with rights of survivorship is
CORNER
whether the bank signature card
establishing the account identiANTHONY J.
fies the interests of the parties as
ENEA
being with rights of survivorship.
Obtaining a physical copy of
the signature card from a bank
A joint bank account is a
can be difficult as a result of
ubiquitous and popular way to
numerous bank mergers and the
own an account with one’s spouse, passage of time from when the
children, loved ones and friends.
account was created.
Generally, the primary and most
Additionally, §675 of the NY
significant advantage to using a
Banking Law creates a presumpjoint bank account is that any of
tion that a bank account created
the parties named to the joint ac- in the name of two or more
count will have access to the funds persons, which is to be paid to
in the account, and if the account
either of them or the survivor,
is a joint account with rights of
in the absence of any evidence
survivorship, upon the death of
of fraud and/or undue influence,
any joint tenant to the account,
will vest title to the survivor
the account passes to the surviving named on the account. The party
named account holder(s).
seeking to challenge title to the
Generally, and in the past, the account passing to the survivor
has the burden of proving that
undue influence and/or fraud
existed.
Historically, producing a
signed bank signature card
containing the requisite statutory
language of §675 of the Banking
Law has been sufficient to create
the presumption (although rebuttable) that the survivor is entitled to the remaining account
proceeds upon the death of the
joint tenant. However, in recent
years when the bank signature
card cannot be obtained, the
courts, in determining whether
the account has survivorship
rights, look at other extrinsic
evidence in making said determination. For example, the bank
representative’s recollection of
advising the account holder that
the balance in the account would
be paid to the survivor upon
the death of the other account
holder and/or that the bank has
a policy that all joint accounts
are survivorship accounts, may
serve as extrinsic evidence that
the account was a joint account
with rights of survivorship.
The courts have also relied on
electronic signature cards having
the designation “J” as in “joint
account” as evidence in support
of the presumption under §675
of the Banking Law.
Additional factors the courts
have relied upon in support of
the presumption of survivorship
rights are:
(a) a joint holder making
withdrawals from the account
for his or her sole benefit;
(b) the decedent receiving
statements and cancelled checks
for the account; and
(c) absence of evidence that
the account holder was incapacitated or the victim of undue
influence and/or fraud at the
time the account was opened.
Obviously, having extrinsic
factual evidence that establishes the intent to create a
joint account with rights of
survivorship is of great value.
However, in my opinion, the
best assurance one can have is a
copy of the bank signature card,
from the time the account was
opened, containing the statutory
language. This is, in my opinion,
the best evidence for warding off
any challenges to the survivorship nature of the account upon
the death of a joint tenant.
Anthony J. Enea, Esq. is the
managing member of Enea,
Scanlan & Sirignano, LLP
with offices in White Plains and
Somers. Enea can be reached at
914-948-1500 or A.Enea@
esslawfirm.com.
Did You Know?
The home improvement market, which includes both improvements and maintenance,
has rebounded considerably from
its most recent low point in 2011.
The Joint Center for Housing
Studies ( JCHS) of Harvard University indicated in early 2015
that the upcoming year would
surpass the $324 billion spent on
improvements during the peak of
the housing boom a decade ago.
Even though homebuilding and
the home industry in general is
still not at complete recovery,
trends within the home improve-
ment industry do suggest that
homeowners have once again
become comfortable investing in
their homes.
Coldwell Banker
residential Brokerage
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For a Confidential Interview, please call our
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914.277.5000
ColdwellBankerHomes.com/Somers
© 2016 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal
Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker® and the Coldwell Banker logo are registered service marks owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC.
Classifieds
Thursday, May 26, 2016
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North Salem News – Page 23
able rentals. Full/ partial weeks.
Call for FREE brochure. Open
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MAY 28th & 29TH
THIS IS A RAIN OR SHINE EVENT
Columbia Co. Fairgrounds, Chatham, NY
From South Beach to the Berkshires.
Special Weekend Events Inlcude Wine, Beer
& Cider Seminars, Food Pairings & More!
AWARD-WINNING WINERIES, DISTILLERIES
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Information & tickets available on-line at:
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Reach more homes than any other local paper
by U.S. Mail... so you know you’ll be seen.
Call Halston Media at 914.205.4183
Page 24 – North Salem News
Thursday, May 26, 2016
THE FACTORY HAS FLOODED US WITH OVER 400 CHRYSLER, DODGE, JEEP & RAM TRUCKS!
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‘16 Cherokee Latitude: TTL Pymnts $7,884 (BOEL $21,741.00) ; 10k mi/yr., .20¢ ea. add’l.
‘16 Grand Cherokee Laredo: TTL Pymnts $4,056 (BOEL $19,423.65) ; 10k mi/yr., .25¢ ea. add’l.
‘16 1500 Crew Cab Big Horn : TTL Pymnts $8,964 (BOEL $26,694.50) ; 10k mi/yr., .25¢ ea. add’l.
*24 mo. / 36 mo. & 39 mo. lease with 1st payment, tax, title & tags due at signing and $2,999 Down. Subject to approval by primary lender. Leasee responsible for wear and maintenance.
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