Governor Cuomo: Tear Down the Tolls! Chazz Palminteri to Present
Transcription
Governor Cuomo: Tear Down the Tolls! Chazz Palminteri to Present
WESTCHESTER’S OLDEST AND MOST RESPECTED NEWSPAPERS PRESORT-STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID White Plains, NY Permit #7164 Vol 111 Number 9 www.RisingMediaGroup.com Friday, February 26, 2016 Chazz Palminteri to Present Landmarked & Condemned: Council Votes on Haas Murals ‘A Bronx Tale’ for PAL One Property Condemned by Building Dept. Chazz Palminteri has agreed to perform his one-man show “A Bronx Tale” to benefit the Yonkers PAL. By Dan Murphy In 1989, Chazz Palminteri wrote a oneman show about a killing he saw in the Bronx when he was 9 years old. He performed it at a little theatre in Hollywood, and it became a hit and the most-sought after property since “Rocky.” With only $200 left in the bank and million-dollar offers, he refused to sell his play un- less he played Sonny and wrote the screenplay. Chazz held out and got his wish, with actor Robert De Niro also signing onto the project. This is the original one-man show he wrote and performed in 1989 that made him a star. The movie “A Bronx Tale” made Chazz famous and won him critical acclaim. Today, he performs his version of the show occasionContinued on Page 8 Internal Medicine Residency Program Approved One of Richard Haas’ murals at 36 Main St. was landmarked by the City Council, but the building was condemned by the city’s building department. Photo by Donna Davis. By Dan Murphy The Yonkers City Council voted 5-2 on Tuesday night to approve the landmarking of three buildings that feature murals by artist Richard Haas. The Landmarks Preservation Board, at its Dec. 5, 2014 meeting, accepted the application and voted to approve the motion May 6, 2015 by a vote of 9-1-1. Because the City Council has approved the landmarking application, under the Yonkers City Code, the murals and the underlying structures upon which they are painted cannot be demolished without approval of the Landmarks Preservation Board. The three downtown properties that feature the Haas murals, located at 35-37 and 36 Continued on Page 8 Governor Cuomo: Tear Down the Tolls! The City Council passed a resolution calling for the tolls on the New York State Thruway in Yonkers be removed. St. John’s Riverside Hospital recently announced that its Internal Medicine Residency Program has been approved by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education after an 18-month approval process. The program will offer both three-year categorical and one-year preliminary pathways, designed to train knowledgeable, compassionate and efficient physicians. “There is significant demand for primary care physicians both nationally and locally, therefore, additional training programs are needed to ensure an adequate physician supply,” said Ronald Corti, president and CEO. “This program is good for St. John’s and the community we serve.” “The medical education program at St. John’s Riverside Hospital embodies our commitContinued on Page 8 By Dan Murphy When former President Ronald Reagan went to the Berlin Wall near the end of his second term, he said, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” Yonkers City Councilman Mike Breen quipped “Gov. Cuomo, tear down the tolls,” which we used for our headline. On Tuesday, the Yonkers City Council passed a resolution calling on the New York State Thruway Authority to remove the $1.25 toll in north Yonkers next to Stew Leonard’s and Ridge Hill. The toll is collected in both northand sound-bound directions and generates $23 million per year for the Thruway Authority. The resolution reads: “Whereas the NYS Thruway Authority has removed numerous tollbooths throughout the State of New York and Continued on Page 8 Gorton High School Grooming Future Doctors Seated from left are YPS Superintendent Dr. Edwin Quezada, State Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assemblymember Shelley Mayer celebrating the success and continued funding for the Smart Scholars Program at Gorton High School with students and staff. State Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assemblymember Shelley Mayer, along with Superintendent Dr. Edwin Quezada last week visited Gorton High School and met with students from the Smart Scholars early college program. The Charles E. Gorton High School Academy of Medical Professions of Smarts Scholars Early College Program is a partnership between institutions of higher education and public school districts or public charter schools to cre- ate early college high schools that provide students with the opportunity and preparation to accelerate the completion of their high school studies while earning a minimum of 24 but up to 60 transferable college credits at the same time. Students receive additional academic support from the school/college partnerships to ensure they are at grade level and ready to participate in rigorous high school and collegiate Continued on Page 7 PAGE 2 - Yonkers Rising - Friday, February 26, 2016 West. Teen Makes Us Think About Life Without iPhones Hastings High School junior Janey Litvin is urging her peers to put down their iPhones. By Dan Murphy We enjoy the emails our papers receive from Greenburgh Supervisor Paul Feiner because they are different; different from the usual releases or promotions we receive from most of our elected officials in the county, but also because Feiner talks about subjects and topics that are different from the mainstream political discourse of the day. Three interesting ideas from Feiner include: The Snow Angels program in Greenburgh, which pairs volunteers with senior homeowners who need their driveways and walkways shoveled; complaints about the service we all get from the U.S. Post Office (which we will highlight next week), and bring our attention to Hastings High School student Janey Litvin and her quest to give up her iPhone. Feiner wrote: “In recent weeks we have tried to highlight some of the outstanding students who reside in our community. Janey Litvin is an amazing young girl who did something recently that many teens probably think is impossible – she gave up her iPhone. “Janey Litvin, is a junior at Hastings High School, where she is an editor for the school paper, as well as a board member of Project Share, a service organization dedicated to helping the homeless. She also is a member of the school’s varsity cross-country team and track team, as well as the girls’ varsity basketball team. She loves spending time with her friends and family, and recently wrote an article for Seventeen Magazine that all parents should love. “Do you think it’s possible for your teen to give up their iPhone for a flip phone? For a day... week... month... permanently? Should area schools sponsor a contest to see which school district could have the greatest success rate?” wrote Feiner. Litvin’s story, which can be read in its entirety at www.seventeen.com/life/real-girlstories/a36468/i-ditched-my-iphone-for-a-2008purple-flip-phone, should be read by any parent with a teenage kid and a cell phone, but also for all adults – most of us who use our phones way too much. Titled “I’m 16 and Traded My iPhone 5 for a 2008 Purple Motorola Flip Phone,” in the article Litvin explained what happened after she broke her iPhone. “Before that fateful day, although I wouldn’t have admitted it, I was totally addicted to my iPhone…,” she said. “But a broken iPhone changed everything. Suddenly, there was no pressure to respond or stay updated on everyone’s latest move, and it was… nice. “But during that phoneless month, I began to notice how much time other people actually spent on their phones… I started to really like being disconnected, even though I knew I’d need a phone eventually, for calling my parents, making plans with friends and for putting in the inevitable movie-night sushi order. That’s when it hit me: I wanted an old-school flip phone, not another iPhone. So I logged onto Amazon and ordered myself a purple flip.” “Adjusting to a simpler life in a world of smartphones was harder than I expected,” continued Litvin. “Sure, I thought I might get teased a little, but when I told my friends that I was switching to a flip phone – which meant leaving the group chat – I wasn’t ready for so much pushback. Honestly, their initial lack of support was somewhat painful. But the simple truth was that I couldn’t handle an iPhone and the stress that came along with it. “It’s also amazing to hear the really positive feedback about my phone from my peers. Continued on Page 6 Celebrating our 125th Anniversary Spa Arab nish an d ic prov speakin ide g avai rs are lable INTRODUCING THE LATEST MEMBER OF THE SAINT JOSEPH’S FAMILY Saint Joseph’s Family Medicine 415 South Broadway Yonkers, NY 10705 (914) 623-5400 Offering Comprehensive healthcare services for the entire family Pediatrics • Adults • Older Adults Ammir Rabadi, MD, Medical Director Wendy Sylvester, MD • Nadeem Shahid, MD Convenient Hours Basic Testing Services On-Site Most Insurance Plans Accepted Same day appointments available Hours of Operation Mon-Wed 9am-5pm • Thurs 11am-7pm • 2nd Sat of each month 9am-1pm FOR MEDICAL EMERGENCIES, PLEASE GO TO OUR ER AT: Saint Joseph’s Medical Center 127 South Broadway Yonkers, New York 10701 (914) 378-7000 www.saintjoseph.org Yonkers PBA Celebrates 100th Anniversary The Yonkers Police Benevolent Association will celebrate its 100th year in existence in 2016. On Friday, March 4, the PBA will host its annual installation and awards dinner-dance at the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel in Tarrytown. “This year we are incredibly proud to celebrate the Yonkers PBA’s 100th anniversary,” said Yonkers PBA President Det. Keith Olson. “We hope you will join us in honoring our association, the men and women that built it and their countless acts of heroism, charity and generosity.” Over the last few years, the Yonkers PBA has helped raise close to $1 million for charities including the St. Baldrick’s Foundation, which funds research to cure childhood cancer; the Special Olympics through the annual Polar Plunge; and for other charities through its YPD vs. YFD Toughman Competition. And every year its deliver clothes and toys at Christmastime to dozens of underprivileged local children and their families. In the weeks to come, we hope to highlight the 100 years of the Yonkers PBA, and its efforts to continue to protect and serve the public. This year’s dinner will be a somber one, as Yonkers’ finest remember Det. Frank Hernandez, who died recently after an automobile accident. “Detective Fernandez was a well-respected member of our agency for more than 15 years and a stellar detective for the past eight years,” said YPD Commissioner Charles Gardner. “Frank was a ‘go-to guy’ and his passing is a major loss to our YPD family.” “The entire Yonkers community mourns the loss of Detective Frank Fernandez,” added Mayor Mike Spano. “A 15-year veteran of the department, Frank was a dedicated officer, husband and father. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Fernandez family.” Volunteer reporters and photographers wanted: If you are an apsiring journalist or photographer and want to see you name in print, contact us at risingmediagroup.com. High school interns are also welcome for this summer. FRidAY, FEbRuARY 26, 2016 - YoNkERs RisiNG - PAGE 3 This, Too, is America to Yonkers By Eric W. Schoen ment complex, baseball staSo much going on in the dium or something to make world! Let’s span the globe … the area come alive at night. post Office After 6 p.m., the square, as I have written about the old timers call it, is a ghost horrible service from the Unittown. ed States Post Office numerLandmarking a building ous times. If you learn anythat is uninhabitable to prething from this column today, vent it from being torn down let it be this: On your envebecause it has a very fine mulopes, make sure you spell the ral on it makes no economic street address correctly (i.e. sense. Other owners of busiSadore Lane in Yonkers vs. nesses in the square tried Sador Lane), and if your mail this tactic before saying their is going to an apartment, that buildings had architectural you put the apartment number value. Eric W. Schoen on the envelope. Even if you It is in the interest of evlive in a complex like I do where there are four eryone in Yonkers to bring Getty Square back to apartments for each street number address. life. If you disagree with me, send your letters to Make sure your mailbox is clearly marked [email protected]. with your name and those who receive mail at the Donald Trump & the Koch Brothers address. If you live in an apartment, make sure They want to take Donald Trump’s name off your mailbox has these details also. a park in Westchester and Putnam. They also want Strange things are going on at the post office – to take the Koch name off a wing at a hospital in high turnover of personnel, old timers retiring and New York City. new, profit-driven managers running the ship. Do The state accepted the parkland from Trump what I tell you and your mail will sail! years ago. Why take the name off parkland that Pensions & Term limits can benefit the public because you disagree with It is time that elected officials who are con- his political views? victed of a felony lose their pensions. We can’t The lives of many will be saved because of the award pensions to those who use their jobs for per- donations of the Koch Brothers to medical facilisonal benefit or who steal tax dollars. Have sympa- ties in New York. Should we not accept donations thy for their wives? I bet your bottom dollar they because we disagree with their political views? knew what was going on. Every dollar that a donor gives to save lives State legislators are long overdue for a rea- and improve the lives of Americans and New Yorksonable salary increase. Tie that increase to term ers should be cherished. That’s one less dollar we limits for the Legislature and the governor, as well have to contribute in tax dollars to the cause. as the aforementioned pension reforms. State Sen. Parking Validation at ridge Hill Stewart-Cousins, Assemblywoman Mayer, State The Cheesecake Factory validates parking for Sen. Latimer, Assemblyman Pretlow and all of the two and a half hours; Whole Foods validates parkother elected officials who represent Westchester, ing for one and a half hours; and Lord and Taylor’s we are counting on you! validates parking with a purchase. But when you landmarking the Mural in Getty Square go over the time period your ticket is validated for, Full disclosure: The building in Getty Square it is not prorated and you have to pay the full $3 that the Gateway to the Waterfront mural is on is freight. owned by the Publisher of these newspapers, Nick Someone needs to make some sense out of Sprayregen. Full disclosure: I wouldn’t know Nick the parking at Ridge Hill. When you or your insurSprayregen if he was sitting across from me drink- ance company is paying $1,000 or more for a test ing a soy, no foam latte at Starbucks, at Westmed, should you be stuck with a $3 parking Should we landmark the murals so that the fee? It makes no sense. building they are on, which is in deplorable condiTime to laugh tion and not habitable for business, can’t be torn Have you signed up for the Bernie Sanders down? That is the question before the Yonkers City dating site? The site is so popular that it crashed Council. I say “no.” last weekend. Are you a Socialist and want to At press time the council was scheduled to meet a Communist? Are you a Liberal who wants vote on the landmarking at its meeting Tuesday to meet a Conservative? It’s all there for you. My night. I received the Yonkers City Council agenda question: What’s next in this bizarre political seaFriday where the announcement of the vote was son? listed on the items to be considered Tuesday. I went to the movie theater in Greenburgh (the Getty Square is in dire need of development. old Master’s site) over the weekend. There were At one time when Mayor Mike Spano and I were big signs reading “No Masks and No Face Paint.” growing up, Getty Square was the heart of Yonkers Do the theater owners truly believe these prohibicommerce. We would shop at Genung’s, which tions will prevent criminal activity or the terrible became Howlands. There was Mimi’s where the shootings that have taken place in movie theaters fashionable ladies would shop, as well as numer- from occurring? It’s highly doubtful. ous fine men’s shops and quality shoe stores. Reach Eric Schoen at thistooisyonkers@aol. Now, the area is populated with the finest dol- com and follow him on Twitter @ericyonkers. lar stores. I am not, however, talking about the fine Catch the Westchester Rising Radio Show featurrestaurants from Riverdale Avenue and down Main ing Dan Murphy and Eric Schoen on Thursdays Street to the Hudson River. at 10 a.m. on WVOX 1460 on the A.M. dial or The only way Getty Square will have a re- on the Internet at wvox.com and click on “listen birth is if we bring in a movie theater, entertain- live.” Computer Repair, Upgrade, and Troubleshooting Cracked Laptop Screen, Broken Power Jack Virus Removal, Data Recovery Call James at 646-281-4475 – 718-324-4332 Flamenco Dance Program David Podles “The Passion and Joy of Hispanic Music and Flamenco Dance,” a lively tour of Hispanic music accompanied by a Flamenco dancer, will be presented Sunday, March 6 at 2 p.m. at the Yonkers Public Library, 1500 Central Park Ave. Admission is free and tickets are not required; seating will be in the 325-seat Pincus Auditorium. This program is sponsored by Friends of the Yonkers Public Library. Acclaimed international concert violinist David Podles covers the Cha, Tango, Samba, Merengue, Paso Doble, Mambo and Bolero. Travel with him through Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Mexico. Also, Flamenco dancer Maria will dazzle participants with her execution of the art of Flamenco dance. For more information, call 914-337-1500 or visit www.ypl.org. Response to YFD Overtime Allegations By John Flynn President uFoa Mayor Mike Spano’s statement that Yonkers firefighters receive the “best compensation for firefighters in North America” is ludicrous. Does he really believe this? A 10-minute fact check on Google will clearly demonstrate to anyone who cares to know the truth that Yonkers firefighters are not the best compensated in Westchester County – much less America. Many fire departments throughout North America pay their firefighters and fire officers far more than the City of Yonkers does. Furthermore, this issue is not about a dispute over a raise. The UFOA is willing to accept the exact same raises for fire officers that were granted to the firefighters and to both police unions. Mayor Spano stated that “the fire officers don’t want to give back anything.” This is untrue. The fire officers have agreed to several very significant givebacks. The fire officers have agreed to the exact same, very significant concessions in 207a line-of-duty injury protections language as did the firefighters of Local 628, among other givebacks. However, after the fire officers chose not to endorse him in his recent re-election bid, Spano has insisted that in order to receive the same salary increases as the firefighters, the fire officers must agree to far more severe concessions in 207a line-of-duty injury protections than the firefighters did. The mayor wants the fire officers who place themselves at risk equally as much as the firefighters in leading from the front, to be saddled with significantly worse language – and far less protection – than the firefighters have. The language that Spano wants the fire officers to accept would result in fire officers who are legitimately injured in the line of duty being placed at the mercy of the mayor and his innercircle. These politically-appointed individuals, rather than an independent medical professional, would potentially determine which fire officers would be approved or denied for benefits based on political favoritism. We simply cannot ever agree to that. Spano’s attempt to portray the projected overage in the fire department overtime budget as the result of widespread sick leave abuse is disingenuous, to say the least. He knows he has perennially underfunded the fire department overtime budget, and it has been overspent every year since he has been in office. The overage in the overtime budget is the direct result of mismanagement, as opposed to widespread sick leave abuse. It is very easy for us to provide evidence that will demonstrate a variety of poor management practices, including the fact that a large portion of fire department overtime emanates from the practice of removing firefighters and fire officers from line positions and either temporarily or permanently assigning them to staff positions, in order to perform necessary support functions. These vacant line positions are then filled by firefighters on overtime. Simply staffing these support positions adequately in the first place would reduce the overtime budget substantially. Most importantly, Mayor Spano has stated that he believes the UFOA is engaged in a job action. This statement is slanderous and wholly untrue. If he believes the UFOA is engaged in a job action, then he can and should take legal action against the UFOA. But he won’t, because there is no job action and Spano knows this. As time goes on, and the UFOA proceeds through the arbitration and grievance process, we are confident the true facts will come out. View your favorite paper online! ... log on to risingmediagroup.com PAGE 4 - Yonkers rising - Friday, February 26, 2016 Explore the Cuban Literacy Campaign of 1961 With SLC Learn Reiki, Sewing Skills At Riverfront Library Heal your body and your mind at the Yonkers Riverfront Library during a free reiki workshop Saturday, March 5 at 2 p.m. in the Yonkers Room at One Larkin Center. Reiki is an ancient energy healing technique that may help restore physical and emotional wellbeing. Join Reiki Master Chandra Sookdeo, a holistic health coach, for this workshop. The Yonkers Riverfront Library is also offering a free sewing program for teens ages 13 to 19 on three Wednesday afternoons in March, when participants can learn to make a drawstring bag, zip case or large tote bag. The series will be led by Kate Perri, teacher, author and fiber artist, on March 2, 9 and 16, from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the second-floor community room. Sign-up is required and teens must attend all three sessions. Call 914-375-7966 or register on the third-floor at the Riverfront Library. This workshop is made possible in part with funds from Westchester Library System’s Unlimited Possibilities Mini-Grant Initiative supported by Entergy, Con Edison and the H.W. Wilson Foundation. The Riverfront Library is handicapped accessible, and parking is available at the nearby Buena Vista Parking Garage and the Warburton Parking Garage. Limited metered street parking is also available. County Golf Courses Scheduled to Open The six Westchester County-owned golf courses are scheduled to open for the season Wednesday, March 16 – weather and conditions permitting. The courses include Mohansic in Yorktown Heights; Maple Moor in White Plains; Saxon Woods in Scarsdale; Hudson Hills in Ossining; and Dunwoodie and Sprain Lake, both in Yonkers. Tee time reservations may be made online or by calling the individual courses. Walk-up reservations will also be accepted at the courses. Reservations via the automated telephone line will no longer be accepted. Greens fees for 18 holes with a Westchester Sarah Lawrence College will present “Maestra” on March 3. The Sarah Lawrence College Art of Teaching Program will present “Maestra” by Catherine Murphy on March 3 at 5:30 p.m. at the Esther Raushenbush Library at SLC, 1 Mead Way, Bronxville. In 1961, Cuba aimed to eradicate illiteracy across the island in one year. The government sent 250,000 volunteers across the island to teach reading and writing in rural communities, and almost half of these volunteer teachers were young- er than 18, and more than half were women. Narrated by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker, Class of 1965, “Maesra” (Spanish for teacher) is a 33-minute documentary. The film explores the experiences of nine women who, as young girls, taught as part the Cuban Literacy Campaign of 1961. The program is free and open to the public; RSVP is requested to [email protected]. For more information, call 914-395-2412. HV Restaurant Week Celebrates 10th Anniversary The highly-anticipated list of restaurants participating in the 10th anniversary of Hudson Valley Restaurant Week from March 7 to 20 is now live online on the event’s recently-renovated website. A record number of restaurants – more than 220 – have already registered for the twoweek culinary event that offers diners the chance to experience the best restaurants of the region at a fraction of the normal price point. The dining fest, presented by The Valley Table magazine, showcases the tantalizing flavors, talented chefs and exceptional dining experiences in the Hudson River Valley that spans 114 miles. It’s an opportunity for chefs to flaunt their best fare, for diners to check out new restaurants or visit old favorites, and for all customers to toast and enjoy the bounty of the Hudson Valley. “Whether it’s the new restaurant Baja 328 Tequila Bar and Southwest Grill in Beacon or the historic Olde Stone Mill in Tuckahoe, with so many restaurants participating, there is something for everyone,” said Janet Crawshaw, publisher of The Valley Table. “Be it date night, corporate lunch, girls’ night out or just a night off from cooking, now’s the time to take advantage of HVRW specials. The growing popularity and participation in HVRW over the past decade underscores the importance of the Hudson Valley as a culinary capital, both regionally and nationally. Restaurant owners eager to sign up demonstrate the economic success of the event, which has helped it grow to become one of the largest restaurant weeks in the nation.” The HVRW roster is a balance of restaurants that have participated in Restaurant Week since its inception 10 years ago, like Crabtree’s Kittle House in Chappaqua and Restaurant X and Bully Boy Bar in Congers; and restaurants on both side of the Hudson River who are new to the party, like Vigneto Café in Highland, Austin’s in Piermont and New City, Mountainside at the Catskill Resort in Barryville, Woodnotes Grille at Emerson Resort and Spa in Mt. Tremper, Rabbit and Turtle in Poughkeepsie, and Winston Restaurant in Mount Kisco. HVRW features prix fixe, three-course dinners for $29.95 and lunches for $20.95. Participating restaurants span throughout seven New York State counties – Westchester, Rockland, Dutchess, Putnam, Orange, Ulster and Sullivan. Participating chefs take pride in using seasonal and sustainable products, often sourcing from surrounding farms, and represent a wide variety of cuisines, including Argentinean, French, German, Greek, Irish, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Mediterranean, Mexican, New American, Thai and Swiss. In 2015, HVRW generated an estimated $10.2 million in sales revenue and an estimated $844,387 in tax revenue, representing a 37 percent average increase in business during the event, according to a survey of participating restaurants. For more details, including a complete list of participating restaurants, visit the recentlyrevamped website at www.HudsonValleyRestaurantWeek.com. Also, find The Valley Table’s Hudson Valley Restaurant Week on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram with #HVRW and @ValleyTable. County Park Pass (except Hudson Hills) are $36 for weekends and holidays, $32 weekdays, or $25 for seniors and juniors (weekdays only). Greens fees without a park pass are $46 for weekends and holidays or $42 for weekdays. Twilight, super twilight and nine-hole discounts are available. Golf cart fees will increase by $1 to $19 for 18 holes, and $15 for nine holes. Fees for Hudson Hills can be found at www.hudsonhillsgolf.com. Any available E-Z Reserve spots will be sold at the courses. E-Z Reserve enables golfers with a Westchester County Park Pass to block out a regular Saturday or Sunday tee time for a period of 25 weeks. Why Americans are Angry By Frank V. Vernuccio Jr., J.D. Party leaders and pundits continue to wonder about the obvious anger on the part of the voters. They shouldn’t be so shocked. The perception that the “Washington establishment” has failed the American people is accurate. The voters are taking out their justified anger at politicians whom they perceive to be representing more of the same. The decline of the United States and the prospect that the millennials may be the first generation to inherit a diminished nation has, correctly, been laid at the foot of those currently in office. Older Americans certainly have a right to be angry. From Obamacare’s Independent Patient Advisory Board, which decides whether saving a senior’s life is cost effective, to the repeated lack of cost of living increases under Social Security, there has never been a time when the over-65 crowd has been less respected. The middle class has taken it on the chin repeatedly. Their net worth has declined, many of their jobs have moved overseas, and their 401Ks have not done well. They have become the “sandwich generation,” supporting their 20-something kids who can’t find jobs and their older parents whose health care has been reduced and whose Social Security payments have not kept pace with inflation. Extremist attempts to slash energy sources and raise prices in return for negligible gains in questionable environmental statistics present a clear threat to homeowners’ ability to heat and light their homes. Blacks within inner cities have been treated worse than at any time since segregation ended. Many of their youth can’t find startinglevel employment because the positions have been taken by the vast numbers of illegals allowed into the nation. Race relations, which had been improving steadily and substantially for half a century, have been set back as a result of progressives’ false or exaggerated statements seeking to gin up the voting base and distract from the failures of their economic policies. Youth, as a whole, have been ill-served. Upon reaching college, they have had their free speech rights abridged by leftist administrators and professors. They have been charged unjustifiably, outrageously high tuition rates, and upon graduation have had few job opportunities. Servicemen and woman, not only in the regular armed forces but in the National Guard and Reserves, have been overused because there are simply too few of them to provide adequate rotation. When they leave, they face excessive wait times for treatment at VA medical centers. And, by the way, there are times when their votes have been conveniently not counted. Seven years ago, America was the “indispensable nation” – sometimes feared, sometimes respected, sometimes hated – but always the most important factor in any international matter of any consequence. Seven years of cuts to the military, demanded by President Barack Obama and bartered away by establishment Republicans, ended that. Combined with diplomatic moves so inept that “amateurish” doesn’t begin to convey the foolishness of it, the U.S. is seen as a has-been on the world stage, incapable of defending its interests or those of its allies. Examples are rampant. The premature withdrawal from Iraq – whatever one thought of the war there in the first place – created the vacuum that allowed ISIS to prosper. The “reset” with Russia allowed Moscow to replace Washington as the major power in Europe. The failure to even diplomatically confront China’s aggression in the Philippines and elsewhere encouraged Beijing’s hardliners to adopt intimidation as a matter of course. The refusal to forcefully confront Islamic extremists – or even utter those words – after the murder of an American ambassador, the slayings in San Bernardino, the bombing of the Boston Marathon and so much more, have portrayed the United States as rudderless, weak and cowardly. The failure to confront the growing presence of Russian, Chinese and terrorist military elements in our own hemisphere is negligence writ large. Utterly counterproductive moves, including encouraging the attempted toppling of pro-Western regimes in the Middle East, and opening up discussions with the Taliban in Afghanistan, have left the American public Continued on Page 6 To join the Exchange Club of Yonkers contact Vice-President David Tubiolo at 646-596-3375 Friday, February 26, 2016 - Yonkers Rising- PAGE 5 Meet Oakley On This Day in Yonkers History… Oakley needs a home. The Yonkers Animal Shelter has many pets available for adoption. Oakley is a large, handsome dog. He’s about 2 years old and weighs about 65 pounds, and is a mixed bully breed. He was found wandering around as a stray dog in Yonkers shortly after Christmas. Oakley was skinny and forlorn, but a warm bed, good food and a lot of attention and affection has turned him into a new dog. He’s friendly and outgoing, and loves all dogs and could also live with a cat. Oakley loves toys and likes to carry them around whenever possible. He’s quite a dog and a favorite of all the volunteers at YHS. Visit Oakley at the Yonkers Animal Shelter, 1000 Ridge Hill Blvd., between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. daily. For more information, call 914377-6730 during business hours or 201-9813215 at any time, or email lesliem147@gmail. com. The Titanic and the ship Carpathia that returned survivors LWV of the Rivertowns Hosting March Breakfast The League of Women Voters of the Rivertowns will host a program titled “What We Should Know About End-of-Life Issues” on Tuesday, March 8 at 8:30 a.m. at the Eldorado West Diner, 480 S. Broadway, Tarrytown. Elizabeth Briand will be addressing legal aspects of aging. She is a member of the Bleakly Pratt law firm’s Elder Law and Trusts and Estates Practice Group, and belongs to the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys and the Westchester Bar Association. Susie Rush will be addressing end of life legislation. Rush is a legislative analyst for Assemblywoman Amy Paulin. A former League president and partner with the law firm of Lowenthal, Landau, Fisher and Zeigler, P.C., she has worked on legislative issues in education, domestic violence, human trafficking and health care, including aid in dying. Sherry Saturno, LCSW, DCSW, will be addressing administrative issues of aging. She has both clinical and administrative experience in the field of aging as an assistant administrator and director of social services in nursing homes, specializing in palliative and end-of-life care. She is certified in aging studies at Boston University’s Center for Aging, Disability, Education and Research. This event is free and open to the public. RSVPs are appreciated to [email protected] or 914-332-1301. Weekend Events in Westchester County A number of events are scheduled at Westchester County parks and nature centers the Weekend of Saturday, Feb. 27 and Sunday, Feb. 28. On Saturday at Lenoir Preserve on Dudley Street in Yonkers, artists can submit work for the “Seasons at Lenoir” exhibit between 9:30 a.m. and noon. Artwork and photos inspired by Lenoir must be ready to hang. For more information, call 914968-5851. Also on Saturday, from 11 a.m. to noon at Cranberry Lake Preserve in north White Plains, look for animal racks. Learn which tracks go with which animals, and then make a craft. 914-4281005. Then from 1 to 2 p.m. at Lenoir Preserve, enjoy a mid-winter Stroll. Join the curator for a stroll around the preserve. 914-968-5851. Also on Saturday, at the Marshlands Conservancy on Route 1 (Boston Post Road) in Rye, a volunteer work project is scheduled from 1 to 3 p.m. Bring work gloves and help clear the northern border; hand tools will be provided. 914-8354466. Then, at Trailside Nature Museum at Ward Pound Ridge Reservation on Route 35 at 121 South in Cross River, enjoy “American Indian Sugaring” from 1 to 3 p.m. Northeast North America’s history will come alive during demonstrations of the production of this sweet product. 914-864-7322. Lastly on Saturday, Read Wildlife Sanctuary at Playland Park in Rye will host “The Sound of the Sound” from 1 to 3 p.m. Storyteller Jonathan Kruk will present Zen tales of life along Long Island Sound. 914-967-8720. On Sunday, Muscoot Farm on Route 100 in Somers will host a program titled “Maple Sugarin’” from 1 to 3 p.m. Stop in at the sugar house and see how sap is turned into maple syrup. 914864-7282. Also on Sunday, from 2 to 3:30 p.m. at the Marshlands Conservancy, learn how to identify trees by the best method – their buds. 914-8354466. For more information about Westchester County parks and nature centers, visit www.parks. westchestergov.com. DONATE YOUR CAR Wheels For Wishes Benefiting Make-A-Wish® Central New York x % Ta 100 tible uc Ded *Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not *Fully Tax Deductible WheelsForWishes.org Call: (315) 400-0797 * Wheels For Wishes is a DBA of Car Donation Foundation. Do you remember ANGELA DOLAN? Mary Angela Dolan was born in County Fermanagh, Ireland, in 1918. She emigrated to Yonkers in 1949 and may have worked at O’Dare’s restaurant on 602 Central Park Avenue. If you have any recollections or photos of Angela, please contact Zoe McCaw at zmccaw01@qub. ac.uk or 31 Colenso Court, 2-18 Colenso Parade, Belfast BT9 5BB, N. Ireland. By Mary Hoar President Emerita, Yonkers Historical Society Monday, Feb. 29 Feb. 29, 1920: The Tenth Regiment Armory at Waverly and Maple Streets was sold for $50,000 to Antonio Coppola, a representative of the Sons of Italy. Columbus Hall soon became the center of sports competition in Yonkers. Feb. 29, 1932: An anonymous postcard message to police suggested they “kindly search the Park Central Restaurant and surrounding territory at Central Avenue near Midland for the Lindbergh baby.” They did, with no success. Tuesday, March 1 March 1, 1904: After investigating the method of thawing out frozen water pies with electricity, the Yonkers Electric Light and Power Company announced it was ready to apply this method in Yonkers. March 1, 1932: Detectives from the Lindbergh kidnapping visited a Yonkers spiritualist. Carpet shop employee Generoso DeMuro of Fagan Street claimed to have visualized the entire kidnapping in a trance. His vision saw the nurse hand the baby to a man on a ladder; the man handed the child to a second woman and they drove off in a car. He elaborated by telling the detectives they drove to “a body of water, where they got into a motor boat,” stayed for two days, and then resumed their flight in a motor car. Their trip ended at an apartment building. Wednesday, March 2 March 2, 1925: Yonkers Mayor Weisendanger officially opened the Fifth Annual Yonkers Automobile Show in the Yonkers State Armory. More than 70 cars were on display, including Hudsons, Franklins, Rollins, Pages, Chryslers, Buicks, Oaklands, Stars, Moons and Chevrolets. March 2, 1928: Yonkers “inventor” Dr. Louis Clement, wanted by police in connection with the murder of a Park Avenue governess, had victimized more than 200 Yonkers residents with his claim of inventing a gasoline substitute. Clement, also known as Aaga Schmidt, opened a laboratory at the corner of Dock and Bashford Streets. He claimed to invent a cheaper gasoline substitute called “nuoline.” After a demonstration in his laboratory he sold 25,000 shares of stock at $1 each. He alleged his new fuel could be sold for 11 cents a quart. Unfortunately, to make it work, you also had to add another liquid that cost $25 a gallon. Thursday, March 3 March 3, 1925: A “new” table arrived at School 16 – a large six-foot rosewood library table. The piece, in its former life as a square piano, was purchased for the school when it opened in 1902, and remained in the building. After years of use, the school determined it was ready for junking. The piano was taken apart and put in the school’s basement. Principal Leonora Hobart came up with the idea of making a library table using the huge rosewood top and the scrolled legs. The table was placed in the upper hall of the new school’s addition to be used as a study table. March 3, 1934: Apparently money that had been stored in socks, mattresses and chimney pots came out of hiding as Yonkers taxpayers rushed to pay their 1934 taxes. More than $40,000 in currency was received at the comptroller’s office in one day, with hundreds of dollars paid in the old, large-size bills that had been out of circulation for five years Friday, March 4 March 4, 1905: Congressman and Mrs. John Andrus held a party at the Hotel Arlington in Washington for many of the Yonkers people in the nation’s Capital to attend Theodore Roosevelt’s presidential inauguration. Leslie Sutherland, George Kelly, Thomas Larkin, Elijah Yerks, Richard Peene and Alderman Albert Garthwaite were among the prominent citizens who attended. March 4, 1929: Bill Kay Jr. of Park Avenue Terrace began his quest to set a car endurance record in a standard Essex Challenger sedan, and learned some of the pitfalls in the effort. Dodging traffic, red lights and motorcycle police while trying to stay alert, Kay – working in shifts with three other drivers – managed to go 50 miles and averaged 35 miles an hours through the rainy streets of suburban Yonkers the first day. His first challenge was the Van Cortlandt Park Avenue hill, a true testing ground for any car in Yonkers. When pulled over on the Bronx River Parkway for speeding, Kay explained about the endurance run and was told to stay off the parkway because there were advertising signs on the car. Sponsored by the William Gracey, Inc. Car Dealership at 348 S. Broadway, the car had two gas tanks – allowing the drivers to cover a distance of about 400 miles. Saturday, March 5 March 5, 1928: Faithful pet dog Tige was responsible for saving the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Walton Harrison Jr. and their three children as their home burned in the early morning hours. Tige’s persistent and loud barking woke the family from a deep slumber, enabling them to escape. March 5, 1929: On day two of his Essex Challenger sedan endurance run, Bill Kay Jr. refueled his car on Central Avenue from a specially designed truck… while both vehicles were in motion! The endurance run continued all week, with the main objective to keep the wheels in constant motion. Sunday, March 6 March 6, 1928: Miss Adele Carpels, a wellknown Broadway actress, became the leading lady of the Aldis Bartlett Players; her first performance in this capacity was at the Warburton Theatre. March 6, 1936: An oarlock from a lifeboat of the Titanic, a grim reminder of one of the worst tragedies at sea, was presented to the Yonkers Museum of Science and the Arts. William Seward, a storekeeper on the Titanic, brought the oarlock with him when he landed in New York with the other survivors on the steamer Carpathia. Seward visited the James Fee family on North Broadway and gave them the item. After his visit, he returned to work for the White Star Line. The Fee family gave the oarlock to the museum. Two Yonkers residents, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Robins of Garfield Street, had been on the ill-fated ship. Their lifeless bodies were found in a lifeboat at sea and buried in Oakland Cemetery. For more information on the Yonkers Historical Society, Sherwood House and upcoming events, visit www.facebook.com/YonkersHistoricalSociety or LinkedIn and Twitter @YonkersHistoric. For information on membership in YHS, call 914-961-8940 or email yhsociety@ aol.com. PAGE 6 - Yonkers Rising - Friday, February 26, 2016 Legal Notices Classifieds ANTIQUES • ART • COLLECTIBLES Most cash paid for paintings, antiques, furniture, silver, sculpture, jewelry, books, cameras, records, instruments, coins, watches, gold, comics, sports cards, etc. Please call Aaron at 914654-1683. Delivery Driver Needed-Delivery driver wanted for weekly newspapers in Yonkers and Westchester County. Experience and own auto preferred. To apply send email to [email protected] Licensed therapists needed - for Early Intervention SLP, OT, PT, SI, SW, Psych Cases in Westchester County for ages 0-3 with developmental delays Send resume to [email protected] Income Properties in Newport, VT Auctions: Thurs., Jan 28 25-UnitApt. Building, 27,500+/-SF Ind. Building, & 28,000+/-SF Ind. BuildingTHAuction.com *800-634-7653 ADOPT: An experienced mom, dad, and hopeful big brother are ready to welcome a new baby. Expenses paid. Please call Alana &Michael:1-855-840-3066. AlanaAndMichaelAdopt.net. Donate your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make -A -Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 914 -468 -4999 Today! Privacy Hedges -SPRING BLOWOUT SALE 6ft Arborvitae (cedar) Reg $129 Now $59 Beautiful, Nursery Grown. FREE Installation/FREE delivery Limited Supply!ORDER NOW! 518-536-1367 www. lowcosttrees.com Can You Dig It? Heavy Equipment Operator Career! 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Free Shipping.www.Cashnowoffer.com or 888-210-5233. Get Extra $10: Use Offer Code: Cashnow! Municipal Housing Authority for the City of Yonkers NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HERING FOR FIVE YEAR AGENCY PLAN FOR FISCAL YEARS 2016-2020 AND ANNUAL PLAN FOR FISCAL YEAR 2016 The Municipal Housing Authority for the City of Yonkers (MHACY) will hold a Public Hearing on Tuesday March 15, 2016 to discuss and accept comments on its proposed Five Year Agency Plan for Fiscal Years 2016-2020, the Annual Plan for Fiscal Year 2016, Public Housing Admission and Continued Occupancy Plan (ACOP), proposed revisions to the lease and the Section Eight Administrative Plan The Authority will hold two public hearings to discuss and accept comments on its proposed Five Year Agency Plan, the Annual Plan, Public Housing Admission and Continued Occupancy Plan (ACOP), proposed revisions to the lease and the Section Eight Administrative Plan. A draft copy of the proposed changes and information will be available at the Office of The Municipal Housing Authority for the City of Yonkers, Augustine J. Shea Administration Building, 1511 Central Park Avenue beginning February 12, 2016 from 8:30 A.M. - 4:30 P.M. weekdays until March 15, 2016 and on our website www.mhacy.org. The Public Hearings will be held Tuesday March 15, 2016 at: 4 Curran Court Community Room Building #4 Yonkers, New York 2:00 P.M. Ross F. Calcagno Home 10 Brook Street (Gymnasium) Yonkers, New York 6:00 P.M. Notice of formation of Blue Dwarf Properties LLC Arts. Of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 12/29/2015. Office location: Westchester County. The street address is: 32 Fraser Place, Hastings-On-Hudson, New York, 10706. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process served to: Blue Dwarf Properties LLC, 32 Fraser Place, Hastings-On-Hudson, New York, 10706. Purpose: any lawful act. #6732 01/22 – 02/26 Notice of formation of Ovation Strategies LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 12/10/2015. Office location: Westchester. The street address is: 25 Beechtree Drive, Larchmont, N.Y. 10538. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process served to: Ovation Strategies LLC, 25 Beechtree Drive, Larchmont, N.Y. 10538. Purpose: any lawful act. #6733 01/22 - 2/26 Notice of formation of Davis Creek Ventures, LLC Arts. Of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 11/18/2015. Office location: Westchester County. The street address is: 22 Larchwood Road, Larchmont NY 10538. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process served to: Wole Coaxum, 22 Larchwood Road, Larchmont NY 10538. Purpose: any lawful act. Notice of formation of Primaxel LLC Arts. Of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on January 21, 2016. Office location: Westchester. The street address is: 310 Claflin Avenue, Mamaroneck, NY 10543. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process served to: 310 Claflin Avenue, Mamaroneck, NY 10543. Purpose: any lawful act. Notice of formation of Pacific Diesel LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/26/15. Office location: Westchester County. The street address is: 3228 Albany Post Rd. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process served to: Pacific Diesel LLc, 3228 Albany Post Rd, Buchanan, NY 10511. Purpose: any lawful act. #6735 01/29 - 03/04 #6736 01/29 - 03/04 #6737 02/19 - 03/25 Notice of formation of Apple Accessories LLC. Of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on February 12, 2016. Office location: Westchester. The street address is: 70 Saratoga Ave, B2, Yonkers, NY, 10705. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process served to: Anna M. Matias, 70 Saratoga Ave, B2, Yonkers, NY, 10705 Purpose: any lawful act. Notice of Qualification of YRC Capital, LLC. Appl. for Auth. filed with NY Dept. of State on 1/8/16. Office location: Westchester County. NY Sec. of State designated agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served, and shall mail process to 810 Yonkers Ave., Yonkers, NY 10704. DE addr. of LLC c/o Vanguard Corporate Services Ltd, 3500 S Dupont Hwy, Dover, DE 19901. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901 on 1/7/16. Purpose: any lawful activity. #6738 02/19 - 03/25 These public hearings are open to all interested parties. Residents are encouraged to select a spokesperson to present their comments at the public hearings. Participants in the public hearings should present their comments orally and in writing. Persons wishing to speak at any of the public hearings will be limited to five (5) minutes each. A sign-up sheet for speakers will be available at the start of each public hearing. The Municipal Housing Authority for the City of Yonkers does not discriminate because of disability, color, sex, religion, national origin, family status or race. Provisions will be made for persons with disabilities to ensure their full participation in these public hearings if they so choose. Request for any reasonable accommodation must be made to the Authority by 4:00 P.M. on Tuesday March 8, 2016. The request must be directed to: Joseph Shuldiner Executive Director Municipal Housing Authority for the City of Yonkers 1511 Central Park Avenue Yonkers, New York 10710 [email protected] Fax: 914-793-6916 Dated: January 21, 2016 #1432 02/26/2016 Why Americans Continued from Page 4 openly wondering whether the White House is even paying attention. Many Americans are furious that federal agencies have been misused for partisan political purposes. The Internal Revenue Service, the Federal Election Commission and the Department of Justice are among the examples. While all these very real crises go unaddressed, false or exaggerated problems get the spotlight. While isolated examples of law enforcement abuse may occur, there is no war on minorities by police forces. There is no wave of discrimination against Muslims. Indeed, FBI statistics indicate that Jews are far more West. Teen Continued from Page 2 I’ve had tons of people – from the captain of the football team to my school’s incredibly talented aspiring artists – come up to me and tell me they think what I’m doing is great. “But I wonder if we, as a generation, should make a conscious effort to unplug sometimes,” she said. “I’ve been going to summer camp for seven years, and it’s the best four weeks of my year – not just because I’m sailing and playing basketball instead of studying for tests, but also because we’re not allowed to use our phones. We are forced to make conversation, eye-to-eye, and this has helped foster incredibly strong friend- prone to be the target of hate crimes.) Wall Street is not seeking to rob the middle class. Asking unions to not force people to join, and demanding that union leaders be accountable for pension plans they administer, is not an attack on collective bargaining. There are no substantive reports of government agencies harassing LGBT individuals. Listening to leftist politicians, pundits and academicians, many Americans wonder whether any of the individuals employed in those rarified fields inhabit the same reality as the rest of the country. It’s no wonder the voters are angry. Frank Vernuccio serves as editor-in-chief of the New York Analysis of Policy and Government. ships. “So maybe try it some time. Turn off your phone for an hour or two when you’re hanging out with your friends. Or next time you’re at lunch and you hear that ever-so-tempting tritone, ignore the text and focus on having one conversation at a time,” wrote Litvin. To thank Janey for making me think about not only my teenage daughter’s cell phone overuse, but my own phone abuses, as well, my family has made a $50 contribution to Project Share in her name. SHARE the Project is a community service group invested in sharing students’ time in acts geared to making a difference in the larger community, with a focus on the homeless and the hungry (www.sharetheproject.org). Notice of formation of Jenny Dobell Gardenscaping, LLC, a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC), filed with the Secretary of State of NY (SSNY) on 12/17/2015. Office location: Westchester County. Principal office of Jenny Dobell Gardenscaping: 10 Central Avenue, Rye, NY, 10580. SSNY designated as agent of Jenny Dobell Gardenscaping LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC 10 Central Avenue, Rye, NY 10580, upon whom and at which process may be served. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. #6734 01/29 - 03/04 #6739 02/26 – 04/01 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT WESTCHESTER COUNTY JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff against JONG KUK KIM; SANGHUN JUNG KIM A/K/A SANGHUN JUNG-KIM ,et al Defendants Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Fein, Such & Crane LLP, 1400 Old Country Road, Suite C103, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorney(s) for Plaintiff(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale Entered JUNE 11, 2015 I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder at the LOBBY OF THE WESTCHESTER COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 111 DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. BLVD., WHITE PLAINS, NY 10601 on MARCH 21, 2016 at 12:30 P.M.. Premises known as 508 CENTRAL PARK AVENUE, APT. 5109, SCARSDALE, NY 10583. Sec 8.471 F/K/A 37JP Block 346 F/K/A 2 Lot 15.5109 F/K/A 5109. ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Town of Greenburgh, County of Westchester, State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $465,188.29 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 12291/11 . JOAN C. SALWEN, ESQ , Referee #3204 02-/19/16 – 03/11/16 FRidAY, FEbRuARY 26, 2016 - YoNkERs RisiNG - PAGE 7 Seniors and Health Care Health Department Issues Zika Warnings To avoid Zika and other mosquito-borne viruses, the Westchester County Health Department advises pregnant women to postpone travel to regions where these are common, including Mexico, Puerto Rico the U.S. Virgin Islands, Central and South America and the Caribbean. All international travelers are also advised to bring and consistently use repellents that contain DEET or another insecticide proven to help prevent mosquito bites. “This virus is a concern for international travelers and their families,” said Westchester County Health Commissioner Dr. Sherlita Amler. “While the symptoms of Zika in most people are mild, Zika has been linked to birth defects, so it is safest for pregnant women to avoid travel to regions where Zika is prevalent.” Zika is of concern now in many countries south of the United States with warmer weather and active mosquitoes. It is primarily spread through the bite of an infected Aedes aegypti mosquito, which is not found in Westchester. This mosquito also spreads Dengue and Chikungunya, two viruses that are common in the same regions. The symptoms of these mosquito-borne viruses include fever, joint and muscle pain, and headache. Zika symptoms also include a rash and pink eye (conjunctivitis). Chikungunya symptoms may also include joint pain that can persist for months. Dengue symptoms may include mild bleeding. “Using repellents with DEET and staying in places that have secure screens or air conditioning when you travel will reduce your exposure,” said Amler. People with Zika usually don’t get sick enough to go to the hospital. Travelers who visit places with Zika should see a health care provider if they are pregnant or if they develop a fever, rash, joint pain or red eyes during a trip or within two weeks after they return. There is no specific treatment or vaccine. Supportive care includes pain relievers with acetaminophen (Tylenol). Until Dengue is ruled out, avoid aspirin and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen. Mosquitoes are not active in Westchester during cold weather. Once Westchester thaws out and warmer, wet spring weather begins, using repellents locally can help residents avoid tickborne diseases and West Nile Virus, which also is spread by mosquitoes. “Residents should also be vigilant about removing standing water from their property since mosquitoes can breed in the rainwater that collects in an overturned garbage can lid or a flower pot saucer,” said Amler. “The health department has a robust mosquito monitoring system in place. Throughout the spring and summer, the health department collects, sorts and identifies the kinds of mosquitoes found in Westchester. These mosquitoes are sent to the state lab for testing, where the viruses they carry are identified. Should there be any public health concern about this or any other topic, we would alert residents and take appropriate action.” Protect yourself and your family when you travel by using air conditioning or window/door screens to keep mosquitoes outside. If your bedroom lacks screens or air conditioning, sleep under a mosquito bed net. Empty standing water from containers, such as flowerpots or buckets on your patio or balcony. When weather permits, wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants. Also, buy repellents before you travel. Apply repellents containing DEET to exposed skin, over your sunscreen, and to clothing whenever you go outdoors. Repellents that contain picaridin, IR3535 or oil of lemon eucalyptus are also effective; always follow the label directions. DEET is not recommended for use on infants younger than 2 months of age; oil of lemon eucalyptus products should not be used on children under than 3 years of age. Do not apply to eyes or mouth, and apply sparingly around ears. When using repellent sprays, do not spray directly on your face; spray on your hands first, and then apply to your face. When applying insect repellents to children, avoid their hands, around the eyes, and cut or irritated skin. Do not allow children to handle insect repellents. When using on children, apply to your own hands and then pat it onto the child. After returning indoors, wash your and your child’s treated skin. Clothes exposed to insect repellants should be washed with soap and water. Make a Winning Retirement Game Plan By Julissa Javier Social Security assistant district manager, Yonkers This month, a driver will take the checkered flag at the Daytona 500; skiers will stand atop the podium at the World Alpine Ski Championships in Vail, Colo.; and a football team will win Super Bowl XLIX in Glendale, Ariz. The sports are different, but the winners share a common trait – years of commitment to their plans. To win the retirement game, you also need commitment and a plan. For years, you’ve worked hard and paid into Social Security. Whether you’re new to the workforce or getting ready to cross your own career finish line, you’ll want to open a “my Social Security” account to see how your hard work is paying off. You can create or access your account at www.socialsecurity.gov/myaccount. You can use it to verify your earnings history, get estimates of your future Social Security benefits, and more. It’s the place to get the information you need to put together your own winning game plan. A good NASCAR pit crew keeps its driver on the track, and our retirement estimator can do the same for your retirement plan. The estimator offers an instant and tailored estimate of your future Social Security benefits based on your earnings record. You can plug in different anticipated yearly earnings to discover different retirement options and learn how your benefits could increase if you work longer. Give the retirement estimator a test drive today at www.socialsecurity.gov/estimator. Once you’ve come of age to retire – or if you’re just in the planning phase – our quick and convenient online services are in place at www. socialsecurity.gov/applyonline. In as little as 15 minutes, you can speed through our online application. In most cases, once your application is submitted electronically, you’re done. There are no forms to sign and usually no documentation is required. Fine-tune your game plan. Take advantage of our services and resources at www.socialsecurity.gov to optimize your retirement. Gorton High guidance and encouragement they need to excel and to build a solid academic foundation that will serve them well beyond graduation. “The Early College Program removes the initial financial barrier that economically-disadvantaged students can face by allowing them to earn at least 24 college credits for free. As a result, some students say they will be the first in their family to consider college. Every student deserves the opportunity to achieve the best education possible.” Both Stewart-Cousins and Mayer are actively seeking support for this program to continue with state funding. Last year the budget included $3 million for the statewide program, and this year Gov. Andrew Cuomo has budgeted $4 million. In the fall of each year, students take the Accuplacer assessment, the entrance exam for Westchester Community College. Also, students have the option of taking college algebra, medical terminology, psychology, sociology, intermediate or advanced Spanish, writing and research or writing and literature, anatomy and psychology I and II, emergency medicine services, and physical anthropology. Students will have the opportunity to attend an eight-week symposium titled “Introduction to Health Careers” at WCC. One hour laboratory experiences include nursing, radiological technology, respiratory therapy, emergency medicine and dietetics. Continued from Page 1 courses. This “dual or concurrent enrollment” program and college completion rates, while reducing student tuition costs as result of the compressed time, need to complete a college degree. “Gorton High School’s Smart Scholars Early College High School program provides low-income students and students traditionally under-represented in college with the opportunity to earn transferable, general education college credits while they are in high school,” said Mayer. “This program has been incredibly successful in increasing Yonkers’ high school graduation rate and providing many students a jump start on college. “I will continue to fight for additional funding for programs like this, which allow students to exit high school with college credits and the support they need to be successful in college,” she continued. “It is such a pleasure to visit with these young scholars and see their impressive achievements.” Democratic Senate Conference Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins added: “I remain committed to supporting the state-funded Smart Scholars program and applaud the Yonkers Public Schools for undertaking this innovative learning initiative. These impressive and determined students at Gorton High School are getting the Advertise on our Seniors and Health Care Page! Call today: 914-965-4000 How Can Technology Keep Loved Ones Safe? Alzheimer’s patients are tracked with satellite technology. Caregivers are invited to a free educational program titled “Keep Your Loved Ones Safe: The Value of Technology,” from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 26 at the White Plains Library, Conference Room B, 100 Martine Ave., White Plains. Registration is requested, but walk-ins are also welcome; email mama@ westchestergov.com or call 914-813-6300. “This is a great opportunity for caregivers to learn how to use technology and keep their loved ones safe,” said County Executive Robert Astorino. “With today’s advancing technologies, there are so many new ways to improve the quality of life for both caregivers and patients.” Panelists will include Kristen Bonistall and Patricia Gaston of the Alzheimer’s Association, Hudson Valley Chapter; Kerry Mills of Engaging Alzheimers, LLC; Mark Britton of TellaBoomer Telecare Services; and Sgt. Amery Bernhardt of Project Lifesaver. This program is sponsored by the Westchester County Department of Senior Programs and Services; Alzheimer’s Association; Livable Communities; and the Westchester Public Private Partnership. Business Card Advertising Display your business card in each of our NINE NEWSPAPERS for only $299 for twelve weeks! Reach 150,000 readers per week! Great New Advertising Opportunity from Rising Media Group Reserve your space today! Call Dan at 914-965-4000. PAGE 8 - Yonkers RIsing - Friday, February 26, 2016 Celtic Harp Concert A free family concert of Celtic harp music performed by the Westchester Harp Ensemble will be presented in the Ossie Davis Theater of the New Rochelle Public Library on Sunday, March 13 at 3 p.m. The 12-person harp ensemble will perform a selection of traditional and enchanting music from Ireland. The concert is on a first-come, first-served basis, to the capacity of the 138-seat theater. Directed by harpist Lois Colin, the Westchester Harp Ensemble was founded in 2004 and has performed extensively in Westchester and neighboring communities. The concert is a “BID Family Day” event, made possible by the New Rochelle Downtown Business Improvement District, in conjunction with the New Rochelle Public Library, the city school district and the Department of Parks and Recreation. Chazz Palminteri anniversary. PAL board member Vic Federico said the Yonkers PAL may be the oldest in the country. “We want to do a big event for our 75th anniversary and Chaz has agreed to help,” he said. “This will be a great show.” An anonymous donor has helped with the expenses to put the show on, resulting in most of the proceeds going to the PAL. Tickets will be $200 each and will include dinner, open bar and entertainment. Luxury boxes are priced at $1,000. We will provide more information on how to obtain tickets in the weeks to come, but they will go fast. Contact PAL President Howard Berman at 914-423-8880 if you want to make sure you’re in the building – I’ll be there. Continued from Page 1 ally, and thanks to a friendship between one of Chazz’ closest friends and a member of the Yonkers Police Athletic League, “A Bronx TaleOne Man Show” will be performed as a benefit performance at the Westchester Dinner Theater on May 16. While the show is still months away, we wanted to put in on the radar of our Yonkers readers, and the many who will want to attend the performance while supporting the efforts of the PAL to provide positive alternatives to the youth of Yonkers. The show will also coincide with PAL’s 75th Landmarked & Continued from Page 1 Main St., and 5 Riverdale Ave., are in varying states of condition and the murals present “a fanciful look at the earliest history of the area around the plaza and of the persons and events leading up to present-day Yonkers,” according to the resolution passed by the council. There was little debate over the beauty of the Haas murals. But in order to preserve them, the buildings on which they are featured must also be preserved, and landmarked. One of those properties, at 36 Main St. (owned by Rising Development, the parent company of Yonkers Rising), is in such a state of disrepair that it was condemned by the city’s building department in response to an engineering report by the developers, also on Tuesday. That fact was largely ignored by the majority on the City Council, which approved the landmarking of the Haas murals for all three properties, with the other two owned by Verizon at 5 Riverdale Ave., and a corner property at 35-37 Main St., owned by Gateway Lots Associates. Verizon has also expressed concerns about the landmarking of its property, pointing to an agreement made when it originally purchased the property that it would not be landmarked. Councilmen Mike Breen and Dennis Shepherd voted against the landmarking. “How do you landmark a building (Verizon) that we agreed not to landmark?” asked Breen. “And how do you landmark a building that’s condemned? I voted ‘no’ because there is already an agreement in place with Verizon not to landmark and because it will take a yeoman’s effort to save the other property (36 Main St.)” Shepherd pointed to private property rights and asked if there would be any interest in purchasing properties that have a murals or a sculpture on it every again. The majority of the council spoke in favor of the landmarking: “The preservation community in the City of Yonkers is very active and often takes a role in pointing out some of the treasurers that we sometimes take for granted or maybe even didn’t recognize,” said Council President Liam McLaughlin. “They opened my eyes once before with the Philipse Manor Hall Historic District, but in this case it wasn’t necessary at all. I was on the City Council when we first authorized the money for the murals. At that time, some questioned the expenditures, and when it was done, people were quite frankly speechless. I’m very proud to have supported it then, and I am proud to support it now. The loss of the mural would in fact be a tragedy.” Majority Leader John Larkin added: “I would like to thank the Landmarks Preservation Board, the applicants, Richard Haas as well as the entire preservation community for carrying this issue forward and negotiating in good faith throughout the process. A condemnation does not mean we tear it down – it means we repair and we fix what is wrong.” The three City Council Democrats – Minority Leader Michael Sabatino, Councilman Governor Cuomo Continued from Page 1 on the NYS Thruway, and Whereas Northbound motorists on the NYS Thruway constantly exit the Thruway at Route 100 exit (Central Park Avenue) to avoid paying the toll, and “Whereas, the continuation of tollbooths on the Yonkers portion of the NYS Thruway has long been and continues to be a safety issue, and “Whereas, numerous accidents directly occur due to the horrendous backup and congestion caused on Central Park Avenue and the entrance to the northbound Sprain Parkway entrance, due directly to toll avoidance, and “Whereas, the immediate proximity of Stew Leonard’s Drive and the stores thereof, and Ridge Hill and the stores thereof, causes shopping motorists to seek toll-free routes to these stores causing extraordinary local traffic problems and accidents, and “Whereas, the elimination of the tollbooths Christopher Johnson and Councilwoman Corazon Pineda – all voted for the landmarking and issued the following joint statement after the vote: “In the mid-1990s, the City of Yonkers commissioned artist Richard Haas to create a series of trompe l’oeil murals for several of its downtown buildings. Today, the Richard Haas murals connect us with a ‘downtown of the past’ by reflecting a fanciful look at the earliest history of the area around the plaza and of the persons and events leading up to present-day Yonkers. “Tonight we have heard our constituents’ opinions and concerns in wanting to have the Richard Haas murals preserved and deemed as a historical landmark,” continued the Democrats. “We are happy to have supported, voted (for) and led the effort to landmark the murals – a welcoming piece of art work to all those who enter our city. The murals are an important part of the Yonkers landscape along Riverdale Avenue, reminding everyone of the importance of the Hudson River in the life of the city. We believe it will continue to help with the rebirth and revitalization of downtown Yonkers.” Mayor Mike Spano said: “I am pleased to support the famous Haas murals and plan to sign the legislation landmarking these iconic images portraying Yonkers history. Over the last four years, our city has made great progress in utilizing the arts as way to stimulate the revitalization of our waterfront. For so many residents and visitors, the Hass murals have become the gateway to our downtown and they should be preserved. We will work to encourage the building’s developer to the save the building from the structural issues compromising the murals, so we can protect the artwork as well as the safety of the surrounding community.” There was much discussion both prior to, and during the council meeting about the report from the building department condemning 36 Main St. hours before the council vote. Yonkers Rising has learned that a copy of the report listing the structural dangers of the building, which was sent to all City Council members and Spano, was also sent to the building department, which did not receive the report from the proposed developers of 36 Main. Yonkers Rising has also learned that the building department, on receiving the report on 36 Main St. from someone other than the developer, reviewed the report, inspected the building and issued the condemnation order, based on the serious dilapidated condition of the building. Several council members we spoke to complained about the late date in which they received the report from the owner, which is true. But they had the information before a vote was taken. A lawsuit could be forthcoming in opposition to the council’s decision and the mayor’s expected signature. The Boyce Thompson property referenced above was never condemned and is believed to have been in much better structural condition than 36 Main. on the Yonkers portion of the NYS Thruway would dramatically improve the safety, congestion and associated traffic problems of the local streets, neighborhoods and community, and “Whereas, with the completion of the New Tappan Zee Bridge in 2017, and subsequent bridge toll modifications, lost revenue could be included in the bridge toll “Therefore, be it resolved that the Yonkers City Council calls for Gov. (Andrew) Cuomo and the NYS Thruway Authority to eliminate the toll booths on the Yonkers portion of the NYS Thruway.” (End of resolution.) The Yonkers toll on the NYS Thruway is one of the few remaining in Westchester. Toll booths on the southbound portion of the Saw Mill Parkway in Yonkers, and on the Hutchinson Parkway in Pelham Manor, were removed years ago. With the state flush with billions in additional revenue, some members of the council are hopeful the state will consider the request in this year’s budget proposal. Who Will Be the Next Westchester D.A.? Bruce Bendish By Dan Murphy The office of Westchester County District Attorney still holds the gravitas it had under its most respected and remembered D.A., Carl Vergari, who served from 1968-93. Only three Westchester district attorneys have occupied the post since 68, adding to the luster over who will next serve: Jeanine Pirro 1993-2007, and Janet DiFiore, 2005-15. With DiFiore resigning her post to sit on the New York State Court of Appeals as the chief judge, candidates are stepping forward to run for the county’s top law enforcement post. White Plains resident Bruce Bendish announced his candidacy for Westchester district attorney last week at the Crowne Plaza Hotel. Bendish, the former chief of the Westchester County D.A.’s Office’s Homicide Bureau, plans to utilize his 40 years of legal experience to continue to make Westchester a safe and secure community. He emphasized the need for increased interaction with federal, state and local law enforcement to fight the growing problem of drugs and guns in the community. “The District Attorney’s Office cannot be confined to the four walls of a courtroom,” said Bendish. “We must proactively attack the drug and gun problem, by interacting with our schools to make all students aware of the dangers and consequences they face when making poor decisions.” His program to assist seniors in combating identity theft and his proposal to establish a Veterans’ Court are reasons he believes he is the best suited to be the next district attorney. Bendish also has the connection to Vergari and DiFiore, and will continue the connection and link, which the D.A.’s Office has maintained for more than 45 years. “Having taught and worked with Janet DiFiore, now our chief justice, and having lived in Westchester County for 42 years, Bruce is well equipped to lead the core group of Westchester prosecutors,” he said. “As a non-career politician, he has zero tolerance for political and governmental corruption at any level.” Taught by his mentor, Vergari, the district attorney should be guided by the principle that fairness must be applied to all investigations and prosecutions. As D.A., Bendish will be guided by a doctrine that justice is more important than simple convictions. “There is no Democratic way or Republican way, nor liberal or conservative way to fight crime,” he said. “There is only the fair way. Politics plays no part in the execution of the law.” He will be seeking the republican nomination for the seat. Another Republican has stepped forward to run for D.A. Former Nassau County prosecutor Mitch Benson, who lives in New Rochelle, pointed to his experience outside of Westchester as his bonafides to be the next district attorney. “This is what I’ve been doing for 30 years,” he said. “I’ve dedicated my life to this and the public is receptive to someone who’s qualified, has experience and knows what they’re doing. The opportunity is there for me.” Benson served for 21 years in the Brooklyn D.A.’s Office before becoming the executive assistant district attorney in Nassau from 2014 until recently, when he resigned from his post to run for D.A. Benson has tried many criminal cases, including a few high-profile ones, winning convictions in the homicide cases of police officers in New York City and Nassau. The only announced Democrat for Westchester D.A. is George Fufidio. His biography, from the law firm of Mancuso, Rubin and Fufidio in White Plains, reads: “George Fufidio is Internal Medicine Continued from Page 1 ment to providing quality medical care to our community,” said Michael DiGiorno, DO, FASN, designated institutional official for the residency and nephrologist on staff at St. John’s. “We began formally educating medical students nearly three years ago and with support from the Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine have continuously expanded and honed the program. Our comprehensive curriculum focuses on community-based health care and aligns with the hospital’s mission of service to our community.” “I am proud to be a part of a medical staff Mitch Benson George Fufidio a graduate of Fordham University and received his law degree from the University of Miami. He served as deputy bureau chief of the Homicide and Special Investigations Bureau in the District Attorney’s Office in Westchester County. As a prosecutor, he investigated and tried criminal cases that included murder, robbery and serious drug felonies. “In private practice since 1988, he has represented clients in all criminal law cases, with a focus on white-collar crimes, drug crimes, driving violations, DWI/DUI, confidential corporate investigations, and those with weapons charges. In addition to his criminal defense practice, Mr. Fufidio serves as an administrative law judge in Westchester County and lectures on criminal law at Pace Law School CLE.” Fufidio could face opposition from another Democrat; one name mentioned, who would be formidable to Republicans and Democrats alike, is Anthony Scarpino, former Surrogate Court judge and FBI agent. He is beloved and respected throughout Westchester; the only question is whether Scarpino wants to run, as he recently stepped down from his Surrogate Court post for private practice. The political implications of DiFiore’s appointment should also be mentioned. DiFiore’s top deputy James McCarty is serving as acting D.A.; Gov. Andrew Cuomo could appoint an interim D.A. to serve until a special election is called, or this November’s election could also have the district attorney’s race on the ballot in Westchester. The other “race” on the ballot this November is the office of U.S. president. Democratic turnout is always higher during a presidential election, and could be sky high in Westchester with Hillary Clinton at the top of the ticket. By moving the election to November 2016, Cuomo would also be able to move the D.A.’s race to a presidential election every year moving forward, instead of on the off year that it currently sits, with the county executive and county clerk’s race. While Bendish and Benson are confident they can win a D.A.’s race this November on the Republican line, it has become tougher and tougher for a Republican to win a countywide race if his or her name isn’t “Astorino.” DiFiore, who won her first race as a Republican, switched parties to Democrat, and ran and won as a Democrat in 2009 and 2013. It has been more than 23 years since Vergari was the Westchester district attorney, but his name still looms large over who will be the next D.A. in our county, regardless of political party. that has supported the introduction of resident training in both theory and practice at St. John’s Riverside Hospital,” added Dr. Paul Antonecchia, program director of the residency program and vice president for medical affairs at St. John’s. “We are privileged to have an excellent and diverse team of physicians on our medical staff who are excited to share their expertise and experience with new residents. The addition of resident physicians in internal medicine will reinforce St. John’s reputation as a quality hospital that provides outstanding care to its community.” For more information, visit www.RiversideHealth.org, “like” the hospital on Facebook or follow it on Twitter. FRidAY, FEbRuARY 26, 2016 - YoNkERs RisiNG - PAGE 9 Quinn for the Win Hosts 3-on-3 Hoops Tournament Pat with the winners of the 3-on-3 tournament, G-Ink. Pat with the biggest fundraisers for Quinn for the Win. Pat Quinn with members of the Iona Rugby Team. Jenn and Pat Quinn share a private moment. Photos by Donna Davis By Dan Murphy Pat Quinn is known for quite a many achievements and accomplishments. He helped start last year’s Ice Bucket Challenge, which raised millions to fight Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, which he is fighting every day. Pat is also this year’s grand marshal of the Yonkers St. Patrick’s Day Parade. But Pat is probably best known by his longtime friends for his love of just hanging out and playing basketball. “You all know how much I love basketball,” he said to a group of participants at this year’s third annual Pat Quinn 3-on-3 tournament at the Yonkers PAL. Thirty-two teams participated (it’s always been a 32-team tournament with a waiting list). Rob McCarthy was one of the referees, and Bill Maher makes sure the tournament goes off without a hitch every year. Pat and his nephew Joe Quinn, Debbie and Dennis Keane, Monica Keane and Joe Fava helped keep score. This year’s winning team was G-Ink, who also won the tournament in 2014 and is made up of Pat’s closest friends. Pat played basketball with all of them and if it were another tournament other than Pat’s – he more than likely would have been on their team. G-Ink seems to push a little harder to win Pat’s tournament every year. Pat’s friends from Iona Prep and Iona College always come out and support the tournament, as well. Lavender Caterpillars was the top fundraising team for the second year in a row. Matt Downs was highest individual fundraiser (for the second year in a row), and thanks to Anderson Bennett, Nick Rumunto and Steve Breznicky, the tournament was another success. The guys in the kitchen – Stephen Flynn, Tim Campbell, Nick Bottone, Chris Campbell and Dennis Strnatko – and the girls working the food – Jenn Bottone, Stef Schiavone and Dana Higgins – were also appreciated; as were the donations of food by Burkes Restaurant and Bar. Beer was donated by Yonkers Brewing Co, Nugents Irish Pub and Grill, Tryon Public House of Inwood. This year marked the most obvious change in Pat’s status, which he spoke about with the morning and afternoon players. He was very candid about the physical changes he has undergone in the past two years. The first year of the tournament, Pat could still walk around and move his arms. Last year, he had limited arm movements but was able to slowly walk around the courts. This year sees him in a wheelchair, unable to use his arms and with limited ability to move his legs. His voice may not have the volume of two years ago but “my mind is still sharp,” said Pat. He is very thankful for everyone who was there in big and small ways to help him, Jenn and their families as they go through this transition and continue to spread awareness of ALS. As Jenn says, Pat is very close to his circle of friends from Iona and they are a constant source of help and encouragement. Pat celebrated his birthday Feb. 10 and was surprised with a party on the 13th at Yonkers Brewing Co. God bless you, Pat and Jen Quinn – you are an inspiration to us all. We will see you on McLean for the parade! ShopRite Supermarkets Donates to Maria Fareri From left are Tom Urtz, vice president of operations for ShopRite Supermarkets; Megan Castiglione, shopper advocate at ShopRite of Vails Gate; Vinnie Calabrese, shopper advocate at ShopRite of Middletown; Cathy Grisanti, shopper advocate at ShopRite of New Rochelle; Ryan Powers, shopper advocate at ShopRite of Croton; Meredith Buono, manager of marketing and community relations for the Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital; and Sharbari Bose Kamat, assistant manager of marketing and community relations at Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital. Team members from ShopRite Supermarkets, Inc., recently presented a check for $150,000 to representatives from Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital, a member of the Westchester Medical Center Health Network, and the children’s hospital for the Hudson Valley and Fairfield County. ShopRite stores throughout Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Sullivan, Ulster and Westchester counties collected donations at checkout and hosted in-store activities and events during the month of November to raise funds. Shopper advocates from four of ShopRite’s five top-performing stores that participated in the fundraiser – ShopRite of Vails Gate, Middletown, New Rochelle, Croton and Montague – were onhand to present the donation, which will help support the hospital’s efforts to provide lifesaving and life-changing care to thousands of local children each year, including those in need of open heart surgery, brain surgery, cancer treatment, trauma and burn care, organ transplants and more. PAGE 10 - Yonkers RISING - Friday, February 26, 2016 MLK Jr. Poetry Contest Winners Celebrate at City Hall Mantasha Khan with Deputy Mayor Sue Gerry, family, educators and officials. Photos by Donna Davis Kayla Casanova with family and officials celebrating her winning poem. The winners of this year’s Martin Luther King Jr. poetry contest celebrated their achievement recently in the Council Chambers. Deputy Mayor Sue Gerry, Assemblymember Shelley Mayer and State Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins joined with members of the City Council, educators and the essay winners’ families for the festivities. Angela Lopez-Tucker, a fifth-grader at the PEARLS Hawthorne School; Mantasha Khan, a seventh-grader at Yonkers Middle/High School; and Kayla Casanova, an 11th-grader at Roosevelt High School were this year’s winners. (Yonkers Rising printed their essays in the Feb. 19 issue.) View your favorite paper online ... log on to risingmediagroup.com Angela Lopez-Tucker with her family, YPS educators and elected officials. CHARTER SCHOOL CHARTER OF CHARTER SCHOOL OF CHARTER SCHOOL OF EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE EDUCATIONA EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE A PUBLIC SCHOOL WITH A PRIVATE A PUBLIC SCHOOL SCHOOL SETTINGWITH A PUBLIC SCHOOL WITH A PRIVATE SCHOOL SETTING A PUBLIC SCHOOL WITH A PRIVATE SCHOOL SETTING A SCHOOL WITH A PRIVATE SCHOOL SETTING 260 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, New 260York Warburton 10701 Avenue, A PUBLIC PUBLIC SCHOOL WITH A PRIVATE SCHOOL SETTING 260 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, New York 10701 260 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers,Ext. New18 York 10701914-476-5 914-476-5070 260 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, New 914-476-5070 Ext.New 18 York 260 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, York 10701 10701 914-476-5070 Ext. 1818 914-476-5070 Ext. 914-476-5070 Ext. 18 Visit our website at www.charterschoolofeducationalexcellence.org Visit our website at www.charte Visit our website at www.charterschoolofeducationalexcellence.org Designated as a REWARD SCHOOL FOR 2014 and 2015 by the New YorkDesignated State Department as a REWARD of Education SCHOOL FOR 2014 and Visit our website at www.charterschoolofeducationalexcellence.org Designated as a REWARD SCHOOL FOR 2014 and 2015 by the New York State Department of Education Visit our website at www.charterschoolofeducationalexcellence.org Designated as a REWARD SCHOOL FOR 2014 and 2015 by the New York State Department of Education Visit our website at www.charterschoolofeducationalexcellence.org Designated as a REWARD SCHOOL FOR 2014 and 2015 by the New York State Department of Education Designated as a REWARD SCHOOL FOR 2014 and 2015 by the New York State Department of Education Proudly serving the City of Yonkers Nick Sprayregen, Publisher [email protected] Daniel J. 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POSTMASTER Send address changes to: Rising Media Group, LLC, 25 Warburton Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. 10701 We are accepting new student Weapplications are accepting new student Grades K-8 We are acceptingfor new student applications for Grades K-8 We are accepting new student applications for Grades K-8 SESSIONS We INFORMATIONAL are accepting new student applications for SESSIONS Grades K-8 INFORMATIONAL applications for Grades K-8 INFORMATIONAL SESSIONS • January 26, 2016 at 2:30 p.m. INFORMATIONAL • January 26, 2016 SESSIONS at 2:30 p.m. • INFORMATIONAL January 26, 2016 atSESSIONS 2:30 p.m.p.m. • February 11, 2016 at 5:00 January 11, 26, 2016 2016 at at 5:00 2:30 p.m. p.m. •• February January 26, 2016 2:30 p.m. • • February 2016 atatat 5:00 p.m. March11, 16, 2016 9:30 a.m. February 2016 at 5:00 •• March 16, 11, 2016 at 9:30 a.m.p.m. February 11, 2016 at a.m. 5:00 p.m. • • March 2016 at 9:30 26016, Warburton Avenue • 260 March 16, 2016 at 9:30 a.m. Warburton Yonkers, NY Avenue 10701 •260March 16, NY 2016 at 9:30 a.m. Warburton Avenue Yonkers, 10701 APPLICATION DEADLINE: March 29, 2016 at 4:00 p.m. 260 Warburton Avenue Yonkers, NY 10701 260 Warburton Avenue APPLICATION DEADLINE: March 29, 2016 at 4:00 p.m. Yonkers, NY29, 10701 APPLICATION DEADLINE: March 2016 at 4:00 p.m. Yonkers, NYApril 10701 LOTTERY DATE: 4, 2016 APPLICATION DEADLINE: March 29, 2016 at 4:00 p.m. LOTTERY DATE:March April 29, 4, 2016 APPLICATION DEADLINE: 2016 at 4:00 p.m. For an application or more LOTTERY DATE: April 4, 2016 Forinformation an application or more LOTTERY DATE:please April 4,call 2016 For an application or more LOTTERY DATE: April 4, 2016 information please call For an application or more information please call 914-476-5070 Ext. 18 For an application or call more information please 914-476-5070 Ext. 18 information please 914-476-5070 Ext. call 18 We Estamos are accepting new student aceptando Estamos aceptando applications for aplicaciones para losGrades gradosK-8 K-8 Estamos aceptando aplicaciones para los grados K-8 Estamos aceptando aplicaciones paraINFORMATIVAS los grados K-8 INFORMATIONAL SESSIONS SESIONES Estamos aceptando aplicaciones para los grados SESIONES INFORMATIVAS K-8 aplicaciones los K-8 26 INFORMATIVAS depara enero a lasgrados 2:30 p.m. SESIONES •• January 26, 2016 at 2:30 p.m. •• 26 a las 2:30 p.m. SESIONES INFORMATIVAS 11de deenero febrero a las 5:00 p.m. • 26 de enero a las 2:30 p.m. SESIONES INFORMATIVAS • February 11, 2016 at 5:00 p.m. •• 11 de febrero a las 5:00 p.m. 16 de las 9:30 a.m. 26 febrero de marzo eneroa las aa las 2:30 p.m. • •11 de 5:00 p.m. 26de demarzo enero las 2:30 p.m. ••• 16 aalas 9:30 a.m. March 2016 at 9:30 a.m. 11Warburton de 16, febrero a9:30 las 5:00 p.m. • • 16 de marzo a las a.m. 260 Avenue • 11 de febrero a las 5:00 p.m. • Yonkers, 16 de marzo a las 9:30 a.m. 260 Warburton Avenue 260 Warburton Avenue NY 10701 • Warburton 16 de marzo a las 9:30 a.m. 260 Avenue Yonkers, NY 10701 Yonkers, NYAvenue 10701 260LIMITE Warburton Yonkers, NYPARA 10701 LA FECHA ENTREGAR LA 260 Warburton Avenue APPLICATION DEADLINE: March 29,ES 2016LAat 4:00 p.m. Yonkers, NY 10701 LA FECHA LIMITE PARA ENTREGAR SOLICITUD DEL SORTEO Yonkers, 10701 ES LA LA FECHA LIMITE PARA ENTREGAR SOLICITUD DELNY SORTEO EL DIA 29 DE MARZO A LAS 4:00 p.m. LADIA FECHA LIMITE PARA ENTREGAR LA LOTTERY April 4, 2016 SOLICITUD DELDATE: SORTEO ES EL 29 DE MARZO A LAS 4:00 p.m. LA FECHA LIMITEDEL PARA ENTREGAR LA SOLICITUD SORTEO ES EL DIA DEFor MARZO A LAS 4:00 p.m. EL LA 29 LOTERIA SEapplication LLEVARA AorCABO an more SOLICITUD DEL SORTEO ES EL EL DIA 29 DE MARZO LAS 4:00 LA LOTERIA LLEVARA A 2016 CABO DIA 4 SE DE ABRIL A DEL information please callELp.m. DIA 29 DE MARZO A LAS 4:00 p.m. LAEL LOTERIA SE LLEVARA A CABO DIAobtener 4 DE ABRIL DEL 2016 Para informacion llame LADIA LOTERIA SE LLEVARA A CABOalEL 4 DE ABRIL DEL 2016 Para obtener informacion llame al LA LOTERIA SE LLEVARA AExt. CABO 914-476-5070 18EL DIA 4 informacion DE ABRIL DEL 2016 Ext. 18 Para 914-476-5070 obtener llame al DIA 4 DE ABRIL DEL 914-476-5070 Ext.2016 18 al Para obtener informacion llame 914-476-5070 Ext. 18 Para obtener informacion llame al 18 Ext. 18 “We 914-476-5070 aim to inspire,Ext. motivate and instill a love“We for914-476-5070 learning aim to inspire, in all children” motivate and in 914-476-5070 Ext. 18 914-476-5070 Ext. 18 “We aim to inspire, motivate and instill a love for learning in all children” “We aim to inspire, motivate and instill a love for learning in all children” “We aim to inspire, motivate and instill a love for learning in all children” “We aim to inspire, motivate and instill a love for learning in all children”