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The Inside Press

Flexible and Trained Staff at Play Care

January 29, 2013 by The Inside Press

playcareSERVICES: Preschool, Baby Care, Lunch Care, Extended Day, Enrichment Programs

GREATEST STRENGTHS: Only Preschool in Chappaqua with a truly flexible schedule. Choose any combination of days: morning or afternoon. Music, Science, and Creative Movement classes offered in addition to general academics. Large shaded outdoor playground with new equipment. Convenient location and easy parking. Licensed by the New York State Office of Children and Family Services. All staff are CPR trained and an RN is on Staff.

SPECIAL PLANS: Early morning drop-off, additional after hours enrichment classes such as art, science and cooking. Visits by a petting zoo, Ranger Rick, Maritime Aquarium, Fire Department, etc. Call with any questions. Registration is now in progress.

Play Care
DIRECTOR: Carol Cleary
IN BUSINESS SINCE: 1971
www.playcarepreschool.com

Filed Under: Merchant Profiles

Bilotta Kitchens

January 29, 2013 by The Inside Press

bilottaPRODUCTS AND SERVICES:  Custom cabinetry design; cabinetry for any room in the home–kitchens, baths, 
libraries, wine cellars and more.

Background: Bilotta Kitchens, a leader in the custom cabinet industry, creates hundreds of elegant living spaces for the entire home year after year. Starting with a custom mill shop owned by Jim Bilotta, Sr. in 1955, Bilotta evolved to open its first showroom in 1985 in Mamaroneck. Bilotta is one of the most respected American firms of its kind, renowned for its exquisite product and unrivaled service. Their award-winning designers are unmatched in the industry for the talent, passion and dedication they bring to each project. They create kitchens, bathrooms, libraries, and more, and their designs range from very traditional to ultra contemporary and everything in between. With an unparalleled reputation for excellent service, Bilotta is still family-owned and operated today with three showrooms in the tri-state area.

Greatest Strengths: Our variety of product–both in style and price-point; our talented, award-winning design team; our owners who are hands-on with every aspect of the day-to-day business; our behind-the-scenes staff who really excel at all aspects of the industry from engineering to construction and more.

Proudest Moment: Our proudest moments are when we give back to the community. For years we have supported charities such as Friends of Karen in Purdys, The Vincent G. Halloran Memorial Fund in North Salem, Kips Bay and Camp Clio in New York City, and the Children’s Storefront School in Harlem – all charities focused on improving the quality of life for children.

SALES & EVENTS:  Don’t forget to take advantage of our sale, now going on through March 15th–35% to 50% off custom and semi-custom cabinetry with a copy of our ad. Call 914-242-1022 for more info. Also, check back in with us for details on “Design Your Own Dream Kitchen Day,” an all-day meet-the-experts open house for people interested in re-doing their kitchens.

Bilotta Kitchens
PROPRIETORS: Bilotta Kitchens
IN BUSINESS SINCE: 1985
www.bilotta.com

Filed Under: Merchant Profiles

Surrounded by Love

January 29, 2013 by The Inside Press

By Miriam Longobardi

Gone is the innocence with which most of us used to go about our daily lives, secure in the routines of going to work or school. Nobody used to leave for work imagining that someone might intentionally fly a plane into their office building or that when your children leave for school you will kiss them good-bye for the last time.  Sadly violence has become too common in the least likely of places–schools, shopping malls, movie theaters, restaurants, and the list goes on.

As an elementary school teacher the tragedy in Sandy Hook struck close to home for me.  They were a group of staff and children going about their day when the unimaginable happened.  Although I now teach fourth grade, I taught kindergarten and first grade for 19 years, the ages of most of the children that died.

Envisioning the terror those people endured, children and adults alike, either in their final moments or those who survived, is still a mental image I cannot lose.

As teachers we spend several hours each day with our students, and in the primary grades those children need a lot of TLC that goes beyond the curriculum.  In the midst of chaos and panic, all of those teachers, administrators and staff maintained a presence of mind to calm the children, as well as to guard, comfort and protect them.  Whether or not they had children of their own, those teachers and staff members stepped into a parental-type role and, when there was nothing more to be physically done to keep them safe, they surrounded those children with love.

Although their actions were heroic and in many instances life-saving, heroism was not the motivating force. Protecting the children is instinctive. The bond between teachers and students during the course of a school year is what makes many of us in the profession feel that teaching is a calling. Those little faces turning earnestly to you throughout each day with their joys, hurts, giggles and injustices makes teaching much more than simply a job. Yes, there is the rigorous curriculum to teach but school is very much about the interpersonal relationships that develop between students and teachers as much as academic instruction.

School communities are like a giant family.  Even students not in my class are familiar to me and I feel a lasting connection with my former students when I see them.  The Sandy Hook staff that will now move forward with determination, courage and professionalism when a large part of their “family” is forever missing is also heroic.

Miriam Longobardi is a freelance writer, fourth grade teacher and single mother of two daughters living in Westchester.  
A breast cancer survivor, she also volunteers for the American Cancer Society and has completed four marathons.  Also, check out her weekly New York Modern Love column  at Examiner.com.

An Outpouring of Community Support

A late December event at McGuires in Newtown brought many Westchester and Connecticutresidents together to raise funds for families affected by the tragedy. The Sandy HookFamily Fund co/ Wells Fargo of Newtown accepted a check for $2000. Newtown MemorialFund co/ Savings Bank of Danbury accepted a check for $1677.77. (Special thanks to RyanCummins and to Lori Gmuer Graves for supplying information and pictures to Inside Chappaquaand for all their work with this event.)
A late December event at McGuires in Newtown brought many Westchester and Connecticut residents together to raise funds for families affected by the tragedy. The Sandy Hook Family Fund co/ Wells Fargo of Newtown accepted a check for $2000. Newtown Memorial Fund co/ Savings Bank of Danbury accepted a check for $1677.77. (Special thanks to Ryan Cummins and to Lori Gmuer Graves for supplying information and pictures to Inside Chappaqua and for all their work with this event.)

Now, in the wake of the tragedy, people from around the world are reaching out to that grieving community with an outpouring of love and support.  Our sense of community toward Newtown extends beyond the county, state or country boundaries as we connect with them as parents, educators, and people from all walks of life, all trying to extend a healing gesture of some sort.  There is a warehouse full of items that have been donated and volunteers are needed to help sort, organize and distribute these items.

Additionally there are many free counseling organizations that need monetary support.  If you would like to get involved and volunteer or donate, below are websites to point you in the right direction.  Meanwhile, let us hope that gun control laws will be changed and tragedies of this magnitude can be prevented.

Organizations accepting donations:

  • Donors Choose
    donorschoose.org/newtown 
  • Sandy Hook School Support  Fund
    uwwesternct.org/sandyhook
  • Newtown Youth and  Family Services
    newtownyouthandfamilyservices.org/index.php
  • Newtown Memorial Fund
    newtownmemorialfund.org
  • Newtown Parent Connection
    newtownparentconnection.org

Filed Under: Inside Thoughts

One Brunette, One Redhead: A Tribute to Lady, Our Dog.

January 29, 2013 by The Inside Press

Seth & Lady.
Seth & Lady.

By Jane Genende

On a typical day, Steven and I would accompany Mom on her errands. We might be waiting for a light to change at a street corner when someone would inevitably stop to look at us and say, “Oh, what a beautiful baby. Where did he get such beautiful red hair?”

Strangers would never fail to notice the cute little red head but not the brunette little girl standing right next to him. I would begin to feel myself shrink and get really angry. I  Wondered why people had to make comments about Steven’s hair? The streetlight would change from red to green, and these brief encounters would end.

Years later, when I was pregnant with Emily, our first child, Jack and I thought she might have red hair but she is actually a brunette, like me. Our second child, Seth, was born with, that all too familiar, strawberry-blonde shade of red hair.

Unbelievably, the phenomenon that I had experienced so long ago and had forgotten, reemerged. I would be with my children waiting for a green light at a street corner and someone would invariably make that familiar remark, “What a beautiful baby. Where did he get such beautiful red hair?”

Instead of being the little girl I was now the mother in this new version of the old scenario. As time went on Seth grew annoyed asking, “Why do people care about my hair color?” He did not like the fact that he was the only one in our immediate family with red hair. “Why am I the only person in the family with red hair?  I should have a brother or sister who has red hair like mine.” Emily reacted to these encounters nonverbally. She would roll her eyes, and cluck her tongue. When it happened we would look at each other knowingly and say, “Here we go again.”

It seemed to me that the fates must have a sense of humor to impose this particular pattern upon us once again. Two generations of a mom, a sister and brother, past and present, converging around a laughable twist of fate.

After we moved to a house in the suburbs, Seth began a determined plea for a dog.

“I need a dog!”  “I want a dog!”

At some point during this period of time, I learned of a program in which seeing-eye dogs in training become ‘released’ for adoption to the general public if they do not pass the various tests to qualify as a working dog. Had I found an answer to Seth’s quest for a dog? If we could get a one or two-year-old ‘release dog’ already trained and healthy that might work for us. We contacted organizations for the blind and got on waiting lists. We began to get calls about dogs available for adoption.

The first of several options was a two-year-old dog named Lady. I didn’t like the name at first and that was a bit of a strike against her. She was described as a mix between a Golden/ Labrador Retriever. The issue causing her to be released from the seeing-eye dog program was her difficulty adapting to the special leash/harness they wear. Was this, strike two strikes against her? We were told that she had a tendency to chase after chipmunks & squirrels. It seems her instinct to retrieve was stronger than any desire to please her trainers and become a working dog. Was this, strike three?

On the positive side she was trained and we were told she would make a perfect family pet so long as we had a fenced in backyard. The scales tipped in her favor when we inquired about her coloring and appearance. Lady had the short hair of a Labrador, and they described her as having,  “… a strawberry-blonde coat.” We decided to pursue her adoption. When Jack brought Lady home I couldn’t believe I was looking at that familiar shade of hair, on a dog! Somehow Lady was meant to be ours.

Seth came home and we surprised him with the dog. When he saw her he blinked back tears and cleared his throat, straining to appear composed. He began petting the dog, as we told him, “Her name is Lady and we adopted her, she is ours.”

Seth responded,  “I can’t believe you got a dog for me. Is she really ours to keep?”

“Yes she is.” We answered happily.

Emily was nonchalant, “What is with you people, why did we need to get a dog and such a big one?”

Then my son made his final comment and captured the essence of the moment.

“Look, I can’t believe it, her hair is the exact same color as mine. Finally someone in this family has red hair like me!”

You would think this was the end of the story, but it seems the fates were not through with this particular theme in our lives.

I often found myself home alone with Lady. She’d rest beside me, sitting at my feet, as I sat and wrote at my computer. We would often go for long walks, one brunette and one red head and guess what happened…?  Who do you think got all the attention, and what do you suppose they said?

The 12 years that Lady was a part of our lives was an unexpected and precious gift. She loved to go for long walks, swim, catch tennis balls and chase squirrels. Although her hair had turned grey and lighter with age she will always remain our beautiful red haired Lady. She was a wonderful addition to our family who lived a long, happy life and she will be missed.

Chappaqua resident Jane Genende, a Psychotherapist in private practice in New York City, is the author of “The Lost Tribe of the Andes: A Jewish-American Family’s Struggle with Assimilation.”

Filed Under: Inside Thoughts

Still Lovin’ It

January 29, 2013 by The Inside Press

graceWith the latest edition, Inside Chappaqua Magazine is proud to present its 5th Annual Merchant Profiles which encourage patronage of local shops to help keep a local economy vibrant and thriving. You can find those shops on the profiles page. Here’s Inside Chappaqua’s very own “profile” too…

PRODUCTS AND SERVICES:  Six to eight issues of Inside Chappaqua (“IC”) Magazine are produced each year and mailed to some 10,000 area households and businesses, on time, every time according to a production schedule we religiously abide by! That’s up from a 6,000 piece mailing just one year ago–when  we simply decided to share the love even more (so a special welcome to all the “newest” IC readers out there!)  The magazine thrives thanks to some wonderful key team members:  my associate Carine Feist, designer Dina Spalvieri and new web designer Annette van Ommeren, and  a great team of talented  freelance contributors; you know who you are!  A special nod of appreciation to the folks up at Cummings Printing in Hooksett, NH, for the fine printing and mailing jobs too!
Very important!

Finally, the magazine’s news and features are made possible, year after year, due to the generosity of year-round sponsors, many  finely represented in this Fifth Annual Merchant Profiles Feb. edition that always focuses on Love, this time, as one example, via contributor Sarah Ellen Rindsberg’s cover story on Gray Williams–his love for the town and its rich history are quite evident, I’d say!  I also appreciate many of YOU who generously support a “free” magazine with a voluntary or gift subscription from time to time.  See lower left for how to subscribe too and keep supporting a small print shop. Trust me when I tell you that every vote of confidence and dollar contribution helps! I value each and every one of you enormously and would like you to know how I feel about my job: Still lovin’ it!

GREATEST STRENGTHS: Perseverance, continuity and enthusiasm.  I’m particularly proud this year of Inside Chappaqua’s  “Travels with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to Africa and Turkey” edition in November.  To say that she empowered me by so obviously valuing coverage inside her hometown magazine would be a serious understatement.

All of us at IC wish Madame Secretary all the best in her new beginnings, post her much lauded tenure serving this country.  I’d like to also point out IC’s  near daily social media presence by yours truly, with now well over 1600 visitors at press time who have liked the Inside Chappaqua Magazine Facebook page (it really “took off” while I was posting from Africa and Turkey!)  which links to Twitter and Linked In accounts, thus increasing the visibility of the print and online editions of the magazine–and all the sponsor spots.

SPECIAL PLANS: The Magazine, which was launched in the spring of 2003, is proudly approaching its official 10th year anniversary this March and  I personally look forward to celebrating that milestone with family, friends, contributors and sponsors alike very soon at a favorite Chappaqua institution, Crabtree’s Kittle House.

Happy Valentine’s Day!
Grace

Filed Under: Just Between Us

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