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The Inside Press

It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing)*

April 20, 2014 by The Inside Press

jazz-playerIn the 1930’s, Armonk was one hip hamlet. Though America was 
in the midst of the Great Depression, Armonk’s merchants were busy. Crowds of tourists drove in their Studebakers, Fords and Cadillacs from New York City and beyond to eat, drink and dance their worries away in this remote corner of the county.

Over a dozen restaurants, bars and dance halls flourished back then. The Armonk police were called at all hours of the night by reveling couples who, on the spur of the moment, decided they wanted to wed and needed the appropriate official to do so. Now the epitome of “family-oriented,” Armonk had, back then, earned the moniker “Sin City.”

Small, but never small-time, Armonk’s largest draw was The Log Cabin. Live bands featuring musicians like Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa and Doris Day regularly performed for up to 1500 patrons at a time. The floors of the Log Cabin creaked and moaned as music poured across neighboring farmland and orchards. Five cents for a hot dog, or ten cents for a hamburger, was all it took to enjoy an entire night of listening and dancing to the best live Big Band music the world had to offer.

With its illustrious past and handsome new infrastructure, Armonk is ripe for an old-fashioned revival. Downtown’s appealing new landscape provides ample gathering places and spaces for people to socialize. The stage is set.

“Swing” may be just the symbol or guiding image we need to pay respect to Armonk’s roots while ushering in a new era. With its driving intensity and abandon, Swing represented freedom and pleasure amidst the financial hardships of the 30’s. It also served
to ease the social tension of the era; men, women, young, old, black, white all danced the Swing. Everyone, figuratively and literally, was on the 
same footing!

Swing brought tolerance, mutual respect, and cooperation. It was grown by individuals who were able to suspend judgment and incorporate new sounds from diverse musical lineages. While the Great Depression was devastating, it also forced people to turn to what economists and others now call “social capital”.

Social capital, as distinguished from money or material goods, is an under-recognized but vital component of a healthy community. It is goodwill, fellowship, empathy and concern for others. It bonds people together. Data have found that communities high in social capital have children with fewer emotional disturbances and an adult population with a lower incidence of heart disease and a greater life expectancy than matched communities rated low on social capital.

In his books, articles and TED talks, contemporary writer and philosopher Alain De Botton reports that one of the losses modern society feels most keenly is the loss of a sense of community: “We imagine that where there once was neighborliness, there is now a ruthless anonymity, characterized by pursuit of contact with others for purely individualistic gains.” As we’ve become increasingly secular, many have switched worship of God to worship of professional success. “What do you do?” is our way of introduction in new social groups; the answer can determine acceptance or marginalization by the community.

It is no surprise, then, that we throw ourselves with a vengeance into our careers. Focusing on work
to the exclusion of almost everything else feels necessary–not only for 
financial security, but to thrive psychologically.

Demonstrating kindness, acceptance, acknowledgement, and appreciation in small ways to those we encounter in our community (and noticing when others do so to us) is what creates social capital. The feeling that one “belongs” in a group, is a valued member in his or her community, fills an essential human need. Small increases in social capital may help us to work a little less feverishly while becoming healthier, more productive and happier…not a bad equation.

Armonk’s revival has begun. The stage is set. A small swing in investment toward social capital and this town will be rocking.

*Music by Duke Ellington, lyrics by Irving Mills

Dr. Rachel Levy-Lombara, an Armonk resident, mom, and licensed Clinical 
Psychologist, uses evidence-based approaches along with a focus on identifying and nurturing a client’s strengths and genius to help people “swing’”from surviving to thriving. She practices in Chappaqua and can be contacted at DrLevyLombara@aol.com.

Filed Under: Et Cetera Tagged With: Inside Armonk, Jazz, Swing

Westchester Medical Center 35th Annual Gala

April 20, 2014 by The Inside Press

westmedgalaWestchester Medical Center (WMC) recently announced that the 35th Annual Medical Center Gala will be held on June 7, 2014. The black tie event, the medical center’s largest annual fundraiser, will be held this year at the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx, N.Y. and will honor outstanding Physicians and pay tribute to local community partners.

This year as in the past, the Annual Gala will help to raise funds for the Westchester Medical Center Foundation a 501 (c) (3) which through philanthropic endeavors, supports the mission of the Medical Center, the Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital and the Behavioral Health Center.

For more information on tickets and sponsorship opportunities please call 914-493-5414, e-mail teglask@wcmc.com or visit www.westchestermedicalcenter.com/gala

Filed Under: Happenings

Manhattanville College Graduate Open House

April 18, 2014 by The Inside Press

Thursday, May 8, 2014


PrintManhattanville College Graduate Open House:
This free information session will provide an overview of Manhattanville’s graduate business programs, advanced certificates and what to expect when applying and enrolled. Find out why now is the perfect time to earn a graduate degree. Prospective students will be given the opportunity to meet with program directors, admissions staff, and representatives from student services, as well as current students. A live, interactive Q&A session will follow the formal presentation. Thursday, May 8, 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. Reid Castle at Manhattanville College, 2900 Purchase St., Purchase, NY. RSVP to www.mville.edu/gps. For more information, email GPSadmissions@mville.edu or call 914-323-5150.

 

Filed Under: Happenings

Free Family Concert in Armonk

April 15, 2014 by The Inside Press

musicwestOn Sunday, April 27 at 2 p.m., Music Conservatory of Westchester will present a free concert at the North Castle Public Library’s Whippoorwill Hall featuring works by Beethoven, Bach, and more.  This will be an entertaining and educational concert for the whole family. Free.

For more information, contact the Conservatory at info@musiced.org

Filed Under: Happenings

Why Bedford Street Fire was Fought from the Outside

April 12, 2014 by The Inside Press

Photo by Marianne A. Campolongo
Photo by Marianne A. Campolongo

By Marianne A. Campolongo

As firefighters arrived on the scene of a fire at 91 Bedford Road in the wee hours of Friday morning, “we were met with an unusually large amount of fire,” said First Assistant Fire Chief Russell Maitland. All seven residents had escaped unharmed when first responders arrived on the scene at 1:09 AM, after receiving the call at the nearby firehouse a minute earlier, according to Maitland. Although there were no injuries, fire destroyed the building, leaving the residents homeless and the Whispering Pines Flower Shop, the building’s commercial tenant, in need of a new location.

Our volunteer firefighters from Chappaqua and Millwood worked throughout the night alongside neighboring crews from Mt. Kisco and Pleasantville to put out the fire. At times the smoke was so thick it nearly obscured the dedicated men and women who were still working as dawn broke hours later to quell the blaze. In fact, like some other nearby residents, it was the smell of smoke being borne on heavy winds that first alerted me to the fire.

Due to the volume of the fire and attendant structural damage to the building, they made a conscious decision to fight the fire from the outside, which takes longer but poses less risk of injury or death, said Maitland. “We operate on a risk benefit analysis. Knowing that everyone was outside of the building and that the damage meant it was likely going to be torn down we chose to employ a defensive strategy and fought the fire from the exterior of the building. There were certain collapses inside the structure and we knew at that point it was a loss so we approached it from the exterior rather than the interior in order not to risk people’s lives,” he said.

The fire was not officially brought “under control” until 5:18 AM, and firefighters didn’t leave the scene until 7:30 AM, said Maitland.

NEIGHBORS HELPING NEIGHBORS

Chief Maitland estimated there were about 40 to 50 firefighters on the scene, working in 15-minute shifts “Firefighting is a labor intensive endeavor,” he said, explaining that firefighters need rehab after each shift before heading back to continue fighting the fire, and that “for every two men fighting the fire, two must be on hand to rescue them.” Neighboring Pleasantville Ambulance Corps was there to rehab the firefighters; the Chappaqua Volunteer Ambulance Corps stood ready to transport injured firefighters.  No firefighters were injured.

Filed Under: New Castle News

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