• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

The Inside Press

Magazines serving the communities of Northern Westchester

  • Home
  • Cover Stories
  • Features
    • Portraits and Profiles
  • Advertorials
    • Lifestyles with our Sponsors
    • Sponsor News!
  • Wellness
  • Happenings
  • Advertise
    • Advertise in One or All of our Magazines–And/Or Subscribe
    • Advertising Payment Form
  • Contact Us
  • Search

The Inside Press

Growing Up Greeley

March 7, 2014 by The Inside Press

By Tim Bloom

pastedGraphic_1I have lived in Chappaqua my entire life, except for eight summers in Maine and one in China. I loved growing up here, given the beauty of the town, the cohesiveness of the community and the myriad opportunities to do almost anything. There were times, mostly in recent years, where I felt how small Chappaqua is and how insulated we are from what life is really like “out there.” But, that doesn’t mean I didn’t have some defining moments, mostly thanks to some influential figures I had the good fortune to encounter along the way.

Now that I am in college, I can see what a great education I got here; from a terrific kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Kane, at Roaring Brook, to one of my favorite instructors at Seven Bridges,  Mr. Knisely, who taught me how to write and do research. At Greeley I learned how to learn. I also learned how to ask the right questions, but most importantly, I learned how to advocate for myself, and to speak up if something seemed unfair, unethical or just plain wrong. I think it’s hard for some to do that sometimes because the ramifications for speaking up can be significant, but it doesn’t mean we shouldn’t.

There is a sense here that the stakes are high in everything kids do. While that may be true, I am glad I was allowed to screw up sometimes and didn’t always have a backup plan. If we get rescued every time we mess up, we are doomed to repeat those mistakes. There is a lot of pressure on us to always do well, but sometimes that just isn’t possible.  I hope parents let their kids fail sometimes because that is how we learn how not to fail the next time.

tim-babyI played baseball, soccer and eventually football here and was lucky enough to have played for the legendary Bill Tribou at Greeley. He always expected the best from us, and he was a big influence on my determination to always try my hardest at everything I undertake.  I also benefited enormously from joining the Chappaqua Fire Department. I believe real community service should be in one’s community or at least close to it. Being a volunteer firefighter has been one of the highlights for me of growing up here. I don’t think it’s for everyone, but it is a meaningful way to help my friends, neighbors and community.

I am now at a university that is many, many times larger than Greeley and I live in a big city for the first time in my life. I play in the band, am pledging a fraternity, and am on the business staff of a professional theatre company celebrating its 125th year. While it’s exciting and a lot of fun, I appreciate having grown up in a beautiful small town, and having received an education that prepared me very well for college. Don’t know where I will end up living, but I do know how lucky I am to have spent my first 18 years growing up in Chappaqua.

Tim Bloom, HGHS Class of 2013, was Student Council President, a recipient of the Chappaqua Rotary’s Jill Goodman Service award. Tim is a first year student at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is studying Political Science and is a member of the business staff of Mask and Wig Club.  

Filed Under: Inside Thoughts Tagged With: College, education, school, sports

Consulting For A Cause: A Great CHOICE

March 7, 2014 by The Inside Press

Matt Daly
Matt Daly

By Matthew Daly, CFC Intern

With Valentine’s Day come and gone, we are left with memories of love lost, roses by the dozen, and heart-shaped chocolate boxes. For Paula Barbag and her Consulting For A Cause (CFC) Team, however, the spirit of love, passion, and devotion extends year round. CFC, as the firm is known within the fundraising world, has operated under the premise of care-based prosperity since its inception in 2012. Within the past twelve months, 2013’s New Business of the Year helped to spread the love within the greater Westchester area by providing vital consulting services to the organizations that need them the most.

“Consulting For A Cause has become our lifeline to new strategies and approaches.” Such are the words of Guy Fessenden, CFC’s first client. In October of 2010, Fessenden brought an end to his lucrative IT career so he could run from Savannah, Georgia to Santa Monica, California–all to raise awareness for mental illness. Fessenden now works alongside his daughter Suzanne, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia at age 16, as the Executive Director of C.H.O.I.C.E. of New Rochelle. C.H.O.I.C.E. (Consumers Helping Others in a Caring Environment) is a nonprofit organization that provides case management, advocacy, and homeless outreach services to those afflicted with mental illness.

The two year relationship shared between CFC and C.H.O.I.C.E. has undoubtedly helped to accelerate programmatic development within the latter organization. Most recently, CFC helped to raise $20,000 for C.H.O.I.C.E. with a fundraising art exhibit hosted by internationally renowned pop artist Charles Fazzino.

The event, which featured artwork drawn by C.H.O.I.C.E. clients, served as a medium through which the isolation and loneliness felt each day by those with mentally illness could be expressed. Fessenden’s latest project, Share The Light, is a grass roots organization that hopes to dismantle the negative stigmas currently associated with mental illness in contemporary society.

Matthew Daly is a junior at William and Mary College and a graduate of Horace Greeley High School. For more information about Consulting For A Cause, visit wwwconsultingforacause.com or contact Paula Barbag at 914 238-2199.  

Filed Under: Sponsor News! Tagged With: Consulting For A Cause, fundraising

20 Years of Supporting our Schools: 20th Annual Benefit

March 7, 2014 by The Inside Press

chap-school-founationsCome and support public education in Chappaqua at the Chappaqua School Foundation’s 20th Annual Spring Benefit
 at Trump National Golf Club in Briarcliff Manor on Friday April 25 at 7 p.m.  Join your friends and neighbors for a casual evening (yes- you can wear jeans!) featuring a fabulous and informative showcase of grants in action presented by students and faculty, extensive silent auction, raffle, great food and great company.  As an added bonus, your Benefit ticket purchase also provides you with an all-access pass to Spring Madness–more than a month of discounts and special offers from a large number of participating local merchants.

The annual Spring Benefit is CSF’s biggest fundraiser. Bring your friends and be part of a special evening in support of our schools.

About CSF

The Chappaqua School Foundation was founded 20 years ago with a simple mission: to enhance the education of Chappaqua’s students by funding meaningful initiatives beyond the scope of the school budget.   Since that time, CSF has funded over 200 grants providing nearly $2 million in resources to support innovative programs spanning all curricular areas and all grade levels in all six schools. CSF continues to build a strong partnership with our school district to ensure that there are exciting possibilities for long-term innovation and improvement in teaching and learning, while also allowing our District to maintain its foundation of academic excellence. This collaboration between our school district and CSF fosters innovative projects, such as the iLab, that might not be possible elsewhere without such strong community support. CSF also remains committed to working with teachers with creative educational ideas by funding learning programs that engage our students while increasing their potential for intellectual curiosity and academic excellence and which impact your children’s learning every day.

CSF’s fundraising efforts make it possible for Chappaqua schools to continue to undertake innovative programming and to pilot new teaching tools and methods in classrooms despite the financial pressures impacting our school budget. As our District continues to wrestle with hard decisions necessitated by challenging financial times, our community needs to ensure that our schools and our students have access to cutting edge learning technology and educational innovation.  Now more than ever, CSF and the continued generosity of our community are critical to maintaining the quality of education our Chappaqua students deserve.

For a comprehensive list of CSF grants to the schools 
and more information about the Spring Benefit and 
Spring  Madness, please visit the CSF website at 
www.chappaquaschoolfoundation.org.

Filed Under: Happenings Tagged With: Chappaqua School Foundation, fundraising, spring benefit

The Greeley Gallery

March 7, 2014 by The Inside Press

Stephen Ku “Fracture”
Stephen Ku “Fracture”

Intro by Stephen Ku

The talent of Greeley’s art department is at once distinct and indistinct.  It, by its very nature, is one of the many examples of the students and their successes as being part of the school.  Students who have matriculated in this department make it a goal of theirs to refine their work to a stage where it is representative of their commitment. What results is a slew of creative works [here we highlight Greeley Seniors] that have the capacity to confound  and inspire other students to imagine and develop their own work.

At times it may seem as though there is an aim to score higher than others with one’s assignments; however, this presupposition is, essentially, irrelevant because it is counter-productive to think of drawings as one would a test or evaluation.  The only direct correlation between the two is that they require one to place lines, whether it be with pen or ink, on a page. It is with this mind set of individuation that seems to perpetuate the growth of individual work.  Work that addresses subject matter ranging from absurdist humor to dynamic compositions of hands and feet to self-consciousness to childhood tales with a plot twist. In just the same way that we strive to develop our proficiency in conventional academics, there is a similar effort in the art department.

I, myself, have only recently endeavored to advance myself in this area having begun in a physical three-dimensional plane and now finding myself spending more time in a physically two-dimensional plane that has the capacity to express three dimensions.

 

anxiety
ari-bennett-work
found-objects-angela-sun
fracture-16
illumination
Ocular-Migraine
pearce_portfolio_01

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts Tagged With: Fine art, gallery

Valentine’s Day, 2014: Snow Art!

March 7, 2014 by The Inside Press

Following a Houlihan Lawrence office contest inviting staff to submit their favorite snow scene or snowman picture, “Snowy Peter,” a skiing snowman built by the Kimtis family won (submitted to IC by mom, Karen).
Following a Houlihan Lawrence office contest inviting staff to submit their favorite snow scene or snowman picture, “Snowy Peter,” a skiing snowman built by the Kimtis family won (submitted to IC by mom, Karen).

Getting plastered with mounds and mounds of thigh high fine soft snow on Valentine’s Day might have caused municipal and school headaches galore (including using up the allotted number of school closings), but it just brought out the snow artist in others. A call on Facebook for snow art submissions brought many works to our attention! Here’s a sampling.

Snow Igloo: By the Hessert boys of Chappaqua.
Snow Igloo: By the Hessert boys of Chappaqua.
Mr. Snow hears of the upcoming snow storm! By Colin, Liam & Ayden Dunne
Mr. Snow hears of the upcoming snow storm! By Colin, Liam & Ayden Dunne
Snow Dog by Katie Kim, a senior at Horace Greeley High School
Snow Dog by Katie Kim, a senior at Horace Greeley High School
“Snowman” by second grader Ava Fleisher
“Snowman” by second grader Ava Fleisher

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: In and Around Town Tagged With: igloo, snow, winter 2014

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 60
  • Page 61
  • Page 62
  • Page 63
  • Page 64
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 238
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Please Visit

White Plains Hospital
William Raveis – Armonk
William Raveis – Chappaqua
Northwell Hospital
Houlihan Lawrence – Chappaqua
Houlihan Lawrence – Armonk
Houlihan Lawrence – Briarcliff
NYOMIS – Dr. Andrew Horowitz
Westchester Table Tennis Center
Spavia
Compass: Miller Goldenberg Harris Team
Lipari & Mangiameli Dentistry
Raveis: Lisa Koh and Allison Coviello
Bristal Assisted Living
Maid Brigade
Kevin Roberts Painting & Design
Zwilling J. A. Henckels
Meagher & Meagher Attorneys at Law
Compass: Aurora Banaszek
Dr. Briones Medical Weight Loss Center
Roamfurther Athletics
Fleetwood Pastry Shop
World Cup Gymnastics
Decicco and Sons
Beascakes Bakery
Joseph Richard Florals
Breathe Pilates and Yoga
Carolyn Simpson (Doublevision Photographers)

Follow our Social Media

The Inside Press

Our Latest Issues

For a full reading of our current edition, or to obtain a copy or subscription, please contact us.

Inside Pleasantville and Briarcliff Manor Inside Chappaqua and Millwood Inside Armonk

Join Our Mailing List


Search Inside Press

Links

  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Subscription
  • Print Subscription

Publisher’s Note Regarding Our Valued Sponsors

Inside Press is not responsible for and does not necessarily endorse or not endorse any advertisers, products or resources referenced in either sponsor-driven stories or in advertisements appearing in this publication. The Inside Press shall not be liable to any party as a result of any information, services or resources made available through this publication.The Inside Press is published in good faith and cannot be held responsible for any inaccuracies in advertising or sponsor driven stories that appear in this publication. The views of advertisers and contributors are not necessarily those of the publisher’s.

Opinions and information presented in all Inside Press articles, such as in the arena of health and medicine, strictly reflect the experiences, expertise and/or views of those interviewed, and are not necessarily recommended or endorsed by the Inside Press. Please consult your own doctor for diagnosis and/or treatment.

Footer

Support The Inside Press

Advertising

Print Subscription

Digital Subscription

Categories

Archives

Subscribe

Did you know you can subscribe anytime to our print editions?

Voluntary subscriptions are most welcome, if you've moved outside the area, or a subscription is a great present idea for an elderly parent, for a neighbor who is moving or for your graduating high school student or any college student who may enjoy keeping up with hometown stories.

Subscribe Today

Copyright © 2026 The Inside Press, Inc. · Log in