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Armonk Cover Stories

Get Ready for the 56th Annual Armonk Outdoor Art Show!

August 26, 2017 by The Inside Press

New This Year: More Activities, Food and Drink

“All as Fresh as the Art!”

Saturday & Sunday,
September 23 & September 24
10 a.m. – 5 p.m., Rain or Shine
205 Business Park Drive, Armonk

Borden

Ranked one of “The Top 50” Fine Art and Fine Craft Fairs in the US by Art Fair SourceBook and among the top “Fine Art and Design Shows” in the New York Metro Area by Sunshine Artist Magazine, the 56th annual Armonk Outdoor Art Show will continue its long tradition of showcasing fresh and diverse art. Over 185 juried artists from 29 states, Israel and Canada, will be featured, with 35 new artists added to the show this year.

A broad spectrum of art in every medium and price point will be on display, including painting, mixed mediums, printmaking/drawing/ pastels, sculpture, photography/digital art, wearable art, and fine crafts.

Free personal consultants, trained in fine art and home design, are available to assist visitors in selecting art that best fits their taste and decor.

Sigwarth

Family Activities Tent

All new, fun-filled, free activities under a Big-Top Tent!

Presented by:

First Five – Hands on projects, appropriate for children ages 1-5 with adult participation.

The Harvey School – Interactive programs, appropriate for children ages 5-12.

The Neuberger Museum of Art – A creative exploration and experimentation inspired by the works in the Neuberger Museum’s permanent collection. Fun for children of all ages.


Food, Craft Beer and Wine Diverse vendors with new additions!

Including Luke’s Lobster, Captain Lawrence Brewing and Market North.

Gold Sponsors: Equinox, Houlihan Lawrence, Northern Westchester Hospital, Rosen & Company, Inc., White Plains Hospital Medical & Wellness and Westchester Medical Center will entertain and inform.

The Art Show is sponsored by Friends of the North Castle Public Library, Inc., and net proceeds benefit the Town’s libraries in Armonk and North White Plains.


Spector
Bunnell
Green

Admission price: $12, $10 for seniors or with coupon, children under 18 free. There is ample free parking on site. Sorry, no dogs allowed. For further information, and discount coupons, visit: www.armonkoutdoorartshow.org, Facebook/armonkoutdoorartshow, Instagram @armonkoutdoorartshow

Nielsen
Pollock

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: Armonk Outdoor Art Show, Artists, Arts, Family Activities, North Castle, Westchester

White Plains Jazz Fest: A Fun-Filled Festival for Jazz Aficionados and Music Lovers of All Ages

August 25, 2017 by The Inside Press

(L-R):: Wayne Bass, White Plains Commissioner of Recreation and Parks; Janet Langsam, CEO, ArtsWestchester; Kevin Nunn, Executive Director of the White Plains Business Improvement District; Kenny Lee (trumpet/flugelhorn) of Kenny Lee All Stars; Deputy Westchester County Executive Kevin Plunkett; Tom van Buren, Artistic Program Director, ArtsWestchester; and Tom Roach, Mayor of the City of White Plains

By Amanda Kraus

There’s good news for Westchester-based jazz lovers who may not be able to trek to New Orleans for Jazz Fest this year. This September, Westchester residents can simply take a quick trip to White Plains for the city’s sixth annual Jazz Fest in the downtown area, in collaboration with ArtsWestchester, The City of White Plains, and the White Plains Business Improvement District. “Every year gets better and better,” said Wayne Bass, White Plains Commissioner of Recreation and Parks and a key organizer of the event. The once single-day event now spans the five days of September 13-17 and will feature various world-renowned jazz musicians such as 14-time Grammy Winner Paquito D’Rivera, a clarinet and saxophone virtuoso and New Orleans-based saxophonist Donald Harrison Jr., as well as talented emerging local artists.

Janet Langsam, the CEO of ArtsWestchester and an Armonk resident, envisions a county in which every resident has the availability and affordability to participate in the arts with Jazz Fest being one of those opportunities. Most of the Jazz Fest events are free and others have a nominal fee.

Jazz Fest was created to enrich the lives of not only downtown White Plains residents but also the wider Westchester community. “By bringing live music into downtown White Plains, people who might not be familiar with jazz can be exposed to a new genre of music. If you want to know what it’s about, you can just walk in to Jazz Fest and be a part of it. It’s all about opening up our minds and trying to create community –music is something that brings people of all races, nationalities, and backgrounds together. It has that common denominator,” notes Bass.

The festival kicks off with a jazz stroll, in which numerous local restaurants will have musicians playing in either their dining rooms or in surrounding outdoor areas. People can walk down the street and catch as many performances as they’d like. There will be performances in the ArtsWestchester building, in addition to Sunday’s culminating event, which takes place on Mamaroneck Avenue in White Plains, where there will be tents plus food vendors. The festival features a wide range of jazz music, from Afro-Caribbean to blues.

It includes both solo performers and bands including a small orchestra led by versatile Colombian pianist and composer Pablo Mayor to an ensemble led by local Peekskill-based jazz tenor saxophonist and jazz educator Ray Blue. The last day of the festival provides a grand finale of jazz sounds originating from Colombia, Puerto Rico, Dixieland and more.

With so much to do and see, it’s hard to find a reason not to go to Jazz Fest. Whether you’re a long-time jazz enthusiast or new to the genre, you’re guaranteed to have a good time no matter what day you choose to attend. For more information and a performance schedule visit www.artswestchester.org.

Amanda Kraus is an intern at the Inside Press this summer.

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: ArtsWestchester, Janet Lagsom, Jazz, music, Westchester JazzFest, white plains

High Holiday Recipes Featuring the Best of Fall’s Bounty

August 25, 2017 by The Inside Press

COMPILED BY AREA SYNAGOGUES

Fall ushers in the high holidays of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year 5778 and Yom Kippur known as the Day of Atonement when many Jews typically fast. But the Jewish New Year is a time of sweet holiday recipes featuring all the best of fall’s produce for families to eat together. Whether you are Jewish or not, these recipes are easy to make and are sure to delight the senses.

Classic Noodle Kugel

 Ingredients  Directions

4 eggs

½ cup sugar

¾ stick butter

1 tsp. lemon juice

1 cup sour cream

1 cup whipped cottage cheese

2 cups apples, chopped

½ cup raisins (optional)

1 tsp. cinnamon

12 oz. wide egg noodles

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cook the noodles until tender according to package directions. Drain and set aside. In a large bowl, beat eggs, sugar, and lemon juice together. Stir in the cooked noodles and combine until noodles are thoroughly coated. Stir in remaining ingredients. Pour mixture into greased 11×7 inch baking pan. Bake until firm and golden on top, about 50 minutes.

Recipe courtesy of Temple Shaaray Tefila

 

 

Morah Mindy’s Chocolate Chip Applesauce Cake

 Ingredients  Directions

2 cups flour

1 stick of margarine

1 cup sugar

1 tsp. cinnamon

2 tsp. baking soda

1 egg

15 oz. applesauce

1 cup mini chocolate chips

Mix all these ingredients together and bake in a lightly greased square pan at 350 degrees for one hour.

Recipe courtesy of Mindy Citera, Director of Early Childhood Education at Bet Torah

 

 

Holiday Chicken

 Ingredients  Directions

4 tsp. butter, melted

¼ cup honey

¼ cup Saucy Susan or apricot jam

4 tbsp. Dijon mustard

2 cloves garlic, peeled and minced

2 tbsp. white wine

2 tbsp. soy sauce

12 chicken pieces (bone in)

Paprika

In a large baking pan, mix together the first seven ingredients to prepare the marinade. Coat the chicken well; cover with foil or plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Turn the chicken pieces skin side up; baste with sauce, sprinkle with paprika, and bake 1½ hours, basting occasionally, until brown and cooked through.

Recipe courtesy of Congregation B’nai Yisrael

 

 

Honey Cake

 Ingredients  Directions

3½ cups all-purpose flour

1 tsp. baking powder

½ tsp. kosher salt

4 tsp. ground cinnamon

½ tsp. ground cloves

½ tsp. ground allspice

1 cup vegetable oil

1 cup honey

1½ cups granulated sugar

½ cup brown sugar

3 large eggs at room temperature

1 tsp. vanilla extract

1 cup warm coffee or strong tea

½ cup fresh orange juice

¼ cup rye or whiskey

½ cup slivered or sliced almonds (optional)

Note: This recipe fits in three loaf pans, two 9-inch square or round cake pans, one 9 or 10 inch tube or bundt cake pan, or one 9 by 13 inch sheet cake.

In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, cloves and allspice. Make a well in the center, and add oil, honey, white sugar, brown sugars, eggs, vanilla, coffee or tea, orange juice and rye or whiskey, if using. (If you measure your oil before the honey, it will be easier to get all of the honey out.)

Using a strong wire whisk or in an electric mixer on slow speed, stir together well to make a thick, well-blended batter, making sure that no ingredients are stuck to the bottom.

Spoon batter into prepared pan(s). Sprinkle top of cake(s) evenly with almonds, if using. Place cake pan(s) on two baking sheets, stacked together (this will ensure the cakes bake properly with the bottom baking faster than the cake interior and top).

Bake until cake tests done, that is, it springs back when you gently touch the cake center. For angel and tube cake pans, this will take 60 to 75 minutes, loaf cakes, about 45 to 55 minutes. For sheet style cakes, baking time is 40 to 45 minutes.

Let cake stand 15 minutes before removing from pan.

Recipe courtesy of Temple Beth El and adapted from Smitten Kitchen

 

 

 

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: Bet Torah Synagogue, Congregation B'nai Yisrael, Cooking, High Holiday Recipes, Holiday Recipes, Jewish, Jewish Holidays, meal, prep, Synagogues, Temple Beth El, Temple Shaaray Tefila

Where is This? Answers on…

August 23, 2017 by The Inside Press

Editor’s Note: Can you name this picture? Joseph Fleisher, a rising sophomore at Horace Greeley High School, who has a passion for photography, set out to find interesting objects and places unique to North Castle.  The answer key is on page 35 on the September/October 2017 downloadable edition of Inside Armonk found on the home page.

1
2
3

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: Armonk images, Armonk pictures, North Castle, photos, Places

A Proponent of Dialogue, Armonk’s Don Gregg Shares his Views… on the North Korea Threat, Trump and More

June 3, 2017 by Andrew Vitelli

On April 17, as national news headlines warned of an impending crisis and possible war between the U.S. and North Korea, Westchester native and Armonk resident Donald Gregg was one of the few Americans sitting across the table from a North Korean, let alone a high-ranking diplomat. Gregg, the U.S. ambassador to South Korea under President George H.W. Bush, was having lunch with two senior North Korean diplomats and trying to make sense of the latest flare-up in their countries’ animosity.

“We were sort of laughing at the fact that here we are, speaking to each other very civilly,” Gregg recalls, addressing a small group of locals at St. Stephen’s Church in Armonk. “And the news was full of how North Korea was going to be at the center of the next crisis, and the world may come to an end.”

The meeting was nothing new for Gregg, who for decades has been calling for dialogue between the American and North Korean governments.

Gregg’s long career in public service included multiple stints on the peninsula, including as CIA station chief in Seoul from 1973 to 1975 and as ambassador from 1989 to 1993. After retiring from government, he served as chairman of The Korea Society, which promotes cooperation and understanding between Koreans and Americans.

Gregg’s first trip to Pyongyang came in 2002 at the urging of former South Korean president Kim Dae-jung. He has gone five times since, with the latest trip coming in 2014, and has witnessed significant economic growth over that period.

“The people were living better. The conditions were better,” Gregg says of his last visit. “The roads were better, the cars were better, the clothes were better. The body language was better.”

Gregg was in Seoul during some of the tensest moments between the North and the South under the reign of Kim Il-sung, so fear of a sudden attack by the leader of the Kim dynasty is nothing new to him.

But despite the rhetoric coming from Pyongyang, he sees North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, like his grandfather, as a rational actor unlikely to risk his regime through some kind of ill-considered act, like a major attack on the U.S..

“The North Koreans are not suicidal,” Gregg says. “They are not going to use one of their weapons against us, because they know their country would be obliterated.” Even the Kims’ pursuit of nuclear weapons has been undertaken with the regime’s survival in mind, he adds.

“I’ve talked to the North Koreans, and they say ‘We’ve looked at you very carefully. You do not attack people who have nuclear weapons,’” he explains. “That’s the root cause of it. They are scared to death of us.”

The CIA, White House and Two Koreas

Gregg grew up half an hour south of Armonk, in Hastings-on-Hudson. In 1953, he married Margaret Curry, an Armonk native and 1947 Pleasantville High School graduate.

Two days after Gregg’s 14th birthday, Japanese warplanes launched a surprise attack against Pearl Harbor and drew the U.S. into the war already raging across the oceans on each of its shores. In 1945, at the age of 17, Gregg enlisted in the U.S. Army, where he trained as a cryptanalyst. But before he could be sent overseas, World War II ended. Gregg served in the Army until 1947, then attended Williams College in Massachusetts, where he graduated in 1951 with a degree in philosophy.

Don Gregg with his wife, Margaret

Though he narrowly missed World War II, he would leave a mark on the four-and-a-half decade Cold War that followed. He joined the CIA in 1951 and served in Japan and Vietnam, learning to speak Japanese fluently. In 1973 he was sent to Korea, where he served as station chief. There, he helped stop torture by his Korean counterparts and played an important role in the rescue of Kim Dae-jung, who went on to become South Korea’s president.

Gregg worked at CIA headquarters from 1975 to 1978 and then as an Asia policy specialist for the National Security Council under the Carter administration. During the Reagan presidency, Gregg was director of the NSC’s Intelligence Directorate before being appointed Vice President Bush’s National Security Advisor.

When Bush became president, Gregg was appointed ambassador to South Korea. Forty years after joining the CIA in the early years of the Cold War, Gregg now played a role in its end. After Bush’s lone term ended, the Greggs returned to New York and in 1995 moved to Armonk, with Don chairing The Korea Society. He began teaching a course at Williams, looking to get top students interested in public service. In 2014 he published a memoir, titled Pot Shards: Fragments of a Life Lived in CIA, the White House, and the Two Koreas, about his experience.

Gregg has been active locally as well, meeting every month with Armonk neighbors to discuss history, politics and current affairs. “Don has had an immense contribution on the global stage, but he has had an immense contribution locally as well,” says Rev. Nils Chittenden, the Rector of St. Stephen’s, where Gregg is an active congregant. “We as a congregation really appreciate and recognize that we are in the presence of someone that has really had a huge effect on shaping world history.”

A ‘Very Different’ President

Gregg has met eight American presidents. He also met the current president, and though their brief meeting took place years before Donald Trump would seriously consider any political run, Gregg’s view of the 45th president remains broadly the same. “I don’t like Trump,” he says bluntly. “He and I are very, very different people.”

Gregg holds out hope that Trump will change course on North Korea and move away from the escalating rhetoric seen during the first months of the administration. He notes some positives, such as the appointment of HR McMaster as National Security Advisor.

But just as Americans find it difficult to understand Kim Jong-un, Koreans have trouble making sense of Trump’s approach.

“We neither like nor understand the North Koreans,” Gregg wrote in a letter submitted in April to The New York Times, “and fill our gaps of ignorance with prejudice that prevents us from thinking vicariously about Pyongyang, its concerns and policy objectives.”

Filed Under: Armonk Cover Stories Tagged With: CIA, Don Gregg, Donald Gregg, Inside Armonk, insidepress.com, North Korea, North Korea Threat, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, South Korea, The Korea Society, White House

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