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Cover Stories

A Spirit of Collaboration and Good Will Stressed at New Castle’s 2024 Inauguration

February 21, 2024 by Grace Bennett

Top Row (L-R): Former State Senator Stephen Saland swearing in Deputy Town Supervisor Jeremy Saland; Secretary Hillary Clinton swearing in councilwoman Jennifer Naparstek Klein; and councilwoman Alexandra Chemtob, also sworn in by Hillary Clinton.
Bottom Row (L-R): President Bill Clinton administered the Oath of Office to: Town Justice Douglas Kraus, Chairman and Westchester County Legislator Vedat Gashi, and to New Castle Town Supervisor Victoria Bayard Tipp.
Inside Press Photos

Heartfelt messages of appreciation along with ones expressing respect for a diversity of backgrounds and viewpoints, plus lighthearted exchanges, were heard from the stage of the Chappaqua Performing Arts Center during the Town of New Castle 2024 Inauguration held January 11.

Those attending witnessed the swearing in of four New Castle public officials and the chair of the Westchester County Legislator, the Oath of Office administered by former State Senator Stephen Saland, neighbors Madame Secretary Hillary Clinton and President Bill Clinton. The final swearing in was that of Victoria Bayard Tipp as Town Supervisor. See also Zoya Nabeel’s report and reflections of this historic moment and poignant testaments to Tipp.

Following honored traditions, State Senator Peter Harckham stated: “It’s a new day” and a time to celebrate the peaceful transition of power… everything we do is best when we work in collaboration.” Assemblyman Chris Burdick noted the “tremendously proud moment.” Deputy County Executive Ken Jenkins introduced Saland, who served the 41st district for 22 years, and who swore in his son Jeremy Saland for a second time, this time as Deputy Town Supervisor. “At times he can be a handful,” quipped father about son. “But I know the kind of person he is… he’ll give you 110 percent.” “This community is great because of its volunteers…” Jeremy Saland emphasized, noting contributions from long time town administrator Jill Shapiro, staff and volunteers on boards, and first responders.

Harckham introduced Hillary Clinton as “an amazing Secretary of State, a mother, grandmother, a fierce advocate for children and health care reform…” Hillary Clinton swore in town council member Alexandra L. Chemtob who emphasized that public officials “need to lead by example.” “The world gets scarier and more divided by the day,” said Chemtob. “I might not be able to change the world. but I can make my side of the street a little bit better.”

Hillary Clinton also swore in councilmember Jennifer Naparstek Klein. Klein noted that even “small bits of work and effort matter; it’s an imperative in our life to be committed.” She quoted Hillary Clinton’s “One must bloom where one stands,” with a tip of her hat to members of the New Castle Democratic Committee, New Castle Blooms, and Up2Us.

Councilwoman Holly McCall introduced former 17th district Congressman Mondaire Jones as “the first black openly gay person ever elected to Congress and as the youngest member of House leadership, he has kept our congressional district in his sights.” Jones introduced President Clinton as “…a father, a husband, a saxophonist, a patron of Crabtree’s Kittle House in Chappaqua – See? I did my homework! – founder and chairman of the Clinton Foundation, and as the 42nd President of the United States of America, and a damn good one.”

President Clinton, before inviting Town Justice Douglas Kraus to be sworn in for a 9th term, stated: “We are not expecting you will be perfect but that you will do the best you can with an open heart and an open hand and without the venom and hatred which causes so much of our politics today.”

Bill Clinton also swore in Chairman and Westchester County Legislator Vedat Gashi who shared that his work has included landmark legislation to protect the environment, protecting a woman’s access to health care, and passing a first in the nation gun safety law, “all while passing a fiscally responsible budget to help restore Westchester’s economy.” Gashi, the first Muslim elected legislator, quoted Martin Luther King, Jr.: “Hate can not drive out hate, only love can do that.” He promised to “celebrate the love in our community rather than focusing on the hate.”

Tipp, last to be sworn in by Bill Clinton, stated that in her years of public service, she has worked “to gain the trust of constituents without regard to affiliation.” And that even in this “deeply divided political climate”, she would “continue to view residents through the lens of friends, family, and neighbors… I promise you it will always be that way.”

In a benediction, Rev. Dr. Martha Jacobs of the First Congregational Church announced her impending retirement, and offered, “May differences be celebrated and lifted up and move this town forward where all feel welcome and where are all views are welcomed and heard.”

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: 2024 Inauguration, Alexandra Chemtob, Chris Burdick, Douglas Kraus, Hillary Clinton, Jennifer Kerpatrick Klein, Jeremy Saland, Ken Jenkins, Mondaire Jones, Peter Harckham, President Clinton, Stephen Saland, Town of New Castle, Vedat Gashi, Victoria Bayard Tipp

Getting to Know North Castle’s Newly Elected Town Supervisor Joseph Rende

February 21, 2024 by Ella Ilan

North Castle Town Supervisor Joe Rende PHOTO BY ELISE TRAINOR

After a nail biter of an election ultimately requiring a vote recount, the triumphant Joe Rende proudly took office as North Castle’s new Town Supervisor on January 1st with a positive outlook and a determination to make sure North Castle continues to be a town to take pride in.

Public Service As A Great Calling

A resident of Armonk for over ten years, Rende made this his home when he and his significant other, the Honorable Linda S. Jamieson, Justice of the Westchester Supreme Court, who has lived here for forty years, were seeing each other. Rende, a lifelong resident of Westchester, grew up and raised his family in Port Chester. As a young businessman running and operating his family’s home heating oil business, Rende Economy Fuel, with his dad, he was always very interested in politics. A registered republican at the time, Rende became active in various campaigns for different people running for elected office in Port Chester. His political career officially began when he was asked to take an open seat on the village planning commission. He eventually served as chairman of the village planning board, then as an elected member of the board of trustees, deputy mayor, and later as Westchester County’s deputy director of emergency planning and management.

Rende attributes his interest in government to his father, who was a big influence on him. Dinner table conversations often involved local and national politics. Rende’s father was always very active in their community and even ran for political office.

“I always viewed public service as a great calling and certainly necessary as an important part of our form of government,” says Rende. “I always had a sense that you need to give back to your community and what better way to do it than public service. It was instilled in me by my dad, who I was very close with.”

Living in North Castle, Rende, now an involved member of the local democratic party, continued to take an interest in town-related issues. When former Town Supervisor Mike Schiliro decided not to seek another term, Rende felt there would be a void in leadership and threw his hat into the ring.

On the Agenda

PHOTO BY ELISE TRAINOR

One of the first things Rende is focused on is getting the North Castle Eagle sign, a town landmark, back up. The sign, which greets visitors at the intersection of Route 22 and Route 128 was unfortunately knocked down on December 11th.

Rende is also turning his attention to several capital improvement projects. One of those projects involves renovating the recently purchased town swimming pool. He has been working with an engineering firm, the town administrator, and the superintendent of recreation to develop a plan to address those necessary improvements. Other potential projects include improving Town Hall, upgrading the crammed police department, assessing all the town facilities, and putting together a focused capital improvement plan to ensure that there is no further damage to the overall envelope of each of the town’s buildings. He also plans to address the highway department’s lack of a facility to house the newer bigger trucks used to maintain the roads. Storing the trucks outside where they are exposed to the inclement weather has led to their faster degradation and reduced years of service from these vehicles.

Also on the agenda is the review and approval of several large development plans that have already gone through lengthy processes of planning and zoning. Rende’s vast experience on the Port Chester planning commission and board of trustees has provided him with a great grasp for smart development and makes him an asset for the town in that regard.

Leadership Skills

As the current Director of Business Development at Judicial Title Insurance Agency, Rende has plenty of flexibility that will allow him to balance his profession with the role of town supervisor. His career has allowed him to develop management skills that will serve him well in his new position. His leadership experience came at a young age owning his own business with his dad. When he later sold his business to Robison Oil and took a management role there, he really honed his leadership skills.

“To me, leadership has always been about motivating people to work towards a common good,” he explains. “I like to empower people and give them the necessary tools to do their job and make sure they have the resources that they need. I encourage people if they come to me with a problem, to also try to bring a solution. I will never fault anyone for trying to solve a problem. If you need my help to figure out a better way, I will do that.”

Rende also emphasizes that the importance of compromise. Even though different members of the board and various elected officials can have different views, he recognizes that “everyone has the community’s best interest in mind, and he looks forward to working with them.”

In his Spare Time

When Rende has free time, you can find him just being “grandpa.” He and Judge Jamieson share ten grandchildren. Their weekends typically revolve around activities with the grandkids. In the summer, they spend time at the lake at the Windmill Club. They play some golf at various association outings, but most of the time they are enjoying their grandkids, their friends, and some traveling as well.

Pride in North Castle

One thing Rende really appreciates about North Castle is the community’s involvement and enthusiasm for the town. “Events like the Fol de Rol, the concerts in the park and town square, the Armonk Outdoor Art Show, the Stayin’ Alive Fun Run, the Frosty Parade, and the funds raised by these events for great causes really show me the heartbeat of the town,” he says.

Recognizing that it was a close election, Rende knows that he will have to stay on top of his game and hopes to prove to the entire community that he is more than capable of doing the job. “I won’t rest on my laurels and take anything for granted. Hopefully after my first term, residents who voted for me as well as the ones who supported my opponent will recognize that I was a good choice, and I was worthy of it. I am going to make sure this continues to be a town we can be proud of.”

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Armonk, Joseph Rende, North Castle Town Supervisor, town supervisor

Local Doctor turns Writer … Pens Story of Father’s Escape from Nazis and Return to Germany as U.S. Spy

February 21, 2024 by Fran Goldstein

Jack (Wolf) Schwersenz, shown here with his parents and sister, in Berlin circa 1937, is the subject of Audrey Birnbaum’s book, American Wolf: From Nazi Refugee to American Spy.

Audrey Birnbaum’s father, Jack Schwersenz, was determined that the story of his childhood escape from Nazi Germany be passed on to future generations. So in his 70s, he typed it all out… every single grueling detail, amounting to 350 pages. “But I couldn’t get past the first chapter,” recalled Audrey. “It was too tedious, too detailed, too cumbersome to read.” So she stored it away in the attic of the Briarcliff Manor home where she and her husband raised their three children.

When Jack died about 15 years later, she needed some details to flesh out his eulogy. Having recently broken her leg, she practically crawled up the steep attic stairs to retrieve the manuscript. “Then, as a I skimmed it with tears in my eyes, I realized just how rich it was. It was a story that had to be told. But in my dad’s form, it still seemed like nothing more than a testimony that might be of interest to a Holocaust museum,” Audrey said. “A few years later, when the Pandemic hit and I had retired from my 35-year career as a pediatric gastroenterologist, I decided to see if I could make it readable.”

And that she did…

Audrey Birnbaum

The result, American Wolf: From Nazi Refugee to American Spy, is the true story of a Jewish boy’s childhood in Berlin, his riveting escape in 1941 with his parents aboard the Navemar (the Spanish freighter that carried about 1,120 European Jewish refugees to the United States in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions), the challenges the family faced as immigrants in New York City, and his return to Germany in his 20s as an intelligence officer for the U.S. Army.

Published in October 2023, the book has garnered rave reviews from readers, while Audrey has spoken at numerous local and national forums and has been interviewed on dozens of podcasts and news shows. American Wolf: From Nazi Refugee to American Spy also was named a 2023 National Jewish Book Award finalist for Holocaust Memoirs.

“By narrating this true story in the first person, Audrey Birnbaum deftly transports the reader to 1930s Berlin, and we are at once immersed in a family drama during the rise of Hitler,” wrote one reviewer. “This is a story of determination, survival and resistance that is as relevant today as at any time in the last three generations.”

Other reviewers praised Audrey’s writing style as engaging, amusing and witty, and applaud her ability to bring the characters’ stories to life. One could easily assume that she is a professional writer. In fact, this is her first book, although she did briefly consider a career in journalism while a student at Stuyvesant High School in New York City.

She and her older sister grew up in Flushing, first in the same one-bedroom apartment that her father and grandmother lived in when they moved out of Washington Heights, their port of entry when they arrived in New York City from Germany. Eventually, they “literally pushed” their furniture a half block away to a larger apartment, where her mom still resides.

As young children, she and her sister did not quite fit in with the other kids, often feeling like outcasts and becoming victims of bullying. “We ate differently, dressed differently, listened to classical music, and only watched public television. My father raised us as if we were German,” she recalled, noting that her lunchbox typically contained a liverwurst sandwich rather than PB&J. “He also developed from his war experience a pathological fear of spending money. We wrote down every penny we spent. Everything was measured – food, money, toilet paper, phone calls. If we went on a class trip, we didn’t have spending money to buy a souvenir the way other kids did.”

While her childhood was in many ways similar to that of other immigrant children, her father’s history and approach to life had a profound impact. “My sister and I were immersed in his past very early on – he loved to talk about being German and about his great escape on the last train out of Germany,” Audrey recalled. “He was obsessed with the Holocaust, and we watched documentaries about it from the time I could remember. While other kids talked about their trips to Disneyland, in a perverse way, I tried to make myself important by saying my father was a Holocaust survivor.”

Jack also passed on to his daughters a strong work ethic. After working as a CPA, he eventually started publishing out of their apartment a monthly newsletter for accountants. And since he refused to hire a staff, it became a family business, with Audrey, her sister and mother helping with typing, editing, collating and stuffing envelopes.

Since it was understood that they could not afford for the girls to go to college outside of New York, Audrey’s career path was sealed when she was accepted into the six-year Sophie Davis Biomedical Education Program/CUNY School of Medicine. She started practicing medicine at the age of 22.

“When you grow up in a house where work was valued and leisure was frowned upon, it’s very hard to be leisurely as an adult,” she said. “Even when I stopped working as a physician, somehow I was always busy. I’m always in motion,” said Audrey who enjoys singing and reading and has started writing her second book.

“I also love to fix things, which is partly what drove my determination to re-write my father’s memoirs,” she said. “I was also compelled by a sense of obligation to him.”

She dove into researching historical facts and long-lost family members to fill in gaps in her father’s manuscript. And once she started writing, she couldn’t stop – creating several drafts as she experimented with different styles and approaches.

Although Jack often shared with his daughters details about his childhood in and escape from Germany, he rarely spoke about the hardships he and his family faced once they arrived in New York City. Like so many other immigrants, his family gave up comfortable lives for the often harsh realities of starting over, such as becoming menial laborers and living in roach-infested apartments. He also didn’t divulge much about his experiences when he was drafted during the Cold War and stationed in Germany, where as a native speaker he became a valuable spy.

His memoirs reveal all this, as well as Jack’s struggle with figuring out who he was. “In Germany, he was rejected for being a Jew. When they got here, he faced both antisemitism and anti-German sentiments,” Audrey said. “He tried to fit in as an American, but that wasn’t easy. This is how the title American Wolf came about.”

Jack’s given name was Wolf, but on his first day of school in New York City, the assistant principal encouraged him to change it to avoid being teased by other children.

“This is not only a story of rejection by one country and acceptance by another, but also a parallel story about discovering one’s identity – about self rejection and self acceptance,” Audrey said. “When you are considered a lower-class citizen and told that you are worthless, you absorb all of that into your psyche – so you have to go through a process of self acceptance. The book ends when my dad married my mom… when he ultimately found love and acceptance.”

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: American Wolf, Audrey Birnbaum, Holocaust Memoir

A Reminder from Nicole Asquith: The Future of Pleasantville Is Renewable Energy

February 21, 2024 by Michael Gold

Nicole Asquith
PHOTO BY CHAD KRAUS

Nicole Asquith has seen Pleasantville’s future, and it is renewable.

Asquith cares deeply about the town, so she’s doing everything she can to help reduce the village’s carbon emissions, to ensure a good life for Pleasantville’s future generations.

Asquith, a village trustee, currently serving a third three-year term, is the village board liaison to the town’s Climate Smart Task Force, the Conservation Advisory Council, the Pleasantville Recycles Committee, and the Pedestrian Committee.

The village has taken several steps to reduce its carbon emissions, including converting its street lights to LED lamps, which use much less carbon than incandescent bulbs, reducing electricity usage, lowering Pleasantville’s utility bill.

She’s working to help the village government transition to electric vehicles. The town recently purchased a Ford F-150 Lightning truck for the parks and recreation department, with the help of a $10,000 grant from New York State. The village is helping the department to buy electric landscaping equipment, including electric leaf blowers and a ride-on mower.

Pleasantville’s Climate Smart Task Force instituted a rebate program for residents to hand in their gas-powered leaf blowers, lawn mowers, snow blowers, and weed whackers/trimmers and purchase electric units, getting partial reimbursement of $125, or 50 percent of the cost of a lawnmower, or $75, or 50 percent for a leaf blower, whichever amount is less.

Residents who don’t own a gas-powered lawn mower or snow blower, and who want to buy a new electric unit, can get a rebate of $75, or 50 percent off for their new purchase, whichever is less.

Residents have turned in 56 lawn mowers, nine leaf blowers, eight weed whackers, and six snow blowers, for a total of 79 rebates paid.

Asquith was the driving force in getting the village to enroll in a community solar program.

“Community solar customers typically subscribe to – or in some cases own – a portion of the solar energy generated by a solar array and receive an electric bill credit for electricity generated by their share of the community solar system,” the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency website states. Community solar programs enable subscribers to support local renewable energy while earning up to 10 percent of their electric bills.

“A lot of people can’t do solar,” Asquith said. With community solar, “you subsidize creation of solar generated electricity. You are increasing the amount of solar energy in the system.” Community solar “allows the increase of production of solar energy. It saves money on your energy bill.”

Working with the town’s Climate Smart Task Force and the Mt. Pleasant Conservation Advisory Council (CAC), Asquith and others in the village presented an educational event at the local library in the Spring, 2023, to promote geothermal heat pumps, reducing homeowners’ energy use, and improving their insulation. Installing geothermal heat pumps allows homeowners to heat and cool their homes more cheaply, because the pumps use no fossil fuels and require less electricity than traditional methods.

Asquith and other members of the town’s committees have also presented events on conducting home energy audits to find ways to save money on energy costs and help residents lower their carbon emissions. One of the easiest, cheapest things homeowners can do is participate in the town’s composting program, Asquith said.

“Composting reduces the waste stream, so less goes to the incinerator,” she explained. Pleasantville’s program allows residents to compost meat and bones, which you can’t compost in your backyard, because animals may get to them.

Composting’s benefits include “returning nutrients into the Earth,” Asquith pointed out. “You’re completing a cycle nature used to do on its own.”

In 2021, the first year of the program, the village composted 41.1 tons. In 2022, 41.9 tons was composted. The approximate 2023 figure is 42.8 tons.

Asquith is working on increasing the town’s tree canopy too. “Increased heat means trees are increasingly important,” she said. “Ideally, more trees” are needed in the village, Asquith explained. “Part of the identity of Pleasantville is it’s a leafy village. Trees give shade. They also capture carbon. Native trees support a lot of different species – caterpillars, moths, butterflies. They’re important components of the food web for birds. Baby birds eat hundreds of caterpillars.”

Asquith, who has a doctorate in French literature, is also a podcaster, with a program called “In The Weeds,” https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/in-the-weeds/id1467455250, focusing on “how culture shapes our relationship to the natural world.” She has interviewed scientists, artists, cultural critics, and theologians. “In doing our part to address climate change here in Pleasantville, we’re helping to secure a safe and sustainable future for our children and generations to come.,” she stated. “Pleasantville is a uniquely caring community, in which we all pitch in to help each other. Taking action to address climate change is part of this effort – it’s a responsibility we owe to safeguard the future of this community we love.”

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: carbon emissions, Pleasantville, Renewable Energy

SOUPerb – Oh so Fresh Soups to Go!

February 21, 2024 by The Inside Press

By Jessica Stern & Annabel Levin 

During the winter months, soup will warm you up! With its legendary power to nourish, heal and bring comfort during challenging times, soup lifts your spirits when you’re sad, sick, or just plain cold. To brave these last few weeks of winter, we are proud to present our choices for excellent ‘Soups to Go’ from your favorite area eateries.

ARMONK

At Armonk Country Kitchen a container of Pasta Faioli soup exceeded our expectations but do add a dash of salt–if that’s your preference. The tomato base was radiant with color. Like our last Pasta Fagioli, it contained kidney beans, onion, calamari noodles, and a bit of garlic, all complementing each other beautifully–a satisfying and filling soup.

BRIARCLIFF MANOR

At Briarcliff Market and Deli, its stand out flavorful chicken soup broth had a rich, healthy, yellow color to it with ample servings of celery, onion, carrots, noodles, and chicken. Ask for extra vegetables and noodles if you prefer a chunkier serving, the staff is happy to oblige.

CHAPPAQUA

At our visit to Chappaqua Village Market, we chose a gluten free Butternut Squash Soup to sample. A savory blend of yams, apples, onions, olive oil, various spices, and, of course, butternut squash, this soup will also keep the doctor away! This soup’s appeal is in its vibrant color and a smooth and silky consistency. Delicious served either hot or cold, it’s the perfect starter to any meal.

Our go-to deli, Lange’s Little Store and Delicatessen, never disappoints. The broth of a timeless classic, Chicken Noodle Soup, was chock full of vegetables and plenty of chicken and noodles. We found a nice balance of seasoning–on the sweeter, less salty side. The noodles were cooked to perfection. We will definitely be returning for more!

For a third Chappie soup, we tasted the Chicken Soup with Orzo from the fairly new Mexcellent Deli. This complex soup contained ample amounts of chicken, orzo, carrot, potato, squash, onion, and more! Its rich broth had a nice yellow tint–a very appealing quality in a chicken soup. With a few less vegetables – and more orzo and chicken – this soup could have been a top contender for our favorite!

MOUNT KISCO

If you’re looking for a warm, hearty, and filling soup, try the Pasta Fagioli at A&S Italian Deli. Compared to lighter soups such as Chicken Noodle or Butternut Squash, this soup is rich with flavor and can be a stand-alone meal. We appreciated its savory tomato base accompanied by white kidney beans, Ditalini noodles, onions, garlic, hot chili flakes, and pancetta. Pop into the microwave to hit a perfect temperature and enjoy a substantial, delicious, and comforting meal.

PLEASANTVILLE

At Root to Rise, a fully plant-based café, aims to use ‘food as medicine’ through their healthy, traditional, and locally sourced food. We very much enjoyed their Khichadi soup for its considerable chunkiness containing several different kinds of lentils, rice, vegetables, and multitude of spices: including but not limited to cumin and turmeric.

We do confess our favorite soup came from Frank and Joe’s Italian Deli. We ordered Chicken Soup with Rice. While this is one of the more basic soups we tried, it clearly incorporated all the flavors for a fresh, homemade tasting soup and a perfect ratio of vegetables and broth. The veggies were cooked to perfection and not too mushy which can happen in soups when they sit in a heated container for too long. We also found unusual soup vegetables – such as corn and peas – a nice addition of interesting textures and flavors.

Soup can truly be the ultimate cure for the winter blues. Like a culinary hug warming you from the inside out, the soups we tried appeal to all different palates, so they have you covered no matter what you’re looking for. So, get out there and nourish the body and soul with a satisfying bowl of soup from one of your favorite local spots! Be sure to tell them that Jessica & Annabel sent you.

Jessica Stern and Annabel Levin are juniors at Horace Greeley High School where both are also columnists for the Greeley Voice. In their spare time, Jessica swims for the Girls Varsity Swim team and Annabel enjoys travelling and spending time with friends.

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Area Delis, Best soups, Butternut Squash, Chicken Soup, Soup reviews, soups

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