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Zumba dance May 1 supports autism walk-a-thon team

WINSTED — Team Jake and Company, a group participating in annual walk-a-thons in support of the national organization Autism Speaks, will hold a Zumba dance fundraiser Sunday May 1, at 1 p.m. at the Open Door Soup Kitchen.Certified Zumba Instructor Chris Royer will lead the event to support the group, named for Northwestern Regional Middle School seventh-grader Jake Cook.“We’ve been having this walk since 2005 and running fund-raisers every year,” said Adele Banas of Winsted, who was Jake’s speech therapist when he was in elementary school. When Banas retired from the job, Jake’s mother, Karen Cook, asked Banas if she would be interested in running Team Jake, and she said yes. This year marks the team’s first attempt at a Zumba (pronounced “zoom-bah”) fundraiser, in which participants join in an energetic dance to Latin rhythms.“Chris Royer is amazing,” Banas said of the leader of the Zumba event, who is also a member of the Winchester Board of Education. “I think she’s the best Zumba instructor in the world.”Karen Cook said Tuesday that her son takes special education classes in the LINKS program at Northwestern and that he excels in art and music, but struggles academically. Jake interacts with peers in the special education classes and in the general student population, but he is not expected to go to college or live independently as an adult.“I decided to get on the bandwagon with Autism Speaks because they are a national organization, and a lot of the money they raise comes back to Connecticut,” Cook said, noting that the University of Connecticut and Yale University both have autism research programs.Cook noted that autism cases have been on the rise in the past two decades and that increasing services are needed for both children and adults. “Autistic people don’t have a lot of physical issues that would cause a shorter lifespan, so they’re going to outlive their parents and they’re going to need someplace to go,” she said.The Open Door Soup Kitchen is located in the dining hall at St. James Church, 160 Main St., Winsted. The requested donation for the event is $10 for adults and $5 for students, and all proceeds benefit Team Jake and Company for Autism Speaks. Following this weekend’s Zumba event, Team Jake and Company will host a beer tasting fundraiser May 19 at the Hooker Brewery in Bloomfield. For more information, call Team Jake and Company Captain Adele Banas at 860-379-2140.

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Early morning Kent crash sends car into ditch, disrupts traffic on Rt. 341

A blue SUV remains in a ditch after an early-morning crash along Segar Mountain Road in Kent May 27.

Ruth Epstein

KENT – A driver escaped with minor injuries after an SUV crashed into a utility pole and water line before rolling into a ditch along Segar Mountain Road early Wednesday morning, May 27, disrupting traffic for much of the day and affecting water service to a nearby residence.

The single-vehicle crash occurred around 4:30 a.m. near 36 Segar Mountain Road, just under half a mile east of the intersection with South Kent Road. State police said the blue SUV struck the pole, went over a guardrail and came to stop in a roadside ditch.

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Pauline King Garfield

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Pauline spent her career at Becton Dickinson in Canaan, after being a stay-at-home mother for many years.She was employed at Becton Dickinson for 23 years. She enjoyed bus trips with her late husband Duane to the Casinos, spending time with her family watching the grandchildren grow up. Recently she made a comment to care givers that was “wait until I see that husband of mine for leaving me here, I am going to read him the riot act.” Over the years she enjoyed many crafts, but her favorite was crocheting gifts for everyone.

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A blessing for pets — and a lifeline for their health
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For many pet owners, animals are family. On Saturday, May 30, that bond will be celebrated in a uniquely practical and heartfelt way when the Blessing of the Animals returns to Third Lutheran Evangelical Church in Rhinebeck alongside a free rabies vaccination clinic hosted by Hudson Valley Animal Rescue & Sanctuary.

The event, scheduled from noon to 4 p.m., is free for Dutchess County residents and open to dogs, cats and domestic ferrets three months and older. While the clinic itself provides an important public health service, organizers say the day has become about much more than vaccinations.

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Local filmmaker Yonah Sadeh takes his lens to China

Filmmaker Yonah Sadeh on a shoot last year in New York City.

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When I was around 12, a family friend showed me how to use my family’s computer...from that point on, it was pretty much all movies. — Yonah Sadeh

Filmmaker Yonah Sadeh of Falls Village left May 8 for China, where he will shoot a short documentary.

“I got into a documentary film intensive program where we have two weeks to shoot, edit and screen a 10-minute documentary about a topic of our choosing,” he said.“I’ll be in Changsha, Hunan, making a film about a fifth-generation shadow puppet master.”

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Author Courtney Maum to discuss new novel at Norfolk Library

Norfolk Library celebrates the release of Courtney Maum’s latest novel, “Alan Opts Out,” with a book launch party Tuesday, June 2, at 5:30 p.m. The author will speak about her book in conversation with WAMC radio producer Sarah LaDuke.

A graduate of Brown University with a degree in comparative literature, Maum is an acclaimed author of five books, including the romantic comedy “Touch,” a New York Times Editors’ Choice and NPR Best Book of the Year; “Costalegre;” and “I’m Having So Much Fun Without You.” Her memoir, “The Year of the Horses,” was chosen by the TODAY show as top pick for Mental Health Awareness Month. Vanity Fair listed her author’s guidebook “Before and After the Book Deal,” as a best resource for writers, and she has an eponymous Substack newsletter.

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