The Harlem Valley's top graduates: Webutuck

Webutuck valedictorian

MILLERTON — For Alyssa Westfall, the extracurricular side of life is a no-brainer.

“I think it’s really important,� she said in the days before graduating as top of her senior class from the Webutuck Central School District. “You can’t be involved in your school without involving yourself in some of those kinds of things.�

That says a lot about a stellar academic student who kept busy during her senior year as class secretary and co-president of the National Honor Society (along with salutatorian Jimmy Boeding). She’s also a fourth-year actress in the school’s drama program and was the only girl on the boys golf team this past fall.

Westfall, 17, will graduate from Webutuck Saturday with a “101.something� average, putting some significant distance from the rest of her class.

“It takes a lot of work,� she acknowledged. “But the goal has always been to keep the grades in the high 90s, and I’ve worked really hard at that.�

But why so high? Westfall said college has always been in the back of her mind.

“Coming from Webutuck, you have to really have high grades to get into a good school. That’s been my goal forever. And with a few [extracurricular] activities, I figured that keeping my grades high was my best chance of getting in where I wanted to go to school.�

School turned out to be Bryant University in Rhode Island. Westfall made a trip east last weekend for orientation.

“Actually, Bryant was nowhere near my first choice to begin with,� she acknowledged. “But I went to campus for accepted students day, and since then I just fell in love with it more and more.�

Westfall is interested in pursuing a major in either finance or actuarial math.

“I’ve always been interested in finance,� she explained, saying her grandfather was the president of Amenia Bank at one point and she can definitely see herself with a career in banking after college.

But academics don’t usually give you the full-picture of a high school student and Westfall in no exception. Normally a shy public speaker, she found her voice in Webutuck’s drama club.

After a brief stint in third and fourth grade, Westfall really got into the drama program as a freshman and has been in every production since.

“I love both singing and acting,� she said. “I love being on stage. I don’t like talking in front of people, but when you’re reading lines I can do it without a bit of stage fright.�

And as an athlete Westfall has turned quite a few heads on the links. She’s been swinging clubs since she was 6 or 7, she estimates, but only joined the school team for her senior year.

“It was kind of weird,� she remembered. “Everyone just expected that the guys would do better, and then I went out for our first match and beat them all.�

Bryant has a Division I golf team, so the competitive side of Westfall’s game has probably concluded, but she said she’ll definitely still be playing.

And as for the dramatic person inside her, the Bryant Players “do everything, including all the sets, themselves, and that sounds like a lot of fun,� she said. “I hope I can continue it there.�

This summer Westfall can be found working her fourth year for the Millerton Summer Rec program. And while the graduating senior and lifelong Millerton resident said that living in such a small area and attending a small school provided much of the incentive to get involved in the community, it could be a hard habit to kick when she heads to college this fall.

Webutuck salutatorian

MILLERTON — Jimmy Boeding is always running.

Yes, that’s a painfully obvious observation to make about an 18-year-old who’s made headlines again and again for his spectacular performances in cross-country and track.

But speaking with Boeding the week before he graduates as salutatorian of Webutuck Central School District’s class of 2010, it’s easy to see that he is a student, athlete and young man constantly in motion. Even when he talks, he’s going a mile a minute.

Boeding graduates with a 95.23 grade point average. He attributed his grades to a strong work ethic, saying academics “definitely come first,� and he also mentioned finding “a good balance� several times. That balance refers to the very busy schedule that’s part of Boeding’s juggling act for his four years of high school.

Where to start? He’s a four-year member of the high school Mock Trial team, filling a lead role more recently as one of two seniors. He’s also a member of the National Honor Society, which among other things organized a blood drive at Webutuck this past spring.

There isn’t another athlete like him at Webutuck this year. He literally was the cross-country team this past fall, and was the only Webutuck athlete to qualify for state competition. He did that twice as a senior, first for cross-country in the fall and later for two events in outdoor track this spring. And as part of the Marathon Project, run by the county’s Council on Addiction Prevention and Education, he recently stepped into a mentoring position for younger students.

All that’s just school-related activities. Additionally, Boeding worked three part-time jobs during his senior year: In the winter he spent his Saturdays and Sundays as a ski and snowboard instructor at Catamount in Hillsdale, and his weekdays have been busy working as a cafe barista at the Millerton Moviehouse Gallery and Cafe and helping out at the Greystone Farm in Amenia.

“Everything has its own little place,� he said simply when asked how he is able to balance all his responsibilities. “Really it’s just everyone being very flexible and the mangers and owners being very understanding with hours.�

Boeding will head to Bowdoin College in Maine this fall (yes, the two pronunciations are remarkably similar). He applied early decision and called his acceptance “the greatest thing that’s happened to me.�

He wants a liberal arts education, for sure, but hasn’t lost sight of a childhood dream either.

“I just found a fifth-grade letter I wrote to myself, and under favorite career I put doctor/surgeon,� he said. “So I’ve had that aspiration for a while and that’s still strong. But I don’t want to close any doors before they’re even open yet.�

When asked what it was about running was resonated so deeply with him, Boeding struggled at first to find the right words.

“People who run … they know the feeling I’m talking about,� he started out saying. “Kind of like a runner’s high, but that’s something that happens more when you’re at a high level of endurance. It’s just a simple pleasure when you go out and are physically moving. You’re accomplishing something, one step after the other. Maybe you go that extra lap or extra mile, but it’s all yourself. You’re propelling yourself, and you can go at whatever pace you want. You can go places. If I didn’t do it, I would feel like a part of me was missing.�

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