Page 12 THE VILLADOM TIMES I • April 18, 2012 Burglary (continued from page 3) of the three houses burglarized, and that the individuals involved then fled the area, most likely in a vehicle. The other two homes were then probably entered sometime after 8 p.m. Chief Fox noted that one home had an unregistered burglar alarm. Registration of alarms with the Wyckoff Police Department is required by ordinance, and this unregistered alarm complicated the process of notifying the homeowner. Sergeant Dale Winters, Detective Sergeant Michael Musto, and Officers Peter Goodman, Brenda Groslinger, and Kevin Kasak were involved in the Wyckoff police investigation assisted by the officers from Midland Park, Ridgewood, Hawthorne, and Bergen County. Police ask that any residents who saw or heard anything unusual at the time that the burglaries took place contact the police at (201) 891-2121. Residents are also reminded to register their alarm systems. scholarship fundraising program. He has served as executive vice president of the Hawthorn Group, a Washington, D.C. public affairs company, and as senior vice president of communications and public affairs at Union Camp Corporation. Lambrix also spent 10 years as manager of external communications for Phillips Petroleum Company in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Prior to his tenure at Phillips, Lambrix received a presidential appointment to the White House domestic policy staff as assistant director for energy and natural resources. While at the White House, he worked on numerous environmental and natural resources issues for the U.S. President. His 10 years of federal government experience also included many government assignments where he was involved in many legislative and executive branch activities. He also was the founding chairman of a Washington, D.C. industry group called the Global Climate Coalition. He currently serves on the board of trustees of the Nature Conservancy of New Jersey. Visitors from Kenya Attorney (continued from page 4) appointed as the chairman of the borough’s environmental commission in 2007, and still serves in that position. He has a degree in chemistry from Rutgers University and an MBA from the University of Massachusetts. He is an adjunct professor of management and communications at the Anisfield School of Business at Ramapo College of New Jersey, where he has taught graduate business administration courses and is teaching several undergraduate business courses. Lambrix has been a coach for the recreation program, and he was a member of the committee that analyzed the controversial split of the borough’s students between the two schools in the regional high school district that existed in the mid-1990s. He also was a member of the Ramapo Indian Hills Board of Education’s Horizon Project and Community Issues Committee. For 10 years, he participated in the FLOW Follies Chief Joseph Ole Tipanko Sara Kilenyi (continued from page 10) Joseph and his wife have four children who are ages four through 16. All but the youngest go to school. His wife, Cecila, is very active in the women’s group and in the choir at their church. Each day, Joseph walks over four miles to get to work. In addition to math, English, and science, students in Kenya learn about farming techniques and how to filter water. Joseph is also very involved in his community in terms of getting aid, bringing awareness to the Maasai, making other aware of the Maasai, and working with volunteer groups to improve the overall quality of life for the Maasai in his community.