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Town of New Castle Statement Condemns “Acts of Unlawful Discrimination,” and More

November 23, 2016 by Inside Press

 ‘Inclusion and Diversity’ Committee Established

On November 18, 2016, the Governor and Governor-elect of the State of Vermont, together with a number of Vermont education and business leaders, released a Joint Statement reaffirming their longstanding and unwavering commitment to diversity, equity and inclusiveness.

Last night, the New Castle Town Board expressed their support for the Vermont Joint Statement and reaffirmed its own commitment to those principles expressed.  The New Castle Town Board issued the following statement: We, as a Town Board, condemn any acts of unlawful discrimination, violence, and intimidation that target differences in national origin, race, gender, sex, religion, disability, or political viewpoint across our nation. 

Such acts run counter to the rights and freedoms upon which our country was founded and to the core values of the Town of New Castle.  New Castle is committed to fostering welcoming communities and an equitable, diverse, and inclusive society.

As well, last night, the Town of New Castle established the “Inclusion and Diversity Committee.”  The resolution creating the committee set forth that the Town seeks to celebrate diversity and the value of a diverse community through meaningful visible strategies rooted in education, understanding and respect.  the Town finds that there is a need in the Town of New Castle for the organization of an Inclusion and Diversity Committee to highlight the beauty and benefits of appreciating different backgrounds, interests and sexual orientations. 

The Committee will work to effectively create community awareness about differences in others as related to race, religion, cultural differences, sexual preferences and gender identity.  The Committee will work to develop and implement programs designed to create a spirit of diversity and inclusion of all that live and work in the Town of New Castle as part of “one” unified community.  The Committee will work to promote the diversity goals of the Town–to understand and respond to the needs of an increasingly diverse community–and encourage respect and tolerance for those individual differences that enrich our community.

New Castle Town Supervisor Rob Greenstein stated “After the election, so many in our community are looking for ways to promote inclusion & tolerance. One such initiative was already in the works. After the Orlando shooting earlier this year, I suggested forming a Community Inclusion & Diversity Committee.  Now was the perfect time to press ahead with this initiative, and last night we did just that.  I look forward to working with this committee to support diversity, equity & inclusiveness.”

Filed Under: New Castle Releases Tagged With: diversity, Inclusion, Inclusion and Diversity Committee, Town of New Castle

Lifting Up Westchester’s Rolls Out Holiday LIFT Campaign

November 19, 2016 by Inside Press

County-Wide Organization Puts out Call-to-Action for Volunteers and Donors

(Westchester County, NY) – November 1, 2016 – The hustle and bustle of the holidays is around the corner.  To get local residents into the spirit of giving, Lifting Up Westchester (LUW), a nonprofit agency which provides homeless and poverty services to individuals throughout Westchester County, is launching a Holiday Lift campaign which kicked off earlier this month. The campaign offers multiple opportunities for the community to spread holiday cheer and lift the spirits of Westchester’s men, women and children in need.

Holiday Lift activities will include distributing warm coats and winter clothing, providing 2,000 holiday meals from the LUW soup kitchen, filling and distributing 500 holiday food bags, and wrapping and delivering hundreds of holiday gifts.  It will take an army of volunteers to get it done.luw-holiday-lift-4

“Preparing and serving holiday meals at Grace’s Kitchen on Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s is our most popular volunteer activity” said Paul Anderson-Winchell, executive director.  “We get calls as early as  August and all of those slots are now filled.  But there are many other ways for people to help and it’s always heartwarming  and  humbling to see the community come together during the holiday season to make sure that everyone has something to eat, receives a small gift or has warm gloves for the cold winter ahead. This is when we see the best of humankind.”

Rhesa Browne, a Berkeley College employee, began volunteering at Lifting Up Westchester last holiday season.  After organizing a successful holiday toy drive for college staff she said, “I was motivated to do more because there are many needy people in Westchester. I immediately decided to volunteer my time helping in any way that I can.  Recently, I made a commitment to volunteer at Grace’s Kitchen every other week because I realize that individuals in need also need to be treated as people, and a smile and a warm meal can definitely make a difference in someone’s day.”

This holiday season Browne has organized a staff drive to collect $25 gift certificates from Target, Walmart, McDonald’s and Dunkin Donuts to distribute to teens in LUW’s Brighter Futures After-School Mentoring Program.  Nancy Inzinna, LUW Volunteer & Community Outreach Manager said, “We get lots of donations of toys and games for young children at Christmas, but teens are often forgotten and they love to receive gift cards so they can shop for themselves.”

A winter clothing giveaway will launch LUW Holiday Lift activities on Saturday, November 5th.  Students from the White Plains High School Key Club will be on hand at Grace Episcopal Church in White Plains to sort and distribute coats, hats, gloves, scarves, sweaters and other donated clothing.

The clothing giveaway will be followed by Pie Day on Saturday, November 19th.  Inzinna said, “We never seem to get enough donations of holiday desserts, especially pies. The kids in our youth programs love pie, so we’re trying to make it easy for people to bring in donations of their favorite pies to make Thanksgiving a little more delicious.”  On Pie Day, home baked or store bought pies can be dropped off from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at the agency’s head office at 35 Orchard St. in White Plains (just off Hwy 287 Exit 6).  Donations of brownie and cake mixes are also welcome.

LUW is also hoping to receive donations of home baked Christmas cookies.  “The guests at our soup kitchen seldom get a taste of home-baking items and nothing says Christmas like a plate of Christmas cookies,” said Inzinna. She added that getting children involved in baking and donating holiday treats is a great way to introduce them to the spirit of giving.

Below are some other ways that the community can help LUW provide 2,000 holiday meals, fill 500 holiday food bags and gifts for hundreds of individuals and families in need:

Organize a food drive and involve your neighborhood, school, religious organization or community group.  Foods needed most are turkeys, hams, instant mashed potatoes, gravy mix, stuffing, canned vegetables, canned cranberries, cake and brownie mixes.

Donate the free turkeys that many grocery stores give away at Thanksgiving or Christmas.

Donate $25 grocery store gift cards for food bags given to vegetarians and families who traditionally eat something other than turkey and ham for their holiday meals

Donate NEW gloves, hats and scarves for residents of the Open Arms Men’s Shelter and Samaritan House Women’s Shelter

Donate sports balls, board games and multi-cultural dolls for the children and teenagers in the Brighter Futures Youth Programs.

Donate cash online at www.liftingupwestchester.org  to help fill any gaps or last minute needs.

 

For specific date and timing information on Holiday Lift activities, please contact Nancy Inzinna at ninzinna@liftingupwestchester.org or call (914) 949-3098 ext. 9735.

About Lifting Up Westchester

Lifting Up Westchester (www.liftingupwestchester.org)  is a 501 (c )(3) organization whose mission is to restore hope to Westchester County’s men, women and children in need by providing them with food, shelter and support- lifting them to greater self-sufficiency with dignity and respect. It is one of the largest social services agencies in Westchester County and has been fulfilling its mission since 1979 through the operation of eight community-based programs. The agency serves 4500 men, women and children each year providing 140,000 meals to the hungry and 28,000 nights of shelter to the homeless.  For more information, visit www.liftingupwestcehster.org or contact Chris Schwartz at cschwartz@liftingupwestchester.org.

 

 

Filed Under: Westchester Tagged With: Holiday LIFT, LIFTING UP, Lifting Up Westchester, Westchester County

The Chappaqua Children’s Book Festival Story Concert: TICKETS ON SALE!

November 17, 2016 by Inside Press

***This Saturday – 4 p.m.– Get Tickets Now ***

Purchase Tickets here: http://tcochildrensconcert2016.brownpapertickets.com!!!

The Chappaqua Children’s Book Festival Story Concert – Presented by The Chappaqua Orchestra 

Saturday, November 19, 2016 at 4 pm

Wallace Auditorium

480 Bedford Rd, Chappaqua, NY

FREE PARKING!!!

Michael Shapiro conducts music by Chappaqua composer Brad Ross for narrator and orchestra. Paul Shaffer (SNL and Late Show with David Letterman) narrates “A Family for Baby Grand” Story by Sharon Dennis Wyeth, preceded by Ogden Nash’s “The Tale of Custard the Dragon” sung by Broadway star Roger Seyer. story-concert

Filed Under: New Castle Releases Tagged With: Chappaqua Children’s Book Festival, Chappaqua Orchestra, Story Concert

“Maybe Never Fell” Delves into Relationship Struggles

November 15, 2016 by Inside Press

A Provocative New Play by Axial Theater Director Howard Meyer

By Matt Smith

Photos by Lynda Shenkman Curtis

“Goethe. There are passages in his books where he refers to ‘The Jew.’ An entire race of people summed up in two words. Can you imagine that today? The Black. The Muslim.”

I’m sure when playwright Howard Meyer initially wrote Maybe Never Fell, the brilliant new play now showing at the Axial Theatre in Pleasantville through Sunday, November 20th, he never intended it to premiere during such a tumultuous election season, let alone four days before the explosive reveal itself. Furthermore, if he’s like anyone in the rest of the world, it’s likely Meyer probably didn’t expect the outcome to be what it was. But given the result–and what’s transpired over the past week and a half (during which, mind you, this show has continued to play through)–this line, spoken by main character, the German-born Mattie, to American Jew Max, and the subject matter as a whole, are frighteningly more relevant today perhaps than ever before. maybe1

The storyline follows the 26-year-old German-born Mattie Schiller (the brilliant Sara Hogrefe), who’s been impregnated by American Jew Max Weber (a charming David Lanson), himself a lovelorn bachelor torn between his attraction to Mattie and ex-wife Rebecca, and plagued by the past actions of his ancestors, which makes it all the harder to align with his true cultural identity.

Deep stuff, indeed–and as director Jenn Haltman writes in the Director’s Note outlined on the first page of the program, “Digging into the ugliness that still lies beneath the surface is a hard thing to face up to.” That’s certainly true, and Meyer is completely unapologetic–indeed the subject matter is grim, straightforward, right in front of your face from the get-go–and there’s no escaping it, either, as it’s integral to the climax of the story.

What saves the piece, however, from being “just another rote history textbook lesson” (an expert move on Meyers’ part) is the interweaving of Mattie’s personal struggle (and on some level, Max’s, as well) alongside the historically true elements and events: she had had an abortion when she got pregnant at 15, by childhood best friend Gunther Holt (the hysterical Dominic Russo, who cleverly provides relevant comic relief, that comforts rather than distracts from the main action), and now struggles to come to terms with her new pregnancy by a man whom she fears will leave him eventually due to their religious differences and his newly proclaimed love for his ex-wife.

It’s a genius way of storytelling: it doesn’t hit us over the head with the historical elements, but still reminds us that it’s relevant, ever-present and lurking in the background ’til it’s used with passion and power in the final climatic scene. And at the same time the true revelation of Mattie’s and Max’s family history is revealed, Mattie simultaneously peaks within the story of her own struggle.

maybe2A tough task to pull off, no doubt, but, coupled with Meyer’s exquisite script, this cast does it effortlessly, with their top-notch performances blending perfectly with the others in each individual scene. As mentioned, Hogrefe’s Mattie is captivating from the moment the lights go up, channeling every emotion imaginable as she’s hit with multiple revelations throughout the course of the evening; Lanson offers a charming Max, who compels you to empathize and understand his struggle, especially in the show’s final moments; Russo–whose performance takes quite the unexpected turn in its own right–simply couldn’t be more delightful as Mattie’s bestie, Gunther–and Spencer Aste’s Manfred is just so darn powerful–his affective delivery conveys his genuine care for his daughter and his family’s legacy through his actions. Major props, too, to set designer Tim McMath, who does a lot with just a single set in a small space, and sound designer John McKenna, who cleverly infuses the show with an authentic German feel during the occasional scene breaks.

And then, of course–to return to the subject of the writing, the crux around which this masterpiece revolves–there’s the meaning of the title. Now, obviously, one could take the literal meaning–Max, the “maybe” in question, never really “fell” for Mattie or Rebecca, and spends the majority of the play waffling between staying with either one amidst the multiple discoveries that are revealed.

But, in my opinion, it takes two to make or break a relationship… and with her unwillingness to commit to either Max or Gunther, Mattie’s just as much of a “maybe” as is her other half. With her past history of abortion and attempted suicide, it’s easy to understand why she takes multiple trips to that window ledge throughout the course of the play, on the verge of jumping before she’s talked out of it.

But again, while she certainly has enough reason to feel like falling–and true, her life is not necessarily stable and hangs in the balance, especially at play’s end–she doesn’t, in fact, fall at all (as the title suggests). She’s damaged, for sure… but in not falling, she shows us she’s not fully destroyed. And with enough inner strength to know the fight is worth fighting. For her baby. For her friendship/relationship/whatever she’s got going on with Gunther. And for herself.

No doubt it’ll be hard–she does spend the play’s final moments alone onstage and in tears–but she’s giving the audience a sense of hope that, despite major hardships, everything’s going to be okay. And believe me, it’s a message we could all use right about now. I mean, if Mattie can do it, why can’t we?

Maybe Never Fell, written by Howard Meyer, plays at Pleasantville’s Axial Theatre (8 Sunnyside Avenue) through Sunday, November 20th. For tickets and more information, please visit axialtheatre.org.

 Matt Smith is a writer and regular contributor to The Inside Press. For further information or inquiry, please visit www.mattsmiththeatre.com

 

Filed Under: Gotta Have Arts Tagged With: Axial Theater, Howard Meyer, Maybe Never Fell, Pleasantville

New Castle’s Scramble Sunday is November 6th!

November 1, 2016 by Inside Press

Head Over to Rec Field from 9 -11 a.m.

Fun and Challenging Activities for Kids and Grownups

Looking to burn some calories from all the Halloween candy? Looking to donate your Halloween candy?

Join the Town of New Castle on Sunday, Nov 6th (Marathon Sunday) on the recreation field in Chappaqua from 9-11am for running, jumping, obstacles and smiles specially designed for kids. Professional trainers leading the exercises.  Adults should wear their exercise clothes as well and get ready for boot camp!

DON’T FORGET TO BRING YOUR LEFT OVER HALLOWEEN CANDY TO BE DONATED TO THE TROOPS.

“So many of our residents are committed to healthy lifestyles,” stated New Castle Supervisor Robert Greenstein. “This event will build on our community’s commitment to better health.  Kids will exercise while having fun and spending time with their family and friends.”scramble-sunday

Filed Under: New Castle Releases Tagged With: fitness, New Castle, Scramble Sunday

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