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New Castle News

In Memoriam: Donald Michael Lunetta, Sr., January 10, 1940-July 15, 2016

July 22, 2016 by Inside Press

“Thou canst not stir a flower, without troubling of a star.” ~ Francis Thompson

From the family of Donald Michael Lunetta, Sr.:

With full hearts, we share the news of our beloved husband, father, grandfather and friend Donald Michael Lunetta, Sr.’s death on Friday, July 15, 2016. Don died at home surrounded by his loving family. We are grateful that his struggle with brain cancer has ended and that he is now at peace.

Donald Michael Lunetta, Sr.
Donald Michael Lunetta, Sr.

Born in 1940 to Samuel and Esther (Nieri) Lunetta, Don was raised in Sacramento, California, a proud son of Sicilian descent. His youth proved to nurture some of the character traits that stayed strong throughout his life: affinity to music, curiosity, science, nature, invention, and humor. He met the love of his life, Loretta-Jo (Abbott) Lunetta in 1951 while they were both active volunteers at the Sacramento Junior Museum, and after years of friendship blossoming into romance, they were married in 1960.

With the wedding guests waving farewell, Don and Jo headed for Colorado, where they built a home and brought five children into the world. Don worked at the Denver Museum of Natural History as the curator of the Planetarium. During his tenure at the museum, he designed several pioneering technologies for planetariums, including the first tilting dome and the first telescope/television projection system. Don’s systems were used by NASA and national news media to show the progress of the Apollo 10. The museum was also the perfect environment for Don to cultivate his natural teaching style, a talent he shared with everyone around him his entire life. In addition, Don was honored to be part of the discovery and first known documentation of nesting Goshawks in Colorado, with his photographs and story included in The Colorado Book of Birds. Don remains known at the museum for his sense of humor, wonder and aptitude for education and community outreach and was featured in their recent 50-year retrospective of the museum.

Hired by McGraw Hill in 1969, Don brought his family to New York, where he consulted on space and planetarium projects throughout the 1970’s. He appeared on a variety of TV and Radio Shows and was a featured speaker for many organizations, spreading his love of space and the natural world. He designed and directed the installation of planetarium domes and telescopes at Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, NY, and at Camp Kaybeyun in Alton Bay, NH.

Don owned and operated his own business, Small Moon Enterprises, an international multimedia production company. Responsible for all aspects of production, he created multimedia interpretive exhibits for museums and special projects including work on the Intrepid Sea Air Space Museum, the Franklin Park Zoo in Boston, the Charlotte Science Museum, the Amarillo Texas Science Center, Roanoke Science Museum, West Virginia’s Oglebay Park, the US Navy Band, Covenant House, and the Louisiana World Fair and Smithsonian Folk Life Festival. In 1979, the Governor of the State of Louisiana named Don as an honorary colonel of the governor’s staff, in recognition of the tremendous work Don did to promote the heritage of the State of Louisiana. Don photographically documented the development of the plans and eventual refurbishment of the Statue of Liberty in 1984. He was a pioneer in multimedia production and interactive communications and marketing, starting with his creation of a panoramic five camera system in 1975 and following through to water screens and interactive touch screens in the early 1990’s.

A lifelong independent learner, fascinated and competent with technology and human connection, Don learned computer language and programming from his home office as the digital age unfolded. He dedicated the final years of his career as a photographer and IT Specialist, first for Holmes and Kennedy Real Estate, and then for Douglas Elliman Real Estate. He was recognized by his peers as a tremendous team player, and in February of 2016 was honored with a Lifetime Achievement award by Douglas Elliman, which he accepted with grace and dignity on the stage of Radio City Music Hall.

Don was always inclined to create positive change, to participate in small heroic acts and to share the stories of those who were quiet heroes. Countless people, young and old, recount meeting Don on the boardwalk at the Pinecliff Sanctuary to discover the beauty and fascination of the natural world, always sharing a laugh or a story. Don treasured his many trips to the inland waterways of the United Kingdom, meandering by narrowboat through England and Wales almost biannually for two decades. Always seeking adventure, Don is fondly remembered as the oldest Grandpa to ever strap himself into the zip-line at Green Mountain College in Vermont.

Community engagement has always motivated Don, he served his country as an airborne radio operator in the United States Air Force and Air Force Reserves. He served as a member of the Saw Mill River Audubon board of directors and was instrumental in the planning, building and ongoing support for an ADA accessible boardwalk through the Pinecliff Sanctuary. Don and Jo were recently honored with the installment of a plaque on the boardwalk, honoring their nearly 50 years of stewardship for the reserve. He also served as an active member of the New Castle Citizen Emergency Response (CERT) Team, the Chappaqua Rotary and was always prepared for random acts of kindness.

Don was most proud of his family. He was a devoted and loving husband, father, grandfather and uncle. Upon learning of Don’s death, his family received this kind message from someone who recalled growing up with Don as his neighbor: “It’s hard to fathom how many lives he changed for the better. I know it’s in the thousands and I would not be surprised if it’s in the tens of thousands… Anyone, everyone… always a kind word and an explanation for some aspect of nature, some fact of art or photography. Always with a wisecrack and a smile. Just a good man who made the world better.” We are thankful for this perceptive and comforting comment, as it captures the spirit of the man we cherish.

Don is survived by his devoted wife and partner of 56 years, Loretta-Jo Lunetta of Chappaqua NY; his brother Dennis and wife Hazel, sister-in-law Sharon Lunetta, his beloved children Roslyn Lunetta, Matthew Lunetta and wife Chenoa Dovon, Samuel Lunetta and wife Bonnie Bisgeier, Celeste Lunetta and husband Don Crooker, Donald Lunetta Jr., grandchildren Meiko Lunetta, Silas Lunetta, Evan Lunetta, Rosemary-Jo Lunetta Crooker; and several nieces, nephews and valued friends.

Service Information:

Please join us at a celebration of Don’s life, which will be held on Sunday, August 14 at Teatown Lake Reservation; 11:30 a.m.- 2 p.m. The service will be at Noon, with light fare and socializing afterwards.  Teatown Lake Reservation is located at 1600 Spring Valley Road, Ossining NY, 10562. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation in Don’s memory to the Chappaqua Library (195 South Greeley Avenue, Chappaqua NY, 10514), or to the Saw Mill River Audubon Pinecliff Sanctuary Boardwalk (275 Millwood Road, Chappaqua NY 10514).

Filed Under: New Castle News Tagged With: Donald Michael Lunetta, Sr.

A Time of Grief and Sadness Brings Community Together Again

July 12, 2016 by Inside Press

Article and Photos By Kelly Leonard

Color Guard awaits vigil.
Color Guard awaits vigil.

Chappaqua, NY, July 11–Four weeks after the Town of New Castle community gathered at its gazebo to mourn the loss of 49 souls gunned down in the Orlando Pulse nightclub terrorist attack, the community gathered again in shock from another week of violence in the U.S. This time we saw the lives of civilians and uniformed police officers taken during the past seven days, including the largest loss of police personnel in a single day in the U.S. since 9/11.

“A Community Gathering in a Time of Grief and Sadness” was held by the Town of New Castle for the community to express its appreciation for the brave individuals who dedicate their lives to law enforcement and to sustaining peace and security on its streets.

In addition to scores of community members, dozens of police and fire personnel came from across Westchester County to honor and remember the fallen including members of the Chappaqua, Millwood, Mount Kisco, Mount Pleasant, and Westchester County Police departments among others. All wore dress uniforms with their badges covered with black bands.

The Emerald Society Bag Pipes Band opened the ceremony followed by a presentation of the Town of New Castle Police Department Color Guard. Chappaqua Central School Board Vice President Victoria Tipp led the Pledge of Allegiance. Speakers included New Castle Town Supervisor Rob Greenstein, Westchester County Legislator Michael B. Kaplowitz, New Castle Chief of Police Charles Ferry, Police Officer Chad Glance, President of the New Castle Police Benevolent Association, Rev. Dr. Martha R. Jacobs, Senior Minister of the First Congregational Church of Chappaqua, Rabbi Jonathan Jaffe of Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester, and Khusro Elley of the Upper Westchester Muslim Society.

The names of the five fallen Dallas Police and DART officers–Lorne Ahrens, Michael Krol, Michael J. Smith, Brent Thompson and Patrick Zamarripa–were read aloud.

The resonating themes of the formal remarks were loss, mourning, honor in service, disparity in justice, and gun violence. While the phrase, “we are not divided, we are united” was said by more than one speaker, at times the remarks underscored the raw emotion felt in the aftermath of last Thursday’s ambush in Dallas.

Town Supervisor Robert Greenstein expressed his outrage about all the lives lost. “Americans of all races and all backgrounds are outraged by police misconduct. It’s unacceptable. When one of us is victimized we all suffer. There’s no division there,” he said. And then added: “Americans of all races and all backgrounds are also outraged when police officers sworn to uphold the law are at risk. Police officers who are protecting those who want to exercise their right to free speech, even if that speech is directed at other police officers, should not be at risk of being murdered. Senseless, heartless, murder.

Greenstein continued: “Whether the event stems from terrorism, hate crimes or any other motive is irrelevant. Gun violence as a tool of hatred targeting race, gender, sexual preference, profession or for any other reason cannot be tolerated. We must say no to gun violence. Lives cannot be lost in vain.”

Chief Ferry spoke of how police departments have more militarized weaponry now in reaction to “the militarization of criminals” and expressed how he is tired of hearing his officers and officers around the country being called racists while they risk their lives to protect their communities. He noted, “Five officers were slaughtered simply for the fact they were police officers.”

Chief Ferry inside the Gazebo addressing the community.
Chief Ferry inside the Gazebo addressing the community.

During his remarks, Khusro Elley of the Upper Westchester Muslim Society said, “We mourn the unfortunate and unnecessary deaths” of the past week and “we are outraged by the killing of African American men and women.” One of the more striking remarks of the evening was when Elley stated, “I would rather be Muslim than Black in America.”

Rabbi Jaffe of Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester offered that gathering was an opportunity for the community to “join together in our feelings of mutual support.” He also quoted from Auschwitz survivor and Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel, “The opposite of love is not hate, it’s indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it’s indifference. The opposite of faith is not heresy, it’s indifference. And the opposite of life is not death, it’s indifference.”

“I truly pray,” said Rev. Dr. Jacobs of the First Congregational Church of Chappaqua, “I am not standing here in another month for another vigil for another senseless act of violence.”

Rev. Martha Jacobs greeting New Castle police officers.
Rev. Martha Jacobs greeting New Castle police officers.

In closing the ceremony, the Emerald Society Bag Pipes Band played “Amazing Grace” as members of the Chappaqua Fire Department lit and released sky lanterns in memory of the lives lost in the Dallas ambush. The playing and singing of “God Bless America” brought the solemn gathering to a close while many lingered to watch the sky lanterns disappear into the evening sky.
Gathering.EmeraldSociety
Kelly Leonard is the Founder and Principal Consultant of KLO Associates, LLC, a digital marketing boutique specializing in custom content strategy and influencer engagement for authors, publishers, local businesses and nonprofits. Previously she held senior management positions at Time Warner Book Group and Hachette Book Group.

Filed Under: New Castle News Tagged With: Chappaqua, Color Guard, Community Gathering, Emerald Society, gazebo, Grief, New Castle, violence

Chappaqua Summer Concert Series Kicks off July 7 with the Mike Risko Band

June 30, 2016 by Inside Press

SummerConcert-poster16
The annual New Castle Summer Concert Series kicks off this Wednesday, July 6th at 7PM with a performance by the Mike Risko Band. So, bring your blanket or lawn chair, a picnic dinner or snack, and get ready for some great music and fun for adults and kids of all ages. Concerts begin at 7 p.m. at the Town of New Castle Recreation Field. Admission is free.
Breezemont Day camp is the top sponsor. Other sponsors include Korth & Shannahan Painting & Carpentry, Financial Asset Management, Allstate Insurance, Jodi’s Gym and Esposito’s Sausage.
Please mark your calendars! Here’s the schedule for this year’s concerts:
• July 6 — Mike Risko Band
• July 13 — Tramps Like Us
• July 20 — Don Dupont Big Band
• July 27 — Chappaqua Orchestra

Filed Under: Happenings, New Castle News

The Greyston Foundation–We Are Open Hiring

June 23, 2016 by Janine Crowley Haynes

By Janine Crowley Haynes

It was a beautiful evening last Wednesday for the Greyston Foundation’s 2016 Gala held at Chef Peter Kelly’s X2O Xaviar’s on the Hudson. Approximately 250 people came out in support of the Foundation and over $275,000 was raised. Greyston Bakery, located in Southwest Yonkers, is known for its decadent baked goods. The Bakery delivers to Ben & Jerry’s 35,000 pounds of brownies and blondies that go into its various ice cream flavors. Their baked goods are also sold at Whole Foods as well as on their website greyston.com.

Mike Brady, President & CEO of Greyston with Greyston Bakery employee, Charles Jones
Mike Brady, President & CEO of Greyston with Greyston Bakery employee Charles Jones

Greyston Bakery is not your ordinary bakery. It’s known, in particular, for its Open Hiring policy wherein Greyston has a fundamental commitment to social justice…in which individuals are offered employment regardless of educational attainment, work history, incarceration, or past social barriers. Anyone with a positive attitude and strong work ethic is given a chance to transform their life for the better.

Open Hiring was the main theme of all the speeches given. Greyston Bakery employee Charles Jones gave a heartfelt speech about how his life was turned around and put on a path of success because of the opportunities and programs offered by the Greyston Foundation.

The Greyston Foundation provides various programs including job training, housing, and childcare—all intended to support and uplift its employees and their families and help them become self-sufficient and thrive, not just in the workplace, but in their personal lives as well.

Brady:Cruz:Jenkins
Greytson’s President & CEO Mike Brady with honorees Founder of Charter School of Educational Excellence Sobeida Cruz and Westchester County Legislator Ken Jenkins

This year, Greyston honored Founder of Charter School of Educational Excellence Sobeida Cruz and Westchester County Legislator Ken Jenkins. In attendance, were various local business owners who’ve supported Greyston and its business model of Open Hiring. Among them, President and CEO Peter Mollo and Howard Rosenzweig of Crown Products. Crown has hired a few of Greyston’s former employees.

Chappaqua resident Dr. Lydia Evans has been a longtime supporter of Greyston and its unique approach to education and employment. “There are many creative paths to success and, sometimes, alternative tracks provide the best outcome,” says Evans.

To learn more about Greyston Bakery and the Greyston Foundation and its mindful business practices, click here: http://theinsidepress.com/greyston-bakery-implementing-mindful-business-strategies-since-1982/

 

*******************************************************************************

Chappaqua resident Lydia Evans, M.D. with husband Arnold Toback, M.D.

 

grey.BradyKelly
Mike Brady with Chef Peter Kelly, X2O Xaviar’s on the Hudson
grey.AndyCaroline
Pleasantville residents Caroline & Andy Rosengarden; Caroline is Associate to the Publisher of the Inside Press and Andy is Vice President of Finance at Greyston
GreystonPic1
President & CEO Peter Mollo and Howard Rosenzweig of Crown Products

grey.brownies grey.ChARLESbEST grey.couple grey.coupleBlackWhiteStripes grey.cuteServers grey.group1BEST grey.OutsideGORGEOUS grey.TwoGuysWater CrowdX2O X2OView

 

Filed Under: New Castle News Tagged With: Greyston Bakery, The Greyston Foundation

Love Triumphs at Chappaqua Vigil for Orlando Victims

June 14, 2016 by Inside Press

Story and Photos by Grace Bennett



Chappaqua, June 13–On the steps and floor of the South Greeley Avenue gazebo or on the soft field of grass, and under a gradually darkening sky, Chappaqua residents stood together either silent or in song during a vigil to honor the victims and their loved ones in Orlando–and to hear and be comforted by the words of area clergy and public officials, and also to begin the hard work of making sense of Saturday night’s horrific massacre.

Chappaqua Vigil for Orlando Photo by Grace Bennett/Inside Press
Chappaqua Vigil for Orlando Photo by Grace Bennett/Inside Press

The crowd was led in singing Ya’aseh Shalom (a prayer for peace) by Star Trompeter, the Cantor of Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester, and Amazing Grace, led by Dr. Martha Jacobs of the First Congregational Church.

Rabbi Jonathan Jaffe of Temple Beth El of Northern Westchester opened the ceremony noting “already stories of courage and faith abound from the victims and survivors,” and that “in such moments we have the opportunity to bring godliness into the world.” He thanked Dawn Evans Greenberg and New Castle Town Supervisor Robert Greenstein and his fellow clergy for making the event possible. “Let’s support one another through our grief and heartache while committing ourselves to the hard work of making a more peaceful world a reality.”orlando.jaffeeGroupBest

Supervisor Greenstein reminded that “more love and less hate stands for a better tomorrow…
“Love serves as both our shield to protect us and our sword to fight hatred and violence and intolerance.”orlando.ROBBestGroup

Dr. Jacobs spoke of the critical need for unconditional love in all our lives and to not allow hatred to poison our outlook or our souls. She asked that everyone reach out and support members of the LGBT community, as well.

“No one is spared from grief and sorrow in our world; it’s the price we pay because we love, we all have grief and we all have sorrow. For those who decide to kill each other and cause such sorrow, I truly have a hard time believing that they have experienced love, absolute love, unconditional love. Because once we experience love, it is something that draws us back again and again to be with people in our lives….”orlando.MarthaGroup

“The best we can do is share the love with all those with whom we come into the contact. I pray in the aftermath of this horror we can find ways to support and honor our lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer friends and neighbors while also being mindful of the cost that gun violence brings to many communities every day…Even while we may disagree I call on us to be more mindful of those directly affected by gun violence–not only in Orlando but across the country…
“Jesus tells us to love our enemies, but that does not mean that we are to be silent in the face of such a horrific act of killing people in the so called name of someone’s God.”

Dr. Jacobs reminded that while we may be angry, “hate will not stop the cycle of violence, not in this country, not anywhere in our world.”
And she recalled the words of Martin Luther King:
“Returning violence for violence multiplies violence adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.”
“Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that.”
“Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”
“Hatred paralyzes life; love releases it.”
“Hatred confuses life; love harmonizes it.”
“Hatred darkens life; love illuminates it.”

Khusro Elley of the Upper Westchester Muslim Society offered poignant words affirming Muslim beliefs: “As Muslims, we can and do condemn in strongest possible terms the killing of innocent people in Orlando. It appears the only crime in the eyes of the killer was the sexual orientation of the victims. We should urge our lawmakers for the harshest measures for hate crimes and take whatever measures are available to prevent such dastardly acts…

“Believe me that fact that the killer professed to be of the Muslim faith makes each and every muslim feel the pain even more than otherwise. We feel the pain as Americans, parents, brothers, sisters and wives and husbands and we feel the pain as Muslims…
Orlando.muslim woman
“I am proud to stand in solidarity with all other faiths and all other the people in Chappaqua to mourn the untimely deaths of all the victims in Florida, many of them still in the prime of their life. May God grant us the courage to overcome this loss.”orlando.Aneese Shaikha

A representative for Congresswoman Nita Lowey reminded that the gun purchase by the terrorist perpetrator was legal. “He was a citizen much as any of us here.” She said that Lowey firmly believes and will fight for a ban on such weaponry. “We have to try. For every person who says it won’t stop anything, if it stops one person from doing something this awful, she (Lowey) says yes, let’s try.”orlando.lowey rep

The final speaker was Chappaqua’s Sheryl Goldberg Manassee, a member of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America. Dressed in an orange tee, Manassee read from an essay written by an openly gay young woman whose identity she did share at the event, but Sheryl and the young lady’s family have since asked The Inside Press for her anonymity. She wrote that she had attended and “had a great time” at the Los Angeles Gay Pride Festival the night before learning of the massacre and of how her sense of safety has been shattered. She pointedly reminds that you don’t need to be gay to feel unsafe, either.
orlando.sherylBEST

“This is what it feels like for her…,” began Manassee.

“…Last night I kissed my girlfriend in public in a simple act of love and protest that straight people participate in without thought or fear. Last night I was not afraid and allowed myself to believe that love triumphs hate. This morning something changed. I guess a part of me always knew that I was truly not safe anywhere. Just like a part of you knows that you are not safe anymore. And neither are your sons, daughters and sisters, whether they are straight, whether they are gay, or whether they are black or whether they are white.

“You feel safe in school, until massacres, at Virginia Tech, and USCB, and Columbine and Sandy Hook and Columbine show you that you are not safe even in school. You feel safe in a movie theater until the deaths of those who dare to watch a Batman film in Aurora show at you are not safe in a movie theater. You feel safe at your place of employment until those who went to work in San Bernardino one day never came home. You feel safe in a church, protected by God himself until a racist unleashes and shows you that you are not safe in church…

And speaking metaphorically to the terrorist, she asked: “Did you think of these people as individuals? Did you check to see that your friends were not one?”

Manassee reached out to those in attendance. She handed out 50 pennies to place down in a location in remembrance. “50 people. Take 50 pennies. Line them up and think of each as a life that was taken last night. Each one is my brother and my sister and each one of them is targeted. 50 people whose friends and families will never be the same. 50 people who left their dogs at home, their mothers or lovers, who said, I’ll be right back…” Single stem pink roses donated by Whispering Pines of Chappaqua were also placed to honor the victims.
orlando.flowers3

Filed Under: New Castle News Tagged With: Chappaqua, New Castle, Orlando, Vigil

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