Dave was a member of the First Congregational Church of Ridgefield, volunteered on several mission trips including H.O.M.E, Habitat for Humanity and locally repaired homes for Americares. Dave also served as a past Scout Master of Boy Scout Troop 431 of Ridgefield
Danielle Marie Coletta of Peekskill was 48 years old.
She was a sixth-grade teacher at Mildred E. Strang Middle School in Yorktown.
Her career began at Columbus Elementary School in Hawthorne, teaching second grade, followed by many years at Brookside Elementary School in Yorktown, as a third-grade teacher.
She attended George Washington Elementary School in Mohegan Lake, Copper Beech Middle School, and Walter Panas High School in Cortlandt Manor.
She graduated from Pace University in Pleasantville, N.Y. with a Bachelors s Degree in Education and Western Connecticut University where she received a Master s Degree in Education.
Danielle will be remembered for her devotion to the teaching profession.
A popular Northern Westchester teacher died unexpectedly on Monday, Feb. 22.Danielle Marie Coletta of Peekskill was 48 years old.She was a sixth-grade teacher at Mildred E. Strang Middle School in Yorktown.Her career began at Columbus Elem…
Danielle Marie Coletta of Peekskill was 48 years old.
She was a sixth-grade teacher at Mildred E. Strang Middle School in Yorktown.
Her career began at Columbus Elementary School in Hawthorne, teaching second grade, followed by many years at Brookside Elementary School in Yorktown, as a third-grade teacher.
She attended George Washington Elementary School in Mohegan Lake, Copper Beech Middle School, and Walter Panas High School in Cortlandt Manor.
She graduated from Pace University in Pleasantville, N.Y. with a Bachelors s Degree in Education and Western Connecticut University where she received a Master s Degree in Education.
Danielle will be remembered for her devotion to the teaching profession.
By JOHN STATON | Star-News, Wilmington, N.C. | Published: February 25, 2021 WILMINGTON, N.C. (Tribune News Service) As it turns out, humans aren t the only ones who ve been experiencing quarantine lately. In January, over at the headquarters for Canines for Service, the nonprofit Wilmington group that trains dogs and places them with disabled veterans, there was a big, friendly boy named Archer who barked and sniffed at the outstretched hands of a couple of masked visitors. Archer, a shaggy Great Pyrenees with a striking coat flecked with grays, blacks and browns, was a new arrival at Canines for Service (CFS), and as such was in his own cage, quarantined a room over (a precaution against kennel cough and other such ailments) from a half-dozen dogs in training who were also barking excitedly.