(Advertisement)

Tube City Community Media Inc. is seeking freelance writers to help cover city council, news and feature stories in McKeesport, Duquesne, White Oak and the neighboring communities. High school and college students seeking work experience are encouraged to apply; we are willing to work with students who need credit toward class assignments. Please send cover letter, resume, two writing samples and the name of a reference (an employer, supervisor, teacher, etc. -- not a relative) to tubecitytiger@gmail.com.

To place your ad, email tubecitytiger@gmail.com.
Ads start at $1 per day, minimum seven days.

Portion of AIDS Quilt On Display in McKeesport

By Submitted Report
The Tube City Almanac
November 30, 2016
Posted in: McKeesport and Region News

By Christina Newmyer, Penn State Greater Allegheny

Jon Lutes loved pizza, his Italian mother, and having fun. He had a passion for working with children, travel, and his friends and family. His life, full of love and laughter, was cut short at the age of just 42.

The Monessen native died of AIDS on May 2, 1994.

Now through Dec. 2, a 12-by-12 portion of the AIDS Memorial Quilt, including a panel dedicated to Lutes, is on display in the concourse of the Penn State Greater Allegheny Student Community Center, to commemorate World AIDS Day.

The day also coincides with Jon Lutes’ birthday --- Dec. 1.

Penn State Greater Allegheny Director of Student Affairs Glenn Beech was a friend of Lutes’. They met while attending college at Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania. The two had several classes together and became friends, as Beech said, due to Lutes’ likeable nature.


"He was a unique individual who brought a varied group of people together and we all became friends," Beech said, "mostly because Jon was a fun, funny, and accepting individual who enjoyed life.”

Beech shared that Lutes loved working with children. After graduation, Lutes volunteered to serve in the Peace Corps teaching English to children in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Later, he moved to Seattle, where he taught infants how to swim at a YMCA.

According to Aidsquilt.org, the NAMES Project Foundation is the international caretaker of the epic AIDS Memorial Quilt. It was formed in 1987, when a group of people first gathered in a San Francisco storefront to find a way to remember and honor the lives of their friends, partners and loved ones lost to HIV/AIDS.

They were angry, scared, frustrated, heart-broken and determined to create a memorial that could not be dismissed or denied.

The website also states that what began with a single stretch of fabric measuring three feet by six feet, has since become the internationally celebrated, 54-ton AIDS Memorial Quilt.


Above: In 1995, Penn State Greater Allegheny Director of Student Affairs Glenn Beech (left) and a group of friends made a quilt panel in memory of Beech's friend Jon Joseph Lutes, which became part of the AIDS Memorial Quilt.

In July of 1995, a mutual friend of Lutes and Beech, Kathy Sturni, and Lutes’ mother Rose thought it would be a good gesture for a number of Lutes' friends to come together to create a panel for the AIDS Quilt in his memory. 

So, one Sunday, about eight of his friends who were still in the Pittsburgh area got together at Kathy's house and sewed a panel, all the while sharing personal stories about Lutes. "It was a day filled with emotion and we shared both laughter and tears," Beech said.

According to worldaidsday.org, World AIDS Day is held on Dec. 1 each year and is an opportunity for people worldwide to unite in the fight against HIV, to show their support for people living with HIV, and to commemorate people who have died.

World AIDS Day was the first-ever global health day, held for the first time in 1988. World AIDS Day is important because it reminds the public and government that HIV has not gone away – there is still a vital need to raise money, increase awareness, fight prejudice and improve education.

“I think Jon would have loved the quilt, or more so, the idea that a group of friends got together to preserve their memories and care for one another," Beech said. "He would be proud that the quilt is still bringing AIDS awareness all over the world."

(Photos courtesy of Glenn Beech and Penn State Greater Allegheny.)

Originally published November 30, 2016.

In other news:
"West Mifflin Bridge R…" || "McKeesport Presbyteri…"