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Welcome to the Wheatley School
Alumni Association Newsletter # 183,
Laura Herbst Writes - “Hello Arthur! I'm so glad that I made the trip to Long
Island for the Class of 1974 50th-Year Reunion. It was a wonderful time, and
I'm still smiling about it all. The terrific slide show presentation
showed each one of our Yearbook photographs next to a current photo.”
The Class of 1975 is planning a
50th-year reunion for the late summer or fall of 2025. Contact Robert
Vincze at vinczelaw@att.net, cell phone: 303-204-8207,
if you are interested in serving on the reunion committee or have a great
idea to share.”
ALBANY TAKEOVER OF LONG ISLAND SCHOOLS???
A 1968 graduate says,
“Hunter Restaurant in East Norwich, NY has great food and atmosphere. The son
of Wheatley graduates Scott Wolowitz-now-Wells (1977) and Kathy Milana (1982)
operates it.”
Jeffrey Orling (1965)
Writes - “ I appreciate Wheatley, the staff, the students and the
education that I received.
You don't know what
you’ve got ‘til it's gone, and that rings true for our days at
Wheatley. Of course, time colors memory... some things stand out... and
others fade so that the memory is not true...but it works for me.
And, I love to read any and all memories from our time at Wheatley. The
school motto, veritatem quaerite, Latin, was great: Seek
the truth. Words to live by.”
Peter David Witt - Deceased
Hillsborough,
North Carolina - Peter David Witt passed away on June 25th, 2024 in
Hillsborough, North Carolina. He was preceded in death by his wife Joan and
survived by daughter Andrea Krivacka, her husband Patrick Krivacka, and
grandson Ivan Krivacka of Hillsborough, NC; daughter Laura Witt and her
husband Rick Green of Bellingham, Washington; brother Stephen Witt of Fort
Wayne, Indiana; sister Karen Rich of Entiat, Washington, and several nieces
and nephews.
Peter was born in Massachusetts; he grew up there and in Buffalo, New York.
He attended Phillips Exeter Academy, and then Yale University. Peter
completed his master's and PhD at Harvard University in Education in 1962. He
was affiliated with Brandeis University as the Director of Education Program
for 32 years.
Peter traveled extensively from a young age, and during his marriage to Joan.
He enjoyed sports and for decades, was a season ticket holder at Fenway Park.
Peter loved music and was an accomplished pianist. As a French horn player,
he was a member of Brassworks Quintet, which played throughout the Boston
area for over 20 years.
After Peter and Joan relocated to Chapel Hill, NC, Peter continued to support
the arts as a docent with the Ackland Art Museum. He also volunteered as a
reading tutor with Chapel Hill schools. Peter was long active with the
Unitarian Universalists, both in Newton, Mass. and Chapel Hill, NC. He was a
dear friend to many.
In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the ACLU or Doctors Without Borders, organizations Peter
long supported.
Elvira “Vivi” Cilmi Kunz Writes - “Hi Art, I find it odd that the obituary does
not mention his teaching at Wheatley. I had him for 9th Grade
English and then he went into the army for two years. I communicated
with him while he was at Fort Dix for months. When he returned to
Wheatley, he taught 12th Grade English, and I enjoyed being in his class once
again. When I was in college at St. John’s, I babysat for Peter and
Joan’s little girls. We kept in touch over the years, appreciating the time and
friendship we shared. He was one of my favorite teachers and friends, and I
will miss him.”
Art Engoron (1967) Writes - Peter Witt was another example of the significant
Harvard-to-Wheatley pipeline.
1962 - SoHo Restaurant
Clockwise from Near Left -
NH, Ruth Rennert (1962), AS, Harriet Feinglass (1962), Art Engoron (1967), NW
1963 - Paul Krauss - Deceased
Paul Krauss passed away
November 3, 2024, in hospice care . After completing his studies and
research fellowship at the University of Buffalo, Paul moved to Boston, and
then Maryland, where he founded AI Corp. Eventually, he moved to
warmer temperatures, settling in sunny San Diego, CA, where he founded
Winfix.
He is survived by his
loving family: partner Jana; son Max and wife Lauren Westfall;
grandsons Reverdy and Simon; daughter Jane and husband Julio Frausto; and
sister Wilma Krauss Royall (1960). Brother George (1967) predeceased.
1964 - James Paley - “Dear Art, I thought that I would take the
opportunity to share with my classmates and other interested alumni a window
into what I have been doing professionally for the past 45 years. I am
Executive Director of Neighborhood Housing Services of New Haven, where we
address housing issues and problems that first-time homebuyers frequently
face in achieving their aspirations to become homeowners.
My work continues to
focus on helping to revitalize and stabilize targeted neighborhoods in New
Haven by promoting homeownership opportunities, providing homebuyer education
and counseling, and establishing resident leadership in the communities we
serve. Over the past 45 years, we have constructed or rehabilitated more than
300 homes for first-time homebuyers, and I am constantly having to raise
subsidies to make it possible for us to create more homeownership
opportunities on vacant lots in underserved neighborhoods in New Haven.
If any alumni are
interested in reading more about our organization, here is a link to our
website: Neighborhood Housing Services of New Haven
And if anyone is
interested in helping us financially with a fully tax-deductible
contribution, here is a direct link to the donation page on our
website: https://nhsofnewhaven.org/get-involved/donate/.
Thank you for giving me
the opportunity to share with fellow Wheatleyites what I've been up to for
the past 45 years. I'm pleased to say that at least four members of the Class
of 1964 already support our organization!”
Jack Wolf (1967) Writes - “On Being Number 1 - I think that I had a good public
education, and I am grateful for that. I still remember Mr. Pagliaro and the
Missouri Compromise, along with the art teacher with no bra (or was that
North Side?). Adolescents definitely have interests other than academics. I
still hold the record for balancing on two legs of my chair in a class,
having spent a whole French class in the air in eighth grade. My education
allowed me to be a better informed 'good for nothing' in the hippy years,
before coming to my senses and getting a job, other than selling poems or
hallucinogens on the streets of Denver.
But in response to the recent revelling in Wheatley's pre-eminence as the
‘best school,' as portrayed by people who fetishize being the top dog, the
creme de la creme, my spiritual leanings always argue for humility instead of
the guy with the big Number 1 finger at the ballgame.
I am likely in the minority, who feel that all of the self-congratulation at
Wheatley avoids the obvious. Wheatley was a rich school. Wheatley was an
all-white school. There were negligible poor people at Wheatley, There were
no blacks or Puerto Ricans in my class of 1967, one Asian person. Some of
that was housing discrimination, even as the liberal district was marching
for freedom for those in the Jim Crow South.
I am no progressive politically, and I don’t buy most of the equity
arguments from the anti-racist crowd. But I am a religious person, and so I
value humility over winning the contest for being the bestest. The thing
about being at the top is that it necessitates a lot of people
being lower than you. So being in a top school in a wealthy district
means that a lot of other people were in 'piss poor' schools in poor
districts.
My ascetic instincts dislike elitism. I would rather see people facing
hardship prosper than the top dogs securing the top dog advantages. There are
finite resources, and education has been the key to keeping the elites at the
top, or as a wonderful book worth reading calls them, the "Dream
Hoarders" ( Dream Hoarders: How the American Upper Middle Class Is
Leaving Everyone Else in the Dust, Why That Is a Problem, and What to Do
About It: Reeves, Richard, author of President Kennedy: 9780815729129:
Amazon.com: Books) That books breaks with the progressive
narrative about some small group of super billionaires making everybody
else miserable (not that I harbor great sympathy for Musk, et al.) but points
out the way that the upper educated professional class of lawyers, doctors,
financial consultants maintains their ever increasing share of the pie
through Kaplan courses and academic requirements, Ivy league cachet, and
through the Wheatleys of the world.
My best friend died recently. Frank Nieves didn't go to Wheatley but to
school in Spanish Harlem, which afforded him a trip to Vietnam. As an adult,
we shared a lot - our love of salsa dancing primarily and our reminiscences
of New York. But what was obvious was that he was raised in a world that was
totally different from my experience in the Elysian Fields of Old Westbury.
My family's progressive politics emphasized sympathy for the poor, but I
still existed in a world distinctly set aside for the privileged. I would
have had a hard time hanging with my friend Frank, because I absorbed so much
of the upper-class intellectual identity that my parents, who grew up in the
slums, themselves, wanted me to have. I sympathize with my parents,
who grew up in poverty and then war, and I understand that they
wanted a suburban utopia free of those things they had to endure, but I left
to join the real world..
I am not anti-intellectual. I still love Mr. Pagliaro for his passion for
teaching the Missouri Compromise every year for thirty years. I loved the
man. And I had a great education. Mr. Seiderman’s unintended assignment of
the Bhagavad Gita in some 10th grade elective put me on the path of a
spiritual pilgrim. But what my spirituality teaches me is to favor the
benefit of others over oneself and not to seek advantage for oneself beyond
the normal that all people should enjoy.
Jack Wolf, Farmer Labor Party of The Wheatley School (1966)”
Scott Geery (1967) Writes - “Refreshing words, Jack, Thanks.”
Billy Meyn (1974) Writes - “I intend to augment Jack Wolf's comments, not to
rebut them I went to four different high schools in four years:
Wheatley; Menchville VA: Pascack Valley High, NJ; Eastport NY. My
experience in four different schools increased my appreciation for
Wheatley, It also increased my empathy and understanding for
others with different backgrounds. My 10th-grade year in VA was the year that
the school was racially integrated by court ordered busing. Some lessons
are learned outside the classroom. I did well enough to gain
acceptance to the US Coast Guard Academy. I always credited my
strong background in the EWUFSD for my success. Acceptance at the
USCGA was based on SAT scores and class rank. My SATs were OK (680
math, 620 English) but not spectacular. I graduated #3 from a
small school with 80 students in the graduating class (Eastport), I was
the top ranked MALE at a time when the USCGA accepted only males (1974 --
women were accepted starting 1976). Graduating from Eastport is more
likely to have secured my spot at USCGA (and 45 years of employment in the
Coast Guard) than anything else, even though Eastport is ranked 283rd in NY
State. I agree with Jack's appeal to humbleness. Life has a strong
element of randomness. Contrary to Shakespeare's claim in
Julius Cesar: the fault sometimes IS in our stars as much as in
ourselves, for better or worse. I was lucky twice.”
1968 - Chris Srinivasan -
Celebrating His Life - 12/7/24 - Noon
Saturday,
December 7, 2024, Paisley-Tribeca, 429 Greenwich Street, NYC
Seth Bardo (1967) Writes - In writing about Chris Srinivasan, I don’t want to
repeat any of the tributes to him that were so graciously crafted by my
classmates Jim Seaton and Arthur Engoron. What I do want to share in
retrospect is my admiration for the way that Chris lived his life in
challenging circumstances. Adolescence poses its own myriad of hurdles; with
great maturity, Chris faced the additional burden of being the only kid who
looked like him. As Jack Wolf pointed out in his recent reflection about the
Wheatley community, our school and neighborhoods were homogenized. The
Srinivasans were different-they were Indian.`
Chris and I spent a fair
amount of time together. He was, I imagine, like having a younger brother. We
hung out together, mutual interests creating a bond between us, one forged by
an overriding desire to escape suburbia. I regret that we never did talk about
his ‘otherness’; it did not occur to me as a subject for discussion, while
for Chris it must have shaped his daily reality in profound, often painful,
ways. There is always a cost for straddling two worlds. The only way he
acknowledged his separateness was in his choice of clothing. While many of us
wore chinos and button down shirts, Chris expressed himself, his
individuality, with a unique sartorial style: black turtle neck and pants,
boots, and leather jacket.
Reflecting on Chris’s
life, I feel a surge of emotion, of gratefulness to him for teaching me
through his charismatic quiet presence that ‘difference’ was not strange, but
instead a source for joy.
1967-1980-1989 - At
Lawyer Event
L-R - Alexander
Tisch (1989), Deborah Rosenthal (1980), Art Engoron (1967)
1973 - Leonard Weinstock - Lenny is doing a
medical research project on a common, but rarely recognized
syndrome - mast cell activation syndrome. He needs a group of generally
healthy people from 18 to 84 years of age to fill out an anonymous, private
health survey. The project is approved by a human study committee and takes 5
-10 minutes to complete. The link is https://www.PatientsCount.org/survey/NMC -- Thank you for
your helping.
1974 - Videos from the Wheatley
Class of 1974 50th-Year Reunion - Compiled by Cliff Gaines (1974) - Submitted
by Class Correspondent Debra Copeland (1974)
[[[Editor’s Note - To access and
play the videos, you might have to click on a big arrow in the middle of the
graphic, then somewhere/anywhere in the dark area, then on a small arrow in
the bottom left hand corner……something like that.]]]
Link to “This is Us / Then and Now”
Link to “Buddy Pics” Video
Link to Photo Montage of Party
2009 - Amanda Hartman Ryan - “This is Stewart, formerly known by Hearts & Bones
Rescue as Butter Cow. He is a one-year-old basset hound puppy from Texas who
loves playing fetch and lying in everyone's laps. 😍”
1960 (Elaine Kent Abrams) - “Thanks for your time in keeping us up-to-date.”
1965 (Jeffrey Orling) - “YIKES, Art, A great big thank you for the journeys down Memory
Lane that you create. I am a big fan of these emails. They are
fabulous. You outdo yourself with each edition. I love reading these, and I
am pleased to contribute. Jeffrey”
1967 (Scott Frishman) - “Hey Art, Great Newsletter, as usual.”
1968 (Ellen Alpert Aronow) - “Thanks for your continued amazing work with the
Newsletter.”
1968 (Leslie Wolowitz) - “I read the Newsletters as soon as they arrive, and I
love all the news. Keep up the good work.”
1981 (Gary Korn) - “You have set up an amazing site. I have followed it
for years, and I appreciate the effort!”
2009 (Amanda Hartman Ryan) - “I love all of the Newsletters.”
In the first 24 or so
hours after publication, Wheatley Alumni Newsletter # 182 was viewed 2,755
times and was liked seven times. In all, 4,717 email addresses received
Newsletter # 182.
For all of October 4,719
email addresses received the Newsletter, which was accessed approximately
18,500 times.
Thanks to our fabulous
Webmaster, Keith Aufhauser (Class of 1963), you can
regale yourself with the first 182 Wheatley School Alumni Association
Newsletters (and much other Wheatley data and arcana) at
The Wheatley School Alumni Association Website
Also thanks to Keith is
our search engine, prominently displayed on our home page: type in a word or
phrase and, wow!, you’ll find every place it exists in all previous
Newsletters and other on-site material.
I edit all submissions,
even material in quotes, for clarity and concision, without any indication
thereof. I cannot and do not vouch for the accuracy of what people tell
me, as TWSAA does not have a fact-checking department.
We welcome any and all
text and photos relevant to The Wheatley School, 11 Bacon Road, Old Westbury,
NY 11568, and the people who administered, taught, worked, and/or studied
there. Art Engoron, Class of 1967
That’s it for The Wheatley School
Alumni Association Newsletter # 183. Please send me your autobiography
before someone else sends me your obituary.
Art
Arthur Fredericks Engoron, Class of 1967