Dear Wheatley Wildcats and Other
Interested Persons,
Welcome to The Wheatley School
Alumni Association (“TWSAA”) Newsletter # 195.
SECOND
AND FINAL SCAM WARNING - Recently, a Wheatley graduate received an email
addressed to “Wheatley Alumni” and advertising $35 “lifetime memberships” in
a supposed organization calling itself “AlumniClass,” allegedly located in
“Spokane Valley, WA.” None of that has any connection to The Wheatley School
Alumni Association. At best, such “membership” is probably totally worthless;
at worst, it is probably a dangerous scam. TWSAA has never taken a penny for
what we do, and we don’t intend to.
Adds Webmaster Keith Aufhauser (1963) - “AlumniClass.com is a real business, but it
is not affiliated with The Wheatley School in any way. Caveat Emptor.
Wheatley in Los
Angeles
Vera Kaltinick (1973) and Nancy Dreyer (1973) were thrilled
to be present when Bonnie Greenberg (1972) was
honored by the Guild of Music Supervisors last month. Bonnie received the
Legacy Award for her career in film, and she's got some terrific projects
ahead. A bonus was seeing Winnie Holzman (1972), who was at
the awards ceremony celebrating her Wicked stage and screen partner, Stephen
Schwartz.
L-R - Bonnie,
Nancy, Vera
L-R - Winnie,
Bonnie
A Wheatley Presenter
Beatles Exploitation Albums in 1964 - Presented by Bob Koenig
(1980)
Saturday, Apr. 26, 2025 - 2:00 pm -
3:00 pm
The Shelter Rock Library Community
Room, 165 Searingtown Road, Albertson, NY
“Join us for an exciting
exploration of the Beatles’ 1964 Exploitation Albums, a fascinating chapter
in music history! Discover the rare, lesser-known albums that capitalized on
the Beatles’ global fame, and learn how these records captured the frenzy of
Beatlemania. Perfect for music enthusiasts and Beatles fans looking to dive
deeper into this unique era of the Fab Four’s impact on pop culture!”
CONTACT: (516) 248-7363 x 233
Faculty - Edward
Ouchi Revisited
Steve Rushmore (1963) Writes - Growing up, I had learning disabilities and was never a
good reader or writer. I found Mr. Ouchi’s class very stressful, and I could
never follow his teaching method. I vividly remember, after turning in a
writing assignment, him saying to me, “Rushmore, this is the worst paper I
have ever read - you will never be a writer!” I was scarred for life.
But life has a way of
forcing you to adapt. It led me to hotel consulting, where my product was a
100+ page appraisal report, which at the time required me to write every
word. Through a lot of effort, I became a fairly good writer, which enabled
me to author eight textbooks and over 350 articles - not bad for a “never be
a writer.” A number of years ago, Mr. Ouchi came to our Class of ’63 Wheatley
reunion, where I presented him with an autographed copy of one of my
textbooks. I’m not sure that he actually remembered the ‘encouragement’ he
gave me many years before.”
Ellen Solow Holzman (1964) Writes - “I've been interested in the messages about Ed
Ouchi, whom I knew as both my teacher and, later, as my colleague, I thought
I would add to the story. He team-taught my 10th grade class with Peter Witt, and they were a good pairing, as they had
differing strengths. This was before Ed started teaching Transformational
Grammar (the official name), but I do remember doing some rather unusual
grammatical exercises, and I now wonder whether they were part of the work he
was doing on his PhD (never attained, so he was, like a number of Wheatley
teachers, what they call ‘ABD’—all but dissertation).
When I returned to
Wheatley in 1989 as a teacher, he was the head of the English Department, and
he still looked just the same. Here are a few notes on him as a boss and
colleague: he was a firm believer in mentoring, and he assigned a member of
the department, Jackie Hennelly (a great choice) to mentor me; and he had me
paid to spend a week at Wheatley the summer before I started teaching, so
that he could teach me (sigh) Transformational Grammar, which I was required
to teach to ninth graders. When I handed in my first quarter grades early, he
said, ‘You bum!’ with a smile—English teachers are notorious for waiting
until the last minute to hand in grades, because essays take longer to grade
than other types of work. He taught me by example to put students first. For
instance, any time a student entered the English Department office, he would
immediately put aside whatever he was working on to listen to his or her
questions and help them in any way that he could. As to Transformational
Grammar—there were a couple of true believers on the faculty, but soon after
he retired, I happily dropped it. It had some interesting features, but, like
most grammatical instruction, was not useful in improving student writing.
Re-writing, I came to believe, was the only way to do that.”
John Sullivan (1964) Writes - “I have read the various discussions re Mr. Ouchi. My
scholastic interactions & recollections of him boil down to one item. The
book “Gods, Heroes & Men,” and from that, The Rock of Sisyphus, which I
have encountered many times trying to keep a homeless Ministry afloat. I
don’t recall anything about linguistics. I last saw Mr. Ouchi in the early
1990s in the Wheatley lobby. He was with Mr. McCormack. I was showing my
fiancé from the Midwest my high school. Mr. McCormack remembered me and was
very gracious. Mr. Ouchi asked him if I was Roger (1961) or Michael (1963)
Sullivan. I told him I was not, as I was a non-entity at
Wheatley. Mr McCormack asked me how my life was and what I was doing. Very
engaging man. I didn’t interact with Mr. Ouchi.”
Daniel Silver (1967) Writes - “Ed Ouchi taught my 10th (or 11th?) grade English class
for only several weeks or units, as I recall (someone whose memory is less
mottled than mine, please correct me as necessary). I know that he taught us
writing in some aspects, though I can't recall any specifics. From this
distance, I still recall mostly his fearsome reputation pumping tension into
the classroom, and that generally it was a useful, enriching, if edgy,
training regime.
Until reading dispatches
from David Hechler (1968), Ronnie Lynn Moore (1965), and Eva Resnicow
(1968) in Wheatley Alumni Newsletter # 194, I had not heard
of his linguistic expertise or his Wheatley classroom explorations—which
David, evidently, decisively resented, and which Ronnie and Eva manifestly
enjoyed.
Interesting how smart,
discerning individuals can emerge from similar (perhaps even identical: were
David & Eva in the same Ouchi class?) learning experiences with such
diametrically opposite reactions.
I wish that Mr. Ouchi had
applied some of his exploratory techniques to my class. (Or maybe he did;
& I long ago absorbed, assimilated and integrated his lessons so that now
they are a part of me, my own nature.)
Anyone who took that same
Ouchi class with me, please share some memories here—maybe your more detailed
memories will spark more specifics of my own.
The Sports Section -
Still More Football
Matt Sanzone adds a footnote to The
Wildcats undefeated 8-0 1957 Season - “When the official season was over, a touch football
game on the Willets Road School field on a Sunday morning was organized
between the team members and the Wheatley faculty. Steve Perlin, Eddie
Kritzler, Johnny Votano. Don Kleban, Mike Stapleton, Bob Oldoni, Matt Sanzone
and others played for the team. Jack Davis, Mel Rosenstein, Howard Storm,
Thomas Cautella, Joseph McCormack Woodrow Zaros and others played for the
faculty. Result? The Faculty ‘waxed’ us very convincingly. Coach Jack Davis
hit open receivers all day long. We, on the other hand, scored little, if at
all😬”
COACH
JACK DAVIS (1925-2008) - Newsday Obituary
John Gilbert Davis, 82, teacher who
touched lives, dies
June 24, 2008
John Gilbert Davis, a physical education instructor for 30 years at The
Wheatley School in East Williston, died of heart failure on June 19, 2008 at
his Baldwin, according to his son Jay Davis. He was 82.
Davis was born Aug. 25,
1925, in Baldwin.
He met his late wife,
Margaret LaBoria, while they served in the Navy in Hawaii during World War
II. She was a WAVE (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service).
After the Navy, he
attended Ithaca College and received a degree in health and physical
education. The couple moved to Levittown, where they raised their six
children.
Davis's popularity at
Wheatley, where he coached varsity football and baseball for 30 years, earned
him the nickname "Cat" after the school mascot, the Wheatley
Wildcat.
"It was so a part of
his life," said son Jay, a physical education teacher at Oyster Bay High
School. "I've blueprinted my life after him." Four of Davis's six
children became teachers.
After retiring from
teaching, Davis was inducted into the school's Athletic Hall of Fame, an
honor of which he was extremely proud. At a recent 50th-year class reunion at
the school, he attended as an honored guest.
After his wife's passing
in 1983, Davis married Margaret Long, and the couple returned to Baldwin,
where they raised her four children.
Davis spent his
retirement playing golf and traveling to Europe, Las Vegas, Florida and other
destinations.
There was one activity
that he enjoyed that didn't require physical exertion - bragging about his
large family.
"Everybody that he
touched he made feel important," said Jay Davis of Wantagh. "There
was no better man. He touched the lives of many."
In addition to his son
Jay, Davis is survived by his wife Margaret and children James, Terence, and
Michael, all of Levittown; Laura Ennis and Lynda Faherty of Rockville Centre;
Candace Thompsett of East Islip; Shelley Lavey of Huntington Station; James Long
of Oceanside, and Robert Long of Lynbrook; 30 grandchildren and eight
great-grandchildren.
A funeral Mass was held
in St. Christopher's Roman Catholic Church in Baldwin. Burial followed in St.
Charles Cemetery.
Bob Holley (1958) Writes - Coach
Jack Davis died on the eve of our
50th-year class reunion. That really makes you feel not only sad but very
mortal. Strange that we spent so much of our banquet night time talking about
him, Steve Perlin, and departeds, but I have a feeling now that Smilin’ Jack
was right there listening in.
Thank you, Mr. Davis, for
those great days, and our great team! You were someone very special to us
all. We will not forget you.
Quarterback and team
leader Steve Perlin was badly injured in the Second Quarter of the Half
Hollow Hills Game (# 4 on our schedule), triggering a great fear that we
might lose a game). Garrett “Zeke” Zebrowski took over as QB until sometime
in the fourth quarter, after they got Steve sewed up.
Perlin's injury was to
his face, around his lips, cheek and/or mouth; it was like flesh torn…..quite a bloody mess. To this day I am amazed that they found a way to get him
stitched up to a ref's satisfaction, and that didn't happen until sometime in
the fourth quarter. I have no idea where the "stitcher" came from,
because as far as I know, we had no doctor onboard. I don’t remember how
improved his face looked before he started to play again. The fact that there
was even an attempt to get him back into the lineup shows how valuable they
thought he was to our game and how resilient he seemed to be to trauma.
He had already half cut
his face off in a horrible auto? crash near the school, on Bacon Road. I'm a
bit puzzled now because his Aurora closeup senior photo doesn't
show his distinctive pirate wreck scar; but it looks like he may well have it
in the group photo of the football team. Several people know the details
about the vehicle wreck and the Half Hollow Hills injury, and I am curious to
see what others may remember.
Matt Sanzone (1959) referred to the wreck in a past e-mail as happening on Stan Wheeler's (1958) BMC (Switzerland) motorcycle; I
was under the impression that it was a car accident involving three or four
people. Whatever! Steve had an amazing flair for danger; we
were regaled at a reunion dinner with Charlie Shapiro's (1958) mad
accounts of their car theft / joy riding capers.
As I was the official
game reporter for the Half Hollow Hills contest, I was surprised to read in
the press that John Votano quarterbacked the game for Wheatley. Not
surprisingly, Johnny did score both Wheatley goals on long
runs, but I don't think he was ever the quarterback.
I don’t how much longer I
am going to be around, and I am uncomfortable sitting on so much historical
information about Wheatley, to which nobody else, except possibly Paul Giarmo
(1976), has access. His great idea is that we (he?) set up a 56-57-58 Wildcat
on-line museum that all Wheatley alumni could view. This might bolster
interest in deservedly restoring football to the Wheatley scene. I just found
eight 1957 Newsday stories about Wheatley football while I was
looking for 1956 stories (which barely seem to exist online). There's no
telling how much memorabilia might be out there in someone else's storage or
mind -- clippings, photos, flyers, anecdotes, whatever.
Art Engoron (1967) Writes - I was told (I think by the man himself), and I always
thought, that people called Jack Davis “Cat” because he moved so gracefully.
There may be truth to both that and the “Wildcats” theory.
Paul Giarmo (1976) Writes - “I'm amazed at how close the relationship was between
the faculty and the students, especially the football team, back then. Great
school spirit.”
Claude Levy (1956) (an exchange
student from France) Writes - “Too
bad that the last Newsletter (# 194) had nothing about football😉”
Jill Simon Forte (1965)
Writes - “Wow, I never realized
that football played such a big role at Wheatley. I guess that’s because my
husband, Bob Forte (1965), didn’t play sports 😉🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Bill Meyn (1974) Writes - “I appreciate the nostalgia for Wheatley football. I
even tried out for football in 9th grade - then moved around to three other
high schools. I believe ties forged among academic teachers and students are
as strong as you might get from a football team. I was in Mrs. Quigley's
special class for shy students in 3rd or 4th grade. It made a difference.
Somehow, Mrs. Rock and Mr. Diamond broke through and motivated me to love
math in 5th and 6th grade. I aced math through Calc I, Calc II and
Differential Equations at the Coast Guard Academy. I recall being in study
groups at Wheatley in which I sat in with some very intelligent boys and
girls. I may have already related the story of being on a 5th grade social
studies team that developed a musical parody to portray Mao Zedong’s great
leap forward. I do not pretend to have been a prodigy. I was Salieri to my
classmates Mozarts. But it was great and memorable fun to be part of that
team! I moved out not long before the school got a computer lab. I can only
imagine the possibilities that opened up. In my retirement, I have taken up
sketching - due in no small part to my 9th grade Art teacher, Mr. Aaron
Kuriloff. This is no great shakes to the average Wheatleyite. I believe you
all have had similar experiences, stories that could fill a book. Most of my
teachers and many of my fellow students made me who I am today. Football is
awesome. But so are academics.”
Parents
On the left is Anne
Sklaire Wild, mother of Madeleine (1962), Jane (1965), and Phil (1972) Wild.
On the right is Lillian Sklaire
Stephens, mother of Mitch (1967) and Beth (1972).
The twins were born on
March 6, 1920, and are shown here in approximately 1941.
Their brother, Jack, was the father
of Michele (1964) and Aline (1968) Sklaire.
Graduates
1958 - Ed Brown - “I was pleased to see several comments by, and mentions
about, members of the Class of 1958 – "The First Class" - in the
recent Wheatley School Alumni Association Newsletter # 194. There usually are
not many, if any, such references to my class. Of course, as time goes by,
there are obviously fewer of us still around. And yet, we were the group that
established much of the ‘environment’ that made Wheatley the incredibly fine
institution that it became, and that it remains to this day – often
recognized as the No. 1 Public High School in our Nation!
I rarely get back to my
original home area of Roslyn and Westbury, but on those rare occasions when I
do, I invariably drive by Wheatley, and sometimes I even stop in to take a
walk through the hallways there for a few minutes. It is an amazing place, of
which I am extremely proud.
GO WILDCATS!!!!
Ed Brown
(Dr. Edward A. Brown)
1961 - Jerry Mintz - “All this talk about our great early football teams
reminds me that Wheatley had another powerhouse sport team--tennis. Roslyn
Country Clubber Larry Nagler 1958) led the team.
He eventually became a top player on USA teams and played in the US Open at
Forest Hills. I was an umpire there as a teenager, a job which was arranged
by Anita Shukow, whose boys (Steven Shukow, 1970, and Allen Shukow, 1972) also played on the Wheatley team. I umpired Arthur Ashe and Billie Jean King
games. In my senior year at Wheatley, I was undefeated as a singles player.
Some 30 years ago, I
switched my main sport to table tennis. I won the national men's over-seventy
championship and still play and teach table tennis every week. One of my
former students, Amy Wang, recently played for the USA in the Olympics.
But I still follow tennis
avidly.
Art Engoron (1967) Writes - When I complimented Jerry for having the stamina to do
all the things he does, like win table tennis championships, he responded, “I
have stamina BECAUSE I keep doing these things!”
1961 - The Bengeyfield Band - New
Material
Jim Paley (1964) Writes - “I enjoyed reading Peter Nelson’s (1961) and Jack Wolf's (1967) reminiscences
of the music scene on Bengeyfield Drive in East Williston. When I first
started playing the guitar in 1962 or 1963, I took a few lessons from Peter F.
Wolf (1960), which started my appreciation for the instrument
and also for the music that was prevalent in Greenwich Village in the early
1960s. I didn't know Woody Mann (1970) at that time,
but imagine my surprise when I spent one of many weekends at Jorma Kaukonen’s
Fur Peace Ranch in Pomeroy, Ohio and Woody was there as one of the
instructors. We were both surprised by the Wheatley connection, and what
followed was a weekend filled with stories of Woody’s lessons at the home of
Reverend Gary Davis and playing some of the tape recordings that he had saved
(and cherished) over the years. It was certainly a weekend to remember, and I
was so saddened to learn of Woody's passing a few years ago. I know that I
would still be playing the guitar now had I not lost the use of my right hand
following a cerebral hemorrhage in 2016.
Thank you, Peter and
Jack, for bringing these memories back to life!
1968 and 1970 - Bengeyfield Drive
Musicians
David Pinter (1968) Writes - “Art, Speaking of Bengeyfield Drive musicians, Woody
Mann & I both grew up on that storied strip of asphalt Some years ago we
played at BB King’s with a certain news anchor.”
L-R - Lester
Holt, Woody, David
1967 (mostly) - Several more people
identified in photo of trip to Washington
Key - “(?)” means
uncertain. “???” means unknown.
Left to Right:
Front Row - ???, Cheryl
Clark (1967) (?), ???, Vicki Schwartz (1967) (?), ???, Rosalind Wald (1967),
???, Lauren Jacoby (1967), Linda Laurie (1967), Abbe Levine (1967), Lesley
Falkoff (1967) (?), ???, Marcy Buzen (1967), Helen Sparks (1967)
Middle Row - Gilbert Katz
(1967), George Dreier (1967), Dominick Foresto (1967), Robert Hecht (1967),
Marty Cervellione (1967), Debbie Friedman or Lynn Robinson (1967) (?), Jane
Colchamiro (1967) (?), Lois Ertel (1967), ???, Jimmy Bressman (1967), Steven
Lax (1967), Tom Glaser (1968), Phil Mariani (1967) (?), Jay Peiser (1966)
Back Row - Marshall
Jablon (1967), ???, Bobby Scandurra (1967), Doug Martin (1967), Paul
Nissenfeld (1967), Paul Tankersley (1967), ???, ???, Peggy Meisel (faculty)
(?), Joseph Goldwasser (faculty), Richard Schwarz (1967), Lee Fein (1967),
Dennis Pensa (1967), Bruce McAllister (1968), Charles Bell (1967), Manny
Casamassima (1967)
If, and only if, other people are
identified, I will publish again next newsletter!
1973 - Todd Glickman - Charlie Nash
(1973/72) writes - “Todd Glickman was one of the brightest members of the Class of 1973.”
1974 - Bill Meyn - “In 1979 I was on the Coast Guard Cutter Icebreaker
Polar Star, coming back from the Antarctic, where we broke ice into McMurdo
Station. We had a one-day liberty stop in Ushuaia, Argentina. It was there
that I found a local record store where I purchased a copy of the Beatles LP
‘Submarino Amarillo,’ Yellow Submarine, with a Spanish language album cover.
The songs on the LP are all the standard English Language Beatles songs. This
was probably ‘marketing’ rather than ‘exploitation,’ but it was still a very
interesting thing to find. You can google to see the cover. My copy is buried
in my garage somewhere.”
1975 - David Bodkin - “Hi Art, I’m looking forward to my Class’s 50th-year
reunion in this fall! The 1961 photo of The Bengeyfield Band is great! My
family made the move from Queens to 68 Bengeyfield in 1968. I delivered the
Long Island Press on my paper route to the entire block.”
Fan Mail
Bob Holley (1958) - “Thank you for your remarkable work in editing all the
football material together into a "must read" for Wheatley Alumni
Newsletter # 194.”
1960 (Paul Hennessy) - "Art, Great job editing all the undefeated 1957 Football
Team information into a lively and interesting piece! My best to you and
Keith for all you do to connect the Wildcat Community✌️.You do a brilliant job!”
1964 (John Sullivan) - “Art - thank you for your great work for all things
Wheatley.”
1967 (Jill Simon Forte) - “Thanks for the photographs. I always enjoy seeing the
people I remember (but we sure are a bit older 😜🤣).
1974 (Scott Stein) - “Thank you for the Newsletter and all you do.”
1975 (David Bodkin) - “The Newsletters are Wonderful.”
1976 (Paul Giarmo) - “BTW, Newsletter # 194 is one of my favorite issues,
not surprisingly. Keep the football memories coming, Art.”
1996 (Sean Sedacca) - “The Newsletter is great, and the ‘younger’ crowd
appreciates it, too.”
The Official Notices
All
underlined text is a link-to-a-link or a link-to-an-email-address. Clicking
anywhere on underlined text, and then clicking on the text that pops up, will
get you to your on-line destination or will address an email.
In the first 24 or so
hours after publication, Wheatley Alumni Newsletter # 194 was viewed 3,784
times and was liked three times. In all, 4,739 email addresses received
Newsletter # 194.
The Usual Words of
Wisdom
Thanks to our fabulous
Webmaster, Keith Aufhauser (Class of 1963), you can regale
yourself with the first 194 Wheatley School Alumni Association Newsletters
(and much other Wheatley data and arcana) at
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
Closing
That’s it for The Wheatley School
Alumni Association Newsletter # 195. Please send me your autobiography before
someone else sends me your obituary.