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Welcome to The Wheatley School
Alumni Association Newsletter # 232,
What a great Wheatley
turnout! I recall classmates from our ancient past: with a shout out and hugs
to 1963: Donna Kenton, Liz Stone, Marcia Friedman~ all looking so healthy,
and Jon Bragdon, Mark Luria, and some family connections: Samberg, Gershen,
Kay; and, of course, our forever Master Host, Art, who with Keith Aufhauser
(1963), keep us connected. My 1963 Yearbook was lost by 1964~ so my memory
must serve me. Thank You!
Good to see you all ~
Joan Hennessy Syms
1965 - 60th-Year Reunion Photo
L-R - Judy
Lutrin Sidran, Linda Sherry, Barbara Ashley, Arden Aibel Rothstein, Jane Wild
Carrel, Ann Greenberg
1964 + 1965 (Andrea Alpert Robbins,
1964) - Great to see my cousin, Hank Alpert (1965), at a happy occasion!”
1966 - Amy Gruskin Gerstein - “My husband and I were in Potomac, Maryland at the bar
mitzvah celebration for my youngest grandson. That’s me in the middle, next
to my husband of 57 years, with our three sons, their wives, and our nine
grandkids. Regards to all!”
1965 - Larry Rosenthal - Content in
California
1967 - Art Engoron - At the recent (10/4/25) Wheatley
School Class of 1965 60th-Year Reunion,
Peter Till (1965) delivered what he later called “Incredibly
Generous Kind Words From the Class of 1965.”
“Just a moment’s
perspective on behalf of The Wheatley School Class of 1965. In very good
years, it is easy to be thankful: for family, for friends, for a country
humming along. It’s the lean years that require real work.
And yet, there are
reasons to be grateful. So, permit me a moment to give long overdue attention
to Arthur Engoron.
Arthur, your
extraordinary service to The Wheatley School and its alumni may now be best
defined by the old maxim, “the exalted will be humbled and the humbled will
be exalted.” Because of that very simple truth … you have and will always be
looked upon with well-deserved recognition. Arthur, throughout, you have
always wanted all to be part of the human exchange.
Now, here, tonight, it
seems like almost yesterday, when unavoidably addressing the years that have
passed, everyone agrees that this bucolic setting - The Wheatley School - was
‘home.’ ‘Home’ isn’t always regarded as a radiant happy place …… but even with
our 60 years now acknowledged …… the memories of faculty, friends and
certainly our parents and siblings remain prominent. Those recollections wash
over us. However, Arthur, what is so prominent is that you have undertaken
the task of recording and preserving all this history, allowing us to
continue to recall the tradition of The Wheatley School.
By yourself and with your
gentle hand, many have now been afforded the unfettered opportunity to
‘report’ and ‘share’ and ‘renew.’ Many others, who did not find it necessary
to report, were then allowed vicariously to remain on the sidelines absorbing
the recollections of others. But through it all, you have barely taken a
moment to set down your own memories, unselfishly deferring the print space
to everyone else.
Every publication has a
back page filled with remarks literally cheering you on. While those cheers
to your efforts are so very genuine, what they mostly accomplish for just a
moment is to allow the remembering of childhood memories on Long Island, at
The Wheatley School. You have afforded an opportunity for the recollection of
history.
Arthur, this unselfish
service deserves recognition tonight and always.
So, ladies and gentlemen,
kindly allow me to bestow the gratitude of the Wheatley School Class of 1965
upon
The pride of East
Williston
And the pride of the
Wheatley School
I give you…
ARTHUR ENGORON”
Art Engoron Responds -
Aw, shucks. I hope that my publishing this, with Peter’s permission , does
not contradict the part about my “unselfishly deferring the print space to
everyone else.” Well, anyway …… this edition needed some filler.
1972 - Jo Ann Bregman Miles - “Hello Art! The Veronica Beard Charity event (see below)
to benefit the Wildlife Center of Long Island is on October 29, 2025.
Meet Huddle a five- day
old Green Heron nestling (baby bird).
On the hottest
day in July 2022, I rescued Huddle from my yard. A call to Volunteers for
Wildlife instructed me to place the bird in a box and keep it in a cool dark
place in my house.
Huddle in a Box
I was further instructed
to bring Huddle to the Rehabilitation Hospital early the next morning if the
bird survived the night. A sleepless night ensued, with my running down to
the basement to check on Huddle. With amusement, I watched myself turn into an
anxious ‘Mama bird’ of sorts!
Little did I know that my
rescue of this tiny bird would evolve into my becoming a volunteer for
Volunteers for Wildlife. My involvement set me on a path to educate the
public about the loss of Long Island’s wildlife habitats and the critical
efforts to preserve them. Educational outreach took me to schools, camps,
nursing homes, and festivals, where our presentations included the
organization’s animal Ambassadors, who inspired great interest and a desire
to learn about wildlife. Recently, I was invited to join the rebranded
Wildlife Center of Long Island’s Board of Directors. I have found my work to
be a labor of love. It has been fascinating to learn the story of an injured
animal, witness its rehabilitation by our dedicated staff, and experience the
exciting release of the animal back into its natural habitat. Our Wildlife
Hotline responds to 10,000 calls annually about injured and orphaned
wildlife.
After two months, Huddle
the Green Heron, was released. It’s hard to believe that a little tiny bird
who could fit in my hand would emerge from the Wildlife Center rehabilitation
hospital with a wing span of 25 to 27 inches!
Huddle the Green Heron
after Rehabilitation and Release
Wildlife Center of Long
Island is a non-profit wildlife rehabilitation and education center dedicated
to the preservation of Long Island’s Wildlife habitats. A recently created
Youth Conservation Team engages teens from Long Island in wildlife and conservation
study. Team members meet monthly to learn the skills needed to preserve
wildlife and practice conservation in a rapidly changing world. “Hands on”
activities include beach cleanups and native planting, coupled with pulling
out invasive species to maintain wildlife habitats.
If you are interested in
helping Long Island’s wildlife, please join me at the Veronica Beard charity
event to benefit the Wildlife Center of Long Island. If you are unable to
join us in person, there is a 21- day window to call in an order at the
Manhasset store: (516) 573-9463. Simply mention my name or The Wildlife
Center to ensure your purchase helps preserve Long Island’s magnificent
wildlife.
L-R - Meryl Moritz, Elvira
(“Vivi”) Cilmi Kunz, Beth Sherwin
1975 (Amy Rothbaum-Patalano) - “Thank you for all everything you do, Art.”
1966 (Amy Gruskin Gerstein) - “The photographs of the luncheon were awesome. If not
for a scheduling conflict (see above), I would have been there!”
1974 (Debra Copeland) - “Thanks for arranging the Alumni luncheon. Was good to
meet fellow Wheatleyites - although from vastly different graduation
classes.”
1975 (Mark Lubin) - ““Art, thanks for keeping the Wheatley community
thriving and together. Your efforts certainly helped make our recent Class of
1975 50th reunion weekend terrific.”
1969 (Jo Anne Newman Abraskin) - “The photographs are awesome of all the people in
my sister‘s class! I’m glad that the reunion was such a success, and that
everyone had a fabulous time.”
In the first 24 or so
hours after publication, the Wheatley School Alumni Newsletter # 231 was
viewed 3,798 times and was liked seven times. In all, 4,803 email addresses
received Newsletter # 231.
Thanks to our fabulous
Webmaster, Keith Aufhauser (Class of 1963), you can regale
yourself with the first 230 or so 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 New Yorker type 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 # 232. Please send me your autobiography before
someone else sends me your obituary.
Art
Arthur Fredericks Engoron, Class of 1967