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Links to all remarks, videos and websites:
Ed and Diane Bernbaum
Andrea Hanson-Kahn
Michael Geschwind, MD
Berkeley Community Chorus (full 3 minute video)
Juri Komendant
Jovia Nierenberg
Zeke Nierenberg
Roy Nierenberg.com
David Nierenberg
Those who wish to honor Roy with a donation may contribute in his name to any one of his many passionate interests—
Cure Huntington’s Disease Initiative
The Huntington’s Disease Society of America:
The Berkeley Community Chorus and Orchestra:
The Berkeley–Sakai Association
Gene Grindlinger - 1964 - “When my family first moved to Roslyn Heights (2nd grade for me), we had a German Shepherd puppy named ‘Fuzzy.’ The demon dog proceeded to chew his way through our living room furniture. Mom demanded that we get rid of the dog or she was leaving. After some deliberation and debate on that issue, and a few phone calls, Country Club neighbors graciously agreed to adopt Fuzzy.”
1967 and 1975 - Merrill Stanton and Wendy Zacharkow Herbel
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L-R - Wendy Zacharkow Herbel (1975) and Merrill Stanton (1967) - Dana Point Harbor, CA - 2025
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Wendy and Fonzie
1967 and 1989 - Art Engoron and Alexander Tisch
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R-L - Alexander Tisch (1989), Art Engoron (1967), Art’s 1979 NYU Law School Classmate - New York City - April 1, 2015
1969 - Gerry Gersh - “Hey Art. The last two Newsletters mentioned Friends World College. I went there for a couple of years before graduating from Goddard College. As a Friends student, I went to Mexico with a friend from Herricks High School who turned down an Ivy League College to go to Friends. Charlie was an All-State Lacrosse Goalie. I studied progressive education in the mode of John Holt (‘How Children Fail’), Paul Goodman, and the Brazilian educator Paulo Freire.
Paulo believed that if you taught people to read words that they used in their every day lives, they would be more motivated to read. His method with the Brazilian farmers was so effective that they ended up being able to read their land contracts with the government and rebelled because they saw how much they were being cheated. As a result, the Brazilian government threw Paulo out of Brazil.
Anyway, highlights? In Mexico, a scorpion stung me. In East Africa, I contracted Malaria and spent a year and a half learning the purest form of Swahili in a remote coastal town called ‘Lamu.’ I also went looking for gorillas, hiking with my guide in the jungle for five hours. We knew that we got close, because we saw freshly broken stalks that gorillas like to eat. However, my guide spotted leopard tracks, so we had to head back. After a long bus ride back to Kampala, Uganda, when I got off the bus, soldiers were running everywhere, as General Idi Amin had just ordered a coup against President Obote (who was brilliant enough to translate Shakespeare into Swahili).
Friends World College kicked me out because the rule was that you had to go to a different country every six months, learn the language, and write up a study. I had just become fluent in Swahili, so it made no sense to me to move on. It was the biggest risk and act of independence of my life.
I ended up writing a thesis on how both Africa and India faced the same identity crisis. There are so many languages/dialects in both, Africa and India faced the same dilemma: Do we mandate teaching English to keep up with the West, or do we keep our multiple languages to shore up our identities? I watched this struggle play out in Lamu. Every week, the poor fishermen boys would play a soccer game against the English speaking boys who had colorful uniforms. The usually somber African/Arabic elders would quietly come to watch. But as soon as the game started they would go crazy cheering for their side. They knew what was at stake. Friends World College liked the thesis and ended up giving me credit.
One final ‘goodie’. I visited the legendary Jane Goodall’s house (she was away on safari) in Kenya and had to go to the bathroom. On my way back to her living room, a young lion, but almost fully grown, started gnawing on my boots. I was terrified for my life, until one of the lion’s helpers laughingly pulled her away.
India’s poverty was brutal……but seeing the white marble Taj Mahal was breathtaking. The Shah built it for his wife in 1632 AD, only for her to die during childbirth. What MANY don’t know is that when you enter its main hallway, two tombs are there. But it’s asymmetrical! Antithetical to the perfect structure, the 20,000 slaves who built it had their hands cut off so that no duplicate structure could be built. The Shah put his wife’s tomb in the center of the room. But his son, a devout Muslim, followed the Quran, which forbids any kind of ostentation at the time of death, so he put his father to the side of his wife.
EXPERIENCING GOD in Nepal. A jet averages flying at 30,000 feet. Mt. Everest and its peaks are 29,000 and change. The tallest mountains in Europe are only the size of the foothills of the Himalayas. So from Kathmandu, I took a small plane to get closer to Pokhara, Nepal. I recall walking out of my hut early in the morning. All clouds, but suddenly they parted. I recall feeling nauseous, overwhelmed. I saw imposing white mountain where logic said only space and sky should be. It was the first of only a handful of God moments in my life.
In India, I contracted hepatitis. I finished in Nepal to come home for the wedding of my sister Gretchen Gersh (1966). In all, I was gone 2 1/2 years.”
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Pokhara, Nepal
1979 - Ethel “Edyie” Yarwood - Deceased
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1965 (Jeffrey Orling) - “I love these Newsletters. Thanks.”
1967 (Scott Frishman) - “Art, I always look forward to the Newsletter. I loved the photo of Phil Celella, Dom Foresto, Bob Rico, and Bobby Scandurra. They were all easy to recognize.”
1967 (Merrill Stanton) - “Thank you so much for keeping us all informed, Art ❤️. It’s these longtime connections far & wide that bring special meaning to my life and remind me that time can’t truly be measured when it comes to the heart. The Newsletters are wonderful!”
1967 (Jill Simon Forte) - “Hi Art, The Newsletters always include a name or a photo of someone that reminds me of the days when we were young.”
1973 (Edward Ryder) - “Nicely done, on an early Sunday morning!”
1974 (Bob Berta) - “Hi Art and Keith, You are The Dynamic Duo that ALWAYS brings us exceptional Newsletters with the help of the alumni. Always a pleasure to read the Newsletter treasure. Keep up the good work /s/ Bob”
In the first 24 or so hours after publication, Wheatley Alumni Newsletter # 197 was viewed 2,870 times and was liked seven times. In all, 4,737 email addresses received Newsletter # 197. In March, the Newsletter was accessed approximately 14,100 times.
Thanks to our fabulous Webmaster, Keith Aufhauser (Class of 1963), you can regale yourself with the first 197 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 # 198. Please send me your autobiography before someone else sends me your obituary.
Art
Arthur Fredericks Engoron, Class of 1967
WHEATLEYALUMNI@AOL.COM
ARTENGORON@GMAIL.COM
WWW.WHEATLEYALUMNI.ORG
646-872-4833