Newsletter and Website
for
Alumni and Friends
of
Hicksville Schools
Hicksville, New York

Latest Newsletter

  • April 2024: Volume 24 - Issue 4

    newHickLogoNewsletter for the Alumni and Friends of Hicksville High School - Hicksville, New York

    Dear Readers,
    We hope you enjoy our latest issue. Thanks to our Webmasters,  Bruce Scherzinger and Gail Schwartzman Mayer, for their work on the time-consuming process, photo galleries from the old site can now be found on this new site. Look at the top navigation bar to locate Old Galleries. You will find the photos from old newsletters. Casale's Corner can now be located in the navigation bar. For car enthusiasts, there is a section of car photos that were embedded in previous newsletters. Memory Lane's migration is being processed, and the old newsletters will follow. Thank you for being so patient as we work to bring you the news while preserving the history of HixNews. We thank all of our volunteers for the hours they devote to bringing HixNews to you each month. Article contributions, suggestions, and news are always welcome! We would love to hear from you. Don't hesitate to get in touch with us at  This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
     - Your HixNews Team

    Click here to continue reading April 2024: Volume 24 - Issue 4

 Background

Although this column is meant to offer our readers a post-Hicksville glimpse of a past teacher or administrator, in this case, it makes sense to begin with some pre-Hicksville background about Dr. Kumpikas.

  • She was born in Lithuania, early in WW II.  The sounds of bombing raids still rank high in her childhood memories (she said in a 2020 interview that the sound of routine noonday sirens still make her cringe).
  • Her family was on the run from warfare and marauding armies until 1944, at which time it had made its way west through the war to an Allied-controlled portion of Germany, and was given refuge in a “Displaced Persons" camp.
  • They remained in the refugee camp for FIVE YEARS, until the summer of 1949, when they were able to get visas to the U.S.
  • They then started a new life from scratch in Williamsburg, Brooklyn – coincidentally, in the same immigrant neighborhood, and in the same primitive tenements, in which my own immigrant grandparents had settled more than 50 years earlier.

What has she done after leaving Hicksville?

  • She continued -- and continues -- to teach!  She is a Full Professor (Adjunct) at LIU/Post, where she’s now in her 25th year.
  • She produces (and in the past hosted more than 1,000 weekly broadcasts of) a New York radio show that addresses the needs of Lithuanian-Americans and their descendants.
  • Several years ago, Dr. Kumpikas produced an award-winning short film, in part filmed on-site in the Czech Republic and Lithuania, that documented her father’s 1934 flight over Nazi Germany from Prague to Vilnius (he was a celebrated early Lithuanian pilot).
  • She serves, and sometimes heads, non-profit organizations that help and guide new immigrant Lithuanian families as they find their way in America.  These organizations also promote awareness of Lithuanian culture and arts, providing Lithuanian Americans with a link to their ancestral past.  In recognition of her work, Lithuania has honored her at a ceremony in Vilnius.

Where does she like to spend her time?

  • Early summers often are spent in France, visiting long-time friends.  Her passion for the French language and the attendant culture in which it flourishes, which I first observed as her student n 1962, continues unabated.
  • She also visits Lithuania, where she lives in the apartment that was her family's pre-war residence!  Well... not exactly.  During the Soviet era, the government of the day broke the dweilling into smaller flats.  After Lithuania regained independence, Giedré purchased one of those flats, and much later was able to purchase the remainder.  She then had contractors re-consolidate the units, and restore the rooms to their original configuration, so that her family apartment exists once again.
  • During the academic year, she’s mostly around New York City, or in the Hamptons.  I last saw her in person in 2019, at the 55th reunion of “my” HHS Class of 1964.
Site Security Provided by: Click here to verify this site's security