Hicksville High School Hicksville, New York
The Editors: | |
---|---|
Buffalo Bob Casale '61 | Linda (Piccerelli) Hayden '60 |
Pat (Koziuk) Driscoll '56 | Bob (Gleason) Wesley '61 |
To contact the editors, email
People Looking for People
We've taken a new approach to this section. It's been re-organized by Henry Lichtenstein as an online spreadsheet. Rather than publish the list here, it's now available below. If you have found the person you are looking for, please let the editors know so the name can be removed from the list. If there's someone you're looking for, just send your request and we'll be happy to add it to the list. If anyone knows these folks, send an email to:
HixNews Subscribers Name & Class List
We have an organized online spreadsheet that presents our current membership: available below. If you wish to add, subtract, or modify an entry on this list, send an email to:
SAVE THE DATE!
Saturday, October 6th, 2012
Class of 1962 50-Year Reunion
7PM -12AM HOLIDAY INN, Plainview , N.Y.
Please be sure Karen Hubner Jenkins has your current e-mail address (
Our Reunion Website 62.hixreunion.com
An alumni from the class of 1963, Jeanne Dethlefsen, has forwarded a photograph from Old Country Road school during the 1953-1954 school year. Jeanne sent along a list of names of those pictured. We went through the 1963 Yearbook and found photos of many pictured in that class.However, there was a long list of people who were not in the 1963 yearbook and we can only speculate on what happened to those alumni. Here are the names Jeanne suggested...Lorraine Dethlefsen, Tommy D'Amoto, Jane Shackinback, David Sarota, Lynette Statz, Nancy Davey, Tommy Arundel, Marie Miller, Gail Mosely, Vernon Ritter, Larry Green, James Glass, Billy Hutchinson, Donald Mott and Matthew M. Please go to the Photo Gallery and help fill in some of the blanks. If you recognize someone who is not named, please put a name to the face. Also, if you know what happened to your classmate, they moved, went to private school, went to Catholic school or whatever, give us a shout.
Thanks
The Editors
Hicksville Vietnam War Era Memorial Project - UPDATE
We're back strong after a brief hiatus for the Holidays with a full head of steam for the New Year! Good work continued in both December and January with the addition of 49 new names for a new total of 1,765. Also, substantial headway continued on filling in missing data for many of the people on our List of Names.
In addition to our efforts to build and refine the List of Names, Bill Walden, serving as our local Project Leader on the scene in Hicksville and Ken Strafer, our Project's Original Founder, made positive strides in January towards bringing our efforts to a successful conclusion. Please see the full update in the Honoring Our Veterans section of the newsletter for details. You can also access the full List of 1,765 Veterans by clicking on the link near the bottom of the update.
With regard to missing data (as noted by red question marks on the List of Names), it remains important for you to review the list for missing information or existing information that needs correction, even if you don't have new names to send us. Please email me if you can help us fill in these blanks. High school class year has been specifically noted, where we have it, to make this review easier for you by quickly scanning the list for people you may know. Please pitch-in and help us make this Project a big success!
Our objective remains not to miss anyone who meets the Memorial Qualifications and deserves to be included in the Memorial and you can still help us make this happen.
We hope all of you got off to a bright start in January and wish each and everyone a Healthy, Happy and Prosperous 2012!
On behalf of The Project Team,
Joe Carfora, HHS '62
Places Our Alumni Have Visited
I've been looking at where our alumni have been and I'm sure there are no stones unturned as far as where on this wonderful earth we have visited, collectively. So many have been to Orlando, to San Francisco, to the Empire State Building and to a multitude of places that have been very dramatic experiences.
Why don't we establish a catalog of who has been where and get some wonderful background that we can share with our expanding newsletter mail list. How many of my classmates have been on a United States Navy ship that went up the Congo River 12 to 13 miles to the port of Banana? I did. Ask and you can find out.
love yah
buffalo bob casale
Go To Memory Lane To See Some Of The Places Our Alumni Have Visited
Thanks
love da buff
Robert Edward Gleason Wesley, 1943 - 2010
Two years ago, February of 2010, we lost Bob Wesley. He was a good friend to many and always had an open ear when someone needed a listener. Bob had a very interesting life and he touched many who benefited from his wisdom.
He was instrumental in taking the Hicksville High Newsletter from ancient times into the new world. The website he established exists today and many can thank Bob for his vision of what future issues of the newsletter should be.
We continue to miss him.
The Editors
The Newsletter
Photo Gallery
Old Country Road School, 1953 - 1954
Classroom
Left Side Classroom Cropped
Graduation Pictures
Right Side Classroom Cropped
Graduation Pictures
Top Left Standing Cropped
Graduation Pictures
Top Right Standing Cropped
Graduation Pictures
Click here to see other photos
Birthdays & Anniversaries
Birthdays
- 1: Pat (Thompson) Dumas (PA); Emmett Goodman (FL)
2: Jackie (Elwood) DiLorenzo (NY); Alan Buckholz (AZ); Jaysen S. Silverman (NC) - 3: Jean (Siegl) Holloway (FL)
- 4: Bob Goldmacher (FL)
- 5: Suzon (Cohen) Fisher (NC)
- 6: Mary Ann (Malerba) Hartman (FL); Michele (D”orazio) Vigliano (NY); Joanne (Tracy) Arnold (NY); Judy (Tremel) Wyatt (FL)
- 7: Pat (Lenzner) Caruso
- 8: Diane (Burke) McGinn (AZ); Fuchs Bill (L.I.); Bob Gillette (SC)
- 9: Michael Perduto; Steve Riscica; Ronnie (McCarthy) Quigley
- 10: Dick Henningsen (NY); Larry Dagna (PA)
- 11: Martha (Gross) Parent (DE); Mike Soblick
- 12: Terry (Tisdell) Moehringer (HX); Susan (Ambrico) Smith (CA); Ronnie (Wells) Brigandi
- 13: Mary (Haas) Penn; Tony Bellacera (CA)
- 14: Tom Manaskie (HX); Armand Sepanski (AZ)
- 16: Denis Rossi (NJ); Robert Bialick (L.I.); Alison (Swanton) Mason (ME)
- 17: Josephine (Cipullo) Walston (HX)
- 18: Sandy (Sandler) Wolfe (FL)
- 19: Larry Baroletti (L.I.); Sandi (Notov) Katz (CO)
- 20: Bruce Goldmacher (FL)
- 21: Dee (Green) Kenny (HX)
- 22: George Lien (L.I.)
- 23: Kathy (McManus) Bock (NC)
- 24: Suzanne (Garrett) Cullen (L.I.)
- 25: Richard Swain 1951 (NY); Henry Lichtenstein (NC)
- 26: Judy (Marcus) Shivers; Carol (Fred) Sliwkoski (L.I.)
- 27: Joe Bausk; Elliot Gorlin (NV)
- 28: Ed Osborne (CO)
- 29: Barbara (Weber) Knueppel (MI/FL)
Anniversaries
- 2/01/1969: Priscilla (Tedesco) and Walter Reichel (L.I.)
- 2/02/19??: Joan (DeJohn) and Paul Brite (FL)
- 2/03/19??: Jaysen and Lisa (Sheffield) Silverman (NC)
- 2/03/19??: Donald and Kathy Werkstell (TX)
- 2/05/19??: Margarita (Cardwell) and Robert Wayne Chernok Esq. (FL)
- 2/14/2002: Lynn (McMorrow) and Marc O’Riordan (L.I.)
- 2/14/1969: Robert and Leslie Otten (SC)
- 2/14/1984: Joan (Siegl) and Fred Rudolph (FL)
- 2/14/2006: Elyse (Marlin) and Seymour Soffer (AZ)
- 2/15/1969: Barbara (Hicks) and Sean Beach (VA)
- 2/16/1957: Ann and Roy Meier (NH)
- 2/18/2000: Joan (Claudy) and Larry Berger
- 2/20/1965: Harry and Janet (McMenamin) Butcher (GA)
- 2/27/19?? – Bob and Patricia (Moore) Smith
Honoring our Veterans
Phil Warren from the UK spent 62 years to build this incredible fleet of 432 ships. All vessels are built entirely of matchsticks and boxes of wooden matches. The collection includes nearly 370 American and 60 British ships.
Although now 79 years of age, he began creating his first boat in 1948, when he was only 17. He uses a razor blade, tweezers and sandpaper to carve the pieces and boxes, then sticks his completed product together with balsa wood glue. In total. more than 650,000 matchsticks were used to create an amazing collection of 1,300 scale models. Even 1,200 aircraft made even more realistic appearance to dress the decks of aircraft carriers
Memory Lane
George & Joan (Mastronardi * 1965) Reilly
Joan and I grew up next door to each other on Cornell Lane, the scene of monster parties at Sharon Ward's house. Joan graduated in 1965. George graduated from Chaminade in 1960. We got married at Our Lady of Mercy in April 1969 and moved to Tappan..then Ridgefield...and then Bayonne.
Parris Island, South Carolina * San Diego, California * Atlanta, Georgia * Oklahoma City, Oklahoma * North Carolina * South Carolina * Tenessee * South Dakota * Dallas/Fort Worth, TX (Including a trip to Itasca - Home of the Whompus Cats) * Bridgeport * California - San Francisco * Redding * Japan - Iwakuni, Hiroshima, Tokoyama, Yokohama, Tokyo, Miyajima, Okinawa * Hawaii * Subic Bay, Phillipines * Taiwan * Puerto Rico * Trinidad & Tobago * Spain * Mexico - Tijuana, Tecate, Puerto Vallarta, Ixtapa, Hualtulco.and in about 2 months we will move to Aubrey, TX.
I can't top cruising up the Congo on a Navy ship, but here's some of the places I've been to since good old HHS, thanks largely to my career in the plastics industry, along with a number of vacation trips too:
Joe Carfora 1962 & Sharon Carfora
Germany : Wildflecken (stationed here for 2 years as a company commander of a combat engineer company, 54th Engr. Battalion), plus all over the country since...
Hamburg * Frankfurt * Baden-Baden * Weisbaden * Munich * Stuttgart * Dresden
France : Paris * Grenoble * Lyon * Versailles
England : London * Manchester * Wales
Italy : Milan * Venice * Rome * Naples and all over the mountains and beaches of Calabria (the "boot" of the country in the south)
Hungary : Budapest
Czech Republic : Prague
Austria : Vienna
Greece : Athens * Crete * Mykinos * Santorini * Rhodes
Turkey : Istanbul * Troy * Ephesus * Kusadasi * Cappadocia * Antola
Denmark * Sweden * Venezuela * Grand Cayman Islands * Jamaica
Bahamas * Bermuda
China : Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen
Taiwan : Taipei
Mexico : Mexico City, Juarez, Querettero, Acapulco, Cozumel, Playa del
Carmen
Hondurus: Rincon
Canada : Toronto, Windsor, British Columbia
Hawaii : Oahu, Maui, Kuai
Japan : Tokyo and numerous other cities
Korea : Seoul, Pusan (to meet with Hyundai when they were still a small auto company)
And.............that's what comes to mind and I'm sure I've missed a few too! I've been blessed to be paid to see the world during my business career and to make enough cash there to vacation all over too!!
Pete Furgiuele 1968
It was July 24, 1969, and we were off the coast of Florida in the splash area for Apollo 11. Several days earlier, July 16, 1969 we were about 30 miles away from the launch area and we could hear the engines roaring and could see the light purple flame as Apollo 11 passed overhead. What a powerful sight. That was history in the making.
Apollo 11 was the first manned mission to land on the Moon. The first steps by humans on another planetary body were taken by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on July 20, 1969.
The astronauts also returned to Earth the first samples from another planetary body. Apollo 11 achieved its primary mission - to perform a manned lunar landing and return the mission safely to Earth - and paved the way for the Apollo lunar landing missions to follow.
In the early morning hours of July 24, 8 days, 3 hours, 18 minutes, and 18 seconds after leaving Kennedy Space Center, Columbia plopped down into the Pacific Ocean
Pat Appelman Levitin 1962
Turkey * England * Scotland * Ireland * Argentina * Alaska * Greece
Egypt (and the Pyramids) * Jordan * Spain * Uruguay * Italy * Austria, Hungary * Prague * Gibraltar * Morocco * Israel * Sahara Desert (sleeping with the Berbers via camel)
almost every state in the US.
Costa Rica (zip lining)
A zip-line (also known as a flying fox, foefie slide, zip wire, aerial runway, aerial ropeslide, death slide consists of a pulley suspended on a cable mounted on an incline It is designed to enable a user propelled by gravity to travel from the top to the bottom of the inclined cable, usually made of stainless steel, by holding on or attaching to the freely moving pulley. Zip-lines come in many forms, most often used as a means of entertainment.
Stephanie (Schlegel) Manning 1968
Hi Bob,
Good idea. I have lived in Berkeley, California for 37 years and have been in almost every state except Alaska and Hawaii. With many stories to tell. Let's do it!
June Diers Niedfeldt 1966
Hi Bob
I am not exactly sure what type of info you are looking for, but I have done quite a bit of traveling. Some of the more notable places I have been to are:
Germany in 1969 with my sister and father. My father immigrated to the US in 1926 and he hadn't been back to Germany for 42 years! I got to meet my Aunt, Uncle and cousins.
Hawaii in 1969 to visit my then fiancé, Pete, who was my first husband, on his R&R from Vietnam.
Las Vegas, Nevada, Grand Canyon and Phoenix, Arizona
Cruises to Alaska and the Caribbean (eastern, western and southern)
Florida, where both my sister and brother now live
Seattle, Washington where my now husband's (Kenny) father was living
Nashville, Tennessee to the Grand Ole Opry and various other US states.
Hope this helps and thanks for all you do with the newsletter and the more recent video. I really enjoy them. If there is more or different info that you are looking for, please let me know.
Frank Anglisano 1969
Hey Bob, how bout a United States Navy Submarine that surfaced not once but twice from under the ice at the Artic Circle. I did!
United States Navy Retired
Pete Maiorino 1964
Hi Bob
I've been to quite a few exciting places, I guess my most exciting trip was
to Beijing working on the Olympics. As soon as I got off the plane I just froze seeing Chinese soldiers everywhere with the same look on their faces that I saw in Vietnam over 40 years ago. The city was modernistic and very interesting.
The locals were incredible, all the kids wanted to have pictures taken with us. The Forbidden City, Great Wall and the Summer Palace were unbelievable. I was fortunate to spend over two months in China meeting wonderful local people and seeing these sites when it was possible.
The young people have a great respect for the elderly, more so than here in the US. All citizens live in fear of their government and do not voice their opinions about anything. The thing I remember most about this trip was meeting an old man in the park, he was playing with this musical Top and was tossing it the air on a simple piece of cord. When he saw how interested I was, he came over and tried to teach me how to do it, he did not speak a word of English. THE Chinese people are very proud people and would not accept money or gifts no matter how bad off they are. I knew he would not take money so all I had was an Olympic Pin on my ID. I took it off and gave it to him and at first he refused it. When I tried to explain to him that I wanted him to have it, he motioned for me to pin it on him which I did. This man looked like someone who just won the lottery, he was so happy and gave me such a hug that I will cherish forever. Working for NBC has taking me many places but this trip is the one I Cherish the most.
Best regards
Al Sypher 1958
Bob,
Can't match your Congo River exploits but if anyone wants any conversation about a trek departing Vancouver, BC on Princess Cruise's via the inside passage to Juneau, Skagway, Glacier Nat'l. Park and disembarking at Whittier, Alaska, I'm your guy. We then boarded a "dome" car train to Anchorage and on to Denali Nat'l. Park for touring. The return leg was highlighted by a stay in Talkeetna and then on to Anchorage. Wildlife was in abundance and the scenery vast and spectacular.
Bob Gillette
How many as a civilian have landed in a plane on an aircraft carrier? I have! How many have been lowered from a moving helicopter by wire onto a moving destroyer that is moving at normal cruising speed? I have!
How many have been a student pilot with 8 hours of solo, got caught in storms on a solo cross country flight in a Cessna 150 and blown sideways off course, unable to read maps due to severe turbulence, landing in Mobile Al. with.3 gallon of gas left in the tank? Yep, me!
(Was heading to Gulfport Ms.)
Who has hiked from the top of Bear Mtn NY down to the bottom of the North side, then hiked all the way around the mountain to the South side, and back up to the top, all in one day, for a total of 18.6 miles? I did! (Missed a turn!)
I have had many more exciting adventures. I always say I'd rather be lucky than good!
Robert Casale 1961
Drama on the Congo
The USS LIBERTY, (AGTR-5), was cruising along, in calm seas, off the West coast of Africa in close proximity to the Congo River. Debris, consisting of fallen trees, planks of various sizes and an assortment of additional garbage constantly exited the Congo forming a trail into the Atlantic Ocean. The trail was visible for miles and those of us aboard LIBERTY waited to see if any bodies surfaced...the two Congo 's, Brazzaville and Leopoldville were constantly at odds, and loss of life in these two countries was an everyday occurrence.
Communication Technician Seaman (CTSN) Bobby Ringe began his day in a usual fashion. After having breakfast, he went topside to catch a breath of fresh air while waiting for morning muster. He was scheduled to stand an evening watch, so, after muster, he had nothing to do. He left the main deck after muster and went to the radio space (RR1) two levels below the main deck because he had to see Joe Bonsignore. Bonsignore was standing the day watch and would be relieved in the afternoon by Bobby Ringe. Ringe opened the door leading to RR1 and walked over to the position occupied by Bonsignore and without thinking, picked up a set of headphones and put them onto his head. He realized he did this without thinking and immediately took them from his head and put them onto the position between the two receivers and the tape recorder.
"What are you doing here, Bobby," Bonsignore asked?
"I have a message for you," he chided. "Tommy Bird told me at breakfast this morning that it won't be long and you'll be able to play pinochle like the big boys!"
Just as Ringe uttered the last word, a strange pain invaded his right side His left hand went to the area and he pushed slightly against his side to help relieve the discomfort. It passed.
Bonsignore, chuckling, said, "You tell Mr. Bird that he's right. It won't be long and I'll get back some of the bucks I've donated to the Stenzel and Bird drinking fund!"
Ringe started to say something when a second and more predominant pain caused him to stop mid sentence to take a deep breath.
Bonsignore asked, "Are you okay, man?"
"I hope so," Ringe said. "I had this pain in my right side but it's gone."
"Better be careful," Bonsignore said. "It could be your appendix."
Ringe decided to go back to the berthing compartment in the after part of the ship. He left RR1 and stuck his head into the Coordination Center that was directly across the hall from RR1. He said hello to one of the Portuguese linguists that were sent from NSA for this TAD (Temporary Additional Duty) to Africa. He had met Dino when the group of eight had boarded the day before LIBERTY left from Norfolk. He needed a new pinochle partner and Dino might be the right person.
He let the door close and headed for the ladder that would take him to the next level up but still one level below the main deck. As his foot hit the second step on the ladder, a third and decisive pain persuaded him that perhaps Bonsignore was right. It could be his appendix so a trip to sick bay was in order.
Ringe's trip to sick bay took a long time. He made stops along the way clutching his side as pain after pain wracked his body. He made it up the ladder to just outside the door leading to sick bay. As he opened the door, an excruciating pain made him so ill, he barfed up some greenish fluid. The corpsman standing inside the door took notice because most of the greenish fluid landed on his shoes. He grabbed Ringe as he started to fall to the deck and placed him on a patient table on his back. He yelled to the doctor who was in the next room redressing a wound one of the deck personnel had gotten a few days earlier.
"Doc," he said. "Ringe has bad pains in his right side and he just threw up some green stuff. The doctor did some preliminary doctor shit and determined that it was, more than likely, an appendix problem. The doctor decided that Ringe needed surgery, as soon as possible.
The doctor and the corpsman both knew that there wasn't enough general anesthesia to complete an operation. They had used most of what they had the previous week and wouldn't get more until they pulled into their next port for liberty. He did have sufficient ether to perform what is called an "open drop" but he had never done that before and was afraid to risk it on Ringe. There wasn't much time and the life of this young man was in his hands.
The Commanding Officer, Commander Daniel Wieland, had been notified of what was happening. He raced to sick bay and the doctor and the CO put their heads together. Ringe needed surgery, so he had to be transported someplace where the surgery could be performed.
The skipper and doc went to the ship's general service radio shack on the main deck. An urgent radio message was sent to the Commander in Chief of the Atlantic Fleet (CINCLANTFLT) for an appropriate answer. CINCLANTFLT contacted the American Embassy in Brazzaville and arrangements were being made to transport Ringe from LIBERTY to the Naval Hospital in Tripoli. There was a slight logistics problem that had to be resolved. How do you get a man from a ship at the mouth of the Congo River to Tripoli for surgery to perhaps save his life???
End of Part 1...Next is the trip up the Congo To Banana
Casale's Corner
A little girl went to her bedroom and pulled a glass jelly jar from its hiding place in the closet.
She poured the change out on the floor and counted it carefully. Three times, even. The total had to be exactly perfect. No chance here for mistakes.
Carefully placing the coins back in the jar and twisting on the cap, she slipped out the back door and made her way 6 blocks to Rexall's Drug Store with the big red Indian Chief sign above the door.
She waited patiently for the pharmacist to give her some attention, but he was too busy at this moment.
Tess twisted her feet to make a scuffing noise. Nothing. She cleared her throat with the most disgusting sound she could muster. No good. Finally she took a quarter from her jar and banged it on the glass counter. That did it!
'And what do you want?' the pharmacist asked in an annoyed tone of voice. I'm talking to my brother from Chicago whom I haven't seen in ages,' he said without waiting for a reply to his question.
'Well, I want to talk to you about my brother,' Tess answered back in the same annoyed tone. 'He's really, really sick....and I want to buy a miracle.'
'I beg your pardon?' said the pharmacist.
'His name is Andrew and he has something bad growing inside his head and my Daddy says only a miracle can save him now. So how much does a miracle cost?'
'We don't sell miracles here, little girl. I'm sorry but I can't help you,' the pharmacist said, softening a little.
'Listen, I have the money to pay for it. If it isn't enough, I will get the rest. Just tell me how much it costs.'
The pharmacist's brother was a well dressed man. He stooped down and asked the little girl, 'What kind of a miracle does your brother need?'
' I don't know,' Tess replied with her eyes welling up. I just know he's really sick and Mommy says he needs an operation. But my Daddy can't pay for it, so I want to use my money.'
'How much do you have?' asked the man from Chicago .
'One dollar and eleven cents,' Tess answered barely audible.
'And it's all the money I have, but I can get some more if I need to.'
'Well, what a coincidence,' smiled the man. 'A dollar and eleven cents---the exact price of a miracle for little brothers.'
He took her money in one hand and with the other hand he grasped her mitten and said 'Take me to where you live. I want to see your brother and meet your parents. Let's see if I have the miracle you need.'
That well-dressed man was Dr. Carlton Armstrong, a surgeon, specializing in neuro-surgery. The operation was completed free of charge and it wasn't long until Andrew was home again and doing well.
Mom and Dad were happily talking about the chain of events that had led them to this place.
'That surgery,' her Mom whispered. 'was a real miracle.. I wonder how much it would have cost?'
Tess smiled. She knew exactly how much a miracle cost...one dollar and eleven cents...plus the faith of a little child.