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06/22/13 04:31 PM #1    

Bonnie Worgaftik (Aquilino)

Welcome to the Jericho High School Class Of 1964 forums. Please press "Post Response" to participate in the discussion.

11/28/13 05:05 PM #2    

 

Larry Grobel

Looking at this site, I notice that only one woman has posted a photo. C'mon gang, post photos so we can see how we all turned out.

 

Larry Grobel


11/30/13 10:30 AM #3    

 

Patricia Sammon (Gaglio)

Larry,I

In case you didn't notice, only five men posted their pictures!!!   I personally don't like having my picture taken. Never have.  But in the interest of getting the ball rolling I'll take a deep breath and try to figure out how to post my picture on this site.

Pat


12/01/13 03:05 PM #4    

 

Patricia Sammon (Gaglio)

I think that ratio has something to do with the fact that men seem to get better looking with age.  Something to do with adding character to their faces.  Women, not so much.  (Or is that just insecurity talking?)


12/01/13 05:52 PM #5    

 

Larry Grobel

Probably insecurity. I just watched Streisand in Brooklyn on PBS, and she's 70. Of course, she also has a zillion dollars to help her look her best.  But you can't blame gender for not exercising and taking care of yourself, can you?  Not that you haven't....just speaking generally.

 

I've been putting out a lot of books as ebooks on amazon,  see if any interest you: 

 http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_0_11?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=lawrence+grobel&sprefix=Lawrence+Gr%2Cdigital-text%2C289&rh=n%3A133140011%2Ck%3Alawrence+grobel

Also: there's an interview I did for Playboy radio which you can find here: http://bit.ly/1brdWbv

And that's my update!  Hope to see you in April.


12/02/13 06:35 PM #6    

Lynn Blanchard (O'Brien)

Hi to everyone!  Don't know if I will get to the reunion as we just moved to Florida but will try. I'ts great to see pictures but can't figure out how to do it on my I Pad. You still look great Pat, haven't changed much from high school.


12/03/13 11:54 AM #7    

Lynn Blanchard (O'Brien)

Glad to hear someone else is having trouble with the pictures, If it takes more than a couple clicks I'm out of luck. How have you been?  Lynn


12/03/13 01:07 PM #8    

 

Robert Dr. Martin

Seems as if you have to send it to the site administrator (Bonnie or Marilyn) and only they can add.


12/03/13 02:48 PM #9    

Lynn Blanchard (O'Brien)

I got your response Mike seems ther are different pages to reply on , did you get mine, I think it may be under your profile.


12/04/13 08:58 PM #10    

 

Patricia Sammon (Gaglio)

Hey guys, click on Edit/Upload Photos on the Home Page.  I had no trouble loading a picture.


12/05/13 11:32 AM #11    

Robert Dr. Raiber

It was with extreme sadness that I have to post that Arthur Kaminsky passed away this morning.  We spoke about 2 weeks ago and he was looking forward to attending the reunion.  As soon as arrangements have been made by Andrea, I will post them.

Bob Raiber


12/05/13 05:08 PM #12    

 

Larry Grobel

This is such sad news.  I called Arthur just last weekend....he was watching a football game Sunday and sounded weak....I didn't know about his condition, it was just a call to see if I could convince him to come to the reunion. Arthur and I always had a friendly competitive edge, and I always enjoyed him.  He said he would call me back after the game....but didn't. And now this terrible news of his passing.  Just so sad.


12/06/13 05:39 PM #13    

Howard Schwartz

Bob (or anyone) - do you know what happened?


12/07/13 09:07 AM #14    

Jack Rheinhold

Remembering Arthur

In the midst of ramping up enthusiasm for the reunion, the beginning of conversations on line with old friends, we have to pause and sadly absorb the loss of a friend.   Arthur and I had a great relationship in high school, and as with all of life, I regret not keeping in touch more often.   

I remember his incredible ability to absorb and retain information, but with a fun and innocent presence.   I can’t remember the teacher, but somehow, probably during a bout of sitting in class seemingly disinterested, Arthur was pointed out as not paying attention.  It was a history class, and a discussion about Spain and the Spanish Armada.  Arthur proceeded to teach the class about the historical event, putting on the board, locations of ships, the strategy, the results, and I was not only educated but amused and amazed by his presentation, off the cuff, not prepared.  At least that is the way I remember it.   

I remember how he was so interested in sports, especially basketball in high school, but was always in awe of his ability to provide accurate data about almost anything.   I remember that as he began to develop his future career, he would provide statistical information to radio announcers for hockey games, and his peers were jealous of his ability to do so, quickly and accurately and without volumes of paper (and no internet!) for reference.

I remember Arthur fondly and grieve today with his family and friends.

  Thank you Arthur and God Bless


12/07/13 09:58 AM #15    

Hope Davis (Mann)

cryingI was so sorry to hear about Arthur' s death from cancer. I used to run into him at high school girls basketball games . He was doing live commentary for local TV. Always had time to say hello. Great guy. Truely missed.


12/07/13 10:40 AM #16    

Bonnie Worgaftik (Aquilino)

Jack, your thoughts were expressed beautifully.

I remember Arthur's very quick wit. We were in Spanish 4 with Mr. Batjacka (I still can't spell his name), we had all been accepted to college and were kind of coasting. Mr. B. went into a rant about how "all you seniors think you're so smart, you got into your good schools and you really don't know anything. You all think you're so smart." And Arthur said, "so Mr. Batjacka, you went to Dartmouth and you're a high school Spanish teacher. What's your point?" Class roared and Mr. B. came back with "very funny, Kaminsky. Yoiu're very funny."

That's my favorite Arthur story.

Bonnie


12/07/13 11:26 AM #17    

Joseph Columbo

Does anyone know what plans the family has made for Shiva calls?


12/07/13 05:39 PM #18    

 

Larry Grobel

The NY Times had an obit about Arthur online--which I haven't read yet, but will after I post this. I've been thinking about Arthur, and about all of us...all the same age, all going our different ways after high school. I remember how fond Arthur was of Joan Stouman, and how he felt he had to lose weight for our first reunion, which he did. I remember when Arthur was out in L.A. he came to my house and we spent a nice day together. And when I told him once that Al Pacino asked me if I could interview him for 60 Minutes, Arthur said he knew the top guy there and could set up a meeting, which he did. Of course 60 Minutes doesn't use freelancers, so it never happened, but Arthur and I both went to that meeting.  And on another occasion he took me to a hockey game at Madison Square Garden. He knew everybody. I didn't know any of the players, and I was never much of a hockey fan, but it was fun to be there, the seats were right behind the glass, so pucks would come at us and bounce off.  Arthur came to a few of the dinners with old high school friends in N.Y.  But then Arthur began to lost contact with us. I know he kept up with what was happening at Jericho but once he left his practice it was as if he had had enough.  I spoke to him on occasion by phone....I always appreciated his take on things. He was definitely a wiseass smart guy you couldn't help but admire.  When I called him last Sunday, it was to goad him into coming to the reunion.  I wanted him around.  I want all the old class around. Just to see how all are doing.  And to smile at seeing everyone together again.   

      Bob Raiber, I agree with you that something should be said about Arthur at the reunion. But I don't think we should single him out. I think we have lost a number of people who live in our memory--David Grant, David Huntley, Danny Jandorf, Richie Abrams and maybe a dozen others.  Perhaps different people might speak of each of the people we lost. Or a moment of silence in memory of.  


12/07/13 06:46 PM #19    

Bonnie Worgaftik (Aquilino)

INFORMATION PROVIDED BY FAIRCHILD FUNERAL CHAPEL

 

Arthur C. Kaminsky

Died: December 5, 2013

Kaminsky, Arthur C. Of Manhasset New York

on December 5, 2013. Loving husband of Andrea.

Beloved father of Alexis (Michael) Bleich,

Thomas (Martin Smith) and Eric.

Cherished grandfather of Annie and Max.

Brother of Janet Pawson.

In repose at the Fairchild Funeral Chapel 1570 Northern Blvd Manhasset Sunday from 2-5.

Interment Nassau Knolls Cemetery Pt. Washington

Donations may be made to Cornell University or Holt International Childrens Services.

Friends are invited to join the family at Pearl East Restaurant, 1191 Northern Blvd. Manhasset on Sunday December 8th at 5:30pm.

 


12/08/13 12:21 PM #20    

Barrett SACHS

Art Kaminsky...

after reading all the well deserved and well written comments about Art it makes one wonder what people will say about you when you're gone..Many friendships were made @ JHS, with some still maintained and you can only hope as many nice things will be said about you  as where said about Art.

 

Barrett Sachs


12/09/13 11:43 AM #21    

Sandy Samuel (Weiner)

This is the saddest news. Art was smart, extremely successful, a good friend to many of us -

He will surely be missed but never forgotten by all of us who knew him. I will definately miss

seeing him at the reunion.

Sandi Samuel Weiner


12/09/13 08:01 PM #22    

John Saunders

My two brothers, Jerry and Pete and I have been emailing back and forth since Art's death.  Pete, who was a freshman at Cornell when Art and Ken Dryden were seniors, sent me the following quote from Dryden.  Art was really special, and Dryden tells us some of the reasons why.

 

Getting to Idaho: the late Art Kaminsky was more than a sports agent

Ken Dryden, Special to SI.com

Art Kaminsky was the kind of person who, if you put lots of accomplished people with lots of things in common into one place, they would talk about Art.

We met at Cornell. Athletes often dismiss super fans as wannabes but Art was too interesting to ignore. He took on life with a jock's intensity and competitiveness, wanting to know everything about everything.

After Cornell, he went to Yale Law School, to go to a good school, and to locate himself more centrally to attend more college hockey games. When I negotiated my first contract with the Montreal Canadiens, I was his first sports client. He would come to represent about one-half of all the NHL's players. When I became a color commentator in the 1980 Winter Olympics, I was his first TV client. The Olympics weren't such a big deal then. But Art knew that in 1980 they would be big in the US, because they were in Lake Placid. He decided which US athletes were most likely to win medals, and went after them. He signed up Eric Heiden. Eric won five speed-skating gold medals. Art knew many of the college hockey coaches. He told the players, you can sign a pro contract now or sign a bigger one a year later -- and after you have played for your country. He would come to represent coach Herb Brooks and all but one of his gold medal-winning players.

Art didn't have a room in Lake Placid. He asked to share mine. Within a few days, it was as if I was sharing his. The phone never stopped. Later he represented such people as Al Michaels, Rick Reilly and Dan Dierdorf. John Hughes had played hockey at Cornell when Art and I were there. More than 30 years later, he represented John's daughter Sarah when she won the Olympic gold medal in women's figure skating.

Art also had his collections. In 1963, he sent away a Time magazine cover to Mortimer Caplin, head of the IRS, and received his magazine cover back, signed. That was the beginning. Every week after that he prepared a new letter and sent it out. Most of the Time laureates responded. Neighbors gave him back copies from their basements. He picked up others in second-hand stores.

"The first Time issue," he once told me, "was March 3, 1923. Joe Cannon was on the cover. He was Speaker of the House. [President] Harding was on the second week. It was [Time founder Henry] Luce's way to get back at him." To Art, his covers weren't collectibles. They were history.

He had a signed cover of every US president since 1923, except for FDR. He had Einstein, Picasso, and as he put it, "all the guys who died at Nuremburg." He had Nehru, Gandhi, Chiang Kai-shek, Ben-Gurion, Golda Meir and Timothy McVeigh. He didn't have Hitler, Stalin or J. D. Salinger. Salinger returned all his letters. Katherine Hepburn didn't sign his cover but wrote back a response to him that wound around the margins and open spaces of his letter to her. In 1991, he found his way into Cuba for the Pan Am Games and returned with five Time covers signed by Castro. A few years earlier, when Reagan and Gorbachev signed an arms reduction treaty in Washington, at the same table they also signed Art's Time cover. Art had a friend who worked for Reagan. In Time's 90 years, Art had about 75 percent of its covers signed.

He collected political buttons as well. He had more than 1000, dating to the late 1800s. His favorites were those of presidents from earlier in their careers when they had run for lower office: Roosevelt for Congress; Truman for Judge. He collected first edition books. When I was at his house this past weekend, we had take-out sandwiches from a local deli. I put my drink on a box beside me. On it was printed, "Clinton's Sax."

He also collected "states." Some years ago, when he had been to 49 states, he started bragging. I was at 48, but then I went to Oklahoma. We each had one state left, the same state -- Idaho. We started trash-talking each other. He told me that on this next trip to Pittsburgh, he would go by way of Pocatello. In 2002, I drove to Toronto from Calgary with our son. We decided to go south into Montana, wind around a bit and enter Yellowstone Park through Idaho. But it was winter and the Park's Idaho gate was closed. A few years later I was driving through southern British Columbia and saw a sign that said, Idaho, 8 km., but I was already two hours late for an event, and I missed my chance again.

Then Art got sick. It began to seem less important now who got to Idaho first. We started to think about how we could get to Idaho together. We'd go to a Boise State football game, or to an Idaho State basketball game. Or really, it didn't matter what. His condition would stabilize; he would seem to get stronger. Then things would worsen. I contacted a friend who knew the Governor of Idaho. Was it possible for the Governor to declare Art's house on Long Island as part of the territory of Idaho for just one day? The Governor said he would. I would visit Art with the Governor's proclamation; we'd open it together. We'd be in Idaho, our 50th state, at exactly the same moment.

But that would be giving up. So I waited. I never told Art.

Art had retired as an agent a few years ago. When the 30th anniversary of my book, The Game, came out last month, this was his chance to get back on the phones. He stunned the book's promotions people with his ideas, with all the people he knew who would surely clamor to interview me. We talked almost every night. I was coming to New York for Thanksgiving. I'd do some book promotion that weekend and into the following week. I met him in Manhattan on Monday; we went to a few places and then to a studio for an interview with Bob Costas. Art was moving very slowly. The tumor in his neck meant that his head was pitched forward. During my interview with Costas, he cleared his throat as he often had to do. The director had to stop the taping and begin again. Art was horrified with himself. He knew many of the people there; talked sports and TV with them. He was "Artie the agent" again. He knew he would feel awful the next day, but this was his fun and he wasn't going to miss his chance.

I talked with him the next day; he was very tired and we cut our conversation short. We spoke again on Wednesday. His voice sounded like his throat was on fire. I had done a draft of an article we wanted to submit to the New York Times. He was to have sent it in earlier that day, and was upset at himself for feeling too weak to do it. He would send it tomorrow, he said.

This morning, he died.

49 states is enough.


12/10/13 09:57 AM #23    

Marilyn Della Vecchia (Profita)

As life would have it I was gone for the weekend and very out of touch when Arthur passed. Wondering what happened was not pleasant. Arthur was certainly a force but really a very sweet and caring guy. I saw him  at least yearly at the Hall of Fame ceremonies including the very first one when he and Larry were inducted. After that he joined the board and a long list of our classmates have been inducted since then. He would always say hello and after Peter Shulman was inducted he went to the "diner" with a bunch of us to celebrate. I remember Arthur in math class (why I was in that class I will never know but to this day numbers are my friend) Arhur and Jack Fierman would play stump the math teacher (Mr. Katz) as often as they could bringing in math problems they thought he could not figure out. I remember being in the back of the class saying to myself "I didn't even know what we learned yesterday, why are they doing that, I will be sooooooooooooooo lost" The good thing was that I was in his class, asking, seeking, challenging, always wanting to learn more. It taught me more about life than any math book and I spent 26 years in education because of all I learned outside the classroom at Jericho from my classmates. Arthur didn't go to the ceremony last year I heard he was ill. But then I heard he was planning to come to the reunion so I put off calling him ( as I didn't have an email for him) and he was on the list of calls I have to make. He will be missed, I will be sending sympathy to his family from the class and we will speak of our lost classmates,they will forever be in our minds and hearts.


04/28/14 03:15 AM #24    

 

Jeff Tetenbaum

Oh and one more thing - we live in Taos, New Mexico - ski country. If you are a skier and have never skied Taos, you need to try it. If you don't ski, the weather here is terrific all year round- virtually no humidity- and it doesn't get much more scenic anywhere. We'd love for you to visit. Jeffandnancy@tetenbaum.com 575-776-3837.


06/20/14 04:09 PM #25    

 

Jeff Tetenbaum

with all this talk about eating or being eaten, (we didn't have cupcakes, sorry Bonnie) Michael Shopenn and lady friend Gail stopped our home (Taos, NM) yesterday for lunch and a reunion reunion. Had a great time for about 3 hours before Mike and Gail started their drive back to Boulder, Co. They spent a few nights in Santa Fe and we are only an hour and a half away. So if anyone is coming out west to the Land of Enchantment, please give us a call 575-776-3837 or email us jeffandnancy@tetenbaum.com.  We'd love to have you visit.  Jeff   


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