Dear Wheatley Wildcats and Other Interested Persons, Welcome to The Wheatley School Alumni Association Newsletter # 74. Editor’s Note - No, you are not seeing double. This Newsletter, # 74, follows hard on the heels of Newsletter # 73, published just 2 days ago (on 7/1/2022). Why so soon? Because lots of material has come in over the transom since Friday (and because I have too much free time on my hands; I’m not doing enough). Check it out!
Art, this was (another) sensational newsletter. Hi Marshall how are you have time to produce this terrific and news filled document while you are making news behind the bench. Bravo! Louise Kampa Triano 1965
Its a little scary to have more to look back on than to look forward to. But there were two stories in this issue that particularly grabbed my attention. James Schaus' paintings are really lovely and evoke persistent memories of the Roslyn duck pond and the EW train station. Seems like yesterday, even for someone that never returned to Long Island after leaving for college. I barely remember Dana Seman. and never thought that cancer would be so much a part of my life (who does?). But my stage 4 colon cancer was surgically removed and I am doing well. I am very sorry that Dana did not have a better outcome. Evolution did not design us to live much past 60, so class of 70 enjoy it while you can!
Thanks for showing the photo of me at of Hildebrandt's front door - but you really should have used the one I took inside - taken 5 minutes earlier, but looking exactly like it did in 1964. I don't!
How I managed to translate how you manage to Hi Marshall I will never know!!🤣
Art, this was (another) sensational newsletter. Hi Marshall how are you have time to produce this terrific and news filled document while you are making news behind the bench. Bravo! Louise Kampa Triano 1965
Its a little scary to have more to look back on than to look forward to. But there were two stories in this issue that particularly grabbed my attention. James Schaus' paintings are really lovely and evoke persistent memories of the Roslyn duck pond and the EW train station. Seems like yesterday, even for someone that never returned to Long Island after leaving for college. I barely remember Dana Seman. and never thought that cancer would be so much a part of my life (who does?). But my stage 4 colon cancer was surgically removed and I am doing well. I am very sorry that Dana did not have a better outcome. Evolution did not design us to live much past 60, so class of 70 enjoy it while you can!
Thanks for showing the photo of me at of Hildebrandt's front door - but you really should have used the one I took inside - taken 5 minutes earlier, but looking exactly like it did in 1964. I don't!
To Jim Jr. thx for sharing your Dad’s Beautiful work-I absolutely adored him & your whole Family-Many Blessings to Everyone xoxoxo