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Flashbacks

Date: Jul. 27, 2008
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Jim Worden helps to launch a new category on the Class of 1959 blog, namely FLASHBACKS.

The idea here is to add a comment with your own brief flashbacks on events you recall that occurred during our 4 years at OHS.

Come on now, let's not let Jim dominate the Favorite Memories section of the blog. It's time for everyone to participate.

Jim starts us off with this gem. I'm still trying to remember the janitor's trash can scenario Jim mentions below - must be my age ;-)

"As I sit here writing this bio, I keep coming up with flashbacks of High School and before. Things that occurred almost 60 years ago. Why do I remember these things yet couldn’t remember that “ITC” on my Geology final stood for Inter Tropical Convergence zone that I had studied just the night before?
 
Anyway, I also remember: buying $1.00 worth of gas from George Dando at a gas station on Croton Ave.; walking home from a late night hockey game with Rich Lovelace down some very cold and slippery streets; filling up the boy’s shower room 3 feet deep after a baseball game, Bobby Wood’s ‘57 baby blue Chevy; one way traffic in the halls at OHS, Chinos with a belt in the back; “engineer boots; slow songs at Bandstand; sack dresses; eighth grade dance club; nylons with a seam up the back; “Doc” Reilly getting stuck in the janitor’s trash can before a hockey game; noticing “Buffalo Bob” Smith at a baseball game with Pleasantville HS; mind numbing Latin classes; surrealistic music classes with John Crowley; someones stink bomb in 3rd year Latin class; listening for that siren that would signal a no school snow day; working for the Town of Ossining for $1.50/hour during the summer, the 4 pound placemat I made in Mrs. Walker’s 3rd grade class, the library book I swore I had returned only to find it 6 months later at the end of the school year, disecting a frog in 8th grade Biology class with Irene Wynant, and many more, too numerous and tedious to mention."
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Washington School - 1947

Date: May. 2, 2009
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Hello OHS Nostalgia Fans,
I happened upon the enclosed photo while digging through boxes of stuff that never seemed to have been thrown out. It is a photo of the first grade class at Washington School taken in 1947, probably in May or June of that year. I have been going crazy trying to match up names with the people in the picture. So far I have only gotten this far:
Front row: no idea for any of them
2nd row: Jim Worden (that was an easy one), maybe Joanne Petrella, Fred Swensen, ?, Donald Tompkins, maybe Margo Traino, Frank Berlin.
3rd row: Sammy something or other, Terry Campabasso, ?, ?, ?, maybe Mary Pat Farrell, Bob Merrit.
4th row: maybe Jack Donahue, ?, ?, Margret Marino, Jeff Abbraities, ?.
 
If anyone can identify anyone I couldn’t, or have made an error, let me know.
 
Jim Worden
aka Big Duck
 

And here's a 3rd Grade photo sent by Terry Campabasso. Teachers are Miss Montaldo and Mr. Carpenter - nice tie ;-).That looks like Terry next to Charles Halsted. Terry says that they originally went to Roosevelt School but for some reason the class went to Washington School for a year or two.


 

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In the Land That Made Me, Me.

Date: Mar. 1, 2009
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Submitted by Valerie Moos Crotty

Long ago and far away, in a land that time forgot,
Before the days of Dylan, or the dawn of Camelot.
There lived a race of innocents, and they were you and me,

 
For Ike was in the White House in that land where we were born,
Where navels were for oranges, and Peyton Place was porn.

 
We learned to gut a muffler, we washed our hair at dawn,
We spread our crinolines to dry in circles on the lawn.

 
We longed for love and romance, and waited for our Prince,
And Eddie Fisher married Liz, and no one's seen him since.

 
We danced to 'Little Darlin,' and sang to 'Stagger Lee'
And cried for Buddy Holly in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
Only girls wore earrings then, and 3 was one too many,
And only boys wore flat-top cuts, except for Jean McKinney.

 
And only in our wildest dreams did we expect to see
A boy named George with Lipstick, in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
We fell for Frankie Avalon, Annette was oh, so nice,
And when they made a movie, they never made it twice.

 
We didn't have a Star Trek Five, or Psycho Two and Three,
Or Rocky-Rambo Twenty in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
Miss Kitty had a heart of gold, and Chester had a limp,
And Reagan was a Democrat whose co-star was a chimp.

 
We had a Mr. Wizard, but not a Mr. T,
And Oprah couldn't talk yet, in the Land That Made Me, Me.
We had our share of heroes, we never thought they'd go,
At least not Bobby Darin, or Marilyn Monroe.

 
For youth was still eternal, and life was yet to be,
And Elvis was forever in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
We'd never seen the rock band that was Grateful to be Dead,
And Airplanes weren't named Jefferson , and Zeppelins were not Led.

 
And Beatles lived in gardens then, and Monkees lived in trees,
Madonna was Mary in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
We'd never heard of microwaves, or telephones in cars,
And babies might be bottle-fed, but they weren't grown in jars.

 
And pumping iron got wrinkles out, and 'gay' meant fancy-free,
And dorms were never co-ed in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
We hadn't seen enough of jets to talk about the lag,
And microchips were what was left at the bottom of the bag.

 
And Hardware was a box of nails, and bytes came from a flea,
And rocket ships were fiction in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
Buicks came with portholes, and side shows came with freaks,
And bathing suits came big enough to cover both your cheeks.

 
And Coke came just in bottles, and skirts below the knee,
And Castro came to power near the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
We had no Crest with Fluoride, we had no Hill Street Blues,
We had no patterned pantyhose or Lipton herbal tea
Or prime-time ads for those disfunctions

 
in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
There were no golden arches, no Perrier to chill,
And fish were not called Wanda , and cats were not called Bill.

 
And middle-aged was 35 and old was forty-three,
And ancient were our parents in the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
But all things have a season, or so we've heard them say,
And now instead of Maybelline we swear by Retin-A.
They send us invitations to join AARP,
We've come a long way, baby, from the Land That Made Me, Me.

 
So now we face a brave new world in slightly larger jeans,
And wonder why they're using smaller print in magazines.
And we tell our children's children of the way it used to be,
Long ago and far away in the Land That Made Me, Me.
 
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Flashbacks from Mary Lou Puglia Moran

Date: Oct. 18, 2008
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Aschermans
The name Ascherman makes me think of stopping after Mass every Sunday to pick up my dad's favorite treat -- crumb buns and raisin buns. It was a weekly ritual. it had to be Ascherman's, no other place would do. I  can still  taste the toppings on those crumb buns, my favorite.
 
Each obit you send is sad and reminds me that we are next in line,  but always brings back memories, most of them good, bc of the wonderful little town we grew up in, OHS where I learned so much from teachers like Abe Fischler, Joan Smythe, and Emma Baccari.  The camaraderie we experienced cannot be appreciated until you have  had the heartbreak of living in three other towns and cities and attending  to 3 more high schools before graduation. I did have Phyllis  get me the yearbook each year. These treasured memories are why I come to OHS reunions even though I graduated elsewhere. I did take a train up to Ossining June 1959 on your graduation night to watch all of you dear friends graduate. Can you imagine how I cried sitting in  the audience seeing all of you up there? Many of us had been friends since kindergarten.
 
I am crying again just in the remembering. It's still fun t o look at the prom photos once in awhile when I resolve to take the pictures out of shoes boxes and put them in albums, a typical resolve among my fellow retirees. Grandchildren tend to pop in and draw me away from the task. I share a few photos with them and of course they think they are so funny  mostly because of the way we dressed and the boys' hairstyles.

 
Enough maudlin ramblings  from a 67 year old who can't remember what she ate for breakfast but remembers all the experiences from K thru 10th when I left clinging hystericallly to Phyllis and Obie! My dad literally puled me away and threw me in the car. Feel free to post on our website if you think anyone would be interested  in my trip down memory land. It  will not surprise you to now that one of my favorite songs is, "The Way We Were." I hope it is played at our reunion.
 

More Memories:

Kipp's: Sharing an English Muffin and a nickel coke with 2 straws.

Hillikers:Complete utter fascination with the pulley and little metal box which zipped your money up to the great unknown.

5&10 store: thick, square waffle ice cream sandwiches, vanilla, chocolate and strawberry (but no Cherries Garcia!)

Ascherman's Bakery: Sunday morning crumb buns and raisin buns after church

Nelson Park: The ending point of the parades. We  proudly marched in our Brownie and then Girl Scout uniforms, always also wearing white gloves. Later, as an OHS colorguard marching in what was considered at the time, a short, little  skirt. Maroon skirt. White boots. Maroon and white, of course! We  then stood impatiently in the blazing sun listening to speeches. At the time, pre Viet Nam, we didn't  fully understand what Memorial Day was really all about.

 
Fondly and with affection
Mary Lou Puglia Moran
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