Sunday, October 21, 2018

The Foto Booth Funnies, October 6, 2018 (Part II)

 Laraine Cox Reedy and Jim Nazametz
 (From left to right): Gerry Garatino Burns, Nancy Campbell and Adrienne Jacobs Graubard
 Hat off (or on) to the class of 1969: William Orloff and Noel Marks
 Dwight Griffith and Jane Schroeder Griffith 
 Frank and Arlene Vastano
 Boulder's best: Colorado residents Beat and Barbara Steiner
 Orange is the new hat color: Frank and Jill Cramer, and Carol Mingione Greene and Stephen Greene
 Diane Broccoletti Leonard and William Leonard
 The glasses are half full: Bonnie Bell Kish and Steve Kish
Hart to Hart (from left to right): Robert Hart, Judith Feller Hart, 
Nancy Bueschel Byrum and Tony Byrum
Suzanne Dumont Millan and Rob Millan

Thursday, October 11, 2018

The Foto Booth Funnies, Oct. 6, 2018 (Part 1)

 Honor roll event organizer Jan Hansen Lake and husband Greg.  Give her an A+ for co-organizing such a successful and fun reunion.
 From left to right: Linda Allen Dickert, Karen VonTish Andronici, Cathy Reid Nolan, and Kathy Miller Senna
 Linda Gibbs Carovillano (left) and Patty Carovillano
 Sister act:  Laraine Cox Reedy (left), class of 1968, and Claire Cox Krusch, class of 1970.
 Maggie Gabler King (left) and Rosemary Fineberg
 Who's that masked man?  It's Michael Maresca and his wife Gerda.
 Carl and Carolyn Mehlhorn
 Dave and Janet Millar
Seal it with a kiss! Carol Mingione Greene and her husband Stephen.

Wednesday, October 10, 2018

The Breakfast Club (Oct. 7, 2018), Holiday Inn NJ version

Some people (who shall go unnamed) choose to sleep late rather than eat a hearty 8:30 a.m. breakfast on Oct. 7 at the Holiday Inn.

 Michael Maresca, Jack Muldowney and Rich Senna.
 Dave Millar and Kathy Miller Senna
 School daze!  Jack Muldowney strikes a pensive pose.  
 Cathy Reid Nolan and Karen VonTish Andronici
Nancy Waller
Myrtle Ave. buddies: Emily Polskin Zylber, Carol Martinez Weber, and Howard Polskin

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

The Kids Look Great....from the Class of '68!

Reunion Committee Chairperson Gerry Garatino Burns, takes a breather with Sam Ghanaim.
 Author Maggie Gabler King (left) and Mary Wilson Castro.
 Gene Ferraro (foreground) and Wayne DiNardo.
 Louis Carlucci.  That's Nick Thul in the white shirt.
Jeff Sperling.

This Ain't No Canteen. It's the 50th Reunion Party for the NPHS Class of 1968....and the 49th for the Class of 1969

Check out the check-in ladies.  Gerry Garatino Burns (left) and Janice Hansen Lake check in Dave Millar and his wife Janet.
The worker bees take a break before the party at the Beaver Brook Country Club.  For left to right: Kathy Miller Senna, Linda Shebey Leugers, Mary Wilson Castro, Gerry Garatino Burns, Janice Hansen Lake, Karen VonTish Andronici, and Nancy Waller.
A drive-by hello.  Dennis Disbrow cruised by the Holiday Inn to drop off Joe Ricci and Ken Wakefield after a country club lunch.  Family obligations prevented him from attending the reunion.

Frank Cramer and his wife Jill (center couple) remember the good times with Ken DeFillipo and his wife Rosa.
 Three cheers for three old friends: Russell Pollack (who flew in from Paris for the reunion), Karen VonTish Andronici, and Ken Wakefield (far right).

The bond is strong:  Bob Riggs (left) and Howard Polskin.  They hadn't seen each other since Howard's 30th birthday party in Manhattan but they picked up the conversation like it was 1969 all over again.

MORE PHOTOS WILL BE POSTED IN THE NEXT 10 DAYS SO KEEP COMIN' BACK!

Sunday, October 7, 2018

We've Got Legs and We're Still Standing! NPHS Classes of 1968 and 1969 Hold Reunion October 6, 2018.

Stairway to heaven:! Linda Shebey Leugers wears her 50-year-old gym uniform to the
morning-after breakfast at the Holiday Inn.  
More than 175 classmates from the North Plainfield High School classes of 1968 and 1969 attended their reunion on the night of Oct. 6, 2018, at the Beaver Brook Country Club in Annandale, NJ.  It was largest dual reunion the two classes ever had since they began holding them together in 2004.  The event also marked the 50th anniversary for the class of 1968.

The night was misty and a thin fog enveloped the Country Club but spirits were not dampened as the warm night air was punctured by gusts of laughter, loud conversation and class rock music.  The evening featured a live DJ, photo booth, and an extensive NPHS memorabilia display plus a hot buffet dinner, warm memories and cold beer.   The only thing missing was a live performance by Bruce Springsteen.

The festivities continued until almost midnight.  The traditional Reunion after-party was held in the room of Roger and Adrienne Graubard at the Holiday Inn Clinton where most overnighters stayed.  At 8:00 on the morning of October 7, bleary-eyed party-goers staggered to the hotel dining room for breakfast to reminisce more. Linda Shebey Leugers made the grandest entrance of the morning in her maroon gym class jumpsuit which will surely be the next big fashion trend coming out of Paris in 2019.  

PHOTOS FROM THE EVENING WILL BE POSTED BEGINNING OCTOBER 8 OR 9. WATCH THIS SPACE!



Friday, October 5, 2018

The NPHS Reunion Interview with Steve Miksis Class of 1969

Steve Miksis and his wife, Lori, in Croatia (2018).  
Describe your career. 
My career has evolved over the years. In the 70’s I was a building contractor with a crew who built many cool homes in Los Angeles. In the early 80’s I went back and completed college to get licensed as a Certified Public Accountant (fancy name) then found my niche as an investigative forensic accountant; lots of interesting stories. I have also practiced as a mediator for business and family disputes, also very interesting. Currently work three days a week, perfect, and soon no days a week, even more perfect.

Where have you lived since graduating?
Since 1981 I have lived in Santa Rosa, California, an hour north of San Francisco. Beautiful part of the world even as it has doubled in size since moving here. Climate is Mediterranean, rugged coast, many, many awesome hiking spots and great local food, art and music.  

Who were your friends back in high school?  
Friends/the crew included: Emily Polskin, Howard Polskin, Ned Fitzgerald, Bob Riggs, Ann Proli, Al Misko, Mark McCloud, Carmen Jones aka Carol Mingione, Dave Mills, Rich Senna, Deb Metz …damn, never made a list like that before, sorry if I forgot someone, and I remain in touch, somewhat.

Do you have any regrets about your experiences during your high school years? 
I don’t hold regrets, in retrospect, maybe if I had a little more clue of how I affected others, and how others felt about me, that probably would have been cool, but, I would not change anything to where I am now with the life I enjoy.

Now, 50 years later, has your perspective on your high school years changed at all?  If so, how? 
Yes, as I mentioned above, I now see how personal insecurities, along with my introspective nature, kept me at a distance which did not give me the opportunities to possibly connect with others, but again, all good.

What is your fondest memory of your years at NPHS?
Not sure I can write about my fondest memory/memories, but summers at the shore, surfing endless days, autumn in the east, lasting connections.

What was the craziest or stupidest thing you did in high school?
I can’t write what was the stupidest thing I participated in, but the craziest was showing up at someone’s house whose parents were having a gathering and I was high as a kite and hallucinating and meeting people and acting normal (at least that is what I thought in between thinking, “I got to get out of here!”) Guess whose house and whose parents?  

What was your proudest accomplishment in high school?
Never thought of a “proudest accomplishment in high school,” will have to get back to you on that one.

Who was your favorite teacher? 
Paul Sincavage, great teacher, great human being.

What was your worst class?
No recall of a worst class, I guess that is good. 

What is your most powerful or haunting memory during your years at NPHS?
Most haunting memory is that of coming upon the car crash that killed Bobby Gardner and seriously injured my other two classmates. It was surreal as it had just happened and I got out of my car and was looking and walking around the scene and I heard voices mentioning the guys names, not knowing anything at the time other than it was a very serious crash; the only time in my life I recall praying for those guys.

How did growing up at a child of the 60s – and all the social baggage and impact that it may have entailed – impact you at the time and in your young adult years?
My daughter, who is now 29, once said to me when she was a teenager, “You grew up in the 60’s, right? I wish I grew up in the 60’s, I think it would have been cool.” There you go, could not have said it better myself.
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Wednesday, October 3, 2018

The NPHS Reunion Interview with Richard Muglia, Class of 1969

Richard Muglia, Yellowstone River, 2018.
What is your biggest fear? Hopelessness.

What is your idea of perfect happiness?  Watching my wife catching (and releasing) a Yellowstone Cutthroat trout.

Who are your heroes in real life?  Firemen, soldiers and cowboys.

What do you consider your greatest achievement?Paying off my college loans.

What is your greatest extravagance?  A 911 Carrera S that stays in the garage six months a year (we live in New England).

What words or phrases do you most overuse?Lachrymose.  

What is your most marked characteristic?  Razor focus and an incredible Italian nose.

What is your greatest regret?  That rejection slip from Langley.  And not taking Trig.

What is your motto?  Fidelium, Fortitudo, Verum.  

What do you consider the most overrated virtue?   A great memory.  Which I lack.

What is the trait you most deplore in yourself?  Agreeing with others when I really don’t.

What is the trait you most deplore in others?  A sense of moral superiority.
Muglia family home on the
range in Sept. 2017 at
Hubbard Lodge in Montana.
From left to right: Richard,
daughter Alice, wife Ellen
and son Sam.  

What do you most value in your friends?  A sense of humor. And fierce loyalty, which they deliver in spades.

On what occasion do (did) you lie?Every Saturday in the fall of the year throughout high school. I’m 5’6” and 130 lbs.—check out the football programs…

Who are your favorite writers?Ernest Hemingway, Ward Just and Jay McInerney.   And Herman Melville when I can’t sleep.

What are your favorite names?  Sam and Alice. Or Alice and Sam, depending on who’s in favor at any particular moment.

What is the quality you most like in a man?  Moral courage.

What is the quality you most like in a woman?  The same quality I admire in a man, there should be no light between genders on this.

Which talent would you most like to have?  The ability to make a fire without matches.  And to barbeque like the other men…

How would you like to die?  Sitting in a rocking chair in our barn, listening to Chet Baker sing My Funny Valentine.  And holding my wife’s hand.
130 pounds drippings wet: Richard Muglia kneeling above #40 Dave Mills
and to the left of #75 Mike Maresca.