Jon Breen letter to MVHS 3-20-2002

The Jon Breen Memorial Fund

Mount Vernon High School

100 California Road

Mount Vernon, NY 10552

914-683-0131 pm/ 914-467-7802 am

e-mail rjg@cloud9.net

MVHS Class of 1963 Website

www.geocities.com/Tokyo/7970/mvhs1963/reunion.htm

 

March 20, 2002

 

Dear Friend and Classmate,

 

I hope this letter finds you and yours quite well in this 39th year since our graduation in 1963. Because next year is our 40th re-union year, our standing committee from the last re-union has had our first organizing meeting, held at my home, this past Sunday, March 17th.

 

This year Michael Rosenblum, Ayn Silverman, Peter Altieri, Susan Satenstein and I sat down for a few hours and agreed upon certain criteria, which I have listed below:

 

a)      We all would like it held in the 2nd or 3rd week of June, 2003.

b)      We are exploring the idea of a multi day event at a hotel/conference complex, ie: Arrowood, Rye Town Hilton, the Renaissance, etc.

1)   Hotel rooms available for over-night stays

2)   Friday night get-together in separate bar/nosh area (optional)

3)   Saturday luncheon (optional)

4)      Saturday night dance/light later buffet

c)      We also are considering the idea of an open invitation to any one from the classes 1961 through 1965.

 

We are all still open to other ideas and suggestions. Please call or e-mail your thoughts as quickly as possible (914-683-0131, rjg@clou9.net).

 

In the meantime I am combining this report with the annual Jon Breen Memorial Fund letter. First of all, the Jon Breen Fund now has over $10,300 in its account. As many of you know, three prizes are given in the name of Jon Breen, to the three top essayists. This year’s topic is “Freedom vs. Security, A Delicate Balance.” Recently, besides the annual award’s assembly, I have started to make arrangements with the honorable Mayor Ernest Davis, of Mount Vernon, Dr. Thomas Turner, Principal of the Mount Vernon High School and Mr. Paul Court, Lead Social Studies Teacher, to have a Jon Breen Memeorial Fund Assembly. At this gathering, the winning essayists will read their papers, there will be a blue-ribbon panel discussion, with questions and answers, and it will either be broadcast or cablecast or both. This should lend an exciting new aspect to the Fund. Again the, Fund will also donate a $500 prize, in the name of the late Henry M. Littlefield, for the top history student in the senior class.

 

 

 

 

In regards to this past year I have continued my verbal, electronic, and written correspondence with Bill Bernstein, who is retiring from Coca Cola in Atlanta, Jim Cotton, who is now a Selectman in Redding , Ct., Lucy Bisesi who is a new grandmother, Larry Baker, happily selling equities in Ct., Carol Duncan, who is presenting a teaching paper in Lancaster, Pa., Frank Engel, who loves the Pacific Northwest and continues to write beautifully, photograph dramatically and think philosophically, Stan Goldmark, who loves to ski, root for Wisconsin football and sell plastics, Lee Jackel, who has recently eloped and loves to send humorous e-mails, Alan Rosenberg , who is still collecting NBA autographs and is up to his neck in tax returns, Marcia Salonger, who retired from teaching to a new career in real estate, Barbara Tucci, who has married off two handsome sons and summers in Rhode Island, Elaine Knopping, who enjoys living in northern Westchester, Jim Kurtz, who retired and likes to travel, Laura Kosof who is the busy owner of Michael’s Clothing on 79th Street in NYC, Fran Lazar, who is loving life in Dix Hills after retiring as a teacher, Noel McFarlane  who has started a new career, Sue Nassau who enjoyed the Olympics out in her home state of Utah, Dr. Larry Reich, who has started to conquer the legal world in the same way as he conquered to medical profession, and Jim Finch who is the Mount Vernon Commissioner of Public Works and a big booster of Mount Vernon basketball. Also I have heard from Carol Bellew, Al Schultz, Bruce and Phil Dix, Matt Goldberg, and Bob Sabin who has a 30 month old! Stuart Tobin is still practicing medicine in Richmond, KY and he wishes his friends in the class all the best. I also made contact with Norman Raphael, who sent me a check and Arnold Siegel, from the West Coast who has always been generous to the Jon Breen Fund. Peter Altieri remains a great Yankee fan and is looking forward to another championship in the Bronx.

 

Also of course, my old and close friend Warren Adis and his wife Mary who venture with Linda and me to museum after museum. The Adis family also love skiing in between his Professorship at Iona College. Dr. Lew Perelman and his wife Isabella, keep busy in the Virginia suburbs of Washington D.C. with her music and his consulting. Whenever I get interested in the subject of education, I refer people to Lewis’s famous book School’s Out. You should all find a copy and read it!

 

Unfortunately for many of us in the Metropolitan area, this has been a traumatic past six months. I know I speak for all of us when I say that the shock has been incredible. We are all entering into a different world. It may presage our passage into a new and more dangerous era of world instability and conflict. Hopefully our country will meet this new challenge with determination and strength. Maybe by the time we hold our fortieth reunion, in about 15 months, this horrible chapter of world conflagration and hate will be behind us. 

 

I look forward to hearing from you regarding the reunion, your opinions on what we are or should be doing, and your continued support to the Jon Breen Fund. Also I would like to wish to everyone who celebrates the traditional holidays of the spring a sweet and happy Pesach and a joyous Easter.

  

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

 

Letter to Mayor Ernest Davis of Mount Vernon 3-21-02

Mayor Ernest Davis

City Hall

Office of the mayor

Mount Vernon, NY 10550

 

 

March 21, 2002

 

Dear Mayor Davis,

 

I hope that this letter finds you and yours quite well. As you probably recall we had talked about having an assembly revolving around the winners of the Jon Breen Memorial Fund essay contest annually awarded at the Mount Vernon High School. Each year, with the cooperation and coordination of Mr. Paul Court, the Jon Breen Fund sponsors this essay contest and this year’s topic is Freedom versus Security: A Delicate Balance.

 

During our conversation at the radio station last year, you indicated that a broadcast of an assembly regarding this contest was one of your interests. I would like to offer this thought. I suggest that the winners of the essay contest read their award winning essays to the senior class, and that a “question and answer” session follows regarding the topic. Along with this effort a panel discussion could accompany the reading of the essays. The panel could be chosen by you, in concert, with Mr. Paul Court or the Principal, Dr. Turner. I believe this event would be quite important and would stimulate the proper “public-policy” debate that we all believe is essential to our democracy. I hope that you will give thoughtful consideration to this concept.

 

With all that in mind, I look forward to seeing you again at either the tennis courts, or at your office, or at the radio station.

 

Regards,

 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

Three Mount Vernon Stories from 2001 -1-17-2002

THREE MOUNT VERNON STORIES

From 2001

Richard J. Garfunkel

Hopefully these vignettes will not intrude greatly on your peaceful lives, so if you have a moment or two and wish to indulge me on this, read on!

 

As this momentous year of change, peril, disaster and anxiety stars to wane, I had thoughts of sharing with you three Mount Vernon connections that came my way with a typical dose of serendipity.

 

SUMMER AT THE PHILHARMONIC

In the middle of summer, Linda and I decided to go hear the New York Philharmonic perform at the Westchester Community College. Every once in a while we would go to this mid-summer event. In fact, one year, while we were in rapt attention, and numb with vino, the then conductor Zubin Mehta fell off the stage. As a result of this unfortunate happenstance, which he incurred injury, Mr. Mehta’s career took a “tumble”.

 

Not withstanding, the program featured show music by Leonard Bernstein and a classical finale by the Russian master Prokofiev. We were joined by our old AB Davis friend Warren Adis, and his wife, of many, many, years,  Mary. ( Mary is an English girl, whose father was in the Foreign Service and who’s livelihood contributed greatly to her birth in India, at the time of the Raj.)

 

The NY Philharmonic attracts great attention in suburban Westchester County, and therefore over 25,000 other souls had the same idea of picnicking on the grounds with friends and listening under the stars to melodious offerings. Even though we were quite early, and were able to find a few square yards of uninhabited turf for our blankets, the unoccupied terra firma disappeared by the minute. In fact, two hours later, and after the music had started, the enthusiasts were still piling in with their unending march toward the rear. Without the strategic placement of huge loudspeakers, every 50 feet, 90% of the people would have been out of audio range. Meanwhile, because we had not seen the Adis group in a while, I brought some photos albums, and some travel journals that I had been piecing together over the past year.

 

As I was showing Mary one of the journals, and because of the closeness of everyone around, us our conversation was overheard by our neighbors. Somehow when the Mount Vernon or Davis High School name was mentioned, a women who was sitting practically on top of us, leaned over and said she went to Davis and that she really admired my journals. She was an archivist at the Central Synagogue in New York and understood how difficult it was to do what I had done, and she admired my dedication and originality. That was flattering in itself, and since this was all happening before the music started we did get to talk about AB Davis, where she and her husband had attended and graduated. They were about ten years ahead of us, and of course we were able to match up teachers from both eras. Nobody left teaching in those days, no matter how rotten the pay was! Eventually the music started, we settled down, and after numerous selections we reached intermission. Since we were all a bit spent we decided to take advantage of the intermission, and pick up, leave, and find our car. It was all right, because no one was really in the mood for Prokofiev, the parking lot was jammed, and the port-o-san lines were unending. As we stood up and were packing our gear, I asked the woman, whom we had been conversing with, and I had practically stepped on, what was the name she went by. She told me “Minninberg”. I asked her “was your mother-in-law named Mildred?”  She said “yes”, and how did I know? I told her that one of my mother’s good friends was Mildred! Small world! We were ready to go and it was tough stepping over people, so I didn’t get a chance to learn what had happened to the Minninbergs, but I decided to look up their phone number and I’ll eventually ask!

 

TENNIS AND WRESTLING

 

Later this same summer, I was playing my usual weekend tennis at the County Tennis Club in Scarsdale, just off the Bronx River Parkway past Fenimore Road and opposite the, Hartsdale Station. I was in a tournament, and our doubles team was scheduled against a pair of guys, of whom one was a new member. As I was musing on the deck of the clubhouse, a young guy came up to me with a magazine in his hand, and asked me my name. I said who I was and I asked him why he wanted to know. He then started to relate to me a strange story prefaced by a series of questions. He first asked me if I knew anything about wrestling, and I said that my knowledge was limited to amateur scholastic wrestling in Mt. Vernon, Westchester County and Section I between 1960 and 1977. Then he asked me if I knew Randy Forrest and Jimmy Lee ( the famous New Rochelle and Mount Vernon amateur wrestlers and coaches from the late 1950’s to the late 1970’s, Randy, NR 1958, and Jimmy, MVHS 1964).  I said that knew them quite well from the time I was 16 years old. I was now very curious why this young guy wanted to know whether I knew these people. I looked at him and said, “you are a much younger person, why would you be interested in these people?” Before he answered, he brought out a magazine, The Amateur Wrestling News (printed in Oklahoma, USA) and asked me if I had ever heard of Henry Littlefield, who had coached at Mount Vernon and Doug Garr, who had written the article in the magazine. Again, I told him that I knew Henry since I was 16, and that he was the coach and mentor of Forrest, Lee and also Doug Garr. He was not terribly surprised when I elaborated on the wonderful wrestling program that Henry had put in place. Finally, after a general review of the history of our program from 1960 to 1977, I again asked him why he cared. He then told me that he was currently interested in scholastic, collegiate and Olympic freestyle wrestling, and that this interest had derived from his brother who was a competitor from Roosevelt HS in Yonkers in the late 1970’s. At that time he and his brother had come in contact with the Mount Vernon program and became interested in its history. Since no one seemed to know much about the history, he inquired whether there would be someone out there in the world that would know. So over 25 years ago someone suggested that a guy named Garfunkel would know. Lo and behold in the year 2001, we are matched up in a tennis tournament and he sees the name Garfunkel, and asks someone at the club “does this guy know anything about wrestling.” Of course, we meet and I am that Garfunkel.

 

Funny world we live in! It seems that Henry’s legacy lives on and on. My new friend, and tennis opponent, told me that in wrestling circles, Mount Vernon High School’s

Program from that 15-year period is legendary. So long after the program waned in Mount Vernon, the dusty memories still evoke some talk among the aficionados of the sport!

 

MEMORIES OF PROSPECT AVENUE

A long time ago, in late 1945, I moved into Mount Vernon with my parents and older sister, Kaaren. Of course I had little to do with that move and being less then 1 year old my contribution was understandingly sparse. It was a large and roomy red brick house at the end of Prospect Avenue, nestled between Magnolia and Sycamore. The house was quite old even then, having been built in the last century, that is the 19th. Because of moving in at such a tender age, I always regarded myself as being born in Mount Vernon. It may have been a little white lie, but so be it. In fact, when I was on Howdy Doody or something like that, I was asked where I was from, and I said Brooklyn! Boy was my mother unhappy. She said that I was from Mount Vernon! So from then on I was not only from Mount Vernon, but born there!

 

Meanwhile our house was next the Oshman house, an old stucco Mediterrean type, and our backyards were rather contiguous and we shared a very, very large ice age era rock. This rock was quite fantastic and I eventually was able to climb up and down it from almost every angle. Even today it is quite gigantic and imposing. The Oshman’s had three daughters, Ethel, Marilyn and Betty, who probably were, from the oldest to the youngest 20 to 15 years older then me. Well since the backyards adjoined, I frequently visited the Oshman’s as their married daughters returned with their latest offspring via stroller or carriage and visited with their parents. Even though I was only a few years older then the first of the grandchildren, I got to see babies first hand. Well this went on for many years and as time passed the three girls had nine children. The middle daughter, Marilyn, I remember quite well because she was quite stunning.

 

It was always an adventure romping around the backyards in those days, and my neighbors got to know me quite well. The Oshmans were older then my parents, and Mr. Oshman just enjoyed sitting in his driveway and holding court with his daughters, their husbands and all the little kids. As I got older, and my interests shifted I saw less and less of the Oshman family. As I entered junior and senior high school I became preoccupied with the conventional interests of a teenager, and my backyard visits were restricted to relaxing on a hammock on a warm summer day and listening to Yankee games. My sister had gone on to Cornell in the fall of 1959 and she was rarely back in Mount Vernon. In fact, I saw little of the Oshman family in my waning years in Mount Vernon. My contact with my neighbors practically ceased in 1963 when I went off to college and my parents finally sold our house in 1965. It wasn’t terribly traumatic, my sister had graduated college, moved into an apartment in New York City and I adjusted to finishing college and adjusting to the strange and dangerous world we were all facing. The thoughts of Prospect Avenue never really faded, but moved into the background. Thankfully many of my friends still lived in the neighborhood, so I was able to visit quite often. It’s a funny feeling of coming back to one’s home neighborhood, but not being able to stay. At the end of the day one must return to different surroundings.

 

Time past quickly. My friends never came back to Mount Vernon. Their parents moved away, some died and the town changed, maybe forever. Eventually, after meeting Linda at the Mount Vernon High School in early 1969, we were married, moved to White Plains, raised children and like many others, tried to age gracefully.

 

Over the years I would, through conversation, meet people from Mount Vernon. One day a few years ago I was sitting on the deck of the clubhouse at County Tennis in Scarsdale. While waiting for the next available court, I wound up talking to one Herb Haber, an older member, whose wife was from Mount Vernon. He learned that I was from there and asked me if I knew of the Oshmans. “Of course”, I said and went on to tell them that we were their neighbors for about 20 or so years. I didn’t know much about them, even when I lived there, because of my youth, but Herb, who was over 80 years of age, filled me in about the family. It was quite fascinating, because my impression was quite different. The old man, who I used to see in his cheap beach chair playing with his grandchildren, was not the person I had assumed him to be. As a boy I had heard that he was in the “shoe” business, so I assumed he was a “shoemaker”! Funny, but as I was to learn, I was quite mistaken. Herb went on to tell me that Lou Oshman, was a Brown graduate, a champion collegiate swimmer, a great tennis player, who won a national public courts championship and a millionaire. In fact, they owned a summer camp, and a golf course.

 

Of course, I told Herb what little I knew of the Oshman family from those days, and I did remember Marilyn and her feisty husband Jules Yarnell, who was a lawyer. One memory of Jules was that we argued politics even though I was a young teenager. He, like the Oshmans (this I later learned) was a rabid Republican and I a “yellow dog” Democrat.

 

Well, not so long ago, in fact about five months I gather old Herb Haber told me that Jules Yarnell had died. I asked Herb how old he was and Herb told me that he was about 83! I was really amazed. It was probably 42 years since I had seen Jules and the rest of the Oshman’s. Wow, had time flown away!  I asked Herb where they lived, and he told me, so I looked up their phone number and called. Unfortunately there was no answer, but I left a message. After a week or so I called a few more times, but with no further messages. I guessed that she was away, so I decided to wait a bit longer and to make one more call. Well not long after, I called, and a woman answered. I asked if she was Marilyn Yarnell, she said ”yes” and I told her who I was. Immediately she thanked me for calling, asked how my sister was, and told me that though she was away, she had been thrilled about my early phone message. She had told her sisters about the call and they were amazed that I had remembered all of them. We talked for about an hour and I eventually sent her a long letter about our lives and family history. It was like entering into a time capsule, and not only going back to an exact spot of my youth, but also being able to enjoy the rare opportunity of catching up with someone who knew me from the time I was an infant to almost manhood.

 

 

Jon Breen letter to MVHS 6-6-2001

                                                                                JON BREEN MEMORIAL FUND

                                                                                      Mount Vernon High School

                                                                                 100 California Road

                                                                             Mount Vernon, NY 10552   

                                                                                914- 5665-5300 FAX 914-665-5281

 

June 6, 2001

 

Dear Classmates and Friends,

 

Once again another year has passed since my last Jon Breen Memorial Fund letter. I apologize for waiting so long to send this edition out, but it has been a busy year, as usual.  Since I last wrote all of you, Linda and I have been out to California to see Madeline Littlefield, off to Arizona to see Sedona and the Grand Canyon, and to Hilton Head Island off South Carolina. Now and again, I have had the great pleasure of receiving mail and talking to many of you over the past twelve months. Specifically I have heard from Phil Dix, who is currently in the Far East, Dr. Lew Perelman, Dr. Larry Reich, Dr. Warren Adis, Stan Goldmark, Mike Rosenblum, Sue Satenstein, Alan Rosenberg. Doug Zelman, Joel Zalvin, Lee Jackel, Peter Altieri, Carole Bellew, Frank Engel, Jim Finch, Matt Goldberg, Bobby Zeitler, who has moved to Florida, Sue Nassau, Marcia Salonger, Ayn Silverman, Morris Tobin, Barbara Tucci, Sandy Yorn, Jane Zimelis, Elaine Turkin, Bill Bernstein, Jim Gordon, Diane Baer and I know there are others that I have unfortunately omitted. Also, on a social note, I attended the Section I basketball finals with Jim Finch and Alan Rosenberg, as the MVHS roundballers won another title. Also, I must report that Barbara Tucci Parent’s son will be married in Tarrytown, at the end of this month. Of course, best wishes to Barbara, her husband Roland and their large lovely family.

 

Meanwhile, I am sad to say that I learned of the passing of Susan Solender Bailis, a member of our class and a neighbor of mine. We attended the same schools in Mount Vernon all the way from K to 12! Also, in regards to our next class re-union, the 40th , I hope that many of you will be interested in taking an active role in its planning. Many have asked, “Will there be a fortieth?” The answer is assuredly “yes”. But to make it as great as the 35th, three years ago, we all must “pitch in”. I hope that our last committee will start to “brain storm” in the near future, and hopefully some suggestions can be forthcoming that will make sense to all.

 

This year’s Jon Breen Memorial Fund essay is on the topic: “Who should elect the U. S. President”, to maintain the Electoral College, or amend the Constitution to provide direct election by the people! Along with the judging of essays and the awarding of prizes, the Fund will also continue to sponsor a Henry M. Littlefield Memorial Prize for the outstanding History and Social Studies scholar. Currently I am reviewing both the essays and the resumes of some of the leading students.

 

 

The 2001 MVHS Award’s night will be held on June 12, 2001 at 7:30 PM. I look forward to reporting on that event. As a reminder , reflective of my role as the Chairperson of the Jon Breen Fund, this is a charitable effort that builds bridges between the past and the present. It perpetuates the memory of an outstanding member of our class and an outstanding citizen who’s life reflected only the best and brightest. If we want the next generation to come forth with the same intellectual vigor that Jon possessed, we should encourage it with as much help as possible. There are worse things that you could spend your money on! No check of any size will be refused and it can be sent to either address at the top or the bottom.

 

Regards,

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

101 Prospect Street

White Plains, NY 10606-3514

email garf@cloud9.net

914-683-0131

Fax-914-332-0558

 

Letter to Mayor Ernest Davis of Mt. Vernon 3-31-01

RICHARD J. GARFUNKEL

101 Prospect Street

White Plains, NY 10606

914-683-0131 (pm) 914-467-7802 (am)

 

 

 

March 31, 2001

 

 

The Honorable Ernest Davis

Mayor of Mount Vernon,

City Hall

Mount Vernon, N.Y.

10552

 

Dear Mayor Davis,

 

I hope that this letter finds you and yours quite well. I wanted to thank you for taking the time to speak to me this morning at the Memorial Field Tennis Facility. Knowing the dynamics and pressures of public life, I appreciate your thoughtfulness regarding my subject matter.

 

We had originally met through the good offices of my long time friend Randy Forrest, whom I have known for 40 years. I have worked with Randy on many projects starting with scholastic wrestling in the early 1960’s, up to his work with the Frederick Douglass Institute in New Rochelle. In fact, Randy and I flew to San Francisco together, just a year ago this week, for the memorial service of the former great Mount Vernon High School coach Henry M. Littlefield.

 

Over the last eight years, I have directed the effort to raise funds for the Jon Breen Memorial Fund, which uses these funds to sponsor a public policy essay contest every year. The late Jon Breen, a 1963 Mount Vernon High School graduate (president of his class), a Dartmouth College alum, a Harvard Law School graduate and a Fulbright Scholar, had a great fondness for Mount Vernon, was an award-winning essayist, and was a public-policy thinker. Through these eight years I have raised over

$20,000, have read and judged over 200 essays yearly, and have awarded thousands of dollars to the winners. With the help of the last three Social Studies coordinators at Mount Vernon High School, L.E. Smith, John Alberga and Paul Court, I have been able to accomplish this important effort.

 

Last year, with the untimely death of Henry Littlefield, I was able to start an annual history award to be given in his name. With Mr. Court’s able assistance, I was able to select Robert McNair (Cornell, ’04) as the year 2000’s honoree. This year, as in the past, we have chosen a subject that has recent historical and political relevance, the Electoral College. Please find, along with this letter, copies of last year’s Jon Breen Fund letters, and one of the contest flyers from 1999.

 

Over this period of time, I have had the pleasure of being invited to speak in Advanced Placement and Honors classes on 20th Century historical topics. One of these topics has been the life and times of Franklin D. Roosevelt. As part of my lecture, I bring along artifacts and collectibles reflective of his life, public career and the events that made him famous.

 

Your idea of convening a panel discussion, in front of an assembly, on this very important topic and having this event and the awardees also honored on local cable television is greatly appreciated. I believe it will bring added recognition and needed exposure to the project. I look forward to helping you accomplish this goal with any and all efforts I can contribute.

 

Regards,

 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jon Breen letter to MVHS 6-15-2000

The Jon Breen Memorial Fund

Mount Vernon High School Class of 1963

100 California Road

Mount Vernon, NY 10552

MVHS Class of 1963

www.geocities.com/Tokyo/7970/mvhs1963/reunion.htm

 

June 15, 2000

 

Dear Friends and Classmates,

 

As usual, I hope this letter finds all of you and yours quite well. Recently, as you know from my last letter, I reported on the untimely death of Coach Henry Littlefield, who passed away after a long illness on March 30th. Over the past three months I have received a number of wonderful letters from our class regarding Henry and his legacy of giving, scholarship, committment to a greater, more open society and some poignant personal reflections. MVHS, with my input, has created a memorial plaque for Henry, and I have included a picture of the plaque along with this letter.

 

This year the Jon Breen Memorial Fund has again sponsored an essay contest, based on the public policy question “The Presidency: Who decides? the People, the Press, the Parties, or big money?” This year, again, I worked my way through many, many submissions, along with the educated assisstance of my wife Linda. The 3 winning papers were submitted by: Stephanie Brown, Harvard, Richard Thomas, NYU, and John Boykin, Cornell.

 

Along with the Jon Breen Award, our fund is donating a $500 history prize in the name of Coach Henry Littlefield to Robert McNair, who will be attending Cornell in the fall. Robert is an excellent athlete and scholar, who has especially excelled in the field of Social Studies. He not only achieved a 5.0 on his American History AP exam, but has attained top grades in this discipline throughout his high school career. (FYI, Henry was an AP History grader.)

 

On this past June 14th, I had the pleasure of attending the MVHS Award's evening and was the presenter of these prizes. As usual, as a consequence of this venture, I get to speak to many in our class, and I do receive some wonderful mail. Recently I have been in contact with Jessica Romeo, Matthew Goldberg, Joseph Gherardi, Armel MacDonald, Alan Rosenberg, Larry Reich, Michael Rosenblum, Frank Engel, Stan Goldmark, Lee Jackel, Carol Bellew, Lewis Perelman, Beth Roberts, Al Schultz, Barbara Tucci, Arnold Siegel, Peter Altieri, Lucille Bisesi, Norman Raphael,Warren Adis, and I know there are some others that I have unintentionally ommitted. Meanwhile our old friend Jim Anchin, Davis '61, has donated $90,000 to MVHS Seniors over the past 9 years in the name and memory of his sister Linda. In addition, over $1,000,000 in

grants and scholarships were awarded to the class!

  

Linda and I are heading out to California on July 20th. Hopefully we will meet with Matthew Goldberg in San Fransico, and then we will work our way down to Pacific Grove and spend some time with Madeline Littlefield. We will then proceed southward to Los Angeles, where we will meet up with Dr. Larry Reich. Along the way, we will try to link up with some cousins who have made the trek west at an earlier time.

 

If any of you have any news or thoughts on what I have written, please drop me a line or e-mail, or post your message on our website (see above). Also, if you wish to contribute to the Fund, please send to the above address or mine, that is listed below. For sure, if you send it to me, you will get a personal thank you. Unfortunately, I do not learn about all of the donations sent directly to the school. Again, thank you for your continue support.

 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

Jon Breen Fund Letter to Paul Court 4-11-2000

The Jon Breen Memorial Fund

Mount Vernon High School Class of 1963

April 11, 2000

 

Mount Vernon High School

100 California Road

Mt. Vernon, NY 10552

Mr. Paul Court

Social Studies Coordinator

 

Dear Mr. Court,

 

In regards to our conversation of today, and reflective of earlier conversations at your office at Mount Vernon High School, I have included information on the Jon Breen Memorial Fund, a biography of Jon Breen, parameters regarding the 2000 essay contest, and my request to fund a Henry Littlefield History Prize.

 

The Jon Breen Fund, which was founded in February of 1994, was established to award prizes to Mount Vernon High School students who write superior essays on public policy issues involving history or politics. Since the founding of this fund, I have taken the responsibility of informing our class, raising the funds, selecting the essay subject, judging the essays and attending the award's night as the representative of the Jon Breen Fund.

 

This year, with your input, I have requested that the subject “The Presidency: Who Decides? the People, the Press, the Parties, or Big Money?” be offered to the student body. This year I would like the fund to offer prizes of $300, 200, and 100 for the three top entries. The essays should be 3 to 4 type-written and double-spaced pages in length with a staple.

 

Because of the recent tragic passing of Henry M. Littlefield, obituary included with this letter, and his great connection to MVHS and the Class of 1963, I would like to have a $500 used from this fund to establish a Henry M. Littlefield Prize for History. In regards to this prize, I intend to send a major mailing to our class and to many of Henry's friends from all over America. Henry had major connections with the New York State Amateur Wrestling community, Amherst College, where he was Dean of Students, the York School of Monterrey, California, where he was Headmaster, and the Stevenson School of Carmel, California, where he was on the faculty. Since the monies collected would go into either the Jon Breen Fund, or a separate, but similar Littlefield Fund, I would hope that Mount Vernon would contribute some postage to this effort, or allow the Jon Breen Fund to differ some of the mailing costs.

 

Please keep me informed on what your decisions are in this matter. I would like to send out at least two hundred letters in the next few days and I am willing to proceed with this effort and submit to your office any postal receipts. I can also bring addressed letters to the high school for processing through your postage machine.

 

Again, thank you for your cooperation.

 

Regards,

 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jon Breen letter to MVHS 4-22-1999

JON BREEN MEMORIAL FUND

 

 

April 22, 1999

 

Dear Friends of the Jon Breen Fund,

 

Once again a year has passed since the last Jon Breen Memorial Fund essay contest. As you can readily see on the opposite side of this letter, the fund has been able to increase its awards this coming year. Over the past five years or so, the fund has raised over $15,000 and currently has over $10,000 in its account.

 

The winners have been a fine group of scholars, and it has been a genuine pleasure to attend the award ceremony and to meet the honorees. We have tried to select a subject that will stimulate some provocative yet introspective thought. Last year we selected  “Trial by Jury,” in the wake of the Simpson and Tyson trials. This year I thought that the subject of Presidential conduct would be appropriate in response to our country's past experience with the Ken Starr investigation and the impeachment hearings and trial. John Alberga, head of the Social Studies Department at Mount Vernon High School, and I ate lunch this past Friday, and we discussed the award's process in depth and future projects.

 

This past year proved quite exciting with our great 35th reunion get-together and its marvelous turnout. As you all should know, we are having a mini-reunion event on the weekend of May 22nd. As a reminder, there is an “Oldies” concert at Westlake High School and an optional dinner at Sir John's in North White Plains after the show. The next day we are having a picnic at the Glen Island Park off Shore Road in New Rochelle. I hope that all of you who are within shouting distance make an effort to attend. Let your hair down, and have some fun! Over the past 6 months we have established a Class of 1963 Fund. We have been able to raise money through the sale of a video tape that encompasses some of the events of the 30th and 35th MVHS reunions.

 

Since  our reunion, we have established an internet website for our MVHS Class through the expertise and generous work of Pierre Malraison. Along with all of that, I have had the fun of communicating with Lee Jackel Egan, Peter Altieri and others through the exchange of “humor” via e-mail. Speaking of our class, my wife Linda and I had the pleasure of being treated to dinner by our classmate Armel MacDonald, who flew into Westchester from his home in Omaha. It was great seeing and talking to him after a 35 year hiatus. Our joint memories of Henry Littlefield made the eveing extra special. Recently I attended services at the old CBI Synagogue on Crary Avenue in Mount Vernon as a guest of Alan Rosenberg. Alan celebrated the 40th anniversary of his Bar Mitzvah, and chanted his haftorah beautifully. Speaking of synagogues, Free Synagogue, where I was a member, has been torn down for a senior citizen living complex, and a smaller building is being constructed.Temple Emmanuel on Lincoln, has become a Baptist Church, and the congregation has linked up with Genesis in Tuckahoe. Meanwhile for all of you Holmes' school people, one of my neighbors and early playmates was one John Petrillo. Noting his father's death notice in the      newspaper, I decided to wander down to the Yannantuono Funeral Home on W. Lincoln Avenue in Mount Vernon. There I met the whole Petrillo family! Though all six children attended Catholic schools, Anthony and John, my contemporaries, did attend the public schools in the lower grades. They are both practicing doctors, and their mother still lives in their pink house on Lorraine Avenue. It was quite a reunion in the most unlikely of places. I had not seen any of that family since 1961! Frank Engel, of Portland is due in the weekend of May 8th and will be our guest for at least one night.  I also was able to visit with Joel Zalvin in his new offices in the MetLife building. For all younonattendees at our past reunion, Joel looks great and is in marvelous shape.

 

The Jon Breen Award will be given out at MVHS in mid-June, and I look forward to reporting on that event. As a reminder, reflective of my role as the Chairperson of the Jon Breen Fund, this is a charitible effort that helps perpetuates the memory of a friend and an outstanding member of our class. Only by investing in the present will we be able to have some control over the unpredictable future. The leaders that come forth from today's generation will have a great deal to do and say about a future America. As I wrote here last year, if we want the next generation to come forth with the same intellectual vigor that Jon possessed, we should encourage it with as much help as possible. There are worse things that you can spend your money on! No check will be refused, and it can be sent to either the address at the top or the bottom of this letter. Also special thanks to Ronnie Breen for her continued support.

 

Regards,

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

 

Jon Breen letter to MVHS 6-16-1998

Jon Breen Memorial Fund

MVHS

100 California Road

Mount Vernon, NY 10552

 

 

June 16, 1998

 

Dear Friends of the Jon Breen Fund,

 

This past year has been an exciting and interesting one for my family and myself. In regards to my family, we just returned from Princeton, where we were happily able to partake in and enjoy my son Jon's graduation. As you all know and have experienced in one-way or another, it is major milestone in the life of both one's child and family. Officially my wife Linda and I have ascended or descended, depending on one's perspective to the role of empty nesters.  Gratefully, for the moment, he will be living in Boston, within shouting distance of our daughter Dana. He'll be working in the internet-telecom field with BBN/GTE.

 

Aside from all that, I have been involved with Mount Vernon through Project 2000, which is an effort to create a new school of the performing arts, within the current high school, and rehabilitate their existing auditorium into a world class communication and learning center theater complex. Currently we are at the stage where we are forming a tax-exempt entity to begin the process of fund-raising.

 

As all of you hopefully know, we have been working steadily on our 35th high school reunion, which will take place at the Tarrytown Hilton, located on Rte#9, in of course Tarrytown, NY. I am sure that you have received notice from either our own mailings or from Reunions by Design.  With the considerable talents, help and energy of Michael Rosenblum, Susan Satenstein and Ayn Silverman, we have been trying to find other ways to make that whole weekend, October 17th, enjoyable with other activities. I know that we will have a hospitality room available for Friday night and we are looking for another venue, possible MVHS, possibly someone's home, or possibly the hotel for brunch on Sunday.

 

Through all this activity, I have had a great deal of personal contact with many members of our class. I also know that the active members of our committee have also had numerous and rewarding contacts with long lost friends and acquaintances of their youth. As I reported in my letter of March 15, 1998, many people have called me in response to our mailings, and since then I have spoken to a number of others that wish to attend our reunion, but didn't graduate from MVHS. I have talked to Joan Wishnie Cotrone, Roy Pitchall among others, and Sandy Birkenfeld Marks, Carole Bellew, Sue Wallis Field and recently Jimmy Kurtz. I have also received letters and e-mail from Sue Weiss Gitlitz, Alan Wexler, Gail Bland Wilson, Bill Bernstein, Peter Altieri, Richard Hoffman, Pete Sisto, Paul Luciano and Arnold Siegel.

 

Besides the normal interaction, I usually stay in close contact with Warren Adis, Alan Rosenberg, Larry Reich, Lewis Perelman, Stan Goldmark and Henry Littlefield. Henry just sent me a card about his upcoming visit to see his daughter in Concord, Mass.  Meanwhile Warren Adis and I attended the Award’s evening last night, and presented the Jon Breen Memorial Award to Ms. Sasha Clark who will attend Hofstra next year.  As in previous years we were able to say hello to Mickey Boyle, class of 1962, who is now at Education House, and Jim Anchin, class of 1961, who awards a prize in memory of his sister. Warren and I met Commissioner Jim Finch’s lovely wife Charlotte, who was also an award’s presenter. After the festivities Warren and I drove into Pelham, looking for the old Pelham Chateau, but settled at Rockwell’s where we quaffed a few brews and watch the Yankees unfortunately suffer one of their few losses. With all that in mind, please feel free to communicate with me at your convenience or leisure. Both the Jon Breen Fund and the 35th Reunion Committee could use your ideas and wise counsel.

 

Richard J. Garfunkel

Jon Breen Letter to MVHS 3-15-98

                                                                                JON BREEN MEMORIAL FUND

                                                                                      Mount Vernon High School

                                                                                 100 California Road

                                                                             Mount Vernon, NY 10552   

                                                                                914- 5665-5300 FAX 914-665-5281

 

March 15, 1998

 

Dear Classmates and Friends,

 

Hopefully this letter will find you and yours all healthy and happy.  At about this time last year I had written to you about my visit to Mount Vernon High School and about some of the happenings with our fellow classmates.  In recalling the February 12th 1997 letter, I note that Warren & Mary Adis have successfully returned from Israel and their eldest daughter Zana (from Rosie) is finishing her first year at Rutgers, where my daughter graduated in 1994.  Henry Littlefield has been successfully battling colon cancer and his recent conversation with me was quite upbeat. Dave ”Pete” Sisto, who lives in Aptos, went to see HML and also gave me a positive report.  Of course, I continue to correspond with Lew Perelman, Frank Engel and Larry Reich. We see Wendy & Alan Rosenberg, who is an outstanding Knickerbocker round ball aficionado. He attended with 20 or so others our December 7th Reunion brunch. In January, while we were visiting our daughter Dana in Boston, we were able to enjoy the hospitality of Diane Baer Ryan and her husband Tom in their home in Bedford, Ma. Bert Collins and Sue Phillips Collins were also there with their young son who was quite happy to frolic with the Ryan’s young boy.

As I noted last February, MVHS had started an effort to rehabilitate its auditorium. Since that time I have become chairperson of that effort, and it is now known as Project 2000. It has been an interesting experience. To paraphrase, the great Winston Churchill, in regards to the progress of Project 2000, “ it is not the beginning of the end, but certainly the end of the beginning.”  In the last few months I have had the distinct pleasure and opportunity of speaking and getting approval from the MV Board of Education, the Mayor of Mount Vernon and the City Council. I will be addressing the Black Minister’s Interdenominational Breakfast on March 21st as part of our grass-roots communication effort.

 

In the past few months I have been working on our 35th MVHS reunion and I have heard from many of you on the same subject. After our Reunion brunch I was able to receive some excellent advice and help from Michael Rosenblum, Ayn Silverman, Sue Satenstein, Sandy Yorn and Marcia Salonger. Hopefully we will all receive notices from Reunions of Design of Stamford, CT. unless an earthquake happens, the reunion will be held October 17th, at the Tarrytown Hilton.

 

Meanwhile over the past few months I have heard from Stuart Tobin, Judy Lange Godfrey of Action Property Management of Euclid, Ohio, Pete Sisto, Alan Wexler, a lawyer in East Amherst, NY, Paul Luciano, Jimmy Cotton, Lee Jackel, Bill Bernstein and Peter Altieri.  Through the internet and other sources I have spoken to Roger Caro, Patty Kravitt Ellis, who has an outstanding mail order gift business, Andy Mahler, Alice Merker Peters, Vicky Slavin Pinkerton, Harvey Berenger, Ron Pomerance, Ellen Fuchs Abramson, Elaine Knopping Haimes, Barbara Soloff Levy, a famous writer and illustrator of children’s books published by Troll and Dover, (working on three books) Judy Cohen Rosenthal, Jim Kurtz, a retired real-estate magnate upstate, Fran Lazar Ashkin, who’s son will be married in June and has been hiding in Dix Hills, LI, Elaine Turkin, Steve Blankstein, Jimmy Gordon, former MVHS wrestler, Bruce and Phil Dix, and Jane Cutler Feirer. Recently I met with and was treated to breakfast at the Regency Hotel by Richard Kahan, who is also running for Governor of New York. Richard Kahan's campaign can be reached at the Committee to Rebuild New York at 212-572-6340 or email info@kahan98.org. Richard also gave a very generous gift to the Jon Breen Fund and has voiced his support for Project 2000.  By the way our old friend Jim Finch is a member of our Project 2000 Committee and serves as Mount Vernon’s commissioner of Public Works.

 

 

I also had the pleasure of visiting the offices of Michael Fuchs in New York City. He seems to be surviving quite well in his retirement from HBO. Laura  Kosof Fluhr is off to New Zealand and Australia and according to her email, is looking forward to our reunion. I just received a letter and a post high school picture form Elaine Pogostin Brown, who enjoyed hearing from two of our classmates, Shelly Greenberg and Michael Rosenblum.  Barbara Lambert Howard is finishing nursing school and seems as happy and bubbling as usual. She asserts that she will be at the reunion.

 

Yesterday, we had our second in a series of pre-reunion brunches. We first met at my home, and then ventured two blocks to Ernesto’s Restaurant on Rte#22. Because of the slight threat of inclement weather some of the less hearty were frightened off. But, be that as it may, we still had a great time with Warren Adis, Stan Goldmark, Sue Satenstein, Ayn Silverman, (her friend Jeff), Joel Grossman, Diane McGinnis Fleck, Elaine Turkin, Richard Levin, Bob Mayer, Linda Garfunkel and our special guests from Portland, Oregon, Frank and Pam Engel.  Our informal committee is sending out a letter and a list of our missing persons to every classmate with an address (that we know of). Please send me the addresses of anyone on that missing list. Hopefully we will find someone with a great backyard and pool to host another one of these events in June or July!

 

The 1998 MVHS Award’s night will be held on June 15, 1998 at 7:30 PM. I look forward to reporting on that event. As a reminder, reflective of my role as the Chairperson of the Jon Breen Fund, this is a charitable effort that builds bridges between the past and the present. It perpetuates the memory of an outstanding member of our class and an outstanding citizen whose life reflected only the best and brightest. If we want the next generation to come forth with the same intellectual vigor that Jon possessed, we should encourage it with as much help as possible. There are worse things that you could spend your money on! No check of any size will be refused and it can be sent to either address at the top or the bottom.

 

Regards,

 

 

Richard J. Garfunkel