Tag: classmates

In Memoriam

Since the days of the Roman empire, the words “in memoriam” (in memory) have been found on monuments and gravestones. None of us want to think about losing people we know, but the reality is that over the course of the years since our graduation, we have lost a number of our classmates. At the 50+ Reunion, we thought it was important to acknowledge those who have passed.

Laura Krampetz Cuevas is a lifelong artist and teacher who is on the reunion committee. She volunteered to create an in-memoriam display for the 51st Reunion. Using yearbook photos and electric votive lights, she made luminaries and set up a multi-level display that was set up in the corner of our event room.

We saw attendees walking around the display and sometimes thinking of a friend now gone and sometimes discovering that someone they did not know had died was there.

If you open your yearbook, take a look at those who have passed or just remember someone noted here that you knew in high school and send out a good thought or prayer.

The list of classmates below comes from the current class database and includes a date when one was found in an obituary or a “?” when the date is unknown. Some class members’ obituaries have been posted on Facebook.

UPDATED January 2025

  1. Frederick Adamcsik – January 2021
  2. Carmen Algarin – 2017
  3. Lu-Ann Alliegro – 2019
  4. Julie Alliston – 2008
  5. William Alves – 1976
  6. Charles Ambielli – 2017
  7. Michael Balkun – 2014
  8. Jacqulyn Bellas – 2006
  9. Frank Bellis – November 2024
  10. Anthony Blasi – 2008
  11. Thomas Blasi – 2007
  12. Frederick Bol – 2015
  13. Linda May Boyce 2025
  14. Howard Brennan – 2019
  15. Peter Brunarski – 2004?
  16. Joanne Carbone – December 2010
  17. Reynold Catelli – while in high school
  18. William Charniga – 1974
  19. Glenn Conrad – ?
  20. Andrea Corrao – ?
  21. Karen Crawford – 2016
  22. John Crispin – ?
  23. Diane Demers Massino – 2015
  24. Joanne DiCecco – ?
  25. Frank Dobrowolski – 1993
  26. Philip Dombrowski – 2001
  27. Harry Donovan – Many years ago
  28. Michael Droppa – 1999
  29. Kim England – January 2022
  30. Richard Flynn – ?
  31. Phyllis Foti – late 1970’s
  32. Frank Fox – February 2023
  33. Beverly Friedman Bruno – 2023
  34. Kathleen Gallagher – before 1991
  35. Connie Gargiulo Kusher ) – June 2023
  36. Mike Geller – January 2022
  37. Alice Colleen Gensinger Yednak – January 2024
  38. Kenneth Gerisch – 2007
  39. Kenneth Gladd – 2012
  40. Elizabeth Grasmueck – April 2022
  41. Jeffrey Greenspan – 2019
  42. Marc Greenspan – April 2020
  43. Linda Gresham – 2022
  44. Michelle Grohol Andolino – July 2021
  45. Roy Gross – ?
  46. Warren Gross – 1971
  47. Thomas Gruppuso – ?
  48. John Haderthauer – 1996
  49. Jerry Heda – ?
  50. Hazel Hohweiler – ?
  51. Peter Jensen – 2009
  52. Richard Kahl – April 2022
  53. Richard Kiefer – 2016
  54. Arlene Kokosinski Fetta) – August 2023
  55. Paula Kolodich – ?
  56. Joseph Kormylo – April 2016
  57. Eugene Lalevee-?
  58. Barbara Laue – 2014
  59. Karen Long Rohe – February 2024
  60. Bruce Lovenberg – August 2002
  61. Frederick Lucking – ?
  62. James MacConchie – 2007
  63. Linda Maciolek – 2017
  64. Grace Murn Fairchild – 2019
  65. Rich Murray – 2018
  66. Gloria Neanderthal Cignarella – 2018
  67. Esther Niwinski – ?
  68. Charles Nystrom – 2008
  69. Janis Olsson – September 2020
  70. Joseph Patriarca – 2018
  71. Sally Peralta-Wain – 2018
  72. Frank Pospisil – 2011
  73. Joann Raddi – October 2014
  74. Joyce Reingold Ciaburri – October 2021
  75. Clare Riggio – 2022
  76. Mario Russo – 2011
  77. Sandra Sanko – 2009
  78. Carol Schaffer – 2010
  79. Edward Joseph Sienkiewicz – 2023
  80. Keith Spaeth – 2007
  81. Dennis Testa – ?
  82. Steven Thatcher – 2017
  83. Gerald Turi – ?
  84. Joanne Urso – ?
  85. Manny Vazquez – July 2001
  86. Wayne Vogler – 2001
  87. Barbara Weekley – 2015
  88. Cinda Weldon – 1990
  89. Alexander Wieczorek – March 2007
  90. Ray W. Wills  – 2011
  91. Jane Woody – before 1996
  92. John Zabriski – 2014
  93. James Zangari Jr. – 2009
  94. Michael Zielinski – ?

Any updates to this list can be emailed to our class email. If you have a link to an obituary, include that.

You’ve Got a Game to Play

Mike
Not sure what high school Mike Emanuele is up to here.

by Michael Emanuele

Time has a way of moving quickly and catching you unaware of the passing years. As kids, we grew up in Irvington. Whether we were hanging out at Orange Park, Irvington Park, Olympic Park, or on the Giampino’s front porch following a game of stickball at Irvington Tech, we were from Irvington!
Doesn’t it seem like it was just yesterday that we were young adolescents going to St Leo’s Canteen on Friday night to dance and listen to the likes of Wilson Pickett singing “Mustang Sally” and then being disappointed when they played The Platters’ “Goodnight Sweetheart” knowing that the night was over? Can’t forget going down the street to get a quart of milk from the vending machine or hitting the corner store for a bottle of soda and some 5-cent candy bars. Which corner store? Didn’t matter it seemed like every block had at least one. And the Castle Theater…oh yes who can forget walking to the Castle Theater to catch a Saturday Matinee.


It wasn’t long before we hit the halls of Irvington High and blended from Greasers and Collegiates into Hippies, trading in our Leather and High Roll shirts or Sweaters, Chinos and Shitkickers for blue jeans and sneakers. Wasn’t it just a little bit ago that we packed into George Kleiner’s house uninvited on Thanksgiving Friday and started a tradition? Or drove around in his mean green machine to Burger King on Route 22 or to Jahns after the basketball game for an Awful Awful or the Kitchen Sink. Or maybe we hit the Pit for some liquid refreshments and stimulating conversation. And then before we knew it, it was Senior Cut Day down the shore and of course Prom Weekend.

And then…. we were graduating from Irvington High School and embarking on our new life, our new careers, and starting our new families. Again, it seems like it was just a stone’s throw ago, yet at the same time, it seems those days were ages ago. Where did all the years go? We know that we lived them all. We have memories and boxes of photos of how it was back then, and of all our hopes and dreams. We remember many of the milestones we achieved along the way as well as many of the mistakes and failures.

And now here it is….as each member of the family from our parent’s generation passes, we have the sobering knowledge that we are in the ninth inning.

Ken Ronkowitz, Mike Emanuele, Barry Feigenbaum, 2019

How did we get here so fast?
Where did the years go and where did our youth go?

We remember seeing older people along the way thinking that becoming old like them was years away and that we were only in the first or second inning of the game of life. The last inning, the end of the game, was so far off that we couldn’t visualize it or fully imagine what it would be like, what would we be like? We recall being in the third, fourth, and fifth innings too and while we knew the 9th inning was coming – it was still a ways off. And yet, here it is.

Most of us are retired. We are grey-haired (unless we’re bald or we cheat) and move slower. When we get out of bed, we can feel every joint in our body – and they ache. No more stealing bases. More like falling down at the plate. We fall asleep at 7:00 pm watching TV or if we do go out, we are back home and in bed by 9PM. Wasn’t that just the time we were leaving to go out on a Friday night?

Some friends are in better shape than us and some worse, but we see a great change in them and in ourselves as well. They’re not as we remember them, young and vibrant. But like us, their age is beginning to show and we are now those older folks that we used to see and never thought we’d become. When we look into the mirror, we wonder how our grandfather or grandmother got in there!! Unfortunately for more than a few, the game ended early and they never got to the 9th inning.

Yes, it is now the 9th inning for us, but we still have 3 outs to go. We should be happy we made it to the last inning. And there are certainly some plusses for being here. We have the knowledge and experience that only comes with our age. We grew up in a much simpler time and in Irvington, a wonderful community. We have more time to enjoy ourselves and perhaps a few extra dollars to do the same. We had and still have the best music. And, we were taught by the best generation ever.

So, don’t end the game early. Play until the last out. Win the game! Don’t put off anything you would like to do or accomplish – it’s not too late. It’s never too late. Go on that trip. Spend time with family. Spend time with friends and with people whose company you enjoy and who love, like, and respect you. Mend fences, forgive, and ask to be forgiven. Have no regrets. Enjoy what you have accomplished and strive to accomplish more – whatever that means to you – not anyone else. Love yourself!

Ok, enough said, now let’s Play Ball!
Hope to see you at the Reunion.

Mike Emanuele