Saturday, April 21, 2012

RHS 100 Best Teachers: Loren E. Leek

This is a tribute to RHS English Teacher, Loren E. Leek. It was written by Chris Stella, RHS 1973.



RHS 100 Best Teachers  -- Miss Loren E. Leek

If you were a Ridgewood High School Student in 1972, and were not in the mood for work during a free period, you could always amuse yourself by going to the library, to examine the old yearbooks, particularly as regards the ancient portraits of your current teachers. Usually, the contrasts were predictable – shorter hair for the men, odd coiffures for the women, less commodious waistlines for both, more enthusiasm for both. But, they always seemed to have been the people who they now were, as they stood before you, in class.

The situation with Miss Loren Leek, who was my senior year English teacher, was entirely different. In her 1963 yearbook photo, she looked entirely unrecognizable. And her name, moving forward in time, it had changed from Mrs. Pipp, to Miss Leek. The question of how this obviously prim and repressed 1963-model Mrs. Pipp creature, had become transmogrified into my 1972 English teacher, the sass-engorged, stylish, hot-tempered woman who now classified herself as a Miss Leek, was a tantalizing mystery, of the greatest  interest.

 


She was intensely interested in the writing skills of her students. I would write an assigned paper. She would review it, and make written comments. A meeting with her would be scheduled.



 


And so, with a rustle of bleeding Madras fabric, and a clink of her exotic bracelets, she would tear mercilessly into my essays.

“Your paper, it needs a haircut. This idea here, it’s a ‘wow’, but you already said this, (and in a better way), in this other paragraph. And, you put your thesis in the middle of the paper; it doesn’t belong there, put it in the first paragraph, so your reader knows what you are trying to prove. And, all through the paper, you use ‘gerunds’ inappropriately. I’ll bet you don’t even know what a ‘gerund’ is!!”

Why, of course I know what a “gerund” is, Miss Leek. It is one of those little furry things that your sister buys at the Ye Towne Pet Shop. And, when she loses interest in the little gerund, your mother gets stuck cleaning its cage.





Miss Leek looked savage, but the corners of her mouth turned up slightly. 

“Real cute. Regarding the mouths of babes, sometimes the gems of wisdom get stuck in the mouth, and they do not fall. Rewrite it, Mister, as of now; you’ve got a ‘D’.”

“This is the form I want. You are strictly limited to a structure of five paragraphs. First paragraph states your thesis. That is where you tell your reader what you believe. Second, third, and fourth paragraphs are where you say what evidence you have in favor of your beliefs. Fifth paragraph is your conclusion, where you tell me why you think that the things in the middle paragraphs prove what you said you believe at the beginning of your paper. This is what you have to do, so please get to work.”


********


Form! Structure! I could not believe what I was hearing. Didn’t this lady know that this was 1972!! All across the creative world, everyone knew that the old forms and structures needed to be broken down, burned, and discarded! This was the only way that the creativity and feelings could be allowed to flow freely, through the Universe, to reach all the people, in an unfettered way! I was angry and it occurred to me that the Severely Repressed Pipp creature of 1963, secretly lived on.

Well, this went on for months. She was relentless in her infuriating criticisms. And, I never did learn to reliably spot my gerunds, as they spent their days hopping and skipping and cavorting through my prose. But, slowly, glacially, I began to change. Sentences were re-written, and re-balanced. Word choices became more careful, at her unceasing insistence. 

After many months, the Miss Leek method Just Looked Right, and I unconsciously began to adopt her many suggestions. 

But, that did not make the process any easier.

Finally, one day, during one of our meetings, in a heat of frustration, I told her off. “I do not like this novel we are reading. It stinks. Get off my case.”





I received a very neutral stare in return: I, a 1972 high school adolescent, she, a gray ey’d Athena, cool of visage, and of purpose. 

“Well, then. Just what is it that you do like?  I don’t think that you like anything. You can go. “

And, at that moment, that was pretty much how I felt about all sorts of things.


*******


So, she went out and found some stuff for me to like. For her students, it was onto a bus that she specially chartered, and, ZIP, a trip to The Circle in the Square Theater, at Lincoln Center, to see a world-class production of Eugene O’Neill’s Mourning Becomes Electra. It was so wonderful, I hardly dared to breathe, as the four hour drama, it seemed to go by in an instant.

Then, a quick trip to Stratford, Connecticut to see a Watergate-era rendering of Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure. The Nixonesque main character, a dark brooding man with a secret penchant for evil, seethed. We howled like Groundlings as the codpieces moved, and the double-entendres sizzled.

But, most memorable was her multi-day in-class movie screening of Stanley Kubrick’s Cold War, end-of-the-world nuclear comedy, Dr. Strangelove.

Now, you did not always have to write a paper for Miss Leek. Sometimes, you would be allowed to create a bit of visual art, in response to an assigned literary work. A student might make a poster, or a small, Calder-like mobile, which might be suspended, near the class windows, to shine in the sun, as the elements moved. One student had mounted a dueling epee on a board, with the words “…to thine own self be true” printed in old English, underneath. 
She had obviously liked that one a lot, because Miss Leek kept it untouched in her classroom, for years.

I see now that she did this to accommodate those students who were struggling with writing on some deeper level, because they saw things in visual or physical, rather than in language-based terms. 

I, however, was intent on proving that I could do both, as I planned my visual arts project, in response to the Kubrick movie.

Four titanic black pieces of construction paper were liberated from Ms. Crivelli’s art room. I had access to large pieces of high quality cardboard from my evening job as stock boy at the Vintage Corner Spirits Shop, near the Co-Op. I set to work.

I glued the four huge pieces of black art paper, together, to make an even larger square. This was rolled into a tube, to make a cylinder, by adding big cardboard circles, at the ends. To one end, I glued on the cardboard dividers used to pack and ship wine bottles. They looked precisely like aerodynamic vanes. Everything that was not already black, was painted black. After an Air Force logo, and the scrawled words “Hi There!” were added, I had a near-perfect, near life-sized model of the atomic bomb that Major “King” Kong rode, to the doom of civilization, in the famous scene from Stanley Kubrick’s movie, Dr. Strangelove.



To this, I attached a small poster, a collage of pictures of beautiful things. The idea was, if the Bomb is ever used, these are the things that will be destroyed. A fine pacifist sentiment, which I meant in a serious way, but I also had a secondary goal.

I put my mother in the James Earl Jones role; she drove me to school with my creation, as it was way too big to carry on the schoolbus. Miss Leek greeted me with her customary enthusiastic smile, as I carried it into our classroom, before first period. It was taller, and wider, than I was. “Oh, hi Chris, what is this?”

 I briefly explained what it was, and what is was supposed to show. 

“Oh, this is a ‘wow’ ! Let’s set it here, in the corner.”

Well, actually not, Miss Leek. The Kubrick-Stella Reproduction Hydrogen bomb is meant to be suspended in the air.

“Ah, then, let’s hang it from the ceiling, here.”

No, actually, I was thinking that it might look best suspended from the light fixture directly over your desk.

A burst of laughter, then that zillion megawatt smile: “Yes! Lets!”

 Minutes later, it was done.

And, for several days, there was a constant stream of visitors to her classroom, as Miss Leek sat happily below my sinister gigantic paper model of a Strangelovian thermonuclear warhead. I still have very mixed feelings about the whole business, in many ways; it was a most unwise thing for me to have done. But it was meant in a harmless way, done in a less harm-filled time, and I tell you about it only to show you that Miss Leek was fearless, and open to all sorts of types of expression, even those tinged with adolescent mania. 

After this, I thought that I had won her over. And, our relations in the classroom did then become warm, and humor-filled. 

But, regarding my writing, she became more exacting than ever. For, now she had a new rule:

“If there is even one spelling error, or one cross-out on your paper, then the maximum grade you can earn, is a ‘C’.”

Well, this I would not do. And she made good on her threat. I slouched into a grade of ‘D’ in my final quarter of English 12, with Miss Leek.



100 Best Teachers, Miss Loren E. Leek, Chapter 2.

Now, in order to have this story make any sense, I have to tell you about a seemingly-unrelated conversation, thirty years later. 

I was speaking with an old, retired policeman. He had spent his life on a small-town Force, usually a quiet setting, but when there was action it tended to be spectacular, and dangerous. Because the Force was so small, he was basically without much back-up. A radio call would produce no onslaught phalanx of screaming sirens, no army of blue would descend if he was in trouble, he was usually on his own, the only lawman within miles. I had my own professionally stressful experiences, but the difference was, in his line of work, his own life was also often at stake. I asked him if this required some ability to “kick it up a notch”, when required.

He just guffawed.

“Yeah, that’s what they say – when it’s all on the line, you will find a way to ‘rise to the occasion’. That’s bulltwinkie! Rise to the occasion, hah.”

“Listen, buddy, when your own meat is on the line and there is danger, no one ‘rises to the occasion!’” 

“What happens is, you default to the level of your most basic training.”

Now this is interesting. When something you care personally and deeply about is at stake, and you have to perform a complex task to protect, you tend to go back to those things you learned hardest, and best. I’ll have to think about that.

********
Well, I graduated from Ridgewood High School. And, with the help of my parents, and some other people who had an unexplainable belief in me, I was admitted to a pretty good school, the University of Rochester. I was pre-med, and I really wanted to succeed in this, my whole view of myself was tied up in making it to med school. 

And, although pre-med at Rochester reliably placed about 50 people into a medical school each year, because I had probably the worst high-school grades of anyone in the freshman class, well, the prognosis seemed grim. For the first time in my life I really cared about, and needed, good grades. I was petrified.

In my first week of college, I found myself enrolled in English 130, Concepts of Literature, with an aggressive, fuming Assistant Professor who I will call the Professional Aesthete. He was brilliant. He was incandescent. He was, most definitely, a Step to the Next Level.

After several weeks of aggressive, fuming, brilliant incandescence, the Professional Aesthete had his first assignment for us.

“Read the D.H. Lawrence story, Odour of Chrysanthemums. Write a three page paper. In your paper, tell me what the Lawrence story is ‘about’. Then, starting next week, I’ll meet with all of you, one at a time, to discuss your paper, and grade. Class dismissed.”

Some of my new classmates smirked with pleasure. They knew the drill. You had a nice dinner. You went to your room, and in an hour, wrote your paper. Then you turned it in. And then, your teacher said wonderful things about you.

As for me, it seemed that my brain had turned to stone. All the frothy, manic ideas that had tended to well up in my mind when I had been in the presence of Miss Leek, fled from me. I carefully typed out my paper while in this condition, to the best of my ability. I used the 1973 version of a word processor:  my roommate’s old typewriter, fitted with a special paper, upon which you could expunge typed printing with a rubber eraser. I did not know it, but I had defaulted to the level of my most basic, hard-learned training.


********


But, after turning in our first college work, something strange began to happen. As my dorm mates returned from their meetings with the Professional Aesthete, there were wide eyes, blank stares, fearful expressions. The Professional Aesthete, it developed, was a grading nightmare. Everyone was returning with their papers perforated with slashing, words, written in bold red ink. Grades of C and below were the norm. 

Entire careers in Cosmetic Dentistry were at risk, aflame with the P.A.’s red penned critique. Happy years performing Medicare Colonoscopies, maybe seven in a day, hung in the balance.

And, as I studied the dissected papers of my freshman friends, an even more disturbing trend seemed clear. The Professional Aesthete, his judgments were, well, aesthetic. He could say, “This is bad”, and he would be right. But, he appeared to be less effective in articulating how flaws could be corrected. He was not saying to anyone, given your interests and aptitudes, here are the affirmative things that you can do to write a better paper.


Finally, it was my turn. As the sonorous bell chimed out the Indian Summer hour from atop the Rush Rhees library dome, I wobbled across the inner courtyard, towards the P.A.’s office, which was located in the lowest, and innermost building, of the innermost Quadrangle. I ascended the 13-or-so stairs, and was waved into his small office, to receive my critique.

Up close, the persona of the Professional Aesthete was even more terrifying, than in class. His features seemed even more sharply incised. For the first time, I noticed small tufts of hair, which he should have shaved off, sprouting from the tips of his ears. I thought I saw the flit of a nictitating membrane. As he motioned me into the old oaken chair, I felt the cool wood against my calf. A knotted cord hung from a humming electrical fixture. Piles of burnt residue from his illegally-imported Cuban cigars smoldered on his desk.

A nicely freckled and friendly smile, was not seen. A diaphanous and airy Madras skirt, cowling, but also emphasizing, attractively tanned female legs, was not noted to be present, in the office of the Professional Aesthete, Assistant Professor of English, at the University of Rochester.

He also stared intently at me, as he pushed my paper across his desk, into my view. I looked at it. I could not see the grade – yet. But, there were no red marks, on it, at all. What few changes he had made, were made with a stubby, green felt pen. In one place, he had a double arrow, to indicate two of my words should be re-positioned. In another place, he had crossed out one of my words, and wrote in one of his own, that he liked better. That was it.

“Where did you go to high school?” he asked.

I told him.

Then, he started. The Professional Aesthete’s voice had a tone of respect, and his face now showed an intense sense of engagement.

“Well, it is very clear that your secondary school preparation in expository writing has been superb.…”


Thursday, April 19, 2012

Brotherton Foundation

This is from 2006 and speaks to Bert Harmon's generosity of his time.


Brotherton Foundation Treats RHS Students to Opera

Through a generous grant from the Fred J. Brotherton Charitable Foundation and the development of a new program with the Metropolitan Opera Guild Education Department, Dr. Edward Schmiedecke, District Supervisor of Music and Dance for the Ridgewood Public Schools, took 150 Ridgewood High School students to experience grand opera at its most grand. Besides attending the performance, the students received two extended preparation sessions with Guild Teaching Artist Alan Johnson. On an extensive backstage tour of the MET, they saw dressing rooms, a costume shop, sets and props being built, painted and dressed; the amazing hydraulics of the MET’s five stage sections; and sets being placed for that evening’s performance of “Aida” or “Louisa Miller.” They met famous opera stars rehearsing, managed to get some autographs, and heard Rosemary Summers, music librarian at the MET, talk about her role in the production. This was followed by dinner and orchestra seats for the opera.

The Brotherton Foundation is supported by Dr. William Brotherton, a former student of Ridgewood Schools’ music teacher C. Bertram Harmon for whom the Harmon Music Center at GWMS was named. Mr. Harmon would regularly take groups of students to the Metropolitan Opera. Dr. Brotheron was among a group of students present at the opening performance of the MET in its present home at Lincoln Center. He was so impressed by the experience that he became an avid opera goer and patron and is now, through his generosity, making that same grand experience available to a whole new generation of students.

Saturday, April 07, 2012

Photos of Bert Harmon

We are collecting tributes to Mr. Harmon at

RHS Class of 1977 Reunion: Our Favorite Teachers.



Friday, April 06, 2012

Vintage Pics

My lovely wife Laurel had been surfing around the ancestry website, and she has come up with some amazing stuff. We think we have traced family back to the 1600s. On a more recent note, she found these pictures of my father from the mid-sixties, when he was the head wrestling and soccer coach at Ridgewood High School. Bob Whitaker, one of Dad's wrestlers, was the only State Champion Ridgewood has ever had in that sport. It's fun to see these pictures and remember the names of these athletes my Dad loved so much.



Wednesday, April 04, 2012

UHAAA

Received a note from Betsy Golden, class of 1979. She created the UHAAA scholarship given at the Senior Awards ceremony each June. I thought the requirement of an essay was a novel approach (pun intended!). Here is what she wrote:

Ahearn Scholarship criteria: Students applying for the award must submit an essay describing an imaginary dinner meeting with the person from history they would most like to meet. The winning essay should show creativity, originality, humor, and critical thinking. For over two decades students have submitted compelling essays, and the committee members were very impressed with our current seniors contributions.
 
 

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Perdue's Addendum

Like Paul, I have many fond memories of Perdue's. I am glad he found a picture of it, a barn converted into a sporting goods store. As I recall, though I may be mistaken on this, it was located behind Mario Ferraro's dental office, which was itself a converted farmhouse.

But back to Purdue's. I remember the interior as dark and woody, like one would expect in a barn, subdivided into little rooms for each sport. Equipment was hanging everywhere, jammed into every nook and cranny. And the stock wasn't the "sporting goods" one would find at Sports Authority. It was a different era, and sporting goods meant lots of fishing gear: fly reels, poles, waders, little wicker bait baskets. I remember buying a little jar of pink fish eggs, which were bait to use in fishing the mighty Saddle River. There was also lots of hockey gear, ping pong accessories, and a machine for re-stringing wood tennis rackets. My father took me to Purdue's for my Little League baseball hats and mitts. We never called them baseball gloves for some reason, only "mitts."

Walt Purdue had some back or neck problems. I remember him in a neck brace several times over the years. But, like Paul, I also remember him as kind and helpful. He couldn't turn his head, but he would happily climb up and pull down a set of hockey skates to try on. And another and another, until you were both happy with the fit.

To this day, when I need running shoes I prefer to go to the local boutique running shop rather than a big box sporting goods store. I pay 5 or 10 bucks more, but the service is more than worth it. And I value that service mostly because I remember Walt Purdue and what he could do to get you just what you needed.

Perdue's Sport Shop

Never forget the first time I went to Perdue's Sport Shop. It was simply known as Perdue's when I was growing up in Ridgewood. I was all of seven years old and I drove there with my Dad and my entire life savings of ten cents. I believe my allowance at the time was five cents so this was a long anticipated day.

I was in Perdue's to purchase a red rubber ball, the kind you throw against a wall to practice your pitching or to play the game "Baseball Off the Wall."

On this particular Saturday I was assisted by Mr. Perdue. You would think that the man might have had better things to do than help a 2nd grader buy a ball but that was Mr. Perdue. He was filled with patience and saw immediately how much this meant to me.

My father had been there many times before and he recognized him well enough to give him a hearty hello. We were only there to make this one purchase though instinctively Mr. Perdue knew he had a new customer and that I might come back every year until I went to college to buy sporting goods from him. It wasn't a cold calculation on his part, only common sense. I handed over my ten cents to Mr. Perdue and I left the store the happiest kid in town. On this particular day I had been out, just me and my Dad on a beautiful Saturday morning in early Spring, and had been to Perdue's, where the nicest shopkeeper in town had personally made certain my simple purchase was completed with the utmost dignity.

Perdue's Sport Shop is now a parking lot. Though if you stare at it and squint your eyes you can see it, and the old wood paneled truck with the Perdue's name emblazoned on the side. Mr. Perdue had a commute to work that most men who lived in Ridgewood would have taken in a heartbeat. And he had a job I bet most men also admired. Not just because it involved selling all types of sporting goods, but because he did it with such aplomb and assurance of manner that people were drawn back as often as they could find a reason to shop there. Even if it only meant a ten cent rubber ball for your son.

Wednesday, February 01, 2012

Parking on Heermance Place

According to the Ridgewood Patch the age old tradition of students parking on Heermance Place has come to end:

The Ridgewood Village Council on Wednesday will be discussing a request by the school district to require that Heermance Place be open to only those with parking permits, effectively booting high school students from spots during the day and giving teachers relief.
The other place we used to park during school hours, a vacant lot across the street,  has since had a huge house built on it. Students have been instructed to park in the Graydon parking lot, which I suppose is better than nothing.

Parking on Heermance meant one had access to a car or owned one outright. Students would generally arrive early to secure a spot.  I can remember times when weeks would go by and the same cars would be there every morning in the same spots. Heermance was a place to meet and be seen by one's peers. It turned into a mad house immediately after school as buses arrived to transport students to various parts of town and Hohokus.

I never rode the Yellow School Bus to either GW or RHS. We lived inside the limit for the free ride. I maneuvered around this by walking, riding my bicycle or bugging my Mom or friends for a ride. I also could ride an Intercity Bus which was used by commuters to NYC. This would be quite an eye opener for students today as smoking was allowed on the bus. There were certain bus drivers who chain smoked and they would have an ash tray filled with cigarette butts in front of them. When you combined these drivers with students trying to grab a smoke, the bus often had a toxic air to it. The upside was it only cost a quarter to go to GW or RHS in the 1970s, which was a good deal. We could also see the bus from our kitchen window on Glenwood Road as it drove to the end of the line on Hillcrest Road. It then turned around and while it was doing that I could stroll up to the bus stop and wait for its return. This was very handy when it rained or when it was dark because daylight savings was in effect.

Monday, January 09, 2012

Old Friends

Old friends are unique in our fast paced, ready-in-an-instant society. The tendency is to try and keep up with the latest news, technology, and fads, if for no other reason it gives us something to talk about while we try to keep up. It represents a vicious cycle to me sometimes.

This is why old friends are even better than new friends. We have had more time to cultivate the relationship and there is less than can be hidden. Our new friends don't have the perspective of time and really only know our current incarnation of our self. They are valuable just the same but different in a number of ways.

It hurts more I believe to lose an old friend than it does a new one. Both occurrences are tragic in their own way but when the friends we made as children leave our lives, either voluntarily or not, there is an emptiness we feel that often times cannot be replaced by a new friend.

It's very common that a busy life will prompt us to let old friends slip away and make us cling that more tightly to our new friends. Again, having friends is what is important, and even more important is how we treat them and the other people in our lives.

I compose these blog entries with my old friends in mind. Every once and a while, like just last week, an old friend will email me to tell me of their interest in my recollections. Sometimes they offer me one of their own, but they always get me thinking about how we crossed paths at an earlier and seemingly more innocent time in our lives. It always makes me feel good and gives me the incentive to try and capture those old time feelings in words. Only our old friends can do this and that is why it is so important to stay in touch. I believe that of all the claims made about the Internet there is little doubt that it has helped us find and keep our old friends better than all the previous technologies and methods which came before. I fully expect to see the day when retirement homes are filled with seniors emailing, video conferencing, and posting their thoughts online, even if they are bedridden. It all makes me feel less afraid of growing old as I know I will be doing it with the people who knew me when I was young.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Raise Revenue, Not Taxes!

Ridgewood is a beautiful place, in my memory, and in its present incarnation. The Village seemingly  reinvents itself periodically, in an effortless fashion, as the old families who put their children through school move out and new ones move in to begin the cycle over again. This is fairly typical of suburban life in the Northeast US, except that Ridgewood does it as well or better than any other place.

This cycle of renewal of Ridgewood residents does come with a price, as any Village property tax statement will readily attest. It costs plenty to maintain a first rate school system, operate police and fire departments, and to keep the Village, including its gems like Graydon Pool, in pristine condition. This just names a few items which must be funded annually, and the price of all these amenities is only going up.

Let's be clear, I am all in favor of funding the tangible and intangible features of Ridgewood which add to the desirability of a living within its borders, and especially those that increase its attractiveness or value. I just want to point out the obvious that Ridgewood's next renewal will have to be predicated on finding new sources of revenue and not new sources of taxes.


This to me means growing the tax base by building housing in the Central Business District which are of the one and two bedroom variety. Besides offering a place for empty nest Villagers looking to downsize, they would also maintain a sense of continuity in the village. Downtown housing offers the opportunity, which is now largely lost when people move out, of protecting the Village's collective knowledge of what it is and hopes to represent. I maintain that the Village's Group Intelligence is a priceless asset, and one which common sense urges be respected and encouraged to developed further. 


In our likelihood in addition to downtown housing ideas, raising revenue and not taxes might mean swallowing hard and accepting ideas which might be aesthetically challenging like cell phone towers and solar panels.


I've never felt it was going to be easy for Ridgewood to contemplate, not to mention implement, its next period of renewal. I just put these ideas out for discussion and hope that I won't be shouted down. I fear and have felt the pervasive group think which is often inflicted ex-Ridgewood residents when they speak their minds regarding their old hometown. This happens often enough that it hampers our collective intelligence by limiting input to a select few individuals or filtering potential Golden Suggestions. My suggestions may not be "Golden" but they are worthy of consideration as a means for making the future of Ridgewood as bright and promising as it was when I lived there in the 1960s and 70s.

Happy Holidays!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Playing Games

"Before there were play dates there was play..."

I wish I could claim credit for the above statement as I share its sentiment. It was taken from a short documentary on the games children played in NYC in the 50's, 60's and 70s. They interviewed people from all the boroughs and the games were basically the same, though they might have called them by different names. The interesting part to me was that no adult ever showed the kids how to play these games, and that the origins of the games could be traced back hundreds of years by examining paintings of scenes of children playing.

We had many of the same games in Ridgewood, due in large part to the large migration of New Yorkers to the suburbs. Let me name a few and provide Wilipedia explanations for those that made the journey to Jersey:

Red Rover
The game is played between two lines of players, usually around thirty feet apart. Each team lines up along one of these lines, and the game starts when the first team (usually called the "East" or "South" team, although this does not relate to the actual relative location of the teams) calls out, "Red rover, red rover, send [name of player on opposite team] right over." or "Red Rover, Red Rover, let [name of player of opposing team] come over." or "Red rover, red rover, we call [name of player on opposite team] over."

Box Ball
Four square, also known as squareball, boxball, and in Canada, champ, is a ball game played among four individuals on a square court divided into quadrants. It is a popular playground game with little required equipment, almost no setup, and short rounds of play that can be ended at any time.

Stickball
Stickball is a street game related to baseball, usually formed as a pick-up game, played in large cities in the Northeastern United States, especially New York City. The equipment consists of a broom handle and a rubber ball, typically a spaldeen, pensie pinkie, high bouncer or tennis ball.


Stoopball
Stoop ball (also spelled "stoopball") is a game that is played by throwing a ball against a stoop (stairs leading up to a building) on the pavement in front of a building. The game is also known as "Off the Point". [1] Historically, it has been popular in Brooklyn and other inner cities. It first became popular after World War II.[2] A Portable Stoopball Striker has been patented. [3]

The games were usually impromptu and a group for the game could easily be mustered at the schoolyard or nearby park. These games taught us life lessons about who we could trust and how to negotiate. Though this posting is mostly about boys games, there were interviews with many girls, too. We might call them tomboys if they played the boys games but they had also hopscotch and skipping rope in a multitude of variations.

The other theme this all presupposes is that no direct adult supervision was required, though in all cases there were stay-at-home Moms, close relatives, and the ultimate arbiters the Police. All these groups kept order to a degree and kids knew they had to behave or else their parents would find out their infraction.

This is all a dream world supposition now, with fewer extended relatives like aunts and uncles living nearby, not to mention grandparents, fewer stay-at-home Moms, and lastly fewer kids playing on the streets. It seems that a combination of central air conditioning, television, and video games has depleted the streets and schoolyards of the armies of children who used to play the aforementioned games so regularly. This is not to say the games have vanished, only that their ability to bind us together and teach us life lessons has diminished.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Santa at the Old Garden State Plaza


All it takes is a quick search of Google these days to bring up memories of days past. I was not astonished when I searched for the picture of Santa in the chimney, which used to adorn the old Garden State Plaza, and quickly found numerous mentions in blogs. As the story goes it cost about $20,000 each year to repair Santa and another $20,000 to get him set up in the chimney. I suppose for the number crunchers who work for these retailers with their razor thin margins this was an expense which was easy to eliminate.

Santa was in the same category of 1960s excess as The 200-by-50-foot work, created by the Polish-born artist Stefan Knapp. It dominated the intersection of Routes 17 and 4 from 1962 to 1995. Constructed of red, orange and blue porcelain panels attached to a steel structure, it was commissioned for $250,000 by George Farkas, a former owner of the store.



People generally liked seeing both of these landmarks but were not going to put up a fight when both were kicked to the curb to make way for new stores. They'll live forever, however, in our memories and on the Internet.

I guess that makes us luckier than our ancestors, who had only grainy photographs of landmarks torn down to make way for something newer and better.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

RHS Class of 1977 35th Reunion Fundraising

Tom Thurston

If you would like to be remembered in the Reunion Program with RHS Football, please use this button to donate. Our 35th Reunion will be the weekend of July 20-22 2012.




Becky Deetz came up with this fine idea of allowing groups of individuals to donate as one, for example the RHS Football team. Everyone in a group would do this by clicking on the specific PayPal button on the web site home page or the same one located on this blog. In either case for the Football team, the button is located underneath Tom Thurston's picture. The same holds true if you would like to contribute and be remembered as a member of the UHAAA (Uncle Harry Ahearn Admiration Association). ((See below.))

Everyone who contributes to a group would be mentioned in the Reunion program in the specific group they have designated, no matter what they donate. Becky's idea is that we concentrate on making the occasion of our 35th Reunion a success, and not on how much people are donating. Please let us know about ideas for creating groups other than the two that have been mentioned.

We do mention individuals and businesses on our web site who give more than $200 in cash, prizes or supplies. They are referred to as Patrons, but nothing is said about the size of anyone's contribution to a group.

As an FYI, we have prioritized our Reunion Weekend expenditures and are first taking care of necessities like the deposits for the Marriott Park Ridge, The Stable, and liability insurance for the Sunday Picnic at The Stable.

We are also making provisions for door prizes, swag bags, a printed program, and anything that Jimmy Velardi says he needs for the Alumni All-Star Band on Friday night. We would like to also pay for the food at the picnic and buy specially designed t-shirts for the RHS Ambassadors to wear, who will be giving us a tour of RHS on Saturday morning. These just so happen to be on sale in the RHS Class of 1977 online store CafePress. As you can tell we have a big list and we will need the support of everyone. Though I cannot mention enough that we will take care of the needs first, then concentrate on the frills.

Harry Ahearn

If you would like to be remembered in the Reunion Program with members of the UHAAA, please use this button to donate.



Saturday, November 05, 2011

The Schonemans

A photo taken by Robert Schoneman of his parents. His Mom was one of our Cub Scout Den Mothers and his Dad was the Scoutmaster. The Schonemans were wonderful neighbors and close friends of my parents. They would have been married 61 years today.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Learning To Drive

Learning to drive is a right of passage I take completely for granted these days. Though at the time it consumed me just like it did every teenager starting at age 16. It did not let up until I had received my license sometime after my 17th birthday. Gas was $.50 a gallon and had gone up significantly after the oil shock of 1974. It was still cheap enough that we could empty all of our pals pockets for donations and have enough to cruise around on a Saturday night. Up and down Ridgewood Avenue we would go looking for other people doing the same and possibly word of a party at some unsuspecting parent's house.

In those days it didn't matter if the car only had an AM radio, as long as we were out of the house and moving around we were content. If we could find some girls who wanted to sit in the back seat and drive around with us then that was all the better.

When it was hot the windows would be down and we would hear the sounds on the street as we drove. It was sometimes the best form of communications that we had, and usually it was the only type since we cruised in the era before cellphones. Though 0ur communications could also be non-verbal and be left entirely to the drivers of the cars, especially if we were in a car with some horsepower that could go fast on route 208. It was well known among hot rod enthusiasts that if you hooked up a single white light near your back license plate and flashed it at another hot rod that this was a challenge for a race. I can't say I was in any races ala American Graffiti, but I did on one occasion ride "shotgun" while my driver played a dangerous game of "getting on the rear" of the car in front of us in an attempt to intimidate and show how fast his car could run. In those days we were immortal and split second decisions about safety were usually shouted down by those in the car. It was scary and stupid but all a part of growing up.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Ridgewood High School Alumni Association

Through the years I have received a mountain of requests from my college alma mater for funds. Both of my brothers went to Prep school and they receive requests from Phillips Academy as well as their respective colleges and graduate schools. This is all well and good but it has lately left me wondering why Ridgewood High School doesn't have an alumni association of its own. Here is my suggestion:

The purpose of this non-profit association would be to identify and properly recognize the accomplishments of the alumni, students, faculty and staff of Ridgewood High School. Equal attention would be paid to the academic and non-academic phases of high school activities, in order that a well-balanced picture may be presented to the public.

The Ridgewood High School Alumni Association would strive to sustain friendships and memories of Ridgewood High School days in four ways. Firstly, its membership database would help graduates stay in touch and would facilitate class reunion efforts by offering advice and a refined methodology for organizing and supporting class reunions. The association's second mission would be to preserve RHS mementos and to create a permanent record of alumni accomplishments; at first collecting achievements and posting them on its website, and then ultimately by the acquisition of a permanent space for a Ridgewood High School Alumni Museum/Information Center, created and operated by the Association. The Association's third mission would be to use its website and FaceBook page to provide information about RHS alumni and association activities. The fourth way the association would fulfill its primary mission would be by awarding scholarships annually to deserving graduates.

In this age of Cloud Computing this seems to me an obvious use of technology for the common good. Nobody would be included who didn't want to belong and the RHS Alumni Association would create its own database of names.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

142 Glenwood Road


I lived at 142 Glenwood Road from 1961-1978 in a single family house built in 1937 on .21 acres of land adjoining Willard School. It always amazes me when I see how the house has appreciated since that time. I don't believe the first mortgage my parents had on the house was as large as the property taxes the current owner pays in a single year.

According to the Zillow web site the house last sold in 1995 for $420,000.

Today they estimate a 30 year fixed mortgage at about 4% with 20% down payment would leave you paying $3459 a month.

Tax History

Year           Property taxes        % Change            Tax assessment            % Change

2011           $18,281                       5.3%                 $968,800                      --
2010           $17,361                       4.0%                 $968,800                      --
2009          $16,692                         --                     $968,800                      --
2008          $16,692                         2.9%                $968,800                    59.4%
2007           $16,228                         --                     $607,800                      --

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

139th Annual Harvest Fair

139th Annual Harvest Fair


Old Paramus Reformed Church
10am to 4pm - Free Admission - Come early for holiday shopping, have lunch and bring friends. 660 East Glen Avenue at Rt. 17. Garage Sale - Gift Basket Raffle - Attic Treasures & Collectibles - Furniture - Jewelry - linens - books - toys - Homemade Baked Goods - & soup - Farm Stand Country Kitchen Refreshments & Lunch!

From their website a bit of history:
Old Paramus Reformed Church has a rich past. The congregation was formed in the year 1725. During the American Revolution, the Paramus Church was the site of a Continental Army military post for four years during which clashes between American and British forces took place. It was also in the original church building that General George Washington held a session of the court-martial of General Charles Lee who disobeyed orders at the Battle of Monmouth in 1778. Washington had his headquarters here at the church a total of ten times during various days from 1778-1780.

Other noted Revolutionary War figures such as Alexander Hamilton, the Marquis de Lafayette, Anthony Wayne, Richard Henry Lee, and Aaron Burr also were here from time to time during the war. From early colonial times, slaves were members of the church congregation, the upper galleries on both sides being designated for their use during services.

The present church building was built in 1800. An interesting feature is that the pews are numbered. The members of earlier days rented them on an annual basis. The most expensive were numbers 50 to 57 at $52.00 per year while the least expensive were numbers 38 to 100 at $4.00 per year. Needless to say, the less expensive pews are at the rear of the sanctuary.

On each side of the pulpit, there are three pews placed at right angles to the rest of the pews in the church. These were reserved for the Elders and Deacons (on the left and right respectively). These persons collectively are known as the Consistory, which is the governing board of the church. It was their duty to sit in these pews each Sabbath with their Bibles and copies of the day's sermon to check on the "Domine" as to his conduct of the service as well as sticking to his sermon! That tradition (as to seating) is kept alive in Old Paramus by current members of the Consistory who sit in the first pew facing the pulpit each Sunday.

The decorated organ pipes in the rear of the chancel (choir loft) behind the pulpit date back to 1892. In that year they were installed when the church received the gift of a new organ from a congregation member.

At the top of the arch over the pulpit, there is a Dove of Peace. The dove is made of wood and is hand-carved. The exact date of origin of the dove is unknown. One authority claims that, "The bird is an eagle and was a donation by Dr. Garret D. Banta in 1800." Records from the Consistory minutes read: 1874, Aug. 3rd: Resolved that the Consistory thankfully recognize the kindness of Mrs. Catherine Wessella for repairing and regilding the Dove, which has been a part of the decoration of the old church."

There are three flags on the pulpit - the American flag, the Christian flag and the flag of The Netherlands, the last representing our Dutch heritage. In a similar vein, the Dutch flag is flown under the American flag on the staff in front of the church.

There are several plaques on the inside walls of the church. Some honor the ministers, and others honor the various Consistories since 1725. Another just inside the front door notes that this Church has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In display cases you will find various bits of memorabilia concerning our history.

When attending Old Paramus Reformed Church, you will have come to a warm and comfortable historic church, but the service is up to date, alive, and nourishing to your whole being.

On the church campus, you will find the modern Educational Building which houses the church offices and facilities needed for Christian nurture. Another building is the one-room, church-like schoolhouse. This building houses the Ridgewood Historical and Preservation Society and is known as The Schoolhouse Museum. It was built in 1872 and was used as a school until 1905. It contains many items of historical note to this area. Make it a point to visit this museum during visiting hours. You should find it to be a very interesting and rewarding visit.

So, what kind of a church is Old Paramus Reformed Church? It is affiliated with the Reformed Church in America, the oldest Protestant denomination with a continuous ministry in America. The first church was established in New York City, then known as Nieuw Amsterdam, in 1628. The Collegiate Churches presently represent the origins of that original congregation. The best known is Marble Collegiate Church, which is where Dr. Norman Vincent Peale was the minister for fifty-two years. The Reformed Church in America (RCA) is an historic denomination coming out of the Reformation when the Church was "re-formed" and re-organized according to the teachings of the Word of God, the Bible. The Reformed Church is Biblical in doctrine, semi-liturgical in worship. Presbyterian in government, and evangelical in practice.

This year, Old Paramus Reformed Church celebrates 286 Years of God's Loving Spirit. Come join us next Sunday at 10 A.M. We would be most happy to see you, and you will surely feel rewarded for the experience.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Call For Pledges: Promote Your Business and our 35th Reunion Weekend

To all potential sponsors of the RHS Class of 1977 35th Reunion Weekend:

With our 35th Reunion Weekend some nine months away, plans are take shape nicely, and we are now in possession of the approximate costs of all the weekend's events. Our goal is to raise $1000, that's ten pledges of $100 from businesses with a presence on the Internet and from individuals.

By giving to this event you'll be helping defray expenses for things such as door prizes, decorations, the Reunion program, and the rental fee for use of The Stables for our Sunday Farewell Picnic. Your donation will be recognized in several ways. As a business sponsor you'll have a link to your web site on our web site in the sidebar on every page, and on our new page dedicated just to sponsors. Your donation will also be acknowledged in in all press releases, advertising materials, and banners which publicize the weekend, as well as announced verbally at our events.

We hope that we can count on you to support our 35th Reunion Weekend. If you have any questions or concerns please feel free to contact me privately via FaceBook or via my email address: paulmccubbin@gmail.com.

Thank you in advance for your consideration!

To date the following people have made pledges of money, prizes, and/or their time.

The ladies first:
Francesca Cavallaro Wall
Rebecca Deetz Haskell
Laura Fleming
Joanne Hunter Currey
Deborah White Bryant
Penelope King Quirk
Suzi Baxter-Beene
Susan Raymond
Carrie Stewart
Cindy Neidig Myer

The men:
Jeff Roberson
Hank Bordowitz
Gypsies on Parole
Jim Velordi
Schweinfurth Florist
Chet Douglas
Karl Olsen
Peter Branigan
Paul McCubbin
Tim Daly