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07/16/24 04:42 PM #1399    

Richard B Silver

John  Bennett died February 4, 2023


07/18/24 12:11 PM #1400    

 

Joan Pekoc (Pagano)

My husband James and I are coming in from NYC and are very excited to be attending Reunion festivities on Saturday.  We also have 5 brothers and their families living in the Heights area, so it will be a wonderful family visit as well!


07/25/24 12:00 PM #1401    

 

Evie Fertman (Braman)

Hi!  We're getting pretty close to the Reunion Weekend!

A couple of things that I wanted to share follow:

After giving precise instructions as to how to get to the venue Verizon has moved across the street and changed everything!  You are now looking at an empty, pretty, beige, free standing building that USED to be Verizon!! The wide driveway, hoever, is still there!  If you are going west from Lander Road you want the third driveway on the right, remember that you can't see the building from the street.  The driveway is also directly across from the western driveway of Staples which is across the street.

Also, I purposely do not include who is coming because someone will look at the list and think that their friends won't be there and then I get the friends' checks the next day.  Also, one of the best things about the Reunions is that you meet a lot of interesting people who you weren't friendly with in high school.  If you have to know if certain people are coming you can always call me at 216-288-4506 and I'll let you know.  

Please check your information on the Shaker64 site, a lot of it is outdated and we might not have your correct email and physical addresses.

Please call me with any questions, and no, it's not too late to send me a check!!!  216-288-4506,  checks to: Evie Braman, #1004, 13800 Shaker Blvd., Cleveland, 44120.


07/25/24 12:10 PM #1402    

 

Evie Fertman (Braman)

Jim Baumoel has informed me through Steve Joseph that the rumor of his death (for which I totally take responsibility!!) is greatly exaggerated, to steal a little bit from Mark Twain!!  Someone told me that he had died and I checked it on the Internet as I always do and actually found him there, departed from us in 2022.  Fortunately for us it was a different James Baumoel, my condolences to the other one's survivors.   And yes, Jim was very surprised to hear that news!!  It also shook Steve Joseph to the core - he's currently recovering nicely.  And I learned how to recessitate people on our web site when falsely accused of leaving us so he is no longer on our Memorium List.


07/25/24 04:31 PM #1403    

 

Evie Fertman (Braman)

I just registered Lorrie Saltzman Fromson in our In Memorium list.  I read her obit in the Cleveland Jewish News  flag that I receive by email.  Our list has her last name as Sedley but  her second husband was Fromson, not Sedley, so I don't know where that came from.


07/25/24 06:20 PM #1404    

 

Evie Fertman (Braman)

I mistakenly clicked on Faulb instead of Saltzman so if that came through, Laurie Faulb is fine as far as I know!!   
I think I need a nap.


07/26/24 04:07 PM #1405    

Edward M Kovachy, Jr

I am delighted to learn that my cheerleading buddy Jimmy Baumoel is alive and well and quoting, doubtless with his wonderful twinkle in his eyes and his radiant smile, Mark Twain.  Yippee! 

 

 

 

 

 


07/27/24 01:19 PM #1406    

Patricia Ann Richards (Armstrong)

 

Just a quick note to those of you attending the exclusive gathering at the beginning of August.  HAVE A GREAT TIME!  I would have joined you but for an injury in '95 (white water rafting in Ohiopyle) which suddenly reappeared in the form of "signal changes" in my spinal cord.  Since 2014 I have been steadily losing balance and sensation and 2 new plastic cervical  vertebrae have not stopped the deterioration.  Sooo I cannot manage what would have been a pretty much pure pleasure occasion.  I have, however, very much enjoyed, and sometimes been saddened by the various posts on this site.  Again...best wishes to you ALL!

 

 


07/27/24 03:10 PM #1407    

Joseph G Blake

This is a recall of events 55 years that we all share. The other night when President Biden explained why he was leaving the race for president in favor  of Kamala Harris, I was reminded of a night in March 1968. That was when LBJ said he would not run again.

I recall that I was sitting in my dorm room listening on the radio. No one was with me. But everyone was listening eleswhere in the dorm.  When he said he would not run again, everyone cheered it seemed. You could hear them through the walls. It was a lonely night for me as I recall.

But I also was thinking about what do I do now.  I was going to graduate and go to law school. But that night the reality of my choice ahead started to develop.  I had gotten into three law schools but my law boards were mediocre. My grades were high but I often did not do well on standard tests.

Plus the draft was a reality. And I had defended our presence there. so time to put my money where my mouth was). By the end of the summer I was heading to Marine OCS. I never regretted that choice. They yanked my Shaker silver spoon. Long overdue.  I met my wife Jane whose father was a Marine general and served two and half years (1966 to 1968) in Vietnam. Long story but he believed the war could not be won because it was a civil war (Buddhists versus Christians in the South) within a civil war (North plus Viet Cong verus  the South ).  I add this only as an observation he made then and shared with senior commanders when asked for his opinion. He was not alone in this opinion. He was a likely advisor for the Paris Conference if Hubert Humphrey had won in 1968. 

I am sure others have memories of that night as well. It stands out like the day JFK was assasinated. Perhaps we can share them here or at the reunion. How did it effect you? 

Thanks

Joe


07/28/24 12:52 PM #1408    

 

Craig Miller

My recollection of LBJ’s announcement was tempered by a different reality. I jumped into the Navy right after Shaker graduation to get it over with and to grow up. Both happened. I got into heated arguments with my soon-to-be mother in law. “You served your country!” “No, I didn’t. I served LBJ, the Commander-In-Chief, who told me to go to Vietnam, put my head between my legs, and kiss my a** good bye”. I cheated and came home alive and unhurt. Then I joined Veterans Against the War and went after that SOB. I must have made an impression because I had an interview with the FBI who opened a file on me. So, when LBJ made his announcement, I felt totally vindicated. But, I also felt sorry for all the poor guys that still had to figure out how to avoid being drafted into an unwinnable war.

I learned very early on what a messy war Vietnam was going to be. I learned that Ho Chi Minh, the North Vietnam leader, was a big fan of George Washington. Why? Uncle Geoge took on the greatest militiary in the world at that time, Britain, and fought them to a stand still. You win by not losing. Uncle Ho learned his lessons well. Did we lose militarily? Nope. Did we lose politically? Yep.             And life goes on.


07/28/24 01:33 PM #1409    

 

Dana Shepard (Treister)


07/28/24 02:00 PM #1410    

 

Dana Shepard (Treister)

Responding to the reflections from March 1968...  Well, Michael and I were 9 months married by then and living in Chicago (where we knew no-one).   I had transferred for my senior year from Wash U to Loyola/Chicago, whose downtown campus was literally 3 blocks from our apartment, and was totally focused on student teaching in a Chicago Public Schools first grade and then kindergarten classroom -- Michael was podding through his intern year at Northwestern's Chicago medical campus -- and we were mostly focused on where he would be doing his orthopaedics residency!  (He stayed at Northwestern). Which is why...  for us ... the LBJ announcement was way down our list of focus priorities...

Changing gears entirely, I'd like to share a very special recent Cleveland Experience.  My entire family of 1 husband + 2 sons + 2 daughters-in-law + 3 grandchildren = 9 of us in all were in Cleveland over the Independence Day weekend for the wedding of our niece Bailey Treister to Jake Dronzek.  Miraculously I was able to pull off a mini-walking tour of my part of the Lomond School neighborhood.  Everyone was literally directly from either long drives from Chicago or flights from Boston - we met at Lomond School, and walked from there to Avalon Rd where I grew up, and from there to the corner of Avalon+Chagrin = our shopping area, from where we could see the Rapid Transit a block away.  Our city children and grandchildren marveled at the quiet on Lomond Blvd on a Friday afternoon, and how well kept were the homes and yards - such joy for me to re-experience my childhood walks to school through the eyes of the next two generations. 

Then back to Lomond School for the cars and a drive to SHHS, where we found a passing high school kid who took this picture.  And... while we were there...  one of the grandchildren noticed a doe and fawn on a lawn on Aldersyde across from the school! And not lawn sculpture -- real live deer!  In the middle of the afternoon!  I guess "back in our day" the wildlife had more undeveloped nature to call their own..

Looking forward to seeing many of you this weekend~

DANA


07/29/24 08:42 AM #1411    

 

Betsy Dennis (Frank)

My spouse and I are attempting Saturday night. What time does it begin?


07/29/24 10:32 AM #1412    

Joseph G Blake

Thanks for the memories. 

The other day we watched Chariots of Fire which is about the UK track team at the 1924 Olympics and then My Fair Lady which was made in our year of 1964. Always a happy experience to watch. 

I received the following reply yesterday from Will Karhl's family in reply to mine. He apparently died Friday. I will add any other news I receive. Will was from Mount Vernon, Ohio but came to Shaker for high school because of his mother's ill health. He lived with his sister and brother in law during those years on Chadbourne.. 

Joe,
 
I am very sorry to report that Willy passed away on Friday morning, July 26th. He had long standing health issues but was still very active as chair of the Newcastle Fire Protection District Board and other community organizations.
 
We are working on his obituary and I will try to remember to send you one.
 
Regards,
On Sat, Jul 27, 2024 at 4:26 AM Joseph Blake <jblake9147@aol.com> wrote:
Will,

All the news about the fires in CA reminded me to say hello and wish you well. Hope the fires are not nearby.
Next week will be our reunion. I know you won’t be there. Anyone I should pass along your best wishes?
Best wishes
Joe Blake

07/29/24 12:56 PM #1413    

Gary D Hermann

My reality in 1968 was similar to Craig's but with a happier ending.  Though I had committed to attending Northwestern Law School in the Fall of 1968, I knew that I would likely be drafted during my first year.  Fortunately, I learned of a ROTC program for graduate students which allowed me to finish law school and receive my commission in 1971.  By-the-time I received my Vietnam orders in 1972, the War was almost over.

Dana mentioned being in Chicago in 1968 and beyond because her husband interned at Northwestern. By the Fall of 1968, I was living in the same neighborhood (Northwestern Law School was part of NU's Professional Campus on Chicago Avenue, which included the Medical School and their hospitals). Really enjoyed living there (especially the close proximity to Wrigley Field via the "L"), although my wife had to drive quite a ways to her teaching job in Wilmette.

 

 

 


07/29/24 11:03 PM #1414    

William A Sokol

Asking about 68 started me thinking about all that....I was on my way back to Madison Wisconsin in a carload of crazies, returning from the SDS national convention in Louisville Kentucky when we heard the news on the radio... huge joy as we imagined we actually had something to do with it....perhaps we did, not so sure anymore....but what we got for our troubles was RMNixon, who later gave me the opportunity to do radio anchoring of the Watergate hearings...strange times that all seem very dreamlike now...RIP Willie - we crossed paths quite often here in Cali and enjoyed each other each time - his California Water Atlas and his book Water and Power are still outstanding works on California's most important story....or as Kurt Vonnegut would sayl 'and so it goes'.....

 


07/30/24 11:54 AM #1415    

 

Evie Fertman (Braman)

I always order a few more dinners for people who decide at the last minute to join us at the Reunion so you're not too late, just call me at (216) 288-4506!!

Both nights are from 6:00 to 11:00 (Saturday changed from 11:30 to 11:00).

Ut's amazing that so many classmates emailed me or texted me or called me to tell me that they would be there but they can't travel yet because of a knee or hip replacement!!  We are now "The Bionic Shaker Class of 1964"!!

We're planning an 80th Birthday party (for an as of yet undecided) date in October of 2026!!  Please plan your surgeries accordingly!!!!!

There is now a large "For Rent" sign in front of the vacant former Verizon building to the left of the driveway to the venue!!

Evie


07/30/24 04:04 PM #1416    

Marc Chizek

For those of you attending the class reunion, I have one request. PLEASE TAKE LOTS OF PICTURES. Please post them for the rest of us who aren't attending. This could very well be our last " big" gathering. Thanks in advance for your cooperation. 


07/31/24 03:47 AM #1417    

Edward M Kovachy, Jr

I was saddened to hear that Willy Kahrl had just died. Willy was extraordinary. Conversations with Willy were always lively and fun. He was a true Renaissance man. I always learned from him. I always had my mind pleasantly stretched. And his laugh. My goodness what a wonderful laugh!  Willy did a beautiful job of organizing us to make sure that our brilliant classmate Thomas Young was most deservedly inducted into the Shaker High Hall of Fame. Thank you, Willy!  As Bill Sokol points out, Willy was an important writer. That gene lives on in Willy's daughter Christina Kahrl, who is the sports editor (The Sporting Green) of the San Francisco Chronicle. I read the Sporting Green every morning. It does Christina--and Willy--proud. RIP, Willy. Like many of us, I was blessed to know you.

 

 


07/31/24 10:20 AM #1418    

 

Betsy Dennis (Frank)

Evie, thanks for the laugh amidst the sadness of learning of recent deaths. 


08/01/24 02:16 PM #1419    

 

Phyllis Hammer (Gubanc)

I second what Betsy said! Evie, you made me laugh. And rub my "bionic" knee.


08/02/24 03:32 PM #1420    

Joseph G Blake

I sent Ed Kovachy's beautiful tribute about Willy Kahrl to his family.

I received this detailed obituary which I have added below.

Joe

Thank  you for informing the class. Here's the obit:
 

William L. Kahrl died in his sleep after a brief illness in a Roseville hospital on July 26, 2024, attended by his family. From his arrival in the state in 1969 to the end of his days, Kahrl, 78, made an impact on California and its communities in the areas of public policy, resource management, environmentalism and conservation, as a government employee, historian, journalist and consultant, always following his motto, “Let me help us.”

 

“Bill Kahrl was the classic definition of a citizen – tireless in improving his community, active in the public policy debate and passionate for the values and beliefs that define us as Americans,” said Rep. Tom McClintock (R-CA).


Kahrl was the project director and editor of “The California Water Atlas,” published in 1979 by the Governor’s Office of Planning and Research, which came out in the wake of the state’s then-worst drought of 1976-77. It remains a revolutionary, award-winning work for water resource management for a state in which there is no more important natural resource.

 

Further establishing his place as the pre-eminent scholar of water policy in the state, he subsequently wrote “Water and Power” as a Rockefeller Fellow; this history of California water development was subsequently selected by the New York Times as one of the best books of 1982.

 

“Bill Kahrl played a huge role in educating the public about the history of water in California, and about how our incredibly complex water system works,” said Jerry Meral, former deputy director of the California Department of Water Resources and Director of the California Water Program at the Natural Heritage Institute.

 

Kahrl was creative, engaging and rigorous as he crafted stories and columns about state, local and federal water policy for the Los Angeles Times and Sacramento Bee; he joined the Bee’s staff as an editor in 1986, eventually becoming its opinion editor before leaving the paper in 1997. He was also a co-founder of and contributing editor for the World’s Fair Quarterly magazine, and contributed articles to the California Historical Quarterly and the Public Historian.

 

“I met Bill Kahrl when he was the editor of the opinion pages of the Sacramento about 30 years ago and greatly admired his work,” said state senator Roger Niello. “He will be missed by many.”

 

Upon his arrival in California, Kahrl helped launch a new chapter in California’s history of public conservation, joining Marin County environmentalist Peter Behr as a CORO Foundation Fellow to work on the revolutionary Save Our Seashore petition drive in 1969. This unprecedented citizens campaign generated 450,000 signatures to inspire the Nixon administration to sign off on federal funding to save and extend the Point Reyes National Seashore, shelving National Park Service plans to sell off and develop a significant portion of the peninsula. For his work, he received CORO’s Irvine Fellowship as the person who “makes the greatest contribution to California.”

 

After that, Kahrl worked for Alfred E. Heller at California Tomorrow before joining the staff of Behr – then a state senator – later moving from Larkspur to Sacramento for new legislative responsibilities, including working for Behr on passage of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act in 1972. He subsequently worked for State Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti and then Governor Jerry Brown before leaving state government. It was entirely in character for Kahrl to work with leaders and elected representatives of both political parties to see good works achieved.
 

Helping save Point Reyes was not his only achievement in natural resource conservation. Kahrl later worked on the creation of Headwaters Forest Preserve, and one of California's largest transfers of environmentally sensitive lands for public use and preservation at the Hearst Ranch.

 

In his later career, Kahrl was a public relations consultant, working with public agencies, tribal governments and private corporations involved with agriculture, educational reform, energy, water resource development, project siting and land use.

 

Kahrl remained active in California’s public affairs to the end of his life, chairing the board of the Newcastle Fire Protection District in Placer County, where he achieved funding and construction of a new fire station in the Sierra foothills above Sacramento.

 

Bill embraced a responsibility for more than his official duties, delighting in playing Santa Claus in his community association Christmas celebration, entertaining and encouraging hundreds of California children every year, not merely his own. Bill loved going to the opera in Los Angeles and was a cinephile as well. He relished participation in the Sacramento Art Deco Society, and traveled the world with his wife, enjoying many adventures abroad.

 
Born on May 30, 1946 in Mount Vernon, Ohio, Bill graduated from Shaker Heights High School before going to Yale College, where he was a Scholar of the House, graduating in 1968. He attended the Yale Graduate School of American Studies and later received a National Endowment of the Humanities Fellowship to Princeton.

 

Bill is survived by his wife of 57 years, Kathleen Mazzocco Kahrl, and their children, Christina (Charles Mae), Benjamin (Anne) and Justin (Gabriela), and his grandchildren Kayla, Peter, Makoa and Xiomara.


Funeral arrangements are with Nardone Funeral Home at 414 Washington Street in Peekskill, NY. A celebration of William Kahrl's life will be held in California in September.

 

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to the Newcastle Fire Protection District, PO Box 350, Meadow Vista, CA 95722 and to the American Heart Association.


08/02/24 04:40 PM #1421    

 

Marianne Coplan (Schapiro)

Thanks, Joe--can you tell us where this obit appeared? Tom Young asked me to find more information about Will Kahl's passing. I copied and sent him the previous note, but I'll direct him to the obit--AND this Forum--for more information.

 

 


08/03/24 04:14 PM #1422    

Edward M Kovachy, Jr

Thank you, Joe! 
With deep appreciation for this and for all you do,       
Ed

 

 

 

 

 


08/03/24 04:46 PM #1423    

Joseph G Blake

I only know that Willy lived in Northern California where he presumably died.

His famiky sent the above copy which notes a funeral home in Peekskill, NY where he will be interred.

I hope that helps 

Joe 


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