*Members: If you have any announcements that you would like to post on the ROBS web site, please contact Nick Siciliano at News2@robsny.org. Announcements will be posted each month on this page.
If you miss any previous month's announcements,
you can view them at the Archives page of this web site. You can also read more news in our Newsletters. In addition, if you have
your own web site, and would like to share it with other members, let us know and we can include the link on the ROBS site.
ROBS MEMBERSHIP-JOIN OR RENEW
POSTED 12/1/21
Please download the following informative welcome letter and the ROBS Membership Form if you would like to join ROBS or renew your membership.
The annual membership fee is $25, complimentary for those over the age of 75. Checks should be made out to ROBS with "Dues" written on the memo line and sent to Carmen Roldan, 49 Linda Lane, North Babylon, NY 11703. Membership FormWelcome Letter
PROJECT HOPE - A TIME FOR GIVING POSTED 12/1/21
As you may know, PROJECT HOPE is a way for the retirees of the Brentwood school community to show we are still concerned about the children of the area. Through "Suburban Children of Bay Shore", ROBS adopts local families during the traditional holiday season. Food is provided for Thanksgiving and many gifts are bought, wrapped and presented at Christmas time.
In the past, many of you have generously supported this endeavor with your donation. Your efforts have been very much appreciated, not only by the folks at Suburban but especially by the children and their parents. Please help continue this fine tradition. Make your checks payable to “ROBS,” and write “Project Hope” on the memo line so that we may keep proper records. Please send your checks to: Carmen Roldan, 49 Linda Lane North Babylon, N.Y. 11703.
Thank you so much for your continued support.
MEMBERSHIP
CENTENNIAL ARTICLE BY LETTY SUSTRIN POSTED 12/20/21 In Celebration of it's 100th year anniversary, NYSTRS has established NYSTRS' Centennial Stories: a collection of reflections and photos from its members. Letty Sustrin submitted a beautiul araticle about her and her sister Sheila's life as teachers, and it was selected to be published in the December 2021 issue of NYSTRS Centennial Stories. It appers on their website and can also be viewed by clicking on the following image.
How are we doing?
We'd like to hear from you. Please visit our
Letters to the Editor Pagewhere you can share your views and comments
IN MEMORIAM
View theIn Memoriam page with the list of our Brentwood colleagues who have passed away. This list will be updated on a yearly basis.
* * * * * If you would like us to place an announcement on the website of the passing of one of our colleagues please contact us here.
Why did we do it? What was our purpose in taking on such an open ended “History Project”; for which we evolved a script of questions and got answers from over 150 subjects for two decades?
We couldn’t answer the question in 1994 when people would ask “What are you going to do with the interviews?” All we could say was that for educational purposes we had to document our record now or lose the chance to preserve so many poignant accounts, funny stories and touching tales told by exemplary educators. We knew these dedicated public servants might shortly, for reasons yet unknown, be leaving Brentwood for good.
So, we decided to let time sort out the details. We began scheduling appointments. We asked questions and listened saving for generations the essence of what it meant to have been an educator or employed, in this large public school system during the second half of the 20th century. Brentwood remains an exemplar to all others; a diverse microcosm of America reflecting 124 districts on Long Island while simultaneously resembling thousands across the U.S. We’ve accomplished something here to be proud of. Whether we were interviewed or not, ours is a claim of service that few professionals in the State of New York or elsewhere have positioned themselves to share in the way we have. INITIALLY the practice of sitting with a subject for an hour and giving them a hundred percent focused attention seemed somewhat daunting to a number of friends and colleagues. So much so in fact that many declined our repeated invitations to speak with us as they left careers or retired from full employment. Despite all assurances that we were not about investigative journalism or invading privacy, they deferred. Now, twenty years after we began, some are saying they may be ready. “Better late than never” we say. However, to all among you who were willing to share not only your classroom experiences and personal stories, but precious memories from your lives along with your fondest hopes for the future, we say “Thanks”. Thanks for allowing us to continue the process by paying it forward as we share these interviews with the Brentwood community and countless professionals and researchers near and far. Through an acceptance of ROBS offer of collaboration with Archivist Dr. Geri Solomon and The Long Island Studies Institute at Hofstra University our History Project lives on in academia as well as in the collection of the Brentwood Public Library, thanks to Director, Thomas A. Tarantowicz.
You can enjoy unlimited visits to www.robsny.org where you can watch and listen to segments from featured Interviews in the ROBS History Project Section on our Announcements Page each month. Return here to listen and learn again and again.
THIS MONTH'S FEATURED HISTORY PROJECT
INTERVIEW: Alex Werner
Administrator
Click on the image above to read Alex Warner's Biography