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03/18/26 03:04 PM #16999    

 

Michael Boulware

 

 

Just had lunch with Dave Dunn, Brian McNamara, Bill Tribbie, Chuck Kaps,and  Fred Clem. They asked about the money that I am collecting for the reunion. I explained to them that everytime I get a check, I have a fond memory or association of some sort. For example, Barb Boggs reminded Sue that they not only have the same birthday, but they were born in the same hospital with cribs right next to each other. Kathy Harper's payment made me think of the great backrubs she graciously gives at our reunions, I can visualize Bob Curtin walking the hallway with his boisterous laugh and big smile just making everyone feel better.

Joe McCarthy wanted me to let everyone know that Homewood Suites is a great place to stay. Latasha is there from 9 to 4 and gives a special rate to friends of Joe and Watterson reunions. Joe, would you put her phone number and address on USER FORUMS ? 

The payments have been coming in steadily. We have enough to put down deposits for St. Andrew Church, The Berwick Party House, and The Eck Center.

If you have not send in your payment please do so in order for me to have another pleasant memory. Make out your check to - Watterson Class of 1966 Jane Blank and mail it to -Mike Boulware - 2056 Thistlewood Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43235


03/18/26 03:28 PM #17000    

Joseph Gentilini

Mike B - let me know if someone says they can't come because of the $60.  I can help them by paying their $60.  joe


03/18/26 04:38 PM #17001    

 

Michael Boulware

Joe, You are an example of the kindness and generosity of our classmates. I really anticipate this reunion to be a really special occasion.Thanks


03/18/26 06:41 PM #17002    

 

David Mitchell

Coolest invention ever!




03/18/26 07:17 PM #17003    

 

Michael Boulware

Joe McCarthy's suggestion for a hotel is 3841 Park Mill Drive in Hilliard. Joe ALWAYS give great suggestions, Check it out.


03/18/26 07:41 PM #17004    

 

Michael McLeod

Joe G.:

I, too, appreciate your generous spirit.

 


03/20/26 10:56 AM #17005    

 

Michael McLeod

useful nerd-alert:

statistics indicate that neglecting to floss can negatively influence longevity. Or to phrase it more positively, flossing, if only incrementally, will help you to live longer, statistically. How they did the research and came up with the estimate I couldn't tell you. A survey of some sort, I'd assume.

 

Flossing influences longevity by reducing chronic inflammation and preventing harmful oral bacteria from entering the bloodstream, which lowers the risk of systemic diseases like heart disease, stroke, and dementia. Daily flossing removes plaque and prevents gum disease (periodontitis), which is strongly linked to reduced mortality and, in some studies, an increased lifespan of 1 to 6 years.
Key ways flossing impacts longevity include:
  • Reduced Systemic Inflammation: Gum disease triggers chronic inflammation, which can cause damage to blood vessels and arteries throughout the body.
  • Preventing Bacterial Spread: Harmful bacteria, such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, can travel from infected gums to the brain and heart, contributing to dementia and cardiovascular disease.
  • Heart Health: Regular flossing helps prevent bacteria from adhering to heart valves and arteries, decreasing the risk of cardiovascular events.
  • Preventing Tooth Loss: Studies show that maintaining natural teeth through proper hygiene, including daily flossing, is associated with a lower risk of death compared to people with substantial tooth loss.
  • Improved Immune Function: By eliminating consistent oral infections, the body faces lower levels of chronic immune system stress.
In essence, because flossing clears the roughly 40% of tooth surface that brushing misses, it acts as a crucial preventive measure for overall physical health, not just oral health.

03/20/26 11:16 PM #17006    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Oral Health

Good advice, Mike 🪥!

😁

Jim

 


03/21/26 06:43 AM #17007    

 

Michael Boulware

Joe McCarthy and Fred Clem endorsed Homeland Suites by Hilton
3841 Parkland Mill Run Drive in Hilliard 43026. You can book on line at a great rate.

03/21/26 09:23 AM #17008    

 

Michael McLeod

Forgive me if I've shared this before.

It's a poem that helped inspire me to pursue an occupation I loved, that being journalism.

I never met Robert Frost but he gave me the advice that put me on the path I chose for myself when I read this poem many years ago..

Such a gift that man had: it's poetry, but upon reading it you feel more like you're a kid, sitting on a davenport in your jammies in your grandparent's living room, and your grandpa's reading you a story before sending you off to bed.

Here's a good example, and one of my favorites among his many beautiful poems. And I truly believe that reading this poem when I was young played a role in my decision to "unite my avocation and vocation" and choose a workaday path that I would love.

I like how arftully yet humbly he sums up the weather. that was frost through and through: brilliant, but so down to earth. And I love how he phrases his admission that beating the crap out of those logs is therapeutic for him, helping him to work out the frustrations of his day, whatever they were.

Two Tramps in Mud Time

  • Out of the mud two strangers came
    And caught me splitting wood in the yard,
    And one of them put me off my aim
    By hailing cheerily “Hit them hard!”
    I knew pretty well why he dropped behind
    And let the other go on a way.
    I knew pretty well what he had in mind:
    He wanted to take my job for pay.

    Good blocks of beech it was I split,
    As large around as the chopping block;
    And every piece I squarely hit
    Fell splinterless as a cloven rock.
    The blows that a life of self-control
    Spares to strike for the common good
    That day, giving a loose to my soul,
    I spent on the unimportant wood.

    The sun was warm but the wind was chill.
    You know how it is with an April day
    When the sun is out and the wind is still,
    You’re one month on in the middle of May.
    But if you so much as dare to speak,
    A cloud comes over the sunlit arch,
    A wind comes off a frozen peak,
    And you’re two months back in the middle of March.

    A bluebird comes tenderly up to alight
    And fronts the wind to unruffle a plume
    His song so pitched as not to excite
    A single flower as yet to bloom.
    It is snowing a flake: and he half knew
    Winter was only playing possum.
    Except in color he isn’t blue,
    But he wouldn’t advise a thing to blossom.

    The water for which we may have to look
    In summertime with a witching wand,
    In every wheel rut’s now a brook,
    In every print of a hoof a pond.
    Be glad of water, but don’t forget
    The lurking frost in the earth beneath
    That will steal forth after the sun is set
    And show on the water its crystal teeth.

    The time when most I loved my task
    These two must make me love it more
    By coming with what they came to ask.
    You’d think I never had felt before
    The weight of an axhead poised aloft,
    The grip on earth of outspread feet.
    The life of muscles rocking soft
    And smooth and moist in vernal heat.

    Out of the woods two hulking tramps
    (From sleeping God knows where last night,
    But not long since in the lumber camps.)
    They thought all chopping was theirs of right.
    Men of the woods and lumberjacks,
    They judged me by their appropriate tool.
    Except as a fellow handled an ax,
    They had no way of knowing a fool.

    Nothing on either side was said.
    They knew they had but to stay their stay
    And all their logic would fill my head:
    As that I had no right to play
    With what was another man’s work for gain.
    My right might be love but theirs was need.
    And where the two exist in twain
    Theirs was the better right — agreed.

    But yield who will to their separation,
    My object in living is to unite
    My avocation and my vocation
    As my two eyes make one in sight.
    Only where love and need are one,
    And the work is play for mortal stakes,
    Is the deed ever really done
    For heaven and the future’s sakes


03/21/26 02:23 PM #17009    

 

David Mitchell

Back to the movies for a moment.

For a long boring evening I decided to watch Braveheart with Mel Gibson as lead actor and director. It's one of those epic films (I guess) that I had never watched all the way through, and I had a whole evening to kill.

And yes, it is loooong!

Anyway, there is a part where Rob Bruce (another historic Scottish hero) comes into the story and betrays William Wallace (Gibson) in a key battle. That seemed odd to me so I looked it up.

Apparantly there was never such a betrayal, and in fact, historians believe the two men never met. 

So I ask myself, why on earth would you create such a major falsehood in such an important movie?

 

(You three readers can go back to something interesting now)


03/21/26 02:52 PM #17010    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Mike, The best rates for thw Homewood suites inHilliard can be obtained IF someone in the committe calls, ask for Latasha, and sees about a Group rate or discount.  

Spoiler alert, Spoiler alert.  Dave is once again giving away the biggest film plot in Braveheart.  Way to go, now I don't have to watch the film.

 


03/21/26 02:53 PM #17011    

 

David Mitchell

March Madness

You are probably all familiar with the young NBA star from France, Victor Wembanyama. He's 7' 4".

But Florida has a young player who is 7' 9"!

His name is Oliver Rioux 

Look it up.


03/21/26 08:22 PM #17012    

 

David Mitchell

Did somebody say March Madness?

The same group of 6 of us - one Captain, 2 of us Warrant Officers - (alll 3 pilots) and 3 enlisted guys, played full court (partly pictured) basketball several nights a week off and on throughout the year. Great way to relax.

 


03/21/26 08:55 PM #17013    

 

Michael McLeod

that picture reminds me of basic training.

and dave I know this is gonna break your heart but movies are make-believe.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ee6_xG788LE

 


03/22/26 02:34 PM #17014    

 

David Mitchell

Interesting referrence - thanks Mike


03/23/26 01:22 PM #17015    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Seeking the Shade 

Five does taking a siesta break.

Jim

 


03/23/26 04:42 PM #17016    

 

David Mitchell

About a week back, Jack posted a great story about a mortar attack.

 

Here is an episode that cost us one of our best local "buddies".

MORTAR ATTACKS - A Regular "Visitor"

Life on Vinh Long Airfield was relatively secure - at times even boring. A property the size of a regional shopping center had a perimeter that was well manned with plenty of little two-story guard shacks (manned 24 hours a day) and several small towers along the more exposed south and east sides. Barbed wire was everywhere, and the one main gate was heavily guarded.

But we still had an unwelcome visitor every few weeks - always late at night – usual after most of us were asleep for the night. Sometime in the middle of the night, a few small teams of Viet Cong would set up mortar tubes in the open fields out to our southeast and send us their life-threatening calling cards. I never learned if they were the smaller 60mm or the larger 80mm tubes, but it didn't matter - they were scary as hell and could wreak havoc on humans or our parked aircraft on the flight line. A few photos throughout the book show the "Revetments" (concrete walls) between parking spaces to cut down on the splash effect of mortar explosions. They might hit one, but the spreading lateral damage was partly mitigated by the revetements.

          Looking down at the short end of our flightline - row after row of concrete "revetments".

It seemed like their usual target was our aircraft out on the flight line, but the noise was enough to wake us up and scare the crap out of us a few hundred yards away in our beds. I can recall jumping up in my underwear in sheer panic and scrambling down the hall of our hooch and into the bunker just ten feet from our back door. We would stand there in the dim light of a single bare bulb, listening to our Cobra gunships (a team always circling high above the airfield throughout the night), firing rockets down on those mortar tubes, as soon as they could detect the location of a flash from the tubes. It was usually over in ten or fifteen minutes, then back to bed.

The first several attacks scared the living crap out of me! I was quick to jump up and dash down the hall and into the bunker. But as time went on, I grew somewhat accustomed to sound and was slower to respond. I recall the last two times, someone actually had to come back in and wake me to get me up for my dash to safety.

TBC

 

 

 


03/23/26 05:07 PM #17017    

 

David Mitchell

MORTAR ATTACKS - A Regular "Visitor" - conclusion

* I have edited out a portion that would not be suitable here. We once had a serious injury

 

On another of those occasions when they were aiming at the supply yard next to our hooch, we suffered no casualties, but we lost a valued member of the "Scout family".

 

There was a space outside our back door where we sometimes gathered in the evenings to relax  and chat outside. When we returned from our mission one day, we were blessed to find three ducks strutting around in this outdoor space. We fed them food crumbs and played with them. To our surprise and delight, they stayed - at least for a while.

We created a small space just for them. We were able to salvage one half of a barrel shaped “shipping cannisters" (from one of our little "Allison" Loach engines). We sunk that into the ground and filled it with about fifteen inches of water. We also replanted a small nipa-palm tree - maybe five feet tall and propped a large wooden box on its side for shelter from the rain. And someone managed to "requisition" (stole) some small sections of very short garden fencing - supposedly from in front of the Officers Club. I never did find out who did that. We used the fencing to enclose the entire "complex" making about a six by-six-foot "home".

Two of the ducks left in a few days but one of them stayed and stayed - maybe a month or two. We named him "Choy". "Choy Duc" in Vietnamese means something like "Goddammit." Weren't we clever? We fed him and held him and played with him every day when we came back off the flight line.

But on one of those mortar attacks - the ones dropping on that supply yard – Choy decided to relocate to a safer neighborhood. We never saw him again.

We were distraught!

                     You can see three ducks just inside the fence at right.


03/24/26 03:34 AM #17018    

 

Michael McLeod

You guys had a lot more to beware of than ducks, dave.

I appreciate your discretion when it comes to relating the things you had to deal with in the service -- and count my lucky stars that I lucked out and wound up with a desk job for the duration. Scariest duty I ever had was cleaning the latrines.

 

 


03/24/26 05:17 PM #17019    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Hmmmmm...

Something to think about as we consider moving back to the Buckeye State in the future:

 

 

🤔😀, 

Jim


03/24/26 08:04 PM #17020    

 

Michael McLeod

you really thinking of going home, jim? I've entertained that notion myself.


03/25/26 11:57 AM #17021    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike McL

Yes, we are probably going to be back to Ohio as that will be best for us as we approach our eighties. Janet's family is quite large and will be more able to help us if ever needed. Even though the thought of such a move is daunting it will probably be the best option.

Jim

 


03/25/26 01:57 PM #17022    

 

Michael McLeod

I'm kinda jealous of you moving back home Jim.

Florida has a lot of great newspapers and I've had a good career down here at two of them and yes the sunny weather is generally delightful although the simmer of summer sucks. It's like the worst Columbus August I can remember, extended for four months as sweaty summer swelter holds forth every year smack in Florida's belly button mid state.

That's a longwinded way of saying: I'm jealous. 

Sure you gotta slog through the winter in ohio but I sure miss spring and fall up there as opposed to the sweat and swelter that comes on too fast and lingers too long down here where the seasons, it seems to me, just kinda merge into a stew instead of having distinct flavors, individual identities. I swear in many ways I can't tell one from another sometimes. Miss the crisp smell that falling leaves and the first snow of winter use to announce their respective arrivals and individual personalities. 

Yeah I am grateful to dodge bitter winter but -- it has been a trade-off. Miss the the distinct variation of seasons up north. The first snow. The smell of falling leaves. The gratitude of the warmth that spring slowly ushers in. How great the sun of summer feels on your skin. You feel redeemed.The season down here just kinda blend together. Up north each one felt different, there is newness in the air when they arrive, a curtain is pulled back and there's a new show on stage to enjoy. Florida just feels same old same old to me. 

ok forgive me for getting sentimental and wordy but hey: It's spring. 80 degrees and rain on the way in Orlando. I don't want to sound ungrateful. I got a pool out back and the water's just right. If I moved back home I'd be a grump once winter weather came along. And hell no I'm not coming back. Just being sentimental for the moment. And I wish you and yours well, Jim.

 


03/25/26 09:42 PM #17023    

 

John Jackson

The news today is that Trump has presented Iran with a peace plan.  If the Iranians accept it (which they said today they would not), Trump will stop the attacks and all will be well.  The sad thing is that Trump’s current demands were largely agreed to by Iran in 2015 when they accepted the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action that the Obama Administration negotiated.  This agreement wasn’t perfect and didn’t give the U.S. all it wanted (sometimes you have to choose between the good and the unattainable perfect), but Iran agreed to get rid of most of its nuclear material and agreed to limit enrichment of any material it retained to a level far below what is required for nuclear weapons. Iran also agreed to regular inspections  to make sure they didn’t cheat.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran_nuclear_deal

But Trump, in his infinite wisdom, tore up the agreement in 2017 and Iran proceeded to move forward with its nuclear ambitions.  So today we are waging what should have been an unnecessary war that has resulted in the deaths of 13 U.S. service members (and how many more once we put boots on the ground as seems likely), is costing the U. S. $1.5 billion per day,  and has raised the price of gas by a dollar a gallon (if we're lucky).  All because Trump wanted to play the tough guy in 2017 and has now allowed Israel to goad him into a war that only Israel really wanted.

Heck of a job Donald!

But, as usual, the Borowitz Report says it far more eloquently than I ever could:

Trump Says Intelligence Played No Role in His Decision to Start War

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Confirming the suspicions of many in the international community, on Monday Donald J. Trump revealed that intelligence played “no role” in his decision to go to war with Iran.

“People keep asking me about intelligence,” he told reporters on Air Force One. “I made this call with no intelligence whatsoever.”

“Quite frankly, every decision I’ve ever made in my life I’ve made without intelligence,” he boasted. “Intelligence is for losers.”

Trump added that “I don’t trust people who have intelligence, which is why I love Pete.”


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