Message Forum

Welcome to the Watterson High School Message Forum.

The message forum is an ongoing dialogue between classmates. There are no items, topics, subtopics, etc.

Forums work when people participate - so don't be bashful! Click the "Post Message" button to add your entry to the forum.


 
go to bottom 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  

11/01/25 10:44 AM #16472    

 

Michael Boulware

Monica, Let me throw this out. Lets meet at the Kingsdale First Watch on Thursday morning, November 13,, at 9 o'clock. This is just a proposal. If it works; I will be there. Everyone that wants to be involved, please join us or suggest a different time.


11/01/25 12:11 PM #16473    

 

Michael McLeod

Your trick or treater looks way too old to be out hustling for treats, Jim. On the other hand I can't fault them for the costume.  Looks for all the world like a real bear.


11/01/25 12:47 PM #16474    

 

Monica Haban (Brown)

 

Mike Boulware- my calendar is marked, will be there.

How many seats shall we save?

If the reunion is at Watterson, we need to reserve the Old Gym for a 30 minute kick boxing class with John Jackson ( could swear he was our class president.... ). He must attend this reunion.  His wife is my cousin Julie Castrop's best friend, and the latter can stay with us. 😍

Gathering Eagles!  🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅

 

 


11/01/25 10:31 PM #16475    

 

Daniel Cody

Janie I along with 6-7 members of WHS went to St. Charles for College Seminary from 66- the closing of the College in 1969.  8 years St Michael, 4 years WHS. They called the Quanset hut St. GI. ?


11/01/25 10:37 PM #16476    

 

Daniel Cody

Oops Janie!  I took your "Dan reference" as personal and saw in a prior post it was meant for Dan Browh. My apologies 


11/02/25 08:34 AM #16477    

 

Michael McLeod

Dan: You're such a twit.

Yeah i said it. Come down here to sunny Fla and I'll say it to your face.

LOL.

I'm serious about the come down here invite tho.

In all seriousness hope you are doing great.


11/02/25 02:46 PM #16478    

 

Michael McLeod

Joe: Thanks for the history lesson about mr 5 by 5 - as in that nickname going back to a humorous song.

I think I have that right but feel free to correct me if I am wrong.

All I will say is this: Ihave a memory of father crosser actually seeming to like his nickname.

or at least being cognizant of it and good natured about it.

he said as much during a conversation.

 

 


11/02/25 06:16 PM #16479    

 

Michael Boulware

Monica, Let's wait a couple of days before we get a table so we can get an idea how many planners we are going to have. If anyone is going to join us, please let us know.

First Watch in Kingsdale Shopping Center, 9 o' clock, November 13 for anyone that wants to help us plan a 60th reunion.


11/02/25 10:46 PM #16480    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

This past year has brought the loss of many beloved classmates and friends. On this All Souls’ Day, when Catholics pause to pray for and remember the departed—and as it also marks the 14th anniversary of Crick’s passing—I felt moved to share this article.

Editor’s Note: This is the final in a multi-part series on the unsung heroes of Christendom.]

As we come to the end of this series, there is time for one final song for the unsung, a sort of swan song, a final elegy and eulogy for those unknown heroes and heroines whose passing from this life went unheeded and unheralded but who have been sung to their rest by ministering angels. Whereas those who have been the focus of the previous essays have all left their mark on history in the sense that their names are known to posterity, albeit not as well-known as they should be, this final song will be of the nameless ones, the vast majority of humankind, whose names have been completely erased from the historical record. 

The nameless ones are those whose names are no longer legible on the weather-worn tombstones that mark their resting place. They lived, to be sure; they loved and were loved, we can assume; they might have had children who also had children of their own, and whose children’s children are oblivious of their ever having lived. Their sins are forgotten as are their virtues. 

These nameless and unrecorded ones remind us that history comes in two forms. There is recorded history, which is documented and written about and studied, and there is unrecorded history, which is all that has ever happened in the past, known and unknown, documented and undocumented. The former is miniscule in relation to the latter, the mere tip of the historical iceberg. 

 
These hidden heroes of Christendom, these nameless ones, are the saints who are known to God, if unknown to us. They are those who are forgiven by Him, if forgotten by us, who now enjoy His eternal Presence in Heaven. Having been good and faithful servants and soldiers in the Church Militant, they now enjoy their triumph in the Church Triumphant.    

Who are they?

They are those who suffered for the Faith in times of persecution. They are the martyrs of the Early Church, who are not listed with the saints because their names are not known. They are those who hid priests during the Tudor Terror in England, putting their lives at risk, or those imprisoned or forced into exile because they would not abandon their faith. 

They are the victims of plagues and the victims of war, whose lives were cut tragically short. They are those killed by guillotine, gulag, and gas chamber; and those incinerated by the bombs of blitzkrieged London, carpet-bombed Dresden, and atomic-bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki.          

 
And then there are those humble souls who lived quiet uneventful lives in relatively quiet and uneventful times. They are the simple laborers in the vineyard, the sowers of seeds, the shepherds, and the craftsmen. They are the meek who inherited nothing but the earth in which they were laid. 

Perhaps these musings on unsung heroes should conclude with a brief meditation on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery, the burial site of a World War I soldier whose remains were unidentifiable. It is right and just (dignum et justum est) that Caesar should honor the unknown warrior in this way; but it is much more right and just that Christ should honor those unknown heroes who have fought the good fight through so many centuries. 

If Christ so honors these humble souls by raising them from the tomb into His Kingdom in Heaven, it is surely incumbent upon us to honor them also. In doing so, and in doing what they did, we might hope to be where they are. Through their prayers and by the grace of God, we might hope to join the unsung heroes of Christendom in the song of songs that never ends.

 
 

11/03/25 08:24 AM #16481    

 

Nina Osborn (Rossi)

I will be at First Watch!!!


11/03/25 08:25 AM #16482    

 

Nina Osborn (Rossi)

I will be at First Watch!!!


11/03/25 12:04 PM #16483    

 

Michael McLeod

wish I could be there!!!!!


11/03/25 12:28 PM #16484    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

I'll second Mike.  I wish I could be there but circumstances won't allow it.


11/03/25 11:51 PM #16485    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Sounds like that, with all you who are familiar with the right spots in Columbus to have a 60th reunion, it will be an event to surely remember.

As our class does decrease in numbers it will hopefully bring the remaining members closer together and perhaps urge more to participate in this Forum. 

Yes, we have many areas of disagreement among us but we also have much in common, lots of which is yet to be discovered. So let's try to discover some of those areas as we enter our very senior years.

Jim

 


11/04/25 03:39 AM #16486    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Flexibility 

As many of you have probably undergone surgical procedures, you know that surgery - like life itself - often involves gains and losses. My neurospinal procedure was performed primarily to alleviate pain in my legs. So far it appears to have been 100 percent successful.

But just as is life, there are trade-offs and I figured that my range of motion might be impaired due to some fusing of the lumber vertebral bodies. This will most likely be minimal due to the levels that are involved and, at our age, should not be very life style altering. 

Now, if I were a mule deer and my neck needed fusing, that could be a major problem:

Jim

 

 


11/04/25 11:59 AM #16487    

 

Janie Albright (Blank)

Mike, I will plan to be at First Watch. Thanks for taking the bull by the horns. I've been very ambivalent since my partner in crime is no longer with us crying but I know she would expect us to carry on. 


11/04/25 12:05 PM #16488    

 

Janie Albright (Blank)

Jim, glad you have no leg pain! Wonderful. Pick out a lovely fall picture from your collection and I will post it on the home page, por favor. 

Maybe if we give out free drink tickets for the 60th for anyone who hasn't posted on the forum in the last 3 months we might get some more participants. I know lots of lurkers out there tune in regularly. wink
 

 


11/04/25 01:08 PM #16489    

 

David Mitchell

Born in the Wrong Century?

Maybe one of you can help a feeble minded old guy out.

I never did learn how to progam my VCR.

And I don't understand Bit Coin.

But for Pete's sake can someone please explain to me what in hell the Kardasians are famous for? 


11/05/25 07:30 AM #16490    

 

Michael Boulware

So far we have Monica, Janie, Nina, and me meeting at First Watch on Thursday , November 13 at 9 AM. Janie, bring your ideas, noone expects you to do anymore. You have gven so much of yourself already and your efforts are greatly appreciated. I think we have the backbone of a good team to get things started.

We have to establish if there is enough interest in a 60th reunion to have one,where we can have it, and when we can have it. 


11/05/25 02:00 PM #16491    

 

Michael Boulware

Brian McNamara made our planning team stronger; he will be at breakfast.


11/05/25 02:22 PM #16492    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

The Night America Chose Chaos Over Clarity 


The verdict is in—and it’s ugly. Democrats didn’t just win; they ran the table. But these aren’t your mom and pop’s Democrats—the blue-collar workers who believed in God, family, and the dignity of hard work. No, last night’s victors are the radical heirs of a political faith that worships grievance, deconstruction, and power at all costs.

In New York City, an Islamic radical—who openly fantasizes about wiping Jews off the map, confiscating private property, and “socializing groceries”—won by a majority of votes. Think about that. In the greatest city in the world, a metropolis that once symbolized American aspiration and pluralism, a man who despises the very foundations of the Republic now speaks for its citizens. A city where 160 languages are spoken has become less American, more resentful, and disturbingly anti-American. Bill de Blasio and Eric Adams may have failed the city, but this new era is something worse—it’s a rebellion against the idea of America itself.

In Virginia, the story grows darker. The new chief law enforcement officer—tasked with defending the innocent and upholding justice—once mused online about “putting bullets in the brains” of his political opponents, murdering their children, and desecrating their graves. And yet, he is now the face of “justice” in the Old Dominion. Evil doesn’t even bother hiding anymore; it campaigns on Twitter, smirks on debate stages, and collects votes with pride.

Across the river in New Jersey, the machine did what machines do—cheated, bullied, and crushed. Jack Ciattarelli, the man who nearly toppled the corrupt edifice last time, was defeated not by superior ideas but by a system that learned its lesson. They brought out the old playbook: phantom ballots, mysteriously missing precincts, and late-night “adjustments.” The result? A buffoonish Democrat who can barely string together coherent thoughts is now the new governor. Congratulations, New Jersey—you just rewarded incompetence and dishonesty in the same breath.

And then there’s California—the laboratory of leftist decay. Its voters passed a gerrymandering plan that will lock in one-party rule, cripple its already failing economy, and accelerate the great exodus of normal, sane Americans fleeing for freer soil. It’s like watching a once-beautiful mansion rot in real time while its owners toast the termites for their hard work.

If you squint hard enough, it almost feels biblical—and that’s because it is. The Apostle Paul wrote to Timothy about a time when “people will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive… lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God.” (2 Timothy 3) Sound familiar? We are living in that time. A moment when the moral compass is so inverted that people celebrate what destroys them and mock what could save them. They think they are choosing love, equity, and justice—but in truth, they’re embracing hatred, chaos, and bondage.

Yet Paul didn’t just diagnose the darkness; he offered a prescription. He told Timothy to remember the truth—the real truth, not the shifting, social-media-approved nonsense of the day. Truth that is anchored in God’s Word, not feelings. Truth that doesn’t bend to trends or polls. Truth that defines good and evil, light and darkness, man and woman, life and death. That truth, Paul reminds us, is “God-breathed and useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness.”

And then came the charge—one that echoes louder tonight than ever before: “Preach the Word; be ready in season and out of season.” Translation? Stay faithful when it’s easy—and when it’s not. Speak truth when the world listens—and when it mocks you for doing so. If the lights go out, be the candle. If the mob drowns out reason, whisper wisdom into the chaos. That’s our call. That’s our duty.

Because as tempting as despair feels, believers don’t get to surrender. We don’t get to pack up and retreat to the hills. This moment—this humiliating, heartbreaking, gut-wrenching moment—is when real courage is born. God doesn’t call us to win elections; He calls us to be faithful witnesses. To hold fast the line of truth, even when the votes go the other way.

So what now? We remember what’s eternal. We re-anchor our lives and families in the only foundation that can’t be shaken. And we preach—not politics, but purpose; not partisanship, but the Person of Jesus Christ. The same Christ who told us we’d have tribulation, and who promised that He has overcome the world.

The late-night pundits will spin the data. Pollsters will pretend they understand what went wrong. Consultants will whisper about strategy, messaging, and turnout. But the truth is simpler—and far more sobering. America isn’t suffering from bad politics; we’re suffering from bad theology. We’ve traded in the Author of truth for the authors of confusion. We’ve chosen to call evil good, and good evil—and the ballots simply reflected that choice.

So tonight, don’t curse the darkness. Light a match. Don’t wring your hands—fold them in prayer. Don’t rage at your neighbor; invite them to know the One who still redeems broken people and nations alike.

Because one day, the ballots won’t matter. The headlines will fade. But truth will remain. And when it does, may it be said of us that when our culture lost its mind, we didn’t lose our mission.

That’s our profound observation for this hour—and our challenge:

When a nation forgets God, remember Him all the more.

When truth is mocked, speak it louder.

And when darkness wins the night, live so brightly that morning has no choice but to rise.


11/05/25 08:27 PM #16493    

 

David Mitchell

 

 

 

Fulll moon and absolute calm water off my dock tonight and t can't seem to post the photo




11/05/25 10:01 PM #16494    

 

John Jackson

Trump Flees to Argentina

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Stating, “I can see where this is going,” on Wednesday Donald J. Trump fled to Argentina, vowing never to return.

Speaking bitterly to reporters as he departed the White House, Trump said, “You take away people’s food, throw yourself a Great Gatsby party, and tear down the White House, and this is the thanks you get.”

Trump had hoped to leave the US on the luxury 747 given him by the Emir of Qatar, but once Tuesday’s election results became clear the Arab ruler swiftly withdrew the gift.

In a tersely worded statement, the Emir declared, “Fly coach, loser.”

In Buenos Aires, Trump was greeted by an angry anti-immigrant mob.


11/06/25 09:44 AM #16495    

 

John Jackson


11/06/25 11:26 AM #16496    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Fact:  the federal government is over $38 trillion in debt (that's over $111,000 for every American), and it's getting worse. 12% of Americans receive SNAP benefits. 

Isn't beyond time to heed the words of those of those who have gone before us?

"Any measure that establishes legal charity on a permanent basis and gives it an administrative form thereby creates an idle and lazy class, living at the expense of the industrial and working class." Alexis de Tocqueville 

Our Founding Fathers tried to prevent this from happening. James Madison wrote the following: "Charity is no part of the legislative duty of the government...I cannot undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which granted a right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of their constituents."

History books are filled with the devastation a welfare state will bring to a nation...here is another quote from an 18th century Scottish historian:  "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship."


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page