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01/05/26 09:45 PM #16726    

 

Michael McLeod

Sorry you had that crappy experience dave. I lucked out and had a different soldier's holiday. this time of year I always remember that one of my favorite Christmas seasons was spent a loooong way from home: specifically, in mannheim,germany. Unlike you I had lucked out and instead of going to 'nam was sent to europe to work as a clerk and courier and office worker in the US section of a massive nato headquarters office complex, delivering mail. I worked shoulder to shoulder with french, german, and canadian soldiers and lived off base with my wife in a basement apartment rented out us by frau baron and herr baron, a very nice couple who didn't speak a word of english and lived in the house above us with their three children., We were close enough that I could walk to work at the nato headquarters complex, which featured canadians, french, german, u.s., and british army offices, that I could walk to work and a fairly cushy job as a clerk typist and courier. Was there for a year and a half and had picked up enough German to muddle through by the time my tour of duty was over. Anyway I'll never forget the big christmas gala at the base where we got to listen to christmas carols in english, french,and german.

Man,did I luck out. 


01/06/26 09:08 AM #16727    

 

Michael McLeod

Meanwhile:

Apparently Venezuela is Spanish for  "hot mess."

I have a headache just from trying to figure the whole thing out.


01/06/26 09:43 AM #16728    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

As today is Crick’s birthday, I created a short iMovie sharing personal remembrances of the life we shared. The accompanying song carries the longing that still remains after years without him—a reminder that abiding love does not fade with time, and one that may resonate with classmates who have also experienced love and loss.

https://youtu.be/o1IOVnh1wlE?si=Fqg_RubVjnQD_guC

 

01/06/26 09:54 AM #16729    

Joseph Gentilini

Mary Magaret, I listened to your love with Crick and was so touched.  What a wonderful marriage you had - something that many persons never find. Love endures always.  I am glad that you were able to experience true love for such a long time. This was and is grace in your life.  Crick waits for you with longing from heaven.  Peace, joe


01/06/26 12:38 PM #16730    

 

David Mitchell

Great video M/M,

May I ask the song title and singer?


01/06/26 02:52 PM #16731    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Dave - song title: September Rain.....artist: Aiden Ross, 20 year old recent winner of The Voice. 


01/06/26 03:42 PM #16732    

 

David Mitchell

M/M,

He's really good!


01/06/26 09:19 PM #16733    

 

John Jackson

Late breaking news from the Borowitz Report:

George W. Bush Celebrates No Longer Having Launched Dumbest War in U.S. History

CRAWFORD, TEXAS (The Borowitz Report)—Stating, “I never dreamed this day would come,” former President George W. Bush confirmed on Tuesday that he is celebrating no longer having started the dumbest war in U.S. history.

“When you make a boneheaded mistake as epic as I did, you pretty much assume that no one will ever do something stupider,” Bush said. “I gotta say, I’m pinching myself.”

The former president admitted, however, that “if anyone was going to out-dumb me, it was gonna be this guy.”


01/06/26 11:11 PM #16734    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Last week I purchased a new Desktop computer,  Yes Mr. Dave it is a Hewlitt Packard.  Today, Tuesday> I took it in to have it set up, and I took my Old computeralso.  Then they are going to transfer date from the old to the new desktop.  I guess it was time, I've had the old computer for about 14 years.

Anyway, It took me awhile to figure how to scan something to the new, bought late last year, notebook.  Finally,

One of our classmates asked me very politely if I could place on the Forum a list of upcoming Automotive shows in Ohio.

 


01/07/26 03:04 AM #16735    

 

Mark Schweickart

MM -- I was thinking that it was Crick's birthday today, but wasn't sure. Why I remember that is a mystery, since my memory is terrible these days, but thanks for mentioning that in your post. Happy birthday Crick! RIP. 


01/07/26 09:15 AM #16736    

 

Michael McLeod

happy birthday to the guy with the coolest nickname in the class, I also just sent a virtual hug to  you, mm.


01/07/26 03:35 PM #16737    

Joseph Gentilini

John J - thanks for the link and Bush's response to Trump. I wish he had come out against him when he was running for president. There have to be more republicans politicians who see what damage DT is doing to our country and the world, but they keep silent. Many politicians and citizens didn't stand up to Adolph in the 30s and it is happening today all over again. We are headed for a world war and the possible destruction of our country and the world.  Thanks for helping us to remain sane.  joe


01/07/26 04:57 PM #16738    

 

David Mitchell

I hope you are all sittng down when you read this.

I am about to shock you all by admitting that I AGREE with something president Donald J Trump is proposing.

I see a news aticle today where he is proposing that large corporations and "private equity groups" such as Blackstone should not be allowed to buy single family houses. AAAAAAAMEN!

I could not agree more!

It has become harder and harder for young couples to afford a house. There are other underlying reasons that have been contributing to the problem for years, but this is one flagrant mis-use of home ownership.

 

 


01/07/26 05:01 PM #16739    

 

David Mitchell

This is fun!

I just found this and wish I had seen it last week.




01/07/26 06:36 PM #16740    

 

David Mitchell

REMEMBERING A STRANGE CHRISTMAS -  conclusion

When I got back home from Colorado, I had one thing (or person) on my mind – that cute chick - Mary.  I could not wait to see her and called her immediately. I had less than a week at home and I think we went out all of those four or five nights. But my thirty-day clock was ticking. I realized my parents were not that excited to see me gone for nine days, and I could not help thinking that this special time was slipping away from me. Two things were working on me – I was running out of time, and I was falling head over heels in love. 

Mary and I had a wonderful last few nights, but at the same time, a fear of going back was starting to overcome me. I started having some more mild panic attacks. My dad finally asked me, “Don’t you have a date certain for your return?” I told him it was not that precise – that it was flexible.

I was lying through my teeth! And I was completely overwhelmed with fear.

I actually stayed a few days past my deadline, but finally out of fear of the consequences, I asked Mom and Dad to take me to the airport. I packed my bag, put on my uniform, grabbed my “orders” envelope, and got in the car. At the airport I kissed Mary and my Mom goodbye, shook Dad’s hand and boarded my flight for San Francisco. God only knows how nervoud I was!

I arrived in San Franciso and got a military bus for Travis AFB. I spent no time in San Francisco this time. I wasn’t required to wait for my connections at the Oakland Naval Yard. It was just straight to Travis, and I entered the terminal ready to board a flight.

But there was an issue.

As I stood at the travel desk, the young Air Force enlisted man working the desk seemed puzzled by my orders. He said something to the effect that I was overdue and walked back into the small office behind the counter. I could hear him talking to a young Captain. They were having a conversation about my being late. They were questioning whether to call the MPs and have me arrested for being AWOL (Absent WithOut Leave – a really serious matter in the military).  I started to panic! 

They both came back out of the office and the captain spoke. “Mr. Mitchell, your orders are for two days ago. You are technically AWOL. “

Then I did something I had never done (before or since). I gestured with my right hand across my chest and pointed to my commendations (we called it “fruit salad”). I said “Look guys, I have been through hell and I’m willing to go back. They need me back there and I’m here now, so just put me in a seat and I’ll be on my way.”

They both walked back into the little office and had a bit more conversation. Then the captain came back out, made two quick stamps on a ticket and said, “Have a good flight.”

 

    I think the photo was not neccesary with the story


 


01/07/26 07:29 PM #16741    

 

Michael McLeod

Been going over my old clips, compiling a keepsake for my kids. 

 As a feature writer I interviewed hundreds of interesting people, many of them bigshots and celebrities, but I only fell madly in love with one.

Here she is.She's been gone for many years now but I'll never forget her. Wish I could have walked into  a reunion with her on my arm as a guest of honor. Yes. I admit it. I had a crush on her. Can you blame me? 

In all honesty, out of all the stories I wrote as a journalist over half a century of meeting deadlines, if you asked me to pick one story that came straight from my heart,it's this one.

This ran in the Orlando Sentinel

 

 

Goodbye, Gorgeous

Harriett Lake had style. But that was the least of it.
July 16, 2018 

Over the past few years, as she grew older and finally became housebound, I would call Harriett Lake every now and then, having gradually shifted from somebody who just wrote about her into somebody who, like so many, just flat-out loved her. I always got a kick out of how she’d say goodbye.  No matter what we had talked about, people or politics, my problems or hers, or how lousy she might have felt, she’d always chirp, at the end of the conversation: See ya!

   It wasn’t so much the words themselves. It was how she said them. No: how she sang them, sang them from the middle of that self-generated, no-matter-what, sun’ll-come-up-tomorrow spotlight that had been emanating from her, as far as I could tell, since her childhood in Depression-era Lebanon, Pa. She was the eldest of seven children, charged with caring for the little ones. Nicknamed Skeezix by her father, after a comic-strip character who was left on a doorstep as a baby, and as the only brunette among blondes, she came to see herself as the ugly duckling of the family, and decided she’d have to try harder to get people to notice her and to make her mark in the world.

Well. Did she. Did she ever.

 

Harriett Lake, who died at the age of 96 last week, was buried on Friday at Ohev Shalom Cemetery, with Rabbi Aaron Rubinger presiding and roughly a hundred close friends and relatives in attendance.

A flag was draped over her casket, and two uniformed Marines were there to pay tribute. But of course they were. She had served in World War II, doing everything from peeling potatoes in pre-dawn darkness to processing paperwork for soldiers being sent overseas, rising to the rank of sergeant—and making the most of her olive drab uniform by having a tailor duplicate it in better wool.

So a bugler played taps for her. But a violinist—Orlando’s preeminent violinist—was also present: Rimma Bergeron-Langlois, concertmaster for the Orlando Philharmonic Orchestra, was there to play the theme song from Schindler’s  List.  But of course she was. Harriett Lake deserved tribute from that corner for being the most generous and wide-ranging patron of the arts Central Florida has ever seen, an avocation she took on when she and her husband, developer Hy Lake, moved from South Florida to Orlando in the 1970s. It was one she continued, singlehandedly, after his death in 2010, pouring tens of millions of dollars into cultural coffers, writing check after check from the kitchen table of her home to virtually every performing and visual arts troupe in town.

Many of the women at the funeral wore hats, clothing, jewelry or other accessories that once belonged to Harriett. But of course they did. Harriett was a clotheshorse—no, a clothes stampede. High-end flamboyance was her trademark—say, purple feathers and a matching, faux fur collar, with a Chanel scarf, perhaps, and one of the jewel-encrusted Judith Leiber handbags she loved so dearly. Over the years she accumulated a cornucopia of vintage ensembles, her Longwood home so jam-packed with Valentinos, Escadas, Dolce & Gabanas and Adrienne Landaus that she had a professional tailoring-shop conveyor system installed just to keep track of them.

Two years ago, she moved it all out to a warehouse and had everything sold off for charity.  Chances are you’ll have Harriett Lake to thank, in part, for the roof over your head the next time you attend a cultural event—say, a performance in the new home being built for the Orlando Ballet in Loch Haven Park, funded in part by her last major donation of $5 million. It’s also quite possible she’ll have had a hand in outfitting several of the ladies in the crowd.

 
 

But it’s not the stuff she gave us that’s important. It’s the stuff she was made of. When Rabbi Rubinger spoke, he keyed his remarks to a Hanukkah song that celebrates the heroes who arise, who are needed to arise, in every generation. I think it was his way of wondering how someone like Harriett Lake, who always liked to refer to herself as “a tough old broad,” can ever be replaced.

Good question. It reminded me of something she once said to me: “I can’t die. Too many people depend on me.”

After all the speakers paying tribute had finished their remarks, the mourners walked a few yards away to the gravesite. Some took a turn at the shovel to sift the dirt from a mound beside the grave onto the coffin. Rabbi Rubinger explained a tradition: If you wish to, you can flip the blade of the shovel around, spooning in the dirt upside down as a kind of mute protest against doing something you wish you didn’t have to do.

I have my own, private, more or less spontaneous traditions at a funeral. Once, twice, maybe more, I fix my attention on the one who is gone and whisper goodbye. And so last week, as people were still filtering into the enclosure, I walked up to the casket, squeezed a corner of the flag draped over it between my thumb and my forefinger, then leaned over and whispered: “Goodbye, Gorgeous.”

That was one of her words. That was what she always called people: gorgeous. Of course I couldn’t say it as well as she did. Somebody at the funeral remembered that the way she said it always reminded them of Barbra Streisand.

 
 

I didn’t think of it at the time, but I wish I had said goodbye in another way, too. I guess I can just say it now:

See ya, Harriett.

I should be so lucky.

 


01/07/26 08:01 PM #16742    

 

Michael McLeod

Damn, Dave. It's true what they say about how irresistible a man in uniform can be.

Call me any time big boy


01/07/26 09:42 PM #16743    

 

John Jackson

Dave, I couldn't agree more that private equity shouldn't be allowed to buy single family homes.  They're also buying medical practices left and right and operating them for maximum profit and that's really bad. 

Trump says he's against it now (although I kind of doubt he even understands the whole situation) but wait until Blackstone and others buy into the Trump family crypto-currency business and I'm sure he'll change his tune.


01/08/26 12:06 PM #16744    

 

David Mitchell

John, 

I'm glad youu mentioned that. And there are other entities these "Private Equities" are buying up. And driving poeple out of the market for lack of affordability.

 

--------------------

 

Meanwhile, Vance calls criticism of Minneapolis ICE shooting 'preposterous'.

I call Vance preposterous!


01/08/26 07:35 PM #16745    

 

David Mitchell

It's dark out. Driving up a street in old Bluffton I see people eating at outdoor restaurants in short sleeves.

Eat your (northern) hearts out.


01/08/26 08:16 PM #16746    

Patricia Fagan (Motil)

Mary Margaret, the video you posted was so touching.  Thank you for sharing!  I used to go to breakfast on Saturday mornings at Friendly's when Jim was the manager.  We always had a great time!  Everyone misses him!  


01/09/26 10:49 AM #16747    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Thank you to Patty, Dave, Joe, Mike, Mark for your kind remembrances of Crick on his birthday.

 

 


01/10/26 10:06 AM #16748    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

A few months ago, I posted a request for prayers for my daughter & son-in-law who were in a custody struggle for the right to adopt Ray, the child they have fostered since his birth 3 years ago. On Thursday, he officially became my adopted grandson. For those who offered any prayers on my family's behalf, I want you to thank you and share with you how your prayers have been answered. 

January 11, 2026 SANCTITY OF HUMAN LIFE

CATHOLIC TIMES 7
Foster mother wants to help ease concerns about process
daughter all have been actively involved
By Tim Puet
For The Catholic Times
in the lives of 5-year-old Gianna, 3-year-
old Ray and the other children for whom
the family has cared.
“Be not afraid!”
It’s a phrase used often in Scripture.
Jesus said it to his disciples when He ap-
proached them walking on water. It’s as-
sociated with every appearance of an an-
gel in the Old and New Testaments. It also
was used often by Pope St. John Paul II.
It’s the same message Stephanie Baird
and a ministry with which she is associ-
ated, Springs of Love, have for prospective
foster parents.
Baird has been a foster parent of four
children for extended periods, has adopt-
ed one of them and was scheduled to com-
plete the adoption process for a second on
Thursday, Jan. 8. She has been involved
with Springs of Love for several years and
is starting a chapter of the organization at
her parish, Columbus Immaculate Con-
ception.
“I’ve talked to many couples about fos-
tering and there’s understandably a lot
of concern about the process because it’s
not simple and there can be a lot of bar-
riers to overcome,” Baird said. “Springs of
Love helps people discern not to be afraid
of the process and helps them feel more
comfortable with the whole idea.
“I’m not sure that I’ve helped any other
couples become foster parents, but I’ve
heard indications that this is what hap-
pened in a couple of cases. I also know of
many people who have at least been in-
spired to do more about looking into being
foster parents through Springs of Love.
“The familiar saying is that ‘it takes a
village to raise a child’ and I’ve certainly
found that to be true in our own case. Be-
ing a foster parent has impacted a whole
community of people who have been in-
volved with my foster daughter Gianna
and Ray, who is about to become my foster
son.
“They’ve followed the paths of all the
children I’ve had in foster care to see
where those paths have led. The result has
been a lot of unexpected joy for us and for
them because we’ve been willing to see
where the journey takes us.”
Baird; her husband, Joe; their 21- and
18-year-old sons and their 15-year-old
“This has helped the older children
understand the struggles so many fami-
lies face,” she said. “And it’s brought so
many blessings to our family. It’s opened
our hearts to help many people who need
hope. I just hope they feel some sort of im-
pact from our care.”
Besides the four children the Bairds
have hosted for extended periods, they’ve
cared for several others for two days to
two weeks or more to give other foster
parents a respite.
Baird said she became a foster parent
through her work as a labor and delivery
nurse. She now is a care coordinator in a
clinic for pregnant young women at Na-
tionwide Children’s Hospital.
“I’d see what would happen to children
born to mothers addicted to drugs and
knew they probably would go into foster
care while their mothers were in rehabili-
tation,” she said. “The moms in many of
those cases don’t make it through rehab,
so they can get their children back.
“I was involved in pro-life activities and
realized being a foster parent would be a
way to put my pro-life beliefs into action,
to practice what I’ve been preaching.”
She said her husband had doubts about
the idea but got on board after attending a
training class with her and seeing a docu-
mentary about foster care.
Both took classes to become foster par-
ents at the Bair Foundation in suburban
Dayton. They also completed a home
study, submitted references and back-
ground checks, had their home inspected
for fire hazards and other safety issues
and went through 24 hours of pre-place-
ment training.
Their first placement was a boy named
Deon, who stayed with them for a year
before being adopted by a member of his
family. They have stayed in touch with the
adoptive mother and are Deon’s godpar-
ents.
He was baptized at the same time as Gi-
anna, whom they adopted at birth and is
now in preschool. “She’s smart, energetic,
is meeting all her growth goals and will be
playing soccer in the fall. And she loves
The Baird family
Ray,” Baird said.
“Ray’s a great little guy who has thrived
under our care,” she said. “There was one
point where I thought he was going to be
removed and placed with a different fam-
ily, but that decision was reversed. I can’t
explain why that change happened, but
it came on the day of my mother-in-law’s
death, so maybe it’s a sign.
“Many prayers have been said on his be-
half. Through our involvement in foster
care, I’ve seen what I consider to be many
miracles occurring through families be-
ing strengthened and friendships being
made.”
On its website, Springs of Love, the
organization the Bairds are starting at
Immaculate Conception, describes its
mission as “to rise up more Catholic fos-
ter and adoptive families and to support
those touched by fostering and adoption
through educational programming, small
groups and parish care teams.”
It’s based in Mount Vernon and was
founded by foster and adoptive parents
Greg and Kimberly Henkel of Mount Ver-
non St. Vincent de Paul Church. It’s a sis-
ter organization of Springs in the Desert,
an apostolate that accompanies parents
struggling with infertility. The two com-
bine to raise awareness of the need for
loving families for the more than 400,000
children in foster care and countless chil-
dren in need around the world.
Critical to the mission of Springs of Love
is establishing care teams in parishes who
will provide for the material needs of chil-
dren in care, offer wrap-around support
to foster families (including prayer, meals,
child care, rides and mentoring), host fos-
ter and adoption awareness events and
inspire more Catholics to consider foster-
ing and adopting. According to Springs
of Love, the 50 percent retention rate for
fostering families increases to 90 percent
when they are supported by a care team.
In April, Baird said she will be present-
ing a Springs of Love video series titled
“Building and Belonging” at Immaculate
Conception. The series will highlight sto-
ries of those who have been in the foster
care system and of those who find joy,
even amid pain, through fostering and
adopting.
She said the videos are in the Augustine
Institute’s Formed series, which many
parishes offer to their members, and have
been seen on EWTN television. Baird also
has done a podcast on foster parenting for
Ohio Right to Life.
Springs of Love also has supported fos-
ter families by providing them with gift
cards and household items and is plan-
ning a documentary on foster care and
adoption.


01/10/26 01:43 PM #16749    

 

David Mitchell

For some reason, I seem to recall this was the first song I ever heard that I understood was "Rock and Roll". Make sure you get past the :43 mark on the timer.

(I think this is about 1956 - my older sisters had this record)




01/10/26 03:38 PM #16750    

Joseph Gentilini

MM, I am so glad that the adoption went through and they are now officially a family. I remember that years ago a family had adopted a child and raised him for several years before the birth mother decided to change her mind and wanted him back.  For some crazy reason, she went to court and forced the issue. They had on TV the 'adopted parents' handing overe the child who thought he was secure with his parents and did not want to go to his birth mother.  Watching it on TV was horribly sad!

 

SO GLAD ALL WENT WELL FOR  YOUR FAMILY.

 

jOE


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