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  
Next Page      

12/08/21 06:41 AM #10269    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

Janie and Clare-- I´m really sorry but I won't be able to make it to the Reunion this time.  I hope to be in Cols at the end of July and will hopefully be able to see some of you then.


12/08/21 09:19 AM #10270    

 

Frank Ganley

To all that wished me a happy birthday, thank you it means a lot to me. Happy birthday today to my first roommate, joe Donahue. We were obviously born a day apart , Joe's mother and mine were nurses at a long ago tear down, they only had one nursery ! S as a roommate I can only say he cried a lot for his mother! HAPPY BIRTHDAY JOE


12/08/21 10:51 AM #10271    

 

Michael McLeod

Just wrote a column about an upscale axe-throwing bar just down the street from me. What a hoot.

Note to doctor Jim: You with your jovial personality ought to find a partner and give it a try.

Note to Donna: You'll notice a familiar name in the column: The young lady I quote is the absolutely brilliant, globe-trotting  daughter of the Love of My Life. She - meaning Jessica - just earned a post-graduated degree online from the University of Essex. 

 

OUR TOWN I MICHAEL MCLEOD

 

         

          With all the new buildings turning up in Winter Park, you may have missed one that was completed last spring on Lee Road, just east of I-4: an upscale, family-owned enterprise that encourages patrons to enjoy a snack with a beer or a cup of coffee, then pick up an axe and throw it at the wall.

It’s called “The Axe Trap.”

          The name is a droll reference to the corner lot’s previous occupant, a strip club that had gone by various names over the years. Most recently, it had been The Booby Trap – a creepy up-nod to the club’s architectural profile, once described with characteristic savior faire by Billy Maines, the late and beloved Orlando Weekly columnist, as “two suggestive domes.”

          Seven years ago, Winter Park officials had a suggestion of their own.

          They approved a plan to buy the property for $990,000, have the building torn down, offer up the lot for sale and hold out for a buyer with a business model more apropos for the northwest gateway of the City of Culture and Heritage.

          Eventually, two unlikely takers emerged: vascular surgeons David Varnagy and Manuel Perez, who’ve been partners in an Orlando practice for eight years and best friends for longer still. They have frequently and cheerfully enmeshed families, leisure activities and vacation plans – so why not join forces on a business venture?

          “We complement each other,” says Perez, who is from Cuba and Puerto Rico.

          “I always know what he is going to like, and vice versa,” adds Varnagy, who is from Venezuela.

          The bond extends to their being unusually well-matched as surgeons. Perez is right-handed and Varnagy is a southpaw, making it easier for both to operate using their respective dominant hands from their places on either side of an anesthetized patient.

          The notion of partnering in an after-hours enterprise evolved after Perez’s son took him to a trendy millennial nightlife spot in downtown Orlando: an axe-throwing bar. Think craft beers and dart boards, only with bigger targets and heftier projectiles.

          Perez was initially unimpressed – “It was all particle board and chain-link fence. It looked like aisle 15 of Home Depot” – but intrigued enough to make a second visit and bring along his bestie, who announced: “Manny, we can do this better.”

          As they have.

          The pair bought the lot for $950,000 and spent roughly as much to build an airy 5,000-square foot venue with the feel of a converted circa 1920s waterfront warehouse.

          A rear entrance via a deck leads to a quiet seating area featuring industrial-chic couches, semiprivate cubicles – and a yet another homage to the past: a stripper pole fashioned by Perez, a handyman who did much of the interior work himself.

          (Perez also installed a hidden door that can be swung into place to hide the pole – which is for decorative use only -- if its presence offends a guest.)

An ornate bar is in the middle of the venue, cushioning the lounge area from the staccato thuds and generalized hubbub that begins emanating in late afternoons from the poplar-lined walls of the five netted bays on the far side of the facility.

          Axe-throwing ranges from leisurely to competitive as coached and safely stewarded by Ian White, a young iconoclast whose fixation with the Canadian lumberjack-born pastime dates to his childhood.

          There’s plenty of cross pollination between the two sides of the place among patrons, as evidenced by Jessica Sudler, a 28-year-old online program manager who works remotely and frequently turns up at the venue, laptop in hand.

          “I just have to get out of the house sometimes,” she says. There’s that, plus the late-morning coffee and spinach-artichoke dip, plus the chance for Sudler, who played varsity softball as an undergrad, to head over to the axe-throwing side to wing a few and work out the day’s stressors.

          Perhaps you remember Hawkeye Pierce and Trapper John, the two combat surgeons of M*A*S*H, the feature film and 1970s TV series, who would retreat to a makeshift bar for mingling and martinis after a tough day tending to the wounded.

          I’m reminded of these fictional Korean War medicos when Perez and Varnagy turn up at their new venture in the evenings, sometimes still in their scrubs, clearly enjoying the surroundings.

          “They have people’s lives in their hands,” says Varnagy’s wife, Miriam, who has been drafted as the venue’s manager. “They needed a place like this.”

Maybe that accounts for a second sign on the back side of the enterprise. It applies to the doctors. It applies to the patrons. It applies to the City of Culture and Heritage.

          It says, simply: “Remedy.”

 

 

 


12/08/21 11:07 AM #10272    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Dave ....I was not referring to your comments, but rather why you felt the need to bring up Trump's name at all given that the article itself was not about him in any way. It was referring entirely to how the media and the Democrats have very short memories on how they portrayed Dole throughout his political career. 

 


12/08/21 11:11 AM #10273    

 

Harold Clark

great job on the vidio invite


12/08/21 11:13 AM #10274    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Janie, I never saw the notice about the reunion plans, but I am glad to know that you and Clare have set a date.. I may not be in Columbus that week, but those plans are tentative, so I will let you know if I can join you all.


12/08/21 11:17 AM #10275    

 

Michael McLeod

On the subject of the press, dole, andTrump's beatific personality - here is an interesting take.

 

https://time.com/6126048/bob-dole-death-donald-trump/


12/08/21 11:32 AM #10276    

 

Deborah Alexander (Rogers)

Janie and Clare,

Count me in!  


12/08/21 12:38 PM #10277    

 

Michael McLeod

On the subject of operas, cabbies, and socialism:

 

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=rm&ogbl#inbox/FMfcgzGllMLLsVFdtCSXHlQKHwJkpNGb


12/08/21 01:04 PM #10278    

 

Daniel Cody

Janie n Clare. I'm in!


12/08/21 02:15 PM #10279    

 

David Mitchell

As an equal opportunity political critic and complainer, I would just like to put this out there - (and I will get off this "Dole vs Trump" grassfire that I've started)

Joe B's assurance today (or yesterday) that he will not send troops to help defend Ukraine (or Taiwan, I assume) is almost as dumb as his botched pull-out from Afghanistan. Wether you will or you won't, announcing such a thing for all the world to hear is incredibly stupid. His mess in Afghanistan will have far reaching negative consequences for generations. Pray God this confrontation does not happen in Ukraine.

If you want to acccuse me of having little regard for most of the people in either political party, I plead guilty in the first degree.  Hang my poster in the Post Office!

In my opinion, both parties are a hot mess, and the system is broken. Until we revoke the 2010 Supreme Court decison "Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission", things will continue to spiral out of control. We also need term limitations, a complete re-thinking of gerrymandering, and a radical revision of our IRS code, (or, as I like ot call it, "Life Styles of the Rich and Famous Relief Code"), to name a few things.

And our problem with systemic racism will only be healed by a combination of facing historical truth, and God's healing grace of forgiveness. Hiding the truth from our children - another word for lying - only lets the wound fester and grow.

(I continue to be dumbfounded at the history of slavery and racism - that we never heard in school - that I continue to learn since I have lived in the deep South. We got a few "highlights", but the details of the reality are simply horrifying)

 

But my current political complaint is against the foul, detestible character of so many that now call themselves "conservatives", who insist that anyone who disagrees with them should be shouted down, fired, lied about, or even threatened. That includes this crowd of utter nut jobs - Gaetz, Greene, Gasol, Gohmert, Boebert, Cruz, Nunez, and others. 

Oh, and throw in their so-called "leader" Kevin McCarthy - one of the biggest cowards I have ever seen. What an embarrassment to the notion of Truth, Justice, and the American Way. Decent Republicans shoud be clamoring for his replacememt.

Let's clean up our own house first, and then we can throw snowballs at our opponents. We could start by getting Tucker Carlson a job he is better qualified for - like janitor in a low-cost motel, or maybe assistant car wash operator. 

 

(For all of their faults, Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan must be rolling over in their graves.)

 


12/08/21 02:18 PM #10280    

 

David Mitchell

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Note: the second face you see - older guy in plaid shirt - is actually the songwriter, Travis Meadows) 




12/08/21 03:09 PM #10281    

Lawrence Foster

I've been digitizing some of my father's old color slides from our years growing up.  There are over 2,000 of them.  Here are a few from my Confirmation in May 1957 at Pritchard Place Chapel in Ft. Knox.  The ceremony was done by Cardinal Spellman who had come to visit.  His title was something like the "Military Vicar" for the Church to the U.S. Armed Forces.   

Friends in Cincy have told me that their Confirmation name had to come from from the Calendar of Saints.  They could only choose a name from the list of name(s) of saints that matched their birthday.  But we, or maybe it was just me, were allowed to choose our names. So I chose Stephan ... as in Stephan Foster.  I suspect I chose it because I rememberd a previous family trip to Bardstown and My Old Kentucky Home.  I am not sure I knew of St. Stephan at that time 

After the ceremony there was a reception in the church hall.  My specific memory of the reception is that I had been running around with friends and we had gotten cookies and punch.  In my case it was probaly a lot more than just one or two cookies.  My parents were in line to greet the Cardinal.  As they got closer to the front of the line, one of my older brothers came over to get me in line with Mom and Dad.  I remember kissing Cardinal Spellman's ring and being suddenly afraid that I had left cookie crumbs on it.      

In the first photo I am off to the far right, 3rd row up, looking directly at the camera becasue my Dad was taking the picture and I knew not to be picking my nose or anything else when he took his photo.  Photos taken by other parents?-well, who knows what I looked like.  The next photos are just ones of the Cardinal and folks around him.

  

 

 

     


12/08/21 03:11 PM #10282    

 

Michael McLeod

Larry: those photos are treasures!

Joe D happy birthday!

Dave: When have we ever, since ww2, retreated gracefully from a foreign war?

I'm not picking a fight. It's just an obvious and very sad observation posing as a question.

Also to Dave: Gerrymandering will kill off democracy. Trump and his cronies gave that process a jump start but the rot was there to exploit before they arrived. Then again the libtards, commies, secular humanoids and zoonotic viruses may beat them to the punch.

My apologies for being such a yapper today. I'm winding down at the end of a semester at school and a series of assignments.


12/09/21 11:06 AM #10283    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Larry Q.S. Foster, 

What great memories you have with those slides! And is it not fantastic that such mementos can be scanned and digitalized for even longer preservation with today's technology. 

Jim


12/09/21 03:18 PM #10284    

 

Mark Schweickart

Janie & Clare – Let me add my response – a resounding MAYBE!!! I would love to be there, but not sure at this time if that will happen.

Dave – So nice to hear a song in which one does not have to strain to make out the lyrics. Out of curiosity, why did you post this? Are you somehow connected to this song? I am guessing that perhaps this is the case, since you somehow knew that one of the people pictured in the video is the songwriter. Or are you just once again proving that you are a bottomless well of arcane information.


12/09/21 04:30 PM #10285    

 

Frank Ganley

All of this corruption that supposedly happened with Trump and his dealings with all the guards and etc. and announcing him as a misogynist of C flyer draft dodger etc. it is now come to light more of Hunter Biden's laptop I've been exposed the amount of corruption on that side is just incredible now if you wanna argue that point at Hunter is pure as the driven snow bring it on and of course Joe he thinks that Hunter is pure and has never had any discussions with him his friends etc. on all these business dealings that they did with the Biden name funny how Hunter Biden was given by China a 3 carat diamond and approximately $30 million I don't know how you can explain that other than corrupt the entire Biden family is a crime syndicate it's a shame it is hopefully we will all come to agree that they are not just the Republicans I'm not saying help you are I would love to see all of Congress expose their tax returns and explain Hell with a salary of $178,000 they can make millions and millions and millions take any of them Pelosi Mitch McConnell the granddaddy of them of making money hand over fist would be the lead senator The Honorable John McCain a prime example of going from the military to the Congress to making a fortune once again it's just not the Republicans strike that not just the Democrats but it includes a major amount of Republicans one thing that we need in Congress is term limits they created those so that the president doesn't get so much power by staying in office for as long as he can get elected well Congress certainly has taken advantage of that law that they can stay in office ad infinitum soSo let's not full ourselves then corruption does not happen on one side it happens on both sides of the aisle


12/10/21 12:45 AM #10286    

 

David Mitchell

Frank,

I think you left out the part about Jared Kushner and his lucrative dealings with his Saudi buddies.


12/10/21 12:49 AM #10287    

 

David Mitchell

Mark,

Nope, I just thougth it was an interesting follow up to my political ranting and the opposing repsonses.

 

That and the fact that I just like the song and the video, and thought we could use a music break.


12/10/21 12:21 PM #10288    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

I am wondering how hopeful everyone is, looking toward to 2022? 

Personally, I have many legitimate worries about all too many important life issues.  For one, I wonder about the ability many of us will have to secure timely and effective medical care. As an example, I currently have family members needing crucial medical tests and having to wait weeks for critical cancer detecting CT scans and PET scans, and another family member who just spent a week in a Columbus hospital where they experienced the effects of the staffing shortage of medical personnel. Besides the much publicized nursing shortage other important positions are severely impacted....PCA's for one.  On one floor of the OSU Medical Center hospital where my brother-in-law was recovering from surgery a week and a half ago, they had NO PCA's on his floor for 3 out of his 5 day stay, and the nurses were expressing their frustrations over trying to tend to the many needs of their patients while also taking on the job of the PCA's.  Consequently pain medication, for one thing, was often delayed.  Not only that, but because the hospital is still only allowing one person to be present to provide support for their loved one, my sister was exhausted from being the sole person allowed to be there to make sure his needs were being adequately met. Further they were both told that the hospital is giving thought to once again denying ANY visitors at all. If this happens and with a PCA and nursing shortage.....who is actually going to advocate and care for the needs of the sick?

Gas prices are nearly double what they were a year ago, store shelves are sparse and you can not always find grocery items you need.  The supply chain is a mess and the promise of even more regulations for cars and trucks will create even worse scenarios than todays.  Inflation is at a 30 year high and the policies being put forth insure that there will be no relief. My bank has recently informed me that they are now establishing a full service ESG practice to "help" clients address ESG issues through banking.....e.g. providing lower borrowering costs for meeting "environmental milestones" . My mayor is putting forth a budget that will have at its goal....diversity and inclusion as primary measures for improving schools, first responders, housing etc.   

Restaurants are reeling from a worker shortage.  A wait at one of my favorite Clintonville dining places now requires a 30-45 minute wait for your food to be delivered to your table, after you have waited 15 minutes to order, while prices have risen exponentially.  Does no one have need for a job these days?  Where ARE the people wanting or needing to  work?

Living as many our age do now on a fixed income, I have seen my property taxes rise so that I am now paying nearly triple in taxes for what my original mortgage payment for my home was, all while our Columbus City schools have increasingly become failing schools, and crime and homelessness (due to surging drug abuse) have been rapidly increasing. 

This may not be happening where you live, but it is a definitely my personal experience living in the community where I have made my home for nearly 70 years. With the freedom to make my own individual decisions about so many aspects of my life over the past year being ever so cleverly diminshed, I know better than to ever, ever lose hope.  For as Albert Einstein is reported to have said, "Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow, and never stop questioning."


12/10/21 12:23 PM #10289    

 

John Maxwell

Francois,

I, for one, missed your spot on rants against those corrupt Americans and their plans to destroy our way of life. Glad you rediscovered your outrage against all that are out to get us. It's nice to know that Frank Ganley is standing on that wall, guarding our democracy against those who seek our demise. Thanks is not enough.

12/10/21 01:40 PM #10290    

 

Frank Ganley

Jack , I am in that , ready to ride and spread the alarm to every middlsex cottage and farm. Why some can't Handle the truth. One of the great Greek philosophers said, beware when the people in power think they are above the law and citizens are treated as ssecond class citizens that is the beginning of the end of our republic. To point the Biden syndicate and clintons foundation, followed by all of them , dems and Republican have surged the power and as they thing we are unable to care for selves so government does it for you like it or not. Ie the virus vaccine, Obama care, term limits. Not 48 years for sleepy joe who has accomplished nothing during that time


12/10/21 04:11 PM #10291    

 

Julie Carpenter

Janie and Clare--I also am all in for next year's reunion. Look forward to seeing everybody and actually being in a room with other people! Merry Christmas to everyone!


12/10/21 04:41 PM #10292    

 

David Mitchell

From the department of absolutley nothing to do with anything -

I give you a (poor) video of my all-time favorite play in Bronco history. The very first play of overtime against the Steelers in 2011, as Tim Tebow finds Damaryius Thomas open over the middle for the foot race to win that first-round playoff game. Of all the years I thrilled to Floyd Little, Randy Gradishar, John Elway, Peyton Manning, and others, this was the most exciting play I ever watched. 

The reciever, Damaryius Thomas was one of the great players of his era. But he was even a better person. One of the sweetest, kindest guys in the game. Everybody loved him.

He died yesterday in his home at age 33 (possibly from seizures).  

We could sure use more like him.

 

(wow - two NFL videos and they are not allowed to be copied -hmmmm) - make that three "no shows"

Finally, a very poor angle from a private fan in the crowd. Sorry, the NFL video is so much better




12/10/21 11:04 PM #10293    

 

John Jackson

MM, you didn’t say it, but the subtext of your post is that Biden is the cause of all of what Americans perceive now to be wrong with our economy and country.

In this regard, I’m not sure why you brought up our health care system – for many years/decades we have spent way more (50% more on average) per capita on our fragmented and dysfunctional health care system than any other advanced nation and this has bought us healthcare outcomes (measured in commonly accepted measures of public health such as life expectancy, infant mortality, etc) that are significantly below other first world nations.  I know it’s an article of faith on the right that this is just another thing that Biden has screwed up royally, but the dysfunction of our woefully underperforming health care system has been building for decades.

MM also simplistically lays the blame for high gas prices at Biden’s feet.  The reason that gas prices are high now is that OPEC, Russia and other oil-producing nations cut output drastically as a result of collapsing demand during the pandemic and they have not ramped production back up as economies around the world have recovered. 

It’s also worth noting that the U.S. has plenty of production capability to meet its domestic needs and is now the world’s largest oil producer and a net exporter of all oil products.  But the price U.S oil producers charge for their oil is determined pretty much by world prices and what do you think the chances are that Exxon, Chevron and others, out of patriotic concern for their fellow Americans, might charge less than what their OPEC counterparts are getting?

I think the supply chain issues, though real in some cases, have overall been exaggerated.  When I go to the supermarket the shelves seem just as full as before and I’ve not had any problems shopping in other stores.  I’m not happy to admit that I buy a lot of stuff on Amazon but I can’t say that their virtual shelves seem depleted either.

Of course, one of the genuine shortages is the unavailability of new cars and this has also led to a run-up in prices for used cars.  Also, major appliances are in very tight supply.  Both shortages have been caused by a chip shortage which began 2-3 years ago.   Using MM’s logic, since the chip shortage started on his watch, isn’t it reasonable to blame the high price of new and used cars on Trump?

What shortages there are are largely due not to governmental policy but to the fact that many American consumers are flush with cash because for the past two years they haven’t been traveling, going out to eat, or buying the vast array of other services that in a normal year account for 70% of the U.S. economy.  Instead they have been buying “stuff” and most of the shortages and inflation we see now are the result of an abnormal amount of money chasing a limited supply of goods.  It’s called the law of supply and demand (something  conservatives are supposed to know about).

The fact is that the economy does more or less what it wants to do and, despite what most people think, government policies affect its behavior largely at the edges. 


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page