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04/27/23 01:38 AM #12555    

 

David Mitchell

How 'bout another round on the house?




04/27/23 04:17 PM #12556    

Joseph Gentilini

Thanks, David, for the picture of you and TL.  It was good for my heart to see you both.  Who was the 3rd person?  joe


04/27/23 10:28 PM #12557    

 

Michael McLeod

Dave: thanks for the story. I'm sorry. You were a good friend and a loyal human being and you did everything you could. There are things we can't control and there's nothing to do but accept that and do what we can in spite of it.


04/28/23 07:34 AM #12558    

Joseph Gentilini

David, I almost said Keith G but decided I would wait until you responded just to make sure.  Thanks again for the picture of all of you.  joe


04/29/23 09:25 AM #12559    

Mary Clare Hummer (Bauer)

Good Saturday morning, everyone. Congratulations to all of you who have successfully transitioned to age 75 and are preparing the way for the rest of us. We are planning to have a little 75th birthday party for anyone who can make it sometime in August to celebrate this momentous occasion. Nothing fancy--just food & drinks at a local eatery. (Remember how much fun our 70th birthday celebration was at Peggy Southworth's??!!) We're also thinking of perhaps a day trip to somewhere in Ohio to extend our opportunity to visit. Joe McCarthy has suggested a couple of ideas for us to consider. 

1.  A trip to Newell, West Virginia (along the Ohio River) to the Homer Laughlin (Fiesta ware) factory and outlet store, with a stop for lunch on the way and perhaps a stop for dinner before returning home around five or six. It's a nice drive that Joe has done many times.

2. A drive to Greenville, Ohio to their museum which has a wing for Annie Oakley, born and buried just miles away and a wing for Lowell Thomas, a newscaster who was born and raised in Greenville. Afterwards, lunch at the famous Maid Rite restaurant in Greenville. Finally returning to Columbus in the late afternoon, or stopping for an early dinner.

Those of us who went to the Henry Ford Museum in Detroit probably would never have gone there if Jack Maxwell hadn't recommended and arranged it, but it was really worthwhile and fun. Perhaps you have a day trip idea that you think people have not done but would enjoy.

Email Janie at janeblank@gmail.com  Susan at Susan.gp8800@gmail.com or Clare at clare_43221@yahoo.com with your interest/suggestions about these great plans. 

Have a merry month of May! 

Your Favorite Little Planning Committee
 

 


04/29/23 05:13 PM #12560    

 

Nina Osborn (Rossi)

While we (Mary Ann and I)are talking about AT&T and Lucent, I too worked for both. I participated in a focus group in Parsippany NJ in the 80's. The purpose of the group was to tell the designers what we would want on a phone if we could carry it with us!!!  We had all kinds of ideas...today it is known as a smart phone😁

 

 


04/29/23 07:10 PM #12561    

 

David Mitchell

Nina,

I am sure many peole are grateful to you and your fellow workers for the invention of the so-called "Smart Phone".

But I sure wish somebody out there could have come up with a "dumb phone". I was apparently born in the wrong century and am forever grappling with all these technology "advances".


04/29/23 09:02 PM #12562    

 

David Mitchell

Mark,

I meant to comment on your earlier quotes from the stand-up comic, Steven Wright.

I thought he was one of the cleverest and funniest stand-ups I have ever seen.


04/30/23 12:19 PM #12563    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

From the "say it isn't so" (I hope) category

Several internet sites today are writing about an article published in JAMA - a medical journal to which I do not subscribe but one which is a respectable publication - that found in a study that 80% of respondent patients preferred the advice and "bedside manner" of an AI "doctor", ChatGPT, to a live physician. 

Has anyone had experience with this form of medical care? Have so many physicians lost the caring attitude and value of actually touching and examining the patient that the practice of medicine is being totally relinquished to this modality?

William Osler, the "Father of Internal Medicine"  must be turning over in his grave!

Jim 

 


04/30/23 06:43 PM #12564    

 

David Mitchell

Jim,

Your post contains a couple of buzzwords from my childhood that caught my attention.

 

First; JAMA.

Wow, I will never forget the piles of monthly (or was it quarterly?) issues of those Journal of American Medicine Association (JAMA) magazines all over my dad's office. But then I suspect like you, like he, quit the AMA for political and ethical reasons.

 

Second; Bedside Manner

I can't count how many times i heard him cuss and discuss the issue of patients being treated by what Dad called  "technicians" who were not behaving as "physicians" - MDs who were technicaly experts, but who lacked  the skill of actually caring for the patient.  

 


04/30/23 07:00 PM #12565    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Dave,

I never quit the AMA.

Why? Because I never joined it in the first place. 

Jim 


05/01/23 10:19 PM #12566    

 

David Mitchell

I have urged my good friend Tommy Swain to post on the Forum but I guess it is not his thing.

Last night he emailed me a bizarre news item from Columbus. Some of you living there will have seen this. A few nights ago, Columbus police were shot at while trying to break up a group of nearly 100 cars drag racing on Indianola near Cooke Road.

My golly!  That is only about two blocks from my childhood home on Yaronia Drive (but with an Overbrook address). 

 

 


05/01/23 10:42 PM #12567    

 

David Mitchell

Clare, (and Janie, and Susan)

Thanks you for your post about a 75th birthday party in Columbus in August. I love the idea and hope I can attend. 

As for the idea of a short trip out of town - I was going to comment privately to you three ladies but thought maybe I should offer my opinion for all to discuss openly. 

I think there is a difference of priorities between those of you who live in and around Columbus vs. those of us who travel from far off. As I travel for a long ways to get there, that consumes part of the time that I have to get away, and I prefer to spend as much of that time as I can in and around Columbus - where I have other people besides classmats to visit (for many of us outlanders, it's family visiting too).

Perhaps a small side trip appeals more to those of you who are already there and aren't giving up time just to get there.

I would encourage you to consider doing both, but with a day or two separation from the one big night, before you bus yourselves out of town, so we "foreigners" can get to be with you all at one big gathering, and possibly a day for some small private visits. I personally would love to make it to both a big class reunion, AND one of Fred and Brian, and Mike B's Wednesday "guy lunches". 

 

Just my 2 cents worth.


05/01/23 11:12 PM #12568    

 

David Mitchell

Gordon Lightfoot ("the Canadian Mumbler") died at 84 today.

He was my all-time single favorite singer!

I first heard him sing in 1969 on the afternnon talk show from Siagon on radio station A.F.V.N. (Armed Forces Radio- Vietnam - yes, as in the Robin Williams film  "Good Morning Vietnam!").

It was this song. Looooove this song!  And he also sang the first version I ever heard of Me and Bobby McGee - which just might be as good as Janis Joplin's version. Maybe?

Years later, Mary and I saw him live a the famous "Redrocks" amphitheater out southwest of Denver - a magnificnet natural theater looking back over the city of Denver and with great natural accousitics and seating for about 10,000. We had seen John Denver twice at Redrocks, with full entourage, orchestra, and multi-media screens.

When we saw Gordon Lightfoot, it was an earlier start in daylight, but chilly. He walked on stage with 3 backup musicians, each of them carrying folding chairs and their guitars and no backdrop, no orchestra, nothing. They plunked their 4 chairs down at center stage and he said "Dont' wanna keep you out here in a cold stamp", and started playing. He barey said anything between songs. They just kept playing. He was fabulous!

A year of so later he came to Redrocks again. It used to be that crowds would gather early at Redrocks to get best seats, and maybe wait hours for the show - and bring alcohol (no longer permitted). Someone in a close row was drunk by the time he started. They threw a tomato and hit him in the face. I forget if he finished that day but he swore never to come back.




05/02/23 10:34 AM #12569    

 

Michael McLeod

Interesting background on G.F. and the E.F.

 

Gordon Lightfoot, the Canadian folk singer who died on Monday at 84, had one hit in particular that famously defied Top 40 logic.

“The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” his 1976 folk ballad, was unusual partly because, at more than six minutes long, it was about twice as long as most pop hits. It also retold a real-life tragedy — the 1975 sinking on Lake Superior of a freighter with 29 crewmen aboard — with meticulous attention to detail.

“It’s a documentarian’s song, when you think about it,” said Eric Greenberg, a longtime friend of the singer who interviewed Mr. Lightfoot as a student journalist in the late 1970s and later co-wrote a song with him.

The plotline of a typical Top 40 hit usually consists of “boy meets girl, boy breaks up with girl, or come back, or you left me, or whatever,” Mr. Greenberg said, speaking by phone from New York City. “Not a five-, six-, seven-minute story — a factual story, in Gordon’s case, painstakingly checked to make sure that all the facts are right.”

Here’s the true story that inspired “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” and a look at the song that kept its memory alive.

A disappearing ship

The Edmund Fitzgerald was a 729-foot ore carrier and one of the largest freighters on the Great Lakes when it left Superior, Wis., on Nov. 9, 1975, carrying iron pellets bound for Detroit.

 

The next day, the ship was caught in a storm with winds that averaged 60 to 65 miles an hour. Its captain reported 20- to 25-foot waves washing over the decks and water pouring in below deck through two broken air vents.

That night, the Edmund Fitzgerald sank near the coasts of Ontario and Michigan, in water that was only about 50 degrees. A nearby ship reported seeing its lights disappear in the driving snow.

The Coast Guard later found lifeboats, life rings and other debris from the ship. But the lifeboats were self-inflatable, so their discovery did not necessarily indicate that they had been used. None of the 29 crew members survived.

An unlikely success

The morning after the Fitzgerald went down, the rector of Mariners’ Church of Detroit tolled its bell 29 times, once for each man lost. An Associated Press reporter knocked on the church’s door, interviewed the rector and filed an account that was published in newspapers.

Mr. Lightfoot read the article. Soon afterward, he started singing a song about the wreck during a previously scheduled recording session. His band joined in, and the first version of the song that they recorded was later released, according to “Gordon Lightfoot: If You Could Read My Mind,” a 2020 documentary.

There was no expectation that the song would become a hit single, because its length made it too long for airplay on the radio. But it would spend 21 weeks on the Billboard charts and peak at No. 2, one notch behind Mr. Lightfoot’s only No. 1 hit, “Sundown.” It also turned the tale of the sinking into a modern legend.

Yet unlike songs that use a real-life story as the basis for embellishment, Mr. Lightfoot’s ballad hewed precisely to the real-life details. The weight of the ore, for example — “26,000 tons more than the Edmund Fitzgerald weighed empty” — was accurate. So was the number of times that the church bell chimed in Detroit.

Decades later, Mr. Lightfoot changed the lyrics slightly after investigations into the accident revealed that waves, not crew error, had led to the shipwreck. In the new lyrics, he sang that it got dark at 7 that November night on Lake Superior — not that a main hatchway caved in.

 

“That’s the kind of meticulous, looking-for-the-truth kind of guy that he was,” Mr. Greenberg said.

An enduring legacy

“The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald,” like its creator, endured as a Canadian classic long after slipping off the Top 40 charts. The bluegrass guitarist Tony Rice (who also released an entire album of Lightfoot cover songs) and the rock bands Rheostatics and the Dandy Warhols were among those who sang covers over the years.

“The melodies are so powerful and he’s such a good storyteller and such a beautiful lyricist,” the Canadian singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan said in the 2020 documentary. “And the combination of those things just really makes for a great song.”

Mr. Lightfoot remained proud of it for decades, and he kept newspaper clippings and items given to him by the crew members’ surviving families in his home, Mr. Greenberg said.

The song’s success had one downside: It turned the wreck, which lies in Canadian territory at a depth of about 500 feet, into a trophy for divers, upsetting the lost sailors’ families. In 2006, the government of Ontario adopted a law protecting the site.


05/02/23 11:15 AM #12570    

 

Michael McLeod

 

Mary Clare: Thank you for your efforts as social director of this late-afternoon cruise. Hope I can make the birthday party and I think I can.

I was in town last weekend for a very interesting family wedding and will file a report about it once I get a writing assignment done and attend to  the end-of-semester details of the class I teach.

The trip was very emotional, as is the story, which is  a eulogy for a museum director of a fabulous tiffany museum down here with whom I had a wonderful friendship.

Meantime this is sooooo lovely 

Have I posted this song yet?

Just discovered it recently.

It may sound, at least from the title, that it's about home, at least for us.

Au contraire.

It's the only song I've ever heard that mentions a cormorant, whose cameo scene is a hint as to what this quite beautiful and quite profound song is really all about. 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D5dOLgUZv_I&ab_channel=MaryBlack-Topic

 

 

 


05/02/23 11:18 AM #12571    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

In response to Post #12566

This article is from almost two years ago....it seems that the mayor, city council and chief of police have not found the means to "reimagining public safety". 

https://www.dispatch.com/story/news/2021/07/04/columbus-trying-find-ways-deal-loud-motorcycles-cars-atvs/5371853001/

Here is the article regarding the events of this past weekend at Indianola and Cooke Rd. an area with which we are all very familiar.

 https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/surveillance-video-shows-saturday-illegal-street-racing-incident-in-clintonville/ar-AA1aBKtf 

Seems as though our city is heading the way of other major cities.

https://www.googleadservices.com/pagead/aclk?sa=L&ai=C6JSHcylRZNyuI_yDpfgP1JuUmAeS7fyOcKe4jIinEffmjOvVEBABIPrG1iZgyc7 

 


05/02/23 04:10 PM #12572    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Lorraine,

I like the shot of you about to climb that ladder in Marin Co.

Reminds me of some (less sturdy) ones at Mesa Verde National Park in CO that we climbed about 40 years ago. Today I hesitate to even ascend one to our roof!

Jim


05/02/23 07:43 PM #12573    

 

Michael Boulware

Kevin Ryan was just notified that he will be inducted into Watterson's Athletic Hall of Fame. He certainly deserves this award and I am so happy that Kevin's accomplishments are being recognized. Kev is a great person and a great friend and will represent our class with class.


05/02/23 10:39 PM #12574    

Joseph Gentilini

Congratulations, Kevin Ryan, on your honor!  joe


05/02/23 11:38 PM #12575    

 

David Mitchell

Mike B.

Great news about one of my favorite people since he arrived in our class at OLP in second grade.   

You had mentioned to me a several years ago about Kevin's potential nominaton. So I decided to call the school office and spoke with a guy named Scott Manahan, (then) Director of Alumni. He explained the process and mailed me some forms to fill out, but I am embarassed to say that I lost them in a pile of paperwork and forgot to complete and return them.

(just now searched them out of the pile)

I was tickled to hear that you had been granted that status last year and had hoped that Kevin's nomination would soon follow (with or without my letter of nomination). I was also shocked to hear your story about Kevin running in some diocesan track meets. I doubt any of us knew anything about that at the time. He and I were best of friends and I myself heard not a word from him about it.

Just so you know I had good intentions - see part of Mr. Manahan's letter below - interesting to note that Kevin was not yet on his list (I had discussed Kevin and three other names with Scott on the phone call).  

 

 


05/03/23 09:30 AM #12576    

 

Michael McLeod

Congrats to Kevin and kudos to our old school as I like the "including three women" part in the response to you, Dave.  WTG, WHS, on the inclusiveness


05/03/23 10:28 AM #12577    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Kevin Ryan,

Congratulations on a great and well deserved honor to one of the best all-around athletes that WHS has ever known!

Jim


05/03/23 11:20 AM #12578    

 

Deborah Alexander (Rogers)

Congratulations, Kevin!  You deserve this honor in spades.  I have many fond memories of watching you play football during our years at WHS.  You were, and are, a star, and a true gentleman on and off the field.  I'm so happy you are being recognized with this honor.   

Debbie


05/03/23 12:28 PM #12579    

 

John Jackson

Kevin, I want to add my congratulations – you deserve the honor and you’ve made the rest of us OLP’ers proud!


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