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05/19/18 08:21 PM #3189    

 

Bruce Wilson

Bill Rodgers, who won the Boston Marathon a number of times, last ran it in  2009 at age 61. Time:  4:06:49.

Treasa's husband did a very respectible  4:18:22 at age 68 in 2014.

 

 

 

 

 

 


05/23/18 01:50 PM #3190    

 

George Bracey Gillow

BAYFRONT RESORT HOTEL

The City of Chula Vista and the Port District signed an agreement with a development company called RIDA Development to build a large hotel (1600 rooms) and convention center on the bayfront to the west of where Rohr was located.  It is a $1billion project.

I think it will be difficult to fill that many rooms with tourists. However, a company called Gaylord--which is owned by the Marriott Corporation--will operate the hotel. They own the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville and other hotels similar to the one planned for Chula Vista. They have all been successful.  So we will see.

The City plans on a "fancy" redevelopment of  "F" street leading to 3rd Avenue to include a trolley line. They hope that will get the tourists from the hotel.

Here is their rendition of the proposed hotel and grounds:

This is the plan for F Street. All views are looking east.


06/03/18 02:27 PM #3191    

 

Bruce Wilson

 

Hilltop Drive Elementary School - Sixth Grade 1953-54. Would be HHS first class 1960.

Wilson, Butterfield, Banner? 

 

Guesses?

 

 


06/04/18 10:52 AM #3192    

 

Terry Lee Maple

I'm back! Somehow, the forum is now coming to my wife's e-mail account and I successfully changed my password so I am able to communicate again. I've missed a lot, but I'm still here. Addie and I just visited our daughter Molly and her family in Charleston. We celebrated our grandbaby Gunnar's first birthday; what a wonderful moment for all of us. He is growing fast and appears to be a very happy baby. His older sibs, twins Grayden and Piper, adore him. He was showered with gifts of course including a furry plush anteater, a memento from my recent visit to Brazil. I will be posting photos of the event to Facebook.


06/04/18 12:51 PM #3193    

 

Bruce Wilson

Say T:

I've been watching some of the women's world series. Didn't your dauighters play? What school(s)?

 

Happy birthday Gunnar (still have a couple months till the other one's bd Gunnar Eric Nelson (born September 20, 1967 - Rick's twin sons).

 

Note error: I finally had my other eye done and the good news is that I have near perfect far vision. On the other side of the coin, I have no near vision without glasses. I'm using 2.75 readers right now. Still experimenting.

 

"One man gathers what another man spills."

 



06/04/18 05:23 PM #3194    

 

Terry Lee Maple

I am a big fan of all women's sports. My oldest daughter (mother of Gunnar, Grayden and Piper) was a tennis player and member of the dance team at McIntosh High School in Peachtree City, GA. Daughter Emily was the outstanding senior swimmer at McIntosh. Daughter Sally, the son I never had, was the outstanding senior female athlete at McIntosh where she lettered in basketball, football (as a kicker), lacrosse, and roller hockey. The roller hockey team was a boy's team but she was the goalie when they won the Georgia state championship. She later played ice hockey for the Atlanta Lady Thrashers. She was all-state in girl's lacrosse and played college lacrosse at Presbyterian College in SC. Later, when Addie and I relocated to South Florida, Sally began to play women's tackle football. She kicked, punted, and played wide receiver well enough to make the national team. This team traveled to Stockholm to play in the first Women's World Championship of tackle football. They won a gold medal. Sally wears a gigantic ring that was presented to the members of this outstanding group of female athletes. I am amazed at how good these women are in all sports. Sally could punt a football fifty yards. I was the punter at HHS in my senior year. Sally would have beat me out! It will be fun to see what sports the grand-babies favor. I'm hoping they will be golfers.


06/04/18 09:00 PM #3195    

 

Bruce Wilson


06/09/18 02:00 PM #3196    

 

George Bracey Gillow

Tom Rice made his annual D-Day jump on June 6th. This time in France.




06/09/18 03:04 PM #3197    

 

Bruce Wilson

The Right Stuff alright. 

Big thumbs up.

At first I thought he was solo, which would have been even righter, but the final frames show he was in tandem.


06/10/18 12:23 PM #3198    

 

Bruce Wilson

Attended the 2018 Quin Murphy fundraiser yesterday

http://www.quinmurphy.com/

It's a very sad story worthy of your attention..

 

 

Here are 2017 scholarship awardees..

 


06/10/18 12:37 PM #3199    

Kay Kozuye Ochi

George- amazing video of Mr. Rice!  His history and words are awe inspiring. I’m going to listen to his comments again. Everyone, take a moment- he’s still teaching us! Thanks, George, for this share.


06/10/18 11:14 PM #3200    

 

Bruce Wilson

 

anyone frequent the place?

 


06/10/18 11:24 PM #3201    

 

Rosalee May (Rosie) O'Day (Mason)

Thank you, George.  Amazing video of Mr. Rice.  Indeed one of the Greatest Generation.  I am humbled with gratitude for all the members of our military -- those who are serving and those who served.  Thank you!


06/12/18 09:24 AM #3202    

 

Bruce Wilson


06/12/18 09:25 AM #3203    

 

Bruce Wilson


06/13/18 01:01 PM #3204    

 

Terry Lee Maple

A&W was ubiquitous in Northern California. When I began trekking to Stockton from Chula Vista in 1964, the long road up highway 99 included many opportunities to stop for fuel at A&W. Wonderful burgers and great root beer. I was happy to read recently that the company is making a comeback. On my last trip to Stockton, I learned about an A&W in Lodi. Just like the old days.


06/13/18 03:00 PM #3205    

 

Bruce Wilson

Well, as John Fogerty once said"

 

""Oh Lord, stuck in Lodi again.""

 

Out with the old in with the new.

1950's

Since 1995


06/13/18 03:15 PM #3206    

 

Bruce Wilson

 

 

Oscar's El Cajon.

 

It was a long drive, but somebody had to do it.

 


06/17/18 04:43 PM #3207    

 

Bruce Wilson

Girls/women in sports? 

 

Katelyn Tuohy

 

it was last October, in a cross-country race at Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx. Virtually every top scholastic runner in the Northeast has competed at Van Cortlandt in the past 45 years. Tuohy ran the woodsy, 2.5-mile course in 13:21.8, breaking the course record by 32 seconds.

Maybe it was in December when she won and set the course record at the cross-country team national championships in Oregon. Maybe it was at the meet in Virginia in January when she broke a national record for high school girls in the 5,000 by 18 seconds.

 

 

Quotes of the Week (that weren’t quote of the day)

#1 Have NYers already forgotten Mary Cain?

“She might be the best high school runner ever already.”

Jim Mitchell, a Bronxville High School coach (where Mary Cain ran) talking about NY phenom Katelyn Tuohy, 16, in an excellent NY Times feature on Tuohy and the tough task teen distance prodigies face in maintaining their success into adulthood.

Tuohy, who won the NXN title in the fall, is having an incredible year. At the NY state met last week, the sophomore ran 9:09.71 for 3000 to set a US age-16 record and then came back the next day and won the 1500 in a meet record of 4:14.75.

Tuohy is amazing, but let’s get real. At this point in time, her HS accomplishments are inferior to what Mary Cain accomplished. According to an astute messageboard poster, here is how their HS track PRs compare.

Mary Cain’s HS PRs: 1:59, 4:04, 8:58, 9:38(i), 15:45
Katelyn Tuohy’s HS PRs: 2:09, 4:14, 9:05, 9:51(c), 15:37(i)

Remember, when Cain graduated high school in 2014, she had won two U.S. indoor titles, and finished 9th at the World Championships outdoors. This year, Tuohy ran the high school mile at the Millrose Games and finished 4th. As a senior in high school, Cain ran the Wanamaker Mile against the pros — and won it. Tuohy might be a better cross country runner than Cain, but in an absolute sense, Cain clearly had the better career (though Tuohy still has two years remaining).


07/15/18 03:00 PM #3208    

 

Bruce Wilson

Some sad news to report. My old buddy and sometimes mentor, Mike Hollister has passed away.

 

Top row far right. I have something a bit more current but I can't find it right now.

 

 

This isn't it, but Eshbach always seems to be around him, eh? Top, second from right.


07/16/18 07:41 AM #3209    

Phillip Smith (Smith)

Me, Frank and Terry on the other end of the second row. Gary Earls kneeling on bottom row.

 


07/16/18 05:54 PM #3210    

 

Treasa Struble (Skiles)

Bruce, so sorry for the loss of your friend. As the days move on, our class' numbers dwindle. Remember the good times and rascally high jinx. Hugs, Treasa


07/18/18 03:42 PM #3211    

 

Bruce Wilson

Thanks Treasa. Mike's brother Jay died in 1963 (about a year before Jim Probert) and this was my first experience with the death of somebody I actually knew. 

While Mike got me out of blue jeans and into "real" Levis, Jay got me into Topsiders and taught me proper sweater folding technique (he worked at the clothing store with Finis Jones).. 

By a strange quirk of fate, Mr. Jay Hollister (the coach in the two photos below) lived to be 94.

 

 


07/18/18 03:52 PM #3212    

 

Bruce Wilson

Here's a rarely seen photo from 1959 of some of the St. Rose of Lima boys and Mr. Hollister.

No Eshbach, but Freddy Workman and Gary Funaro. {sp?)

 


07/19/18 10:00 AM #3213    

 

Jim Hawes

Bruce, 

Speaking of Mr. Eschbach! Eschy did a great rendition of the Saturday morning cartoon line "Plunk you magic twanger Froggy, Hi ya kids, Hi ya, Hi ya, Hi ya"! Funny some of things you get remembered for! yes

Pic of Pvt. Eschy from our US Army basic training yearbook. Ft. Bliss Texas 1966 B-1-2! 

 

 

 


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