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02/02/21 09:52 AM #1027    

Gary Acker

Is that your whole group of family members? A fine looking bunch.

02/02/21 10:45 AM #1028    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

This photo was of the family that could spend Christmas with us.  My two daughers and one granddaughter who live in Henderson, Nevada were not able to be with us.  My daughter, Michelle, the girl we adopted from Bolivia when she was a baby is the mother of three of the them; Leonardo (Leo) 18, Tyler (Tyty) 13. Vanessa 7. She is a sweet daughter with the heart of pure gold.  It was her idea to have us all dressed in the same PJ's,  She ordered them and paid for all of us to have look alike PJ's.,  Tyler my son-in-law is a Chief in the Navy in San Diego, and was able to take leave to bring the family for Christmas.  Tyler is a handy guy, always looking for somthing to do, so he installed horse shoe pits for me in the back yard.  A great and professional job.   My son Evan  and his wife Marcela, came from Wilmington, North Carolina, with their son Lucas 4. 

My wife's sister who lives right behind us, with a gate between our back yards had her only son flew in from Virginia.  We all had a great time; unfortunately, most all of us came down with the COVID virus.  it affected us all differently, some with muscle pain, some just losing taste and smell, and most all of us suffered loss of energy.  I was listless for three weeks, no stamina to get much done at all.  I would get the vacuumn out and spend 45 minutes vacuuming and would need to take a rest.  None of us had fever, mostly mild symptomss, thank the Lord.  Everyone is pretty much back to normal.

Jane plays on-line Bridge with several groups, and one of the players in Cochabamba, Bolivia, the owner of a jewlery store was telling her he had the virus and for four months he suffered from loss of energy, being listless.  He would only go to his store for a few hours day.  There are many folks dying of the virus in Bolivia; one reason is there are no ventilators.  One of my fellow Masons a fellow who just turned 50, just passed away last week.  A doctor who was director of a hospital in La Paz, who accompanied me to the States in 2011, when my appendix ruptured, just died a couple of days ago,.  Many have died, many we knew.  I wish I could win the big one with Powerball, and I'd fix the Bolivian ventilator problem.  It's sad to see so many afflicted.  Thank the good Lord we have proper care and equipment in the States.

Stay safe everyone.  


02/10/21 01:58 PM #1029    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

 

 


02/10/21 02:12 PM #1030    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

Since Karen recently had a birthday, and today is Pete's birthday, I thought they would get a kick out of this.

Happy Birthday - Pete.

 


02/11/21 09:26 AM #1031    

 

Karen Peterson (Belliston)

Thank you, Dan, for remembering our birthdays and for the great joke!


03/06/21 06:30 PM #1032    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

Hi Everybody

I just read Gary Acker's comment about Dennis Tuck being in 'memorium'.  I didn't know he passed away.  Looking at the red roses on the list of those who have left us, shows we have more roses than those who don't.  

I noticed Ronald (Ron aka Junior) Jackson, passed away in 2021, obviously that's recent.  I was trying, without success to find him and Brent Peterson, a couple of years ago.  They were practically joined at the hip in high school.  I belive Brent dropped out of school.  I don't know if Ron dropped out or not.  I do know the two of them joined the Navy on the "Buddy system', a couple of months before I did, and both were attending a school in San Diego.  After I finished Radio School in Norfolk, Virginia, before leaving for Taiwan, I looked them up, having agreat visit with the two of them. Come to think about it, I believe our visit was after I completed Boot Camp, before going to Virginia.  I joined in August '62, the same day with Mike Imman, a year behind us.  He too dropped out of school.  In Boot Camp, we were in the same company, and he was a 4.0 (perfect) recruit.  I held out hope he would excell, doing great things.  Unfortunately,he was in Radar School in San Diego doing very well (I was told), but something soured him on military life and he went AWOL, eventually getting kicked out of the Navy.  Mike had been dating Jackie Lee (Norogon) when we joined up.  I believe Jackie and a girl I was dating from Ogden High, Janet Magdiel, went to Fort Douglas to see us being sworn in, then off we went to Boot Camp.

Again it would be good to hear from some of you.  I know I would enjoy hearing and communicating with more of our classmates.

 

 

 

 

 

 

  


03/06/21 08:34 PM #1033    

Gary Acker

Thanks again Dan for your information about the Navy and all with those guys. Junior Jackson I used to run into now and then but he wasn't especially fond of working a full time job. He told me once that he was thinking of retiring and I said from what Junior? He did work for Eddie Samone who owns the Kokomo on 25th street..yes we have lost quite a few of our classmates, it almost makes me feel old! Chime in guys we miss hearing from you. Oh I almost forgot about Mike Iman, did you know that he did some prison time? I ran into him one day and we rode around for awhile one day and wow did prison ever change him and not for the best either! Enough rambling for now. Be safe you all and get your shots if you want or can, my wife and I got ours. Regards my friends. Who did Tuck marry!? I ran into his ex wife on night in a saloon, she had left Denny and was on a "runner" if you know what I mean.

03/08/21 09:22 AM #1034    

 

Ruth Young (Adams)

Hello dear classmates.

I have been absent from the group for some time..or should I say lazy.!!   No good excuse.    Dan it is always fun to read you funny posts

It is sad to hear about so many of our friends leaving us but ..guess we all must.  We have been pretty lucky here with covid.  My son had a very mild case and a dear neighbor passed.   The worst part is that we have had to not see the new baby.  BUT that is understandable.  So glad you and your wife are ok Dan.

My eldest son had a stroke in Sept.  He is comming along ok but the covid has put delays on things like therapy.  He is unable to get back to work but gets around ok with his weak left side. A little more grumpy than usual.

Thanks to you all ..keeping us informed of each other.  Don't get much news out here in the east.

To answer your question  Gary  no, the cat doesnt go on walks with us but when the dog goes in or out the cat must PUSH herself through the door first.  The poor old dog just says "whatever"  she doesn't know where she is half the time.  She will go potty ON the porch and then go down the steps to the grass.  I figure what she has been through --she can do whatever she pleases.

Oh and I hope those knees are good.  two at once?  wow.

Well I really don't have any exciting new so will say farewell for now.   Stay well all you dear people

                                                                                                    Love Ruth


03/11/21 09:19 AM #1035    

 

Ruth Young (Adams)

Hey I was trying to remember some of the teachers.    It seems the memories have faded.  BUT Nina Clyde left quite an impression on me.    I remember her standing in front of the class...always with here hankie.  She seemed to have taken a dislike to me.  My older brother said to just tell her he was my brother cause she liked him.  I was too stubborn to do that.  So her favorite student (a girl)  got the same grade as I did on our final test.  That girl got an A and I got a D.  Sooo I never forgot Nina Clyde.        I also remember the librarian Mrs. Young.   On the first day they stopped recording attendance......(the first time I skipped school)   off I drove in my dads Edsel.  HA  HA  guess that was pretty easy for her to figure out who that was.


03/11/21 01:45 PM #1036    

Gary Acker

I remember Mrs Clyde but I didn't ever have her for English. You skipped school!? I can't believe that I thought only us dumb kids did. And your dad had an Edsel! That's a car that I was never in. Nice to hear from you Ruth Ann, be safe and take care of yourself.

03/15/21 07:23 PM #1037    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

I've been meaning to respond to you, Ruth and Gary, but have been tied up.  I hope to add a few words soon, but for now just a couple of things to uplift the spirits,

 

 

Inline image

 

 


03/15/21 07:41 PM #1038    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

May be an image of text


03/15/21 09:52 PM #1039    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

Just a note about my profile photo showning me in my Navy uniform with the ship I served on for three years.

One of my shipmates, a guy from the Salt Lake area, used to call me 'flaps'  you can see why from the picture.  He was a year or two older than I, and was losing a lot of his hair, so I would just call him 'baldy'.

You can also see my high school class ring in this photo.


03/15/21 11:03 PM #1040    

Gary Acker

Oh my goodness Dan, your so spot on with your post!we're learning even more each day. That's a keeper for sure I've just been talking to Bob Vanfossen and my neighbor about the very same thing. Thanks Amigio 😊

03/16/21 07:31 AM #1041    

Gary Acker

I couldn't let your "flaps "comment go by we all loved the haircuts that our uncle, uncle Sam gave us when we served for him I'm not to fond of them myself. Gotta ask you though,did you need 30degrees for landing or only 15? You probably only didn't need any for takeoffs depending on your gross weight. Be safe my friend and I hope your not having any aftereffects from your go experience with the covid. We now have had both of our shots.

03/16/21 10:46 AM #1042    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

Chuckling Gary.  I lived with the jokes about my ears my whole life and learned to laugh along with them.

My shipmate from Salt Lake (Darrell Brailsford-Baldy), used to say "if the ship ever loses it's proposlsion plant, we can just tie lanyards (thin ropes) to your ear lobes and use you as sails".

My mother told me when I was about six years old, "you look like a taxi cab going down the street with both back doors open" 

Once when about nine years old, my grandmother sent me a half a block down the street to the local grocery store to buy her a quart of milk to make gravy with.  I was running back home with the bag, when two neighorhood teen-agers were talking, one in his car and the other leaning on the drivers window sill. He  turned around as I was going by and said "Danny, don't run too fast or you'll take off"!

My son Evan was unfortunately blessed with the large, protruding ears.  Jane and I had them laid back a bit closer to his head, by a plastic surgeon in Bolivia.  He sure felt better about himself.

While in the Navy, a doctor one time said he could do the same with my ears, but I declined, saying:  "My big ears are part of who I am, part of my personality".

 

"All the better to hear you with, my dear"!


03/16/21 11:21 AM #1043    

Gary Acker

Frankly Dan l didn't really notice that you have the ears that you were always getting harassed about but it makes a good joke about yourself. I'm glad that you could help your son sometimes those things can really bother you. Mine are uneven, one sticks out farther than the other but it never really bothered me. Good chatting with you and I loved the joke I've got to show it to my neighbor. Take care and we'll talk again soon.

03/17/21 10:01 AM #1044    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

Happy Saint Patrick's Day,

Along with being Pat Phelps' birthday, Happy Birthday, Pat; it's the day I was released from active duty in the Navy, 54 years ago --- whew, where does the time go?


03/17/21 02:12 PM #1045    

 

Steven Nielsen

Hey everyone. I've been AWOL for too long and sincerely apologize. I keep up with Dan, Gary, Ken, David and JoAnn somewhat on my personal email but am seldom here. Just too busy...

But regardless of lame excuesses Sue and I are now living in Utah wanted to let everyone know of a Special Fireside to be held on Tuesday evening, March 23, 2021 7:00 P.M. in Willard. 

The fireside will be on Hebrew Writing Styles within Holy Writ and will be presented on a colorful Power Point format with paintings and graphs of thoroughly researched, informative, thought provoking and edifying information.

MOST IMPORTANT: You can watch the Fireside on your computer screen on the link: zoom.us/j/91855705039

The actual Fireside Fireside will be held in the Willard Ward Cultural Hall located on the corner of 100 North and 100 West in Willard, UT - All are invited! Family & Friends - Social Distancing and Face Coverings Requested but not required.

Individually wrapped treats to follow the event...

See everyone next post; I'll try to be more active. Steve Nielsen

 

 


03/19/21 07:49 PM #1046    

Gary Acker

Someone has to help me on this one. I thought that our Vice President was the first Afro-American woman to hold that position 🤔 According to the nightly news she is the first Asian American? Tell me what I missed please. I know that I'm old and not too sharp but I'll still ask.

03/20/21 09:34 AM #1047    

Ferron Wimmer

Gary Her father was Jamaican and her mother was Indian {India}. Thats what I under stand. If I'm wrong I would likento be corrected. One of these days I'm just going to grab you and take you to coffee


03/20/21 01:04 PM #1048    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

An intereting bio for Kamala Harris -- quoted from wikipedia:

"Harris was born in Oakland, California,[10] on October 20, 1964.[11] Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, a biologist whose work on the progesterone receptor gene stimulated advances in breast cancer research,[12] had arrived in the United States from India in 1958 as a 19-year-old graduate student in nutrition and endocrinology at the University of California, Berkeley;[13][14] Gopalan received her PhD in 1964.[15] Harris' father, Donald J. Harris, is a Stanford University professor emeritus of economics, who arrived in the United States from British Jamaica in 1961 for graduate study at UC Berkeley, receiving a PhD in economics in 1966.[16][17] Along with her younger sister, Maya, Harris lived in Berkeley, California,[18][19] briefly on Milvia Street in central Berkeley, then a duplex on Bancroft Way in West Berkeley, an area often called the "flatlands"[20] with a significant black population.[21]

 
Harris's childhood home on Bancroft Way in Berkeley

When Harris began kindergarten, she was bused as part of Berkeley's comprehensive desegregation program to Thousand Oaks Elementary School, a public school in a more prosperous neighborhood in northern Berkeley[20] which previously had been 95 percent white, and after the desegregation plan went into effect became 40 percent Black.[21] A neighbor regularly took the Harris girls to an African American church in Oakland where they sang in the children's choir,[22][23] and the girls and their mother also frequently visited a nearby African American cultural center.[24] Their mother introduced them to Hinduism and took them to a nearby Hindu temple, where she occasionally sang.[25] As children, she and her sister visited their mother's family in Madras (now Chennai) several times.[26] She says she has been strongly influenced by her maternal grandfather P. V. Gopalan, a retired Indian civil servant whose progressive views on democracy and women's rights impressed her. Harris has remained in touch with her Indian aunts and uncles throughout her adult life.[27] Harris has also visited her father's family in Jamaica.[28]

Her parents divorced when she was seven. Harris has said that when she and her sister visited their father in Palo Alto on weekends, other children in the neighborhood were not allowed to play with them because they were black.[26] When she was twelve, Harris and her sister moved with their mother to MontrealQuebec, where Shyamala had accepted a research and teaching position at the McGill University-affiliated Jewish General Hospital.[29] Harris attended a French-speaking primary school, Notre-Dame-des-Neiges,[30] then F.A.C.E. School,[31] and finally Westmount High School[c] in Westmount, Quebec, graduating in 1981.[33] Wanda Kagan, a high school friend of Harris, later told CBC News in 2020 that Harris was her best friend and described how she confided in Harris that she had been molested by her stepfather.[34] She said that Harris told her mother, who then insisted Kagan come to live with them for the remainder of her final year of high school. Kagan said Harris had recently told her that their friendship, and playing a role in countering Kagan's exploitation, helped form the commitment Harris felt in protecting women and children as a prosecutor. After high school, in 1982, Harris attended Howard University, a historically black university in Washington, D.C. While at Howard, she interned as a mailroom clerk for California senator Alan Cranston, chaired the economics society, led the debate team, and joined Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.[35][36] Harris graduated from Howard in 1986 with a degree in political science and economics.[37]

Harris then returned to California to attend law school at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law through its Legal Education Opportunity Program (LEOP).[38] While at UC Hastings, she served as president of its chapter of the Black Law Students Association.[39] She graduated with a Juris Doctor in 1989[40] and was admitted to the California Bar in June 1990.[41]"


03/20/21 02:00 PM #1049    

Gary Acker

Ok Ferron, I got your message buddy I do need to get out more. Dan, thank you for the complete background on her. But, there's always a but, I simply that it's what ever way the wind blows. (I'm really black when it comes to George Floyd). How's that for a band-wagooner! My tongue is stuck in my cheek.

03/21/21 09:28 PM #1050    

 

Karen Peterson (Belliston)

Dan, I have a question for you. Our grandson just got called to the Bolivia Cochabamba mission. I understand you used to live in Bolivia. Please tell me a little (or a lot) about the place--what they eat (beans and rice, like everywhere in South America?), economy, living conditions, crime (that's the scary part), religions, weather, and generally what you remember about Bolivia. Where did you live? How long since you've been there? I'd appreciate some info! Thanks!


03/22/21 12:02 AM #1051    

 

Daniel Hutchinson

We lived for several years in La Paz, the shared capital, with Sucre.  Our last two and a half years were in Cochabamba.  Cochabamba is noted for their excellent food. The rice and beans are indeed a staple in most of Central and South America, but Peru and Bolivia are noted for some unique, very nice dishes.  One of my favorite places (the Missionaries are well aware of) is in a fairly large office building, right next to a large, popular supermarket Hipermaxi. The place I have in mind is  Brazilian style Rodiizio, similar to the one in Salt Lake at Trolley Square.  Sunday brunch is fantastic with many many foods to choose from - a lot of beef, pork and chicken dishes; a salad bar out of this world.  There is another very good pace to eat at the Hotel Cochabamba.  Food prices, restaurants are very resonable.  Another favorite is a restaurant called 'La Kaffe' -- excellent menu at good prices. The owner thinks I look like the British General Montgomery, and would greet me as the General, everytime we'd go in.  

As for crime,the city is quite safe.  As missionaries they will experience some chiding, harrassment; as is the case in most of the world.  My uncle's great grandson was serving a mission in Cochabamba while we lived there, and never heard of any problems.  As you can guess the vast majority of the populace is Catholic, very nice laid back people.There are some Jehova witnesses, who are very active.  I was always very respectful and polite with them.  They too sacrifice a great deal in proselitizing their faith.  I think your grandson will have a rich, rewarding and memorable time.  I was the Ward mission leader in Asuncion, Paraguay, during my last, retirement tour. the same laid back attitude prevailed there as in Cochabamba.  I endured more harrassment when we lived in the States in the same capacity of mission leader, than in Latin America.

At present there is some political upheaval in Bolivia, which affects the entire country, including Cochabamba, but as I'm sure he'll be briefed, to stay away from large political demonstrations, in order not to be peceived as connected to the opposition political parties.  Generally the life for the missionaries is pretty low key; with little to worry about. The field is ready to harvest with regard to the people being ready to hear the Gospel.  I'm heartened to see any missiomary group spreading spiritual goodness, regardless of faith; versus all of the evil we see in the world these days.  I'll share more with you in this regard at a later time.  You can rest easy; I don't think there's much to worry about.

We stay in contact with a lot of friends (mostly Jane) in Cochbamba (most people shorten it to Cocha); staying abreast to what's going on.  We understand current affairs,keeping our fingers on the pulse of life there.  Jane plays Bridge with large groups, mostly in Cochabamba, with some in La Paz -- they play via 'Zoom' on the computer - a couple of times a week.

Cochabamba weather is excellent, almost like spring weather year round.  Heavy coats will not be necessary in Cochabamba.

 

 

 

 

 

 


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