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09/14/24 08:44 AM #2097    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

Just touch David's name on his post to see the photo of his house in Fairbanks, Alaska with Aurora.


09/14/24 02:50 PM #2098    

 

Roger C. Kaage

David's picture is beautiful, with an unusually bright display.  Those of you that have traveled to the area probably know this, but the hotels and motels around Dinali have aurora wake-up calls.  If you let the front desk know, they will call your room if the "northern lights" are shining that night!  We were treated to some great shows that way.


09/15/24 07:50 PM #2099    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

Two weekends in a row!      
Bonnie Binkoff and I enjoyed our time together again this afternoon.      
The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra gave their 50th concert at Ripon College, thanks to a thoughtful endowment.      
We were there at Bonnie's Alma Mater for the concert.       

For you musicians and music buffs, the program included:

 ANTONIN DVORAK      
 Slavonic Dances     
             Opus 46, No. 8 in G Minor        
             Opus 72, No. 2 in E Minor        
 

 GEORGES BIZET/Guirard, E / Stenz, M          
 Carmen Suite   
 

 JOHANNES BRAHMS          
 Symphony No. 2 in D major, Opus 73        
 

 


09/15/24 09:06 PM #2100    

 

Nancy Doyle (Sudlow)

Sounds like a wonderful afternoon!

09/18/24 04:05 PM #2101    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

I wasn't a nude model, but apparently I should have attended our reunion naked.


09/19/24 06:05 AM #2102    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

   Remember who we are.


09/21/24 10:58 AM #2103    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

Let's bare our skin: school's not like our old locker room days.          
Neither of my daughters and none of my grandchildren, not grandsons nor granddaughters (all have participated in team sports), have taken locker room showers.      
As to written assignments:        
Have you seen ads for Grammarly?          
AI is the nemesis. Increasingly teachers have students do their writing in class.

 


09/22/24 04:32 PM #2104    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

Happy Birthday, Bob Nadler. All best wishes to you.

I am thinking of you and fellow classmates at Hackney's to celebrate our 60th reunion.

Our contemporary culture is obsessed with greatness - consider the endless iterarions of the GOAT meme...

Greatness, we assume, implies power, fame, wealth, and all the other things that allow the Greats to influence people and make things go their way.

What if we measured greatness not by the influence we wield but by the service we offer to others?

How are we doing?

Bob Nadler is one of three classmates at our 60th reunion who have worked in legal aid in order to see others move ahead.

Enjoy your special day, Bob; we celebrated our 60th in good company.

 


09/27/24 05:08 PM #2105    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

A tent can be a wonderful home - like when a hiker is in the mountains, enjoying the wonderful outdoors, a tent can be exactly what a hiker needs - a place to rest and be refreshed, a place to be protected from a storm. But even a hiker doesn't expect to live in a tent forever - after awhile, most hikers want to go home and live in a house, a structure that is much more permanent and sturdy than a tent. Tents are good for a purpose and helpful for a season or two, but they wear out, the fabric can be worn and torn and the poles can collapse.

One day as John Quincy Adams, former president of the United States, and turning four-score years, hobbled down the street leaning heavily on a cane in his favorite city of Boston, a friend tapped him and said, "John Quincy Adams, how are you this morning?"

The old man turned slowly, smiled, and said, "I'm fine, Sir, fine, but this old tenement that John Quincy lives in is not so good. The underpinning is about to fall away. The thatch is all gone off the roof, and the windows are so dim John Quincy can barely see out anymore. As a matter of fact, it wouldn't surprise me if before winter's over he had to move out. But as for John Quincy Adams, he never was better!              
 

 Aging    
 is a journey that starts the moment we are born;     
 it's not lost youth,          
 it's about changes that can include growth and learning.

 


09/30/24 10:26 AM #2106    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

   We share concern with all who have been impacted by Helene. People have been forced to their knees. Entire towns are inaccessible, communities have been devastated. Thankfully FEMA and medical teams were deployed before Hurricane Helene hit southeastern states.. 

 


10/02/24 11:00 AM #2107    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

President Biden ordered deployment of up to 1000 active duty troops to reinforce the North Carolina National Guard's emergency recovery operations including the fight to save lives in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene's assault on parts of southeastern states.

 


10/03/24 07:47 AM #2108    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

     

        Baseball, 

           a gift to America.

 

 


10/03/24 06:38 PM #2109    

 

Marvin Irving Blusteln

I saw on Face Book that Ron Thigpen passed.  I remmeber him.  I don't see his name for '64.  Did he not graduate with us?


10/04/24 02:22 PM #2110    

 

Jack Edmund Bookwalter

I believe Ron Thigpen went to Niles East after East and West became 4 year schools.

10/04/24 06:03 PM #2111    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

If Ron did not graduate with us, I think he was at West for more than his/our freshman year.


10/05/24 06:56 PM #2112    

Rosalle Stemer

Ron Thigpen performed a lead role in our production of The Heiress, in which I played a bit part. 


10/05/24 10:27 PM #2113    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

Which year was that, Rosalie?

Though Ron did not graduate with us, perhaps he can be included in the "In Memory" section of our website. He attended Lincoln and apparently spent a significant amount of time with us at West.

 


10/11/24 08:22 PM #2114    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

  Dear classmates,      
  Beware rising floodwater; take care.

  The St. Johns River in Florida:         
  expected to crest Wednesday, Oct. 16th.

  be aware: alligators in the back yard  

 


11/23/24 05:51 PM #2115    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

It's deer hunting season in Wisconsin.

Deer are strapped on cars.

Some years ago a bullet meant for a deer went through a friend's bedroom window.

 


12/04/24 11:20 AM #2116    

 

Scott Mermel

Greetings from Palm Springs, CA -- left 18 degree Chicago for this


12/04/24 03:35 PM #2117    

 

Nancy Doyle (Sudlow)

Beautiful! Enjoy!

12/05/24 12:07 PM #2118    

 

Kathleen Moyes (Clewell)

Hi Scott -

Looks like you're in my neighborhood. Another perfect dayin the Coachella Valley!  You picked a good time to be out here.


12/05/24 01:55 PM #2119    

 

Holly Semiloff (Ciotti)

O for crying out loud.  Should I show you a picture of beautiful downtown Eagle Rock???  Or lovely Glendale?  How about a freeway offramp???????????

 

holly ciotti


12/06/24 07:07 PM #2120    

 

Janis Kliphardt (Emery)

What joy! on the morning of November 8th, eight historic bells in Paris' Notre Dame Cathedral's northern belfry began to ring out for the first time since Parisians and the world watched in horror as a devastating fire tore through the centuries-old cathedral. The April 2019 fire damaged some parts of the cathedral irrevocably, though a feared collapse was averted. The fire toppled the iconic spire, melted the lead-covered roof, and brought charred beams and stones crashing down. The first task after the fire was to stabilize the structure. Then the cleaning that eradicated both fire damage and centuries of dirt. More than 2,000 architects, engineers, and craftspeople used artisanal methods to painstakingly re-create what was lost and restore what could be saved.

Firefighters saved the towers. Some of the limestone gargoyles and grotesques were damaged by water pressure from the hoses and have been restored or recarved.

The eight bells of the north tower have been cleaned and restored. The pair of bells in the south tower were undamaged. Three new bells have been installed above the altar.

Though modern designs were proposed, the decision favored a reproduction of the 315-foot spire that was toppled by the fire. The rooster atop the spire is new, it has "wings of fire" representing the cathedral, like a phoenix, rising from the ashes; the damaged rooster will be displayed in a new museum. The sixteen copper statues below the spire had been removed before the fire as part of restoration work, they have been reinstalled.

The flying buttresses played an important role in preventing the cathedral's collapse during the fire.

The stained-glass rose windows survived the fire and will be fully restored as part of future work.

Notre Dame will reopen December 8th.

with attribution to "Notre Dame unveiled", Washington Post, December 6, 2024

 


12/10/24 02:25 AM #2121    

 

Fancy Miss Nancy (Novak)

Hello Y'all, My favorite part of the Notre Dame reopening ceremony was getting to hear the nearly 8000 pipes of the 3-story organ. 


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