Wednesday, February 14, 2007
SKINNY TIE FUNCTION - CLASS OF '66
Hi everyone.
I was in Houston for a few days and Nancy Head and I were able to connect for a few hours. She let me 'borrow' the attached photo: skinny ties - 1965. First.........Look at that attachment........ and see if you can identify the (8) dudes.
Then open the second attachment for the names with the faces. I think that it was some function in 1965. Does anyone remember what "party" would FORCE US to wear the suits and ties???
By the way; does anyone know an email address or phone number for:
a) Linda Becker?
b) Pat Manganelo?
c) anyone else from class of 1966?
thanks,
Tom
tom.madsen@earthlink.net
Sunday, February 04, 2007
NOTE FROM JERRY BALL '65
Gloria,
Thought you might be interested in this obituary for the mother of former RHS football coach Robert Mickler.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/obituaries/stories/MYSA020307.06B.Obit_Mickler.192f52f.html
Different subject (but perhaps inspired by the fact I now read the obituary column daily!). I experienced an occasion that a lot of our contemporaries have gone or are going through - on Monday I turned 60. Other people seem to have handled that milestone better than I did.
I took the day off to mope over my lost youth.
Turned out okay though. On my day off, I drove about an hour and a half north of the place where I live to see the National Museum of the Pacific War (a WWII museum housed where Admiral Nimitz grew up). I watched the exhibits and thought about the young folks who never got a chance to turn 60 as a result of that war. Then I thought about our era and the fifty thousand who lost their opportunity to grow old because of Vietnam. And the troops who are serving us today around the world who have paid or may pay the price of that service. All of a sudden, turning 60 seemed like a gift.
A gift - like still being in contact with so many of the "kids" I walked the high school halls with - even after all these years. Friendships of long standing are especially sweet. For my year at Randolph, you are the lynchpin to keeping us all connected. Again, I thank you for that.
Hope things are going well for you.
God bless.
Jerry
Thought you might be interested in this obituary for the mother of former RHS football coach Robert Mickler.
http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/obituaries/stories/MYSA020307.06B.Obit_Mickler.192f52f.html
Different subject (but perhaps inspired by the fact I now read the obituary column daily!). I experienced an occasion that a lot of our contemporaries have gone or are going through - on Monday I turned 60. Other people seem to have handled that milestone better than I did.
I took the day off to mope over my lost youth.
Turned out okay though. On my day off, I drove about an hour and a half north of the place where I live to see the National Museum of the Pacific War (a WWII museum housed where Admiral Nimitz grew up). I watched the exhibits and thought about the young folks who never got a chance to turn 60 as a result of that war. Then I thought about our era and the fifty thousand who lost their opportunity to grow old because of Vietnam. And the troops who are serving us today around the world who have paid or may pay the price of that service. All of a sudden, turning 60 seemed like a gift.
A gift - like still being in contact with so many of the "kids" I walked the high school halls with - even after all these years. Friendships of long standing are especially sweet. For my year at Randolph, you are the lynchpin to keeping us all connected. Again, I thank you for that.
Hope things are going well for you.
God bless.
Jerry
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