Class Notes
July/August 2010
by Bill Drennen
[These notes are by Bill Drennen, "guest columnist," who was prevailed upon by Tony Lavely, our Class Secretary.]
My computer started adding space between letters as if I
were trying to pad a paper. Space is what I study: the concepts of a man
named Hameed Ali who writes under the pen name of A. H. Almaas. He is a
fully developed thinker and writer and I have been a member of his Diamond
Heart Inquiry Group since 1999. His newest book Diamond Heart Book V -
Inexhaustible Mystery will be out next March.
Gordon Davis answered my "Linked-In" note to
him with the information that he had suffered a heart attack in late March,
drove himself to the hospital, where they wired and stitched him up and let
him out in two days. He says he is a little disappointed in what China has
been offering the world of late. He teaches now at Northwestern; his
Political Science course is "Nations ― The Challenge to International
Sustainable Development." Gordon has been badgering
Gus Speth to step up his campaign to wrest power back from the
consumer and political lobbies, and promoting Gus's book: The Bridge at
the End of the World.
Gordon's episode brought to mind Bob Kaiser's
essay about his "Tell-Tale Heart" attack. "Greeley" is still vibrant,
writing for the Washington Post, and working on a new book about the
breakdown of the financial system in this country. It is due to be published
later this year. Check out Bob's 2004 essay and other publications on our
Class Website; there's a wealth of information, pictures, and good memories,
thanks to the design and maintenance of Sam Francis.
Gary Griffis and bride Leslie Pearlman stopped
by Shepherdstown to share their spring with the Drennens. Gary seems
healthier than ever and recommended his orthopedic surgeon in Braintree as
the one to replace my knee pain. Grif's career as a consultant in banking
and development in post-communist countries is very interesting for its
globe-circling and problem-solving aspects: Africa, the Caribbean, Albania,
Eastern Europe, and four years in Mongolia.
One common thread I've encountered in contacting classmates is how much we
have in the way of medical and physical complaints. This is not a medical
blog, but the issue of healthcare and its cost and insurance rates has held
congress spellbound for months and is surely of increased interest to the
Class of 1964.
John Morrison responded to my call for
information: "I just passed the twenty-year mark as a contracting officer
with the FDIC, a civil servant doing what I can to keep your banks solvent;,
we are fairly busy. However, what I really enjoy is my avocation as a 'life
coach', which I have been doing for over 25 years, mostly on a pro bono
basis."
Merrill Pasco and I went sailing with
friend/architect Ferdinand Johns on his sailboat, Cacafuego, in the San Juan
Islands between Seattle and Vancouver. We encountered a pod of orcas
peacefully moving north. On my way west driving my faithful 2002 yellow Ford
Escape, I had a breakfast visit with Sam Deloria
at the Indian Cultural Center in Albuquerque.
Tony Morris, ever the alert firefighter,
dropped a note about a new film he is working on about the Italian crews
that dip 7299 gallons out of the wild to dump on fires in Italy ... and how
this country should have a more unified firefighting response.
Frank Hotchkiss was recently elected to the
city council in Santa Barbara, CA. "Interesting work, and people certainly
do return your phone calls."
Tony Lee and wife Margie were set to drop by
Shepherdstown. (I know, West Virginia seems out of the way and backwoods,
but it's really not. Only an hour to DC.) Unfortunately for us here it was
not the backwoods but the rain that kept the rendezvous from happening.
Tony's basement flooded and he had to put off his windsurfing trip to the
North Carolina coast. Weather irony!
One of my efforts to dig up information included looking up classmates by
name on popular websites from Google to Yahoo to Facebook to Linked In. That
is where I encountered social-media folks like Nick
Von Baillau, Jon McBride, and
Sam Low. Sam and I serve on an awards committee
of the International Documentary Association. So we get to screen movies and
talk film for hours every fall.
Several classmates shared life items at the reunion in June.
Kip Burweger and I had dinner at a table hosted
by wine buyer and whiskey maker Owsley Brown II
and his wife at the reunion dinner. Owlsley bought the wine for the class
and his was a good table at which to be sitting. We got to watch
Dick Niglio, who deserted us for a younger
class ('65), dance the night away with his beautiful young bride. And we
paid close attention to the election of new officers for the next five
years.
We do have The Contemporary
American Theatre Festival here the whole month of July which was graced
by the presence last summer of Jack Cirie's
daughter, Andrea. She will probably be back this summer for another run.
My email for information got Dick Ainsworth's
attention. He called from San Diego, one of their homes. He and his wife
were married in the chapel at the Coronado naval base forty odd years ago.
Dick was on an LPD for his three years of naval duty, and he reminded me our
paths crossed at the Brooklyn Naval Shipyard as she was getting outfitted.
He was with the ship through several trips delivering troops to Vietnam.
Dick told me he had been recruited by Dick Cheney to serve on a federal
mediation panel during the period of Republican control. He always brought
laughs to Washington to share with the Veep. His tenure concluded recently
with a nice thank-you note from President Obama. He says he still enjoys
get-togethers with roommates Walt Macauley,
Dillon Hoy, and Bear
Mason.
If you'd like to be a guest columnist for Class Notes, as I am for this
column, please contact Tony Lavely, our Class Secretary. It gives him a
break, and it's fun reaching out to classmates.
Bill Drennen