Richard
Schaphorst
From Fall / Winter 2017 Alumni Bulletin:
As
Ralph
Fortney
said during the festivities: "We may not have had quantity, but we sure
had quality!" Richard Schaphorst joined 12 other '52
Classmates at our 65th Reunion - See
Fall / Winter
Alumni Bulletin for more details.
From Summer, 2015, Alumni Bulletin - Dick recently attended a
Lehigh Alumni Club meeting along with
John Kerr
(deceased),
Ralph Fortney,
Robert
Kiesling,
Ed Purdy
(deceased),
Neil
Randall (deceased),
and
George
Young
(deceased).
From Winter 2010 Alumni
Bulletin -
Bob Flynn
(deceased)
saw
Neil Randall (deceased),
and Dick Schaphorst at the Villanova game.
For many years,
Neil
and
Dick worked
together in Philly, sidestepped a corporate move to California, and then
formed their own high‑tech company and prospered.
From 50th Reunion Book, 2002 - ->
April 2002 - After graduation, I
joined the Philco Corp. in Philadelphia where I worked as an electronic
engineer / manager for the next 24 years. In 1957, I married
Patricia Smedick and we have been blessed with three children and
six grandchildren. In 1976 I left Philco / Ford to found an
electronics company, Delta Information Systems. From the
beginning,
Neil
Randall (deceased),
also Lehigh '52, has been a key technical consultant to Delta. I
retired as president in '97, as an employee in '99, and continue as
Chairman. We have lived in Jenkintown for 38 years and have been
active in civic and church organizations. I look forward to seeing
everyone at the reunion. |
Elihu
Schepps
Elihu
Schepps
wrote: I understand your need for some news about our class
of '52, but unfortunately (actually fortunately) there's not
much new in our lives that is newsworthy. Joan and I
still live in Boca Raton, and she is very involved with
duplicate bridge (She is a Gold Life Master, and writes the
Bridge Newsletter for a local Duplicate Bridge club). I
spend my spare time with golf and watercolor painting. No
changes there.
We last
visited Lehigh in 2016 for our Granddaughter's graduation,
and again when our grandson Max Schepps became a
Freshman. He is now entering his Senior year and is doing
very well as a Mechanical Engineering major. So if all goes
well, next Spring we will get back to our 4th family
graduation. The next one after that will take another
generation which has not yet arrived.
We
usually attend The Tower Society get together in Palm Beach
each year, but the only one from our class is usually
Bob Reisman and his wife Toby, Hope you are
doing well, regards, El - June 2019
From Summer 2017 Alumni Bulletin:
Elihu
writes that he and his Joan are enjoying retirement in Boca
(West), Fla. El plays golf, does some painting and has kept
in touch with
Norm
Merksamer (deceased) and
Bob Reisman. El and Joan have a son and
granddaughter who are Lehigh graduates, and a grandson who is currently
a freshman. That's a Lehigh family, for sure! Thanks, El,
for the wonderful update.
I retired a few years ago after
spending over fifty years at Mastex Industries, our textile
manufacturing business in Holyoke, MA. Joan and I are now living
in Boca Raton, FL. We love it here and are enjoying the great weather
and golf and bridge.
We recently attended a Tower
Society affair in Palm Beach and met
Bob
and Toby
Reisman
there. We found that we both were celebrating that their grandson and
our granddaughter will be starting at Lehigh next Fall. It is great
that our kids keep wanting to go there. It helps keep us in touch with
the campus.
Bob
and I are planning to be back for
reunion, as is
Norm Merksamer
(deceased), and I hope a lot more of our class. See you there.
Elihu
- March 2012
From 50th Reunion Book, 2002 - June 16, 1952 not only brought my
diploma, but also an invitation from Uncle Sam to serve my time in the
USAF. The first few years of my post-Lehigh life were spent in
Newfoundland. When I returned, I joined our family business, a
textile manufacturing plant in Holyoke, MA. The last 48 years have
been spent there, culminating in serving as President. The years
were not uneventful. Responsibility for all aspects of a
manufacturing business has presented a myriad of challenges. Our
company has become a leader in several areas of the industry.
In 1956, I married Joan
Fortgang and we have shared our lives since. We had 2
children, Israel and Sara. Israel graduated
from Lehigh in 1980 and his time there gave me the great opportunity to
come back on a frequent schedule. He now works with me at Mastex
Industries . Our daughter, Sara, is an attorney in Westchester
County, NY. Joan and I have 4 grandchildren. Joan
is an avid tournament Bridge player and has a world-class collection of
Trump Indicators.
I have been active in Holyoke
community work, serving for many years on the Mayoral Advisory Committee
and in the area of industrial development. In 1999, I was the
recipient of the "Business Person of the Year" award from the Holyoke
Chamber of Commerce.
My years at Lehigh gave me an
excellent foundation for my career, as well as many happy memories.
In the years since, Lehigh's growth and progress have been a great
source of pride to me. My choice of Lehigh in 1948 was a good one. |
Charles
Scovil
From Summer, 2015, Alumni Bulletin - I received a compelling
biographical sketch on
Charles E. Scovil, Fairhope, Ala.: Born 1928, Queens, N.Y.
Raised in Montclair, N.J., and attended public schools. Enlisted
in Army 1946. Spent 1947 in Japan. Graduated Lehigh 1952,
degree in geology. Met wife during college years, married 1951.
Three children. Hobbies: Photography and astronomy.
Became interested in astronomy at about age 10. Retired 1988,
Curator, Stamford, Conn., Observatory, Stamford Museum and Nature
Center. Awarded many astrological commendations. In 2001,
received the Peltier Award of the Astronomical League for contributions
to popularizing astronomy. An asteroid, #3949 Scovil, was named
after him for his work in astronomy.
Charles
goes on to tell us he was raised Presbyterian from age 5, became an ordained
elder about 1957 in Aurora, Colo., and moved to Connecticut in 1959.
Exposed to miracles of healing in 1967 at Rye, N.Y., Presbyterian Church, he
became charismatic. In 1972, he died of exposure to toxic fumes and
overwork. "The Lord sent me back to work for Him,”
Charles
says, and he is now pastor of a small group of men. 2015: Now
completely retired and living with son Gary in Alabama. Thank you for
sharing,
Charles.
From Spring 2008 Alumni
Bulletin: Classmate
Charles Scovil
typically starts his workday at 6 p.m. When the sky is completely dark,
he leaves his desk and peers into a 22‑inch telescope at the billions of
white freckles scattered across the black sky. Over the 10 or so hours
he spends at the observatory nightly,
Scovil
records stars' subtle changes in brightness with a pencil and logbook.
Why does he do this?
Charles
is the chief astronomer and curator of the Stamford (CT) Observatory
at the Stamford Museum. He does not do this volunteer work for acclaim.
"It brings one closer to God, that basically is how I worship," says
Charles. Scovil
has made 37,000 observations over 44 years, and his awards if related to
football would be the equivalent of the Heisman, the MVP, and the Super
Bowl trophy! |
Jack
Skakandy February 2008: I was surprised
to be included in the "deceased" listing as I am alive and
well spending the last 37 years enjoying life in Tequesta
FL. I hope that this error will be corrected SOON.
Thank you, Jack
Editor's note: Sorry
Jack, we do that when we don't hear from someone for over 10
years. We make it conditional by a note that we don't know if you are
"dead" or just "lost." |
William
Skillman*
Bill, sorry to hear that your bike riding led to your appearance
as a 90-year-old bag of bones. I quit riding over 10 years
ago so I will settle for looking like a 93-year-old bag of
bones every day. I do have a history with bicycles! When I
was waiting to go to class around the 8th grade, I was
playing tag in the school bus parking lot and collided with
a bike coming at right angles like your car. Knocked me
unconscious for a short time and a sharp ornament on his
front fender dug a hole in my left thigh.
A friend and I went swimming several years later, and riding
back home we locked handlebars and went down in fresh patch
of tar on the side of the road, leaving a new hole in my
right knee. Several stitches and a dose of Sulfa powder
fixed this up. I can still see a small amount of black tar
in my knee.
Not too long after this, I helped my step-sister learn to
ride and the next day she came home with her right arm
broken. Step-mom wasn't too happy with me.
Years later I went for a ride with son-in-law and rode from
the pavement onto the grass strip beside the walk. Didn't
see a hole someone had left and the bike stopped, but I
continued on with a graceful fill gainer to the grass. No
damage, my son-in law was sorry he didn't capture it on his
smart phone.
I miss biking, but I guess I'll do without at my advanced
age. Don't even own one now.
I hope the above treatise will help you save yourself.
Bill Skillman - July 2021.
Bill
writes: An update on my life: Charlotte, (Susie)
List and I were married May 4, 2019, in the Chapel at Augsburg Lutheran
Village in Gwynn Oak, Baltimore, MD. My son-in-law, Richard Brash,
ordained in April by the Church of the Nazarene, presided. Best man was my
Grandson, Eli Brash. I am in the process of moving to her
apartment at Augsburg, but am living there while packing up my Charlestown
apartment. - August 2019
April 2018 - Since I am near the bottom of your
correspondents list and after reading your plea and
Pat's plea in the Bulletin, I decided to take a
look at your marvelous site. Rather than inventing a new
diatribe, I thought perhaps you could utilize my web site
for our web page. I have a brief bio and lots of links to
interesting items, such as slide shows on the Hindenburg,
that I toured in 1936 and watched the disaster in 1937, also
AWACS career, and even me singing the Westinghouse song a
few years ago. My home page is
http://skillmansofamerica.com/SkillHome.htm. The last 20 or
so years of my retirement I have researched the Skillmans
of America, see base page, now have over 6,000
Skillmans from my 9th great grandfather who came to
America in 1664 to convince Peter Stuyvesant that he should
surrender New Amsterdam, which he did, so it was promptly
renamed New York. I correspond with almost 500 people
interested in this Skillman saga. I lost the love of my
life March 19 last year, almost a year after
Pat lost DAZ, so I will email him
directly to share some thoughts. I'll see if I have a
picture or two to send via email. Later I'll send
another message about my review of the "S" classmates. Boy,
you have a great job here!
Regards, Bill Skillman - Should we continue web
site?: Yes
(From Bill's web sit) I'm a retired Radar Engineer
with several areas of interest. For over 53 years I lived
in Linthicum Heights, Anne Arundel County, MD, about 10
miles south of Baltimore, MD, right next to
Baltimore-Washington Thurgood Marshall International Airport
(BWI.) My wife, Anne, and I raised our three
children there and have been empty nesters for over three
decades. In March, 2010, we moved into the Charlestown
Retirement Community eight miles to the north of our beloved
Linthicum. The average age here is 83, close to ours when
we moved here, but approaching 90 now. Late 2011 we
decided to gift our house to our daughter. After a frantic
several months her family moved in the week before
Christmas. She loves the house since she grew up there.
November 2005 - I recently found the long-missing
Christopher
Longyear (deceased). He is a retired professor of U. of Washington, living in
Seattle, WA. He sent me one e-mail, no more than "hi," so he is still
among the living. Maybe you can elicit more from him.
William Skillman of
Linthicum, Md., retired engineer at Westinghouse (Baltimore, Md.), has
been named 2003 recipient of the IEEE D. J. Picard Medal for Radar
Technologies and Applications. Bill was honored for his
pioneering work in pulse Doppler radar design, including advances in the
Airborne Warning and Control System. The AWACS is considered one
of the most effective air surveillance tools and is used the world over.
- Winter 2004 Alumni Bulletin
*Bill
has been a fantastic support person. Starting in
April, 2018. he has diligently searched Ancestry.com and
other data bases for names of Classmates. Thanks to
him we have many updates and corrections. |
David
Stickell
Temple Terrace, FL
Received a phone call from David February first and
he brought me up to date on his interesting life.
Originally from
Sewickley, PA. The day after he graduated from Lehigh
he was drafted and sent to Ft Riley, KS, where he applied
and was accepted to OCS. But when he found out he had
to spend a couple of extra months as an officer he opted
out. In their infinite wisdom, the Army made him a
medic without giving him any training. David
spent his time around Manhattan, KS, giving shots and
driving an ambulance - Corporal Stickell should apply
for the job of giving COVID shots.
He went to College
Station, PA, as an Adjunct Professor at Penn State and as an
office manger for Exam Services. Married until 1981 -
but says, "My wife and I get along better now than when we
were married." He gave up his motorcycle when he moved
to Tampa in 2010 and lets his daughter, Ellen, look after
him.
He sounded great
and reasonably happy with his situation. He still goes
to church as often as possible and hopes outlive me -
February 2021.
Hi,
Bill, Where are you these days? In 2010 I
sold the house I had lived in since 1969 (with NO
advertising) and bought a house in Tampa about 2.5 miles
from my daughter and son-in-law. At the moment I am
visiting in State College and staying with a friend who
lives around the corner from Joe Paterno's house. Needless
to say there's been lots of activity in the neighborhood.
The day
I joined the Unitarian-Universalist church in Tampa earlier this year a
couple from Lehigh joined. Chuck Smith was a professor and
Christine was staff or administration. If you have a chance, let
me know what you've been up to. David Stickell – November 2011 |
Ernest
Szvetecz
Heard from
Erny by accident on March 31, 2017, so I know he is
still out there doinf stuff. I hope I hear more about
him soon -
Bill
Winter 2012 Alumni Bulletin:
Erny was in attendance at
our 60th Reunion |
William
Tait
Just received an email
saying he is alive and well! - Circa 2011.
Title: Professor
Emeritus, Department of Philosophy and CHSS, University of Chicago
Home Address: 5522
S. Everett Ave., Chicago, IL 60637, (773) 241-7288, williamtait@mac.com
Books:
-
Early Analytic Philosophy: Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein (in honor of
Leonard Linsky) (Editor).
Lasalle: Open Court (1996)
-
The Provenance of Pure Reason: Essays in the Philosophy of Mathematics
and Its History. Oxford:
Oxford University Press (2005)
Recent Papers (PDF
format)
-
Philosophy/ History
-
Frege versus Cantor and Dedekind: on the concept of number. Frege,
Russell, Wittgenstein: Essays in Early Analytic Philosophy (in honor
of Leonard Linsky) (ed. W.W. Tait). Lasalle: Open Court Press
(1996): 213-248. Reprinted in Frege: Importance and Legacy (ed.
M. Schirn). Berlin: Walter de Gruyter (1996): 70-113. (43 pages)
-
Cantor's Grundlagen and the paradoxes of set theory. Between
Logic and Intuition: Essays in Honor of Charles Parsons (ed. G.
Sher and R. Tieszen). Cambridge: CUP (2000): 269-290. (27 pages)
-
Beyond the axioms: the question of objectivity in mathematics. Philosophia
Mathematica 9 (2001): 21-36 (19 pages)
-
Noesis: Plato on exact science. Reading Natural Philosophy:
Essays in the History and Philosophy of Science and Mathematics to
Honor Howard Stein on His 70th Birthday (ed. David Malament).
Chicago and La Salle: Open Court (2002). (22 pages)
-
Remarks on finitism. Reflections on the Foundations of
Mathematics: Essays in honor of Solomon Feferman (ed. Wilfried
Sieg and Richard Sommer and Carolyn Talcott). Urbana: Association
for Symbolic Logic, Lecture Notes in Logic, Volume 15 (2002):
407-16. (11 pages)
-
Gödel's unpublished papers on foundations of mathematics. Philosophia
Mathematica 9 (2001): 87-126 (48 pages)
-
The myth of the mind. Topoi 21, Nos. 1-2 (2002):65-74. (20
pages)
-
Gödel's correspondence on proof theory and constructive
mathematics. Philosophia Mathematica 14, No. 1 (2006):
76-111. (41 pages)
-
Gödel's interpretation of intuitionism. Philosophia Mathematica 14,
No. 2 (2006): 208-228. (41 pages)
-
The Five Questions . Philosophy of Mathematics: Five Questions (ed.
V.F. Hendricks and H Leitgeb). Automatic Press/VIP (2008): 249-263
(8 pages)
-
Gödel on Intuition and on Hilbert's Finitism . Kurt Gödel: Essays
for His Centenial (ed. Solomon Feferman and Charles Parsons and
Stephen Simpson). Cambridge : Association for Symbolic Logic,
Lecture Notes in Logic, Volume 33 (2010): 88-108. (26 pages)
-
Primitive recursive arithmetic and its role in the foundations of
arithmetic: historical and philosophical reflections: In honor of
Per Martin-Löf on the occasion of his retirement .Epistemology
Versus Ontology: Essays in the Philosophy of Mathematics in Honor of
Per Martin-Löf (ed. P. Dybjer, S. Lindström, E. Palmgren and G.
Sundholm). Springer (2012): 161-180. (261 pages)
-
Logic
-
Variable-free formalization of the Curry-Howard Theory of Types. Twenty-Five
Years of Constructive Type Theory (ed. G. Sambin and J. Smith).
Oxford: OUP (1998): 265-274. (15 pages)
-
The completeness of Heyting first-order logic. The Journal of
Symbolic Logic 68, Number 3 (2003): 751-763 (11 pages)
-
Proof-theoretic semantics for classical mathematics. Synthese 148,
N0. 3 (2006) 603-622. (23 pages)
-
Constructing cardinals from below. Chapter 6 of The Provenence of
Pure Reason. (26 pages)
-
Gödel's reformulation of Gentzen's first consistency proof for
arithmetic: the no-counterexample interpretation . The Bulletin
of Symbolic Logic 11, Number 2 (2005): 225-238. Reprinted in Kurt
Gödel: Essays for His Centenial (ed. Solomon Feferman and
Charles Parsons and Stephen Simpson). Cambridge : Association for
Symbolic Logic, Lecture Notes in Logic, Volume 33 (2010): 74-87. (15
pages)
-
The substitution method revisited . Proofs, Categories and
Computations: Essays in Honor of Grigori Mints. (ed. Solomon
Feferman and Wilfried Sieg). College Publications (2010): 231-241.
(11 pages)
-
Gentzen's original consistency proof and the Bar Theorem . Gentzen's
Centenary: The Quest for Consistency. (ed. Reinhard Kahle and
Michael Rathjen). Springer. (To appear) (20 pages)
Syllabi and Lecture Notes (PDF format)
|
John
Tepper
It is a shame John has never written to us again since 2015 (8
years) after complaining that I had him in the "Lost" column. - May 2023
From Fall / Winter 2016 Alumni Bulletin:
John Tepper says he is not "lost, assumed deceased," as per the
Alumni Office. He is very much alive, retired from Western
Electric and living in the Kansas City area.
John Tepper writes: I was mildly shocked to see my name in
the list as "lost, assumed deceased". No, that is not the case. I'm
very much alive and well.
I'm retired from Western Electric (many years ago) and am continuing to
live in the Kansas City area with my second wife. I've been in this
area for 55 years; two of my three sons also call KC home.
I enjoyed visiting the campus last fall and was able to watch a football
game. Occasionally a Lehigh team shows up on our local TV; I watch
those games whenever they occur. John – November 2015.
Editor's note: Sorry about that. John, but I had
received no information concerning you since graduation, 63 years ago.
Glad to hear from you. |
|
Jerome
Underhill Heard from
Chic
Wheldon today. Great news! Jerry is alive and
well.
Chic
wrote: ...I can only
report one other classmate I know to be with us. Jerry
Underhill lives in Dallas, TX, with his wife, Ann. Both
are reasonably healthy and spend a lot of valuable time visiting their
children and "vacationing". Ok, Jerry, now you must write
to Bill. I hope others will take the time to immediately write to
you - June 2021.
Editor's note: Sorry
Jerry, I had you listed as deceased from lack of any correspondence. |
Richard
Washer
Bill, a special thank you for your 1952 class section
from several members who sent you interesting class news in
this outstanding publication. We certainly appreciate
your support keeping us informed.
At the
65th Lehigh 1952 Class Reunion which my wife and I attended
in May 2017 there were 15 attendees from our class. Two of
the class members included my friend
Dick
Schaphorst and my early room mate
Dave DeGraaf. We all heard Lehigh President
John Simon make several great presentations about his
vision for Lehigh.
I loved
my Lehigh years and engineering education. Since 1958
my wife and I are grateful that we have been able to travel
extensively on a worldwide basis. I have enjoyed
photographing in over 55 countries and 6 continents.
Before the present pandemic took hold, we had a once in a
lifetime trip in January 2018 to Machu Picchu in the
Peruvian Andes mountains at 8,000 ft. elevation. This
lost city of the Incas was rediscovered in 1911 after 400
years by Hiram Bingham, a Yale university professor and
explorer. Bingham helped extensively plan and restore
the partially buried overgrown city to reveal the precision
stone architecture, construction, terraced agriculture and
culture of this city of about 1,000 population before it was
evacuated.
We
downsized to a townhouse in Hickory, NC, in 2007.
Also we spend time most weeks year round at our Blue Ridge
Mountain home in Blowing Rock, NC. I usually walk a
mile each day to keep active. Very Best regards to all our
1952 classmates. Richard and Adrienne
Washer - November 2021
From Fall / Winter 2017 Alumni Bulletin: As
Ralph Fortney
said during the festivities: "We may not have had quantity, but we sure had
quality!" Dick Washer joined 12 other '52 Classmates at our 65th
Reunion - See
Fall / Winter
Alumni Bulletin for more details.
Here is a quick update:
Adrienne and I have been attending the Lehigh Reunions
every five years. We always enjoy seeing friends and are
impressed with the on-going Lehigh Campus improvements since
1952.
In October 2007 we moved to a new townhouse
development after selling our Hickory, NC home of 29 years. We now enjoy
half our time in our Hickory townhouse and the other half in our Blowing
Rock, NC, house in the Blue Ridge Mountains just 35 miles north where
elevations are about 5000 ft for cooler summers and winter skiing.
Especially after retiring in 1993, we have been enjoying some rewarding
world travel experiences. Recently, we counted about 55 countries
visited in 5 continents. I have always been interested in photography
and try to keep up with the technical marvels in the digital photography
world.
We have an outstanding camera club in
Hickory and meet twice a month, year round. I am amazed at the skills
the new younger members bring with them. I try to make multimedia
productions of our travels with images, video, music, titles and brief
info. Now, we rely on these things to help us relive and remember what
we did.
This has been a most unique "March Madness"
basketball month for us in NC. When Lehigh beat Duke 75-70 earlier this
month we enjoyed every minute on TV. What a game the Lehigh team played
throughout. Coach K of Duke in his post game TV interview was very
sincere in his remarks about the Lehigh team that had upset Duke. A
friend who had visited UNC several days after the game said UNC (a
serious rival of Duke) was selling T-shirts that were printed with the
words: Lehigh 75 Duke 70. A nice UNC dig at their nearby Duke rival.
My 12 year old grandson IAN WASHER
became a serious wrestler in his middle school this year. Several weeks
ago he wrestled in the finals held in Winston Salem where he placed
third in the state in his weight class. I enjoyed sharing some of the
great Lehigh wrestling team stories I remembered about our time on
campus and the winning teams we had that era. Looking forward to meeting
and greeting 1952 reunion classmates. Dick - March 2010
From 50th Reunion Book, 2002 - Dick joined the General
Electric Company Manufacturing Management Program following Lehigh
graduation. He subsequently served in the U.S. Army Research and
Engineering Command based in Fort Eustis, Virginia. Following
military service, he returned to General Electric and held managerial
positions in New York, North Carolina, France and Arkansas. His
wife, Adrienne, is a native of Toronto and they have 2 sons and a
daughter. After a 25-year career with GE, he joined Drexel
Heritage Furnishings in North Carolina as Manager Engineering.
Dick put his Lehigh accounting courses for engineers and computer
knowledge to good use in Adrienne's women's fashion business for
21 years. The business is now owned and operated by their
daughter. Since retiring in 1993, Dick has continued to
enjoy a wide range of interests, including world travel, winter skiing,
hiking, sailing, photography, civic and church activities. Dick
and Adrienne also enjoy spending time at a mountain home in
Blowing Rock, NC, just off the Blue Ridge Parkway with several nearby
peaks exceeding mile high elevations. |
|
Charles
Whedon
521 Heron Point, Tinton Falls,
NJ 07753
Dear
Bill,
your '52 report in the latest Lehigh Bulletin struck a cord!! I've
been meaning to write many times but, like so many others, fell short.
Let's send out a challenge to all of our remaining classmates to,
without delay, write you a short note so that you may learn how many of
us are still alive. I can only report one other classmate I know
to be with us.
Jerry Underhill
lives in Dallas, TX, with his wife, Ann. Both are
reasonably healthy and spend a lot of valuable time visiting their
children and "vacationing". Ok,
Jerry, now
you must write to Bill. I hope others will take the time to
immediately write to you.
I went to work with Union
Carbide upon graduating and spent 36 years with them. On the way I
met a wonderful girl and married Marge who unfortunately died in
1996. We had 3 children, Carol, Chuck, and Frank.
They still live within striking distance so I am fortunate. We
lived in Fanwood and Westfield, NJ. I'm now living in Seabrook
Village, a very nice retirement community in Tinton Falls NJ.
Having gone to Lehigh and
learned what a great sport wrestling is, I had to introduce it to my two
sons and they to two grandsons. They were pretty good, three of
them getting to the NJ State Championships, the last one now at
Muhlenberg.
I'll leave it at that for now
and try very hard to write you again. Regards, and stay healthy
(stay off a bike), Charles (Chic) Whedon - June 2021
Editor's note: Sorry
Chic, I had you listed as deceased from lack of any correspondence. |
|
Harold
Wissmann
Hal wrote me a nice letter. He said, "It sounds like you
would like some update info: I worked 33 years at GE and Honeywell in
various Engineering and management positions Last job was Computer
Systems Test Manager at the Honeywell plant in Phoenix. I retired in
1985 and joined my wife's Real Estate company. Both of us fully retired
in 1998. Spent several years RV'ing, boating and fishing - many great
memories. Sadly, Charlotte, my wife of over 65 years passed away
in April, 2022. I am now living alone at our 50 year-old mini-ranch in
North Scottsdale. Horses are gone, plenty of wildlife visiting me night
and day. Age-related vision problems are somewhat limiting activities.
Best regards, Hal.”I called him as I uploaded his news and we
both agreed that we were blessed to be happily married for over 65
years. He sounded great. - May 2022
Received
phone call today from Hal and gathered the following
information: He and wife, Charlotte, are both retired but still
practicing Realtors in Scottsdale. Hal survived 2 years in the
Army as a draftee when the Army in its infinite wisdom took note of his
BS in IE and assigned him to the Chemical Corp. When he escaped he
joined GE where he served as an Engineering Manager for 17 years. From
there he spent another 17 years with Honeywell then retired to
Scottsdale to join Charlotte's Real Estate firm. We commiserated
on our similar vision problems and both decided that poor vision is what
it is and we are doing very well for the shape we are in. He is
still active and looks forward to a long, fun live in Arizona.
They have a son, daughter and granddaughter, all nearby. - May 2019 |
Revised:
July 25, 2024
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