Spring 2013
Pat Moran
(now deceased):
Hi,
'52ers! Your correspondent is getting stronger—feeling better and about 80-90
percent of normal. Thanks to all the well-wishers.
Daz
and I ventured back to Bethlehem in October to be with
Wally Field, our gracious host, and saw the
Fordham and Columbia football games. At the Columbia game I spoke to
Cass Camarda
(deceased),
Bob
McCann (deceased),
Dan Kaplan
(deceased),
Chick
Kuss and Bob Hoyt. Speaking of
Cas,
his wife, Lockie, sent a great card wishing me well and noting that they
were closing in on 60 years of marriage and that
Cas
was still gainfully employed in commercial real
estate. While east, Daz and I drove up to Vermont and became "leaf
peepers," local term for those viewing the gorgeous fall foliage.
A very
poignant and from the heart letter was received from Laurel Johnson,
daughter of Neil Fisher. Neil
has been in a health care facility with Alzheimer's
since 2010. Upon graduation,
Neil
married Joyce Belk, his college sweetheart.
They settled in western New York, where
Neil
worked for Westinghouse as an electrical engineer and
they raised five children. In the early 1970s,
Neil
became increasingly dissatisfied with suburban life
and the "keeping up with the Joneses," so he went back to school and earned a
master's degree in teaching from SUNY Buffalo. Call it a shift in direction or
a midlife crisis. Neil
then moved his family of seven to a 35-acre working
farm in Cambria, N.Y., and took a teaching post at Erie County Community
College. Neil
taught electrical technology at E.C.C.C. until
retirement in 1993. He loved the farming life and enjoyed the diversity of his
first farm, where he raised beef cattle, chickens and every imaginable fruit.
Although there was plenty of work involved with the farm, his family also loved
the rural life. In 1974
Neil
bought a 135-acre farm near Lake Ontario, where he
continued to raise beef cattle and hay. Neil
was always slightly ahead of his time, and he marched
to the tune of a different drummer. He designed and installed on his farm one
of the first wind turbines in New York State and also designed co-generation
systems in several commercial buildings in downtown Buffalo. He worked with
food banks and anti-hunger organizations, donating surplus produce from the
farm. Neil
and Joyce were married for 57 years until her
death in 2009. With medication and his extraordinary number of brain cells, he
was able to stave off the most debilitating effects of the Alzheimer's until
2010. He is well taken care of hospital administration and community and still
enjoys his love of music and good food. Please keep
Neil
in your thoughts and prayers.
Guy Ailing writes
that he found himself on the class's "lost list." That is probably because he
was abroad for 25 years with The United Church Board of World Ministries, the
overseas arm of the Church of Christ, where he worked in hospital administration
and community health outreach in Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leone, India and Papua
New Guinea. Guy is retired and living on Pawley's Island, S.C. Thanks, Guy,
for this most interesting story.
Thanks,
'52ers, for all your input. Many letters and e-mails tell me that the class
likes the news I provide. You send it—I'll print it! God bless.
Deceased
Pat
(now deceased)
[ Class Columns ]
Revised:
May 07, 2023
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