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CLASS
NOTES
Columbia
College Today
475 Riverside Dr., Suite 917
New York, NY 10115
cct@columbia.edu
Kudos
to Herbert L. Nichols Jr. 29, of Roswell, Ga., who
at 93 has been recorded as the oldest individual to plunge into
the waters of the North Pole and earn a place in the elite Polar
Swimmers Society.
Diantha
Horton, wife of another Roswell denizen, William Horton 50,
sent an article from the Roswell/Alpharetta Neighbor detailing Nichols
unusual summer vacation aboard the Russian Icebreaker Yamal on a
North Polar Expedition. Nichols flew from Newark to Oslo to Spitsbergen,
the northernmost port in Norway on the Arctic Sea. He then reached
the Yamal by helicopter for the trip sponsored by the American Museum
of Natural History.
In
1932, Nichols left New York for Greenwich, Conn., where he acquired
a large abandoned farm and began operating a topsoil excavation
company. At the outset of World War II, he worked for about six
months at an airport in the Bahamas, and, soon after, joined the
Seabees, where he was principally assigned to a maintenance battalion
in Adak in the Aleutians. Shortly after, he was promoted from first
class to chief and was given an island sub-base in Tanaga.
Following
the war, Nichols returned to the United States and went back to
the excavation business. He self-published Nonsense, its
all in your mind, and wrote several more books, mostly pertaining
to excavation and science-related subjects. Nichols says he often
would write when traveling; the two activities were complementary
because the train or freighter would allow him uninterrupted time.
Paul
V. Nyden
1202 Kanawha Blvd. East
Apt. 1-C
Charleston, WV 25301
cct@columbia.edu
Murray
T. Bloom
40 Hemlock Dr.
Kings Point, NY 11024
cct@columbia.edu
Within
the next few months, youll be getting full details on our
65th Reunion in May 2002. As a member of the Class Reunion Committee,
I marvel that so many of us are still around to say hello to one
another. Please try to make it. The Reunion Weekend will be from
May 30 to June 2, 2002. Youll receive full details long before
then. Regardless of whether you will be attending, why dont
you give as generously as you can to help us reach our goal of a
$60,000 class gift?
Dr.
A. Leonard Luhby
3333 Henry Hudson Pky West
Bronx, NY 10463
cct@columbia.edu
Ralph
Staiger
701 Dallam Rd.
Newark, DE 19711
rstaiger@udel.edu
Do
you remember when John Siegal used to catch Sid Luckmans
long passes with his big hands? After graduation, John played for
the Chicago Bears in their heyday. He used his time off the field
to attend Northwestern Dental School and told me that he appreciated
footballs enabling him to become a dentist. I had the mistaken
notion that he invented the tooth protector that most football players
wear, but he discreetly told me who invented the device.
Johns
brother, Joe, who recently celebrated his 80th birthday, left Columbia
for the service after two years. Johns son, John M. Jr. 77,
also graduated from Northwestern Dental School. In the 1992 Columbia
College Alumni Directory, there was confusion about John Sr.
and John Jr.s addresses and phone numbers; John Sr. was listed
as living in New York. I am glad to report that the error has been
corrected and that John Sr. can be contacted via the address and
phone number in the new directory.
Seth
Neugroschl
1349 Lexington Ave.
New York, NY 10028
Sn23@columbia.edu
As
you may recall, our September
2001 Class Notes attempted to summarize our class history
(as weve lived it, separately and collectively, including
our WW II experience and our class tragic casualty record),
as context for the Class of 1940 Legacy Planning Committee, now
in process of formation. Three New York members, Hector Dowd,
Bill Feinberg and I met on September 6 for a preliminary planning
meeting in Hectors Fifth Avenue office. Jim Knight was
out of town (see below); Bob Ames and John Ripandelli
had been active for many months, by phone and e-mail, in earlier
discussions; and a number of other classmates have already expressed
a strong interest in joining the committee as we move ahead.
We
discussed Robert McNamaras description of the narrowness of
our escape from nuclear disaster during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis
and the urgency of understanding current major threats to peace
in the light of the different world we live in today, including
the growing access to weapons of mass destruction by rogue
states and non-state terrorists. Even more fundamentally,
we need to address the kind of world we hope (or fear) we and our
children are building for our grandchildren, and whether they are
doomed to repeat or worse the bloody 20th century
in the 21st.
A conceptual
starting point: In answer to our 60th reunion question, Must
history repeat the great conflicts of the 20th century? Dean
Nye of Harvards Kennedy School of Government asserted, It
is a mistake to use historical metaphors for complacency or despair.
History does not repeat itself our future is always in our
own hands.
We
agreed that as a first step toward establishing our C40 legacy
at Columbia, we needed a high visibility wake-up meeting on campus,
which we tentatively scheduled for late Spring 2002. As we were
closing the planning meeting, I think it was Bill Feinberg who
said, Were talking about the future of the world.
Bill said he planned to be out of town for the weekend, but that
I could call him to continue our discussion the following Tuesday,
September 11, at his home at Battery Park City (directly across
from the World Trade Towers) or at the Second Circuit Federal Court,
where he was scheduled to hear a case.
The
Twin Towers disaster that morning provided a grim wake-up call very
different from the spring campus wake-up meeting we had discussed.
My scheduled phone call to Bill took more than two weeks to complete,
with phone circuits out and the Federal Court building closed. When
we finally connected, Bill described leaving his apartment, which
faces the Hudson, away from the Towers, at 9 a.m. that morning,
discovering people already streaming out of the buildings; running
back to get his wife, Shirley; running north up the West Side Highway;
and finally locating a cab to take them to friends uptown. Many
days later they were permitted 15 minutes back in their undamaged
apartment (except for heavy layers of dust) to get some clothing.
He told me he felt we should go ahead with a (rethought) spring
wake-up event. As I write this, were about to reschedule a
follow-up meeting of our committee; youll be kept abreast
of our deliberations, and we strongly invite the participation of
all interested classmates.
Jim
Knight was unable to attend because he was still at his Long
Island summer home, grieving the loss of our classmate and his close
friend Ed Rice, who died on August 18. They had been collaborating
for years on a book-in-process on their colleague Tom Merton 38.
You may recall the dozen-page
article on Ed in Mays CCT. Jims note about
Ed included a tribute that will appear in the next issue of CCT,
along with an obituary. It closes with the words, Goodbye,
sport; oh, how I will miss you!
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