Volume Five – No. 2 March 2012
Transcription
Volume Five – No. 2 March 2012
Volume Five – No. 2 March 2012 Scribe – Dave Halloran Publishing – Bill French Chairman – Harlan Fair Treasurer – Dave Donovan Reporting Staff – Entire Class That best portion of a good man’s life, His nameless, unremembered, acts of kindness and of love” Our Secretary and Alumni Magazine Editor, Dr. Mark Smoller, has made a collection of Donald’s expressions from his many writings, has written about them, and written about Donald. As we approach the magnificient monument to our lives together, our 60th Reunion, and on the heels of the Class’ extraordinary gift to the Dartmouth of the Future, the Class of 1953 Commons, your newsletter staff just felt it would be warming, yea inspiring to hear from a few tidbits of one of our Stars of Forever, with the expressions of his heart. It is a heart that reaches out to the all of us in Spirit of 1953; yes, Don’s heart reaches out to the Universe itself. Donald Carpenter Goss’ arrival in Hanover was preceded by a line of 86 relatives that began with Josiah Carpenter, Class of 1787, and which continues today with his grandson Nathaniel Goss, who will enter with the Class of 2016. So it was not unexpected that young Donald would be devoted to this place and its people. His father and uncle preceded him to Hanover. They lit the original spark, but it remained for Dartmouth itself to kindle spark and to capture Donald’s heart; Dartmouth did not come up short. “You’ve got to do your own growing, no matter how tall your grandfather was” Donald entered our class a graduate of Phillips Andover Academy, and having been steeped in the traditions of that place and reared in a loving, generous, spiritual home, was prepared to subsume whatever Dartmouth could throw his way. He absorbed the Dartmouth mystique completely, and young Donald would become as devoted an alum as there has ever been, one who was ever-exited with loyalty, concern, and love for the College and all of its citizenry. If you can imagine it, you can achieve it. If you can dream it, you can become it. Dartmouth was to be an incubator for Donald, a place where he began to fulfill his potentials, not only academically, but socially as well as spiritually. He was hooked as soon as he stepped onto the campus, and in the process, began his career, his vocation and his many avocations. He Class E-Addresses for News Class Mail Address for News: Fax: 407-862-4261 dhalloran@cfl.rr.com Dave Halloran-Newsletter/Website Dave Halloran, 700 Spring Valley Road, Altamonte Springs,Florida, 32714 -5820, or Mark Smoller, 4 Schuyler Drive, Jericho, New York, 11753-1912 Dartmark@gmail.com Mark Smoller-DAM and Newsletter Billfrench13@msn.com Bill French-Newsletter Publishing “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 nurtured his love for the English language through relationships with a variety of professors who saw in Donald the light of a gifted writer. That love for language remained strong throughout his life, so strong in fact that he saw himself as a preserver and would never under any circumstances succumb to the “crass, coarse electronic invader, the internet.” At Dartmouth, he took courses wherein he would ingest and absorb all the subtle nuances of his native tongue and of his literary icons. He challenged his professors who, in turn challenged him, and sent him off with a command of our language which he exercised and augmented through the years as he inspired his clients, their customers, as well as his classmates until his passing. We are going to have a little more of Donald in each letter, as admired and inspired through the gentle touch of Mark’s literary acumen. We know you will enjoy that: it will keep Donald’s spirit with us, always. For those of us tuned to the spiritual, we know that he will enjoy staying in touch. Besides, that is what he requested of his electronic internet successor, and, if obliging, said he could wear one of his shoes! The Sixtieth Reunion, June 13 to 16, 2013 — Y’all Come on Up, Y’ Hear! Harlan Fair reports that the Memorial Service for our 60th Reunion, always a centerpiece of any reunion, has already been organized!! “That is amazing” said I, and how did that come to be. Harlan confessed that he had little to do with it but that, inasmuch as Don Goss was always the heir apparent to be Chair of this event, that he organized that just a few weeks before joining his Creator. “It was just a few weeks ago that he invited me to his house where he presented me with a two page typewritten list of planning ideas. He had an outline for the memorial service/ concert that follows his previous highly successful and rewarding services for all our reunions; i.e. The Three Bells, The Lord’s Prayer, Dartmouth Undying, Men of Dartmouth, Widor Tocatta and select songs by the Dartmouth Aires. Don suggested Len Gochman as the MC and Chair for this momentous event, and Len has already agreed. We therefore are in good hands along with John Kennedy, Ron Lazar and others that have supported the memorial service in the past. I have talked to Joanie Whiting about her availability. Donald will have his imprint on our 60th reunion, and is anybody surprised?? CLASS OF 1953 COLLEGE FUND and THE DONALD CARPENTER GOSS DARTMOUTH COLLEGE FUND INITIATIVE The following is an updated interim list of gifts for the Dartmouth College Fund received by February 24th from our very generous classmates. The highlighted names are those who have elected to be part of our presentation to the Goss family in honor of Don by giving an amount that represents an increase over their last year’s gift. The starred names are those who have elected to be Special Supporters of Don by increasing their gifts by 20% or more or who have returned as donors after an absence. The second interim list is of our very generous widows and adopted classmates who have done likewise. There Page Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT is still time to join this august group. We have until the end of June to register your new or additional contribution to the college fund. Each gift will be eligible and added to the presentation in honor of Don as outlined above. Ralph Adams * Raymond Alexander * Byron Allen Arthur Amick * Paul Arenberg Gerald Avanozian * Abdul Bahrani Lawrence Barnett Philip Beekman * Harry Bennett Neil Bersch Putnam Blodgett * Richard Blum * Edgar Boody Herbert Borovsky Daniel Boyd Thomas Bradley Donald Bremmer Stephen Brown * Nathan Burkan Curtiss Bury * Frederick Bush Hubert Bush * Richard Cahn * Richard Calkins John Camp * Fred Carleton Seth Carpenter * James Cartmell * Warren Cassidy * John Cernius * Frederick Chase * Harry Cherry Leo Clancey * Richard Collins Allen Collins * Edward Condit Richard Confair * Paul Dillingham * John Dodge William Dolan Thomas Dyal * Paul Emery * Frederick England * Frederick Entwistle Aaron Epstein * Daniel Ernst Robert Fahrenholz Harlan Fair Scribner Fauver Richard Fleming * David Florence * David Folger * Stuart Fordyce * Robert Foster Anthony Frank Adolph Franz William French * J. William Friedman * Henry Fry * Laurence Garvin * Frederick Geig * Richard Giesser * David Godchalk * Richard H. Goodman * Werner Graeve * Edwin Grant Richard Greene * Peter Grenquist Everett Haggett Richard Hall Jackson Hall Dave Halloran * Wayne Hansen John Harris Robert Heilman * Mayo Johnson * Gaylor Jones Wayne Keller Lawrence Kelly John Kiernan James Kiley Stanley Kimmel * William King * Herbert Klagsbrun Edmund Knapp * John Koerner * Richard Kuhn Ronald Lazar * Arthur Little * Richard Loewenthal * Robert Longabaugh * Richard Mainzer * Robert Malin David Martin Peter Mattoon * Thomas McCrea * John McGuire Donald McMichael * Edward Merritt * Allan Miller John Morris George Nevers * John Newton * William Nichols Frederic Niles * Charles Noll* Richard Nunley Richard O’Connor * George Passano * John Patten * Peter Patterson Stephen Pearsall * Donald Perkins * Thomas Ritner * Robert Robinson Hilton Rosen John Runyon * David Salter John Sargent Ronald Scheman Robert Scheuer Rex Schirmer * Emil Schnell Brandon Schnorf Arthur Schweich * Kenneth Sewall Gilbert Shapiro * Bruce Sherman Wade Sherwood Walton Shim * Grafton Sieber * David Siegal Juraj Slavik * Russell Smale * Herbert Solow * Denny Speidel Frederick Stephens * Bernard Sudikoff * John Thornley Thomas Trager * John VanHuyck * John VanWagoner William Vitalis Walter VomLehn * James Washburn Edward Weltman Warren Wentworth Frederick Whittemore * Thomas Wilson * John Wortley * Michael Zarin Page “53 OUT Russell Cook * David Cost George Cull * John Cunningham * Richard Davenport Allen Davis * Le Baron Dennis Thomas Dewey * John Dickason * Collins Corner Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 Robert Henderson * Ralph E. Heyman George B. High David Horlacher * John Horne * Sherman Horton William Hutchison * Alan Ives * Douglas Perkins * David Picker * Robert Poor * James Porath * Benjamin Potter * Timothy Reed * Charles Reilly * Dave Replogle John Zimmermann * Widows and Adopted Lillian Goss Joan Haigh Linda Hering Joan Markey * Jane Springer * Joseph Stevens There’s been a little snow up north, but for most of us - and certainly here in Boston - it has been the balmiest winter I have ever known. I had the pleasure of traveling with a Dartmouth group to Cuba earlier in March and had a most eye opening and interesting experience. I was delighted to find that classmate Tim Reed and his wife Barbara, and also Joan Haigh, widow of classmate George Haigh, were part of the group. Does that qualify as a Cuban mini-reunion? Here is a photo of the four of us in Revolution Square where Fidel delivers his occasional speeches. Cuba was a great experience and Tim and I have some stories that we hope to share at some point. In the meantime, here are a few photos of the automotive scene in Cuba. They are all out of our undergraduate years I had a most enjoyable lunch this week with classmate Jack Newton right here in Boston. Jack is currently our class Bartlett Tower Society chair having taken over those responsibilities from Ron Lazar when Ron moved on to head up our Dartmouth College Fund. Jack is truly one of 1953’s most loyal and ardent workers and just quietly does his job. He previously headed up our Bartlett Tower activities for over 25 years Page Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT while also serving as Memorial Gift Chair as well as a perennial Class Agent – a job he continues to perform. We are fortunate to have him re-volunteer to head Bartlett Tower Society for our class. In whatever spare time Jack finds, he is also well known as the collector of a world class assortment of books on the White Mountains and NH as well as another collection on worldwide mountaineering and explorations. He has over 4,000 books on the former and over 5,000 books on the latter as well as 4,000 duplicates. He currently is finding a home for this incredible collection at academic institutions as well as selling some choice pieces to international book collectors. His calling card identifies him as “The Lost Nation Bookman”. While I am throwing out Kudos, we owe Fred Stephens a huge thank you. We all received a copy of the well done video of the events at the dedication of The Class of 1953 Commons. This was Fred’s idea and he recruited funding from several of our class members to make it happen. Here are the folks that Fred contacted and urged their participation: Phil Beekman Tom Bloomer Dick Blum Al Collins Jack Crisp Bob Henderson Bob Malin Chuck Reilly David Replogle Bob Simpson Fred Stephens Fred Whittemore Thanks to you Fred, and all of you who pitched in to create this wonderful reminder of a great day for the Class of 1953. Homecoming — October 26–27, 2012: A little different format this year for homecoming. This year we will play Harvard at a night game in Hanover. The Friday evening events will be as usual with our gathering at Zimmerman Lounge prior to and following the bonfire, the traditional parade of the classes through the streets of Hanover, the speeches from Dartmouth hall and the neat and tidy bonfire in the center of the green. Our bonfire was hardly that and here is a picture of our less than tidy bonfire in 1949. Where did we collect the wood?? The exciting news is that thanks to the aggressive planning of co-mini reunion chairs, Dave and Bonnie Siegal, we will be having our class meeting in 1953 Commons at 10 AM Saturday morning, and then a luncheon at 1 PM. A wonderful opportunity for those of you who have not seen this wonderful new facility. What a delight to be able to use and meet in “our” building. A special treat for all of us is that Martha Beattie, Dartmouth’s new VP of Alumni Relations, will be on hand to speak with us during our luncheon. Plan to be there – you will love what our class has done. And while you are making your plans, here are the dates of the other home games for this coming fall. The Siegals are hard at work putting together post-game receptions for each of them and will keep you advised. Sept 15 – Butler Sept 20 – Penn Oct 13 – Sacred Heart Nov 10 – Brown Page “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 The Donovan Ski Event – Rescheduled: Once again Dave and Cynthia Donovan are graciously hosting the annual 1953 ski event at their home in Branford, New Hampshire. As of this writing there are about 24 classmates, spouses and friends planning to attend the event with 6 or 7 skiing and the rest just enjoying the camaraderie, the cocktails, the dinners and the collective lies. I had plans to attend to enjoy all but the skiing but a rare New England snow storm on the night of the event forced a postponement. Dave and Cynthia have rescheduled for March 8th and hopefully we will get some pictures. I will miss the event as I plan to be in Florida at the time and will stop by and say hello to the ’53 contingent at Harbor Ridge while there. The Class of 1953 reaches out to our Widows: Tom Bloomer and Nancy Johnson (widow of Bill Johnson) have sent a letter out to all 1953 widows urging them to keep us posted on how they would like to interact with the Class. Widows enjoy the same Class membership and involvement in the Class as did their husbands and we would like to make it as easy, comfortable and inclusive as possible to continue that relationship. We often hear that a widow would like to attend a Class event, but are unsure who else is going and who she would know. Thanks to Nancy Johnson’s input and the responses from the survey, this is just one of the issues we will be addressing. We have heard from about half of our widows and will be in touch once we have heard from more. A slightly subtle reminder: Your Newsletters, your Dartmouth Alumni Magazines, your Class activities and your connection with your Class and your College are solely supported by our Class dues. If you are not yet part of the solution, how about sitting down and writing a check for $100 made out to Dartmouth 1953, to Ledyard National Bank, PO Box 799, Hanover, NH 03755. We need your help to continue to do what we do for you. And Now, You the Classmate are the Headline Since September, this Class has had a continuing series of wonderful events that have highlighted our life as Dartmouth’s Greatest Class ever. The dedication of the Class of 1953 Commons in September, the celebration of Homecoming in October, the gratification for the inspiration of Donald in November, and the organization of the Dartmouth College Fund in December, all of these magnificient events have precluded the sharing of the news of what really makes up the Class of 1953, and that is YOU, all of YOU. So here we go in “fast and furious” forward to catch up on the news and views of the likes of youse! Jack Tukey — Last year your’53 Out reporter failed you miserably when he forgot to note that Jack, twice in his 79th year, shot his age on the golf course. This was duly certified by Gib Warren who attested to that accomplishment and that Jack bought the appropriate round of drinks at the Club, Sanibel I believe, TWICE. Let’s all show up at Jack’s birthday round this year. Wally Ashnault — Another “better late than never” report of a note from Tom Bloomer in mid-2011 that Wally had just been acclaimed by the Penfield, New York, Chamber as Page Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT “Citizen of the Year for 2010” Wally is practicing law in Penfield, a close-by suburb of Rochester. Kudos to Wally. Bert Melcher and Dick Fleming — through the “constant chatter” that is ongoing amongst many members of the class, and to which I am privy to much, it came to our attention that the fathers of these two great classmates, Bert and Dick, were both pioneers in the seaplanes of Naval Aviation in the late teens and early ‘’20’s when the name of the game was not “touch and go” but “splash and dash” Dave Donovan, one of the splashers in the following generation, take note. Here are some of the tidbits from a note from Bert to Dick, and when Dick gets back to the Cape in the spring [he is “wintering” in Harbour Ridge”], he will peel open his memento box to send us information on his dad. “Dick - I had written how my father would have loved the “High Flight” poem Dave had sent out, and it would seem that your father would also: our fathers were both WW I Navy pilots at Pensacola. It was then I learned that your dad and Dave’s dad were both the Class of 1919. I have a book titled “Flying Officers of the USN 1917-1919, and I found him in the book and he is listed as Naval Aviator #2191, Herbert Pace Fleming, Melrose Mass. which would make him senior to my dad. My Dad was Number 2367, certificate dated April 13, 1919. I sent two photos one of my Dad in front of his flying boat and another of flying boats lined up along a beach at the Naval Air Station in Florida in what is now Miami Beach. Dad said he could have bought land for $10 an acre but he could not justify that price for land that he did not need. Oi Vey! I also have an album of pictures that Dad took at Pensacola. Further, a small leather certificate wallet with a card from the Federation Aeronautique Internationale - Aero Club of America with a picture of Dad in the cockpit looking very cocky and certifying him as ‘Hydroaeroplane Pilot Number 726” dated October 15, 1919. I wish I had more vivid memories, but I cherish the mementos that I have and I am proud that my father was patriotic, Page “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 adventuresome and apparently with good skills. I was going to be in the Navy from my childhood days and one of the biggest days in my life was when I got the NROTC scholarship. Without it, I would not have gone to Dartmouth. I became a Civil Engineer Corps officer after Thayer School and stayed in the Reserve SeaBees until I made Captain. While at Dartmouth I got two tickets to the Army-Navy football game through the Navy staff at Dartmouth. Dad came east from Colorado and we saw the game; it was a thrilling day in his life to see Navy win. Cheers, Bert. And now notes from the script of our Illustrious Treasurer, Dick Fleming Bert: Many thanks for your kindness in sending the pictures, and for your most interesting letter and research! You are most thoughtful. Dad earned his Wings at Pensacola a little more than a month before the War ended. I think that I remember the date as October 8, 1918. It is in his Log Books. That would be consistent with your Father’s Date and Number. I have 2 Log Books, somewhat duplicative; and some pictures of planes. Also I have 2 copies of what was essentially a Class Book for his Class in Pre-Flight School. That was at MIT. The Students were given the Rating of Chief Quartermaster. Of course, it was also just a few miles from his home in Melrose, MA. After Pensacola, my Father also spent some time at NAS Miami, as did your Father. Marc Michener, one of the Naval Aviation Pioneers and notable in WWII was the CO. He was a Lieutenant Commander, but apparently there were not enough Captains or Commanders who were Qualified Naval Aviators to be the CO. After my Father was discharged he returned to Dartmouth, where he attended every other year for 5 years and Graduated in 3 years. Perseverance! Sometime after he Graduated from Dartmouth he and Carl Shumway,’11, rode Carl’s motorcycle to Reserve Training at Far Rockaway - No high speed highways: US 1 through the Cities in MA, RI and CT and through Harlem. His Log Book is signed by LT. Walter Hinton, the Pilot of the first plane to fly across the Atlantic (actually they taxied on the water for part of the journey) - 8 years before Charles Lindbergh. A connection here is that I know one of Carl Shumway’s Daughters and Al Collins knows another. Dick, our fathers must have known each other in Miami and may well have been in the same squadron because Lt. Commander Marc Michener was well-known to my dad, who closely followed Michener’s great career in WWII. Michener was on NC-1, one of the planes that tried the Atlantic but did not make it as did the NC-4 with Lt. Hinton. The picture of my dad in front of his plane, the plane is an HS-1. Our fathers may well have been at Pensacola at the same time as well. Bert and Dick, for those of us afflicted with the incurable disease of the love of flying, I cannot tell you how much we have enjoyed your remembrances of your dads, their time in Naval Aviation, and those pictures, wow. I look forward to Dick’s picture when he returns from “wintering.” After Dartmouth, my path to Naval Aviation was through OCS “the 90 day blunder” Page Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT school, and then on to Pensacola for flight training. Dud Milliken, John Springer, Tom Dixon, and I were in close classes and stayed in touch though they went off to the Marine Corps Aviation when we were all “winged,” but stayed in touch. I went off to Carrier Aviation, back to Pensacola as an instructor, and then back to sea. Last year, the 100th anniversary of Naval Aviation, many of us were invited to Pensacola for a gala celebration, air show, opening of the new wing of the museum, Blue Angel reception et al, and I found all seven types I flew in my 10years of service, 6 active and 4 reserve. Highlight of the weekend, after the Blues flew, was an Air Force F-15E flyby our stands, 300 feet and on the “verge of the sound barrier” when directly in front of the stands, he pulled up 90 degrees, burners on, which activated every single car alarm system in the VIP parking lot right behind our stands!!!!. We laughed all the way to Happy Hour. Here is a picture of “moi” by my favorite of favorites, the Grumman F9F-6/8 Cougar in which I have over six hundred hours of flight time with lots of “traps”. Even got them to put the 1953 Class Year on the Sign. What a joy. AND HERE IS WHERE IT ALL BEGAN!!!!!!! 100 Years Ago, January, in San Francisco, when Eugene Ely invented naval aviation. Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings; Sunward I’ve climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth Of sun-split clouds, — and done a hundred things You have not dreamed of — wheeled and soared and swung High in the sunlit silence. Hovering there, I’ve chased the shouting wind along, and flung My eager craft through footless halls of air. . . . Page “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 Up, up the long, delirious burning blue I’ve topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace Where never lark, or ever eagle flew — And, while with silent, lifting mind I’ve trod The high untrespassed sanctity of space, Put out my hand, and touched the face of God. — John Gillespie Magee, Jr During the desperate days of the Battle of Britain, hundreds of Americans crossed the border into Canada to enlist with the Royal Canadian Air Force. Knowingly breaking the law, but with the tacit approval of the then still officially neutral United States Government, they volunteered to fight the Nazis. John Gillespie Magee, Jr., was one such American. Magee was 18 years old when he entered flight training. Within the year, he was sent to England and posted to the newly formed No 412 Fighter Squadron, RCAF. He flew the Super marine Spitfire. Flying fighter sweeps over France and air defense over England against the German Luftwaffe, he rose to the rank of Pilot Officer. On 3 September 1941, Magee flew a high altitude (30,000 feet) test flight in a newer model of the Spitfire V. As he orbited and climbed upward, he was struck with the inspiration of a poem — “To touch the face of God.” Commonly called High Flight. Ronald Reagan, addressing NASA employees following the tragic loss of the Challenger 7 crew on STS-51L, used the poem in a well-remembered line: “We shall never forget them nor the last time we saw them, as they prepared for their mission and waved good-bye and slipped the surly bonds of Earth to touch the face of God.” 1953 Class Notes, May/June 2012 for the Alumni Magazine from Mark Smoller In a year when most of our classmates have achieved octogenarian status, the energy, spirit and production of our Class remains high with a large number of us still actively engaged in productive pursuits. For instance, the Honorable Peter Bridges reports, “In October (2011) I had an interesting trip to the Republic of Georgia. I was invited to lecture at universities in Kutaisi and Tbilisi, after the Georgians learned that the officer from the American embassy in Moscow who accompanied John Steinbeck to Georgia in 1963 was still on earth. I also discussed early contacts between Georgia and America, beginning with an American who visited Tbilisi in 1804, when Georgia had just lost its independence to Russia. Today, both government and people are keen on developing contacts with us. My host had just come back from eight months at the University of California at Santa Cruz. I also spent two days in the region of Svaneti, which features mountains higher than the Alps and old towers, not to defend against invaders but because of blood feuds. The road into Svaneti has been rebuilt and in hopes of attracting more tourists the government is repairing the old towers and building new guest houses. I want to go back, and do some hiking in Svaneti. Anybody interested? With a year and one half to go before our 60th reunion, President Allen Collins has apPage 10 Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT pointed Harlan Fair chairman of the reunion committee Harlan is hard at work organizing the most exciting 60th reunion yet. Please make sure to save the dates: June 10 through June 13, 2013. On the other hand, such longevity status brings with it the loss of classmates whom we hold dear. We never become inured to this situation so it is with great sadness that I acknowledge the following classmates who have left us recently, and offer the sincere condolences of the Class to their families. They are: Richard L. Core, Walter Rod Jennings, Karl G. McGhee, Dudley R. Williams, Frank G. Willard, John E. Crisp, Harvey W.F. Mason, Peter S. Spalding, Clifford H. Rusch, James A. Rose, Gilbert S. Osborne, Frederick Chase Jr., and Chester F. Caswell, Jr. Additionally we just learned from John Kennedy that two others have been deceased in preceding years John Heintzelman 11/09/2008 and Roy Jacobsen 07/17/2007 Other days are very near us, as we sing here soft and low, We can almost hear the voices of the boys of long ago. They are scattered now, these brothers, up and down the world they roam Some have gone to lands far distant, from the dear old college home Some have crossed the silent river, they are looking down tonight And the thought of these old brothers, makes our love now burn so bright. A Tribute to Fred Chase by Dave Godschalk. Our wonderful classmate Frederick Chase, Jr. Chase died suddenly on January 3, 2012 in Waukegan, Illinois, where he had been living for the past eight years or so with his dear friend, Lynne Atherton. Lynne and Fred had dated at the time of our graduation in 1953 and they had reconnected in recent years. Tom and Anna Bradley and I attended Fred’s memorial service in Lake Forest on January 7. The Church of the Holy Spirit was filled with parishioners who had come to know and value Fred, especially in his role as the environmental conscience and advocate for the church. In his remarks, the pastor said that Fred was the “closest thing to a prophet” that the congregation had, due to his untiring efforts to lead them to sustainability and green practices. This is especially remarkable since Fred had only been involved with the church during relatively recent times. Fred and I were closely connected at a number of times over the past half century. We were both Phi Delts at Dartmouth. Following our military service after Dartmouth we lived together in Gainesville, Florida, while he was in law school and I was in architecture school. He introduced me to my wife, Lallie, and was best man at our wedding. We enjoyed sailing with him and spending weekends together at our stilt house in the Gulf of Mexico. Over the years, we saw each other less frequently after I left Florida, but we stayed in touch and visited each other in Florida and Vermont. Last year we all got together in Baltimore for a great mini-reunion with a group of Phi Delts : Fred and Lynne, Lallie and me, Dick Blum and Harriet Warm, Mayo and Julie Johnson, and David Salter and his friend, Christina Howe. We will miss Fred’s elan, his dedication to sustainability, and his unwavering friendship. Page 11 “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 Thanks David, and from your’53 Out reporter who learned more about sustainability and the preservation of God’s creation from Fred than anyone whom I have encountered, he will always be a guiding friend whom I only came to know is recent years, an enduring member of our CEZ group and leader of our years of discussions on Sustainability over the cyber sphere. Bon Voyage Fred and will see you at the next stop. John Kennedy and Owen Cote attend the Eddie Jeremiah celebration John writes, The Athletic Department at Dartmouth decided to have a “celebration weekend” to honor late ice hockey coach Eddie Jeremiah, who was at Dartmouth for the years 1937 through 1967, and invited hockey players who had played for “Jerry” to come back to Hanover to take part in the celebration. Even though I only played Freshman hockey, I was invited to attend and I did. There were 40 of us including Jack Riley, Class of 1944, 92 years old and as spry as you could imagine. Jack was a Hockey All-American (as were several others of the attendees), an Olympian and a member of the Hockey Hall-of-Fame as was Coach Jeremiah. We were treated to several receptions and brunches at which Athletic Director Sheehy and current hockey coach Bob Gaudet spoke, and two men’s hockey games (we beat Brown 6-2 and lost to Yale 5-4). John’s wife was him for all the events as well. During the second intermission of the Yale game, we were asked to line up in Class order on the ice at one of the goal lines and were introduced individually by class and name. Owen Cote was also there and it sent shivers up our spines as the capacity crowd stood and applauded as we were introduced. I was really humbled to be there with so many real hockey stars. From Our Writer Extraordinaire, Brock Brower, with a Preamble to a Most Complimentary Review of the New Publication of His 1971 Best Seller Novel “The Late Great Creature.” Through the wire weed of this forward, you’ll find one of the better reviews I’ve gotten in four decades. I enclose same for the glimpse that Donelon gives of my Late Great Career, since turning 80 myself. I’m just now finishing up a short TV-doc-series book I’ve written on the King James Bible (all that intro we got our freshman year from the future Dartmouth Bible, remember?), and it should be out this year. You’ll recognize this as my whistling in the dark to keep out of our class necrology, well-tended as the Siegal s are keeping same. If I’m sounding wary, it’s because I realize how the blaring of one’s own blown horn can sound. But here’s more, yet. I’ve not been contributing to our 1953 funding of Dartmouth because, like all writers toward the end of their careers, I’m constantly broke. My substitute gift has been my literary files to the Rauner Library, which are already invaluable for their political coverage of the USA from 1952 until the most recent Romney, whose father George I followed closely in 1968, until the late Bill Johnson — correctly — forced him to quit the New Hampshire primary. I know what’s driving Mitt, and more power to him. I may yet have my say on that just to round matters off. Of course, I’m counting on other hopes that future calls will come for the odd visit to my Rauner Page 12 Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT files. I suspect they will grow in worth to the College over this next century, since they are one steep record on well over half of the last century. But we’ll just have to let others wait and see. If so, my papers will kick in nicely just after Budd Schulberg’s cache, and whatever Morton Kondracke leaves of his take--the two editors of the D who book-end me. By the way, I totally sympathize with what you’ve written me about our military and the grave, fatalistic pressure the services are under. And I speak as a former intelligence member of Special Forces (tho’ admittedly in peace time, from those long years since 1957 until we finally have the tech to meet the doctrine we had worked out, way back then). Only hindsight can make us proud. Please glean from the above whatever serves you well, without my maudlin conceits. And great regards. Brock Thank you Brock and here are parts of the review that is propelling the resurrection of The Late Great Creature. The review in its entirety is being installed on our class website. Go to the Homepage at “The Dartmouth College Class of 1953” for instructions to access. Brock Brower’s The Late Great Creature A Great American Novel Comes Back to Life After 40 Years By Charles Donelan Thursday, January 12, 2012 Books sometimes remind me of numbers — sure they’re great, but there are too many of them! At The Santa Barbara Independent, the lifecycle of the typical volume submitted for review begins and ends in the same place: the mailroom. Below, tight rows of mail slots are crammed with announcements and cultural products; above, along a wide shelf at eye level, the rejected books and CDs rest in forlorn piles, having been brought back for one last look before they make their way into the permanent oblivion of donation or recycling. Sometimes, although not often — every few years sounds about right — a book, a CD, or a DVD rises up out of the detritus of our in-house remainder bin and, at the last possible moment, reasserts its claim on our editorial attention. In late November, deep in a post-Thanksgiving rut of early sunsets and late work hours, one such volume poked its head up out of the pile and called to me. There, at the bottom of the front cover of a rather bizarre pulp-fiction–looking paperback, was the following testimonial from James Ellroy, one of my favorite contemporary authors. “Brock Brower,” Ellroy wrote, “created a brilliantly observed and wholly synchronous work of art 40 years ago; now it is back to be savored and marveled at anew.” The Late Great Creature, first published in 1971 and now reissued in paperback by Overlook/Duckworth, purported to describe the making of a Roger Corman–style B movie, and to deliver a chilling, verbally pyrotechnic portrait of a fictional movie actor, the hugely talented and desperately weird horror star Simon Moro. Checking the back cover, I learned that Joan Didion liked it. So did Dan Wakefield, the New York Times, and Playboy. And there, in the last full sentence of the whole thing, was the clincher — “Brower lives in Carpinteria, California.” This local angle on an oddball ’70s novel about horror movies is what put The Late Great Creature in my briefcase, and what began my journey into the multiple fascinating worlds of Brock Brower: novelist, journalist, raconteur, and maybe the greatest rediscovered American novelist of the new century. Page 13 “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 Hollywood, Horror Movies, and the Lost Art of Long-Form Journalism The author of The Late Great Creature turned out to be a man with impeccable credentials. A Dartmouth grad, Brower was born into New York media royalty. His father, Charles H. Brower, became president of the legendary advertising company BBDO in 1957 and was known at the height of the Mad Men era as “Madison Avenue’s favorite phrasemaker.” But it was in journalism that Charlie Brower’s son Brock distinguished himself. Brower was one of the most sought-after long-form profile specialists in the golden age of the New Journalism (up there with Tom Wolfe, Didion, and John Gregory Dunne) and employed by the top magazines in America to interview presidents, celebrities, and other top newsmakers. This was a time when such writers were not only routinely accorded ample space — 8,000 words was a typical minimum length for a feature — they were also actually paid well for it. Today’s print journalists beset by the erosion of their audience and the acceleration of a Web-driven news cycle can only wistfully imagine such halcyon days. In addition, Brower had gone on to become an innovative writer and producer for television at a time when that medium was at its peak, helping to create both the long-running newsmagazine 20/20 for ABC, and the classic 1980s educational science series 3-2-1 Contact for PBS. But his book The Late Great Creature was clearly a very different affair. Yes, the narrator of the first section, Warner Williams, is a journalist, and in many ways a dead ringer for his creator, but what one encounters in the novel is not so much the high-flying world of a prominent member of the national media as it is a dark and twisted update of the lunatic universe of Edgar Allan Poe. Brower spent nearly a month on the set of Roger Corman’s film version of Poe’s poem “The Raven,” a film that starred Vincent Price, Peter Lorre, and Boris Karloff and featured a then-unknown actor named Jack Nicholson. He also populated his fictionalization of that experience with recognizable figures, from literary agent Candida Donadio to Esquire editor Harold Hayes and presidential candidate Richard Nixon. Yoked to a sharp mind, powered by wide reading, and saturated with the acid-tinged psychedelia of the late ’60s, the prose of The Late Great Creature is unique. More knowingly “inside” than Thomas Pynchon, hipper even than Wolfe, and as scandalously obscene in places as the raunchiest Philip Roth, The Late Great Creature pulled me in like a sideshow barker and held me with the bony hand of a latter-day ancient mariner. Of all the great novels about the dark side of Hollywood — from Nathanael West’s apocalyptic The Day of the Locust and Budd Schulberg’s influential What Makes Sammy Run? to such distinguished and more recent contributions as Robert Stone’s Children of Light, Bret Easton Ellis’s Less Than Zero, Charlie Smith’s Chimney Rock, and Bruce Wagner’s I’m Losing You trilogy — The Late Great Creature is perhaps the best written, unquestionably the most literary, and often the downright creepiest. Brower has a gift for calibrating the proportions of horror, humor, historic detail, and pop surrealism in a way that makes this unlikely potion work. The novel’s dazzling verbal surface bursts with shocking moments of significant action. As the hero — if you could call him that — Simon Moro blends cynicism, ambition, and sheer perversity in an unforgettable way. When I asked Overlook Press publisher Peter Mayer to explain how it was that he discovered the book and what made him decide to rerelease it, he too expressed a kind of awe in the face of Page 14 Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT this indelible main character, writing that, “It’s a book that once read, has never been forgotten by those who’ve picked it up. Brower’s character, the aging star Simon Moro, is a tour de force, with his aspirations and his failures.” Mayer went on to say that it was his own original reading of the book back when it came out in 1971 that was behind his decision to publish it today, coupled with his belief that “every book is new to someone who hasn’t read it. … [The Late Great Creature is] a great read for a wide public because there’s so much movie lore embedded in the story. It tugs at the heart whilst we marvel as readers. It deserves to be read, and to be rediscovered in America.” The Creature’s Creator at Home When I visited Brower in Carpinteria, he turned out to be a tall, handsome man with a full head of white hair who had just celebrated his 80th birthday. Brower recollected the fanfare that accompanied the original publication of his novel with a mixture of warmth and humor. “The National Book Award nomination was the work of [literary critic] Leslie Fiedler; he had the same fascination with freaks that I did,” he told me. “At the time, the so-called industrial celebrity complex was already well underway. I came off my assignment to cover the making of Corman’s Raven convinced that I could write up the horror movie genre as the key to this whole cultural phenomenon of unbridled narcissism that I had been witnessing as a journalist in Hollywood and in Washington.” As for the thesis of The Late Great Creature, Brower put it this way: “In our society, it doesn’t make any difference if you are a monster, as long as you’re an important monster.” “I’m like a lot of writers who came of age in the 1950s,” he said. “While we were all excited by the opportunities that came our way out of the New Journalism, we still harbored this idea that the one way to legitimize oneself as a writer was to take the energy and techniques of journalism and use them to write a great novel. That’s what I tried to do with The Late Great Creature — justify journalism by transforming it into art.” Toward the end of a delightful conversation full of mutual recognitions and spirited cultural analysis, Brower led me to a shelf in his study stocked with copies of a slim brown hardcover bearing the distinguished imprint of Boston publisher David R. Godine. This was Blue Dog, Green River, the novel that Brower published in 2005 at the age of 74. He inscribed it to me carefully, noting my name, the date, and the fact that it was given to a “welcome visitor, after my 80th.” I took it home and placed it alongside the other things in my stash of books I really want to read. I finished Blue Dog, Green River last night. It’s totally different from The Late Great Creature. The protagonist is a heroic mutt, and the story is one of courage and redemption amid the whitewater rapids and Native American spirits of the great rivers of the American West. A deep reading of our collective dependence on water in this part of the world, it’s also a great adventure story and as thrilling to read as any popular suspense Page 15 “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 novel. In the ninth decade of a long life dedicated to writing, and in the shadow of an era that seems to promise the end of print’s long reign over the hearts and minds of thoughtful people, Brower, and the novels he has written, demonstrate that the lives of books, like those of the people who write them, are as unpredictable and potentially grand as any monster or spirit we can imagine. Words from President Jim Wrights’ comments at the Celebration of Donald’s Life In 2010 Don published a book, “Thinking about Thoughts: Thoughts about Thinking.” It is a delightful collection of aphorisms, wise advice, and observations about the irony and humor of life. He noted in the introduction that since he had not done an English thesis at Dartmouth, this would substitute for that and he empowered the readers with “You are my final grader. I hope you like it.” We did, and the final thesis was followed a year later by another final thesis. He ended this publication with what he called his “personal credo”: “Ministrare Est Ministrari.” “To Serve is to be Served.” It suggests his strong commitment to making a difference as its own reward. He surely made a difference and he gave every indication throughout that he enjoyed it immensely. In his own personal sketch in the Class of 1953 50th Reunion Book, Don wrote, “Perhaps, before my time comes (or even after) someone, somewhere, by the grace of almighty God, will say, ‘In a very small way and for a brief caring moment, he really was ‘the Man of La Mancha.” That is my quest. Hopefully, even at this late date, it is still a possible dream.” President Jim then said “I here do affirm that he was the Man of La Mancha. This man fulfilled his quest. Don Goss was a man who reached, when his arms were weary, for the unreachable star. It was an unselfish dream, a “fight for the right, without question or pause.” He dreamed for a better world and was committed to do all he could to enable this. Today we can all confidently know that, as the lyrics promise, his heart will lie peaceful and calm now, Dartmouth and the world is better due to his quest. We honor and we thank a good man. Bernie and Joanie Sudikoff sent the following “cartoon poem” which captures our “growing up time” magnificently. They received it from an Israeli friend who just loves America, and they want all of you to enjoy. See you next Letter, Dave, El Scribo. Long ago and far away, in a land that time forgot, Before the days of Dylan, or the dawn of Camelot. There lived a race of innocents, and they were you and me, Page 16 Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT For Ike was in the White House in that land where we were born, Where navels were for oranges, and Peyton Place was porn. We learned to gut a muffler, we washed our hair at dawn, We spread our crinolines to dry in circles on the lawn... We longed for love and romance, and waited for our Prince, And Eddie Fisher married Liz, and no one’s seen him since. We danced to ‘Little Darlin,’ and sang to ‘Stagger Lee’ And cried for Buddy Holly in the Land That Made Me, Me. Only girls wore earrings then, and 3 was one too many, And only boys wore flat-top cuts, except for Jean McKinney. And only in our wildest dreams did we expect to see A boy named George with Lipstick, in the Land That Made Me, Me. We fell for Frankie Avalon, Annette was oh, so nice, And when they made a movie, they never made it twice. We didn’t have a Star Trek Five, or Psycho Two and Three, Or Rocky-Rambo Twenty in the Land That Made Me, Me. Miss Kitty had a heart of gold, and Chester had a limp, And Reagan was a Democrat whose co-star was a chimp. Page 17 “53 OUT Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 We had a Mr. Wizard, but not a Mr.T, And Oprah couldn’t talk yet, in the Land That Made Me, Me. We had our share of heroes, we never thought they’d go, At least not Bobby Darin, or Marilyn Monroe. For youth was still eternal, and life was yet to be, And Elvis was forever in the Land That Made Me, Me. We’d never seen the rock band that was Grateful to be Dead, And Airplanes weren’t named Jefferson, and Zeppelins were not Led. And Beatles lived in gardens then, and Monkees lived in trees, Madonna was Mary in the Land That Made Me, Me. We’d never heard of microwaves, or telephones in cars, And babies might be bottle-fed, but they were not grown in jars. And pumping iron got wrinkles out, and ‘gay’ meant fancy-free, And dorms were never co-ed in the Land That Made Me, Me. We hadn’t seen enough of jets to talk about the lag, And microchips were what were left at the bottom of the bag. And hardware was a box of nails, and bytes came from a flea, And rocket ships were fiction in the Land That Made Me, Me. Page 18 Volume 5 Number 2 March 2012 “53 OUT Buicks came with portholes, and side shows came with freaks, And bathing suits came big enough to cover both your cheeks. And Coke came just in bottles, and skirts below the knee, And Castro came to power near the Land That Made Me, Me. We had no Crest with fluoride, we had no Hill Street Blues, We had no patterned pantyhose or Lipton herbal tea Or prime-time ads for those dysfunctions in the Land That Made Me, Me. There were no golden arches, no Perrier to chill, And fish were not called Wanda, and cats were not called Bill. And middle-aged was 35 and old was fifty-three, And ancient were our parents in the Land That Made Me, Me. But all things have a season, or so we’ve heard them say, And now instead of Maybelline we swear by Retin-A. They send us invitations to join AARP, We’ve come a long way, baby, from the Land That Made Me, Me. So now we face a brave new world in slightly larger jeans, And wonder why they’re using smaller print in magazines.. And we tell our children’s children of the way it used to be, Long ago and far away in the Land That Made Me, Me. If you didn’t grow up in the fifties, you missed the greatest time in history. Page 19 1949 “A Touch of ’53 Homespun Class” 2011 “A Torch of Current Out-Sourced Gas”
Similar documents
The Legacy of Leadership is Persistent with the
Grenquist, Rudi Haerle, Dick Hall, Dave Halloran, John Harris, Bob Heilman, Bob Henderson, George High, Tom Hess, Ralph Heyman, Bill Hutchison, Alan Ives, Mayo Johnson, Wayne Keller, John Kennedy, ...
More information