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Horizons" magazine encourages readers to submit letters. Letters
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Both right and wrong
In the June 2002 issue, there is a story about
Greg Cook. There is, however, a mistake in the article; it says he
was 1969 NFL Rookie of the Year. Actually, he was 1968 AFL rookie of the
year.
James Gettler
Via e-mail
Editor's note: Kudos to Mr. Gettler for knowing that Cook's team, the Cincinnati Bengals, played in the AFL until it merged with the NFL in 1970. Cook's rookie year, however, was indeed 1969. The passing prodigy graduated from UC in '68. Likely adding to the confusion is the fact that the Bengals also produced the 1968 AFL Rookie of the year, Paul Robinson.
Dorm tales confessed
The following letters were in response to the
article "Tales
from the Dorm Zone."
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Above,
top: Fifty years ago, this group of DAAP freshman regularly
met to work on assignments in an old campus barracks building,originally
built to accommodate returning WWII vets. We loved to paint
the walls, and since the building was coming down, nobody really
cared, says Diane Hoppenjans Hofman, DAAP 58, who captured
this image in 1953. Her classmates (left to right) are Barb Grimes
Bolenbaugh, Bill Michel, Marilyn Crotty Weyer, Bob Hering, Herman
Luckner (at rear), Don Robinson and Arnold Knipp. Above, bottom: From Deborah Taylor Jordan, A&S 74, comes this 74 photo of Daniels Hall residence advisers taken by residence coordinator Cheryll Dunn, CAS 66, Ed 68, MEd 69, EdD 77, now applied science associate dean. Both admit faces are more familiar than names, but their best guesses include (front row, from the left) Jordan, Meg Davenport, Julie Mitchell (now a Raymond Walters College assistant art professor), _____ ; (second row), Pam Freeman Smith (also an RC), Joanne Pachoud Davis, Mary Kim Hascher Hennessy, Becky _____ ; (standing) Natalie Mincy Brooks, Carla _____ , _____. Can anyone fill in the blanks? |
I just wanted to say that my two years in Sander
Hall were a lot of fun. I don't think that most of our antics would be
suitable for "Cincinnati Horizons," but I can assure you that
the old stories have entertained a lot of people. One example is replacing
the school's lock on the Sander penthouse with our own; we had a lot of
parties on the roof.
Bill Stirling, BusAd '80
San Clemente, Calif.
Having been an RA for five years in the '60s, I think
I've heard and seen everything imaginable that the recreational side of
dorm life provided. As much as we stressed the educational opportunities
of group living, we endured the brash, silly, outlandish behavior most
remembered by former students and staff.
With each new year, incoming residents would repeat
and outdo the antics and pranks of their predecessors: water and shaving
cream fights, floor floods, "pennying" residents into their
rooms, switching doors so residents couldn't get in, water-filled trash
cans leaned against doors, false fire drills, hiding mattresses and hanging
"moons" out of windows. French Hall residents carried a residence
coordinator's VW into the lounge, while a Dabney resident returned from
class to find his entire room set up on the lawn. Another resident returned
from a weekend at home to find his room entirely stuffed from floor to
ceiling with newspaper.
Each year presented the staff with challenges old
and new, but these events and their perpetrators were the things best
remembered about dorm life at UC. And still are.
Ralf Smith, Pharm '65, Ed '68
Ellettsville, Ind.
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One of the chandeliers still in Blegen Library, this one marked
by Egyptian hieroglyphics.
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Library remembrances
A recent story aroused many dormant memories.
Early in 1930 at the suggestion of Dr. E. L. Talbert,
I applied for a job in the Van Wormer library. Fortunately, there was
a need for a part-time employee, and I began work immediately. The "new"
library was then in the last stage of construction, and Edward Henry was
director of libraries.
During the Memorial Day weekend, we began the enormous
job of moving from the Van Wormer building to the new library, which,
alas, has ended its career as a library. During the moving period, the
library remained open for business. The goal was to be operating smoothly
in all departments before the beginning of the summer term. We were proud
of our new quarters and the fact that we met our timetable. By this time,
I had become a full-time member of the staff and remained on the staff
until early 1934.
I wonder what happened to the two chandeliers in
the main reading room. One carried the lettering "Ex Oriente Lux";
the other, "Ex Occidente Lux." Thanks for the memories.
H. W. Abplanalp, A&S '33
La Jolla, Calif.
Editor's note: Dr. Ernest Lynn Talbert was a psychology professor, and the "new" library is now known as the Blegen Library, no longer called the Main Library as it was for 50 years, but still maintaining something of a library "career."
Closed for renovations when Langsam Library opened in 1979, Blegen was renovated and rededicated in '83. Today it houses four specialized libraries: Archives and Rare Books, the Classics Library, the Music Library and the Curriculum Library for the College of Education.
"During renovation, every effort was made to preserve the architectural heritage of the building," says UC archivist Kevin Grace. Interesting features that were preserved include cast-iron book stacks, which uphold the floors above them; exterior bas-relief, which DAAP students frequently sketch; and a series of bronze chandeliers, including the pair Mr. Abplanalp remembers. Each is engraved with a proverb reflecting the importance of learning, written in Chinese, Hebrew, Greek, hieroglyphics or Latin. The Latin pair, which our writer recalls, is translated "light from the east" (ex oriente lux) and "light from the west" (ex occidente lux).
The staff from Archives and Rare Books often gives tours of the building.
Once in a lifetime
I read with interest your story about Sperti
Bio-Dyne and the Institutum Divi Thomae. As a co-op student, I worked
for the Sperti Co. in the early 1940s. At the time, co-op jobs were scarce,
so R.A. VanWye scoured Cincinnati, all of Ohio and Indiana for any type
of work. After working at a rug-cleaning company and a garbage-can manufacturer,
I was offered a job at Sperti. This was a big step up technically and
financially at 50 cents an hour.
My first job there was at a multi-storied plant in
Norwood, located in the same area as the U.S. Playing Card Co. In one
of the upper floors, I helped extract Bio-Dyne from brewers yeast. At
that time, Cincy had many breweries to supply the yeast.
Extraction was done with hot ethanol. The slurry
was filtered and clear filtrate concentrated in a vacuum evaporator. The
concentrate contained the active ingredient Bio-Dyne. I once asked Professor
Green, my chemistry instructor, what Bio-Dyne was, and he just shrugged.
At a later period, I worked for the Institutum Divi
Thomae located in the Rookwood Pottery buildings. The research laboratories
were upstairs, but in the cellar, my co-worker, an elder gentleman, and
I extracted agar from seaweed. Agar was to be used as a gel in the jelly-making
process.
One of the research scientists (called either Dr.
or Professor Hoffman) wanted to use the residual seaweed as a lawn fertilizer
upon decomposition. Consequently, we delivered truckloads of seaweed to
his home and covered his entire back lawn ... in winter. I often wondered
how the experiment turned out the next spring and summer.
The institution provided a free hot lunch for the
research people upstairs, but the two of us in the cellar had to brown-bag
it. (Oh, where was Divi Thomas when we needed him?) My lunch, self prepared,
consisted of peanut butter and baloney sandwiches. In contrast, my co-worker
dined on a variety of foods, some very unusual, which he always generously
shared. This resulted in my once-in-a-lifetime helping of fried possum.
Fondly remember the good old days,
Joe Aubert, Eng '44
Holland, Mich.
Readers talking
I just wanted to drop you a quick note to
let you know how nice the most recent issue of "Horizons" turned
out. It looks fabulous, and John Bach's story
on student ventures turned out great. I have received many compliments
from readers commenting on the story, so I know it is being read.
Charles Matthews
UC associate professor, management
executive director,UC Center for Entrepreneurship Education and Research

