Date: Fri Nov 16, 2001 3:24 pm Subject: Encina Update (etiquette/football/homecoming/ralph bonds/siblings/rea/johnson/bios/obituaries/humor/internet/whats new) ENCINA ALUMNI, There is no sponsor for this weeks update. ETIQUETTE A reminder to those of you who post on the class mailing lists. Please sign your messages. I'm amazed at how many folks think that everyone will know who they are from their email address. And when you reply to an update, please do not include the entire update in your reply to me. FOOTBALL Encina lost to Union Mine 18-34 in the last game of the season, ending up 4-4-1. Date Team Results September 7: Mira Loma W 54-20 September 14: Oroville T 22-22 September 28: Highlands W 42-18 October 5: Lindhurst W 44-3 October 12: Mesa Verde L 0-27 October 19: San Juan W 28-20 October 26: Golden Sierra L 14-20 November 2: Colfax L 14-32 November 9: Union Mine L 18-34 Last Saturday I took the family to see women's volleyball between #3 Stanford and #5 USC (sorry Leslie). Both teams had 1 loss in Pac-10 play with the winner likely to win the Pac-10 title. Stanford prevailed 3-1. Not having seen volleyball in a couple years, I was surprised that they had switched to rally scoring where sideouts count as points. And they play the serve if it hits the net and goes over. And they play to 30 points a game. Evidentally they changed rules this year. We had great seats at floor level in the first row at the net so it was exciting for the kids to be so near the action. I taking the family to the Big Game Saturday between Stanford and Cal. Stanford is still fighting for a good bowl game. Cal is looking for it's first win and hoping for an upset. With apologies to you Cal grads, Go Stanford! HOMECOMING 2001 If you pledged for the homecoming game, I would appreciate it if you would send in your pledge. Thanks! We still need help identifying the alumni in photo 522: http://www.encinahighschool.com/homecoming/homecoming2001/game.htm Information and pictures for Homecoming 2001 are here: http://www.encinahighschool.com/homecoming/homecoming2001.htm RALPH BONDS This interview of Ralph Bonds by Vice principal Steve Gatewood appeared in the Bulldog Barks newsletter... Getting to know...Ralph Bonds Who said "I think; therefore, I am"? was it a. Thoreau, b. Rousseau, c. Descartes, d. Voltaire, or e. Franklin? A walking philosopher, a humanist, the quick wit, and a man of words is our own Ralph Bonds. Ralph was born in El Paso, Texas at Fort Ringgold. Ralph's father was an Army military specialist in Horsemanship and trained people to ride. Ralph W Bonds Sr was also a guard for Headquarters "C" company and Aide to the Commanding General. Ralph's dad's company was the first troop to liberate the University of Santa Thomas in the Phillippines. They destroyed the explosives that were intended to blow up hospitals and the Administration Building. Mr Bonds Sr received the Outstanding Service medal. He is currently 82. Ralph says that his father's strongest character quality was his unquenched desire to see his children's education completed. He skipped lunch and worked so that his children could participate in school activities. Ralph's mother, Isaura Vela, was a typist at Fort Ringgold. What brought Ralph's parents together was their love of family, church, and education. She was a motivating factor because she was valedictorian of her high school class. Ralph has one brother, Everett, who is a security officer in Tacoma, Washington. His sister, Alma Wade, works for the telephone company, is married and has 4 children. Stephanie, his youngest sister, is married, studies at the University of Illinois, and has one daughter. Ralph had a fantastic childhood living in Rio Grande through his 6th grade. Almost all of the families were related in some way and were "one big happy extended family". Ralph had two teachers he liked in elementary school. Mr Zavaleta was funny, creative and included all the kids in activities. Mrs Blackstone, a 5th grade teacher, made him want to learn everything about history. She made history come alive. She wrote a book about the town. It was so encompassing that his community thought it was the beginning of history in the area. When Mrs. Blackstone died, alumni and students flocked to the funeral to pay their respect to an outstanding citizen. After the 6th grade, Ralph's father decided to move to California because the community didn't have the educational resources to fulfill his dream of a better future for his children. In 1961, they moved to Garden Grove in Orange County, one of the most politically conservative communities in California. It was a lot of fun. In high school, Ralph's two favorite teachers were Mr Bill Hoganson, a music teacher who taught him band, choir, keyboard, bass horn, and Mr Harrison, his social science teacher and mentor figure, who taught him to love American history. He would relate history to social movements. He loved the study of the Constitution because it is where our individual liberties are protected. Mr Harrison would always say, "If you don't know the constitution, you can not make America better." Ralph was active in student government, and outreach programs as a tutor for at-risk students. His heroes were Jackie Robinson and Ralph Bunch. He attended dances and football games because he was president of the Band and student activities director. He thinks the senior guide program at Encina would have been very successful at his high school. Ralph was very involved in church. He was the pianist for his Baptist church. He went to California Baptist University. He majored in Spanish literature and music. He had a choice of being a minister or a teacher. He chose teaching because he wanted to be with all types of people. He volunteered at the Sherman Institute in Riverside, California working for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. He decided to join the Army to take advantage of the GI bill. He played music in the 433rd Army Band and served in Viet Nam in 4th Infantry Division Army Band. In Viet Nam, he was responsible for providing moral support. They played Big Band music on stage. In 1968 his band played for Bob Hope and they were so good that "Down Beat" magazine wrote an article about them (February 1968). He received the Bronze Star for meritorious service. Viet Nam also helped him with his leadership skills. He returned from Viet Nam and went back to school. In 1972 Ralph worked at Santa Barbara Middle School as a remedial reading and social studies teacher. He helped establish one of the first ESL programs for Vietnamese refugees. In 1987, Ralph and his family moved to Sacramento so that his wife and children could be closer to their grandparents, uncles, aunts, and numerous cousins. He met his wife, Sharon Hopkins, while opening an account in the Santa Barbara National Bank and Trust - New Accounts. "I walked in and made a life investment." They dated for 3 years. Sharon would always complain that all of their dates were always on Sundays. Being in graduate school and highly involved in Church activities were no excuse. They shared a love of poetry and music. Robert Frost, Stanley Kurnitz, and Robert Lowell were their favorite poets. "The Road Less Traveled" was Ralph's favorite poem because of the theme of giving up comfort to choose a challenge. His favorite date was when Sharon was supposed to meet him at a Santa Barbara Park to listen to a concert and she sat there alone wondering why he was so late when all of a sudden, he appeared on stage and sang a love ballad. Ralph explained to the audience what he had done and they applauded him as he sat in the audience with Sharon. He still remembers the elbow punches he received while the rest of the concert continued. They have three children: DAvid, 34, lives in San Diego and teaches at a community college; Jeray, 32, is married with 3 children and works in retail sales; and Douglas, 31, is a Rock and Roll musician who plays the bass. He was a member of the Kay and Tenfold Bands. Ralph taught at Starr King, Barrett Middle School, and joined Encina in 1995. He loves Encina because of its feeling of community and students. He also is part of its history because his sister-in-law graduated here along with several other cousins in the 1970's. Ralph's advice to kids is, "Make your community better by improving yourself. A community is only as strong as the people who love it. Encina is my community and I love it." SIBLINGS Chris Moser 78 is in contact with: Ron Shaw 70 Joyce Shaw 73 Marcy Shaw 78 Dusty Shaw 80 Cheryl Petrotta 78 wrote: Diane Petrotta 69 Cheryl Petrotta 78 Danbar Ogawa 79 wrote: Danbar Ogawa 79 Iran "Chris" Ogawa 81 Leijane "Luana" Ogawa 82 Shawnn "Kanoi" Ogawa 84 Michael Doran 65 wrote: Michael Doran 68 Larry Doran 68 BARBARA REA 62 ON CINDY REA 68 Barbara Rea 62 went to New York to watch her sister Cindy Rea 68 run in the New York marathon... "My sister Cindy pulled a hamstring and her doctor had some Achilles problems so they finished together in 6 hours and 7 minutes. I congratulate all those who finished. It amazed me to watch everyone. There were blind people; people in wheel chairs turning a hand crank; people in wheel chairs going backwards and using their feet to push them. There were people of all ages, sizes, from just about every country, at least 35,000 of them. I still cannot believe what I saw. At one point I stopped at the 24 mile mark. By then, people were really hurting and about done-in. It was so amazing to watch them perk up when we would should encouragement to them such as, "Congratulations, you're almost there! Only two more miles. You can do it!" You could literally see their countenance change and they would stand up straighter and pick up their pace. I am just in awe of each and everyone I saw. We saw all the traditional sites, including ground zero which was so unbelievable that it literally took my breath away. We went into Trinity Church which is a block away and saw photos of the church all covered in ash and debris. The church and the cemetery which stands near or on Wall Street (I can't remember) has been there for many, many years and it still standing. One can still see traces of ash in the flowerbed and inside the pews are covered with plastic and they have either repainted or have done extensive cleaning. The people in New York were so friendly and helpful. My sisters and I are always lost and usually going the opposite direction we should be traveling because none of us have any clue where we are or which way is north at any given moment. To make matters worse, my memory is so bad that after I get directions I think I'll remember but then we have to ask someone else about a block later. I have never walked so much in my life and we took the subways when we weren't walking. I spent one day in the National Archives in Washington researching my husband's family. It was amazing to actually handle all the original military records for his great-grandfather who was in the civil war and the letters he and his wife wrote in order to get his pension. I spend hours going through microfilm on the Revolutionary War records and how exciting when I actually found the person's records being sought. I do know that I need several days there, not just one day; but that was all I could spare this trip." MARK JOHNSON 81 "I wanted to introduce my website to the Encina network: http://www.transmelodic.com/ This website introduces my latest music recording project "Family Man." There you can find MP3 files that can be downloaded for free. Because there are so many Mark Johnsons in the USA, I use the alias "M.J. Lawrence" -- Lawrence is my middle name. It would make me happy if some Encinians get the chance to take a listen to this mixture of instrumental and vocalized pop music. Even better, I hope they will enjoy it. Mark" BIOS PHAYLOTH CHANDAVONG 97 Occupation: Drive Through Shift Leader at Del Taco Bio: I have been trying to get my AA at Western Career Collage....Only 4 more years to go...yah!!!!!!!! :) Trivia: I ve gained 75lbs, I am the backup flute player for a rock band, but part time only you guys I have to go to school.... Friends: Youmalynaleenichandavong....I have lost contact with corn-dog, angie lubner, christina, jo-el, dan cosgrove.... Hobbies: Playing the band (shrimp chips) come check us out at the elephant bar...... Kids: I was blessed with a baby boy on halloween, he is an artistic elbino... Grade_school: Dyer Kelly Grade_school_friends: Naleeni Memorable_teachers: Mrs. Woo and Mrs Begg Favorite_memory: I lost my virginity on the bus to great america Story: None that I could share...Although the bus ride was greaaaaat!!!!! OBITUARIES These obituaries are courtesy of Kathie Kloss Marynik 67. DANIEL TWITTY 66/67 Sacramento Bee, April 11, 1968 Pfc. Twitty Is Killed In Vietnam Pfc. Daniel R. Twitty, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse H. Twitty of 3332 Tembrook Drive, has been killed in action in Vietnam. Twitty, a member of 101st Airborne Division, was serving with the First Air Cavalry Division when he was killed during a mortar barrage Saturday near Khe Sanh, the last day of the Communist siege there. The 101st is the same division his father served in as a paratrooper in Europe during World War II. Mrs. Twitty recalled that when her son completed paratrooper training, his father's paratrooper wings were pinned to him in graduation ceremonies. Twitty, who attended Encina High School, volunteered for the draft on March 8, 1967. He was airlifted to Vietnam on Dec. 14. RUDOLPH MORRIESE 67 Sacramento Bee, April 27, 1979 CB Equipment Electrocutes North Area Man The coroner's office reported Rudolph Morriese, 29, accidentally electrocuted himself in his North Area home on Hood Road while working on citizen's band radio equipment. His wife told deputies she heard a crash Thursday afternoon and on entering a special room he had for his radio equipment, she found him on the floor. Arden Fire District firemen attempted to revive him. An ambulance took him to Sutter Memorial Hospital, where he died about a half hour later. Coroner's deputies said Morriese had burn marks on a thumb and finger. They are attempting to determine what he touched to be electrocuted. HUMOR Student Book Offers a Twisted History 'Coarse' November 15, 2001 8:04 am EST By Sarah Tippit LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Experience history from the Stoned Age to the Blintz Krieg! From Middle Evil Times to the Age of Now, from the Land of Milk and Chocolate to the Iran Hostess Crisis and the fall of the Berlin Mall! Welcome to the wonderful world of "Non Campus Mentis," (Workman) a book of mangled moments of Western Civilization culled from actual term papers and exams of today's "brightest" students by incredulous college professor Anders Henriksson who, while grading exams, chose to laugh, rather than cry, at his students' most egregious mistakes. History, after all, is nothing more than "the behind of the present," according to one student, who aptly added: "This gives incites from the anals of the past." The once-mighty British Empire is in a "state of recline. Its colonies have slowly dribbled away leaving only the odd speck on the map." Chairman "Moo" has passed away, as has former President "Franklin Eleanor Roosavelt," and civil rights leader "Martin Luther Junior" was slain in the 1960s, shortly after making his famous "If I Had A Hammer" speech. Hitler, a depressed "Nazi leader of a Communist Germany" who spurred a huge "anti-semantic" movement through a terrifying "Gespacho," launched "Operation Barbarella" while the English "vanely hoped for peas." The war began turning around, though, when the "Allies landed near Italy's toe and gradually advanced up her leg. Hitler ultimately "shot himself in the bonker." 'CRETINALIA HISTORICA' At its best, the 150-page book "illustrates the ingenious and often comic ways we all attempt to make sense of information we can't understand because we have no context or frame of reference for it," according to Henriksson, chairman of the history department at Shepherd College in West Virginia. He began compiling samples 20 years ago at the University of Toronto where he also taught. Shortly after he began his collection, he published an article in the "Wilson Quarterly" titled "College Kids Say the Darndest Things," which prompted amused colleagues at more than two dozen universities in the United States and Canada including West Point, University of Alberta and McMaster, to regularly send him their own inane prose collections. Last year, when he realized his office overflowed with funny samples of "cretinalia historica" the idea for a book was born. While Henriksson declined to identify all the schools involved he said they ranged from moderately to highly competitive, about half were in Canada, no Ivy League schools were represented, and that one of the entries came from Oxford in England. At its worst, the book may reflect a generation raised in ignorance by bad schools and disengaged parents. "This is not the norm," Henriksson told Reuters in an interview. What you have here is almost 30 years of my collecting from students' (works) at various institutions. This really represents sort of the creme de la creme of the creatively inane." Did he make it up? "No!" he said. "Who could make this stuff up except Mel Brooks. I'm not Mel Brooks." Which prompts the question: Should people sound the alarms and search for an "escape goat?" Maybe. Hundreds of student contributors received passing grades with such statements as: "When the Davy Jones Index crashed in 1929 many people were left to political incineration. Some, like John Paul Sart, retreated into extraterrestrialism. The New Deal was an idea inspired by Franklin Eleanor Roosavelt." (The Boston Tea Party, by the way, was held at Pearl Harbor.) Gravity of the misstatements aside, the bloopers make a great reference whether one seeks information on the Canadian Missile Crisis, clashes between Israelis and Parisians, or the Gulf War in which, according to one scholar: "Satan Husane invaided Kiwi and Sandy Arabia." (No doubt an act of "premedication.") 'NEW INCITES' Henriksson said the errors fall into three major categories. Some are simply caused by bad spelling or a lack of proofreading, and come out funny. Some were prompted by a "profound lack of preparation, while others, just seem to be "really out at sea," he said. "You get the ones who don't really even seem to understand there's a line between past and present and they tell you that the first airplane was flown by the Marx Brothers. I had this one kid who wrote that Spartacus led a slave rebellion in ancient Rome and then appered in a movie about it later." The book offers fresh new "incites" on history from "prehistoricle" times through "King Toot" and the birth of "monolithic" religion.("Judyism had one big God named Yahoo"). The book goes on to "chronicle" the birth of Christianity ("Just another mystery cult until Jesus was born") and, his pronouncement, later, that "The mice shall inherit the earth." The book sheds new light on the lives of Martin Luther (he nailed 95 theocrats to a church door), "Florence of Arabia," and General George "Custard" who managed to stand up anyway. ("Martian Luther King's" four steps to direct action, by the way, included "self purification," when you "allow yourself to be eaten to a pulp.") In its final pages, the book includes students' geographical misconceptions as represented on several world maps bearing such labels as "The Land of Milk and Chocolate" and "Home of Golden Fleas" (in the Ancient World) to "Bulemia," "Whales," "Roam," the "Eel of France," and the "Automaton Empire" (as they were known in the "Middle Evil" Times). And it notes that, yes, there has indeed been a change in America's "social seen," over the centuries. The last stage, according to the book, is "The Age of Now. This concept grinds our critical, seething minds to a halt." Until then, however, we Americans, "in all humidity" are nothing less than "the people of currant times." INTERNET You'd be surprised at how many alumni inquire about old flames! From the November 12, 2001 Wall Street Journal... Looking for an Old Flame The Web can be used to find pretty much anything -- or anyone. When searching for an old flame, proceed with caution By JOHN BUSKIN Perhaps you're comfortable typing credit card numbers, medical information or other personal data into impersonal Web sites. But are you ready to upload your most personal secrets of the heart? I had an excuse. "I'm working on an article," I told my wife. "That's why I'm trying to find the girl I was in love with when I was a teenager." I was afraid my wife might be hurt. Instead, she burst into laughter. "Can I send her your picture?" she asked. Well, even though the sage rock icon Frank Zappa said, "We're all who we were in high school," I guess not many of us look the same. But the Web has the supernatural power of a time machine. Decades can dissolve in the text of fevered e-mails crackling between long-lost lovers who need not reveal wrinkles, furrows or extra chins. At first blush, finding one's old flame through the Web holds the promise of improved posture, leaner muscle tone and the reawakening of youthful possibility -- at least while you remain online. But before you embark on a Web voyage into your past, stop and think. Can you bear the excruciating heartache of Dr. Zhivago in his unfulfilled search for Lara? Can you summon "the romantic readiness" that infused The Great Gatsby's quest for Daisy Buchanan? Can you sing the Italian stuff in the middle of "Feelings"? Not everybody's cut out for this. Some Advice The Web is a dispassionate tool. It goes about its business calling up pages with the occasional browser crash and no judgment as to content. We mortals, however, are made of more fragile stuff. We'll do well to listen to veteran searchers for past chums or charmers and their warnings about the perils of selective memory and revisionist history. John Delin, for instance, a Staten Island, N.Y., Web-zine editor, has vigorously worked the Internet to reconnect dozens of his baby-boomer high-school contemporaries. His advice: "Don't get your hopes up. I find people who don't remember anything. Or I might remember something and be completely wrong." Visions of the past are ultimately subjective, having evolved to support our own needs and help us face the present. My idealized relationship might be remembered by my true love as the slough of her teenage years, a dark era that is recalled only under deep hypnosis or the administration of truth serum. Those are the risks. Now ask yourself another question. Can there be good -- read innocent -- reasons for contacting an old flame? After polling an unscientific sample of friends (it's not the kind of subject you want to broach with the stranger on the next bar stool during Monday Night Football), I believe there can be at least one good reason: It reveals a vision of the road not taken. There are many lives to live and you just don't get the chance to live every one you want to. And, during a period when our society -- like a horror movie -- is evilly morphing before our eyes, connecting with a past love may temporarily step on the brakes. Finding your old flame on the Web carries with it the ability to peg yourself to a moment and stop the clock, mock mortality. Sure, some of us are tragically unhappy, unlucky, or obsessively carrying a torch. I did come across one story about a British executive with a wife and children who was hunted down on the Web by his first love all the way from Australia. He left a note for his wife and fled down under. There's something ominous in that story that makes me think, "Don't look back." Something else, however, tells me to keep going. Getting Started Mr. Delin offers some general tips for beginning a search. He suggests starting out with online national versions of the white pages, or entering the person's name in popular search engines like Google or Yahoo! He also advises a search of the AOL member directory and the Social Security Death Index. (Possibly a real time-saver there). If initial name searches turn up nothing, "do a keyword search, entering the high school the person attended," he adds. "Put in the word 'reunion.' If a high-school class has had a reunion recently, there's often a Web site that has been created as a result. If you know where the person went to college, e-mail the college. Some colleges have e-mail directories that are public. Some colleges will contact the person for you. Some even give out information. "I found a lot of people that way," Mr. Delin continues, "including at least one report of death. To find a woman's married name, aside from getting access to a marriage record, I guess the best way is to contact other people in the person's class who might know." (For the hard-core searchers, the high-school die-hards, Mr. Delin rattled off the list of specialized classmate-search engines that accompanies this article.) So with that, I was off to the past -- that is, the mid-1960s when I lived in the Bronx and my girlfriend, Kay, lived on Long Island. We went to different high schools and I didn't know many of her classmates. In my memory, our attachment was strong; both romantic and stable. But at 16 we had few illusions about being together forever. I was a year ahead of her in school, and after I left for college, the separation -- and my own callow behavior -- slowly eroded our relationship. The last time we saw each other was during the summer of 1965. Not as epic as Rose and Jack on the Titanic? It just takes a paragraph to tell. But 35 years later, with two teenagers of my own, a happy marriage, an old golden retriever, two cats and an actual picket fence around a stucco beauty in the 'burbs, I was still wondering, "What if..." I'd heard Kay was married, but had no clue to her husband's name. So, mindful that I was systematically going about invading someone's privacy with not just my own presence, but with that of vast legions of Wall Street Journal readers (well, at least yours), I registered at Classmates.com (classmates.com) -- one of the best-known high-school sites -- and paid the $29.95 that made me a Gold member for a year. I eventually registered at most of the other sites also. Before you can browse through other schools, you have to register within your own. Looking through the list of my classmates didn't elicit much curiosity. Mine had been an all-boys school, and I was chasing a memory of a girl. Following a branching path to Kay's school, however, I got increasingly nervous. Scrolling through the list of her registered classmates and waiting for new screens to load was agonizing. I was almost relieved when her name didn't appear. One name, though, was familiar -- a friend of hers, to whom I sent a Classmates "Hi Note" with my e-mail address enclosed and a brief explanation of what I wanted. (Classmates.com doesn't display e-mail addresses.) Kay's friend e-mailed me back right away. It's easy to be straightforward when you have the excuse that you're "writing an article," but she thought it was a gimmick. Offering to send her clips with my byline somehow sounded phonier still. The good news was that she had been at Kay's wedding. She knew Kay's husband was a doctor and that they had moved to Northern California. The bad news was that she couldn't remember the groom's name. Full Exposure The next step was posting a note on the Classmates.com message board of Kay's school. This time I left off the "I'm-working-on-an-article" bit and asked whether anyone had information about Kay just because I was curious. Without the newspaper article excuse, I felt really exposed, like I'd asked a girl to dance in front of the whole gang. I needn't have worried. After a month there was no response. I paid an extra $14.95 for a fruitless search through PeopleFinders, a site accessible only through its partner sites, including Classmates.com. PeopleFinders has a "marriage search," which sounds great but it only covers five states. There are scores of what you might call locate-anyone sites, but for the most part, they cost money and focus on public databases. An example, Fast-Track/Cyber Masters Inc., offers the Investigators Kit 2001 for $89. Their intro copy includes search tips and suggested keywords such as, "Property Records," "Inmate," and "Fictitious Business." Somehow I had segued from finding past loves to tracking bail jumpers. Maybe this is the way real private eyes work, but I didn't see it as productive. Since the assignment was Web-based, I initially ruled making phone calls out of bounds. Early in my search, though, I had found a phone listing in Southern California through Yahoo! People Search, one click off their front page, that sounded like it might be Kay's sister. I held it in reserve and kept looking strictly on the Internet, but time was passing and I was getting nowhere. I held my breath and called. Bingo. Yes, she recalled my name, but I had to fill her in a little. We agreed that she would call Kay and pass along my e-mail address and phone number. Then the ball would be in Kay's court. Mr. Delin's warning had me rattled. I needn't have worried. A few days later, I clicked open Kay's first e-mail to me: "Hello! Just heard from my sister that you've been trying to reach me.…Can you imagine my surprise? Well…it would be great to speak with you. Looking forward to hearing from you. -- Kay" The note included her phone number. I was obviously the coolest guy in the world. Another Life I called her a number of times, and we had long conversations. Initially, I tried to throw in lots of newspaper slang to cover my nervousness and to sound professional so I could ask brash and personal questions -- you know, for the article. Kay wasn't deterred. She was forthcoming and friendly. Kay had been leading what sounded like a wonderful life. After we broke up, she went to Adelphi University in Garden City, N.Y., and earned a master's in special education. She taught for years, finally becoming the principal of an elementary school in the Bay Area. She left teaching in the early '90s and now works at a local art gallery. She and her husband hike and mountain bike, cook and travel. There had been sorrows, certainly, deaths in the family, that made her seem deeper and more real, and added an ironic timbre to her throaty laugh. The sheer volume of her existence made me feel like an interloper. As we talked, though, the sound of her voice really took me back to our weeknight phone calls in high school. For some reason I remembered her old phone number (it had an 'Ivanhoe' exchange, for those who remember phone numbers with words in them) and I reeled it off, maybe to impress her with my sincerity. She seemed shocked and I felt foolish but proud. We remembered seeing "Charade" on New Year's Eve at Radio City Music Hall, spooning in the back seat of my family's Chevy Nova, and going to a Peter, Paul and Mary concert when she visited me during Fall Weekend at college. Sundays, after dates with Kay when I had to do my homework, I was always a little off, distracted, in a daze. I felt that way now -- adolescent and moony. It occurred to me that whatever I wrote would have to be approved by a wife and husband on either coast, but what the hell. You feel the way you feel. You're supposed to paint what you see. Finding Kay didn't answer any great questions, but it was a great thing to do. It's easy to fob off mating strategies on Darwinian imperatives -- we pick who we pick for reasons of unknowable biology and cosmic timing. Had things been reversed, I'm sure rediscovering my wife would be just as moving and affirming. I'm not tortured by what might have been. Still, one thing Kay wrote about searching one's past haunts me: "You shove things to the back of your mind -- questions, losses -- and then they come back and get stuck in your throat." Is there a reason to continue this relationship? On the phone, I'm sometimes terrified of running out of things to say. We don't share a present so it's not as if we might launch into a penetrating discussion about, say, the viability of the euro or the fall TV season. We aren't even certain of each other's politics, and the tentative nature of our conversations aren't up to Socratic contentiousness. But I like talking to Kay on the phone. I don't think it's unhealthy or sinful, and it's not as if we're going to sneak off from our respective coasts and meet up at the Joplin, Mo., Marriott. A friend of mine also found an old flame through the Internet. As they spoke on the phone, they mutually acknowledged the meaning they'd held for each other and the importance of moving on. And eventually they said goodbye. Maybe that moment will come for Kay and me. Who knows? I'll show this to my wife now to make sure she's OK with it. No article is worth a good marriage, right? While she's reading it, I can slip out to the gym. It's a long way back to buff, and I want to be ready. -- Mr. Buskin is editor of dowjones.net, the intranet for Dow Jones & Co., publisher of The Wall Street Journal. WHAT'S NEW 11/15/01: Bonnie Van Buskirk 62 update, Danbar Ogawa 79, Iran Ogawa 81, Leijane Ogawa 82, Shawnn Ogawa 84, Manginder Chana 94/bio, Phayloth Chandavong 97/bio 11/13/01: Sean Colli 86, Pamela Waterbury 87 update, Steve McKellips 77, Ben McWatters 82, Ron Shaw 70, Joyce Shaw 73, Marcy Shaw 78, Dusty Shaw 80, Linda Sturdivant 65, Sandy Felker 79, Karen Green 75, Pamela Wenerd 77, Ann Meredith 66, David Miller 70, Don Schlotz 63 update classmates.com: Eric Weber 62, Ed Hurff 64, Gary Nibbelink 65, Michael Doran 65, Paul Minor 66, Bill Souza 71, Kristen Withrow 83, Michael Marler 84, John Carr 88, Krista Cardenas 89, Catherine Przykucki 90, Candy Curtsinger 93, Jo Ann Wurtz 93, Sandra Guerra 95, Cassandra Huapaya 96, Monica Almendarez 97, Katheryn Mount 97, Brittany Cozad 99, Cassandra Frick 00 11/12/01: Ann Meredith 66, Thomas Dean 67, Pamela Wenerd 77, Diane Petrotta 69, Wendy Onstine 87 update, Tom Puthuff 72 11/11/01: Sunny Pitchell 99 update, Jill Hood 84 update, Lynnelle Lees 72 update, Chantell Abels 89, Marsha Provance 69 update, Youmaly Phothisane 97 update, Roy Colburn 85, Leslie Gier 89 update, Ernie Syck 99 Don't forget to submit your contact information or bio: contact: www.encinahighschool.com/directory/submit_contact.htm bio: www.encinahighschool.com/submit_bio.htm I'm on vacation next week so no update for two weeks. As you get together with family and friends over the Thanksgiving holidays, travel safely and spread the word about the Encina website to your siblings, relatives and alumni... Harlan Lau '73 Encina HS alumni webmaster www.encinahighschool.com harlan@rambus.com