To: encinaupdate@yahoogroups.com Sent: Friday, July 12, 2002 1:11 PM Subject: [Encina Update] Encina Update (reunions, siblings, bios, humor, spam, internet, whats new, homecoming) ENCINA ALUMNI, The first class reunions of the summer will be the class of 1972 and 1987 this weekend! Take lots of pictures and we'll publish them on the class homepages. Note that the classes of 86 and 88 are invited to attend the 87 reunion picnic on Saturday! REUNIONS For those who have reunions this summer, I encourage you to RSVP as soon as possible. Having worked on the last 73 reunion, I know that you must let the caterers/hotel know early on how many people you expect. In some rates, the room charge depends on the number of people. Give your reunion committees a break and RSVP now! Reunion committees, I suggest you publish lists of those who have rsvped so far to the class mailing lists. I'll be glad to publish these lists on the class homepages and keep them up to date. Also, encourage your classmates to submit their bios. Knowing who's going and what classmates have been up to help folks to decide whether they will attend or not. Get conversations going on your class mailing list too. CLASS OF 1962 *** UPDATE *** The class of 1961 is invited to attend the Friday night pre-party at Mace's on September 27th. Event: Bicycle ride Date: Friday morning, September 27, 2002 Where: American River Bike trail Contact Randi Muller Kemper at randikemper@earthlink.net or Barbara Rea Fuller at BarbieJo44@aol.com Event: Alumni only pre-party (*** class of 61 *** is invited) Date: Friday, September 27, 2002 Place: Mace's Format: No host cocktail party Event: Golf tournament Date: Saturday, September 28, 2002 Place: Haggin Oaks Contact: Bill Corrie Event: Reunion party Date: September 28, 2002 Place: Del Paso Country Club Contact: Alice Braio Bogert 62 at ajbogert@yahoo.com CLASS OF 1972 *** UPDATE *** The reunion is this weekend! Up to the minute information and maps to all venues can be found on the Class of '72 web site at: http://www.encinahighschool.com/class72/index.html Event: Alumni Preparty Date: Friday, July 12, 2002 Event: Reunion Dinner & Dance Date: Saturday, July 13, 2002 Place: Granite Bay Golf Club Event: Family Picnic Date: Sunday, July 14, 2002 Contact: Sue Kehoe Jacobson '72 at jacobson41@msn.com Debbie Sprague Mitchell '72 at galsmail@c-zone.net Darrel Mitchell '72 at lynk0007@c-zone.net CLASS OF 1973 *** NEW *** Diane Schoenborn Kelly 73 wrote: Jolie and I are the contact people for the Class of '73 and part of the reunion committee. We are both teaching summer school, which makes me doubly grateful to her for offering to host the first planning meeting. Our first meeting will be: Monday, July 29 7:00 PM Jolie (Ostrow) Baron's house 3109 Kadema Drive Sacramento, CA 95864 (916) 489-0488 jb6197@aol.com I'll attempt to contact all known committee members with this information. Prove me wrong with your response: I have always been of the opinion that summer (August) is the best time for a reunion party due to the fact that classmates who live out of Sacramento have to worry about their children's school and sports schedules more during the rest of the year. Remember that our classmates have children ranging from newborn to adult, with the majority still in school, following a traditional school year calendar. Remember that planning a reunion party is like planning a wedding in that it takes about a year. It is probably already too late to get a place in Sacramento for next May. We welcome suggestions for dates, types of parties, and places to hold our reunion. We also would welcome any help you would like to offer. In the past, we have had a Friday night grad-only gathering, a Saturday night dinner party, and a Sunday picnic in a park. Diane (Schoenborn) Kelly CLASS OF 1977 *** UPDATE *** Hello class of '77, Just a reminder that we are meeting at my home tomorrow afternoon at 3 pm. to discuss the night of the reunion. If you have an opinion about what would make the reunion more enjoyable, please consider coming. Additionally, I would appreciate hearing from you in advance, so I know who (and how many) of you to expect. My home phone number is 916-714-1358 and I live at 8965 Royal Gate Way, Elk Grove CA (close to Bond and Elk Grove-Florin). If you can't make it tomorrow but have ideas that you would like to share, please email them to me as soon as possible. Thank you. Sincerely, Theresa Hyland Bober Class of 1977 Reunion Update Date: August 17th, 2002 Time: 6:00 p.m. - ?? What: Dinner and a chance to catch up Place: The Doubletree Hotel Sacramento 2001 Point West Way (at Arden Way) Cost: $45 per person/$85 per couple Contact: John Hyland at johnthyland@hotmail.com Sue Levy Joslin at Jos964@attbi.com To RSVP send check, made payable to Herbert Niederberger, for appropriate amount to: Encina 1977 Reunion c/o H. Niederberger 5339 Par Place Rocklin, CA 95677 Please remember to list name(s) of those attending. CLASS OF 1982 *** UPDATE *** I am writing you this to inform you that we made a big mistake. We put on the invitations that the price would be 85.00 at the door. We can't do that because we need to let the guy know at the hall the amount of people eating and attending.We cannot wait until the last minute. So I am writing to inform you that we need the money no later than the 31st. Not mailed on the 31st and getting here by the 3rd or 4th or whenever we need the money by the 31st. I can tell you that I have received 2 responses in the last month and it is now the 9th of July. That is less than 22 days away from the FINAL DEADLINE! If the amount of the responses don't pick up dramatically by the 20th Then I am going to cancel the reunion. I don't mean to sound like a Jerk but we have put over a year of our time into putting this on and All we are asking of you is to not procrastinate anymore and to get your money in so we can put the finishing touches on the reunion. If you can't do this then I will return your money and maybe there will be a 25 year reunion. Thank you Soames Hi All, As you can see from my last email that I was stressing a little. Well alot. But we just had a meeting and we all took a part of our master list and made some calls to you. If you happen to get double calls I apologize our records and brains are a little scattered sometimes. After talking to everyone I found out that we got alot of feedback from you and the turnout is going up everyday So I am excited to say that everything is on as planned. I wanted to give you a idea of how the event is going to take place. 6:00 - 7:30 cocktails 7:30 - 9:00 Dinner 9:00 - whenever Dancing & festivities at the picnic We are going to have a jumping balloon for the kids and adults but us adults get tired easily. lol We are also going to have a volleyball net setup and maybe a kickball game. this way kids and adults can participate. We will need everyone to bring chairs and or a blanket to the picnic. Well that is all for now. We are getting so excited because in just a few days we are going to get together after all of these years and be able to share what we have been doing and are going to do. Date: August 9, 2002 Place: Croatian Hall Contact: Soames Funakoshi at alexusfr@yahoo.com CLASS OF 1987 *** UPDATE *** The 87 reunion is this weekend! Hi Harlan, My name is Kari Riffle Erickson class of '87. I was hoping you could send out a message to all those in the yahoo groups for classes '86 & '88 to let them know of our picnic class reunion on July 13th. We have decided to open the invite to them as well. We would really just love to see as many schoolmates as possible, and since this day will be really informal it would be no problem for them to come as well. I know many of us had great friends from both those classes as well. CLASS OF 1987 (inviting '86 & '88) Date: July 13th Place: Rusch Park Time: 12 noon to 9 pm Contact: Kris Monday Dragoo at jkdragoo@winfirst.com or just show up!!! They can just come by, bring their own food/drinks and of course their families!!!! Our class hopes they will take us up on this offer!!!! Looking forward to this day! Thanks Harlan, Kari Riffle Erickson '87 Date: July 13th Place: Rusch Park Time: 12 noon to 9 pm Contact: Kris Monday Dragoo at jkdragoo@winfirst.com CLASS OF 1992 Date: Saturday, October 19, 2002 Place: Grapes Dining & Spirits, 815 11th St Contact Rochelle Karrick Laun at RochLaun@yahoo.com or Jannell Penney at penneytax@msn.com SIBLINGS Tom DuHain 68 wrote: Tom DuHain 68 Michael DuHain Patrick DuHain Paul Opp 90 and Ann Opp 92 are the children of Bob Opp 71 (deceased) and Carol Roberts 71 Marilou Salasky 72/73 wrote: Marilou Salasky 72/73 Meg Salasky 75 Steve Hanks 78 wrote: Steve Hanks 78 Mike Hanks 80 Kim Hanks 81 Margene Scantlin 87 wrote: Margene Scantlin 87 Monica Scantlin 89 Tim Zeka 67 wrote: Gregory Zeka 66 Timoth Zeka 67 Kristine Zeka 69 Vance Zeka 71 Carl Simmermacher 76 wrote: Anne Simmermacher 73 Carl Simmermacher 76 Mickey Owens 87 wrote: Mickey Owens 87 Randy Owens 89 Patty Owens 91 John Owens 93 Kevin Owens 95 Edward Shaffer 89 wrote: Holly Shaffer 72 Edward Shaffer 89 Cathy Hannon 73 wrote: Thomas Hannon 68 Marianne Hannon 72 Cathy Hannon 73 Parsha Miller 87 wrote: Angela Miller 80 Deanna Miller 81 Toneya Miller 84 Parsha Miller 87 Vetica Miller 89 Bob (Ray) King 66 wrote: Bob (Ray) King 66 Regina King 67 Becky King 76 James Jarrett 84 wrote: John Jarrett 83 James Jarrett 84 Morgan Riddell 88 wrote: Kathleen Riddell 86 Morgan Riddell 88 Casey Riddell 89 Diana Kendall 71 wrote: Donna Kendall 70 Diana Kendall 71 BIOS LARAINE NUTT 61 I found Laraine's bio on the classmates.com website... I left Burlington Ontario at the beginning of the 12th grade when my parents moved to California. I finished high school at Encina High School in Sacramento. I worked for an insurance company and they provided the education for me to become a computer programmer. I am still a programmer but the title these days is Senior Applications Programmer Analyst, which just means I am an old programmer. I got involved in sailing and that has been my major outdoor activity for over 30 years. I have been married to a really great guy for 20 years. He is a structural engineer. On one of our first date I took him sailing and fortunately for me, he loved it. Prior to my meeting him I had crewed on a boat through the South Pacific as far as New Zealand, and lived and worked there for a year and a half. Since we met I raced in the 1980 Pacific Cup Race from San Francisco to Hawaii and the 1987 Trans Pac from LA to Hawaii. We now have 2 sailboats. One is a Standfast 36, in which we completed a circumnavigation in the years 1988 to 1992. We now keep it in Hawaii for vacations. The other is a Merit 25 which we race in San Francisco Bay. We have 2 cats, a Tonkinese and a Rag Doll named Butch and Sundance. I still love music - I won the music award for my grade the three years I was in Burlington High - and I attend the San Francisco Opera frequently. I love to sew and do beading and make most of my own clothes and jewelery. I enjoy entertaining and love to cook. Basicly I enjoy my life. It has turned out to be totally different than I ever thought it would, but it has been fun. I am in good health and look forward to many more years of sailing and traveling whenever I can. I hope anyone who might read this is feeling great and enjoing their life to it's fullest. BRIAN LINVILLE 91 Occupation: Musician, school teacher, draftsman, writer, student Bio: Touring in various bands, going to college, finishing my first novel. Trivia: I'm a high school drop out turned high school teacher. I'm working on my Masters so I can teach college. I also used to be horrible in English at Encina. Now I write professionally for various magazines. Friends: I was so, so anti social then because of all of my learning disabilities that I didn't really have many friends. There were a few people that were always nice to me. Sunny Low('91) and Anne Opp(92'). I miss both of them. Hobbies: Tae kwon do, ballet, weight lifting, music, anthropology, 3D modeling and animation, web page design. Grade_school: Howe Ave Junior_high: Howe Ave Memorable_teachers: Mrs Lord who opened up the world of Anthropology for me. Mr Tracy for being interesting. And Miss Misquitta for being patient as I struggled to learn Spanish for four years. Favorite_memory: Always getting higher scores on big tests than all the preppies that looked down on me because I was a "rocker" :) STEVE MENDOZA 01 Occupation: Full time Student at ARC(American River) hopefully transfer to SD,Cal Poly Bio: Working at School Friends: hmmm lets see, Chris, Staples, matt, Big T, and everyone else I forgot Hobbies: Snowboarding, mountain biking... Kids: I don't have any kids nor do I want any, anytime soon that is... Grade_school: I went to greer.. Grade_school_friends: all the ppl tha where there when I was still there before I left to gayass MIRA LOMA! Junior_high: Jonas Salk... Memorable_teachers: Drekee.. Mr MacD Favorite_memory: all them good time we had Story: Chris Jones and Nacy Ross need I say more? hahaha!! I will never forget that sh!t chris... Alumni_in_contact: I still see Big T, HUMOR This is the most interesting spam I've received yet... Hello, If you are a time traveler or alien and or in possession of government or alien technology I need your help! My entire life and health has been messed with by evil beings! If you have access to the carbon copy replica model #50 3000 series, the dimensional warp, temporal reversion or something similar please reply! I simply need the safest method of transferring my consciousness or returning to my younger self with my current mind/memory. I need an advanced time traveler to work with who can help me, I would prefer someone with access to teleportation as well as a variety different types of time travel. This is not a joke! I am serious! Please send a separate email to me at: Dragonball03@aol.com if you can help! Thanks eSmayTdaWSlZ+Zl6OklqmmoVeUkJ SPAM >From the Wall Street Journal... Hotmail Has Quite a Job to Save Its E-Mail Empire From Spam by Lee Gomes You think you've got a problem with spam e-mails because of the dozen or so you get every day? Welcome to Hotmail, where they get more than a billion. Hotmail, owned by Microsoft, is, by virtue of its 110 million users, among the world's biggest e-mail providers. It is, therefore, one of the world's biggest spam buckets. The number of messages it gets each day is closing in on two billion. Up to 80% are spam. Spam, for someone in the e-mail business today, is like cold for someone at the North Pole. It's everywhere, and if you forget about it even for a minute, it can kill you. Hotmail engineers constantly monitor their machines. A sudden deluge of spam, if not tended to, will take down the whole system. The Internet wasn't supposed to be this way. But then again spam, though universally despised, is the purest expression of the Internet's egalitarian technical vision. Everyone is connected; communications are free; anyone can be a communicator. "Spam is the Internet's only indigenous folk art," is how Steve G. Steinberg, a San Francisco researcher, consoles himself while deleting his daily spam. Internet arithmetic favors spam. Type "bulk email" in Yahoo; you'll see a long list of offers to sell you millions of addresses for a few hundred bucks. That means the tiniest acceptance rate puts you in the black. And so the contemporary spammer is not some shadowy pornmonger, but a debt-plagued middle classer who decides to try spam instead of, say, Amway. Hotmail started out free of charge. One reason Microsoft is now trying to persuade users to pay for it is that the drastic increase in spam has made free e-mail very, very expensive to offer. Bengt-Erik Norum, a Hotmail operations manager, says spam, by nature, arrives all at once -- in torrents -- rather than in a steady stream, like regular e-mail. To handle these peaks, he said, you need to greatly overbuild your computer system. This overbuilding is evident in Hotmail's bunker-like operations center in San Jose, Calif. In some ways, it's the house that spam built. The rooms -- icy cold from air conditioning -- house row upon row of stacked gear, panel lights all a-blinking. New gear is added almost weekly to keep up with demand. There are thousands of servers, and many pedabytes of storage. (Each pedabyte is a million gigabytes; you probably have 10 or 20 gigabytes on your PC.) The electricity used here could power 7,000 homes. When you talk to Hotmail staffers, it's obvious how proud they are of their technical accomplishment: keeping Hotmail humming along despite, for example, the tripling of e-mail in the past year. Too bad much of that victory involves simply not letting the spammers win. Hotmail and the spammers play the inevitable technical cat-and-mouse game. Hotmail sets up dummy e-mail accounts to monitor spam. So, of course, do the spammers, monitoring the monitoring. The graphs for spam at Hotmail show a sharp downturn whenever a new antispam feature goes live. But soon, the line starts moving up again, and after a few weeks, it's nearly back to normal. Hotmail blocks messages from an IP number it identifies with a spammer, who promptly moves on to a new one. Hotmail's spam filters might start to flag e-mails with, say, more than 50 names on the "To" line. The spammers see that, and try again, this time with 49. It's the same game with certain words in the subject line. Hence the constant new ones: Lose weight by summer; we'll pay you to eat and shop: do you desire more? Hey! A spam haiku. Spam is a great artificial intelligence problem: A person can spot it right away, but not the smartest computer. Of course, computer programmers keep trying to make better spam-killers. Rick Holzli, Hotmail's development director, said there are a number of new ones out there being considered. Something else Hotmail is considering: redesigning its system so most users can get e-mail only from preapproved addresses: friends, family, etc. That's already an option, but used by less than 10% of Hotmailers. That would be radical change to the sociology of e-mail. But one day, all e-mail might have to work this way. Thanks, spammers! It's unclear how, in such a world, you'd ever see that out-of-the-blue e-mail from a long-lost pal. But think of all the other things you'd never see -- and never miss. Updated July 8, 2002 INTERNET July 11, 2002 Now, the Synchronized Family By PETER MEYERS Was a mutiny afoot in the Tanner family when 15-year-old Melissa began deleting appointments from her father's datebook? No, explained John Tanner, Melissa's father. The Tanners, who live in Pasadena, Calif., had recently begun using a shared calendar program for the Palm computers that he, his wife and Melissa use. "She didn't quite get what we were doing, and she would see things on this calendar on her Palm and say, `Oh, that doesn't have anything to do with me - I'll delete it,' " Mr. Tanner said. Such are the perils of family scheduling in the digital world, where tools like PC-based calendars and combination cellphone-organizers help parents and children coordinate busy lives. The refrigerator door may someday be wired to the Internet, but in the meantime, the chip is replacing the magnet as the crucial link in many households. And while such families are technologically adept enough to own Palms or use calendar software, they are hardly all computer experts. These are "not your leading-edge Seattle techies here," said Cynthia Ewer, editor of OrganizedHome.com, a home management site. "These are average folks that are finding these tools just make it so much simpler." Ken Fischer, for instance, a Manhattan-based photographer, uses a calendar program called Now Up-to-Date & Contact to coordinate the schedule of visitors to his Connecticut country house. "We used to send faxes back and forth maybe 10, 20 times over the summer with schedules," said Mr. Fischer, whose calendar tracks his wife, Robin Cohen; their two children. Samantha, 2 1/2, and Scotty, 6 months; their nanny; and Mr. Fischer's parents. "And it got very complicated because each time you would look at the schedule, you would have to check what the changes were." Mr. Fischer's system allows his father, Carl, who also lives in Manhattan and uses Now Up-to-Date, to enter his schedule into a calendar they both control. Because Mr. Fischer has a Palm, every time he synchronizes the device with his main computer, he has a portable version of the family schedule. "Now I don't even think about our summer schedule," he said. "My father makes his changes. We make our changes. And we know just by looking at it who's going to be where. That's made a huge change." The children's nanny, who doesn't use a computer, keeps up to date by consulting a printed schedule. And Mr. Fischer's wife and mother can check a version of the calendar that is available on the Web. Mr. Fischer said his mother, Marilyn Fischer, used it to track her grandchildren's whereabouts. But does she always check the computer? "Sometimes she does, yes," he said, his voice an unreconciled mix of enthusiasm and frustration. "Other times, she doesn't. It's a long process." Using computers to coordinate a group's schedule is not new. Businesses have long used groupware products from companies like Lotus and Microsoft to help employees arrange meetings and share contacts. But those systems are costly and require server computers, making them impractical for home users. During the dot-com boom, many companies viewed Web-based calendars as a low-cost way for families to coordinate their schedules. Yahoo and Microsoft's MSN.com and smaller sites like PowerGroups.com and FamilyTime.com, for example, offered calendars that allowed multiple users to make entries. But none of those tools attracted a mass following for reasons ranging from privacy concerns to the inconvenience of having to consult the Web for scheduling information. The current wave of families keeping group schedules owes much to the growing number of households with PC's and the rise in palmtop usage among mainstream consumers, who often use those devices' scheduling programs. The number of families with at least one PC and one palmtop computer grew from 900,000 in 2000 to 3.6 million this year, according to MetaFacts, a market research firm in San Diego. The digital schedulers include Jennifer Shelamer of Alachua, Fla., a mother of two and an avid Palm user. Her husband, her father and her 10-year-old daughter are also Palm users. Ms. Shelamer uses a program called WeSync, which helps automate the transfer of information between Palm-based calendars. The program allows her and her husband, Chuck, to coordinate the children's schedules on their Palms. "We weren't having the time to sit down and go through our week," she said. "Now I don't have to remember to sit down and do it with them. I do it on my Palm, it gets on his Palm. We don't have to think about it." The WeSync program works in conjunction with the built-in Palm calendar. Each time a Palm user enters an event, it can be marked for transmission to another WeSync user. The next time both Palms are synchronized to an Internet-connected computer, the entry is made onto the target Palm, with the data transmitted through a WeSync server. Ms. Shelamer and her father, Bernie Haskins, run a livestock feed business together. WeSync helps ensure that neither schedules trips that would leave the office empty. But Ms. Shelamer does have one lament: "Sometimes there's a problem with my dad, who doesn't always hot-synch as often as he should." Ms. Ewer, the OrganizedHome .com editor, advocates a simpler alternative to programs like WeSync: the infrared beam function on virtually all palmtop computers that lets users wirelessly send information between devices. "Most family synchronization routines can be done pretty simply using the beam function," she said. For updates on their son, for example, "my husband and I can go out on the deck, sit down with our martinis and our Palms, and I can say, `Oh, by the way, Brandon is in China - let me give you his contact information," she said. Some families, however, welcome the chance to deploy more sophisticated solutions. In addition to using WeSync for scheduling, the Tanner family jointly manages shopping lists. Each of their address books contains a contact whose "notes" section lists items that need to be purchased. Because their contacts are shared each time they synchronize, each of them always has a list of what the others need. Mr. Tanner has also been working on speeding up the time-consuming process of transmitting data from one WeSync user to another. His solution is the Kyocera Smartphone, a combination cellphone and Palm device. The unit can instantly transmit calendar information to an Internet-connected computer or to another similarly equipped device. The Tanners' inaugural Kyocera went to Melissa, who needed a cellphone. It worked well enough to convince Mr. Tanner and his wife, Linda, to purchase Smartphones for themselves. That leaves Melissa's old Palm unused. Mr. Tanner's 10-year-old, Michelle, is eyeing it, and he is inclined to let her join in. "We'll just have to experiment," he said, "to see if she can get in the habit of synching." WHAT'S NEW 7/10/02: Mike Moore 82, Mary Adam 67, Edward Shaffer 89, Christine Rea 70, Trisha Lander 82, Laraine Nutt 61 bio, Dawn Larson 82, Bob (Ray) King 66 update, Regina King 67, Stacey Barnes 73, Morgan Riddell 88, Casey Riddell 89, Kathleen Riddell 86, Amey Frank 89 update 7/9/02: Meg Salasky 75 update, Van Owens 67 update, Scott Owens 65, Kim Owens 76, Kelly Owens 78, Marilyn Hoppe 61, Jeffrey Weil 87, Joseph Autra 72 7/8/02: Michelle Stampp 87, Lonnie Engelhardt 83 update, Nadera Shoman 96, Nina Shelton 73/74, Vicki Griffiths 62, Georgia Griffiths 71, Annabel Oversby 72 bio, Tom DuHain 68, Steve Mendoza 01/bio, Brian Linville 91/bio, Paul Opp 90, Patrick DuHain 75, Timothy Zeka 67 update, Gregory Zeka 66, Vance Zeka 71, Bill Boehm 63 update, Robert Irving 61 update, Tom Valenzuela 82, Vanessa Richey 89 update, Steven Gregory 68, Dennis Starr 68 update, Carl Simmermacher 76, Anne Simmermacher 73, Gina Graham 84, Thomas Toth 87 update, Daniel Conner 93 update, Sharon Walter 71, Patty Owens 91, Mickey Owens 87, Teresa Jackson 92, Randy Owens 89, John Owens 93, Kevin Owens 95, Geoff Brandon 87, Heather Daley 91, Marilou Salasky 72/73, Stephen Hanks 78, Jesse Canales 82, Margene Scantlin 87, Monica Scantlin 89, Summer Peterson 02, Caroline Johnson 71/72 update, Richard Francis 85 update HOMECOMING PARTY Congratulations to Candy Mleczko 94, who is the FIRST alumni to rsvp for this year's homecoming party! Candy wrote: I've got spirit, yes I do! I've got spirit! How 'bout you?? I can help set-up for rally/party/whatever! Let me know if any help is needed!! I miss those days!! Decorations/whatever!! The current date is Friday, November 1, 2002 versus San Juan. Please make a note of the date of the Homecoming 2002 party! 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 If your class is having a reunion this summer, I suggest you submit or update your bio. This will give everyone something to talk about initially when they see each other at the reunion . If you've already submitted your bio, go to your class homepage and read the submitted bios so you are up to date with what your classmates have been up to... Harlan Lau '73 Encina HS alumni webmaster www.encinahighschool.com harlan@rambus.com