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04/11/17 02:22 PM #666    

 

Joan Hirshman

What a wonderful, sweet way to remember "our" Mikado! Thank you, Robert.  I was backstage on the make-up crew for that memorable production.  When I returned to ETHS to celebrate the 50th anniversary party, we sat in the auditorium and sang every song. There were many hugs and memories.  How lucky we all were to be a part of that time!


04/12/17 11:01 AM #667    

 

Phil Noble

Yes! Great take on spring, youth, & our mikado memories. I was unable to get to the reunion, but got back in touch with a few classmates because of it. Thanks!


04/12/17 11:05 AM #668    

 

Lee Saberson

To Chuck: Congratulations on your USC honor. Well deserved. I remember seeing mostly your back and the bottom of your shoes during cross country. Obviously you are driven. Carry on! Continued good luck.

04/12/17 01:47 PM #669    

 

Alice Rosengard

Ahhh, The Mikahhhhdo! A splendid production; a great experience for performers, crew members, and audience members; comforting and amusing memories lasting a lifetime (only half a century so far), not the least of which was a marvelous performance by the late, truly great Karen Johnson in the role of Katisha. Having been thrilled by a 1960 televised production of this opera (on the Bell Telephone Hour and starring Groucho Marx and Helen Traubel), and having seen it in London performed by the D' Oyly Carte Opera Company many years later, my most vivid memory is of the ETHS version.

What a lovely inspiration for a tender and moving poem, Robert. Thank you for posting it.


04/12/17 03:02 PM #670    

 

Vernon Neece (Neece)

If my memory serves me correctly, an ETHS production of "The Mikado" was broadcast on the local Chicago affiliate of 1 of the TV networks.  I think it was ABC..  Also, I think my older sistier, Cherie, sang in the chorus for the show.


04/13/17 12:05 PM #671    

 

Robert Lindner

Of course, there were other spring memories like:

 

April Showers And Spring Exams

 

It’s rainy and cold, even though it’s spring.

So we will think of something depressing,

Like Spring Exams, they seem like just the thing,

That we worried about remembering,

 

On cloudy days with cloudy minds, when we’d sing

The Spring Exams refrain while showering

Before the test and then after testing,

We would go out into the clouds thinking

 

About the test, with hopes we were guessing

Right on some answers. It was distressing,

Like a cold April day when it’s raining.

I’m safe inside, so I’m not complaining.

 

It could be worse, I could be back worrying,

When Spring Exams were just the thing in Spring.

 

For me and you.

Robert 


04/27/17 03:55 PM #672    

 

Renee Sherer (Schleicher)

Attention: former journalism students and staffs of the Evanstonian and the Key --

I'm taking a class at Northwestern, and John Reque is one of my fellow students.  It's been delightful to reengage with this vibrant, warm, caring man. He expressed his regrets that our class did not have a special reunion for his students, Key and Evanstonian staffs as part of our 50th anniversary.  So -- better late than never.  If you are in the Chicago area and would be interested in getting together with him for some good memories, friendly conversation, and perhaps a meal or glass of wine, please contact me directly by email to let me know: Reneesss@comcast.com .  Arrangements are fluid till we see who can make it and when.

        -- Renee Sherer Schleicher

 


06/16/17 11:13 AM #673    

 

Sonia Ness

I'm sad to announce that Barbara Kirchhoff Russell died at her home in Webster Groves, MO, last Friday (6/9/17) of a longstanding bronchial ailment. Her son, Gregory, called with the news. I don't have his email address, but if anyone would like his phone number, please contact me.


06/17/17 09:46 AM #674    

 

Gloria DeFilipps (Brush)

I don't recall Barb that well from ETHS, but think she went on to become an art teacher. I do remember you, Sonia, so thanks for the information on Barb,


06/17/17 11:29 AM #675    

 

Kathy Dalgety (Miehls)

Sorry to hear this news. I'll let the alumni association know.


06/17/17 12:49 PM #676    

 

Alison Van Swearingen (Brown)

Sonia,  I remember you and Barbara from our days at ETHS.  I knew Barbara fairly well and am saddened to hear of her passing. 


06/19/17 01:53 PM #677    

 

Vernon Neece (Neece)

Sad to learn of Barbara's death.  We were not close friends, but I was acquainted with her.  Unfortunately, we have reached that stage in our lives where these events will become more frequent.


06/20/17 12:38 PM #678    

 

Mike Barnes

I'm very sad to hear of Barbara's death. I knew her well.  Prayers for her family.


06/21/17 11:44 AM #679    

 

Robert Lindner

I am very sorry to hear about Barbara and I think I do remember her.  And I have appropriate poems for death since it is part of life. There is no life without it.

BUT I think that instead I will post something cheerful for the Summer Solstice.  It always reminds me of Shakespeare's  A Midsummer Night's Dream.

 

Midsummer Night’s Dream at Solstice Eve

 

When the Earth becomes drunk with the Sun’s light,

Becomes higher than the Sun at mid-Day,

When the fairies shine on midsummer’s night,

Then mortals dream a world that’s far away,

 

Another world, where Robin’s bringing luck,

A world of magic plays within a play,

There Oberon, Titania, and Puck

Come into view, dust dancing on a ray,

 

Appears among the flowers and the trees,

Enchanting lovers and players of love,

In birdsong, in firelight, like honey bees,

They spread the pollen of the Sun above,

 

In golden rays of life that stay and stay,

As summer’s night comes after summer’s day.

 

Go Out With Love On Solstice Eve,

Robert


06/27/17 01:08 PM #680    

 

Preston Cook

At the urging of a fellow classmate I have entered an article in this Message Forum from last Sunday's Star Tribune, (dated  June 19) the major newspaper in the state of Minnesota. For the full article with photos simply enter "Star Tribune Preston Cook" in your browser.   It will enlighten all of you interested in reading what I have been up to for most of the years since graduation.

 

San Francisco real estate mogul lands in Wabasha with colossal eagle art collection

The home of the educational nonprofit the National Eagle Center thought it knew something about obsessions with bald eagles. Then it met Preston Cook.

 

By Tony Brown Special to the Star Tribune                           Photo: JEFF WHEELER - STAR TRIBUNE

Preston Cook with Andy Warhol’s 1983 screenprint “Bald Eagle” in one of the buildings that the National Eagle Center has plans to renovate, in part to display Cook’s collection of eagle fine art.

June 19, 2017 - Preston Cook has valiantly tried to step quietly into his new life among the 2,500 souls of Wabasha, Minn.

He’s been only partially successful.

“If anyone recently made a big splash around here, it’s him,” said Wabasha Mayor Rollin Hall, who described Cook as “very personable, modest, not arrogant, a good listener. He fits into Wabasha very well.

“But he has been active — and this is about eagles.”

Wabasha — a renowned bald eagle flyway on the Mississippi River and home to the educational nonprofit the National Eagle Center — thought it knew something about obsessions with bald eagles.

Then it met Cook, a confidently understated 70-year-old San Francisco real estate developer.

He came to Wabasha in search of a permanent home for his singular and dumbfounding treasure — the Andy Warhols, the James Audubons, the Roger Tory Petersons and a semitrailer truck trailer full of 20,000 eagle-themed books, photos, statuary, documents, posters, medals, music, advertising, jewelry and everyday ephemera that celebrate the nation’s great bird.

Cook brought his collection, which is worth millions, to Wabasha as a gift for the Eagle Center, which enthusiastically accepted it. Then, he and his wife, Donna, followed the collection from California to the little town on the Mississippi River to oversee its arrival and ultimate display.

“I’m kind of a hoarder,” Cook said with a shrug. “I’m trying to become a donor.”

The Eagle Center, Cook and the town of Wabasha seem to have found one another at an opportune moment.

The center moved from a storefront into its stunning 15,000-square-foot riverside building in 2007. But its 83,000 annual visitors threaten to overcrowd the space. The Eagle Center’s executive director, Rolf Thompson, and the board have been trying to finance expansion for years.

Cook’s collection, accompanied by more than $100,000 to help fund its display, means the expansion now includes two downtown buildings next to the center.

That has brought a lot of construction to Wabasha, Minnesota’s oldest municipality but not its busiest as of late.

“When I got here, there were about 13 properties for sale downtown,” Cook said. “Now it’s just a couple.”

Mayor Hall credits Cook, in part, for the rivertown’s new bustle.

“There does seem to be a lot going on these days,” he said. “Some of that has to be due to what’s going on at the Eagle Center. Lots of people coming through town.”

Hunting for a home

Twelve years ago, one of those people was Preston Cook.

Then 58, he had a successful Bay Area real estate business (he was also commissioner of the Port of San Francisco). He came to town during what would be his 10-year search for a permanent home for his bald eagle collection, a home he hoped would appreciate, preserve and display what had been a principal focus of his life for 30 years.

His search would take him from Alaska (too distant) to Philadelphia (no live eagles) to Tennessee (Dollywood was very briefly in the running), before he settled on Wabasha, which by then boasted a new building for the Eagle Center and a board with a vision to embrace the unexpected gift.

How did this happen, this colossal collection?

Cook will admit to being “a collector” by nature (“I still have an old dresser I bought for $100 when I was 18,” he said). And he is, obviously, consumed by the mystique of the American bald eagle.

“Think about it — everyone has an eagle story,” he said. “Even if that story is, ‘I would love to see an eagle someday.’ … It is the living representation of our country.”

Besides, he added, “no one else was doing this.”

Three events turned Cook’s unfocused inclinations into a lifelong pursuit. First, in 1966, he said, he saw the Herb Gardner movie “A Thousand Clowns,” in which Jason Robards’ character proclaims, “You can’t have too many eagles!”

It was Cook’s Rosebud moment.

An internal switch flipped, Cook said, and he began scouring flea markets and antique stores for anything bearing an eagle — stamps, magazines, carvings, buttons, postcards, jewelry, plaques, coins, currency, flags, sheet music and beer steins.

Second, his real estate business took off, giving him the budget to extend his eagle searches into art galleries and auction houses.

Third? “EBay,” Cook said. “That was a new world for me. It was just endless. Search ‘eagle’ and you get 750,000 hits.”

Word eventually got out that there was a guy in San Francisco amassing an eagle-themed collection. The galleries and auction houses started calling him, and other collectors from all corners of the internet began sending Cook shipping crates of eagle items to examine, on spec.

“I was just inundated,” Cook said. “I had to put a stop to it. It just got out of hand, even for me.”

From cookie jars to Warhol

Cook’s collection is, for now, housed in a warehouse in downtown Wabasha (Cook bought the old American Legion Hall, which is now secure and climate-controlled).

To walk through it with Cook is to see the work of an affably intense one-man team of collectors, curators and archivists. File cabinets, display cases, shelves and work

tables burst with thousands upon thousands of items that “tell the story of the American eagle through American history,” he said.

There’s a proclamation signed by Abraham Lincoln, with an eagle on the stationery. There’s a Model T radiator cap with an eagle on the top. There’s an original Bowie knife, eagle on the blade. There’s a pair of red-white-and-blue cowboy boots, eagles on the sides. There’s an original Norman Rockwell print, eagle-themed. There’s a cookie jar. Guess what? It’s an eagle.

But it’s walking among the fine art that Cook tells some of his best stories.

The Warhol, a rare print from the artist’s Endangered Species Series, he found in a gallery in Portland, Ore. He worked several years to negotiate its price. (“I have my limits.”) A 5-by-4-foot painting of an eagle in distress is from English painter Robert Havell Jr. — who, Cook pointed out, is also the man who hand-painted the copper-plate engravings brought to him by a young American named James Audubon. Then Cook walks you over to an Audubon eagle print; then an Edward Savage print from 1796 that was one of Thomas Jefferson’s favorites.

Few people make it into the old Legion Hall for one of Cook’s tours. That will change if the Eagle Center can find $15 million to pay for its plans — a 125-seat event and education space; expanded care for and display of the center’s flock of live bald eagles (all of which have recovered from injuries but cannot survive in the wild); and larger gallery and education spaces, including a gallery next door for the Cook collection.

Thompson said the center has commitments for $2 million, has requested $5 million from the state’s bonding program, and is searching for the rest. They hope for a 2019 grand opening.

In the meantime, Cook is culling, editing and analyzing his great trove. And he and Wabasha continue to get comfortable with each other.

For his part, Cook had grown weary of the hubbub of the booming Bay Area. When his stepchildren moved to Indiana, he and his wife decided to move east permanently. Already, he’s been touched by the warmth of his new neighbors.

“Wabasha is a very social town — it’s great,” Cook said. “Moving to a small town has not been a cultural shock for us.” He added, “Everyone’s so generous. But Midwestern food is different from California food. I put on about 10 pounds since I got here.”

Inevitably, there is the faintest bit of grumbling around town.

Despite Cook’s best efforts to be low-key, he has bought up downtown buildings, the Eagle Center has been public about its gratitude for all his contributions and he is, in fact, a wealthy guy from California who drives around Wabasha in what is apparently the town’s only Tesla.

The mayor has heard some of the talk.

“There are people who don’t have his money who might want to spend his money another way, if you know what I mean,” said Hall. “It’s mostly some old-timers not comfortable with change. But what we have going on here is all good.”

Cook said that most of the townsfolk treat him like a regular guy, even if he occasionally gets stopped and asked about his eagle collection. And he said he has no regrets about exchanging San Francisco for Wabasha — except maybe one.

“If I had known I was going to move to Wabasha,” Cook said, “I would not have bought the Tesla.”

 


06/27/17 02:45 PM #681    

 

Sherwin "Jay" Siegall

Glad you shared it Preston! Loved it when I saw it on FB. Just dazzling what you have acquired and accomplished. And even more amazing for the guy that appears to have beaten me!!! In an upside down sort of way! Lol!   Im still lookin for that record that gave me 891 out of 919 to,regain the title! 


06/28/17 08:06 AM #682    

 

Terry Levine (Rose)

What a great story, Preston.  I knew you had an eagle collection but was not aware it was as big as it is.  Minnesota is very cold in the winter....will you fly south or west during the bitter cold and just tough it out?


06/28/17 10:29 AM #683    

 

Frank Zeman

Brilliant, Preston.


06/28/17 01:59 PM #684    

 

Alison Van Swearingen (Brown)

Preston, when I saw you at the 50th reunion, we spent time chatting about your "hobby".  Some hobby!  Good for you and make sure you have a 4 wheel drive vehicle if you intend to winter in your new quarters.  You will need it!


06/28/17 03:11 PM #685    

 

Jane Henry (Andersen)

1000 Clowns was my favorite movie of all time.  And to think it inspired your eagle collection.  Go figure.  I'll do a lot of traveling between Madison and St Paul this fall.  Maybe I could take the long way home and get a personal tour of your eagle collection.


06/28/17 05:21 PM #686    

 

Holly Romans (Green)

Well done, Preston!  Not everyone has the incredible joy of actually seeing a dream they have visualized become a reality!  Congratulations on all your success, your generosity, your vision, and your remaining  a humble Midwesterner in spite of all.  


06/28/17 08:37 PM #687    

Vicki Hlavacek

Preston, I'm so glad that your dream is becoming a reality!! I knew you had a big collection, but not this big!! Way to go dear friend!


06/29/17 08:00 AM #688    

 

Stephen Gerth

What a wonderful story, and such a great blending of interests, resources, and culture.  I was not aware of the center, but now I'm going to have to plan a trip there.

 

 


06/29/17 08:59 AM #689    

 

Judith Campbell

When I was in Alaska years ago I stood on a small boat deck looking up at about 30 balc eagles.  It took my breath away!  If you are going to be a collector what better project than to honor these magnificent birds and our country's symbol.  If I get to Minnesota I want to visit your life's work.  Great, just great.


06/29/17 10:38 AM #690    

 

Jack Hayes

This is awesome! Do you have a date planned for when you will open up to the public?

Jack


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