Letters - Summer 2011
Celebrating CU breakthroughs
I found the March 2011 edition of the Coloradan most heartening. My reaction was generated by the articles on professor Bob Sievers鈥 work to invent an inhalable measles vaccine [鈥淭he man fighting measles one breath at a time,鈥 pages 8-13], and distinguished professor Linda Watkins鈥 discoveries related to pain management [鈥淐loser to a cure?鈥 pages 30-33]. Congratulations and thank you to them and their team members.
While pondering the significance of these breakthroughs, I was disheartened, though, that reports of such efforts and accomplishments seem confined to the pages of a university alumni magazine or obscure scientific journals. Decades ago just about everyone knew that Thomas Edison invented the telephone and Jonas Salk developed the polio vaccine. Nowadays most people never hear of these laudable achievements. Indeed, a new product or invention typically reaches the public鈥檚 attention only via advertising that is paid for by and credits a corporate manufacturer.
A funding source, undoubtedly, is important if not crucial to many discoveries. We should never forget, however, that individual thought and persistence are the components without which nothing is learned and no public benefit is realized.
Perhaps one of these years the mass media will brighten our days by reporting on the work of a distinguished professor Watkins or professor Sievers. Isn鈥檛 such news at least as important to us as today鈥檚 stock market report, last night鈥檚 hockey scores or tomorrow鈥檚 weather?
Larry Burch (PolSci鈥68, Law鈥71)
Des Moines, Iowa
Eleanor Roosevelt鈥檚 last CU visit
Judy Dodge (Mus鈥62), vice president of the student body, Allen Nossaman (Jour鈥62), former editor-in-chief of the baby直播app Daily, Eleanor Roosevelt, Kathleen Work (A&S鈥62), ASUC senator and Joe Bell (Math鈥62), president of the student body, pose for a photo on Nov. 30, 1961. Mrs. Roosevelt was invited to a dinner given by student government that night prior to a lecture she gave, Dodge recalls.
The March 2011 issue of Coloradan is the best yet in your improved format. I even read the letters. It鈥檚 always good to read comments from Paul Danish (Hist鈥65) [鈥淛ammin鈥 with The Woz,鈥 page 17], of course, who continues to be wonderfully prickly.
But I must respond to the Eleanor Roosevelt question asked by John Southard (Geog鈥63). Ms. Roosevelt was on campus Nov. 30, 1961. Joe Bell (Math鈥62), president of the student body, and I, vice president, hosted a dinner for her and student government delegates prior to her speech that evening. I found her lively, inquisitive and very interested in what students had to say. I do have a picture of the event that I would be happy to send to your offices, if I can find it [see Judy鈥檚 photo above].
Judy Dodge&苍产蝉辫;(惭耻蝉鈥62)
Washington, D.C.
This is a follow-up to the letter from John Southard (Geog鈥63) in the March 2011 Coloradan. The Coloradan reported the Heritage Center and Conference on World Affairs staff were unable to confirm any of Eleanor Roosevelt鈥檚 visits to Macky Auditorium beyond May 1958. John wondered if she was at CU in the early 1960s. I can attest she delivered an address in Macky between September 1961 and her death in November 1962. I was a freshman in September 1961 and attended her address sometime between those dates. I did not go to summer school in 1962. The big event in the fall 1962 was the Cuban missile crisis.
Frederick W. Obitz (笔蝉测肠丑鈥65)
Phoenix
In reply to John Southard鈥檚 (Geog鈥63) memory of seeing Eleanor Roosevelt at Macky in your March letters, my brother Eric and I recall seeing her there as well in 1961.
Lawrence Chadbourne&苍产蝉辫;(础&补尘辫;厂鈥70)
San Francisco
[Editor鈥檚 note: Thanks to many of you for writing and calling. Eleanor Roosevelt did visit in November 1961. We have updated our files to reflect this. And thanks to Judy Dodge (Mus鈥62) for digging up her photo from the occasion and mailing it to us.]
No business like snow business
I just read the March issue of the Coloradan. I enjoyed the story on Mike Kaplan (IntlAf鈥86). I also was a member of the CU B Ski Team (1982-84) and C Team (1981) my freshman year and remember Mike well. Congrats to Mike on becoming the CEO of Aspen Skiing Co.
The 鈥淎鈥 Team gets most of the press, but some of the 鈥淏鈥 Team members move up to the varsity team. We all spent a lot of time on school and on the ski team. We had dry land training in the fall every afternoon and weight training Tuesday and Thursday mornings. By Halloween we started skiing every weekday afternoon at Lake Eldora and racing on the weekends all across the Front Range. This made for quite a challenge for class schedules and selections, not to mention any time for studying, eating and fun.
Andrew Fernandez (骋别辞驳鈥88)
Middletown, R.I.