Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Revels 2020

Other years we have gone to the Revels in Cambridge, MA on December 27th,  but this year, The Revels as a live event in Sanders Theater was cancelled due to the pandemic. But that was not the end of the matter. They produced a video which celebrated the 50th anniversary of The Revels by drawing on archival films of past years, woven into a contemporary story filmed at Sanders with no audience, and a "virtual audience" of heads in the seats at Sanders Theater. singing their hearts out. We set up the computer, with external speakers, at the Dummerston Church and watched it there on the computer screen - using the church WiFi - which was more satisfactory than watching at home on the iPhone screen. It was well done and quite a bit of fun - not up to the live event but fun nonetheless. I didn't think to take a screen shot till near the end but here is one:

A scene from the virtual Revels performance, 2020

Right now, Ellen is at Hannaford's doing some shopping and I'm at the church doing this!

Getting things done

I'm at Pete's Tire Barn in Chesterfield, NH, waiting to have snow tires mounted on our Subaru. We have all-wheel drive, but the tires on the car are not all-weather tires, they are very much summer tires. We got through last winter with them, but there were times we wished we had better traction, so this winter we're putting on snow tires. Not that we are driving that much these days, but you never know when you might need that extra security. They won't be studded - that would be overkill. Pete's allows only two people in the waiting room at a time, and right now there is another person, but we are 12-15 feet apart, both wearing masks, and no one is talking. Should be pretty safe.

Yesterday I made several calls on my TO DO list. One was to make arrangements to change our propane gas supplier. I learned from John a while back that he pays much less per gallon for their propane than we have been paying - about $1.50 less.  That is a big difference. So I called his supplier yesterday and made arrangements to switch over to them. It isn't simple. They have to check out my whole system, then pull out my tank, put in their own tank, and then I have to contact my old supplier, have them come get the old tank and send me a rebate for the gas left in it. I hope there will be no glitches in any of that. But once it's done, I'll save $120 or so every time I have the tank filled. I don't understand why there is such a difference in price. It's not like gasoline, obviously. 

Yesterday I also sent out about 20 Christmas cards and letters. I'm running late, but better late than never, I guess. I still have about ten more to do. I make my own cards by re-cycling old cards - cutting off covers of old cards I really like and gluing them onto card stock. For some reason I really enjoy doing that and find it very satisfying. As my kids used to say when they were young, "You're weird, dad."  They were probably right! Here are two cards I made:

This card is made from a photograph made by Sarah van Keuren - really beautiful!

I love this card!

This morning, before coming to Pete's, I made a bass track video of the Epiphany hymn, Arise and Greet the Morning Star. It took a few attempts to get it acceptable, and there were some technical glitches.This time, Andy Davis used a Dropbox link to send us the scratch tracks we follow when we sing and make the video. We listen with ear buds using the iPhone 4s, and record using the iPhone 6s. Well, the iPhone 4s could not open the Dropbox link. It's operating system isn't recent enough to recognize the Dropbox app. So I had to call Andy and have him send the scratch track attached to an email. The 4s can handle that.

There is more to report, but the tires are ready!


The rather austere waiting-room at Pete's. The other person left. 

Saturday, December 26, 2020

A Gallery of Christmas Scenes

Christmas 2020 has been different! And it has been very special in many ways. Here are some scenes:

A wildly decorated house in Dummerston (and this is only part of it!)

Out our back window after last week's storm (all washed away by a Christmas rain)

 
Brendon as Santa Lucia at Katie and Savanna's Solstice Party



A fire pit at the Solstice Party

Ellen's workspace on the dining room table

Max Baker (against the backdrop of a Christmas card on the mantle)

A snowman at the Swedeville Lantern display

More lanterns

Ditto

Ellen's stollen - a Tolles Family Christmas Morning tradition

Our tree

Ellen's flaming plum pudding - a Tolles Tradition. She sent small ones to Jim and Mary and Katie and Savanna, since we couldn't all enjoy it together,

We had a 2 1/2 hour Zoom session with the Tolles/Feinland/Baker clans on Christmas Day afternoon; a two+ hour Zoom session with John and Cynthia Saturday noon and a 1 1/2 hour FaceTime with Katie Shay in Boulder Saturday evening. So we feel very connected even though apart. We did MadLibs and a Yankee Swap with Ellen's family, incorporated a puppet show by Sandglass Theater in Putney into our time with J&C, and heard all about Katie's new job with FlowHub in the cannabis industry.  

Here are the words of a parody of The Twelve Days of Christmas that I wrote and we sang at the T/F/B Zoom party;

The twelfth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me 

Twelve cancelled concerts

Eleven virtual choirs 

Ten scratch-trackers 

Nine live-streamers 

Eight muted singers 

Seven tired Zoomers 

Six CDC-ers

FIVE VACCINES

Four socially distanced 

Three face masks,

Two washed hands

And a portrait of Dr. Fauci


Dr. Anthony Fauci - Happy Birthday! (80 on Christmas Eve)


A Happy, Healthy New Year to All!



Thursday, December 24, 2020

Merry Christmas!

A safe and merry Christmas to all and a happy healthy new year!
Lanterns for Christmas in “Swedeville “ in Brattleboro 

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Big storm!

We've had our first big snow storm of the season - it started Wednesday night and continued into Thursday, and we got about a foot-and-a-half of snow. It blew a lot during the storm so it is hard to find an accurate measurement. We heard of other places where it was over three feet! It stopped snowing by early afternoon, but we didn't get plowed out until about 2a.m., Friday morning. So we went nowhere on Thursday. I was very grateful that John had come over and cleared stuff off the deck before the storm. 

I put lights on the tree, finished writing my Christmas letter, recorded some tracks for the Guilford Church and studied for a new study group - I've decided to try Torah Study with the local Jewish Community, led by Kate Judd, who is a Cantor and serves as the rabbi, though she is not officially one. She used to sing in the Blanche Moyse Chorale, so I've known her a long time. It will start this Sunday, at 11:30a.m. - right after church. The lesson is roughly Genesis, chapters 44-47 - part of the Joseph story. I'm looking forward to it. 



The snow at the Dummerston Church, where I am parked at the moment. 


cell phone issues

We are having problems with our cell phone. It's storage is full and nothing we can figure out to do seems to solve the problem. It says we have 15.2 gigabytes of photos on it - that's  huge - and I have no idea what  those could be. We deleted everything we can find. So I'm sitting here waiting for a Consumer Cellular rep  to help me. 

Later:  I got Consumer Cellular and they said call Apple Tech Support. I called them and they couldn't help me because the phone needs to be connected to WiFi and I don't know the password here at the church - my computer remembers it but I don't. So I'll have to get that from somebody. 

Later:  I got the password from Carol H and the phone is now backing up to iCloud. We'll see if that does the trick. 

Me on hold

Later:  It's been about 45 minutes and it's still backing up! It says "23 minutes remaining" -- Good Grief!

Later still: I finally had to abort the back-up. It was taking longer than I had to give it. At first I thought that I had done nothing to solve our storage problem, but the next day, when I checked the iPhone storage numbers, that 15.2 gigabytes mentioned above had dropped to 10.3. So I gained almost 5 gigabytes of space on the phone, which essentially solves our problem. We were having the frustrating experience of making a recording for a virtual choir and having the recording interrupted by an announcement that we were out of storage space. Eventually, I'll come back to the church and finish the back-up. But we're fine for now. 

Thursday, December 10, 2020

How can this be?

How can it be that in the midst of a pandemic when I can't go anywhere or do anything, I feel so pressured? Right now I feel like I have a TO DO List the length of my arm! Winter chores that need to get done before it snows like getting snow tires on the car, clearing stuff off the deck, hammering in the windows to get them tight, etc. Writing and mailing out a Christmas Letter. Filing financial receipts. Doing  music tracks for a family Christmas Zoom, plus a Mad Libs. Another track for the Concert Choir. Christmas is only 15  days away and there are things to get into the mail. We just got a final load of wood that now needs to be stacked. It goes on and on!  And these days, everything seems to take longer to do! So, OK Larry, just relax and pace yourself. It will all get done!

Meanwhile, Katie Shay has a new job, working for FlowHub. And what is that?  Well, in brief, it is a company that sells software to cannabis dispensaries! That's what Katie will be doing. Here is a page from their Website:


A page from the FlowHub website

Just exactly what this will entail I have yet to learn. She starts next Monday. She can work from home. Five states made cannabis legal on Nov. 3rd, so there is a lot of potential for new dispensaries. Should be interesting! She's excited. I wonder if she can find a photography angle! Betsey was helped a lot by cannabis in the later stages of her illness. Katie and I went together to a dispensary in Boulder to get some edibles for her. Maybe that planted a seed (so to speak). 





Saturday, December 5, 2020

An Ingenious Advent Display

I usually come up to the Dummerston Church to do my blog, so that's where I am right now. Just before coming here, I picked up our first CSA at Walker Farm (everything was boxed by them and they put it in the car. Handy!), and then swung by the Brattleboro P.O. to mail some cards and letters - the only place locally you can mail something on Saturday afternoon and still have it go out that day.  

The Dummerston Church has created an Advent Wreath display in the front window so that it can be seen by those driving by the church. It is made of PVC pipe and wired so that a candle can be "lit' each week. The first candle of Hope is lit now (and there is a sign, "Hope," at the base, visible from outside). Another case of a creative response to the pandemic. 


Advent Candle Display, Dummerston Church

There are four candles, one for each Sunday in Advent, and a center "Christ Candle" lit on Christmas Eve. I think the four candles are Hope, Joy, Love and Peace (if memory serves me correctly). 

Today it was supposed to snow, but so far its just rain. Tomorrow the Brattleboro Concert Choir "Stay at Home Sing-Along" is the Faurè Requiem, a favorite of mine. Ellen is enjoying a quiet day at home, reading. Ahhh!




Friday, December 4, 2020

Cookie time

 We have come to the cookie time of the year. Tomorrow is the Guilford Community Church Annual Christmas Bazaar, and every year Ellen has made cookie platters for it -  and I mean like 40-50 platters, some years over a 1000 cookies! This year the in-person bazaar has been cancelled, but in its place the church created a Bazaar Catalog and people pre-ordered items, including cookie platters. Tomorrow, people will come and pick up their orders. So tonight, we are assembling platters. Ellen and Robin Davis are the cookie-makers and they are here. I came along to help and tonight I cut ribbons. Now Ellen and Robin are tying ribbons on the platters. 


Here are the platters!

The was the catalogue page for the cookie platters

Ellen also donated some  felted Christmas ornaments she made (the acorns, pears and baskets are her's)

Some folks made wreaths

Robin tying ribbons

People's orders are all bagged and ready to be picked up

Our church is like a mini-Amazon warehouse!

What else has happened this week? Earlier today we participated in a Zoom lecture from Swarthmore by Prof. Phil Weinstein on Kafka and Subjectivity. Basically it was a defense of the importance of the liberal arts, especially the humanities, especially literature, in higher education. STEM is fine, but we still need to be teaching about the life of the mind and the emotions, the inner life. 

Wednesday was the CTS Reflections Zoom session; Tuesday was River Singers, etc. One day I met for a half-hour with Margaret Holland, Jerome's daughter. A full week!



Sunday, November 29, 2020

Thanksgiving report

We are in the last day of the Thanksgiving Holiday weekend. It is a beautiful day in Dummerston, VT - sunny and relatively mild for the season. We are fortunate indeed! Thanksgiving Day was, of course, unusual this year. No in-person gatherings. Ellen and I had our thanksgiving dinner sitting by our fireplace: turkey drumstick (for me; white meat for Ellen), squash, mashed potato and gravy, stuffing and cranberry sauce, plus a choice of apple pie, pumpkin pie or mincemeat turnover  - a very traditional meal. Ellen had bought a very inexpensive 13lb. turkey - $4.00! But it had no pop-out button - it was cheap for a reason. Result - it was undercooked. Not a common thing for master chef, Ellen, believe-you-me!  So I didn't finish my drumstick. But everything else was delicious. But - it was a busy day with three Zoom sessions: (1)with Rob, Katie, Kate (all in Santa Fe), John and Cynthia at about 1pm; (2)with the Phil and Deborah McKean/Jacob families (about 30 persons in all) at 3:30pm, and (3)Katie, Savanna, Brendon, Tye, B, Dusty and Dorothy at about 6pm. So we felt very connected. 

Here are some Thanksgiving meals:

John and Cynthia's meal:    
                            Layered Enchilada, roasted brussels sprouts, potatoes and mushroom gravy. 
             Apple sauce from our wild apples hadn't made it onto the table yet. 

The Shay meal in Santa Fe:
                                                                Turkey & stuffing 
                                                                Braised red cabbage 
                                                                Beans, cranberry, pickled radishes 
                                                                And of course the walnut balls

Hot turkey sandwich on Friday at our house

Friday, we had a quiet day: I read an entire novel, Wildlife, by Richard Ford, which Ellen had recommended. It is told from the perspective of a 16-year-old boy watching his parents' marriage unravel over a period of about four days. Masterfully done!  I also did something I have not done for months - I went to the pool. Yes, it is open, but under very restricted conditions. All I did was use a couple of pieces of exercise equipment just to exercise my body. I had the exercise room to myself.  Unfortunately, the hot tub is closed, as is everything else except the gym and the lap pool: no changing room, no showers, no steam room, no water aerobic pool, etc. The staff cleans the equipment you used as soon as you finish with it. I think it was entirely safe. 

Saturday, I slept late, had more leftovers, did the Spelling Bee, transcribed some Jerome tapes, and we both forgot a Feinland family Zoom session - quelle domage! However, John put me on to a talk about "how to buy a telescope" coming out of the Dublin Academy (New Hampshire) observatory, which was fascinating, even though I am not contemplating buying a telescope. I learned that there are three basic types of telescopes: 1) refraction (the traditional type); (2) Newtonian reflective, and in particular, Dobsonian (the best bang for the buck), and (3) the composite Schmidt-cassegrain type - the best all-round including photography. Avoid all box-store telescopes (junk). You can do really  well in the $500-900 range, but of course they can get up into the thousands. Here is the Schmidt-cassegrain type:

Diagram showing interior construction: a combination of lenses and mirrrors

Eric, the speaker, showing a real telescope of this type

Today was an outstanding 1st Sunday in Advent church service at Guilford Church, featuring a beautiful anthem, I Believe, based on an inscription coming out of the Holocaust:

            I believe in the sun, even when it is not shining;
            I believe in love, even when I don't feel it;
            I believe in God, even when God is silent.

You can find it by going to YouTube, searching "Guilford Community Church" and scrolling for "I Believe anthem." 

Later today we may get to Grandma Miller's bakery. We're out of morning-glory muffins. 


Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Helping get out the vote in Georgia

Ellen signed us up to send letters to Georgia to help get out the vote in the January run-off election for two Senate seats. So today we mailed fifty letters to Democratic residents of Lawrenceville, GA, a NE suburb of Atlanta. The letters had the letterhead of the Gwinnett County Democratic Party (which was also the return address of the outer envelope). The letters were supplied, but we had to sign them, add a personal, hand-written note, fold the letter, include an Application  for Absentee Ballot Form (which had to be folded), and an envelope to put the form into; address the envelope, stuff it with the packet, stamp it (stamps supplied by us) and seal it. Ellen signed, wrote the note and addressed the envelopes, and I did all the folding, stuffing, stamping and sealing. We were fascinated by the names of the recipients (very diverse in background), and we had fun looking up addresses and seeing the homes people lived in on Zillow. Good job done!

Letters ready to be mailed


Friday, November 20, 2020

A Fine Late November Day

 Today it is sunny and in the low 50's - a fine day for Nov. 20th. I just met with Jerome Holland to do some final work on the booklet I am creating about his life. I think another session will just about do it. He and Margaret led Prayers of the People last Sunday in the Guilford service. That was very special. Ellen is busy making pies for the Guilford Church's Pie-Through, a drive-by pie sale tomorrow. We were pleased to learn at the church Annual Meeting last Sunday that pledges have gone up this year - that is remarkable for a pandemic year!


Jerome and Margaret doing the Prayers of the People











Thursday, November 19, 2020

Just a brief note

Running late, so I'll just say that we're doing OK and put up a couple of photos:


Brendon with the lantern he made

The beautiful light of mid-November from off our deck. This is a favorite time of year for me because of the light and the bare trees

A box of chocolates for Ellen for her birthday from Jerry and Maggie, via Wilbur's of Maine. They are good!!



 

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Happy Birthday Ellen!

Sunday was Ellen’s birthday. I think it was a lovely day for her. Robin brought a little cake for her:

                                          Ellen’s birthday cake with one of the lanterns she made.

Sunday was a full day. We had church in the morning, followed by the annual meeting of the church (via Zoom). I think more people attended by Zoom than normally do in-person. Then we had a little time for ourselves before a 3pm Zoom meeting of the Windham-Union Association of UCC Churches. Again, the attendance was good. I'm really wondering if we'll be using Zoom even after the pandemic is over - it is much easier to go to a meeting that way. I had arranged for our guest speaker, who was Dr. Stephen Ray, President of Chicago Theological Seminary.  I have gotten to know him through a Wednesday Noon session held by CTS via Zoom every week. We would never have been able to have him as a speaker in-person. So, score another win for Zoom. He spoke on the theme: What now for the church? When we invited him, we had no idea what the result of the election would be, so we left it open-ended: looking out at the world, what is the most important thing Christians should be doing in this moment? His answer? Working for justice in the public arena so that EVERYONE can thrive there. There is a lot packed into that statement, so he unpacked it, and we had a good Q&A session following.  I think it was a good meeting. 

Dr. Stephen Ray, President of Chicago Theological Seminary

In the evening it rained like crazy - our spring is really high now - so we listened to the radio, played Scrabble (Ellen won), and then watched The Crown on Netflix on the phone. We are burning thru data like crazy on the iPhone what with all these Zoom sessions and movies! It is our major link with the world. 


Saturday, November 14, 2020

Surprise!!

Late last evening, about 11pm, Ellen and I heard an unfamiliar cry of an animal outside in the woods east of the house. It was a short, raspy cry, at about 5-6 second intervals, and went on for some time. At one point, I went out on the deck to hear it better, and it seemed to be fairly close and moving up the mountain. I came into the house and thought maybe I could get a recording of it with the phone. By the time I got the phone, it seemed very close by, and before I knew it, I heard footsteps on the deck! It was big! What was it? I turned on the lights that illuminate the deck, and OMG!  There was a black bear right outside the door! It was a small bear, the size of a large dog. It was startled by the light and pretty quickly turned and ran off  the deck, but   not before we got a good look. We couldn’t believe it! We actually saw a bear 🐻 on our deck!  I have no idea what drew it up on the deck. There was no food there. No bird feeder. And why was it crying earlier? Amazing!


Friday, November 13, 2020

Where did THAT week go?

Gosh, it's been a week since my last post! I can't think of a good  explanation for that. It is partly because we had Brendon as a house guest Tuesday afternoon to Thursday afternoon, and I think that altered the rhythm of things. Brendon just wanted a change of venue - he has been stuck at home for weeks. I don't think of us as being very exciting, but he seemed to have a good time. He and Ellen made lanterns on Wednesday. Ellen got the idea from Robin when we went to the Davis' for supper around their fire pit. They are made by blowing up a balloon, then covering the balloon with strips of waxed paper, Elmer's glue and fall leaves, letting that get good and dry, so that it forms a hard shell, then popping the balloon and pulling it out from inside the shell. Here we are at the fire pit but there are no balloon lanterns in this photo. I'll get one later.

At the Davis'

                      Lanterns at the Davis’

The other things we did with Brendon were: (1)drive to Grandma Millers'  bakery to get Morning Glory Muffins and  (2)watch episodes of Northern Exposure that Brendon brought with him.  I had seen at least one episode years ago, but hardly knew it - it's fun. Also, Bonnie Hull "Marco Polo-ed" us while Brendon was with us - and I responded with a video of what we were doing that included this shot of Brendon:

                                              

                                                                         Brendon

Otherwise, let's see. We went to the Feinlands last Saturday and had an early outdoor Thanksgiving because it looks like family gatherings for the real Thanksgiving are going to be against Vermont's COVID-19 protocols. We lucked out with a beautiful, warm, sunny day! Both Ellen and Julie contributed to a meal set out on the porch buffet-style.  Brother Jim Tolles in Maine sent a "scratch  track" for recording the Somerset Wassail song for a Zoom family Christmas event and the Feinland family recording themselves singing along with it, and I took a photo of them doing that:

The Feinland family (Max is in Boulder)


Friday, November 6, 2020

The deck is done!

Mike finished rebuilding the deck today. He is a good worker, and a hard and steady one as well. I am pleased with the result. He arrived at 7a.m. this morning and worked steadily until about 3pm. At noon or so he was joined by his friend,  Adam (who is a realtor in Newfane) to help him put back up the metal sheets - a two-person job. Everything looks really solid, and it should last for a long time. One less thing a potential buyer will have to worry about, and we should get a lot of enjoyment out of it as well. The new pressure-treated wood will need to weather a bit before we stain it - a job for next summer. Here are a few shots:

This is how it looks now

Mike and Adam finishing up nailing down decking

This shows how the new joists sister the old ones

Tomorrow, Ellen will deliver a meal to Tony and Margaret Dale Barrand, and then we will go down to Northhampton and have an early Thanksgiving meal outside with the Feinlands. It promises to be a beautiful day weather-wise, so we are taking advantage of that. We'll all  be wearing masks and be socially distanced, so it should be safe and enjoyable.


Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Election Day memories

Today the long-awaited and anticipated day has finally arrived: Election Day 2020. Bound to become a memorable day! At the moment, I am sitting in the car outside the Dummerston Church, which is the Town of Dummerston official polling place. That's right - a holdover, I guess,  from the era when town and church were combined. The Lower level of the church where Sunday school is held is also equipped with voting booths. Normally they are folded up against the wall and serve as cork bulletin boards, but today they swing out and become booths.  There seem to be no lines at all at the moment. Not too many cars in the parking lot either. We were told by Eliza Bergh (who is now apart-time Assistant Town Clerk), that 70% of. registered voters in Dummerston had voted absentee.  Ellen is actually back at the house making two kinds of soup for the poll workers for supper. They'll enjoy that!! So I need to be back a bit after 4:00pm so she can deliver the soup by 4:30pm. That gives me about 1 1/2 hours to blog.

Earlier today, we drove over to Keene, to Ted's Shoes and Sport, to pick up a new pair of New Balance sneakers, size 12B. They feel good on my feet, and I am hopeful that they will take care of my foot problem. You can sort of see them here:


My new sneakers!

I am remembering what is probably the most memorable election day of my life: the Election of 1952. The election itself was not hugely consequential, but the day was memorable for me personally. Here is the story:

I was a senior at Drury College in Springfield, MO. I was 19 years old, and thus not able to vote - you had to be 21 to vote in those days. But my roommate, David Sweet, was very politically involved and a passionate Democrat. The candidates that year were General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Republican, and Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, the Democrat. David was an avid Stevenson supporter, and he announced that he wanted to be in Springfield, IL, Stevenson's home, that evening, to hear Stevenson give his acceptance speech (he was sure he would win). Did I want to go with him? I was always up for an adventure, so I said yes. Neither of us owned a car, so our only mode of transportation was to hitchhike! Much more common back then than it is today. If we left first thing in the morning we figured we could make it in time to hear the speech - a trip of about 250 miles or so.

We walked out to the edge of town to Highway 66 (yes! that famous highway) to St. Louis, put out our thumbs, and - WOW! The first car to stop was a soldier heading to Peoria, IL! He would go right by Springfield, IL! We would be there by noon! Amazing! We had less than an hour to congratulate ourselves, however. About 50 miles down the road, the engine on the car conked out. It just stopped running. I forget what the problem was - I think maybe it was a timing chain - something major, in any case. So there we were, and now we were faced with a dilemma. The car was a convertible, and it was packed with the soldier's possessions. He had to hitchhike to a phone and get a tow-truck (no cell phones back then), and  he was loathe to leave his car unattended because there was no way to secure it. He asked us if we could stay with the car and guard it while he went for help. That would delay us, but we were nice guys and we felt we could still make it to Spfld. IL in time. So we said yes. It turned out that it took over two hours for him to get back with a tow-truck, but it was only about 11am - we could still make it!

Problem was that our luck changed. Nobody stopped for a long time, and we got only short rides when we did manage to get a ride at all. It was late evening when our ride dropped us off at a filling station right at the Chain of Rocks Bridge over the Mississippi River at St. Louis. We weren't even in Illinois yet! We went inside very discouraged, and heard a radio playing. Someone was speaking - it was Adlai Stevenson! And he was giving his concession speech! He had lost the election! (Stevenson carried only ten states: Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South and North Carolina, Kentucky and West Virginia! That's how much the electoral map has changed!). 

So that was the end of that! Nothing to be done but head back to Drury. And what do you know - a guy in a Lincoln Continental pulled in for gas heading west - an Air Force Colonel as I recall - and when we explained our plight, he said - "climb in!"  We were able to get some sleep in the back seat (nice car!!) and we were back in the dorm in a few hours. We were actually back in time to get breakfast and make an 8 o'clock class! 

So that was Election Day 1952

Four years later, Eisenhower ran for re-election and Stevenson ran against him again! That hasn't happened many times in U.S. history. Stevenson lost again, of course (despite the fact that Eisenhower had a major heart-attack in 1955!). In 1956, Stevenson  carried only seven states: Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South and North Carolina! He failed to carry his home state of Illinois in both 1952 and 1956! But he was a fine man, and an outstanding speaker. But he was up against a very popular general who had "won" WW2 in  Europe. 

My college roommate, David Sweet

David went on to become a college President - first at Minnesota Metropolitan State University, and then at Rhode Island College. 

The Candidates in 1952