Sunday, August 28, 2005

Thank God for Mr. Bune's photography class!

Apparently Greg Starosky's requests for photos have not gone unheeded. Leo Raymundo has dug up some photos from Mr. Bune's photography class and has been kind enough to provide them for your viewing pleasure.

Rick Fox displaying his famous love of 'Maui Nectar'.
Seriously, I have no idea to what that refers. I assumed something delightfully lurid, but a Google search for the term turns up basically nothing. Rick, would you like to fill us in?

Walter Sullivan

Richie Rae

Leo Raymundo

Erika Maher, Kayri Walsh, and ???

Dave Kelley

Back row: Mike Adams, Chris Holt, Danny Aahl
Middle row: Micah Bowers, Andy Brandes, Frank Knoblich
Front row: Fred Knoblich, Tim Brady, Leo Raymundo, Richie Rae

Friday, August 26, 2005

I've got Shingles!

Shingles
shingles (shĭng′gəlz)
pl. n.
  1. An acute viral infection characterized by inflammation of the sensory ganglia of certain spinal or cranial nerves and the eruption of vesicles along the affected nerve path. It usually strikes only one side of the body and is often accompanied by severe neuralgia. Also called herpes zoster.
  2. A collection of Ballard High School yearbooks.

It's the second definition to which I am referring, so you need not worry about any contagion at the reunion.



Looking back 20 years to our graduation has finally forced me into the inevitable yearbook review. It started out as a need to refresh my memory as various emails have arrived and I have struggled to match names to faces.

As a result, I have become strangely yet comfortably reacquainted with our past. I have really only reviewed 1985 thus far, but I have done so in excruciatingly painful detail. I have read every autograph and missive and have reviewed every senior picture.

Through this trip down memory lane, I have learned a few things:

  • I hate the Springle.
    Sure the name is cute and the problem of incorporating last minute content when on a deadline is understandable. But it appears completely out of order, it's not indexed, and my 1985 Springle will no longer stay attached to its parent (perhaps an apt metaphor for our senior year). I wonder if they still need the Springle given the elimination of typesetting lead times in favor of computerized layout. I doubt it.

  • Always include your last name when signing a yearbook.
    I'm no longer able to match many of my autographs to an actual person. Especially troublesome are the underclassmen. For my grade school and junior high school yearbooks, I did the following:

    Brilliance or troubling anal retentive tendency?

    A little obsessive/compulsive to be sure, but I can match up Sandy Bennet with her picture—despite the utter lack of importance that I do so.

  • No one tells me to "Stay high" anymore.
    It was surprisingly common in my school days. Some people could always be counted upon to add that little piece of advice onto their yearbook scrawls. My first close encounter with this recommendation came in sixth grade from Eve Morrison. Knowing that she was fond of writing this in yearbooks, I implored her not to do so fearing a reaction from my parents should they read my yearbook. She politely complied and instead wrote "To a really sweet guy."

    Eve was a really nice girl. However, my wife is unsurprisingly not that fond of her. They've never met and I haven't seen her in 27 years, but the possibility that our children could be exposed to drugs at such a tender age is a little unsettling.

  • Some people meet expectations.
    Herb Burke traveled through high school wearing Ozzy Osbourne t-shirts and extolling the virtues of heavy metal. At the end of his entry in my yearbook, he added:


    Today, Herb is the frontman for the Death Metal band Drawn and Quartered. I hadn't heard of Death Metal until I tried to track down Herb for the reunion.

    Now I know more than I ever wanted. It's a disturbing brand of hard-edged heavy metal. I hesitate to even provide the "Death Metal" link above and recommend that those of you with gentle sensibilities consider avoiding it. I refuse to link to the Drawn and Quartered website. Honestly, it doesn't really bother me, but there are many of us that it would.

    Nonetheless, you should look forward to re-meeting Herb at the reunion. From his email, he still appears to be a really nice (if not a little disturbed) guy. At a minimum, he met expectations:

    Death Metal Herb

    Look for him. He'll be the one enjoying a "decent selection of quality dark ales."

  • In the class picture, FACE THE CAMERA!
    What idiot isn't facing the camera in the class picture? Well, one of them is me:

    Javi isn't THAT interesting.
    Don't be this guy.

    Among all of us that failed to do so, and I am in some pretty distinguished company, I was the most center and most front.

    And what is with those sunglasses? Weren't they featured in an Old Navy commercial a few years ago? Perhaps a corollary to the above should be "In the class picture, choose a look that is timeless." Sadly, this look probably fared no better in 1985.

  • Be careful what you write, you just might become famous.
    A certain member of our class who has local fame as a television news reporter is responsible for the most inflammatory entry in my senior yearbook.

    This person, who shall remain nameless in order to reduce internet searchability, aggressively labels my sexual orientation and admits to a predilection with S & M.

    Now, I'm not the type that would judge a man's entire life based upon his attempt at humor in a high school yearbook, I'm just saying....



And with that warning, I will end this trip down memory lane. Stay tuned for more high school musings—yearbookwise and otherwise.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Andrea Baker

Andrea Baker, then and now

Andrea has been kind enough to provide me with a current photo to post. Unfortunately, she wasn't able to provide one from high school.

Her words:

Sorry, I don't have any pics from when we were in high school as I just moved and all my boxes are in a storage unit.

I'll see what I can pull from the yearbook to amend this post.
(Updated August 26 to add a picture from the 1985 yearbook.)

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

20 Year Reunion Information

Posting for Greg Starosky

Ballard High School Class of 1985 20 Year Reunion
One Night Only/Grads Only
Saturday, September 24th, 2005
7:00 p.m. - ???
Bleachers Bar & Grill (8118 Greenwood N. - Seattle)
Tickets: $10.00 Donation at the door
Casual Attire

Send Greg Starosky or Tiffany Musselman (Kittleson) your contact information.

Welcome to BHS 1985!



In anticipation of Ballard High School's Class of 1985 20 year reunion, I have set up this blog where we can share our stories and photos from and since high school.

If you are interested in contributing, contact me with your name (as I would have known you in high school) and I will provide you with the necessary information to let you post.

I am looking forward to hearing from all of us and maybe even seeing a current photo.

(Update: my brother suggested that the last "now" photo I used was a little too Unabomber, so I have included a new picture with me and my daughter.)