Sunday, July 29, 2012

Life saved at Runyon Field

Hello, Central Friends - - this morning I received an uplifting message from our friend and fellow Central alumni, Don Dudley. Here it is - along with the link to the Pueblo Chieftain that tells the story:

Check out this article in Friday's Chieftain about how my Brother's directors down at Runyon acted quickly and gave Bobby Armijo some life last month.

Those of us that played against him know that Bobby " could have made a good little leadoff man for someone."

Best,
Don

http://www.chieftain.com/sports/local/beating-heart-cheating-death/article_1d3f7f6c-d7b1-11e1-8986-001a4bcf887a.html

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Baby "Wildcat" Born Today

Central Friends...when creating this Central High Class of '65 blog I envisioned a medium where we could all share joyful news, along with the sorrow that inevitably comes with the passage of time. Lately, we've lost so many of our class members as well as witnessing other challenging events like our friend Maryellen (Koller) Mencimer's recent auto accident and Cheryl (Hilton) Herron's loss of home due to this summer's fires in Colorado Springs, that I hope you will permit me to share something that is, indeed, joyful to our family. 


Today we welcomed our 4th grandchild into the world, Calvin ("Cal") Louis Wagner. So along with the sorrow, also comes joy in the beginning of life - and if I know this one - he'll be a True Blue Wildcat through and through. At least his Mimi (that would be me) is going to tell him how we did things and made great memories "back in the day."


I welcome any photo or news events that you would like to share with our classmates - we'll take whatever comes this way. It's just one more way we can keep in touch, sharing life and memories.


Take great care, everyone.
Fondly,
Gale Hoover Hammond

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Waldon Canyon Fire destruction--and how to help!


The images above show the aftermath of Cheryl Hilton Herron and her husband Ron's home that was destroyed in the Waldon Canyon fire. It's hard to image the feeling one experiences when seeing such wreckage of your own home. 


The Pueblo Chieftain has published an article about the Herrons and their post-fire challenges, and I will "paste" it below. 


Meanwhile, the Cheryl and Ron Herron Fire Fund continues to grow. For everyone who has already made a deposit - THANK YOU! The Central Wildcat family is strong and supportive of its own.


To make a deposit to help Cheryl and Ron, go to any Wells Fargo branch office. The name of the account is the Cheryl and Ron Herron Fire Fund, Account Number 2095944688. Thank you so much for your generosity - and thank you, too, to Jan Jones Fisher and Sherry O'Brien Massorotti for establishing the fund for Cheryl and her family.


Here's the Chieftain article:


Pueblo natives lost their home
Their possessions are gone, but they’re thankful to have survived
WALDO CANYON FIRE
COURTESY PHOTO/RON AND CHERYL HERRON
The Herrons’ home after the Waldo Canyon Fire.
By LORETTA SWORD
THE PUEBLO CHIEFTAIN
____________________________________________________

Losing everything forces people to redefine the word “priceless” and learn again the meaning of gratitude.

At least that’s what Ron and Cheryl Herron have discovered since losing their Mountain Shadows home to the Waldo Canyon Fire that left them and 345 other Colorado Springs families with no place to live and huge chunks of their lives reduced to ash.

The Herrons, both Pueblo natives who moved north in 1967 after graduating from South and Central high schools, were in Denver watching a granddaughter play softball when evacuation orders were issued. One of their two daughters was with them; the other had stayed behind with the family dog in the home shared by the extended family.

Cheryl Herron said she didn’t think to give her daughter instructions to save anything but herself and the dog when she learned of the fast-moving fire.

“We told her to just get out and stay safe,” Herron said by phone Friday. “I’m so thankful that’s what she did. It came so quick it wasn’t even funny.”

And now everything is gone.

Family furniture and china.

Hand-written holiday cards from children and grandchildren. Photos of those same loved ones, smiling for the camera in happier times.

“That’s the hardest part — losing pictures, and family things.

Things your kids gave you, and your parents. Things that belonged to them and were a reminder. It’s all gone. But we’re safe and we’re all together, and that’s more important than anything else,” Herron said. “We’re grateful no firefighters were killed or injured, and we want to thank them for doing such a fabulous job. We talked to some of them, and they really feel they let you down when they couldn’t save your house. But they shouldn’t feel that way.

They’re heroes, and that’s all.”

The Herrons have been busy trying to replace clothing and find a home to rent. They’ve been staying with friends in Security while regrouping.

Herron said it’s been a tough process because “there are 346 families looking for a place to live.

One place we were interested in got 30 calls in one day.”

She also wonders whether some landlords are taking advantage of the situation, with asking prices ranging from a low of $1,500 up to $3,000 per month.

“Maybe that’s what the going rate is; I don’t know,” she said, adding that the home they’ve found is nothing like the one her

_________________________

husband and father built with their own hands decades ago, and it’s far from the neighborhood they’ve left behind. Where their daughters grew up. Where their grandchildren attend school.

“But it’s a house, and we’ll make it a home,” she said.

Herron is a retired floral designer and her husband is a building contractor.

Former Puebloan Jan Jones and other friends of the couple in Pueblo have set up the Ron and Cheryl Herron Fund at Wells Fargo Bank to help the family.

Anyone may contribute at any local branch.

Herron said she’s grateful for the generosity of friends and family who’ve “helped us out in so many, many ways,” and she’s been even more amazed at the kindness shown by total strangers.

“You think something like this will never happen to you,” she said. “When it does, you don’t know what to do. And I don’t know what we would have done without all the help people we’ve been given.”

Cheryl & Ron Herron Fire Fund. Wells Fargo Bank account number 2095944688.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Colorado Fires Update

The devastating wildfires burning in Colorado have touched one of our Central class of '65 classmates, Cheryl Hilton Herron and her family. Jan Fisher Jones sent me the following e-mail yesterday:


Dear Classmates,

By now you’ve probably heard about the Waldo Canyon Fires in Colorado Springs that has been called the most destructive fires in Colorado’s history. It has wiped out more than 18,000 acres and 346 homes including one that belonged to our classmate Cheryl (Hilton) Herron and her husband, Ron.

Cheryl, Ron, two daughters and two grandchildren lived together in their house in the  Mountain Shadows subdivision. The family was in Denver at their grandson’s baseball tournament when the fire broke out. By the time they got back to Springs, the police would not let them back into their home because the fire was so near.  Everything was lost, except the clothes on their backs.

Both of Herron’s daughters have severe medical problems and all are temporarily staying at a friend’s home, but will soon have to find other living arrangements.

A fund for Cheryl and her family has been set up by some of her classmates at Wells Fargo Bank. We are asking Central Wildcat classmates to donate whatever you can afford to help Cheryl and her family through this horrific time in their lives.

Donations may be made to Wells Fargo Bank: Cheryl and Ron Herron Fire Fund. (see below)

Thank you.

If you would like to make a donation, please e-mail me at galehooverhammond@yahoo.com, and I will send you the account number for this fund. Donations can be made at any Wells Fargo Bank branch.

I know we will be thinking of Cheryl and her family as they work through this devastating loss. 

Take care, everyone!