Scrapbook
This page contains a semi-random collection of “entertaining” events and items related to the Class of ‘62 that did not fit well into any other categories on this website. Enjoy!!!
Development of the Original Website: CulverGrads.com
Around 1996, Bill Mueller, CMA '57 began creating an interactive web application to develop and maintain a website for his class. He subsequently expanded it to provide for other classes to develop their own website using the framework he had developed. The development environment began to simply be referred to by its URL: CulverGrads.com
At our 45th Reunion (2007), Classmates Ken Calhoun and John Davis volunteered to create a website for our class with the objective of increasing attendance at our 50th Reunion. In looking for a software environment in which to develop a website for our class, Ken and John (neither of whom had ever created a website) were impressed with CulverGrads.com and decided to use it to develop a website for our class. It proved to be an excellent choice for John (who had done extensive computer programming in his day job, but never for a website) and Ken (who had only been a extensive user of a website). Ken then made the very intuitive choice of “cma62.org” for the URL for the class website.
While CulverGrads.com could be used to develop a rudimentary website just with text, it also supported the inclusion of HTML code for far more impressive sites. John taught himself the coding language and used it to develop the class website … thereby cementing his reputation as class geek.
Sadly, Bill Mueller passed away in 2009. Based on the quantity of classes who at that time were using CulverGrads.com, the Alumni Office elected to continue supporting the environment and hired a company to host and maintain the CulverGrads.com software. While the contract did not include any funding for further development or enhancement, Bill’s original software was so robust and well written that it was still running spectacularly into the year 2020.
However, by that time, it was only the Class of' ‘62 who was still making significant use of the software. Hence, (with ample advance notice) the Alumni Office informed John that they intended to let the hosting contract lapse at the end of April 2022. With some support from the Culver Information Technology Department, John then migrated the entire Class of ‘62 site to a new hosting environment (www.squarespace.com). As of this writing (July 2022), that is where the site is hosted.
General Order #5, dated 5 June 1961
At the end of our Second Class year, who was promoted to what rank/position to start our First Class year?
Take a look at the Promotion Order (General Order #5), dated 5 June 1961.
An Amazing Coincidence for Scot Kagan
That's Scot taking the picture, reflected in the window of the restaurant.
During the Summer of 2010, Scot Kagan and his wife Sylvia were exploring Toronto on the first day of their two-week vacation in that area of Canada. Sylvia got tired of walking, and Scot promised her they would walk into the next nice place they passed. It turned out to be Barberian Steak House and Tavern. While sitting at the bar, Scot struck up a conversation with the owner (Arron Baberian).
After Scot said they were from the USA/Midwest/Kentucky, Arron mentioned that he went to "a military school in Indiana" ... and the conversation took off from there. Turned out Arron was Class of '82 and had Bob Meek (Class of '61, Company D ... same company as Scot) as his counselor in Troop A. So if you're looking for a Culver connection ... or just some GREAT food & wine ... while in Toronto, Scot highly recommends you stop by Barberian's "... very nice place with an unbelievable wine cellar"!
Coach Marshall Inducted into Culver Athletic Hall of Fame
Time Magazine Article Highlighting Culver
From Jan 5, 1962 of Time Magazine
Education: Molding Men
They advertise in about a thousand magazines, always showing some hot-shot guy on a horse jumping over a fence . . . And underneath the guy on the horse's picture, it always says: "Since 1888 we have been molding boys into splendid, clear-thinking young men." Strictly for the birds. They don't do any damn more molding at Pencey than at any other school. And I didn't know anybody there that was splendid and clear-thinking and all.
Many an educator seconds Hero Holden Caulfield of The Catcher in the Rye, whose wry view of "Pencey Prep" echoes the language repeatedly used in advertising military academies. For military schools are widely scorned as something akin to reform schools with tuition-handy places for the rich or the divorced to dump incorrigible offspring. "Military schools are a symbol of the abdication of parental responsibility," scoffs one non-military headmaster.
Hock-High in Horses. Happily contradicting this gloomy picture is the better military academy, more academic than military, which is actually a first-rate college preparatory school. Perhaps the best example is Indiana's big (838 boys) Culver Military Academy on the shores of Lake Maxinkuckee. Last week Culver was putting on a $5,000,000 fund-raising campaign for a "Program for Excellence" that will create 70 new scholarships, build a center for alumni and parents, endow faculty salaries with $2,250,000. Even without all this, Culver has more excellence than most civilian schools.
Culver is a 1,400-acre complex of parapets and playing fields that looms out of monotonous farmland like a Hollywood blend of West Point, Dunsinane and Fort Laramie. The school is hock-high in horses-140 of them-plus an indoor polo field, 150 boats, twelve football fields, 15 tennis courts, a bakery and a barbershop, as well as a 44-room hotel and a 64-room motel for visiting parents and girls down for dances. But most of all, Culver has academic status: 99.2% of its graduates have gone to college (and not predominantly to service academies-only 18 have done so in the past four years). Stanford rates Culver among the top five private secondary schools in the U.S.; Yale includes Culver in a list of twelve prep schools that it recommends to inquiring parents.
Knee-Deep in Arts. Opened in 1894, Culver owes its military hue to Founder Henry Harrison Culver, a prosperous St. Louis stovemaker, who for his health roughed it one summer on Lake Maxinkuckee. Culver soon zestfully launched a chautauqua, wound up with a military academy. He aimed to blend liberal and Christian education, using military discipline "because of its peculiar advantage in bringing out the best results in the development of boys."
The first results were all too military, but the mind soon came to outrank the manual of arms. Though all Culver boys above eighth grade are enrolled in R.O.T.C., drill is confined to Saturday mornings in warm weather. Hazing is nonexistent; newcomers are plebes for only one term, are obliged only to call old students "Mr." More important are Culver's stiff entrance exams (average cadet IQ: 120) and drill in such matters as college algebra, Latin and Russian. Often recruited from Culver's resoundingly successful summer camp, the boys seem to thrive on the school's theory that esprit de corps enhances the spirit of study. "I didn't know how to work at home," says one firstclassman. "Here you learn to think and reason, not just learn things by rote."
Strong on the arts, Culver even gets its lads to doff boots for ballet lessons. To its new $1,400,000 auditorium this year, it is bringing such cultural attractions as the Indianapolis Symphony and sharing them with hundreds of public school children. Culver has the oldest credit course in dramatics of any U.S. secondary school, has sent to Broadway such bright lights as Playwright William Inge, Director Joshua Logan and Monologuist Hal Holbrook.
"Discipline Is Essential." The man who has lately done most to demilitarize Culver is its sixth superintendent, retired Air Force Major General Delmar T. Spivey, 56, a West Pointer ('28), World War II bomber pilot, and onetime head of the Air University's War College. Shocked at the turncoat performance of some U.S. prisoners in Korea, Spivey turned down fat offers from industry, decided to devote himself to educating youngsters "in the real meaning of citizenship."
A genial general, whose uniform of the day is a tweedy sports coat and slacks, Spivey has raised faculty salaries, doubled scholarships, banished Sunday reveille and the pseudo-military titles (for example, "captain" for assistant instructor) that cadets formerly used to address their teachers. He even did away with marching to classes, but so far has kept the student uniform (royal blue jacket, grey trousers) as standard campus dress.
"We must shape the attitude of the cadets toward the academic. We mustn't let the things they like to do, the leadership program and athletics, overshadow their education in the arts, sciences and humanities," says Spivey. "I have friends who have said, 'Little Pete is an absolute hellion and I just don't know what to do with him.' Well, I won't take little Pete any more than Exeter or Andover will." Then why be military at all? "Discipline is essential to the learning situation,'' says Spivey. "Without it there would be no stable path to intellectual growth and eventual maturity."
Find this article at: https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,874402,00.html
Thanks to Dennis Marchman for remembering the existence of this article
Bob Hartman Honored
Added 6/13/2013
Our "classmate" Bob Hartman has been honored with the establishment of the Robert B. D. Hartman Chair for Excellence in Teaching. A gift of Miles White '73, his wife, Kim, and their sons, the endowed chair will be awarded to that faculty member who has demonstrated a commitment to and an understanding of Culver Academies' history and values. For more details and a link to a video of the announcement ceremony, go to this web page. Watching the video of the ceremony is definitely encouraged.
Miles White (left), chairman of The Culver Educational Foundation Board of Trustees, talks with Robert B.D. Hartman and Head of Schools John N. Buxton prior to the all-school meeting honoring Hartman. Culver photo/Jan Garrison
Mark Twain Tonight
50+ years later ...
On December 2, 2012, Dee Gleason Stinson and Culver alumni from other classes attended a performance of "Mark Twain Tonight", as portrayed by Hal Holbrook, CMA '42, in Lafayette, LA. After the performance, they were able to have a "meet and greet" with the acclaimed actor.
Dee's comment: "We had a fabulous conversation, and he wouldn't let go of my hand!!!"
On April 13, 2012, Bart Hotchkiss attended a performance of "Mark Twain Tonight", as portrayed by Hal Holbrook, CMA '42, at the new Wagner Noel Performing Arts Center in Midland, Texas.
Bart talking with Hal after the show.
A picture for the ages: Bart and Hal.
Hal is purported to say that it takes a lot less time to put on his make-up now than when he performed for us at Culver
As Bart describes the evening:
"What a brilliant performance. It would be common to hear 'I hope I can be that sharp in 20 years...'. I will say that I wish I were that sharp today. He was & is amazing. After the performance we got to go backstage & meet with him. Wow is he ever dynamic. We visited about his time at Culver (living in South). His most vivid memory was of the day in December of his senior year he was walking down the hall to his room when he heard on a radio '... a date that will live in infamy....'. Apparently during his time at Culver, he like a couple of us that I won't name (Doug, J D, Dutch & self) may have been caught doing questionable or unacceptable activities. However, today he has nothing but praises for the school.
"Wish y'all could have been here."
NOTE: Hal returned to Culver on Thursday evening, September 4, 2014 to again perform his “Mark Twain Tonight” show in Eppley Auditorium. See this webpage for details of the Mini Reunion which was held in conjunction with Hal’s return.
Classmates with a Presence on Facebook
As one would expect these days, "Culver Military Academy" and "Culver Academies" have a presence on Facebook.
In addition, based on being "Friends" or "Friends of Friends", the following members of the Class of '62 are known to have a presence on Facebook:
Frank Corum
John Davis
Raymond Dewey
Mitch Fry
Dave Gotshall
Rowan Hollitz
Fritz Horton
Bart Hotchkiss
Scot Kagan
Doug Laipple
Brad Laycock
Andrew Malcolm
Arthur Moore
Rene Murai
Doug Neumann
Tom Norris
Jay Owen
John (Ed) Roessler
Barry L. Spitz
John Sullivan
David Yntema
This is not saying any of them post very much, let alone regularly (except Andy Malcolm!), but they all do have accounts.
The intent of this list is to give all classmates as much of an opportunity as possible to re-connect with each other.
Want your name added to the list? Email it to John Davis, and he will do so.