Saturday, May 16, 2009

Dinner update: Stay after for talk and tunes

Though there won't be a dance after this year's dinner, President Kevin Andrew writes to say that:

"We want people to stay after and visit!

"We are going to be playing our own CDs and hopefully people will stay and talk. We would like to go until 11:00, Also, snacks and drinks will still be available."

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Invitations are in the mail; aim to reserve your seat by June 20

This year's dinner invitations are arriving in mailboxes.

In case you haven't gotten one yet, or if the Alumni Association doesn't have your address, here are the important details:
Date: June 27
Time: Social hour at 5 p.m.; dinner at 6 p.m.
Place: The Corporate Building at the County Fairgrounds.
Of note: There isn't a dance this year.

The reservation form looks something like this (feel free to print out this post, fill in the blanks and mail it in; print two or more if you're bringing guests):

Name ________________________
Class of _______________________

Meal # ___ (see below for choices and prices) $ ____
Annual dues ($3)    $ ____
Donation to LVCS Alumni General Fund $ ____
Donation to Memmott-Langhans
 Scholarship Fund     $ ____
In memory of _________________

I'd like a reserved seat to be with my
class, which is having a reunion:
Class of _____
Number of seats needed _____

Total amount          $ ____
(Make check payable to LVCS Alumni Association)

Meals
#1. Stuffed chicken breast. $16
#2. Swiss steak. $16
#3. Ham steak. $14
$4. Vegetable lasagna. $14

As we've previously reported, this year's guest speaker is Dr. Charles (Charlie) Keenen, class of '77. According to the association's letter, the caterer this year is 3 C's of Falconer.

Mail your reservation form and check to:

Little Valley Alumni Association
P.O. Box 162
Little Valley, N.Y. 14755-0162

The association would appreciate receiving your response by June 20.

See you all soon.

Update at 1:15 p.m. ET, May 16: Though there won't be a dance this year, President Kevin Andrew tells us that folks are welcome to stay around after the dinner to talk, have a drink and listen to CDs. He says the association hopes the after-dinner social time goes until at least 11 p.m.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

This year's keynote speaker will be ...

... Dr. Charles Keenen, better known as Charlie.

Class of '77. Son of the legendary Tom and the wonderful Juanita. Brother of Ann, Matt, Bernie, Laurie and Kevin (hope I didn't forget anyone! I'm sure I'll hear if I did).

The dinner is set for June 27, President Andrew confirms.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

L.V. Library expansion complete

We can remember back to when the Little Valley Library was on Main Street, next to the bank. So it's nice to know, thanks to the Salamanca Press, that the "new'" (to us) library's expansion project is done.

And it's also good to see that the first meeting in the new community room was held by the LVCS Alumni.

Librarian Gretchen Taft tells the Press that there will be an official open house in June. Perhaps on graduation/alumni weekend?

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Don Krug, 1932-2008

As many of you may have heard, there was sad news this week.

Don Krug died on Monday.

Click here to read the obituary that ran in the Salamanca Press. Or, since it's likely to disappear from that webpage in coming days, I'm pasting it in here as well:

Donald M. Krug, 76, of Little Valley passed away on Monday (Nov. 3, 2008)at his home on New Albion Road, after a short illness.

Born Feb. 25, 1932 in Salamanca, he was the son of the late Marie Baumann) and Max Krug of Little Valley. On July 9, 1954, he married his high school sweetheart, the former Phyllis Charlesworth, who survives.

Mr. Krug attended Little Valley Central School (LVCS) where he graduated as salutatorian of his class in 1950. An all-around athlete, he won ice-skating competitions, played football and baseball. He played varsity basketball for LVCS all four of his high school years when they won the County Championships (1947; 1948; 1949; 1950) and won Sectionals in 1950.

Mr. Krug received his BS degree from Albany State Teachers College where he played college basketball. He also received his Masters in Education and Masters in Administration from St. Bonaventure University.

He served in the US Army from 1954 to 1956 as a part of the Korean War peacekeeping troops. Mr. Krug was a high school math and science teacher for 37 years from 1956 to 1990 at LVCS. He also coached basketball there for many years. In addition to his teaching, he ran a dairy farm where he bred and raised registered Holsteins from 1961 to recently.

Mr. Krug believed in being active in his community. He was the Director of Cattaraugus County Agricultural Society; in charge of the Cattaraugus County Fair Dairy Barn; a member of the NY State Holstein Association; and a former officer of the Cattaraugus County Holstein Association.

In addition, he served on the Board of Assessment Review for the Town of Mansfield, was a former member of the Planning Board and the former Town Building Inspector. He was a member of the NY State Retired Teachers Association and was a former member of the board of Education for Little Valley Central School. He was also a member of the American Legion.

In his spare time, besides enjoying his grandchildren and great-grandchildren, he was a devoted fan and season ticket holder at the St. Bonaventure basketball games. He was also an avid Buffalo Bills fan and all-around sports enthusiast.

Surviving besides his wife, are his four children: Joanne K. (Robert) Harris of Rye Brook, Donald J. Krug of Cattaraugus, Max J. Krug of Jamestown, Elizabeth K. (Douglas) Rose of Bethesda, Md.; eight grandchildren; two great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.

He was predeceased by his brother, Richard F. Krug (formerly of Hammondsport) and his sister, Ruth Painter (formerly of Salamanca).

Burial will be in Little Valley Rural Cemetery. Private family services will be held.

Memorials may be made to the Little Valley Memorial Library or the American Cancer Society, Western New York Region, 101 John James Audubon Parkway, Amherst, NY 14228.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Read 'em if you wish

For those who want to print out a "hard copy" of brother Ed's remarks from this year's dinner, you can find a pdf version of them here.

And there's a copy of remarks that Ann Young Bennett, the Class of 1958's president, prepared that I've posted here. She's adds quite a few more details about the Class of '58's history.

(Correction: I first wrote that Dorothy Phillips Stoll had been the Class of 1958's president. Sorry for the mistake.)

Sunday, July 13, 2008

More from this year's dinner


Brother Jim sends along a photo he took at this year's Alumni dinner, of Ryan West and his "lunch lady" mom Olive.

Also, Jim warns that the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle's stories don't always live forever on the web, so I've taken the liberty of copying his column about the dinner so that it's sure not to get lost (shh ... don't tell the D&C). Here it is:

July 5, 2008

Love it or hate it, lunchroom food leaves its mark

LITTLE VALLEY — We met for dinner, but we talked about lunch.

The 109th annual meeting of the Little Valley Alumni Association last Saturday night was marked by talk of Sloppy Joes, fishsticks, macaroni and cheese with stewed tomatoes and something called a tuna boat that I don't remember eating but wish I had.

Those items came up because the association was honoring the "lunch ladies," a group of eight women (seven were on hand) who among them spent more than 100 years preparing and serving meals to the children of Little Valley, the village in Cattaraugus County where I grew up.

The intensity of our conversation proved that memories of school food linger long. We still are what we ate.

Counting kindergarten, I had lunch at Little Valley Central (a school that is now part of the consolidated Cattaraugus-Little Valley Central School District) for 13 years.

There may have been times when I walked home for lunch. There may have been times when I brought a lunch. But most often I bought, as did my three brothers and two sisters.

We were often eating food purchased by my father, the school principal.

He played the surplus agricultural market with the energy of an oil trader, buying cheese, turkey and other items in bulk. It was up to the lunch ladies to translate his stash into kid-friendly items.

They did well, the attendees at the alumni dinner concluded, though for sure, different classes had different memories.

Any graduate of Little Valley Central is welcome at the dinner, about 140 people came, the range of classes represented going from the 1930s to 2000, the last pre-consolidation year.

Those from the years before WWII went to the school before it had a cafeteria. Hence, their memories were often about walking home for lunch.

The post WWII classes could have been divided into the pre-pizza era — it certainly didn't exist when my class, 1960, was passing through school — and the post-pizza era.

No one could quite pinpoint the advent of the fishstick or the tater tot, both breakthroughs in cafeteria cuisine.

Vinegar-drenched Harvard beets seem to have traumatized at least two decades of Little Valley graduates. Sloppy Joes were a staple even longer. (Quick question. Is it good branding with children to name a food item "Sloppy?")

All of these items were mentioned as we alumni played School Lunch Bingo, filling in squares on a bingo-like card with the names of the meals we remembered.

After we finished our cards, Kevin Andrew, the association president, called off the names of actual Little Valley lunch items. The first few people to complete rows won prizes.

As a journalist, I felt compelled to ask lunch ladies to help me with the names of some menu items.

They looked at me as if I had tried to cut ahead in one of their lunch lines, and my sister Elizabeth turned me in to the authorities for cheating.

However, they did get me up to speed on tuna boats, which turned out to be tuna with melted cheese in a hot dog roll.

Not that their help did me much good. My sister Martha did no investigative reporting and won. Go figure.

Then again, she is a retired schoolteacher, someone who has spent many years in or near school lunchrooms.

Maybe I should ask for a recount. Or maybe I should just let things slide.

Either way, I know that someday I'm going to try one of those tuna boats.

I might have a little applesauce on the side — my father bought vats of the stuff.

But please, hold the Harvard beets. I've been to school on that lunch item and, at least for me, it doesn't pass the taste test.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Lunch ladies in the news; more on McLouth's

Brother Jim Memmott writes in the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle this morning about last week's Alumni Dinner and the memories it generated about lunches in the LVCS cafeteria.

Also this morning, we found an e-mail in our inbox from Ellen Weaver (LVCS, class of '80). She writes that she and her aunt, Wilma Easton Bridges (class of '35) were at last week's dinner. Afterward, Ellen checked out this blog and saw the earlier post about the old postcard and McLouth's drug store. Ellen writes that:

"Wilma surely remembers that Drug Store. It was on Little Valley's downtown corner, which later housed Milk's Drug Store and now houses a flower shop. McLouth's sported a soda fountain with marble ice cream counter and stools.

"She said two generations of McLouths ran the store and her deceased brother, Dick Easton, also an LVCS Alum, worked there for some time as a young man. My Uncle Dick later worked at the Little Valley Post Office and his son, Dick, is regularly in attendance at the Alumni Banquets.

"She vaguely remembers a fire which occured in Merow's Hardward, behind McLouth's, but does not remember if the fire affected the Drug Store or not. She is searching for some photos of the fire to help jog her memory."

Anyone remember the fire and its consequences?

Sunday, June 29, 2008

2008 dinner photos, audio & highlights

Another year and another good dinner for all.

Saturday's highlights including honors for the "lunch ladies" and a very popular game of "lunch menu bingo" (though there was some controversy about potential cheating by a member of the Class of '60).

The year's words of wisdom and whimsy came from Class of '58 representatives Dick Williams and Ed Memmott, and if the technology works right you should be able to click here to listen to Dick's remarks and click here to listen to Ed's.

Or, if the Internet Archive audio player opens up correctly for you, the sound should play right here (click the little "play" button at the top of the players -- it looks like a sideways triangle).

First, Dick:














Then, Ed:














There is a selection of photos posted online here, including this one of brother Ed:




And this one of the scene:



If you have photos to share, e-mail them to memmottmark@yahoo.com and I'll try to get some posted.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Dinner time approaches

A reminder to all, though if you're reading this blog you're probably already well aware: The Alumni dinner is next Saturday.

And if you run into a parent of one of CLVCS' baseball players from this past season at the dinner or one of the reunions, say congratulations. The team was ranked No. 20 in the state.