Monday, September 1, 2014

Randy, my lockermate! May 1983 (From Caroline Wilson Good)

 

 

 

It drove Randy crazy that those Greenhills High School lockers were so damn small, so he convinced me we should team up.  In truth, this was a sweet deal for Randy. His assigned locker was the bottom one, which meant kneeling on the floor and getting clunked in the head by every backpack as kids walked through the crowded hallway between bells. (Call it an early example of Randy's deal-making skills.) So we divided up:  winter coats in the bottom locker, books and binders in the top.  Everything seemed great until it was time to "decorate".  I protested vehemently against having to look at the hot blond girl (Randy christened her "Roxanne") every time I hung up my jacket.  Randy was less than thrilled with all the "Pionettes" crap I hung in the top locker.  (Um, as for the Christian Moerlein bottle – the drinking age was 18 back then!) But we compromised and had a blast.  We also had a system to beat the class bell:  If you almost closed the locker but didn't slam it, the lock wouldn't engage, so the next person could grab their stuff without having to do the combination lock each time.  We figured out who was "last in" at each locker visit, then he/she would close it.  Until the days when I would be busy talking and forget....and slam it shut early.  Randy would get that "oh, not AGAIN!" look on his face as he scrambled with the combination to beat the bell.  I took this picture on the last day of Senior year, when everyone in the Senior hallway was cleaning out their lockers for the last time.  Notice, Roxanne stayed with us until the very end. 

 

Randy was one of the good guys, and I'll always remember our fun times at GHS. 

I am honored to have called him and Amy my friends.

 

Caroline Good

ccgood91@gmail.com

Friday, August 8, 2014

I love this picture of you, your Dad & your siblings- Sandy Greenwald

http://instagram.com/p/rahIHjvrou/

Maggie posted this today on Instagram. Precious!

Sandy Greenwald
sandyg128@gmail.com

Response to City Beat Article- Sandy Greenwald

City Beat Article- Sandy Greenwald

Randy Wolf: November 7, 1964-July 11, 2014

BY KATHY Y. WILSON · JULY 22ND, 2014 · KATHY Y. WILSON
kathy
On July 11, my high school classmate, Randy Wolf, dropped dead unexpectedly of a heart attack.

This is not about the shock of a 49-year-old man dying unexpectedly; we are born to die.

This is not about my own mortality; I feel my body's anarchy everyday. My time may also be nigh. 

This will not be a long laundry list of bittersweet memories, because after we were handed our high school diplomas at Millett Hall on the Oxford campus of Miami University that early June evening in 1983, I never laid eyes on Randy again.

In fact, it's a wonder I got news of his death.

I am not on any social media platform. 

My brother, Kenny, is my direct opposite in this arena. 

He tries to make me feel inadequate about my by phone- and email-only accessibility, but I haven't yet been served one reasonably sound argument why I should be checking in at Northside Tavern, posting sweaty-faced, duck-lipped selfies at concerts, taking food porn pictures of the Red Delicious apple I'm chomping while I'm writing this or making a fake, generalized pronouncement for all my online "friends" when what I mean is to tell one person to go to hell.

But I opened my email two days before Randy's funeral to see a note posted on some online high school site I'd logged onto six years ago just prior to what would have been Greenhills High School's 25-year reunion.

I didn't go because that online "community" shamed me for jokingly cursing about a high school friend's kids, further proof that online life is devoid of nuance, personality and humor unless it's mean-spirited and at someone else's expense.

And even though Randy and I had not seen one another since 1983, we spent plenty of random time together, tethered to one another as we were by the circumstances of the alphabet: Wilson comes before Wolf.

We sat next to one another during Ron Glass's Western Cultures I and II classes; we stood in line together for our freshman, sophomore and junior year photographs; and were finally in color right beside one another in the yearbook for our senior year portraits. 

Hell, we may have even been locker neighbors for four years.

I am not one of those Cincinnatians who gets off asking fellow partygoers what school they went to and when they say "Ohio State," "Ohio University," or "Miami University," I say: "Noooo, what high school."

That is so regressively Cincinnati.

The reason I drove to Wyoming to Randy's funeral and gladly sat in the vestibule on an uncomfortable chair near a busy doorway and strained to hear any of the service on a tinny sound system is because when I was less than an hour into my freshman year at a high school I was bussed to along with a gaggle of other black kids from Forest Park and we may as well have been foreigners with passports, Randy was the first white kid who extended himself to me and who was warm and gracious and of good spirit.

We sat on hard seats that swiveled around in Mr.


Glass' Roman Colosseum-style lecture hall that first morning nervously trying to ignore our differences and figure out ways to break that black/white, girl/boy freshman ice.

I do not even know how we did but I am certain Randy spoke first, and he was immediately easy to like. On subsequent mornings while we waited for quizzes to be handed out or were passing in homework assignments, we always talked about what we liked outside of class and we realized we were both Bruce Springsteen fans.

On our integrated morning bus rides, the white bus driver alternated radio stations between WEBN and WBLZ, or whatever the "black station" was at the time. 

It's the only way I even knew who Springsteen was.

Randy and I decided we loved "Hungry Heart," and he didn't register any surprise that this big-haired black girl knew anything about Springsteen and I was not superficially trying to impress him.

In this way, Randy helped me be myself in those strange and uncontrollable Wonder Years when identity is so slippery, made even more so when you're a black girl thrust into a mostly white environment and your musical tastes lean toward Rock and your clothes are thrift store prep.

Perhaps the most beautiful part about Randy back then was that he was the same toward me all the time.

In the hallway passing classes, in the cafeteria or in line for one of those regrettable yearbook photographs, he always acknowledged me and laughed and talked to me, even if he was with his gang of friends.

He never did forsake me.

Even as a teenager I could tell he'd been raised in a household with and by some good people because his manner, his way, his demeanor were always so sweet and calm and welcoming.

I cried at his funeral when his two oldest boys spoke about what an attentive, Duck Dynasty-watching dad he was and how they vowed to make him proud and man up to help their mother keep the household together.

While they spoke there was movement behind me. 

I turned around to see their friends — gangly, hormonal, black and white teenaged boys — jockeying for position to better see their friends on the microphone talking about their dead father, and I cried harder because Randy had obviously passed on that same kindness and open-hearted friendliness to his children.

From where I sat I couldn't see if any other classmates were there. I don't know if I would've recognized them if they were, though I'm sure there were other Pioneers in attendance.

When I hit the sidewalk a handsome, dark-haired man my age stopped me and asked if I'd gone to Greenhills and I told him I had.

"I thought you looked familiar," he said.

Right now Randy Wolf is the only classmate I can recall.

Saturday, August 2, 2014

Tybee Island with the Drapers

Some of our best memories of Randy were on family vacations - including this trip we all took to Tybee Island! We had so much fun that week & shared Randy's love of the beach & seafood. I love this photo at The Crab Shack, even though we ended up eating somewhere else!

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Memories of Randy

Hello, Nate.
 
    I am finding it difficult to pin down any one specific memory of your father (Randy) since there are so, so many that I have. I don't know if he would have ever have claimed me to be his "best friend," but he was certainly mine. Especially during our time together in high school, college, and our early 20s. I can remember first getting to know Randy in high school while sitting a row below him in the Greenhills High School  lecture room known as "The Pit." I was a junior and he a sophomore. We got to talking, and before too long, we were fast friends. He was responsible for introducing me to the close circle of friends that are often referred to by some as the "Greenhills Mafia" or "The Greenhills Gang" that I have had all these 34+ years. I thank him for that.
 
    The summers off from school seemingly lasted forever back then. I can remember spending many an afternoon at the Wolf house on Lochrest Drive which always seemed to be a hive of boyhood activity, especially with three boys so close in age. We all somehow kept out of serious trouble and have some warm memories of that time as a result. One of those memories was playing our very own brand of softball on the mythical and hallowed ground of "Maisel Field." A place of legend, this was a ball field of unique proportion located in the backyard of Randy's next door neighbor, John Maisel. We scraped up enough guys to field teams and played ball for what seemed to be all day long. Well, all summers eventually end and eventually so did high school. I shipped off to art school in Pittsburgh in the Fall of 1982 while Randy finished his senior year at GHS. We would exchange some funny handwritten letters from time to time that I wish I had saved. But, one day while in Pittsburgh, out of the clear blue, I received a small package in the mail from none other than the one and only, Randy Wolf. I opened it, and found inside, a commemorative autographed baseball from "Maisel Field." Randy and John Maisel's signatures adorned the Rawlings "Official League" baseball along with some humorous quips from John and Randy. It made my day! Randy took the time to be creative and think of me by sending me a piece of home. It was a small gesture, but meant a great deal to me. So much so, that I have kept this baseball as one my prized possessions to this day. (see photo) You can see the signature of your father and the quote, "This will be worth some money some day," with an arrow pointing up to his name. It is, and forever will be, worth more than any amount of money to me. It represents a great boyhood friendship with someone who became a great man and an even greater father to his children. I am so very proud to have had your father as a close friend and treasure the memories I have of time spent with him. They make me smile.
 
If your father had ever talked to you about me, I am sure whatever he had to say was prefaced by a comment of me being a man of very few words. We once took a road trip together to Florida in our early twenties and visited his cousin at her beachside apartment who after a day around me sarcastically tagged me with the name "Johnny Carson" because I so seldom spoke. Johnny Carson of course being a talkative late night TV talk show of the time. Randy would often rib me with that when I was being quiet. Well, contrary to that sentiment, I sure hope I haven't run on too long with this post.
 
Thanks, Nate.
    
 
Andy Tucker
andyltuck@aol.com

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Spring Break - Mike Lorenz


Nate,

Thanks for putting together this blog to remember your Dad.  I have some great memories of Randy on Spring Break.  The photo on the left is six of our group of seven, Left to Right: Brian Marzano,
Mike Romer, Randy, Chris Hersman, John Maisel and Scott George (I'm on the other side of the camera) who ventured all the way to Pompano Beach, Fl.   We drove in two cars for our GHS senior year spring break in 1983 (check out the George family station wagon in the background).  
It was good, wholesome fun in the sun. Pompano was just North of the, then famous, Ft. Lauderdale rowdiness.  We stayed away from that.  Instead, we played ball, fished and enjoyed the ocean.  One evening, we came across a huge bale of pot that had floated up on the beach, and we immediately notified law enforcement.  They came and took it away. 

On the way home from that trip, I was in the Maisel Malibu vehicle with Randy and John.  We were the first car stopped behind a massive auto accident on the Florida Turnpike.  It included more than one fatality. We felt extremely helpless and frightened, as it seemed to take forever for the first responders to arrive.  We proceeded North after a few hours stopped.  I remember your Dad driving our vehicle through a big rain storm in Atlanta.  It seemed even more treacherous after what we had witnessed only hours before.

The photo on the right is spring break in college.  Your Dad is with Mike Romer (left,) and Brian Marzano. Mike also passed away in 2014 at age 49.  He was a very close friend of all of us.  I have been thinking about both of them quite a bit over the last two plus weeks.  They were both fine men and leaders.  They both treated people with kindness and welcomed people warmly in situations where others might hold back.  They both had a great sense of humor and laughed and made others smile frequently.  Two great men that I'm proud to have called friends.
Port St. Joe, Fl. was an awesome spring break destination.
We camped out under the evergreen trees and spent the day on the white sand beach.  We would play 
softball for hours without interruption from beach walkers.  We seemed to have the beach to ourselves.  At night we would build great camp fires and play cards.  We built a few bonfires in the sand dunes and "dune jumped" until we were exhausted.  Those spring break memories are great.

I have many great memories of Randy.  Spring break memories are fun because of the travel and adventures that we all experienced together.  I could go on with more, but I just wanted to let you know that your Dad meant a lot to me and I will miss him greatly.   

Mike Lorenz