Old proverb: "To speak the names of the departed is to make them live again."

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Dr. Bob Whiteside Dies on May 20



Thanks to Marsha Whiteside Adams for forwarding the following obituary of her dad, Dr. Bob Whiteside, who passed away on May 20.

Dr. Robert M. “Bob” Whiteside, 90 of Sioux City died on Tuesday, May 20, 2014 at his residence.   Visitation with the family present will be from 6:00 – 7:00 p.m. Thursday, June 5 at Meyer Brothers Colonial Chapel.  Private graveside services will be in Storm Lake, Ia.

Bob was born July 6, 1923 in Galva, Ia.  He was the son of Merle and Elsie (Marsh) Whiteside and grew up in Storm Lake.  

Bob received a B.S. degree from Buena Vista College and then served in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II where he became a certified lab technician.   After the war he returned to school at the University of Iowa where he received a degree in physical therapy, his D.D.S, and M.S in maxillofacial surgery.

He married Maxine Fieg in Storm Lake. The couple lived in Iowa City and then moved to Sioux City when he began his oral surgery practice in 1955.

Dr. Whiteside was a member of the American Dental Association, Iowa Dental Association and the American Association of Oral-Maxillofacial Surgeons. He served as President of the Northwest District Dental Society, Sioux City Dental Society and Iowa Society of Oral-Maxillofacial Surgeons.

Bob served as Potentate of the Abu Bekr Shrine Temple in 1966, was a longtime member of the Chanters and served as Midwest Shrine Association President in 1974. Bob was on the Board of the Buena Vista College Alumni Association.

Survivors include his children Marsha Adams (Bill) of Dakota Dunes, S.D., Jeff Whiteside (Kathi) of Appleton, Wisc., Anne Still (Kevin) of Danville, Ind., Bob Whiteside (Kathy) of West Branch, Ia., 9 grandchildren and 9 great-grandchildren.

Bob was preceded in death by his parents, his wife Maxine, a brother and a sister.


Bill Doyle Trains Union Workers

During the month of May, Bill Doyle, who is married to the middle daughter of the FFN's founder V.P. Fieg, trained about a dozen construction workers in his local union on the use of a remote control-operated excavator called a Brokk 100.

Bill called the machine, which is made in Sweden, "a jackhammer on tracks." It is about half the size of a V.W. Beetle, though they can be as large as a pick-up truck  The demolition devices are used inside buildings to break up concrete and are also used to knock down bridges and other structures.

He trained the crew one at a time on the use of the controls at the union school near his home in Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y.  "If you can use an excavator, you can use this," Bill assured me.

Bill's wife, cousin Diana Fieg Doyle, mentioned that Bill is now working at the Indian Point nuclear power plant, and that "he comes home all aglow."  Let's hope not!


















Wednesday, May 28, 2014

79th Shields Reunion Slated for July 13

Midge McClenon sent this email for the Fiegs who are also Shieldses:
 
The 79th Annual Shields Reunion will be held on Sunday, July 13th, 2014, at Nathaniel Cole Park (shelter #2) in Harpursville, NY. 
 
Lunch will begin at 12:30 PM.  Please bring a covered dish to share, and beverage and table service for your family.  Charcoal will be available for those who wish to grill. 
 
There will be a brief business meeting after lunch and plans for the 80th Reunion will be discussed.  Bring your great ideas to make it the best Reunion yet!!
 
Nathaniel Cole Park is open from 8:00 AM to dusk, offering swimming, boating, hiking, sports areas, and picnicing in a beautiful setting!  If you've never been there come see for yourself!  You're going to love it!! 
 
Call Vera 570 - 729 - 8621 or Midge 607 - 441 - 0475 or e-mail midgemcclenon@lycos.com, if you have any questions or need directions.
 
See you on the thirteenth!!
 
Midge
 
 

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Mini-reunion Set for November in Las Vegas

Cousin Sue Williams has been busy planning not only her imminent retirement from the travel biz but also a 2014 mini-reunion for the Fieg family.

In an e-mail from earlier this month, Sue shares the following details, encouraging any and all twigs on the Fieg family tree to attend:

The date will be Sunday November 2 and the event will kick off with a 3:00 p.m. cocktail party at the Red Rock Resort in Las Vegas (check it out at https://redrock.sclv.com/).  Dinner will follow at the resort in either Lucille's B-B-Q (www.lucillesbbq.com/locations/las-vegas) or the Grand Cafe (https://redrock.sclv.com/Dining/Grand-Cafe.aspx ).

Sue is working with a representative of the resort to schedule the dinner and cocktail reservations, and is delegating the room reservations to Diana Doyle since, as of May 31, Sue will find herself among the ranks of retired baby-boomers!  Her partner will take over the travel business.  Our best wishes to her in this momentous move.

Those who plan to attend in November should contact Sue at either her cell number (708/955-2906) or at home (708/460-5179). 

Sue and hubby Ed will fly out on October 31, as they plan to visit Bryce Canyon National Park, and will stay five or six nights at the Red Rock.  At this point her four brothers (probably with a sprinkling of spouses) and Roman half-sister Sam Theobald and husband Chuck all plan to attend as well.

As a special treat Sue will attempt to create a CD of family photos to show during the cocktail party.  More to come about that.

Please mark your calendar and start saving frequent flyer points.  We hope to see you all in Vegas!

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

From the Mouths of Babes


Art Linkletter had it right:  "Kids Say the Darndest Things," and the kids in the Fieg family are no exception.  

Thanks to Jean Davie Fieg for the suggestion for this article.  Read on for a giggle or two.

Liz Bookhout, maybe four or five years old, came running into the house crying, "Katie isn't doing what she was told to do on the swing.  She's not going backwards and forwards, she's going crookwards!"                                                                                                                                                                                                          At Christmastime, Diana Fieg had either wax or the sound of reindeer bells in her ears when she sang, "Jesus our brother, kind of good...," and "... curly head dolls that toddle and coo, elephant spokes and kiddie cars too."

Her sister, your kindly old editor, sang, "Up on the rooftop, reindeer paws," though, since paws and pause are homophones, I was the only one surprised to find the latter word was the correct one, as I always had an image of reindeer hooves (why didn't I realize they didn't have paws?) pawing at the shingles.

And in keeping with the Christmas theme, 2-year-old Janet Holm McHenry, daughter of Bob and Doris Fieg Holm, used to sing, "Oh, you better watch out, better not cry, Better not pout, I'ma tellin you."  Who exactly were her ancestors...?




Monday, April 7, 2014

Fieg Family Photo Surfaces


Recently your editor received this wonderful photograph of the family of Max Fieg in the early 1940s, sitting on the porch of their Montclair, N.J. home.  It was sent by Max's daughter, Doris Fieg Holm.

The picture was sent with the following notes:

Back row:
  (bro) Carl Fieg, (his wife) Gerry; Mom - Louise Fieg; Leila Foster Wood (friend); Pop - Max Fieg.
Middle:
  Rondolph Gregory; sis (his wife) Janet Fieg Gregory; Doris (Dolly) Moline (Rosenbaum), my niece; Bud Fieg; sis Ruth Stiles Tomasko
Front:
  Sis Helen Stiles Moline - later Santina; Doris Fieg; sis Emma Fieg Walter

35 Oxford St., Montclair, N.J. (ed. note:  now the site of the Essex Youth Theatre)

Doris writes, Brother Henry (Hank) was probably in Ohio, with National Cash Register.  Helen and Ruth were Louise's daughters by first marriage to Robert Stiles.  Rondolph later went to (the) Army, as (did) Fred Walter, too, and both served in Europe.  Fred was wounded in Anzio, Italy, I think.

Clarence Moline, Dolly's father, was killed in an accident at Walter Kidde Co., Bloomfield - hit by a compressed air tank, 1942.  (ed. note:  The Walter Kidde Co. makes fire extinguishers.)

Helen remarried in 1945 to sea captain Frank Santina, who spent his whole life at sea, all wars, in the Merchant Marine.  Decorated for saving lives at sea after (a) torpedo hit.  Three medals!

Many thanks to Doris for this wonderful look back in time.  Your editor notices that Emma Fieg Walter looks extraordinarily like her cousin Florence Fieg Bookhout, somewhat in the facial features but even more in the way she holds herself in the photo.

An additional bonus realized by your editor in the creation of this post was the discovery of the "Save to TIF" function for scanning the photo when she tried, tried again.  This gave a much more satisfactory quality to the reproduction of said photo, and a greater sense of well-being and happiness to said editor.

Monday, February 24, 2014

IMF Official, Fieg Family Friend, Killed in Afghanistan

WWabel Abdallah, the IMF’s Resident Representative in Afghanistan, was killed in an attack in Kabul on January 17 (photo: IMF) ord has been received  from Afghanistan that Wabel Abdallah, the top representative in Afghanistan with the International Monetary Fund, and Lisa Fieg's longtime friend and former roommate, has been killed in a Taliban bombing in Kabul.
Wabel, who was a Lebanese national, was having dinner in a Lebanese ex-patriot restaurant in a supposedly safe part of the city, when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives.

Wabel was a very intelligent, kind and gentle man whose loss is devastating to Lisa and others who knew him.  He and Lisa shared an apartment in Long Island City near where Lisa continues to live today.

Lisa today discovered the Reuters news report after Wabel had not answered any of her letters for over a month.

Reuters
IMF, UN officials among 21 killed in Kabul suicide attack
Sat Jan 18 20:35:28 UTC 2014
By Jessica Donati and Mirwais Harooni

 KABUL (Reuters) - A Taliban suicide bomber and gunmen attacked a restaurant popular with foreigners in the heart of the Afghan capital Kabul, killing 21 people including three United Nations staff and the International Monetary Fund's top representative in Afghanistan.

Gunmen burst into the Lebanese restaurant spraying diners with bullets after the bomber blew himself up near the entrance around 7:30 p.m. local time on Friday, just as people had sat down for dinner.
Thirteen foreigners were among those killed, according to police, and details about the victims began to trickle through on Saturday.

The U.S. State Department said three U.S. private citizens were killed. Britain and Canada confirmed they each lost two nationals and Denmark said one of its citizens also died.

The American University of Afghanistan said two of its U.S. employees died in the attack on La Taverna du Liban, a popular dining spot whose charismatic owner, Kamal Hamade, was also killed. "We are devastated by the news," Michael Smith, president of AUAF, said in a statement.

After the initial blast, sporadic bursts of gunfire were heard over the next hour. The two gunmen inside the Lebanese restaurant, located in Kabul's diplomatic enclave, were shot dead by police, an Afghan official said.
Most foreign forces are preparing to leave Afghanistan this year after more than a decade of war. Afghanistan watchers fear the Taliban will intensify attacks in the run-up to an election in April to find a successor to President Hamid Karzai.

At odds with Washington over the terms of the bilateral security pact that governs the withdrawal, Karzai is still deliberating whether to allow some U.S. troops to stay on.

If no agreement is reached, Afghan forces could be left to fight the insurgents on their own.

The Taliban claimed responsibility for Friday's attack, calling it revenge for a U.S. air strike earlier this week that had also drawn condemnation from Karzai as eight civilians were killed.

The White House condemned the violence.

"There is no possible justification for this attack, which has killed innocent civilians, including Americans, working every day to help the Afghan people achieve a better future with higher education and economic assistance at the American University, United Nations, International Monetary Fund and other organizations," it said in a statement.

FAVOURITE HAUNT
Several kitchen staff survived by fleeing to the roof, where they hid until they were rescued by police.

"When I was in the kitchen, I heard an explosion outside. Then all the guys escaped up and I went to the roof and stayed with my back to the chimney for two or three hours," said Suleiman, a cook at the Lebanese restaurant.
By midnight, the operation to clear the area was still under way, with police nervously flashing lasers at passing cars and people on the dark, dusty streets.

The restaurant had been running for several years, and was a favourite haunt for foreigners, including diplomats, contractors, journalists and aid workers.

A couple of armed guards were usually on duty at the front entrance, which led to a courtyard in front of the main ground floor dining room. The suicide bomb attack took place at that entrance, but accounts differed over where the gunmen had entered from.

"The target of the attack was a restaurant frequented by high-ranking foreigners ... where the invaders used to dine with booze and liquor in the plenty," Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in an e-mailed statement, written in English.

Karzai issued a statement on Saturday condemning the attack, using the opportunity to swipe at the United States for not doing enough to fight "terrorism."

"If NATO forces led by the United States of America want to be united and partner with the Afghan people, they have to target terrorism," he said in a statement. Karzai believes Washington could do more to persuade the Taliban to begin direct peace talks with his government.

UN PEACE SEEKER KILLED
The IMF's representative in Afghanistan, 60-year-old Lebanese national Wabel Abdallah, was one of the diners killed. He had led the fund's office in Kabul since 2008.

"This is tragic news, and we at the fund are all devastated," Managing Director Christine Lagarde said in a statement. "Our hearts go out to Wabel's family and friends, as well as the other victims of this attack."

The United Nations initially said four staff were killed, counting the IMF's representative in the total. The other three included a Russian, an American and a Pakistani.

The Russian was a senior U.N. political officer trying to negotiate a start to peace talks with the Taliban.
"You can imagine the effect it has had on staff members here," U.N. spokesman Ari Gaitanis told Reuters.

A British Foreign Office spokeswoman said two Britons were killed in the attack. Del Singh, a British opposition Labour Party candidate for the European Parliament, was one of British victims, and the other was serving with the EU Police Mission in Afghanistan. A Dane serving with the mission also died.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said two Canadians were killed, but it was unclear which organisation they worked for.

Foreign casualties were taken to a military base in Kabul. At a hospital morgue near the attack, Afghans screamed and cried as they mourned attack victims, some pressing scarves to their faces to stifle sobs. One young man, grieving for his dead father, kicked a wall and howled.

"One of the restaurant's cooks was wounded," said a doctor, Abdul Bashir. "Two dead bodies have been taken to the morgue."

While the south and southeast of Afghanistan have been the main theatres of action in a war that has dragged on for more than a decade, Kabul has suffered regular attacks.

Taliban fighters mounted several attacks in the capital during the summer months last year, but the assault on Friday inflicted far higher casualties.

(Writing by Maria Golovnina, additional reporting by Erik Kirschbaum in Berlin, Louis Charbonneau in New York, Anna Yukhananov, Lesley Wroughton and Steve Holland in Washington; editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Sonya Hepinstall and G Crosse)

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Battle of the Births Quiz

1.  ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in the Continental United States except:

A.  Richard Fieg
B.  Richard Bookhout Jr.
C.  Jeffrey Whiteside
D.  Phyllis Fieg


2.  ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN at Fox Hospital in Oneonta except:

A.  Susan Fieg Williams
B.  Anne Bookhout
C.  Bobby McGonigal
D.  Judy Fieg Kestner


3.  ALL BUT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in Pennsylvania:

A.  John Roman
B.  Judy Fieg Kestner
C.  Douglas Fieg
D.  Anne Roman


4.  ONLY ONE COUSIN WAS BORN in Colorado.  That person is:

A.  Jon McGonigal
B.  Russell Fieg
C.  Don Roman
D.  Marsha Whiteside Adams


5.  JEAN DAVIE FIEG'S NIECE, LORI PRICE, resides in Leesburg, VA.  Born in Leesburg was:

A.  Stephen Davie
B.  Lori's husband John Price 
C.  Steven Fieg
D.  Joe Kestner


6.  MAXINE FIEG WHITESIDE'S GRANDMOTHER, Celestia Shields, having retired from running a boarding house, spent the rest of her days in a second floor apartment above a store.  The name of this store was:

A.  Fieg Plumbing
B.  Gregory's plumbing supply
C.  Bresee's Oneonta Department Store
D.  The Golden Rooster


7.  FIEG'S PLUMBING SUPPLY is located in:

A.  Cleveland, Ohio
B.  Oneonta, New York
C.  Milford, Pennsylvania
D.  Milford, New York


8.  BOB MORGAN WAS BORN in the vicinity of the sleepy village of Whitehall in the upper Hudson River Valley.  Whitehall is best known as:

A.  The birthplace of French's mustard
B.  The birthplace of Sail pipe tobacco
C.  The birthplace of the United States Navy
D.  The birthplace of Franklin Delano Roosevelt


Got your Thinking Cap on?  The answers are underlined:

1. ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in the Continental United States except:


A. Richard Fieg
B. Richard Bookhout Jr.
C. Jeffrey Whiteside
D. Phyllis Fieg


2. ALL THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN at Fox Hospital in Oneonta except:

A. Susan Fieg Williams
B. Anne Bookhout
C. Bobby McGonigal
D. Judy Fieg Kestner


3. ALL BUT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING WERE BORN in Pennsylvania:

A. John Roman
B. Judy Fieg Kestner
C. Douglas Fieg
D. Anne Roman


4. ONLY ONE COUSIN WAS BORN in Colorado. That person is:

A. Jon McGonigal
B. Russell Fieg
C. Don Roman
D. Marsha Whiteside Adams


5. JEAN DAVIE FIEG'S NIECE, LORI PRICE, resides in Leesburg, VA. Born in Leesburg was:

A. Stephen Davie
B. Lori's husband John Price
C. Steven Fieg
D. Joe Kestner


6. MAXINE FIEG WHITESIDE'S GRANDMOTHER, Celestia Shields, having retired from running a boarding house, spent the rest of her days in a second floor apartment above a store. The name of this store was:

A. Fieg Plumbing
B. Gregory's Plumbing Supply
C. Bresee's Oneonta Department Store
D. The Golden Rooster


7. FIEG'S PLUMBING SUPPLY is located in:

A. Cleveland, Ohio
B. Oneonta, New York
C. Milford, Pennsylvania
D. Milford, New York


8. BOB MORGAN WAS BORN in the vicinity of the sleepy village of Whitehall in the upper Hudson River Valley. Whitehall is best known as:

A. The birthplace of French's mustard
B. The birthplace of Sail pipe tobacco
C. The birthplace of the United States Navy
D. The birthplace of Franklin Delano Roosevelt

Editor Emeritus Lothar "Bud" Fieg Cited in War Remembrance

The late Capt. Lothar Fieg, a World War II fighter pilot and Fieg Family News editor emeritus, is cited in a newly-published book titled Fighter Group: The 352nd "Blue Nosed Bastards" in World War II.  

Author Lt. Col. (Ret.) Jay A. Stout mentions Bud once regarding the strafing of a German air base and again, more colorfully, with a description of the parties thrown at the 352nd's base in Bodney, England.  The passages appear below, sent to your editor by Sue Fieg Williams:

Page 135: 
Very little of value was destroyed or even damaged. The poor weather simply made it too difficult to see, and if something worthwhile was spotted it was often too late to fly into a good position to attack it. What was hit reads like an assorted list of scraps: The 352nd's commander, Joe Mason, blasted away at a flak tower and a gun emplacement on the beach; John Thornell shot up a radio tower, some troops and a B-17 that had belly-landed in a field sometime before; Jack Donalson worked over a number of gun emplacements and shot up a rifle range where German solders were practicing their marksmanship. Lothar Fieg fired at a flak tower; after shooting at another tower of some sort, William Halton fired his guns "purely at random," John Coleman shot his guns at "some suspicious looking buildings," and John Meyer "observed strikes on the rear portion of an army truck."
Page 154:
Many of the 352nd's fliers fit the stereotype of the hard-drinking, hard-partying, hard-flying fighter pilot, but some of them didn't. Robert Powell remembered that Lothar Fieg was not a riotous reveler. "His bed was next to mine in the Nissen hut. He was a non-typical fighter pilot--quiet and shy and conservative. He never came to the parties.
"At one point while we were still flying P-47's Lothar was getting a little flak happy," Powell recalled. "I finally persuaded him go to one of our parties. He was curious and I told him that our flight surgeons mixed up a vat of grain alcohol with fruit juices that we called Thunderbolt Joy Juice. The idea was to have a couple of slugs of that before the trucks arrived with the girls. If you did that, then the girls looked more beautiful. After they showed up you picked one out and gave her a slug or two, took her over to the food and then......well, the rest was up to you. Ultimately, Fieg returned to the states and married his longtime sweetheart."
Sue also mentioned that she was happy and pleased to see that the book is dedicated to Betty Powell, wife of Robert "Punchy" Powell.  It reads, " Especially for Betty Powell because she deserves it."
P-51 Bluenoser "E Pluribus Unum"

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Fiegs, Friends and Freddy Freeman Fare Fine in Foul Freeze

Emily and Brian Fieg have hunkered down for an anticipated four-day wait after winter storm Leon dumped 2-3" of snow and a heavy coating of ice on the city of Atlanta.

Brian, son of Doug Fieg of California, barely made it home to suburban Acworth at 2:00 Tuesday afternoon and had to wait for a school bus to get unstuck so he could reach his own driveway.

Meanwhile, hundreds, perhaps thousands, of cars were abandoned throughout the area.  A member of Dr. Ed Fieg's staff was stuck on an arterial for 26 hours.  The Georgia National Guard was helping to "extract" some motorists with medical or other needs from vehicles that were gridlocked on interstates and roads around the city, and students who were stuck on school buses.

Atlanta Braves first-baseman Freddy Freeman was trapped for 11 hours until former Braves super-star Chipper Jones arrived on a four-wheel ATV to rescue him.

"Atlanta is in no way prepared for a storm like this," Brian said.  "We have no intention whatsoever of going out unless it becomes absolutely necessary."

On the bright side,eighteen-month-old Caleb Fieg had a blast trudging through the snow in the yard until it became too cold for him to continue. 

Bob "Punchy" Powell, who flew with Lothar "Bud" Fieg during World War II and lives near Emory University in Atlanta, said that he and his wife Betty were essentially trapped in their house as they cannot negotiate the snow-covered hill where they live.

"Atlanta is shut down today," Punchy said.  "You see barely a single car or even hear one."

Monday, January 20, 2014

Bill Doyle Conquers Mt. Washington

The observatory on Mt. Washington in New Hampshire
With winds sustained at 70 miles per hour and the temperature hovering at a balmy +10 degrees Fahrenheit, the intrepid Bill Doyle, husband of Diana Fieg Doyle, recently enjoyed a two-day visit to the top of the highest mountain peak in the northeast United States.

Last fall, Diana and Bill had driven up to the observatory at the summit of Mt.Washington in New Hampshire where they went so far as to become members.  The brochure they received listed several trips and classes available and one called Winter Mountain Essentials (aka Mountaineering "What If?") appealed to Bill and so he registered to participate.

He arrived on Friday Jan. 3 at the Crummy Inn in North Conway, N.H. (a motel secured by his travel-agent wife who didn't really care about the accommodations as she didn't have to stay there and anyway, he was roughing it, wasn't he?) at about 4:00 in the afternoon, in time to rent mountain-climbing boots and crampons, which are too expensive to own outright (unless you are a St. Bernard dog whose livelihood depends upon that sort of equipment).

The party met Saturday at 8:00 in the morning at the base of Mt. Washington and, the roads being blocked with snow, took a Sno-Cat 6,288 feet up to the observatory where they were to spend the night, take the class and then, the next morning, practice the skills they had learned.  Usually very stoic, Bill (or maybe it was his spine?) had to let out a slight scream at one point as the Sno-Cat went over a particularly jarring bump in the road.

As the temperature in North Conway was -10 degrees on Friday night, Bill and his fellow mountaineers were pleased with the "warmer" conditions at the peak on Saturday when they arrived.  In fact, that night Bill found it too hot in the bunk room so he went to the lounge with the observatory cat, Marty, to sleep.

This crew not only had good luck with the outdoor temperature but also with the unusually clear weather.  Bill reports that the views of both sunrise and sunset were spectacular, and that, to the east, they could see all the way to the Atlantic Ocean and, to the west, all the way to Mt. Marcy, the highest peak in New York State.
Bill Doyle is the second person from the right.

On various forays from the observatory on Saturday the attendees were drilled in ice ax use, walking with crampons and building a snow cave, and they practiced self-arresting (how to prevent a fall) and how to walk in 70 mph winds.  There were a few women among the group, one of whom almost blew off the mountain, according to Bill, and she did not come out of the observatory again after that.

Right off the bat, Bill liked the leader of the expedition, a mountaineer named Joe Lentini, who has been a professional climbing guide for over 45 years, according to his website www.climbwithJoe.com

On Sunday the party walked part way down the mountain to the Sno-Cat and Bill arrived back at the Crummy Inn for one night and then back home to Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y.  The first weekend in February will find Bill again at the observatory to learn about the weather station there.




Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Corkerys Welcome New Addition

Gemma Jacqueline Corkery arrived at 1:30 a.m. on January 7, 2014 at the Bassett Birthing Center in Cooperstown, N.Y. to parents Sarah and Kevin Corkery.  Gemma and all of her seven siblings have been born at the same hospital in the home of baseball and, should there be one more child, we'll have a complete baseball team and probably a front-page headline in the Cooperstown Crier.

Gemma weighed in at 8 pounds 12 ounces and was 21 inches long.

Sarah had the baby delivered under the prescribed terms of an elaborate birthing plan (reproduced below) which was dictated to the doctors, nurses and midwives in attendance.  Asked by her father, Greg Fieg, where she found this plan, Sarah said she was inspired by an article in "The Troublemaker's Guide to Making Trouble."  

Our congratulations and well wishes for for the baby are on the way, attached to a 90-mile-per-hour fastball.




Birth Plan for Sarah Fieg-Corkery and Baby Girl- 
Due date: 1/2/14

Birthing Partner: Kevin Corkery, husband and father


December 2013

To Whom It May Concern:

As I prepare for the birth of our eighth child I wanted to write a basic birth plan for those that will be supporting my labor and attending the birth as nurses, doctors and midwives.  


Background:  All my children have been born at Bassett Birthing Center.  My last birth was twin boys delivered by Dr. Graham through induction at 39 weeks.  It was, physically speaking, my worst birth experience due to the induction.  However all other labors and births, except my first in 1998 were natural and without the use of drugs of any kind.  Outside the twins’ birth all babies were delivered by midwives.  My babies tend to be larger with most weighing in between 8 lbs 13oz to 9 lbs 14oz.  The twins were nearly 8 lbs each and my smallest was 5 lbs 14. I have never had any emergency situations, excessive blood loss or perineal tearing of any significance.  Overall my experiences at Bassett Birthing Center have been very positive and I am content to be returning. 


General Birthing Philosophy:  In a nutshell, I believe in the body’s ability to give birth and prefer outside intervention to be kept to a minimum if used at all.  I ask for as quiet an environment as possible, low lights, and hushed voices.  I prefer to not use drugs for pain relief, my husband is my advocate, I am open to suggestions for comfort during labor, and I do not want the presence of any students at any point. 


Delivery:  Assuming all is progressing normally, I would like to deliver in whatever position I feel comfortable.  I appreciate encouragement and suggestions but ultimately would like to be able to push naturally when my body is ready.  When the baby is born I would like the cord to remain intact for at least one minute and my husband to be encouraged to be involved as much he is up to doing.  He will cut the cord when the time comes.  I would like a quiet, low lit environment with as few people present as possible. 


Baby care:  Upon delivery we would like our baby to be given to me to hold skin to skin as long as I am able and up for it.  If not my husband will hold her until I can.  If possible, within the first hour or thereabouts, we would love our daughter to experience a warm LeBoyer bath when she is ready and prefer to not have any standard bath with soaps of any kind given.  I do plan to breastfeed so our daughter will not require the use of pacifiers, bottles or any other artificiality for soothing or feeding.  I have used an S&S as needed in the past due to my milk tending to come in late but am always hopeful that I won’t need to.  We prefer our baby girl to be in our presence at all times.  We do not want any immunizations, eye ointments, and/or Vitamin K shot.  We want no heal sticks of any sort or any other such procedural, routine events taking place.  Alternatively to the Vit. K shot we would like oral vitamin K given.  It is our understanding that Bassett does not provide that option; however we plan to administer our own liquid vitamin K1.  Please understand this is our conscientious objection and not a frivolous, uninformed decision.  We believe the best transition into the outside world is to be born naturally, brought to mother skin to skin, and put to breast as soon as baby desires.  We want the healthiest, most comfortable, pain-free transition into the world we can give our child and painful poking and prodding interferes with this.  We understand some of our philosophy goes against state mandates.  Nonetheless we maintain our position knowing that parents make the best decisions for their children’s health, not States.  We are fully aware and respectful of Bassett’s responsibility to report as required by NYS law.  


In Case of Emergency:  If anything begins to not go according to plan and unforeseen events begin to unfold we just ask that we be informed at every step of all options and risks to maximize the safest delivery possible.  If for some reason I cannot be awake to receive information and voice my wishes my husband will make all necessary decisions for me.  The baby is to stay with him at all times until I can be with them.  In the event of a life threatening emergency please be certain to call a priest as we are Roman Catholic.  This is very important to us.


In conclusion, I want to reiterate how much we like the Bassett Birthing Center and its staff.  Everyone in the past has been very professional, helpful, and accommodating and we look forward to the same care this time as well.  I always recommend the Bassett Birthing Center to anyone looking for a good, reliable place to give birth.  Thank you for reading our birth plan and respecting our position and philosophy for bringing a child into the world.  See you soon!



Sincerely,



Sarah and Kevin Corkery


Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Pete Rose Recognized as "Da Man"

In the previous story about the upcoming Induction Weekend at the Baseball Hall of Fame, your editor neglected to include an amusing anecdote, submitted by cousin Ed Fieg Sr. at the same time he sent the photo of himself together with Pete Rose.  Here is the conversation between these two gentlemen as relayed by Ed:

"Mr Rose," I asked, "who is the best baseball player you ever saw?"  Pete replied, "Well, let's see, that's a hard one."  I interrupted, "You're lookin' at him -- every morning when you shave!"

BTW:  after I said that to Mr Rose, since he was a player-manager, he asked me, "Do you know who the best player who ever played for me was?"   
 
"Who?" I queried.  
 
Pete replies, "Me!"

 Pete Rose, you da man.

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Fiegs Look Forward to Hall of Fame Week

Ed Fieg (left) chats with all-time hits king Pete Rose during
Induction Week in Cooperstown in July 2013.
Vicki Gates, proprietor of the Phoenix Inn in Cooperstown, N.Y., where the Fiegs have spent several summer weekends, reports that a historically large turnout is expected for Induction Week at the National Baseball Hall of Fame in that city.

"I've already got a waiting list of four or five people," she said, noting that there are few, if any, vacancies left anywhere in town.  Nonetheless, Greg and Eddie Fieg are already making their plans to be there to join in the tumultuous welcome being accorded to former Braves manager Bobby Cox, former Yankees manager Joe Torre and former Cardinals manager Tony LaRussa, who are to be enshrined during the third weekend of July.

As if that weren't enough, former super-stars Craig Biggio of the Astros, Frank Thomas of the White Sox, Mike Messina of the Yankees and ten to twenty more newly named nominees could yet be admitted.

Greg and Eddie urge all who are interested to contact them and come to Cooperstown.
Cousins Greg Fieg and John Roman shake hands with Yankee great Yogi Berra.





Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Eva Dangca Lands Role in Classic Hit Musical

Eva Dangca, 10,  daughter of Allan and Anna Fieg Dangca of Oneonta,  has been cast in the role of cat in the all-singing,  all-dancing (no speaking) musical "Cats,"  an Orpheus Theatre production in Oneonta.

The former, long-running Broadway hit will open at Goodrich Theater on the campus of State University of New York,  College of Arts and Sciences.  In addition to a Friday afternoon show for school classes only,  tickets are now on sale for an 8 p.m. presentation Saturday,  Dec. 14,  and 2 p.m. Sunday Dec. 15.

Tickets are $15 but a block of family seats has been purchased by the family,  with Barbara and Dr. Edward Fieg,  Greg Fieg, John Roman, Diana Monaco and Bill Doyle among those expected to  attend.  Seats are still available at no cost, but must be claimed in advance.

The former Andrew Lloyd Webber production, based on "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats" by T.S. Elliot tells the story of a tribe of phantom cats called the Jellicles and the night they make what is known as the "Jellicle Choice" to decide which cat will come alive.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Maxine Fieg Whiteside, 1926 - 2013

Maxine Fieg Whiteside
Maxine Fieg Whiteside, last survivor of seven siblings from an old Oneonta family, succumbed to cancer in Sioux City, Iowa, on Nov. 22.  She was 87.

Maxine was born at home at 10 N. Sixth St. on Sept. 23, 1926 to the late Lothar and Florence Shields Fieg.  She attended Oneonta public schools where she edited The Echo, the high school newspaper.  From her first year in school through her last, she was a straight-A student.

Retired Oneonta High School coach Tony Drago, her schoolmate and friend, remembered her not only for her intellect but also for a radiant and congenial personality.  "She was affable, always joyful, and very, very intelligent," he said.

In 1948 Maxine graduated with a bachelor's degree in education from State Teachers College in Oneonta (now SUCO) where she was Queen of the May, salutatorian and treasurer of her sorority, Alpha Sigma Alpha.  She was a member of the Oneonta Presbyterian Church where she sang alto in the choir.

Because of her academic standing she was recommended to continue to graduate school, earning her master's degree in education at the University of Iowa.  After marrying Dr. Robert Merl Whiteside of Storm Lake, Iowa, she set aside her plans to teach and together they raised four children in Sioux City. 

The couple was active in the community, where Maxine joined the American Association of University Women and the Junior League and founded a women's bridge club.  They were also members of the Sioux City Art Center.

Preceding her in death were her parents and her siblings Emilie Fieg McGonigal, Lothar E. 'Bud' Fieg Jr., Florence Fieg Bookhout, Franklin W. Fieg, V. Philip Fieg and Dorothy Fieg Roman.

In addition to her husband, she is survived by her children Marsha Adams of Dakota Dunes, S.D., Dr. Jeffrey Whiteside of Appleton, Wis., Anne Still of  Danville, In. and Robert Whiteside Jr. of West Branch, Iowa..  Also surviving are nine grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, numerous nieces and nephews and a sister-in-law, Jean Davie Fieg, of Greensboro, N.C.

To read more about Maxine Fieg Whiteside visit www.fiegfamily.blogspot.com

Sunday, November 17, 2013

A Letter From Syracuse

Philip Fieg, age 26, attending Syracuse University after returning home from World War II, found himself at odds with the dormitory proctor.

In letters to his girlfriend and future wife, Jean Davie -- letters now re-examined after more than six decades -- Philip philosophizes about the age-old conflict between labor and management.  Noting the differences between their backgrounds, he and proctor John Owens took their positions.  Wrote Philip, "If our backgrounds were exchanged, we would be arguing on opposite sides, I know."

He continued, "[It] is difficult to separate your logical thoughts from those which are the result of personal experience.  It takes a pretty great mind to see outside himself and desire what is best for all, rather than what is best for himself.  John thinks he is liberal enough to desire the greatest good for the greatest number, but what he really wants is the greatest good for his class -- even as [do] I."

In an attempt to offer a foundation for his views, Philip mused,  "(My father)...came to Oneonta with the desire to be his own boss, so he invested his savings, put two mortgages on his house, borrowed money and announced to the world that he was no longer Lothar Fieg, carpenter, but L. Fieg, Builder.

"He worked and worried through many years, maintaining a high order of honesty and integrity.  He attempted to do always the best job possible.  He was not afraid to work with his hands himself.

"... In the last half of the nineteenth century the wages his father earned as a stone cutter barely provided food and clothing for a family....  [Lothar] went to work when he was ten and worked for the rest of his life.

"He was intelligent enough to learn, though, and he taught himself estimating, construction formulae, the characteristics of wood and steel beams, concrete strength and the thousand-and-one things a builder must know.

"He could get along with ditch diggers and bankers, immigrant railroad workers who wanted a room plastered and the town's richest man (Edwin W. Elmore), owner of a feed mill, for whom he built a mansion on a hill.

"His work was enough for him, and as long as he could put food before his family and shoes on their feet (and socks three sizes too large for them, so that they must be turned under), he was satisfied.  He made no attempt to get rich.  He never drank when his children were small.

"The only recreation he allowed himself were occasional weekend motor trips.  He had no car.  When the family went on a trip they rode in the back of the truck on benches.

"Now he is 63, and he is beginning to wear out.  The machine was a good machine and it was kept in good running order by never being allowed to stop so long it got rusty.  But a machine must wear out.

"He is a Republican and a free-enterpriser, and the new government regulations and forms are an abomination to him.  Every year there is another form to fill out every month and another tax to pay.  Every year it becomes more difficult to operate his business, and more involved.

".... So the father becomes more petulant, more easily angered, more tired.  He feels that the government is taking away from him what he gave his life to.  He has loved his work and been proud of it.  His aim was never to make money, but to do what he wanted to do and do it to the best of his ability.

Phid reveals the meat of his argument:  "But now he is lumped together with all employers, and is subjected to the same treatment as what are referred to in campaign speeches as 'The Wall Street Interests.'

"A few men have worked for him ever since he went into business for himself.  They ... could have set themselves up as employers instead of employees.  But they lack something he has -- they lack the willingness to take the risks....

"Must he then be responsible for their being born less endowed than he?  He makes about $5,000 a year.  Must he charge higher prices so that he can support a pension program for his employees?

"Perhaps the answer is yes.  Perhaps those who are more fortunate than others must take care of those less fortunate.... Such is the attitude of the young liberal -- John Owens.  His desire is 'to make my small contribution to the community.'

".... What I am suspicious of is his method -- government intervention.  So far, few of the government's efforts have been anything but wasteful and confused.  Turn something over to the government and it becomes immediately unprofitable and twisted up in reams of red tape.

"I am also repelled by the attempt at leveling -- putting everybody on the same plane ....  Men are not all born equal, and to make them all equal will always be an artificial equality."

Ed. note:  The preceding opinions, observations and sentiments are not necessarily those of the Fieg Family News,  its staff, management and stockholders,  nor the Fieg family.  They were condensed from one of three letters sent to me by my mother, Jean Davie Fieg.  She thought it would be good grist for the mill.  It was a great pleasure for Greg and me to collaborate with my father post mortem