"CLASS OF 1951"

ANSWERS AND CORRECTIONS TO BILL MOYER'S PAPER
AND HER OWN THOUGHTS
BY
SHIRLEY GLADMAN


June 11, 1991

Dear Bill,

Gosh, it was so nice to get the newsletter and what a trip I took down memory lane. Doesn’t seem that it is possible that it has been 40 years since we all graduated from high school. I even drug out the old annual and wasn’t too sure which one I was until I remembered that Kathleen Spitz and I were the tallest of the gals.
Think I will start off with family history in Aruba. Dad arrived in Aruba in September of 1939. Mom, Bob and I arrived in May of 1940. As I recall, we arrived the day Holland was invaded on the Esso Aruba, We lived in Lago Heights until there was a vacancy in the colony and then moved to Bungalow 49. Lived next to the Armstrongs. Later we moved to Bungalow 339 and then next door to 341 where we spent many years.
We were three days out of New York going back to Aruba on December 7, 1941 when Pearl Harbor was bombed. Can remember Dad talking about the Grace Line (Santa Rosa) making the trip in record time. We were in Aruba for the duration of the war. Remember very vividly when the lake tankers were torpoed outside the reef and all of the other many incidents we had at that time. Sometimes, I think that I am worse than an old soldier telling my war stories.
Do you remember Miss Parham in the third grade and those infernal flashcards to help us learn the multiplication tables. Miss Olson in the fourth grade. Had trouble with my penmanship then and I still do think Mildred Wright was our 6th grade teacher. Will never forget Maude Thomas and how she made us keep our fingernails short for typing. Have to admit, she made a good typist of me. Do you remember Miss Stadleman and all of the lines we had to memorize from the “Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner” and how she had us write the Iliad and Oddesy in modern
terms.

I left Aruba in 1948 and finished my last two years of high school and graduated in Springer, New Mexico. Lived with my cousins. Brother Bob stayed with the folks in Aruba and graduated in 1954. How he loved softball.
Had a scholarship and went to Eastern New Mexico University in Portales, New Mexico. Graduated with a degree in Business. Graduated June 2, married June 4, and started working at Clovis Air Force Base on June 6. Jim enrolled in medical school the fall of 1955. I worked at a bank while he was in school in Kirksville, Missouri. He did his internship in Lamed, Kansas and then back to New Mexico we came. Socorro to be exact and here I still am. Our daughter, Lauren Lee, was from here in 1961.
Mom and Dad (Gladys and Frank Gladman) retired and moved to Amarillo in 1959. That is just 365 miles from Socorro so we had lots of family visits. We moved them over here in 1982 and had the horrible task of having to put them into the local nursing home. Mom passed away in 1984. Just a little short of being 80. Dad had been physically incapacited by a massive stroke in 1974 and he spent the last 5½ years of his life at Good Samaritan Village. He passed away Oct. 1988.
My husband, Jim Ruff, passed away very suddenly on March 5, 1987. 56 years old - massive heart attack. Being a country doctor takes its toll and I guess I feel very cheated by life. We had talked about what we would do w—en he retired and what we would do on our 50th wedding anniversary. Shattered dreams. I have been the director at the Socorro Senior Center since then and it has been good for me.
My brother Bob (3 years behind us) is a stock broker for Dean Witter and lives in Sugarland, Texas. Commutes in to Houston. He has two children and two grandsons. Talked to him this morning and he is going to the reunion in Aruba later this month. Wish I was tagging along. Would be nice to see Aruba again and see how much it has changed. Can’t imagine it without the Lago refinery. Do you remember the strike when they took a bunch of us out of school and we worked down in the refinery?

Do you remember the old ESSO Club and the open air movies. That was lots of fun. Gracious, what fond memories your newsletter triggered.
My daughter moved back to Socorro two years ago. She graduated from Southern Illinois University in 1985 and is graduate admissions officer at New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology here in Socorro. It is nice to have family in the same town.
Can’t think of anything else to rattle about at the minute so will sign off. Am looking forward to the next newsletter. If you folks are anywhere in the vicinity, please stop by. Socorro is just 70 miles south of Albuquerque and right on 1-40.
Would love to have you.

As always,

Shirley Gladman Ruff