Monday, December 31, 2007

Happy Birthday to two of the cousins!

If we're not mistaken, today and yesterday were cousin Sandy and Joe's birthdays. Happy Everything to them! Here are some photos from their youth. In some of the photos you may notice other cousins. Pay no attention to them! It is not their birthdays! Cousin Joe ate some delicious cake and drank some healthy milk at the Millers' in the late 1960s. Those other people look familiar, but we can't quite place them. Cousin Joe, ever philosophical, pondered life at a family reunion in the 1960s. Joe is now a geologist, plant foreman and pilot. That's cousin Sandra on the right at a Stump-in in the 1970s. Sandy set the standard for the other Lake City cousins by being tops in her class and extremely popular. The scrapblog editor liked to identify herself as "Sandy Kirkwood's cousin" during those years. Whenever she uttered those magic words, doors would open, smiles would spread across faces, bon-bons would appear out of nowhere, Mr. Selleseth would genuflect, Mr. Stengel would say by golly, Mr. Ruberto would get misty-eyed, etc., etc. Sandy set the fashion standard, too. That's her in the middle in chiffon and posies, attended by cousins Cindi and Janie.

A Kirkwood extravaganza

Cousins Tuk and Sheila sent these photos of their family Christmas: What a handsome bunch! We're proud to have them all as cousins. Venerable uncle and aunts John, Kate and Anna.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Blue hues

Aunt Florence and Grandma Sprick, in excellent hats, beamed as they surveyed a gift at cousin Leah's wedding. And no wonder: It's a little hard to make out, but we believe it was a PRICELESS BLUE PLATE! Note how everything looks a little blue in its radiant presence.

Cousins Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone

Cousins Sam and Dan cleaned up this particular Christmas with some really good gifts, including animal skins.

Another family Christmas

Cousins abounded at this 1960s Christmas gathering. The Millers are conspiciously absent (thus the event's orderly air), so this was probably taken during the years they lived in West Germany.

Christmas at the Millers'

Little cousins waited for designated gift distributors Sam and Dan to deliver their gifts at a Christmas gathering in Old Frontenac in the 1960s. Must have been a mild winter -- no snow in the yard.

We hate to bring this up, but...

Tuk was awfully cute (still is). But where are his pants??!!

Fire man

Uncle Joe presided over a fire, and no doubt some grub, at a Stump-In.

Friday, December 28, 2007

Mother Marion

This photo ranks right up there as one of our favorite discoveries of 2007 for content and composition. That's cousin Dan Broberg with his mom, Aunt Marion, in 1962 or '63.

The age of innocence

Cousins Pam and Chris looked so blue-eyed, rosy-cheeked, sweet and innocent in this photo taken at cousin Leah's 1961 wedding, even though their pockets, fists and cheeks were probably stuffed with bon-bons. This wide-eyed phase occurred well before they got into journalism.

Uncles and aunties await sustenance

Grandma, Wally, Mavis, John, Alma, Bill and Disembodied Hand looked awfully serious in this photo. We think it's because the table was so bare. Where were the heaping platters of food? Two apples and two oranges weren't likely to cut it with this crew. We hope the food arrived shortly, before the uncles and aunts took off their shoes and started pounding them on the table in protest.

Akaba, buddy!

The earliest-rising cousin was always Sarah, who liked to trot into her cousins' bedrooms at 6:30 a.m. even on Saturdays and demand that they get up, immediately. She wouldn't let up till they did. Then, exhausted by her noble efforts, she'd go take a nap.

Woodsmen

Here's a more typical photo of cousins Dan and Sam. They were fetching wood for what no doubt would be a gigantic fire on the rocky shores of Lake Superior at Castle Haven. Note that they're both side-armed with trusty knives, just in case marauding bears or the Miller cousins tried to swipe their marshmallows.

Grandma Sprick at the Como Park conservatory

The Broberg family slide box has many photos taken at the Como Park Conservatory. Here's one of Grandma Sprick in that lovely place during a visit to her urban daughter Marion and grandkids.

Here's something you don't often see

Naturally, the Broberg family slide box contains lots of slides of cousins Dan and Sam as diminutive lads. This Halloween shot is one of our very favorites. By the way, belated Happy Birthday to both of them, who share Dec. 20 birthdays. Dan turned 46, Sam 43. They'll always be kids to us.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Jackpot!: Photos from Broberg collection unveiled

The scrapblog editor had recently run out of old photos, having used up Aunt Anna's stash. But a Christmas miracle has occurred! Cousin Sam found a big, dusty box of slides in his basement and turned them over to the scrapblog editor on Christmas Eve. She eyeballed and scanned some tonight, and was gleeful. You're in for a treat, cousins! An example from the 1960s is above: Several cousins visited Janie and her black pony in Lake City, Minn.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Three wise women

The lovely and gifted Sprick chicks, C., A. and K. They're the daughters of cousins Davy and Sarah and the grandchildren of Elmer and Mavis, of course. (We hope someone gave them shoes for Christmas, poor things.)

Bethel-bound

Cousin Teddy Hagberg has been accepted at Bethel University in Arden Hills for fall 2008. Teddy's a senior at Woodbury High School. Congrats, Teddy!

Honored to know Mo

Countessa M. Miller, 16, has made the National Honor Society at Centennial High School. Congrats to our Mo! (The scrapblog editor had written a letter to the selection committee explaining that if Mo didn't make it, their kneecaps would never be the same again. But Mo would have made it even without that letter, absolutely.)

Noah's very fine Christmas

It's good to be Noah these days. Though his car got towed Christmas Eve ($189 in cash money to get it back! Ouch!), he had an excellent holiday, largely due of course to the lovely Tara. Some photos: A "Star Trek" calendar! Tara knows Noah's passions. Tara handed Noah a very large gift. Whatever could it be? Wow! The large gift was a blanket she had hand-made of paisley fleece. It's beautiful and warm. Noah loves it! Tara's artistic mom, Melanie, made this for Noah -- a Christmas stocking with a Manhattan-and-Spiderman theme. (Click on the photo to make it larger.) Noah gave Tara a gold locket with a tiny diamond on it and teeny photos of -- who else? -- Noah and Tara in it. Noah, $189 poorer after retrieving his groovy car from the impound lot, shoveled the driveway. Then Noah took Pam out to lunch at Uncle Franky's diner in Nordeast Minneapolis. Why Uncle Franky's? Why not? And, why, look! It's the lovely Tara behind the counter! She practically runs the place! That's why Uncle Franky's! Tara took a quick break from working hard to kibbutz with Noah. Tara and this excellent fellow, who cooked up some great grub for Noah and Pam, operate Uncle Franky's over the noon hour every weekday. (Uncle Franky himself was nowhere in sight.) Here's what you can get at Uncle Franky's. (Click on photo to make it legible.) They innovate, too; Noah got the Noah special, a vegetarian sandwich with interesting spices courtesy of the Ecuadoran cook. Uncle Franky's has a Scooby-Doo theme. Rut-row! It also has a website that features a webcam. When Noah gets lonesome in Duluth, he can tune in and watch Tara serve lunch.

Christmas Eve at cousin Sam's

Cousins Sam and Bridget graciously invited the scrapblog editor to be an honorary Broberg on Christmas Eve at their lovely home in Eagan, even though she arrived unfashionably late, left unfashionably early, brought no food and babbled incoherently the whole time about near-death experiences (see post below this one). Scenes: Bridget and Sam served up hospitality and platters of heaping, delicious food. Bridget had made seven or eight kinds of gourmet Christmas cookies. We were so busy eating them and possibly sneaking a few into our purse that we forgot to take a photo of them. Young A. consulted with his wise dad as cousin Bridget gave Auntie Mary a recipe over the phone. "There really isn't a recipe," Bridget was saying. "You just kind of make it up as you go along." Everything Bridget made up as she went along was beautiful and delicious. Visions of sugar plums danced in young Z.'s eyes, or maybe it was just that the scrapblog editor's camera doesn't deal with redeye very well. (New camera coming in 2008, scrapblog readers!) Cousin Sarah and Aunt Lavone Broberg had the best sweaters. Sarah, carefully guarding her previous gifts of precious dollar bills, was about to open a mysterious package. Whatever can it be? "It better be good, buddy," Sarah said ... ... whoa! It was good! More dollar bills! And a 12-pack of Diet Mountain Dew! What a great Christmas! "You'd better believe it, buddy!" cousin Sarah said. Say, what is Sarah going to do with all those dollar bills? "None of your business, buddy!" Cousins Pam and Dan reminisced about their childhoods. Remember that one time when cousin Dan ate all that mint chocolate chip ice cream and -- well, you know that story, cousins. Cousin M. had the right hat. (M.'s at his best when he's NOT attacking someone. We know you're a champion wrestler, M.! But in the gym, in the gym, dude!) Marty is the family's best outdoorsman, winter camper and outdoor shelter builder. The Broberg boys built a very impressive snow castle in the cul-de-sac. Cousin N. Broberg talked the scrapblog editor into climbing to the top of it and standing there a while. Miraculously, this did not cause the snow fort to cave in. Perhaps cousin N. should design the new Interstate 35W bridge??

And I lived to tell this tale

The scrapblog editor's hands have been so sore this week that she can't grip anything, though she finally can type again. Here is why. Day 1: Wichita to Topeka Early on Saturday, Dec. 22, I said goodbye to Chats and Michael in Andover, Kan., and hopped into my little red Mazda 3 to head back to Minnesota. It was the first full day of winter, but their lawn was green. An icy rain was beginning to fall, and 2 to 3 inches of snow were forecast, so I noted that it might take me longer than Mapquest's predicted nine hours to get home (it had taken me exactly nine hours to drive there a few days before). Three hours later, I had only one thought: I would be lucky to get through the day alive. The rain had turned to driving sleet that had coated Interstate 70 and every car in ice. I was creeping along at about 5 miles per hour, occasionally encountering a similarly petrified fellow motorist, some of whom were peering through blurry windows from the ditches. Ice caked the windshield and wipers. Finally I pulled over onto the shoulder, thinking, There is no way I can drive any farther. I'll just sit here until it eases. I pulled a blanket from the back seat into the front and took stock of my survival kit: lots of warm clothes, a nearly full tank of gas, five CDs of excellent rock 'n' roll, three cans of Tab and several exotic chocolates for Noah's stocking. Not bad! But I was scared. At any moment a snowblind driver might plow into me. And as the car windows became opaque with snow and ice, claustrophobic panic set in. Every once in a while I'd jump out, shoving the door open against ice and screeching wind, to uncover a window. I began to realize, I can't do this. I have to move. I began to drive again, creeping along, pulling over often to deice the wipers. A few other drivers were doing the same, though most had given up and parked on the shoulder, apparently better equipped psychologically than I was to handle being inside an entombed car. This went on for almost two hours. Finally I got to an exit that didn't say "No services," not that you could even read the ice-coated sign. I crept off the exit. At the end of the exit the thing I'd been fearing for all those miles happened -- my car fishtailed in a circle and smashed rear-first into a guardrail. Thankfully, I didn't hit any other cars. I maneuvered around and turned right, heading toward a hotel sign I could barely see through the sleet. I got the last hotel room available in western Topeka, I heard later. Everyone else after me ended up in church basements. I-70 and other nearby highways were closed. Turns out the people I had coffee with in the lobby of the Sleep Inn, all of us pouring out our stories of near-death and battered cars, were lucky, because other travelers were killed or injured or lost their vehicles in a huge pileup on I-70 that I had just missed. Indeed, as I had been fishtailing at that exit, rescue vehicles were screaming (but creeping) past me in the other lane toward that accident. In the hotel lobby, I gave Noah's chocolates to crying kids in summer clothes (?!) who were going to have to sleep on a cot somewhere (I did not, however, offer them my hotel room; so much for altruism) and climbed exhausted into bed about 8 p.m. Day 2: Topeka to Albert Lea At 4 a.m. Sunday, I arose from a nervous sleep and headed out in the frigid dark, hoping to get to Minnesota in time for at least some of my 11 a.m.-8 p.m. work shift at the Star Tribune. The snow and sleet had stopped and the freeway was open again. Roads were covered with a thick, bumpy snowpack, but plows and salters were out. Home free, I thought, popping in a Christmas music CD and driving very carefully. Four hours later, I wasn't even near Des Moines. Traffic was inching along, and occasionally some vehicle shooting past me at a bold 40 miles per hour would go spinning off the often black-iced freeway into the ditch. But hey, I was being careful and making progress. Maybe I could get back in time to work a night shift?? Then it got REALLY bad. North of Des Moines, it wasn't snowing. But up ahead, there appeared to be a big cloud over the road. What the heck was that, if it wasn't snowing? It was whiteout. Northwest winds had begun screeching across the countryside, carrying ground snow in such as way that you could not see ANYTHING. Traffic came to a complete halt. I sat there on the freeway, able to make out flashing hazard lights in the ditches on both sides of the freeway and all over the freeway, too: a pileup. Two pileups! Three! Behind me, cars slowed, their drivers blind, and nearly slammed into me, sometimes skidding off into the ditches to avoid the cars in front of them. I'm gonna die, I thought. Again. We sat there the longest time. A few people got out of their cars, and rescue vehicles, creeping along, finally arrived. A cop directed us through and around the accidents. But you still couldn't see more than 20 feet in front of your car. So I pulled over on the shoulder and sat there, putting the blanket over my shoulders. To my right, barely visible through the whiteout, was a field in which a herd of strange-looking cows were huddled. After a few minutes of studying them, I realized they weren't cows -- they were elk. Reindeer! Any other day, this would have been a charming discovery, but at this moment, it just added to the feeling of otherworldliness. Still, I wasn't as panicky as I had been in Kansas, because the snow wasn't covering the car, just blowing past it. And it was snow, not ice. But whiteout made is impossible to drive. After about a half hour, a semi with its hazard lights on, moving very slowly, went by on my left with two cars behind it, carefully spaced, with their hazard lights on too. The little caravan slowed, and I realized it was waiting for me to join it. I pulled out behind it, putting my hazards on. Slowly, slowly, we crept along, picking up a few more drivers here and there. That semi led us through the whiteout, going slowly enough that it had time to stop when it came up on accidents (there were many), then leading us past them. To my amazement, cars would occasionally sail past us in the left lane, apparently driving blind, and in almost every case we later came upon them in the ditch. Here's the worst part. Both in Kansas and Iowa, I saw cars in the ditch with people stranded, but I did not stop to check on them or offer them a ride. I simply couldn't figure out how to stop without creating more havoc. I felt like I was abandoning those people whose scared faces stared out of their car windows, and I was. I should have stopped -- but I didn't, because I was so scared. (Yikes, what would I do had it been wartime? It's made for some pondering.) The Iowa whiteout eased from time to time, but our semi-led convoy pretty much stuck together. In southern Minnesota, the whiteout went total, and we crept like inchworms up the Albert Lea exit. That Albert Lea sign looked like heaven to me, I tell ya. I got the last hotel room in Albert Lea, too. Everyone after me had to stay in the National Guard Armory. Given that that last hotel room was foul with smoke residue, I wish I had, too. I did go down and talk to people (again, we all were hell-bent to share our freeway horror stories) and hear impromptu Christmas music played by stranded musicians. (Meanwhile, back at the Strib, the noble Kathleen Clonts was called in to cover my shift. Bless her very much! I will work for her this Friday.) Day 3: Home at last! On Monday, Christmas Eve morning, I got up early. The sun was out and the sky was clear. I drove the final leg to Minneapolis with no problem, though everywhere along the freeway were abandoned, tipped, crumpled vehicles from accidents the night before (at least one of which was fatal, I learned later). I don't think I'll ever again drive cross-country when the forecast contains any sleet or snow. It turned out I had passed right through the middle of two unforecast blizzards. Those two days were full of mortality moments, those times when you realize that the border between life and death isn't all that secure. As a result, Christmas seemed especially sweet this year. My dented car seems a small price to pay for getting home unhurt. Frankly, I feel lucky to have lived to tell of this; it was that bad. I, and others, owe a lot to that calm, careful semi driver, whoever he was. Other than the dent in my car, there's only one physical sign of the ordeal: my very sore hands. They're achy and weak because I was gripping the car wheel for so long over those two harrowing days. I didn't even realize I was doing it till I got home.

Kansas cousins

The scrapblog editor recently returned from a Christmas visit to Chats and Michael in Wichita, Kan. A very pleasant visit except for the return trip (see post above this one). Some photos: Michael has recovered from a recent racing-heart episode and is as handsome and kind as ever. The Rev. Dr. Barrister Cousin Chatsie is senior pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Wichita, one of the few denominational churches anywhere that is growing. It's a very cool place. Chats posed by a bison skin at the American Indian Center in Wichita. A glass sculpture by one of Pam's favorite artists, Dale Chilupy, at the Wichita Museum of Art. Pam's Christmas gift of a virtual aquarium tickled the funny-bones of Michael and Chats. Hey, it's the closest they'll get to their beloved ocean in Wichita, Kan.! In this photo, Chats might have been telling Michael one of her wry blonde jokes. Here is one: A blonde got a fishing rod for Christmas and decided to go ice fishing. She cut a large hole in the nearest ice and dipped the rod in. Suddenly she heard a voice saying, "There are no fish in there." She moved to another spot and cut another hole, but the same voice spoke again, saying there were no fish. She moved yet again, and the voice repeated its message. She looked up and saw an irritated man staring at her. "How do you know there are no fish in here?" the blonde asked. The man said, "Because this is a hockey rink." Chats and Michael lost their dear dog Trixie this year, but take comfort in their other dog, the very sweet Knoxie. Pam felt right at home in Chats and Michael's house, which features at least seven PRICELESS BLUE PLATES.