Kate Wieczorek |
Bob Kohlbecker |
Tom Denbow |
Tom Denbow |
Dr. Jackson will forever have a place in my heart. I had first met him as the faculty advisor to the first environmental teach-in at BGSU in 1070. After the events of both the Teach-in (we had probably the longest teach-in in the nation which included both Ralph Nader and Paul Erhlich) and Kent State, he invited me to become an undergraduate research assistance. At that point, my life was changed forever. Bill McCartney, Dave Rintama, Bob Bastian, Denny, and a host of other folks became my family for the next 2 and a half years. Yet what I learned secured my interest in the sciences, particularly the environmental sciences that has lasted me a life time. I have not seen Dr. Jackson in many years and for that I am sorry. Yet the confidence and the impact of those years have been my foundation all these years. May his memory live on. See you in Chicago.
Tom Denbow
216-577-4144
Anne Lakofsky Moser |
My childhood best friend, Beth, was Bill's daughter. Two memories stand out fondly -- the first, during high school, when there were virtually NO calculators, I remember a group of us crowding around the Jackson's kitchen table using Beth's dad's HP calculator that had logarithms and trig functions. What a miracle! Bill would smile as he passed through that kitchen. The second memory: I grew up in a house very close to the Jackson's which had a cathdral ceiling in the living room. One day, we had a bat as an unwanted visitor. My dad called Bill, who promptly came over with a butterfly net and eventually caught the bat. He put the bat in a glass jar and we all observed it for quite some time before he let it loose.
Beth- I'd love to hear from you again. -- Anne