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Guided missile destroyer named after Korean War hero spotted off Gourock

Guided missile destroyer named after Korean War hero spotted off Gourock

Yahoo21-05-2025
A UNITED States Navy vessel named in honour of American war hero has been spotted in the Firth of Clyde.
USS Thomas Hudner's roles have involved anti-aircraft, anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare, as well as strike operations.
(Image: Roy Elliott) The Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer was launched in April 2017, having been built at Bath Iron Works in Maine.
Several members of the Greenock Telegraph Camera Club captured the vessel off Gourock earlier today.
OTHER NEWS:
She is named after US naval aviator Thomas Hudner, who received the Medal of Honor for his efforts to save the life of Jesse L Brown during the Korean War in 1950.
Both men were on patrol near the Chosin Reservoir in North Korea when Brown's aircraft was struck by ground fire.
Hudner, who was later promoted to captain in 1965, deliberately crashed his own plane on a snowy mountain in a bid to help him, but Brown succumbed to his injuries.
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Lake Forest College's longest-serving president, Eugene Hotchkiss, remembered by family, friends, colleagues
Lake Forest College's longest-serving president, Eugene Hotchkiss, remembered by family, friends, colleagues

Chicago Tribune

time6 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Lake Forest College's longest-serving president, Eugene Hotchkiss, remembered by family, friends, colleagues

Family, friends, and colleagues are reminiscing about the life and impact of Eugene Hotchkiss, Lake Forest College's longest-serving president, and his tireless efforts to improve the school as well as the greater community. Hotchkiss, who presided over Lake Forest College from 1970 through 1993, died June 26 in Lake Forest after a brief illness, according to his daughter, Ellen Rainey. He was 97. 'He was a real people person and was genuinely interested in the people he came into contact with, whether they were students, faculty, staff, or alumni,' recalled David Spadafora, who succeeded Hotchkiss as president. 'He wanted to get to know them, and he took their passion seriously.' Raised in Highland Park, Hotchkiss received an undergraduate degree from Dartmouth College and then served as a Navy intelligence officer during the Korean War. Afterward, he earned a Ph.D. from Cornell University. One day, he received a telegram from the Dartmouth dean proposing that he come to work at the Ivy League school as dean of fraternities. He accepted the position and continued into the world of higher education, becoming the first dean at California's Harvey Mudd College in California. He was later named a dean at Chatham College in Pittsburgh. In 1970, Hotchkiss received the offer to lead LFC. 'This was an opportunity obviously to be a president and to be closer to family because his parents were in Highland Park at the time and his brother was in Hinsdale,' Rainey said. 'It was a bit of a trip home.' However, he was taking over at a difficult time for LFC on multiple levels. Financially, the school faced a $1.5 million deficit, and the school's endowment had plunged to a record low, according to a 1993 Chicago Tribune article. Plus, as was the case at many college campuses throughout the country at the time, tensions were high among students due to the Vietnam War and the racial strife engulfing the nation. In a 2020 interview with the History Center of Lake Forest-Lake Bluff, he remembered those times and wanted to improve the situation, noting he had allowed opening up a pub on campus when the drinking age was still 18. Hotchkiss tried to reach out to students, often riding his three-speed Raleigh bicycle on the campus from his house, seen as a welcoming gesture. 'Students, faculty, and staff saw him on a daily basis,' noted LFC emeritus history professor Michael H. Ebner. 'He maintained a high degree of visibility while he was leading Lake Forest College. He was leading it to a different place. That is his great distinction. He had a vision of what a fine liberal arts college should be.' In addition, Hotchkiss and his wife, Suzanne, often welcomed students to the president's house. 'My father was one of the most extroverted people I know,' Rainey said. 'So he loved being and talking with people. I think every student at Lake Forest was invited twice to our house during their four years on campus.' She added that her parents would entertain the parents of freshmen at the start of the school year. As part of the effort to improve the school's finances, the Hotchkisses sought to create deeper ties within the overall Lake Forest community, again using their home, often with faculty members present. 'That was exciting, we met interesting people. We got to know the town,' Hotchkiss told the History Center in 2020. 'It was fun.' In another way of increasing LFC's presence, Hotchkiss forged an agreement with the Chicago Bears allowing the team to practice on campus starting in 1976, despite the objections of some neighbors. That led to the construction of the first Halas Hall at LFC. 'This was an opportunity to build the visibility of the college without in any way, shape or form compromising its academic goals,' Ebner said. (The Bears used that facility until 1997 when they moved their operation to the Conway Park office complex in western Lake Forest.) Away from LFC, Hotchkiss looked to contribute to the greater community. In 1980, he was a founding board member of CROYA (the Committee Representing Our Young Adults), and he remained active in the organization for the rest of his life. CROYA Manager Todd Nahigian described him as one of the main mentors on situations such as funding or strategic planning. 'He was always the one I could go to for an outstanding perspective on what was best for CROYA,' Nahigian said. 'He was an intelligent problem solver and an empathic listener. He always knew what you needed to get through a challenge and to set the course of CROYA in a positive direction.' In 1993, with LFC's endowment greater than $40 million, Hotchkiss retired as president, stating that his proudest accomplishment was reversing the school's financial troubles. 'I happen to love college administration,' he said. 'It served me well, and I think it served the college well,' he told the Tribune in 1993. Upon his retirement, LFC named what had been known as the North Gym after both Gene and Suzanne Hotchkiss. He later served as Senior Fellow of the Association of Governing Boards of Colleges and Universities and served as interim president of Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida, for approximately a year, according to his daughter. Locally, he was on the board of Bravo Waukegan, a not-for-profit agency that uses music to assist public school students, and was the co-founder of an organization that interviews people to tell their life stories. He was also a board member of the History Center. 'Gene Hotchkiss was an incredible supporter of so many organizations in Lake Forest, and he personally spearheaded building a close relationship between Lake Forest College and the local community during his presidency at the college,' Executive Director Carol Summerfield said. 'We were fortunate to have him as a dedicated board member at the History Center. He was instrumental in getting the museum up and running in our new location on Deerpath. He was always a vibrant, insightful voice and provided grounding to our efforts. We were pleased to honor him as our Local Legend in 2020. And in true Gene fashion, he was adept at shifting to a Zoom presentation, as COVID shut down our ability to host the event live.' Away from work, the Hotchkisses frequently went on canoeing trips in Illinois and Wisconsin, along with traveling all over the world. They also enjoyed going to the theatre and Ravinia before Suzanne died in 2013. Up until recently, Gene Hotchkiss was still going out with friends and loved reading and discussing current events. Survivors include his daughter and her husband, Terry, plus their daughter, Sarah. A memorial service is being planned for later this year.

Pope speaks about childhood and early mornings as an altar boy in unscripted visit with campers
Pope speaks about childhood and early mornings as an altar boy in unscripted visit with campers

San Francisco Chronicle​

time9 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Pope speaks about childhood and early mornings as an altar boy in unscripted visit with campers

ROME (AP) — Pope Leo XIV spoke publicly about his childhood in Chicago for the first time as pontiff Thursday, recalling that from the age of six he used to get up early to serve as an altar boy at the 6:30 a.m. Mass before going to school. Leo shared the memories during an unscripted visit with the children of Vatican employees who are attending the Holy See's summer camp. They were joined by other children, including Ukrainian young people, who are attending summer programs run by Italy's Caritas charity. The visit, which was not announced in advance, took place in the Vatican's main audience hall, which was decked out with huge inflatable bouncy castles for the estimated 600 kids. One of the young campers, Giulia, asked Leo if he used to go to Mass as a child. The former Robert Prevost, who grew up the youngest of three brothers in the south Chicago suburb of Dolton, said the family always went to Mass on Sundays. 'But starting from when I was around 6 years old, I was also an altar boy in the parish. And so before going to school -- it was a parochial school -- there was Mass at 6:30 a.m.,' he said, emphasizing how early it was. 'And Mom would wake us up and say 'We're going to Mass!' Because serving Mass was something we liked because starting from when I was young, they taught us that Jesus was always close to us.' Leo, who was born in 1955, recalled that at the time, Mass was celebrated in Latin. He said he had to learn it to serve Mass even before he made his First Communion, one of the key sacraments in the church. 'It wasn't so much the language that it was celebrated in but the experience of getting to know other kids who served the Mass together, the friendship, and this closeness with Jesus in the church,' he said. Leo's brother, John Prevost, has said his little brother knew from a very young age that he wanted to be a priest. Young Robert used to pretend to celebrate Mass using their mother's ironing board as an altar and Necco candies — a once-popular sweet — as Communion wafers. History's first American pope spoke in Italian, but he switched to English to address a group of Ukrainian children, some of whom held up Ukrainian flags and snagged Leo autographs. He spoke about the benefits of meeting people from different backgrounds, languages and lands. It was one of the first times Leo has spoken unscripted at length in public, responding to questions posed to him by the children. He has tended to stick to his prepared texts for his audiences so far in his young pontificate. ___

Pope speaks about childhood and early mornings as an altar boy in unscripted visit with campers
Pope speaks about childhood and early mornings as an altar boy in unscripted visit with campers

Hamilton Spectator

time10 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Pope speaks about childhood and early mornings as an altar boy in unscripted visit with campers

ROME (AP) — Pope Leo XIV spoke publicly about his childhood in Chicago for the first time as pontiff Thursday, recalling that from the age of six he used to get up early to serve as an altar boy at the 6:30 a.m. Mass before going to school. Leo shared the memories during an unscripted visit with the children of Vatican employees who are attending the Holy See's summer camp. They were joined by other children, including Ukrainian young people, who are attending summer programs run by Italy's Caritas charity. The visit, which was not announced in advance, took place in the Vatican's main audience hall, which was decked out with huge inflatable bouncy castles for the estimated 600 kids. One of the young campers, Giulia, asked Leo if he used to go to Mass as a child. The former Robert Prevost, who grew up the youngest of three brothers in the south Chicago suburb of Dolton , said the family always went to Mass on Sundays. 'But starting from when I was around 6 years old, I was also an altar boy in the parish. And so before going to school — it was a parochial school — there was Mass at 6:30 a.m.,' he said, emphasizing how early it was. 'And Mom would wake us up and say 'We're going to Mass!' Because serving Mass was something we liked because starting from when I was young, they taught us that Jesus was always close to us.' Leo, who was born in 1955, recalled that at the time, Mass was celebrated in Latin. He said he had to learn it to serve Mass even before he made his First Communion, one of the key sacraments in the church. 'It wasn't so much the language that it was celebrated in but the experience of getting to know other kids who served the Mass together, the friendship, and this closeness with Jesus in the church,' he said. Leo's brother, John Prevost, has said his little brother knew from a very young age that he wanted to be a priest. Young Robert used to pretend to celebrate Mass using their mother's ironing board as an altar and Necco candies — a once-popular sweet — as Communion wafers. History's first American pope spoke in Italian, but he switched to English to address a group of Ukrainian children, some of whom held up Ukrainian flags and snagged Leo autographs. He spoke about the benefits of meeting people from different backgrounds, languages and lands. It was one of the first times Leo has spoken unscripted at length in public, responding to questions posed to him by the children. He has tended to stick to his prepared texts for his audiences so far in his young pontificate. ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

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