Camp Zoe Memories
1999 Letters
11/04/99Dear Fowler,
My name is Joni (Peters) Light. Yes, I am Jack and Lois' daughter. I just went through the web sight and was thrilled to see what you have done! The memories came flooding back and I felt a huge lump in my throat. I have so many cherished memories from that time in my life, as do all of the members of my family. I remember the rainy night "kissing festival" under the new shelter, the overnight float trips, and Ozark Day. Steve, Vicki, and I were so lucky to have grown up at the camp. We got to spend our entire summers at Camp Zoe. We made life-long friendships there. Steve still keeps in close contact with several former campers.
I went to college at Mizzou, where I obtained a B.S. in accounting. After trying my hand at several different careers, I have found my "calling" with the Missouri Department of Corrections. No, I am not an inmate (some of you who knew me in my wilder days may have thought that!). I am a Corrections Officer (p/c term for a prison guard) at a men's correctional center outside of Jefferson City. It's almost like being a counselor at Zoe!! I am married to a wonderful man from Shannon County and we have 2 great children: Brad (10) and Jamie (3). We still go to Round Spring at least once a month to visit Mom and Dad. I have told my son a great deal about growing up at the camp. I wish with all my heart that Zoe was still operating so I could send him there! Steve is living with us now as a live-in nanny (kind of like Uncle Charlie from "My Three Sons")! We got a call tonight from Dave White and that's what made us look up the web site.
If you really want pictures and yearbooks, I know Mom (Lois) has probably got lots of Zoe memorabilia stored in the basement. She never throws anything away!! By the way, the shelters were not burned down by vandals! Dennis Howard (Fatman) and Steve were burning leaves one day and the fire got away from them and burned down the Old Shelter. They both got a Number Nine for that incident! The New Shelter beams were rotting from age and weather and had become a major safety hazard. After the Old Shelter burned, Dad (Jack) decided to pull the New Shelter down before it fell down. Just a little info to set the record straight.
Thanks again for all the hard work and love you have put into the site. If you are serious about a reunion, let me know. I would love to help bring the old memories back to life!
Great to hear from you, Joni! It means a lot to me to have the stamp of approval from someone in the Peters family. For those of you who didn't know Jack, number nine was his boot size.
Fowler
11/03/99
Dear Fowler
Hi there! This is Samantha and Kristin Gittelman checking in! We are both living in Chicago. We both cherish our memories from camp Zoe. Some of the best time of our lives happened there.
Kristin is an artist. Samantha is a mom of two year old Riley and hubby Jim Schroeder. Sam's best memory from camp? -blank-
Kristin's best memory? The dances! Early morning rides- doing what you wanted without getting caught! Caving.
Great to hear from you both! Sam and Kristin attended camp in the late 70s. Later, I caught up with Kristin during her K.U. days in the late 80s.
Fowler
10/16/99
Hi Fowler,
Found the Camp Zoe web site with the help of one of my former campers, Gavin Woolley. My name is Tom Waltz and I was a counselor at Camp Zoe for six summers, 1959 - 1964. Margaret McMahan helped me obtain a teaching position in the Kirkwood School District and I have spent my entire career in Kirkwood. Currently I am the principal of North Glendale Elementary School. I have fond memories of Zoe. I met my wife, Betsy Hamsher, at camp as we were both counselors in my middle two summers. For the majority of my summers I ran the rifle range but eventually switched to canoeing.
Other counselors during my time (that I can remember) were Betty Wagner, Joe English, John McCall, Glenn Petersen, and Tim Taft. Winkie, who during my time ran the Lodge, was a distant relative of mine. How can I ever forget Painter, the local resident who rode horses and whom the kids loved so well. The McMahans took good care of him and were at his side when he died of cancer. I too remember the float trips, talent shows, dancing on the tennis court, capture the flag games, and story telling at night. In my time we always did "tick check" on the younger boys after counselor snack - what a riot!! At any rate, I can go on and on, but as you can tell the experience of it all bring back many fond memories. Your web site is great and I hope to check in from time to time.
I live in Kirkwood and can be reached at twaltz532@aol.com.
Sincerely - Tom Waltz (known simply as Tom in my days)
I remember the tick checks. It wasn't much of a riot. Either were the leach checks, but both were necessary. It seems many counselors worked in the Kirkwood school district during the off season. I understand both the McMahans as well as Sam were teachers there.
8/4/99
Hi. I'm Cynthia Howlett, and I went to Zoe, I think, from about 75 to 81.
I'm a lawyer, and I practice in St. Louis, and I am good friends with another Camp Zoe'r named Ramona Martin. I also recently became reacquainted with a rather famous camper Tino Trova. We met again at a local coffee shop, and now see each other regularly as we live in the same neighborhood and frequent the same coffee shop and local "health food store". He told me about the website and also said he hasn't visited it. FYI he's doing great, becoming a very good reacquaintance and friend and he's a poet.
Ramona and I discovered we had both gone to Zoe, along with my little brother then nicknamed "pee wee", and Ramona dug up some old year books.
Great idea Fowler.
Cynthia
Tino has yet to get connected to the information superhighway. It's good to know he's still alive and well and waxing poetic in the St. Louis area.
Fowler
8/4/99
Dear Fowler: Thanks for both a great site and for bringing back great memories of a long time ago. My sister (Cathy) and brothers (George and Tim) and I all went to Camp Zoe in the early 60's. After having read the letters from campers who attended much later than us there is a thread that ties us all to the charm and magic of this little piece of the Ozarks as indelibly marked in our youth as a brand new t-shirt ready for packing in a foot-locker. Any time I get in a canoe I fondly remember the backward J-stroke honed on Sinking Creek.
Best regards to any and all,
Gavin Woolley
circa 62,63, 64
p.s. I am also saddened at the passing of Chris St.Cyr but also wondered how her name could be mentioned without that of Candy Burger.
Cindy and Candy were camp babes from the 60s era.
5/29/99
Dear Fowler: What a serendipitous moment finding your page! I attended Zoe fourth session 1975-77, and returned as a C.A. in 1980, third and fourth session. The memories flooded my mind as I traveled back to Zoe on your site. I realized how lucky I was to have had people like Larry Eberle, Scott Patterson, Tino Trova, Kevin Dodge,and Boyer Barner for teachers. Friends like: Staff and John Swearingen, Kim and Krista Reay, Craig Shoemaker, Pee wee (Greg Howlett), Rabbit (can't remember his real name),Trip Jackson, Hippie, Cynthia Howlett, Willie Shoemaker and many others whose names escape me. I have several sets of pictures from those years and a journal of my days as both a camper and C.A..Included in one of those journals is an account of a overnight canoe trip in which a coed skinny dipping outing was a highlight.(I think it was Scott Patterson's idea) Perhaps a reunion weekend could be arranged through your site at the old place. I'd love to attend and help coordinate as needed. How sad to see the decay that has crept over the place. It would be kinda cool if someone (some ex-Zoegian) could buy the place to preserve it and protect it from whomever the scoundrels were who torched the place. Let me know if you would like copies of my pictures from those days. Thanks again for your time in preparing this site! Feel free to utilize/share any of this letter, although I feel few (if any) will remember me. They might remember my niece Edi or my nephew K.C. but I can't remember the years they attended. Take care.
Benn Brechnitz
I can't wait to hear the story about the co-ed skinny dipping. Weren't the '70s great?
Fowler
5/4/99
Thanks for doing the Camp Zoe site. I was a camper from '80 to '82, '84, '85, and a CA in '86. It looks like I made the page about 5 months before I found it. As I recall, I had just come from a wedding rehearsal or something and Boyer [Barner] made fun of my tie as I ordered a drink. I looked up and called him by name and it scared the hell out of him. I guess when you're 6'8" when you're 17 you're not going to change much.
Bryan is actually 6'3".
I went to camp in 1980 not knowing anyone but one guy I came with. Apparently his experience wasn't the same as mine because one year was all for Richard. Camp Zoe was had an incredible impact on my life. I attribute much of my love for the outdoors and my love to travel and see new things and meet new people to Zoe. Zoe was my window to the world outside of my small Tennessee town. I got to hang out with kids from the city and hear new music and learn new slang and hear new stories. The summer of '86 was sad indeed. I didn't even realize it would be the last summer until I was already there to work. After being best camper in '85 and being hired as a CA '86 I thought I would be a counselor there until I was out of college. I haven't talked to anyone from Zoe since Boyer or anyone before that since I don't know when.
I hope you keep the site going and I hope the registry grows and grows. If anyone comes out this way be sure to give me a call. I wonder how those old horse trails would be on my bike?
Thanks again,
Bryan Bloebaum
Thanks for writing. At 6'8" I have to wonder how much bug juice a guy like you might drink on a hot summer day?
Fowler
Bless you for your resurrection of a fine place. I was a counselor the day we landed on the moon. My name is Kent Jones and I actually saw the "Missouri Reaper" on the shores of Sinkin' Creek!. I took kids to church on Sunday in the Baltz's wagon, and watched many a starry-eyed teen fall in love on the tennis court. Fell in love with a camper or two....met Amy Butler's brother here in Wisconsin and I am saddened by the loss of Chris St. Cyr, the most lovely lady ever to grace the "Z". My ICQ is 2258667. My name is Kent Jones..and ..yes I knew Painter Conway. Get in touch!
It's great to hear from someone who was involved with Zoe in the 1960s. I hope you'll write again and enlighten everyone with regard to the legends and people from your time.
Fowler
4/25/99
Preparations for Zoe's Summer continue... This weekend we decided to see if we could find any graffiti on the cabins from days gone by... this is what we found in just one cabin, and this is the tip of the iceberg so to speak... This cabin is [currently] named Arky's. It's the one on the end right by the tennis courts on the top row... what names did The cabins have when you were there? I wrote these down by flashlight so some of the spellings may be wrong... do you recognize any? I also read some of the letters on your site... One talked of a Zoe Alumni weekend. Zoe is available for private rentals but Because the summer season is short so finding a weekend that hasn't any reservations can be difficult. If they're serious they need to contact Karen Huntington ASAP, I know we'd really enjoy meeting any and all who would turn up. So let everyone know Zoe opens Memorial Day weekend thru Labor Day weekend... and it's oh so short...
Amy Butier - 1971
Niki Cunningham - 1979
Susan Tweedie 1972 (Jeff City)
Leaann Ricket - 1972
Terri Rickman - 1969
Mary Meyer - 1969
Tracey Busman (Counselor) - 1981
Willow Wyner - 1979 1st and 2nd session
MariaAnne Weintrub - 1982 1st session
Weese Coburn - 1969
Alexis Piper - 1969
Mindy Boxer - 1969
Julie Tombaugh - 1980? 3rd and 4th session
I'll look for more next time... hopefully with some interesting comments... if there are some names you'd like us to look for let me know.
regards Martin
For those of you that don't know, Martin Davies is a friend of the current owners of Camp Zoe. That graffiti is from Cabin I. For more information about the buildings on camp see the Camp Zoe Tour. For more information about visiting Camp Zoe today see the Postscript page . To see recent photos Martin took of Camp Zoe visit the Photo Gallery.
Fowler
4/20/99
Zoe-Where do I start? Perhaps I melted too many brain cells during college trying to drink my weight in beer but I can't for the life of me come close to your Hawking-esque ability to conjure up twenty-year-old memories with such precision and detail. Reading the letters of others and digging up old photographs have helped jog a few, so here goes. I thought for sure that I would be the only one to recall the brand name "Nifda" as the official provider of institutional-sized food products to Camp Zoe. I can't remember the names of my counselors but I can remember Nifda...go figure. Someone mentioned "Stairway to Heaven" earlier. That epic-length bastard of a song was, I suppose, the perfect way to cap off an evening of fun and romance for a bunch of under-16 year olds in the late seventies. In hindsight I can't help but laugh myself stupid thinking about the total state of ecstasy I was in dancing with this girl named Maria. Naturally, being that it was Missouri in August we were both sweating like a couple of Burmese textile workers while at the same time each losing about a pint of blood per-hour from those heinous Ozark devil mosquitoes. However, somehow it didn't matter. We were fourteen, it was 1978 and we were slow dancing to a Jimmy Page guitar solo blasting through the speakers of a crappy portable stereo. All was right in the world. I can still smell the Deep Woods Off. Didn't mean to go all Garrison Kiellor on you but once I got to thinking it all come flooding back.
Did I mention that in '78 a small group of us came within inches of pouring Nair into Kevin Dodge's shampoo bottle? I don't know what stopped us. I doubt it was common sense. I also recall in '79 how cool we thought the young [Steve] Peters was because he let us shoot BB guns at each other in BB gun class. (they never broke the skin but did leave a mild welt). I guess that whole liability issue is starting to make sense after all.
I'll write back soon and tell you the story of the Big Foot encounter during our overnight in '79. No really, it happened. Honest.
-Andy Smith
3rd session '77-'79
While we're on the subject of biting insects, who could forget those giant horse flies? I'll wager your BB gun was no match for those either.
Fowler
4/9/99
Great site. Like so many others, Camp Zoe played a pivotal role in my life. I was a camper and counselor over a stretch of eight summers, from 1979 to camp's demise in 1986. The memories of Camp Zoe are indelibly forged in my mind and I have been fortunate to have gained many close, enduring friendships from those days. The horses, Sinkin' Creek, Nifda and the EJ's have not been filed away for good. And every time I hear that damn "Stairway to Heaven" I can't help think back on the tennis courts and looking for a last dance partner.
For the last several years, I have been lucky enough to re-create some of those "overnights" with many Camp Zoe alumni (Dale and Darren Haverstick, Dave White) on the banks of the Current. Without fail, stories from Zoe are told and seem to grow a little more exaggerated every year. I guess that's the way it should be.
Currently I am toiling away in the advertising business at an agency in St. Louis. Life is good.
Thanks for building such a terrific homage to my adolescence.
Sincerely,
Pete Nennert
Thanks for writing. Your comments bring back some mess hall moments. Nifda...come smell the excitement! You couldn't swing a stale pizza square around the dining hall without hitting a container with the nifda logo. As for the last dance, I still look for a dance partner when "Stairway to Heaven" comes on the radio. Was she buying that stairway, or just borrowing it? I'm still not sure.
Fowler
3/27/99
Wow what a great Site! I'm very new to all of this internet stuff. I've heard about your site from many of my old camp buds, with whom I'm still in contact. You have spent an enormous amount of time and energy on it and for that I thank you.
I don't know if you remember me or not, our paths only crossed one session of camp in 1979, I think. I was Kim Hohmann back then, now Kim Good. Like Jamie Searles, I too was wooed away, temporarily, thinking I could make more money doing something else. In 1985 Lois called a few days before counselor's weekend [and] told me that they still needed an Arts and Crafts Counselor. I had been counting baseball cards in an un-airconditioned warehouse with another former Zoe-ite, Ashley Graham, and a couple of ex-cons for two weeks since I had returned home from school. I had all ready started to regret my decision not to return to Camp, so I jumped at the chance. You would think I learned my lesson that summer, but I hadn't. In 1986 I had been working at Dillard's that year and had a super cheap apartment in Columbia for the summer. I went down to visit Lei, who was putting in some early days of labor in the barn, on a day off from Dillard's. I returned home the next day, broke my lease and packed up to work the last official summer of Camp Zoe.
Since then, I graduated from Mizzou in 1988, and moved back to St. Louis. I opened The Artery in November 1993. We do custom picture framing and sell prints and a very limited amount of original art. I've never worked this hard in my life, but I still love it.
I married my sweetie, Rob Good, in 1995. He is a history teacher at my former high school, Ladue. NO - he was not a teacher when I was there! We bought a very old house in Dogtown (a part of St. Louis just south of Forest Park). It's been quite an ongoing project. It is much easier to tear apart than it is to put back together again, but we will get there eventually. It has been two summers since I have been back to Zoe. It was a bit depressing to see it in the state it was in then. We are going to try to get down there this summer. Wouldn't it be cool to rent out the camp for a weekend and get as many people as possible down there? Maybe a Year 2000 Reunion. What do you think?
I have so many close friends from Camp Zoe that I am in touch with on a regular basis, but I can't wait to contact some of those that I have lost touch with over the years! Thanks again for this opportunity!
Fondly,
Kim Hohmann Good
So you chose Arts and Crafts over counting baseball cards with ex-cons? Good move! Kim and I met on New Year's eve 1987 at a party in her Columbia, Missouri apartment. Other Zoe alumni were there including Lei Moncrieff, Stu Hanna, and Jennifer Hanna. It was a lot of fun. We went to Denny's about 2 am and Stu's jeep ran out of gas on the way home. If it wasn't for the nourishment that grand slam breakfast provided, I couldn't have walked to the gas station in the bitter winter cold! Keep in touch.
Fowler
3/20/99
O.K., so it took me entirely too long to find the web page and to write to you. I was looking through the different sections tonight and reading all the different things that people remember about camp. I must admit that it brought tears to my eyes remembering all of those moments from so many years ago. How can I ever forget my first kiss behind the target in the archery field? Time has clearly marched on. As I told you on the phone, I am now living in Deerfield Beach, FL - near Boca Raton. I'm the mother of two kids. My son, Max (6 yrs) and my daughter Claris (4.5 yrs.)
In reading through the letters, someone was asking about the 77'yearbook. I have this yearbook as well as all the rest from all the years I attended camp. I would love to share them with you. I also want to thank you for finding the words to Titanic. I've been singing it to my children since they were born, but could never remember the whole thing. When I told my son that I now have all of the words, he asked where I got them from which led to me sharing some of my camp memories with him. Hard to imagine that in two years he will be the age I was the first year that I went to camp.
I have to go get the kids in bed now. I miss you and all of the people we spent so much time with over the years. Please pass my address and phone number on to any of our old friends. I would love to talk with them. 108 NE 9th Ave., Deerfield Beach, FL 33441 (954)428-2711.
In closing I feel I must remind you of one line that seems to have been forgotten from Titanic - Fishes and turtles, old ladies lost their girdles!!
Love, Willow
Those archery targets did make great impromptu lean-tos. In the evening after sunset, you could cuddle under the hay and no grown-ups ever suspected you were there in defiance of the "no fraternization" rule.
Fowler
3/20/99
I never met you at Zoe, I didn't start until 1981, and finished in 85, but I was just sitting here in Lyon, France, having a pro-Missouri moment after buying Sheryl Crow's new CD, and I wondered about her biography, then if maybe (for some odd reason) she went to Zoe, and then I looked up, for a joke, "Camp Zoe" with Snap online, and about a hundred entries popped up for your site.
As for photo contributions, I think I have one yearbook and a few photos, but where they are geographically speaking I really don't know. Probably Chicago or St. Louis. In any case, we ought to try to find Jane Otto, as she was the 'official' photographer most of those later years. But speaking of geographical uncertainties, its great that you made this site and have listed it with search engines. God knows where any of us are anymore (mostly no longer in Missouri), but you can think, given where we came from, that we have access to the net....
Thanks for a job well-started,
Kirstin Rogers
Lyon - FRANCE
An interesting description about how you found the site. Lyon, France is a long way from Round Spring. It's nice that all of us can remain connected no matter the distance.
Fowler
3/6/99
Great job on the web site! I have really enjoyed it. I hope that we are able to get more contributions from earlier generations of Zoe-ites to write in to tell the old ghost stories, etc. I'll encourage my parents to send something. And Jack and Lois have so much to contribute, especially with Lois's steel- trap memory!
Camp Zoe was so much a part of my life, that it's hard to separate out as any kind of subset or set of stories. I remember in the summer of 1982 I was working for the street department for the city of Des Peres where I lived, and had recently broken up with my girlfriend after our Freshman year in college. I went to visit Jack Peters as he came to pick up a busload of campers at a local mall one Sunday. It was a hot, humid day, and Jack and I were standing there on the roasting parking lot. Jack was sporting a full beard, and we were talking about good times at Camp Zoe...Things were stagnant for me in St. Louis, and it was still early in the summer. Jack slapped me on the back, stared at me with a broad grin, and said "James, go get your stuff." So I did. I rode down with him on the bus, listening to Willie Nelson on the tape player, chatting and joking with Jack. It turned out to be one of the best summers ever.
I hope we get lots of email addresses posted, because there are so many friends with whom I have lost touch. Also, I have yearbooks from '74-'76 and '78-84, but I need '77 and any earlier. I would be glad to try to get good reproductions of some of mine. Does anyone have '77 that they can get reproduced for me? I'll look into how to get a good reproduction (I don't think a regular photocopy would do it).
And by the way, I still don't like "Saturday Night Fever!"
Jim (Jamie) Searles
Jim's parents met at Camp Zoe, presumably in the late '50s. I'd love to hear about camp from their prospective; what traditions endured, and what things changed from the 50s to the 70s. Thanks for the letter!
Fowler
2/19/99
My name is Darren Haverstick and I was a counselor at Camp Zoe during the summer of 1982. I grew up near the camp so I was well acquainted with many of the staff members before I worked there. I played basketball with them on Wednesday nights at Shannondale Community church and they would come down to my farm to bale and haul hay. I never attended Camp Zoe as a camper. Since I grew up down that way, I got to do all the stuff you campers did, only for free. I found out about your web site from my brother, who worked at the camp for several years. He, in turn, found out about it from another former camp employee. Not to get all misty or anything, but I would have to say that the one summer I worked at Camp Zoe had as big an impact on my life as anything I've ever done. Shannon County, Missouri is not exactly the cultural center of the universe. While I more worldly than most of the kids I grew up with, I was still a backward-assed country bumpkin. Camp Zoe changed all that. I made a lot of friends who were from the affluent neighborhoods in St. Louis; an environment I had never seen or experienced. I went to their homes and their gatherings, met their friends, and were accepted. Seeing that I was able to adapt to a situation where I had no prior experience gave me a lot of confidence which I used to accomplish a lot of things in my life. I still keep in touch with many of the people I met during my brief stint as a counselor. While we've all grown up and went our separate ways, we still try to get together when we can just to enjoy each other's company. Thanks for giving all us alumni a way to stay in touch.
Darren Haverstick
Well said if I do say so, Darren. And I'm only too happy to be the caretaker of this project. I also have developed a fondness for St. Louis as a result of my camp experience. In the summers following my camp tenure, I often drove to St. Louis to check on friends. It's a great place!
Fowler
2/12/99
Neat site! I remember summer camp but it was with the boy scouts. In other words, we didn't have access to girls! We learned to make some mean monkey bridges though.
Greg Knight
Patio Culture
Check the Patio Culture web site for great 60s nostalgia:
http://home.texoma.net/~kgreg/links.html
1/29/99
Fowler, it's Dan Searles. I was excited to see the Zoe web site and think it's a great idea. I have so many great memories and always get a little bummed out to think that it no longer exists in the state I remember...As far as the brothers [go]: Chris is the special events coordinator for Breckenridge Resorts in Colorado. Jim is finishing his Ph.D. in biochem engineering in Boulder, and my oldest, Dave, is a stock broker in St. Louis. I will let them know of the site. Take care, I look forward to checking in on the site every now and again.
Dan Searles
Good to hear from one of the Searles clan. I recall it was your brother Jim who called me out of tent cabin in 1979 to explain why I was playing the "Saturday Night Fever" soundtrack during rest hour. To his credit, he didn't ever catch "disco fever".
Fowler
1/7/99
Wow you are incredible. You have really brought Camp Zoe back to life in your web site! I will always have a special place in my heart for the time we all spent at Zoe and the special people that were there. I am Lynn Woodruff (now Colburn) and was a camper, CIT and counselor at Zoe. I remember the last night in the new shelter that you talked about because even though I was a CIT, I was probably as innocent as most of the kids that were a few years younger than me. [I] came from St. Louis, MO (Kirkwood, MO) I remember one year Jack told me, "Lynn, the boys in tent cabin have their own counselor" - referring to you and Stuart, because he disapproved of me spending so much time with you both...even though you were both talking about the girls you liked and asking for advise about them.
I remember when all the girl counselors and kitchen girls pretended to be related. Lori Dodge, Lei Moncrieff, Heather Moncrieff and I were all "cousins" later "scuzs" and we had a special sign for it. One of the kitchen girls and I were supposed to look like sisters so we told everybody we were. It was silly and a lot of fun and made me feel part of a group of sisters (I had all brothers at home).I also remember Don Magenot, "Bandit" who was like my "big brother" at camp. He was an ex-biker and was very gentle and sweet even though he looked rugged. He invited me to his wedding a few years after camp and I couldn't make it and I lost touch. Ever heard from him? I understand you and your wife are expecting a baby. Congrats!! You'll love them. I just hope my two kids can have as many wonderful memories as I have. Thanks again for your wonderful web page!
Sincerely,
Lynn Woodruff Colburn
Lynn, thanks for writing! It's hard to believe it's been over 20 years now since the memorable summer of '78. One of the best summers I ever had. If only I'd paid more attention while it was happening. Perhaps with these pages I can preserve what I do remember. One thing about you I'll never forget...your great smile!
Fowler
1/7/99
To all Camp Zoe alumni,
Over Christmas, I had the pleasure of spending some time with Kevin Dodge while he was in St.Louis to visit [sister] Lori. For as long as I've known the guy, his hair style has not changed. I am proposing a "Help Kevin Dodge Get New Hair Style Fund." I have already committed five U.S. dollars to the fund. Come on guys, let's all chip in!
Boyer Barner
Send your pledges to: Shawn Cassidy Feathered Hair relief, Kevin Dodge, Poster Boy, C/O Boyer Barner, Nashville, TN