Class Crest
Moderator: Bill Roberts
Class Crest
Why is the class crest different on the website than it is on our class rings?
- Bill Roberts
- Site Admin
- Posts: 283
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2004 9:42 pm
- SPAM Control: No
- Enter the number 5: 5
- Location: Tucson, AZ
- Contact:
- Bill Roberts
- Site Admin
- Posts: 283
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2004 9:42 pm
- SPAM Control: No
- Enter the number 5: 5
- Location: Tucson, AZ
- Contact:
- Bill Roberts
- Site Admin
- Posts: 283
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2004 9:42 pm
- SPAM Control: No
- Enter the number 5: 5
- Location: Tucson, AZ
- Contact:
My dear Webmaster,
I think you have taken all this too personally. I did not expect you to have an explanation as to why there is a difference in the two versions of our class crest.
Let us commend our fine classmates who so carefully worked out our class crest in the first place. Perhaps there is a reason, unknown to me, for having more than one version of a class crest. I suspect, though, that there was an early mistake in the selection of one from a list of more than one.
I am continually reminded of the suggestion that to be remembered in perpetuity one must make some noted distraction from the norm. Think of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Would it be known if it were not leaning?
In a grand sanctuary in Dallas there is a misspelled word in one of the stained glass windows. By vote of the entire congregation it was decided to leave it as is. Would the author of that mistake be as well remembered without his mistake in spelling?
I looked at our crest in several recent CHECKPOINTS Class News entries, and it shows the atom rings in the upper right hand corner with the Roman Numeral VII. Also, our baseball cap souvenir from our reunion has a crest identical to the class ring, each different from your website version.
We hope that our class ring and crest committee will accept our thanks for their fine work of some time ago and give us an explanation of the apparent differences in our several crests. Do not expect the AOG to respond. They will take what we give them, and we can thank them for their support either way. More later.
Respectfully submitted.
I think you have taken all this too personally. I did not expect you to have an explanation as to why there is a difference in the two versions of our class crest.
Let us commend our fine classmates who so carefully worked out our class crest in the first place. Perhaps there is a reason, unknown to me, for having more than one version of a class crest. I suspect, though, that there was an early mistake in the selection of one from a list of more than one.
I am continually reminded of the suggestion that to be remembered in perpetuity one must make some noted distraction from the norm. Think of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Would it be known if it were not leaning?
In a grand sanctuary in Dallas there is a misspelled word in one of the stained glass windows. By vote of the entire congregation it was decided to leave it as is. Would the author of that mistake be as well remembered without his mistake in spelling?
I looked at our crest in several recent CHECKPOINTS Class News entries, and it shows the atom rings in the upper right hand corner with the Roman Numeral VII. Also, our baseball cap souvenir from our reunion has a crest identical to the class ring, each different from your website version.
We hope that our class ring and crest committee will accept our thanks for their fine work of some time ago and give us an explanation of the apparent differences in our several crests. Do not expect the AOG to respond. They will take what we give them, and we can thank them for their support either way. More later.
Respectfully submitted.
Class Crest
Still no answer after some weeks of presentation about the class crest. What is so difficult about having a correct presentation of our class crest?
It's a minor thing, but there must ba an explanation of this mistake that has been puzzling me over all these years. Am I the only one who is able to discern this discrepancy? Don't dismiss it as some worthless endeaver in minutia. It is very real, and needs more attention. Enough for now. More later.
It's a minor thing, but there must ba an explanation of this mistake that has been puzzling me over all these years. Am I the only one who is able to discern this discrepancy? Don't dismiss it as some worthless endeaver in minutia. It is very real, and needs more attention. Enough for now. More later.