Friday, January 20, 2017

Full Obits: Lee Magee and Day Lee

Manny’s manager Lee Magee dies at 57
RecordThursday, January 19, 2017
Manny’s TV & Appliance baseball skipper Lee Magee was never one to yell on the Tri-County League circuit.
Longtime player Brian Hayes said he can still remember when Magee got ejected from a game a couple of years back, when he quietly yelled out to a home plate umpire that a pitch that was called a strike missed so high that it could have broken the umpire’s mask. That was one of the few times Hayes, an outfielder who just wrapped up his 15th year with the team, could remember his coach getting ejected in the 15 years he has been with the TCL semi-pro team. It was the way Magee went quietly about his business that made him one of the league’s most respected figures, well-liked by players, coaches and umpires.
On Monday, Magee passed away quietly at his Greenfield home at the age of 57 following a battle with diabetes. Over the past few years his condition made it more difficult for him to get to the ballpark on a daily basis, but his love of the game and being around his team rarely kept him away for long.
“His health wasn’t the greatest and we were all concerned about how he was going to carry on and continue to be the ray of sunshine that he was on our bench,” Hayes said. “He was a quiet guy, and such a great guy, and I know he is in a better place. Our world will miss people like Lee.”
Eric Libardoni is another longtime Manny’s player, having served as one of the team’s catchers since he joined the team in 2001. At that time, the Brattleboro native had just graduated from a postgrad prep-school year and was looking for a place to play in the summer. He got hooked up with Manny’s and that started a pipeline with the Greenfield-based team that has seen over 30 players from the Brattleboro area suit up. Libardoni just finished his 16th year with the club.
“Lee was always happy to be at the ballpark,” he said. “He loved baseball, and he loved being around his team. His team was really his family.”
It was that team family atmosphere that made Manny’s one of the TCL’s most successful programs. Manny’s has had very little turnover in the past decade, with a number of players returning summer after summer. A major reason was Magee.
“We were more than a team. We were like a family,” Libardoni said. “Lee was such a caring person and everybody who came in contact with him had such a positive experience. He was fair and cared about his players’ personal lives.”
Hayes concurred.
“Lee went to the weddings of a number of our players,” he said. “My kids love Lee. He welcomed them to sit on the bench and be bat boys. I love the summer because I get to be around the guys and be around the team. Lee loved that, too.”
Magee spent 27 years coaching the Manny’s team. He hooked on with the club in 1990. At that time he was teaching at Deerfield Academy, where he coached basketball and baseball. Terry Ruggles, who was the general manager of Manny’s, was looking to start a summer league team at that time. He was also looking for an algebra tutor for his son, Todd. Magee was tutoring, and when Ruggles needed a coach, he asked the tutor.
“I called Lee one night and he literally had just gotten off the phone with the Hotchkiss School, where he had taught a summer math course and told them he was not coming back,” Ruggles recalled. “That was the summer of 1990. We didn’t even have a team at that point, but Lee agreed to coach.”
The two men became close friends over the years and built up one of the most successful TCL teams, one that played in seven championship series. The team cashed in on two of those trips, winning the league crown in 2007 and 2009. It wasn’t just his success that made him respected around the league, according to Ruggles, who stepped down as team manager two years ago, but the way he handled himself.
“As a person, I don’t know anyone in the league who did not like Lee,” Ruggles said. “He knew the game, appreciated it, knew how to work with young men, and they respected his knowledge. They respected his quiet demeanor and they listened. He seldom got mad, and he seldom had issues with umpires.
“We have always had people who came to see our games and they would say, ‘We don’t know how you guys put together teams that are this homogenous year after year after year,’” Ruggles continued. “That’s what Lee was after. He wanted to put together a team that knew how to play the game, but also knew how to be gentlemen.”
One player who has remained alongside Magee since the very first season in 1990 was Dave Talbot, who just finished up his 27th year in the league.
“We often joked about how we had been together longer than some married couples,” Talbot said. “It started off as a coach and player, and developed into a friendship. We would go on the road trips to games together. Those will never be the same. His laugh was infectious to say the least. He had so many more things to bring other than baseball. His love of music, TV shows and his brain in general, he was so smart. It was a genuine pleasure to get to know him and be part of his inner circle for all this time.”
Magee’s passing will be felt throughout the league. Karl Oliveira, the manager of the St. Joseph’s team and the league secretary, said that Magee had an impact on the league as a whole.
“Lee was a key member of our Board of Governors, a coach and a friend,” he said. “His contributions to our TCL are numerous and he was always part of every sub-committee. His excellent knowledge of the game, strategy and love for this league and his Manny’s team made this league what it is today.”
Andy Rogers, who is the umpire assigner for the TCL, said Magee was well-respected by his crew.
“Lee cared about the Tri-County League, he loved baseball and he was respectful to the umpires,” he said. “In that same light, Lee would stick up for his players when he disagreed, but he was respectful about how he went about it.”
Local services may yet be planned for Magee, who will be flown back to his hometown of Youngstown, Ohio, to be buried alongside his mother.
“There’s going to be a little bit of a hole to fill, both in the league and on the team,” Ruggles concluded. “We tried to build a team that everybody would respect. That was really the point.

Day Lee passed away on Friday, Dec. 30, 2016.
Day Lee was born on Dec. 6, 1922 at #2 Gramercy Park, New York City, the son of Ronald Currie Lee and Louise Day Putnam.
He attended the Buckley School in Manhattan until he and his family moved to Hook Rd. in Bedford, where he attended Rippowam Cisqua School. Later he studied at Millbrook School in Millbrook, and graduated from Lawrenceville School, in Lawrenceville, New Jersey in 1941. Day's education at Harvard was interrupted by his service in the Naval Air Corps, and in 1947, he graduated with an A.B. in history and English literature. In 1956, he completed a master's in education at the University of Pennsylvania.
On Sept. 9, 1950, in Shaker Heights, Day married Nancy Arabel Mills, daughter of Wilbur Thoburn Mills Jr. and Margaret Welch of Cleveland, Ohio. They had two children, Pamela Arabel Lee and David Currie Lee.
From 1949-1950, Day and Nancy worked for the ECA (Marshall Plan) in Paris, where they developed a lifelong passion for all things French. Day began his teaching career tutoring for the Searing Tutoring School in Bedford. From 1956 to1961, he taught history and was the assistant headmaster at the Gunnery School in Washington, Connecticut. From 1961 to1986, he taught history at Deerfield Academy, Old Deerfield, MA. During his sabbatical (1981 to 1983), both he and Nancy taught at the American School in Lugano, Switzerland.
Throughout his life, Day's four passions were: the Adirondacks, the theater, painting and music. He was also an avid hiker, and in his 40s, he attended the Telluride Mountaineering School in Telluride, Colorado.
Throughout his retirement, Day traveled widely with Nancy and was still playing tennis when he was ninety! Day was first introduced to Keene Valley, and the High Peaks when he was a teenager. His great uncle, Will Day, first visited Keene Valley in 1870 and climbed Mt. Marcy with Old Mountain Phelps. From 1954 to 2015, he and Nancy summered there and became lifelong members of the Ausable Club.
For several years he was President of the Adirondack Trail Improvement Society (ATIS) and founding director of High Peaks Camp for teenagers. In the early 1970s, Day served as president of the Deerfield Valley Conservation Association. When the Army Corps of Engineers attempted to build a 260-foot dam in the Stillwater section of the Deerfield River, Day, with help from many others, successfully defeated the project, and the dam was never built.
Both Day and Nancy were accomplished actors and directors with the Dramalites in Washington, Connecticut, and the Stockade Players in Deerfield, Massachusetts, the Arena Civic Theater in Greenfield, Massachusetts, the Barn Theater in New London, New Hampshire and the Center for Music, Drama and Art in Lake Placid. During his lifetime, Day acted in and/or directed more than 26 productions.
An avid artist and watercolor painter, Day studied drawing and printmaking at Greenfield Community College and became a member of the Pioneer Valley Art Association. He exhibited his paintings at the Windham Art Gallery in Brattleboro, Vermont, and in several galleries in New Mexico and Keene Valley.
He also served as president of the High Peaks Art Association and the New Mexico Art League in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and was a member of the New Mexico Watercolor Society.
In his later years, Day continued to play the guitar, recorder and the harmonica. He especially enjoyed playing folk songs and jazz with friends and, then, listening to music when he could no longer play.
Day was the glue that held his family and the community together. His enthusiasm, joie de vivre, friendliness, wisdom, humor and kindness will never be forgotten,
Day was predeceased by his son, Dr. David Currie Lee, Ed.D., who died Dec. 24, 1995, and his wife Nancy Mills Lee, who died Jan. 12, 2015. He was also predeceased by his parents; his brother Putnam Lee and two sisters: Damaris Lee Gillispie and Gayle Lee Gall.
Day is survived by his daughter, Pamela and son-in-law, Edward Cranston; his daughter-in-law, Margaret "Peggy" Healey Lee; granddaughter, Rebecca Louise Lee; his brother-in-law, John "Jack" Welch Mills; and his wife, Louise Connell; and 11 nieces and nephews and their families.
A Memorial Service for Day Lee will be held in the summer of 2017 at the Congregational Church in Keene Valley, NY. (Date and time TBD.)
Gifts may be made in his memory to the Adirondack Trail Improvement Society (ATIS) - PO Box 565, Keene Valley, NY 12943 - (518) 576-9157 - atis@atistrail.org or to Deerfield Academy, PO Box 87, Deerfield, MA 01342.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Skiing in the new year.


Knight met up with Cruikshank and friends for a weekend of skiing...


Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

RIP Lee Magee

One more faculty member who started while we were on campus has passed.  He was a math teacher and a baseball coach, and a friend to many.  One day  in 1982 I was with him as he opened his mail and discovered two new credit cards.  He invite me and two others to drive to the Holyoke Mall with him where he proceeded to max his two cards and buy a killer new stereo sound system!


Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Twelve years preparation led to this...



Game 6 of the World Series produced an iconic moment is sports photography (GIF here) and we have Jeff Silverman to thank.

In the Sports Illustrated recap of the media coverage of the Series - here's what they wrote:

Tony Gambino is not a sports media name you’d recognize, but he was responsible for one of the most memorable moments of Fox’s World Series coverage. A freelance camera operator who has worked the postseason for Fox since 2012, Gambino took the incredible camera shot of Chapman getting to first base before the Indians' Francisco Lindor in the seventh inning during Game 6. “Plays in baseball happen so fast, and we as cameramen try to see what’s happening on the field, react, frame it correctly, be in focus, all in a moment’s notice,” Gambino wrote via email from Cleveland. “I just saw what was happening on the field and knew the play would be at the bag. And I went for it.... Compared to other sports, baseball is the hardest to shoot because you have no idea what’s going to happen. Plays happen so fast. I knew if I could get to the bag before them, it would look great.”
Gambino said he was positioned next to the first camera operator on the first-base side of the field—Low 1st. According to Michael Davies, ‎the senior vice president of field and technical operations for the Fox Sports Media Group, Gambino used a Vision Research “Phantom” v64 camera that shoots at 2,100 frames a second. Davies said the camera is from a small company in Jacksonville, Vermont, that provides specialty cameras for companies. He said he believed Fox is the only sports network to use the camera.


“Tony is the kind of guy who has really taken to the technology,” Davies said. “He is there at the right place at the right time. One of the things that you miss when you see a replay slowed down as much as that is that it really happens in the blink of an eye. Someone like him needs to be on the mark and in focus. [Former Fox Sports chairman] David Hill used to say the best live events look post-produced, and I think we have definitely gotten closer to that mark.”
Gambino said he heard from people on the crew after the game about his shot, which was gratifying. “As a cameraman, it’s always great to see your hard work pay off,” Gambino said. “Especially for key moments in sports. We try and give the viewer the best look possible. The umpires to a great job, but it’s gratifying knowing that call is correct because of our camera work.

Jeff says be on the lookout for more premium shots since "There's going be stuff coming from Supercross, X-games, Superbowl and Westminster dog show coming up"


Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Farewell comrade!

Former faculty member Day Lee died this weekend at the age of 94.

As a new sophomore, I was learning many things at DA, but European History with Mr. Lee was an eye opener for sure.  Everyone I knew assumed he was a communist, given his enthusiasm for all things european and russian history.  We imagined after dinner chats between Mr. Lee and Mr. Gorski over some ice cold Stolichnaya vodka.

Of course, I doubt any of those imaginings are true, but his ability to keep us all interested certainly started me on a path toward a more global perspective.

Feels like we need that.