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PAGES WITHIN THIS K.A.H.S. SITE Germany links Bob Richmond's links to Germany and military dependent schools Bash2000 The KAHS Fifties reunion in Nashville the first weekend in May 2000. The Fifties at KAHS The classes of 1953-1959 at Kaiserslautern American High School - who we've found so far. Erinnerungen Names of students and faculty from the Fifties yearbooks, and Myrna's old newsletter Rhine High Forever Listen to a MIDI of the old school song, by Bob Long '55 - and find out what Bob Long is doing today. Camp WACAYA That crazy summer camp in the Black Forest. Hohenecken Castle Stories and pictures of KAHS's favorite castle. The Littlest Raiders The Kindergraves: Dependent interments in Kaiserslautern's Waldfriedhof cemetery. Senior Trip The 1955 senior class trip to Italy |
Bob Richmond's Germany LinksGo Raiders!
Kaiserslautern American High School 1953-1959: I graduated from an American military dependents' high school in Germany in 1955. Kaiserslautern American High School's main Web site was begun by Dennis Chambers '63, who maintained it until 2004, when he handed it over to two members of the class of 1990. KAHS Fifties Reunion in Nashville, May 5th-7th, 2000! More than fifty old-time Raiders came! Please e-mail me also, if you attended our school.
Remember Camp WACAYA? After graduating from KAHS, many Fifties Raiders went on to the University of Maryland at Munich. Were you a Rainbow Girl at Kaiserslautern or elsewhere in Germany?
Kaiserslautern city Web site: The city of Kaiserslautern has a most interesting Web site. Quite a lot of it is available in English. Click on the English word "Welcome" on the home page to get to the English language area, which now includes a number of local American military links. This site is somewhat difficult to navigate and is heavily FRAMES-dependent, and it changes frequently.
The city of Kaiserslautern has a number of delightful old legends and ghost stories, which I've translated and put - with their illustrations - on my own Web site. (Click on Geschichte and then Sagen in the city's site if you want the German text.)
Remember Hohenecken Castle?I finally got enough information to write a Web page about it, with several nice photographs including aerial shots.
The nearby town of Landstuhl has quite a good Web site, which (as of October 2004) is entirely in German. It includes several excellent pages about Nanstein Castle, in German, with a very nice map of the castle. The Pirmasens Web site is very nice, though its English translation had disappeared before October 2004. ![]() Parkbrauerei has a Web site. It's entirely in German. They've changed their "P man" logo - you can see the old one on this page, the new one on the Parkbrauerei page. I've translated their old site into English myself - read it. There's more and more new material on the new site, and they have a new slogan, "PARK. Aus Hopfen und Pfalz.". You can't translate a pun - it says literally "made out of hops and Pfalz (Palatinate, the part of Germany we used to live in)". "Pfalz" sounds like "[das] Malz", the German word for malt. - Good ol' BBK, which has departed Kaiserslautern and taken a few hundred jobs with it, lacks a Web site.
Three sites (among many good ones) with a wide selection of things German:Lixl-Purcell's German WWW Trails Robert J. Shea's German Resources Brian Zahn has over 1,000 links, and at KHS! (that's Kickapoo High School in Springfield MO - what did you think?) All the German songs you ever knew (and a lot more you didn't). return to Robert S. Richmond's links page Surfen durch meine Homepage mit der Maus (See, you can read German!) Page posted to the Web before June 25th, 2000. Page revised October 21st, 2004 |
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