I am a 53 year old physician, practicing
Hematology/Oncology in Palo Alto, CA. My first pens
were given to me by my Dad: a Parker 51 and a Sheaffer
touchdown. For my Bar Mitzvah I got only a single
pen, but it was a beautiful Parker 61. In High School
in Berkeley, CA during the 1960es I used Osmiroid
pens. I bought my first Mont Blanc around 1967, as a
going to college present. When passing through Hong
Kong in 1970 I bought another group of Mont Blancs at
incredible prices.
After 1970 I moved to New York City, where I lived until 1989 (except for
my internship year at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore.) I finished college, went to
medical school, and did my post-graduate training at Columbia in New York. I remember
having fun going down to the lower East Side and looking for bargain pens. There
was a sporting goods store (Habers?) that had a pen department, from which I purchased
another couple of Mont Blancs. Many fond memories of Arthur Brown when they were
in the big store that included art supplies. Also a store that was on 57th or
58th street near 5th Avenue, that had an elderly African-American man who was
described as "The Pen Doctor", and who did nice work with nibs. I remember
going to the Parker Service Center in Rockefeller Center to exchange a nib for
my Parker 51!
In the mid 1980's my wife and I moved to the East Side, since she was doing
a post-doc at Rockefeller University. One day I happened to walk past Joon‚s,
and met Mr. Joon, from whom I bought many pens. My wife bought me an engagement
present at Arthur Brown. In 1989 we moved to Indianapolis, where we both worked
at Indiana University. While in Indiana I had the delight of discovering the Columbus
and the Chicago Pen Shows. Also discovered Avalon Pen in Zionsville, where I have
many fun talks with Terry. Terry introduced me to the Hoosier Pen Club.
In the early 1990's I was thrilled do discover other crazy people who loved
pens, on the CompuServe Pen Discussion Group, and the AOL Pen Forum. I don't think
there has ever been a better on-line meeting place than those old original groups.
By the late 1990's I was getting tired of running a research lab, and decided
that I had more fun taking care of live patients, so we moved back to California,
where I am in full-time practice. I have been delighted to discover other crazy
pen fanatics in the SF Bay area, and for the last two years I have been the President
of the Pan-Pacific Pen Club (you should see the mansion and the limousine that
comes with the job!) Most of my collection are modern pens, but I have a good
representation of vintage also. Going to Pen Shows is an absolute delight, and
recently I have figured out how to look for medical meetings being held in cities
on the same weekend as a Pen Show.
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