DIANE WOLF REMEMBERED Pubblico Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 11, Number 4, January 27, 2008, Article 16

    DIANE WOLF REMEMBERED

    David L. Ganz writes: "Here's a little known personal
    story about Diane Wolf. In the 1980's, at Long Beach,
    I was at the Hyatt with my wife and then young son, Scott,
    who must have been about five or six, and is now 26. As
    kids are wont to do, he was running around the lobby as I
    registered, slipped on the tile, fell, and started crying.
    Diane was also registering; she knelt with one knee on the
    floor, leaned over Scott, and said things would be all right,
    calming him. I knew her only as Commissioner and a coinage
    redesign advocate, finding out only later about her advanced
    degree in education. That day, she was Scott’s (and my) hero."

    Dick Johnson writes: "I remember Diane Wolf. She often came
    to New York City coin shows and she stopped by our booth a
    time or two. She also came to my little office in Danbury
    in the late 1980s. I don't know what influence she thought
    I could have for her cause of redesigning American coins,
    but perhaps she was trying to gain supporters one person
    at a time.

    "The opinion of her I created in my mind at that time is
    confirmed by the biography recently published on her death.
    I surmised she was a rich girl with lots of free time in
    search of a cause. Self appointed, she chose changing the
    design on circulating coins. A harmless cause, perhaps
    it was one she must have thought was obtainable.

    "My belief at the time was that all five coins bore
    portraits of famous Americans. People are interested
    in people, ergo, I thought that the existing portrait
    coin designs were satisfactory. I was certainly a candidate
    for Diane Wolf to convert. But she never changed my mind
    to her cause.

    "At our office meeting she appeared overdressed, as always,
    in designer clothes. Perfect makeup and coiffure, with
    ample jewelry. Her band-box appearance tended to reinforce
    her wealthy status. How out-of-place she was in our workroom
    office of rolled up sleeves for medal cataloging. I was
    polite, however, listened to her pitch and received her
    literature. As a lobbyist, I thought, she was more show
    and less substance.

    "She was quite knowledgeable, though, about coin design
    limitations, but not so about coin designers. I think we
    chatted about Victor Brenner and what she would like to
    see on the cent.

    "After years of such activity, with Congress, the Treasury
    Department and apparently anyone who would listen, I believe
    she realized continued effort was futile. She seemed to drop
    from the numismatic scene."

    U.S. COINAGE REDESIGN ADVOCATE DIANE WOLF 1954-2008
    esylum_v11n03a06.html

URL di origine Data di pubblicazione
  • 2008-01-27
Volume
  • 11

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Autore NNP