To set the record straight on the schooner C'est la Vie: She was built at Folmer Jensen's boatyard in Frederiksvaerk Denmark and launched 21 June 1966, reported to be the largest sailboat built in Denmark in a quarter of a century (64' on deck; 75' overall). Owner: Jack Hines, Philadelphia, PA., a difficult man at times but one who made dreams come true. Architect: Arne Slaaby Larsen, Hellerup, Denmark. Original skipper: Ron Emery, Philadelphia. I worked in the boatyard, also crewed on her maiden Atlantic crossing in the fall, 1966. 20 days, 2 hours from Las Palmas, the Canaries, to St. Bart's. Crew on the crossing: Skipper Ron Emery (U.S.), Neil Davis (UK), Peter Nicholson (UK), Steve Fayer (U.S.), Bill Fitzgerald (U.S.) and Lars Ulrich (DK). A special law put through Congress designated the schooner a U.S. Research Vessel. Mission: research on the migration of the European eel; plankton towing for samples around the globe; specimen collection on the Great Barrier Reef. Boat was equipped with the latest Raytheon electronic gear: radar, sonar, RDF, yak-yak ship-to-diver communication, etc. Research mission was cancelled, the boat sold after the initial crossing and a run north to Canada. A later owner raced her off the coast of Massachusetts where Norman Fortier took this photograph. I was told several years ago that C'est la Vie burned and sank in the Mediterranean but never got a confirmation on the when and where. If anyone has information on that sad event, it would be appreciated. Also seeking information on Peter Nicholson, a skilled mariner who chartered for a time in the West Indies. He is the one crew member who has not been located. I am currently working on a book from original logs and journals about the construction and maiden crossing. -- Steve Fayer, fayersteve@aol.com