Monthly Archives: January 2009

JObit: Martin, Margaret Kelly (MC1998) reports the obit for Brady, James [MC1950]

From: Martin, Margaret Kelly (MC1998)
Date: January 28, 2009 8:35:13 AM EST
Subject: Fwd: PARADE Mourns The Passing of James Brady

James Brady is the brother of my local pastor, Msgr. Thomas Brady and was a fellow Jasper

—–Original Message—–

Sent: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 7:17 pm
Subject: PARADE Mourns The Passing of James Brady

PARADE Mourns The Passing of Long-Time Contributor James Brady
Publication Date: 01/27/2009
James Brady

   James Brady, long-time author of PARADE’s celebrity profile column “In Step With”, died Monday at his Manhattan home. He was 80.

   He is survived by his wife, Florence; two daughters, Fiona Brady and Susan Konig; four grandchildren, Sarah, Joseph, Nichola s and Matthew, and one brother, Monsignor Tom Brady. Sons-in-law are David Konig and Carl Mehling.

   For nearly 25 years, Brady provided a glimpse into the lives of some of the nation’s most beloved celebrities, and some up-and-comers who are relatively new to the national spotlight. His last PARADE column, featuring Kevin Bacon, will appear on February 15, 2009. 9 CJim was a friend to the 73 million Americans who looked forward to his column each week, and he was a friend to all of use here at PARADE,” said CEO and Chairman Walter Anderson. “He was also a decorated war hero and a towering figure in American journalism. He will be extraordinarily missed.”

   A prolific author and a Marine, Brady’s book “The Scariest Place in the World”, published by St. Martin’s Press in 2005, is a non-fiction account of his return to North Korea for a PARADE magazine article. He is also the author of “Why Marines Fight”(2007) and “The Marine”(2003), a novel of the Korean War. “The Coldest War”, published in 1990, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and was hailed by The New York Times as “a superb personal memoir of the way it was.”

   Brady just finished the final edits on his new book: “Hero of the Pacific: The Life of Legendary Marine John Basilone”. Basilone was a World War II hero, one of three who’ll be featured players in the forthcoming Steven Spielberg-Tom Hanks HBO miniseries, The Pacific (October, 2009), a sequel to their highly acclaimed Band of Brothers. Jim’s book will be published by Wiley to coincide with the release of the series.

   As a “baby-faced” Marine lieutenant, Brady fought as a rifle platoon leader and later rifle company executive officer of Dog Company in the 7th Marines in the Taebaek Mountains of North Korea in the fall and winter of 1951-52. He was promoted to first lieutenant and battalion intelligence officer, and, in November 2001, he was a warded the Bronze Star with Combat V for a firefight against the Chinese army on Hill Yoke near Panmunjom on May 31, 1952.

   Brady had worked his way through college as a copyboy for the New York Daily News, then the largest circulation daily in the country. After graduation he returned from the war (and was offered not a reporting job but only his old copyboy gig), he wrote advertising copy for Macy’s and in 1953 was hired as a business news reporter by Women’s Wear Daily. In 1956-58 he covered Capitol Hill for Fairchild Publications, a period when Ike was in the White House, Nixon was Vice-President, Lyndon Johnson ran the Senate (and some said, the country), Sam Rayburn was Speaker of the House, and Jack and Bobby Kennedy were making their bones as a junior Senator and investigating committee counsel.

   Brady became London bureau chief for Fairchild in 1959 and two years later succeeded John Fairchild as bureau chief and European director in Paris, where he learned about fashion at the knee of the legendary Coco Chanel, who fondly and invariably referred to Brady as “mon petit indien..my little Indian,” conveniently ignoring the fact he was not a Native American and was a head taller than the fashion designer.

   In 1964 Brady returned to New York to become publisher of Women’s Wear Daily, helping turn that reliable old trade paper into something unique, a sort of media phenomenon, and crafting its successful consumer spinoff W magazine as the company’s editorial director. In 1971 he was hired away by Hearst Magazines as VP/editor & publisher of Harper’s Bazaar, with a mandate to bring the grand old monthly (for which Winston Churchill’s mother was a contributor) into the 20th century. Modernizing too swiftly, Brady disturbed Bazaar’s elegantly aging readership and alarmed the Hearst brass, which panicked, and Brady was abruptly sacked.   

   He wrote his first book, “Superchic,” an account of his publishing adventures and misadventures, and was hired by New York magazine editor Clay Felker to create and write the “Intelligencer” column. His first novel, “Paris One,” became a best-seller and was optioned several times by Hollywood, though never made.

   Brady wrote and hosted a TV talk show spinoff for New York magazine, which became the first cable show nominated for and to win=2 0several Emmys, including one for Brady personally.

   In 1974, Rupert Murdoch recruited Brady to edit his new tabloid weekly, Star. For the next nine years, Brady worked for the press baron in various roles, as vice-chairman of his American company, as associate publisher of the New York Post, and as editor of New York, succeeding Clay Felker. Brady also created and for seve ral years wrote the popular “Page Six” gossip column for the Post. And by now he was back on television, first on WABC News and then for six years doing live ce lebrity interviews over WCBS-TV News in New York, earning additional Emmy nominations. And in 1997 when demonstrably far too old for such nonsense, he was hired by Roger Ailes, then of CNBC, to do “Power Lunch” interviews with movers & shakers over a table at the Four Seasons restaurant in Manhattan.

   In recent years Brady worked in two very disparate fictional genres. His quartet of best-selling Hamptons romances, starting with “Further Lane,” are comedies of manners set in East Hampton, where he lived. Actual real life people and purely fictional characters were woven together and seen through the eyes of Brady’s protagonist and alter ego, the terminal WASP Beecher Stowe, himself like Brady a PARADE magazine correspondent, and his dazzling if spacey paramour, Lady Alix Dunraven, an Oxford graduate with a penchant for becoming engaged to aristocratic chinless wonders, who writes intermittently for Mr. Murdoch’s Times of London.

   At the same time, his quartet of Marine Corps books, historical yarns that are darker, brooding, and more weighty, blending martial adventure with fact, have become critically acclaimed best-sellers that appeal to an entirely different but devoted readership. As Publishers Weekly wrote in a starred review, “(Brady) has stormed publishing high ground to become, arguably, our foremo st novelist current writing on the subject of Marines at war…” And of his “Marines of Autumn,” Kurt Vonnegut Jr. wrote, “The Korean War now has its ‘Il iad.’”

   In the spring of 2003, as tensions rose along the demilitarized zone and North Korea rattled nuclear swords, Brady returned to Korea for the first time in half a century, on assignment for PARADE magazine, to revisit the North Korean ridgelines where he first fought, and to interview the young GIs manning those same positions today. His cover story ran on May 25, on the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, precisely 51 years since the firefight for which he won his medal.

   Until his death, Brady continued to write his weekly column for PARADE and his column on media on Forbes.com, which debuted on January 19, 2006. Prior to that, Brady had written for Advertising Age and its savvy audience of media and Madison Avenue decision makers, and for Crain’s New York Business.

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Brady, James [MC1950]

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http://www.legacy.com/Obituaries.asp?Page=LifeStory&PersonID=123426215

NEW YORK (AP) — James Brady, the Parade magazine celebrity columnist whose wide-ranging career also included novels, a memoir on his Korean War service and a stint as publisher of the fashion bible Women’s Wear Daily, has died at 80.

Brady’s death was announced Tuesday by Parade magazine, where he wrote the celebrity profile column “In Step With” for nearly 25 years. He died Monday at his Manhattan home.

Brady also was credited with initiating the New York Post’s popular Page Six gossip section when he worked for publisher Rupert Murdoch in the 1970s. During that time, he also succeeded Clay Felker as editor of New York magazine when Murdoch acquired it in 1977

His varied interests were alluded to in a 1997 New York Times profile. At Brady’s home in East Hampton, it said, “photos from years gone by paper the walls. Mr. Brady with (designer Coco) Chanel in Paris, Mr. Brady with a young Brooke Shields in New York, Mr. Brady in combat fatigues in Korea, Mr. Brady with President Bush in Washington.”

The Times praised his 1990 memoir on Korea, “The Coldest War,” as “a superb personal memoir of the way it was. … What distinguishes Mr. Brady’s book is its clarity and modesty; there is no heroic flag-waving here.”

He followed it up with a 2000 novel, “The Marines of Autumn,” and his 2005 “The Scariest Place in the World: A Marine Returns to North Korea.”

He had gone back in 2003 for Parade magazine, and in the book he shared his experiences and emotions on seeing the place 50 years after the war ended in a stalemate. In “The Scariest Place,” he wrote that none of the many later events of his life “matched the intensity, the gravitas and sheer excitement” of combat as leader of a rifle platoon.

Among his other books was “Further Lane,” a 1997 murder mystery set in East Hampton; and two novels drawing on his years in the women’s wear field: “Designs” and “Fashion Show.”

He had become Women’s Wear Daily’s publisher in 1964. Working with Fairchild Publications chief John Fairchild, he helped make the daily into a publication popular with 1960s fashionistas as well as professionals in the clothing trade.

He jumped to Hearst Corp. in 1971 and was publisher of its fashion magazine Harper’s Bazaar.

But many readers knew him best for his contributions at Parade. CEO Walter Anderson said Brady “was a friend to the 73 million Americans who looked forward to his column each week … He will be extraordinarily missed.”

His last column will appear Feb. 15. It will feature actor Kevin Bacon.

Born in 1928, Brady started as a copyboy for the New York Daily News, where he worked while attending Manhattan College. Shortly after returning from Korea, he joined Fairchild Publications. Among other posts, he covered Washington for Fairchild and later reported from London and Paris.

He was hired by Murdoch in 1974 to edit the then-new weekly Star magazine. He later was an associate publisher at the New York Post.

Brady is survived by his wife, two daughters, a brother and other relatives.

Guestbook: http://tinyurl.com/d62cjg

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FROM GOOGLE ALERT

James Brady dies at 80; Parade magazine columnist, prolific author

Los Angeles Times – CA,USA

15, 1928, in Brooklyn, NY, James Winston Brady graduated from Manhattan College in 1950. After serving in the Marine Corps, he attended New York University …

See all stories on this topic

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Dear John,

   I believe that Jim is a member of the Class of 1950.

   May He Rest In Peace.

   Mike

[JR: Thanks, Mike. Much appreciated. ]

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JEmail: Breen, Jerry (MC1971) remembers John Updike

From: Breen, Jerry (MC1971)
Date: January 28, 2009 9:14:17 AM EST
Subject: R.I.P. John Updike

To one and all: John Updike died the other day of lung cancer at age 76. Although he’s primarily remembered as a prolific novelist and essayist, he was also one of the 20th Century’s leading poets. Here’s the drawing of Updike that I did just last year for the International Society of Poets in Owings Mills. You can also view it on their website (the world’s most popular poetry website) at www.poetry.com . Sincerely, Jerry Breen http://www.newbreen.com

breen_isp_updike_sf.jpg

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JObit: Donahue, Warren F. [MC1942]

http://www.legacy.com/News-Press/Obituaries.asp?Page=LifeStory&PersonId=123399387

Warren F. Donahue

Obituary

Warren F. Donahue of North Ft. Myers, Florida and Armonk, New York passed away on January 26, 2009.

Mr. Donahue, 87, has lived in North Ft. Myers for more than twenty-five years. In his working years he was a writer and advertising executive. He wrote feature articles for the New York Daily News in the 1950s and then moved into advertising, working in several major agencies. Finally, he established Donahue and Associates and for a number of years handled all of the advertising related to the art shows and theater presentations around the country sponsored by the Phillip Morris Company.

A New Yorker, he was born in the Bronx, the second of four children of Thomas R. Donahue, Sr. and Mary E Purcell. He graduated from Manhattan College in 1942. He served in WWII as a gunnery officer on a submarine chaser on Atlantic convoys and as executive officer of LST 559 through eleven first-day invasions in the Pacific theater. After the war, he earned his J.D. at New York University Law School.

For more than ten years he taught English-as-a-Second Language for adults in Ft. Myers. His late wife, Mildred, served for many years as the assistant director of Senior Services of St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church.

A scholar of history, last year he published a treatise on the rise and fall of democracies in the Western world, ” The Remarkable Pattern of Western History “, which plotted the course of democratic development over the past 2,000 years.

He is survived by a brother, Thomas R., of Washington, D.C., 12 nieces and nephews and thirty-one grandnieces and grandnephews. Condolences may be viewed and offered at

www.harvey-engelhardt-metz.com

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Donahue, Warren F. [MC1942]   

Guestbook: http://tinyurl.com/c388u7

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JHQ: Free admit to Women’s bball game on Monday 2/9. Sex discrimintation?

Lady Jaspers Hosting National Girls and Women in Sport Day On February 9
Release: 01/27/2009
Courtesy of NGWSDCentral.com

RIVERDALE, N.Y. � The Manhattan College women’s basketball team is joining in the celebration of the 23rd annual National Girls and Women in Sport Day. All girls and women will receive free admission and a free poster at the Lady Jaspers’ regionally televised game against Iona at Draddy Gymnasium on Monday, February 9.

The 6 p.m. contest is Manhattan’s only televised home game of the season and will air regionally on MSG Network as a part of the MAAC-TV package. It is also the opener of a doubleheader. Following the women’s game, the Manhattan and Iona men’s teams square off in a contest that will also be televised by MAAC-TV.

The first National Girls and Women in Sport Day was held in 1987 in memory of Olympic volleyball player Flo Hyman, who died of Marfan’s Syndrome during a tournament in Japan in 1986. NGWSD is celebrated in all 50 states and honors the achievements of girls and women in sports, while also encouraging participation. This year’s theme, “Look Who’s Playing,” recognizes female athletes who’ve made a difference or broken records despite difficult circumstances.

Contact assistant coach Christine Catalanotto at christine.catalanotto@manhattan.edu or (718) 862-7890 for more information. To find out more about National Girls and Women in Sport Day, go to www.ngwsdcentral.com.

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JNews: Zoppo, Brother Thomas [MC1985] Calvert Hall College High School president

http://www.baltimoreexaminer.com/local/012709topbrf.html

Calvert Hall names new president
By Staff
- 1/27/09

*** begin quote ***

The prestigious Calvert Hall College High School is getting a new president.

Brother Thomas Zoppo, 51, principal since 2003 of Christian Brothers Academy in Syracuse, N.Y., will become the fourth leader of Towson’s private, Catholic, all-male school in July. A committee of Calvert Hall’s Board of Trustees selected Zoppo after a nationwide search, the school announced Monday.

Zoppo has been director of curriculum and instruction at De La Salle High School in Concord, Calif., academic adviser and lecturer in mathematics at Manhattan College in N.Y. and vice principal for student affairs at La Salle Institute in Troy, N.Y. He has a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Villanova University and a master’s in school administration from Manhattan College.

“We lucked out with Brother Thomas,” Brother Benedict Oliver, who has served as Calvert Hall’s interim president for more than three years, said Monday. “He comes with a great deal of experience and we’re very excited that someone of his caliber is available.”

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Zoppo, Brother Thomas [MC1985]

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Dear John,

   I believe that Brother received his Masters in 1985.

   Mike

[JR: Thanks, Mike. Much appreciated. ]

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JUpdate: Gorman, Tim (MC1980) is over at MC ALUM yahoo group

ON THE MCALUM YAHOO GROUP

Gorman, Tim (MC1980)

*** begin quote ***

I am a 1980 graduate of Manhattan College, with a BS in Business. I would like to reach out to other Manhattan Alumni and get back in contact with old friends.

*** end quote ***

JEmail: Cramer, Vincent (MC1968) has an offer

From: Cramer, Vincent (MC1968)
Date: January 27, 2009 11:00:20 AM EST
To: fjohn reinke
Subject: RE: OSR Newsletter

As a ’68 Jasper I remember the words of Bob Dylan, “You don’t need a weather man to know which way the wind blows.” In ’09, everyone knows: “You don’t need an economist to know that our future is blowing in the wind.” Credit markets frozen, planes in the Hudson River, and Downsizing galore! Weren’t the college days easier? Some of my fellow Jaspers are corporate executives guiding their firms through treacherous winds. Others are in sales and marketing positions seeing their income decline, and fearing a job loss. Regrettably, some have lost their jobs and are looking for employment. Or even a new career.

For each of them, there is a solution.

OurSaleRep Inc. created an innovative sales paradigm (For injineers, like my classmate fjohn, that’s a pair of dimes) to meet the challenges they face. Corporate executives can create a large and effective sales organization – at the lowest cost of sales. Sales and marketing professionals can increase their customer value and create a lucrative career.

My fellow Jaspers, and their firms, will receive substantial discounts for utilizing the capabilities of OurSalesRep and its ever-expanding network of corporations and sales professionals.

I am always open to feedback, networking, and — of course — giving / receiving help.

Thanks,
VC68

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HQ: Manhattan Softball Hosting Wine Tasting This Weekend

Manhattan Softball Hosting Wine Tasting This Weekend

Release: 01/26/2009

RIVERDALE, N.Y. � The Manhattan College softball team is hosting a wine tasting on Saturday, January 31, from 5:30-7 p.m. in Smith Auditorium. Tickets to the event, which immediately precedes the men’s basketball contest against Niagara, cost $30. For more information or to purchase tickets, contact Head Coach Meaghan Asselta via e-mail at meaghan.asselta@manhattan.edu or by phone at (718) 862-7835.

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JNews: Campion, Bill [MC1975] remembers his bball career

http://www.altoonamirror.com/page/content.detail/id/515504.html

Memories of a lifetime: Local man used to play Globetrotters
Campion spent 8 years with Washington Generals battling famous team.
By John Hartsock, jhartsock@altoonamirror.com
POSTED: January 26, 2009

*** begin quote ***

For the past eight decades, the world-famous Harlem Globetrotters have entertained basketball fans with their exhilarating combination of eye-opening talent and side-splitting, hilarious antics.

The Globetrotters almost always win their games, and their most common opponent, the Washington Generals, almost always lose.

But it’s not by design that the Generals – a talented outfit in their own right – have come up short in all but a few of the thousands of games they’ve played against the Globetrotters over the course of nearly a century.

Not at all, maintain former Generals player Bill Campion – who has been living in Altoona for the past 17 years – and the legendary Generals founder and team owner Louis “Red” Klotz, who also spent many years as a player/coach with the organization.

*** and ***

“Red Klotz said that he would never tolerate anybody purposely trying to lose a game,” said Campion, 56, a retired federal corrections employee who lives in the Greenwood section of Altoona. “I always felt that the harder the Washington Generals played, you could see the best come out of the Globetrotters as well.”

*** and ***

But so did the Generals. The 6-foot-9 Campion – who hails from the Bronx, N.Y. and played high school basketball against former Pittsburgh Pirates pitching standout John Candelaria – shined on the basketball court during his collegiate days at Manhattan College, scoring 1,223 career points in two and a half seasons. He set the career school rebound record with 1,070, the single-season school rebound record with 419, and the single-game rebound record with 30 in a game against Hofstra.

*** end quote ***

Campion, Bill [MC1975]

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Dear John,

   I believe that Bill is a member of the Class of 1975.

   Mike

[JR: Thanks, Mike. Much appreciated. ]

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JEmail: McEneney, Mike (MC1953) cites Miller, Bill [MC1945] in the NY Times

From: McEneney, Mike (MC1953)
Date: January 26, 2009 12:40:34 AM EST
To: Jasperfjohn68
Subject: Manhattan in the News

Dear John,

   Today, Sunday, while paging through the sport section of the New York Times to see if they had any comment on Manhattan’s lose to Iona at the Garden, (they did not), I came across the following in the Sports Briefing column:

“TRACK AND FIELD

From Beijing to Armory

Aliann Pompey, a former N.C.A.A. champion at Manhattan College, won the women’s 400 meters in 51.85 seconds at the New Balance Games at the Armory track in upper Manhattan. Clayton Parros, a senior at Seton Hall Prep, won the men’s 400 meters in 47.58. Parros and Pompey, who reached the semifinal round in the 400 while competing for Guyana at the Beijing Olympics, will run the 600 yards Friday at the Milrose Games at Madison Square Garden. . . . (extra deleted)

    Bill Miller”

    While all of the other 5 items were attributed to (AP), this one was attributed to Bill Miller. Bill is a member of the Class of 1948, and was the first Sports Information Officer at Manhattan. Bill who was on the track team at Manhattan before he went into the service in W.W.II, is a member of the Manhattan College Athletic Hall of Fame. He has been associated with the NY Times for more years tan can be remembered.. It is nice to see that he is still at it!

    Best,

    Mike

[JR: Thanks, Mike. Much appreciated. Nice way to sneak in a "sports" story. :-) I think we have to revisit the ban on sports stories. Espeially as the pertain to other Jaspers. But I don't know how much our fellow Jaspers will tolerate "sports" in Jottings. Not to dupe the GOJASPERS site or YUKU, but where it makes sense? Opinions?]
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