Monthly Archives: February 2010

MObit: Dixon, Joseph Lewis [MCxfac RIP]

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/dispatch/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=139895900

Joseph Lewis Dixon

Joseph Lewis Dixon passed away on Wednesday, February 17, 2010. He was 89 years old.

Joe’s was a life enriched with a love of music, an illustrious military career and a gift for sharing his talents as an educator. Joe Dixon was born in Londonderry, Ohio, the fourth child of Harry Jones Dixon and Blanche Heath Dixon. As a talented pianist, Joe won a full scholarship to Otterbein College, where he graduated with a degree in music education and was a member of the R.O.T.C. In 1944, he became a member of the United States Air Force.

In 1945, he married Margaret Elizabeth Pickering Dixon, who remained his wife and partner for sixty-two years. Joe’s music education continued as he briefly left the military to earn a master’s degree in piano and organ at the University of Michigan. He taught vocal and instrumental music at Ohio’s Gibsonburg High School. In 1949, Joe returned to the Air Force where his military career continued as a pilot and flight instructor. As a member of the Strategic Air Command, Joe and his growing family lived in many places throughout the United States, including Alaska. Joe also served in England, Japan, Greenland and the Azores. While stationed at Fort Slocum, New York, Joe was employed as Adjunct Professor of Air Science at Manhattan College. As a command pilot, Joe logged over 10,000 hours. He flew various aircraft to include the B-17 flying fortress and KC-97 refueler. He also flew rescue missions in Japan. In 1962, Joe retired from the Air Force at his last assignment, Rickenbacker Air Force base. He held the rank of Major.

In 1962, Joe pursued a second career with the Internal Revenue Service from which he retired in 1982. Continuing his commitment to life and service, Joe was a twenty year member of the Tri-County Kiwanis where he served as president.

Throughout his life, Joe remained passionately involved with music. He lent his resonant bass voice to numerous vocal ensembles. He performed as a pianist with dance bands. Joe was accompanist for his friend, famed violinist David Rubinoff, with whom he performed publicly. Joe continuously shared his gift, teaching piano to others.

For forty-one years, Joe served as organist for several churches, including the Rickenbacker Air Force Base Chapel, United Methodist Church in Canal Winchester, David United Church of Christ in Canal Winchester and Emanuel Lutheran Church in Lancaster.

Joe was predeceased by his wife Margaret, sister May Schear, and brother Thomas Dixon. He is survived by his sister, Marjorie English of Perrysburg, Ohio; four children, Professor Laurinda Dixon of Syracuse, New York, Janice Fry of Lancaster, Deborah Dixon of Cincinnati, and Kevin Dixon of Lancaster; eight grandchildren and five great grandchildren.

Services will be held Saturday, February 27 at the DWAYNE R. SPENCE HOME, 650 W. Waterloo Street, Canal Winchester. Visitation 12 noon, service 1 p.m. Entombment with military honors will follow at Lithopolis Cemetery Mausoleum. In lieu of flowers, a donation in Joe’s name can be made to the organ bell and choir fund Emanuel Lutheran Church, 231 East Mulberry St., Lancaster, Ohio 43130. Online condolences at www.spencefuneralhome.com

Published in The Columbus Dispatch on February 21, 2010

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Dixon, Joseph Lewis [MCxfac RIP]

Guestbook: http://tinyurl.com/ykrx3cm

[JR: We must recognize that this is one of the "Jasper Makers". Faculty and Staff -- current and past -- should be remembered, and prayed for. We are mindful of the service of these good men and women that comprise the Jasper "forge" that making us what we are.]

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JLinkedin: Ahmed, Adnan [MC2005] IT Eng at Seabury Group

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/adnan-ahmed/13/61b/69b  

Ahmed, Adnan [MC2005]
Senior IT Services Engineer at Seabury Group
Greater New York City Area

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JObit: Corr, James Joseph [MC1951 RIP]

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/philly/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=139897451

JAMES JOSEPH CORR

JAMES JOSEPH, born April 22, 1927, age 82, passed away peacefully surrounded by his loving family and dedicated health care aide, Niki on Thursday, February 18, 2010.

Born and raised in New York City the oldest child of Irish immigrants, Jim attended Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx. After serving in the Military in WW II he graduated from Manhattan College as an electrical engineer. Jim began his successful career in Aerospace Engineering as a parts delivery boy for a TV repair shop in Manhattan.

His pioneering career in electronics paralleled the advancement in television and imaging technology. Jim worked at RCA-GE for over four decades. In the 1960′s he was one of the project managers on the successful Ranger Space Missions 7, 8 and 9 to the moon. These spacecraft took the first close up pictures of the lunar surface. The success of the Ranger projects led to the eventual landing of a man on the moon during the Apollo Space Missions. Jim, a man of integrity, received top secret clearance and helped design and launch the first surveillance and weather satellites, such as TIROS, for the US government. For his contributions to the space program from 1965 through 1975, he was awarded “The Pioneer in Space Award” by the U.S. Air Force.

Jim was a true patriot and enlisted in the Army-Air Force the day after his 18th birthday. In a characteristic display of his commitment, ingenuity and humor, Jimmy being “thin as a rail” ate 10 lbs. of bananas in order to secure his acceptance into the U.S. Military. As the war wound down, Jim served as a Sergeant in the U.S. occupation troops administering the prisoner of war camps in Southern France.

In his boyhood Jim found much joy and pleasure roaming the river banks of the Harlem, East and Hudson Rivers, in search of a good fishing perch. Surf fishing at Barnegat Light on Long Beach Island, NJ became one of his passions. His love of the lighthouse and the island was passed on to all of his children and grandchildren. Jim loved to be outdoors and this was evident in all of his pastimes. He was a constant gardener and grew the most delicious and juicy Jersey tomatoes and the crispest bulging spring red radishes. He planted scores of trees at each of his homes. The height that these trees have grown over the years reflects the height and depth of his values and continuous personal growth.

Yearly, he tramped through the snows of the Pine Barrens hunting for deer. The deer sometimes eluded him but he always found peace, tranquility and restoration in nature. He loved the Pine Barrens as do his children. For many years each summer he took his sons on extended camping trips though out the U.S. and Canada. Jim loved and respected the Earth. It was fitting that the day of his birth, April 22 and the birthday of his first child and daughter was designated Earth Day.

Dad played a good hand of poker and got together monthly with the guys. He also was an avid bridge player and played weekly with his wife and their friends.

Jim’s workbench was loaded with TV tubes, soldering irons, circuit boards, vises and testing gear; it was a place of technical marvel! Dad was known through-out the community as the “go to fix it man.” There was always a TV, washing machine or car under Dad’s care. Jim was a well read History buff and enjoyed sharing his wealth of historic knowledge. He was particularly proud of his Irish ancestry and the traditions of fighting and working towards independence and democracy that were dominant in his family heritage.

He was devoted to the Catholic Church and his religious beliefs. James was married to Jacqueline Perry Corr for 46 years. He was a loyal husband and dedicated provider for his family of nine children. With his dry sense of humor, fighting spirit, will and determination, Jim turned most obstacles into opportunities for applying ingenuity, learning new things and developing compassion and kindness.

Although in his last years he struggled with several physical disabilities, he managed these challenges with admirable calm and grace. We all want you to recognize and cherish your own happiness in memory of our kind-hearted and fearless father, Jim. Dad leaves two sisters, Maureen Corr and Kathleen Carr; nine children and their families. Kathleen Kavarra Corr of Springdale,

Published in Philadelphia Inquirer & Philadelphia Daily News on February 21, 2010 Print print

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Corr, James Joseph [MC???? RIP]

Guestbook: http://tinyurl.com/ylfwgs4

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http://www.philly.com/philly/obituaries/20100225_James_Joseph_Corr__82_engineering_pioneer.html

Posted on Thu, Feb. 25, 2010
James Joseph Corr, 82,engineering pioneer
By Claudia Vargas
Inquirer Staff Writer

James Joseph Corr, 82, of Mount Laurel, a pioneering engineer in the development and testing of satellites, died of aspiration pneumonia Feb. 18 at Virtua Marlton.

As a 9-year-old boy during the Depression, Mr. Corr started working as a delivery boy for a TV repair shop in New York City, his daughter Kathleen Kavarra said. He quickly developed a talent for fixing electronics, and by the time he was nearing graduation at Cardinal Hayes High School in the city, he was the shop’s main TV repairman.

His work with TVs led him to a successful career as an electrical engineer at RCA Corp. in Camden.

“As an engineer, he had to look at what could go wrong” in order to build something the right way, his daughter said. After almost 10 years of fixing electronics, he pretty much knew what basic wiring errors to avoid.

Mr. Corr went to work at RCA with a bunch of young engineers the company hired in 1951, yet he stood out right away, former colleagues said.

“He was a really dynamic person,” said Marvin Korff of Cherry Hill, who started at RCA with Mr. Corr.

Mr. Corr’s stamina and attention to detail suited him to intricate, long-term projects. His first big project in the late 1950s was working on the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System, Korff said.

Then he helped develop cameras for Ranger 7, the first Ranger mission to get pictures of the moon’s surface, his daughter said.

For his work on the Ranger and other missions between 1965 and 1975, Mr. Corr was awarded a space pioneer award through the National Geographic Data Center.

In the 1960s, he worked on one of the first weather satellites, the TIROS. In his home hangs a picture of Mr. Corr and his colleagues posing next to TIROS, and duplicates of close-ups of the moon taken by the Ranger missions.

Mr. Corr was very proud of his creations “because they worked,” his daughter recalled.

His work meant long hours, but Mr. Corr did it.

“It took a hell of a drive like Jim,” Korff said. “He was successful in getting those satellites out.”

For several years, Mr. Corr was in charge of testing units for every condition they might encounter on their way to or while in space, said Ken Long of Moorestown, a colleague in the 1970s and ’80s. Mr. Corr often traveled to California to give satellites a final test and see them launched, Long said.

He used his problem-solving skills long before encountering satellites.

When he turned 18 in April 1945, Mr. Corr wanted to join the Army and fight at the end of World War II, but he was lanky and thin.

“He knew if you were under the weight, they wouldn’t take you,” his daughter said.

To gain five pounds, Mr. Corr concocted a plan.

The morning before trying to enlist in the Army Air Force, he and a scrawny friend devoured dozens of bananas each. Some relatives recalled hearing that each man ate about five pounds each, but others say it was 10 pounds.

Regardless, Mr. Corr was heavy enough to gain acceptance and sent off to training. He worked in logistics, administering prisoner-of-war camps in southern France.

After the war, the Bronx native studied electrical engineering at Manhattan College and graduated in 1951, his daughter said.

Mr. Corr was taking classes toward his master’s degree at the University of Pennsylvania, but when RCA offered a job, he took it right away and worked there until 1988.

In 1953, he married Jacqueline Perry, whom he had met at a dance the year before. She died in 1999.

In addition to his daughter Kathleen, Mr. Corr is survived by sons Thomas, James, Joseph, Francis, Matthew, Brendan, and Charles; daughter Jacqueline P. Corr Brantley; 15 grandchildren; and two sisters.

Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. today and from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Bradley Funeral Home, 601 Route 73, Marlton. A Funeral Mass will be said at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at St. John Neumann Church, 560 Walton Ave., Mount Laurel. Burial will be in Hillcrest Memorial Gardens, Fort Pierce, Fla.

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JEmail: Delaney, Gerard M. (MC1975) takes critic to task

From: “Gerard M. Delaney”
Date: February 21, 2010 12:07:01 AM EST
To: John Reinke
Subject: Quad

Mr. Czaczkes forgets one simple, important fact: the public life of Manhattan College, including student publications, must be informed by the teachings of Holy Mother Church. If he can not accept that reality, he may want to consider transferring to Marist College, or to Marymount Manhattan, both of which are no longer recognized as “Catholic” by the Archdiocese of New York.

Gerard M. Delaney ’75
Prepare for Glory!

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[JR: Now everyone is entitled to make mistakes. Unlike murder or the death penalty, this one can be fixed. I think I heard somewhere up on the hill in one of the theology courses, (which I cut as often as possible), "hate the sinner; love the sinner". Secular Progressives have brainwashed most folks. So mistakes are to be expected.]

http://jasperjottings-daily.com/2010/02/20/jemail-czaczkes-michael-mc2010-disgusted-about-a-quad-op-ed-against-gay-marriage/

JEmail: Czaczkes, Michael [MC2010] disgusted about a Quad op-ed against gay marriage

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Dear John,

   I think that this should read: “Hate the sin; Love the sinner”.

   Mike

McEneney, Mike (MC1953)

[JR: Maybe that's why I got D's in Theology. Thanks, Mike. Much appreciated. Of course, the quote should be "hate the sin; love the sinner". Surely, we can see past the sin to the humanity on the other side. I don't think the gooferment should be licensing "marriages" and setting tax policy on them. Argh!]

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POSITRACTION: Good deeds touch the hardened heart

http://ncc-1776.org/tle2010/tle555-20100131-06.html

THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
Number 555, January 31, 2010
“The days of political correctness are numbered”

On Compassion and Altruism
by IL Fettucinni
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise

*** begin quote ***

Today I witnessed an act of compassion, of tenderness, of caring, of such simple goodness as to make my eyes mist and tears roll down my cheeks.

I was at the Arne Hanna Pool in Bellingham trying to get in some aquatic exercise to lose weight. I was alternating swimming laps and bubbling in the hot tub. The hot tub in this pool can contain 21 people and is racetrack shaped and has a little sitting edge all around it where the bubbles give your back a good going over.

As I was getting out of the pool to go to the bathroom when I noticed a guy assisting another person into the hot tub. I went to the john and came out and got into the hot tub. There were about five or six of us. I now was close enough to notice the man who had been assisting someone into the pool.

The man who did the assisting was about 25 I would l guess, solid build, black hair, sort of semi-olive skin. He looked to be a ‘hapa-hoale’ which in Hawaii means half Caucasian/half something else. He was sitting above and holding what I have to guess was his brother. The brother was also in his mid twenties and seemed to have one of those conditions that robbed him of his ability to move and speak. His eyes rolled frequently out of sight and when they came back into focus seemed to have no knowledge of the external world.

At that moment the bubbles stopped. The brother who had been holding the other jumped out of the hot tub, walked over to the wall and pressed the start button in such a way as to bring the bubbles back on nice and strong. I asked him how he had done that and he replied that he had watched over time and found out that if you hold the button in for a few seconds it would make the bubbles higher and he smiled. His brother in the meantime simply sat in the tub, eyes vacuously rolling about. I noticed that these two men looked very much like each other. I wanted to ask the helping brother what affliction his brother had and were they in fact brothers. But I refrained.

I noticed that the diseased brother was actually quite handsome and was shaved closely. In fact both of these guys were very handsome. The helping brother had never left his charge out of his sight. Then he said to his brother, “Time to leave. Is that OK with you?” In the next moment he very gently placed his arms around his brother’s chest and lifted him effortlessly up out of the water to the ledge of the hot tub. I then noticed how his brother’s body was withered to the point where his waist looked about 12 inches around and his legs were spindly. He must have weighed less than 60 pounds.

Then the caring brother picked up his brother ever so tenderly in his arms and placed him onto a special chair that was designed to go into the water and had wheels to move it about. After checking his brother the caring brother pushed him away to the shower room.

At that moment I was overcome with the real world goodness of this man to his brother. I did not know they were brothers; for all I know the caring guy could have been a paid attendant. But given how much they looked alike my assumption that they were brothers is probably true. We are every day given to see crimes on TV, violence in the news, in movies, in newspapers that we are getting used to it.

Here in this pool I witnessed an act of such loving care and beauty that I literally could not hold my emotions in check. I put my head underwater to remove my tears.

*** end quote ***

[JR: I'm speechless. Other to say that service is its own reward. And, we don't know whom we touch when we are doing good.]

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MVideo: Pink Zone Manhattan vs Niagara

Pink Zone Manhattan vs Niagara.wmv

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VpW7lGRzoTg

[JR: Note the empty stands. Such a shame!]

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ADMINISTRIVIA: JASPER JOTTINGS Week 08 – 2010 February 21

JASPER JOTTINGS Week 08 – 2010 February 21

Jasper Jottings – The achievement journal of my fellow Jaspers, the alumni of the Manhattan College

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ENDNOTE: Sad sale

http://www.irishcentral.com/story/roots/finnegans_awake/n-irish-teen-sells-virginity-n-irish-paper-sells-ethics-82726137.html

Posted on Tuesday, January 26, 2010 at 04:46 PM

Irish teen sells virginity; Irish paper sells ethics

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Essentially, and not for the first time, a teenage girl tried to sell her virginity to the highest bidder on an auction site. Apparently, a reporter for the Telegraph noticed the posting, contacted the girl to see if it was legit and then posed as a wealthy businessman to bid for the young lady’s virtue.

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[JR: Read this and just shook my head. How hard up can a girl be? I'll pray hard tonight that she finds her way. I guess not all technology is used properly.]

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JHQ: Help Wanted Alumni Relations Officer

http://www.google.com/url?sa=X&q=http://www.mediabistro.com/joblistings/jobview.asp
%3Fjoid%3D95925%26page%3D7&ct=ga&cd=qi8KvjBYtYs&usg=AFQjCNGqur–O9BN1fbNGj6uhULh89Bb9Q

*** begin quote ***

Alumni Relations Officer job in Bronx, NY USA at Manhattan College …

Publication or Company, Manhattan College. Industry, Higher Education … About Our Company, Manhattan College, an independent Catholic coed institution in …

*** end quote ***

[JR: Maybe I should apply? ROFL!]

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JFound: LaSpisa, Laura [MC2005] has two jobs

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/laura-laspisa/5/a8b/470  

LaSpisa, Laura [MC2005]
* Planner, Digital Media & Interactive Sales at GSN
* East Coast Sales Planner at SheKnows, LLC
Greater New York City Area
Marketing and Advertising

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