Monthly Archives: December 2010

JEMAIL: Lawrence, Richard A. (MC1968) explains the robot to me

RE: Anyone else find the logo “yucky”? Jaspers are robots. Stiffs. Pre-programmed?

Hi John,

   The robot is the StatSheet logo. It appears StatSheet is generating web “fan” pages for the Division 1 schools and simply sticking the NCAA approved school logo on the StatSheet robot. To answer the rest of your questions, come out to one of the basketball games and draw your own conclusions.

Regards,
Rich

[JR: Ahhh, now I get the symbolism. (You only have to explain stuff several times using little words for me to catch on.) Like those "do not reply" email addresses that every business seems to be fond of! I don't understand how either the robot or the "do not reply" that adds value. But, to each their own. Hope they didn't pay a lot for that "service". So now we have TWO sources of sports info GOJASPERS and JASPERFAN. Any bets on when the Athletic Department spawns another? One of these days I'll get back to the gym. Probably for my ashes to be scattered!]

Lawrence, Richard A. (MC1968)

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JLINKEDIN: Gatens, Kathie [MC1993] Director of Investigations at HSBC

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/kathie-gatens/25/504/617

Gatens, Kathie [MC1993]
Director of Investigations at HSBC
Greater New York City Area
Financial Services

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MOBIT: Blumberg, Joel [MCxstaff RIP]

http://www.newsday.com/sports/radio-man-blumberg-dies-at-64-1.2552362

Radio man Blumberg dies at 64
Originally published: December 18, 2010 7:32 PM
Updated: December 18, 2010 9:33 PM
By JEFF WILLIAMS jeff.williams@newsday.com

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As he had done a thousand times before, Joel Blumberg boarded a Long Island Rail Road train in Merrick on Friday afternoon, headed for Madison Square Garden. Blumberg, a longtime radio broadcaster, producer and engineer from East Meadow, was going to work for a Miami Heat radio broadcast of the Knicks game. But while on the train, he was stricken with what appears to be a heart attack, and he was pronounced dead at Jamaica Hospital. He was 64.

Blumberg had engineered and produced radio broadcasts for virtually every local professional and college team. He worked for the Islanders, Rangers, Knicks, Jets and St. John’s. He had been the play-by-play man for Manhattan College basketball games for many years and had done NFL and NCAA broadcasts around the country.

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Blumberg, Joel [MCxstaff RIP]

[JR: Staff — current and past — are recognized, 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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JOBIT: Gaynor, Robert W. [MC1949 RIP]

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/ctpost/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=147179850

Robert W. Gaynor

GAYNOR Robert W. Gaynor, age 89, of Stamford, passed away on December 17, 2010. He was the son of the late William and Mary (Faber) of Shelton. He honorably served in the U.S. Army Air Corps from 1942 to 1945 serving in Iceland, India and China during World War II. He then went on to graduate from Manhattan College and received his MBA from NYU. He was a certified public accountant. He retired as Director of Operations for the New York State Insurance Rehabilitation Bureau. He was a member of St. Leo’s Parish from its inception and a 4th Degree Knights of Columbus with the St. Augustine Council. He was predeceased by his wife, Helene, and his sister, Eleanor Didsbury. He is survived by his children, Robert T. Gaynor of Stamford, William J. Gaynor of Silver City, N.M., Mary G. Kennedy (Daniel) of Oxford, Dennis J. Gaynor (Deborah) of Monroe; and five grandchildren, Colin, Kerry and Kaela Kennedy, Ryan and Sean Gaynor. His family will receive friends at the Leo P. Gallagher & Son Funeral Home, 2900 Summer Street, Stamford, from 4 to 7 p.m. on Sunday, December 19, 2010. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Monday 10 a.m. at St. Leo Church, 24 Roxbury Road, Stamford.

Published in Connecticut Post from December 18 to December 19, 2010

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Gaynor, Robert W. [MC???? RIP]

Guestbook: http://www.legacy.com/guestbook/ctpost/guestbook.aspx?n=robert-gaynor&pid=147179850&cid=full

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John,

I believe he is a member on the class of 1949.

Ed

McEneney Edward J. (MC1959)

[JR: Thanks, Ed. Much appreciated.]

Gaynor, Robert W. [MC1949 RIP]

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JEMAIL: Fitzgerald, Peter Hopkins [MC1961 RIP] ided by Gearity, John (MC1961)

RE: JOBIT: Fitzgerald, Peter Hopkins [MC???? RIP]

Pete was a member of the Class of 1961. He received a BA degree. RIP

John Gearity (also a member of the Class of 1961)

[JR: Thank you. I'm sorry for your loss. I always am rocked by OBITs from my own class. College class is bad, but high school is worse. Makes me feel that "cold breath" on the back of my neck. And, a sadness for a lost story. I guess it's like Rodney Dangerfield reciting "Dying of the Light" in the farce "Back to School"; it's one redeeming scene that really touched me. Argh! I'm getting maudlin in my old age. Thanks.]

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Gearity, John (MC1961)

Fitzgerald, Peter Hopkins [MC1961 RIP]

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JEMAIL: O’Connell, Bill (MC1959) swaps email addresses

John,

This is Bill O’Connell, A.B. class of 1959. I am already on the Jasper Jottings email mailing list at another address ({Privacy Invoked}). I have a new email provider hence my request to have email sent to the above address. After I get all my stuff moved from my old email address I will cancel my JJ mailings there (or you can do it now if that is convenient).

Thanks as always for your efforts in keeping your readers up to date on matters Manhattan.

All the best.
Bill O’Connell, ’59
Williamsburg, VA

[JR: No, thank you, Bill the older, for providing a "teachable moment" to all the youngsters. I'm I may preume to "teach" anyone anything. See, changing emails is deceptively easy. The problem is: oversights and third parties. IMHO, "oversights" are those people we would have like to have know our email, but forgot to have told. They are effectively "lost" until another way to reconnect is found. "Third parties" are people who have the old email address that we don't know about. Now, changing is a good way to temporarily lose the spammers, at the cost of losing forgotten old friends and those we don't know, like executive search or old classmates who got our address from someone else. Of course, Jasper Jottings will pass along email to anyone from anyone without disclosing the new address. But, there are better solutions to the problem presented by email change. (1) "Forever email addresses" like the "alumni@manhattan.edu" or "@alumni.manhattan.edu" is pretty reliable. (2) But, my preferred solution is for folks to buy their own domain name for about $10/year. Then you OWN your address. Now teaching "old dogs" new tricks, while possible, is annoying to the "old dog", but our younger fellow alums should do it immediately. Based on my "feel" for the data, folks change email address a little less frequently than they change jobs. Of course, it goes without saying that one should NEVER use an employer's email account for personal email or for things like registering with FACEBOOK or LINKEDIN. Any way thanks for an opportunity to lecture the audience on the "evils of email changing", "employer's email", and strong drink. I did mention the strong drink; didn't I? Here's my stock advice.]

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May I suggest that you have your own domain? The common wisdom, or is that common whizdumb, is to own your own name as a domain name. I own “reinke.cc”. (I like saying “sea sea me at reinke.cc”! spam_me @ reinke.cc will actually work!) It gives one quite a bit of control. And, it’s very cheap. I know three solutions at 15$/year using wordpressdotcom with gmail, 25$/year email only with 1and1, and 60$/year for domain+email+webspace also at 1and1. My point is not that you should use 1and1. I could care less which one you use. It’s that getting on to your own domain with email is cheap and easy. And, it’s not hotmail, yahoo, or gmail. It IS your own “personal brand”.

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POSITRACTION: Amish apology; a lesson for all

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2010/11/amish_representatives_fly_to_i.html

November 29, 2010
Amish representatives fly to Israel
Phil Boehmke

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The Jerusalem Post brings us a heart-warming story of a group of delegates from the Amish communities in America and Switzerland who made an inspiring journey to Israel. Leaving centuries of tradition behind, the Amish representatives boarded airplanes for their trip to the Holy Land. On Saturday night the group paid a visit to Jerusalem’s Western Wall where they asked the Jewish people for forgiveness for their silence during the Holocaust.

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[JR: Asking for nothing, but promising to atone for a past omission. Good example goes a long way. Maybe they are Jaspers at heart? Don’t have the haircuts for it, but maybe kinda 60’s-ish!]

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ADMINISTRIVIA: JASPER JOTTINGS Week 51 – 2010 Dec 19

JASPER JOTTINGS Week 51 – 2010 Dec 19              …

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

http://www.jasperjottings.com/2010/jj2010W51.html

 

INDEX

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ENDNOTE: Jasper Katekosior (MC????) rants

[JR: Despite the length, I thought that I’d turn over the ‘endnote’ to a fellow Jasper, who usually doesn’t ‘do’ politics.]

http://katekosior.blogspot.com/2010/12/letter-to-people-who-are-supposed-to-be.html

Saturday, December 11, 2010
Letter to the People Who are Supposed to Be Representing Us

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Dear President Obama, Senators Warner and Webb, and Representative Wittman:

This has been a lousy week in our household. I’m putting the blame squarely on your shoulders. This week, it was announced that federal employees will not receive a pay raise for the next two years. And it was announced that federal employee transit benefits will be slashed in half. Now apparently this is due to the fact that they were raised and were due to come back down. Unfortunately for us, it comes at a time when our sole breadwinner is now commuting 4 hours a day to get to his job, which he loves might I add, in our nation’s traffic clogged capital, and because he has been unable to find someone to carpool with, he must now take the train and Metro to get to work. A train which is frequently late. A Metro that frequently has “issues”. In October, he was leaving home at 7:15 and getting home between 4 and 5. Now he leaves our home at 5:15 and gets home at 6:30. Doesn’t say much for our quality of life when we can’t spend time with our husband/father, who is exhausted when he gets back from those kind of hours, does it!

The pay freeze and benefit reduction news also came at a time this week when I drove by the local gas stations around here and nearly choked on my own teeth to see a sharp spike in gas prices. In case you didn’t notice, gas here is back to nearly $3 per gallon. I suppose I should feel fortunate—in many cases it’s back over $3 per gallon. And you know that manufacturers and retailers are not going to swallow the increase in gas prices on their end. They tack it onto the price of the goods that we have to buy. So really, we get to pay for our gas and everyone else’s.

Our health insurance co-pays have increased. I can only assume this is on account of the fact that those health insurance bastards had to lobby you guys so heavily not to support free health care for everyone. They must be laughing now that the bill you passed will only make them richer. I full support free health care for all. I just wish you had done it right. You had an amazing opportunity to do so, something that could have been your enduring legacy, but you blew it. Good work.

We are far from being in financial dire straits. This year we have taken in an exchange student. I still do not work so that I can be a stay at home mom to our 20 month old. If I was working, the majority of my income would be going to pay for day care and commuting costs. But don’t think I haven’t thought about going back to work. I even contacted my former boss who said I am a phone call away from being employed. Do you know how lucky I am? Because there are literally millions of people out there right now who are either scraping by at jobs they are overqualified for, who are unemployed, or who are in fear that their jobs are going to vanish.

Because of the pinch we’re starting to feel, even just a little bit, our lifestyle will change in the new year. This year, we’ve already started buying generics on things that don’t especially matter—things like “raw materials” for cooking (flour, sugar, oil, etc)—and medicine. We will continue to do so.

The last several years, we have re-invested our tax return into the economy. We adopted our beautiful little girl. We made major improvements to our home. We went on vacation. We discussed what we’re doing this year and my advice to my husband was, “I think we’d better save whatever pittance we get.” And that’s what we’ve agreed to do.

We will seriously slash the amount of travel that we do, both locally and nationally. We do hope to travel next summer to see a former exchange student, but other than that, our plans are to stay home or to visit family. Traveling by air has become such a pain in the butt that we don’t have any plans to do it unless it is absolutely necessary. Between extra fees for just putting a bag on the plane, the new security measures that we may or may not be subject to, and the prices of actually flying, we’re better off staying home. Thankfully the Smithsonian is still free and nearly in our backyard. This past year, we traveled to New York, Florida, North Carolina, Georgia. Next year, once our exchange daughter has gone back home to Thailand, we won’t probably go anywhere. We are fortunate to have been able to show her some of our beautiful country, but we won’t be able to show her a whole lot more of it other than visiting our parents.

I have been running all over town with my younger daughter this year as well, taking her to story time and a local toddler gym and the mall and playground. I participate in a local choir and run a book club. We have a very active group of friends who like to go sightseeing and bowling and out to meals. Where our schedule or that of a babysitter has permitted, we’ve enjoyed joining them. No more. My activities will be restricted to my book club and choir, my daughter’s to the park, toddler gym, and story time at our public library, which has slashed its hours and needs funding. I loved going to visit former co-workers and going to friends’ parties and meeting for lunch. But I think the days of wine and roses are coming to a close.

We have agreed that in 2011, we will no longer go out to eat at restaurants. We went out last night with 4 friends, and on top of quite a pricey bill, we had to tack on a babysitter. It was a sobering wake up call as to exactly how much we spend on something that ultimately really doesn’t matter that much. We can stay home and not pay gas to get somewhere, pay higher prices for a meal, and pay extra money for a tip for the waitress and a babysitter. Oh sure, I know, we should be supporting the American economy. I’ve heard all those precious little soundbites from all of you. But let’s face it. As a card carrying member of the middle class, I can only do so much. My dollar only goes so far, and it’s not really going anywhere at the moment.

But of course, you don’t seem to much care about that. You just passed a big tax cut again for the wealthiest Americans. I know three of the four of you are going to tell me that it was necessary to help out the little guy, but let me ask you this: since when did doing the right thing have to be tied to doing the wrong thing? Republicans like you, Rep. Whitman, are screaming that it was necessary in order to help job growth in this country. Much like Reaganomics, they swear the effect will trickle down into the rest of the population. These tax cuts have been in effect nearly a decade, and forget a trickle, there hasn’t even been dripping. When are we supposed to see some positive effect?

Senator Webb, your email this week was the proverbial salt in the wound. President Obama, when I shook hands with you in 2008, I felt sure I was shaking hands with one of the greatest men of my lifetime. Representative Wittman, I have even been to your office, only to be told the reasons I’m wrong. Senator Warner, I hear nothing from you, literally nothing. I had to go to your website this morning to read up on anything you’ve been doing, only to find out that while you’re “disappointed” in the tax cut deal, you’re going to vote for it anyway. What!? When either of my daughters does something that “disappoints” me, I don’t say, “Oh well, let’s just say it’s ok anyway.” All four of you are about debt reduction, as long as it doesn’t come at a price.

Well, as detailed above, my family’s debt reduction will seriously reduce the amount of money we’re pumping into the American economy, and we are not unique among American families. And watch our choices and the choices of other families trickle down.

Gentlemen, let me assure you that unless something drastic changes, I will not vote for a single one of you when you are up for re-election. I’m not switching sides and voting for the other guy. I’m going to hope someone new comes along with some new ideas, someone whose vote that is supposed to represent me, protect me, and make my family’s life better hasn’t already been bought and paid for by huge corporate donations I cannot hope to match. Let me remind you that the votes of the people got you into office and that’s who you should answer to. Every single one of you seems to have forgotten it. Quit “playing the game” and start making life better for all of us.

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[JR: Well, you play with the Devil and this is what results. Politicians and bureaucrats are not to be trusted. Certainly not with tax money. And, most certainly with our hopes. We’ll just have to see if our fellow Jasper follows through with her threat to vote for ‘the other guy’. Not that ‘the other guy’ will be any better. See it is a game to the bozos. Deadly. Oppressive. But, still a game.]

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JLINKEDIN: Basil, Mack [MC1981] Global Offering Executive at IBM

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/mack-basil/7/607/508  

Basil, Mack [MC1981]
Global Offering Executive at IBM
Greater New York City Area
Computer Hardware

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