Monthly Archives: November 2011

JEMAIL: Stebbins, Donald M (MC1961) cites “Cross of Gold”

From: Stebbins, Donald M (MC1961)
Date: Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 7:19 PM
Subject: Hard Money

Dear Jasper John,

It is not surprising to see you backing hard money and opposing a United Nations takeover of the economy as proposed by Pope Benedict (http://takimag.com/article/truth_charity/print#axzz1bvz5cjBe) given that in the past you have admitted rooting for Ebenezer Scrooge while reading or viewing “A Christmas Carol”. I suppose that you are an Old Man Potter devotee as well after seeing “It’s a Wonderful Life” Actually there are those who argue that Bedford Falls was better off under Potter with a thriving economy based on gambling and alcohol- where I live the local Oneida County economy isn’t exactly thriving, but our largest employer is the Indian casino, which now serves alcohol.

If “hard money” benefits the poor so much why is it always the favorite policy of bankers and other plutocrats?

Do you think those fellows and gals have the interest of poor folk at heart? William Jennings Bryan certainly did not think so

Part of his “Cross of Gold” speech is quoted below from: http://www.academicamerican.com/recongildedage/topics/gildedagepolitics.html

The issue (of hard money) came into sharp focus during the 1896 Democratic national convention. William Jennings Bryan, a populist Democrat from Nebraska, gave a speech which became known as his “Cross of Gold Speech.” In that famous oration Bryan said of the gold backers:

“They tell us that the great cities are in favor of the gold standard; we reply that the great cities rest upon our broad and fertile prairies. Burn down your cities and leave our farms, and your cities will spring up again as if by magic; but destroy our farms and the grass will grow in the streets of every city in the country.

“… Having behind us the producing masses of this nation and the world, supported by the commercial interests, the laboring interests, and the toilers everywhere, we will answer their demand for a gold standard by saying to them: You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.”

Sincerely yours,
Donald M Stebbins
BS 1961

# – # – #

JR:

I am surprised that it took you until Wednesday to “fire back”.

With all deference to the Holy Father, taking over of “the economy” by the UN is an absolutely terrible idea. Unless I misunderstand the definition of “faith and morals”, the Pope is offering us a “personal opinion”. Look at ANYTHING the UN has done and tell me that this the path to peace, liberty, or even prosperity? This is the same UN where the Human Rights are preserved by tyrants, “oil for food” after looting is used to buy arms for dictators, or even the unpunished atrocities committed by UN “peacekeepers”!

You are misreading my support for old Eb. He pays his taxes for his Gooferment social programs and then he gets panhandled to support the poor. His rant about “workhouses” is more about having to pay twice.

And, Potter is a creation of the Gooferment. Where does he get an industry protected from competition? And when an upstart S&L starts to pinch, HE calls the regulators to shut them down.

Gambling and booze are “regulated”; no? I’d suggest that Bedford Falls would be better off without the Gooferment’s “help”.

You have to be joking? What “plutocrat” advocates for “hard money”? Central bankers (including Wall Street), and their corrupt politicians and bureaucrats, want Gooferment to escape the chains of “hard money”. Inflation is the Gooferment’s tax on dollars, and dollar denominated assets. It allows Gooferment spending without debt or taxation. This silent hidden tax has eroded the dollars purchasing power. Remember Ron Paul’s three silver dimes comparison? Three silver dimes in 1960 bought a gallon of gas; those same three silver dimes would buy about THREE gallons today! The gas “value” didn’t change; the value of the “dollar” did! And, don’t you see how the little guy is being cheated?

And, WJB, that you’re citing, wanted “cheap money” from the Gooferment to make the “Farmer” rich at the expense of the “City Dwellers”. Unfortunately, EVERYONE wants to control the Gooferment so they can FORCE others to do their will.

“Money is a matter of functions four, a medium, a measure, a standard, a store.” He repeated that four times like poetry. “Six Characters in Money: Portable – Durable – Divisible – Uniformity – Limited Supply – Acceptability.” — CHURCH 10●19●62 (Vol 1) 978-0-557-08387-9 page 110

Arguing against “hard money”, as opposed to “faith-based money”, is like arguing against the kilogram, meter, and the second. An ounce of something (i.e., copper, silver, gold, palladium, platinum) as money is merely that measure, standard, or store.

And under the Federal Reserve System of “funny money” and all the Gooferment help (i.e., the War on Poverty), how has “the poor” made out?

Four generations of “welfare farmers” is my proof of the “impoverishing” effect of Gooferment, enabled by the “funny money” that allows “guns and butter” spending.

Could we maybe try something else?

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-30 @ 22:33

JHQ: MC Men’s Basketball 12/7 1700

Dear Ferdinand,

Manhattan College Men’s Basketball fans are invited to cheer on the Jaspers as they face their cross-Bronx rival, Fordham University in the 104th meeting of the two teams.   

The alumni relations office invites alumni and friends to come and enjoy dinner and drinks prior to the game in newly refurbished Café 1853 (formerly Plato’s Cave). Preregistration is required.   

Wednesday, Dec. 7
$35 per person
5:00 p.m. | Café 1853 (Thomas Hall, 2nd floor)
7:00 p.m. | Tip-off in Draddy Gymnasium

To register, click here.

Note: the cost of the event does not include a game ticket. For ticket information and to order online, visit Jasperstickets.com.   

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-30 @ 18:41

MFOUND: MC not perceived as a top tier college

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-nelson/there-are-no-top-tier-colleges_b_1116646.html

Steve Nelson
Head of the Calhoun School in Manhattan

There Are No “Top Tier” Colleges, Schools (or Kids!)
Posted: 11/29/11 06:12 PM ET

*** begin quote ***

Last week I visited a school called the Young Women’s Leadership School (YWLS) in East Harlem. Founded in the 1990s, YWLS was the first single-sex school in the New York City public school system. Its mission, which it fulfills admirably, is to prepare girls for college. Its students are almost all girls of color from families with limited resources and little experience with college.

Despite my admiration for the school’s mission, a nearly ubiquitous underlying assumption about kids and educational institutions arose during a meeting with the YWLS college placement director. The two students “guiding” my small tour group were sitting nearby as he explained the college admission process.

“Well,” (I paraphrase) “we have many kinds of girls in the school but they all go to college. We have smart girls who go to top tier colleges, we have average girls who go to the typical places and we have girls who struggle, but we get them into college, too.” I cringed, as I had taken a few moments to talk to both student guides about their plans and knew that one was hoping to attend Long Island University and the other aspired to enroll at Manhattan College. I don’t know whether the college counselor thought of these girls as “average” or “struggling,” but the looks on their faces betrayed their certain sense that they were not the “smart” ones.

{Extraneous Deleted}

*** end quote ***

[JR: If imho MC had an aggressive "social media" strategy, then MC would be in converstation with those young women to help them find the right school. Which may or may not be MC.]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-30 @ 17:15

MVIDEO: Nutcracker Swing

http://youtu.be/oOyZG5v_-M0

Nutcracker Swing

MCPerformingArtsDept

Uploaded by MCPerformingArtsDept on Nov 29, 2011

Tchaikovsky arranged by Mike Story

# # # # #

[JR: Two minutes of fun.]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-30 @ 07:43

JNEWS: Finn, Msgr. Peter G. [MC1960] is in the NY Daily News

From: McEneney, Mike (MC1953)
Date: Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 11:01 PM
Subject: Msgr PETER FINN ’60- in the NEWS

Dear John,

Below is a piece from the NY Daily News that quotes Msgr. Peter Finn,’60. I received this from his Classmate, Jim Smith,’60

Mike

——– Original Message ——–

Subject: FW: PETE FINN – in the NEWS
Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2011 17:38:35 -0500
From: Smith, Jim (MC1960)
To: McEneney, Mike (MC1953)

Jim Smith

—– Original Message —–

From:
To:
Sent: 11/29/2011 1:41:08 PM
Subject: PETE FINN – in the NEWS

Christmas, Chanukah seasons keep priests and their parishes working overtime to help out the city’s needy
The holidays keep city’s priests busy with plenty of duties
BY Gina Salamone NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Originally Published: Saturday, November 26 2011, 6:00 AM

Step aside, Santa.

While your busy season is marked mostly by one all-nighter, there are others working year-round to promote Christmas.

Priests across the city are preparing for what is their most active period since Lent and Easterlast spring. They’re putting in overtime to make sure the holiday’s true meaning doesn’t get lost among the mayhem.

Sunday begins Advent, which extends over the four Sundays before Christmas and celebrates the coming of Christ.

€œWe celebrate Jesus’ birth into the world at this time, which a lot of people apparently are forgetting, and we have to keep bringing people back to that,” says the Rev. Frank Black, pastor of St. Laurence Catholic Church in Brooklyn.

“€œWe thank God for his gift of his Son, and therefore we give gifts and celebrate His love by sharing our love with other people,” he adds. “So to do that, we celebrate Advent right up until Christmas.—

Msgr. Peter G. Finn, pastor of Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church in Staten Island, can appreciate holiday decorations and displays, as long as they don’t stray too far from the spirit of Christmas.

“€œI’€™ve always been a Christmas person, and I love the tree at Rockefeller Center,” says Finn. “€œBut I especially love, promote and encourage keeping Christ in Christmas.”

That can be tough, especially during a week when we’re all bombarded with Black Friday and Cyber Monday specials.

“€œOne of the things, in terms of commercialism, that I do feel bad about and think is unfortunate is Black Friday starting on Thanksgiving evening,”€ says Finn, referring to the decision by many stores to start big sales even earlier this year.

He’s also puzzled by the holiday window displays at certain stores, namely one at Barneys New York, called “Gaga’€™s boudoir”,€ co-created by the eccentric singer.

“€œQuite frankly, I think Lady Gaga is kind of interesting, kooky in a certain sense, but not a bad person,” Finn says. “€œBut I don’€™t think her boudoir represents what the season of Christmas and Chanukah is all about.”

“€œIt might be wonderful thing to distract everyone on a cold belt of winter in February, but I don’€™t think it belongs in December,” he adds “€œI don’€™t think it in any way will bother Jesus, just us. We’€™d like to have everyone be a little bit more in tune of what Jesus really means.”

On Sunday, Blessed Sacrament will light one of the four candles on its Advent Candelabra, kicking off a number of activities that the church has planned.

“We establish a giving tree with lights on it and numerous tags,” Finn explains. “Those tags will include specific requests for children and adults who are in need.”

“€œDuring the course of the whole Advent season, our parishioners are asked to take the tags, bring them home and purchase whatever is indicated there, wrap it, tag it, bring it back and place it under the tree,”€ he adds.

The church is working with about six different charities.

Among dozens of other holiday duties, Finn is also helping to organize a Toys For Tots campaign, filling extra time slots to hear confessions from parishioners and leading the church’s various organizations as they plan Christmas concerts and gatherings.

At St. Laurence, parishioners, led by their pastor, are occupied packing Christmas baskets full of food and gifts. They’ll be handed out to families who may not have enough money for a holiday dinner or gifts.

The East New York church also has a giving tree, benefitting several organizations that help the needy.

“€œI sit down and meet with everyone to plan it and get different committees together,” Black explains. “Everybody has to check back with me. Then, of course, the whole parish has to be decorated, which is a pain in the neck.”€

“€œThere’€™s a volunteer appreciation party for various committees that’s getting bigger every year,”€ he adds. “We have a have a pageant with the kids for Christmas Eve Mass, which I help out planning the music for and playing the guitar during rehearsals.”

Because St. Laurence has a large Hispanic population, the church has two celebrations honoring Jesus’ mother, the Blessed Virgin Mary — the Feast of the Immaculate Conception and the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

“And we also throw a huge party for 300 to 400 special needs kids in the area from the public school system,”€ says Black. “And we have a big fund-raiser going on.”

He notices an increase in parishioners attending Masses and activities during the Christmas season, and says the phone never stops ringing.

“I don’™t buy gifts any more; it just became too crazy to fit it all in,”€ Black says of his personal shopping habits.

He plans to spend this Christmas with his college roommates’€™ families.

“I do that every year,”€ Black says. “And then I’ll come home and collapse.”€

# # # # #

Finn, Msgr. Peter G. [MC1960]

[JR: Thanks, Mike, Jim, and all that had their hands in getting it in. Much appreciated. Amazes me that the NYDN does allow Google to index their content. That's why eyeballs are the last line of defense.]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-30 @ 07:36

ADMINISTRIVIA: Another “best” on Yahoo Answers

REPORTING LIVE FROM THE YAHOO ANSWERS DESK IN THE VIRTUAL JASPER JOTTINGS NEWSROOM …

*** begin quote ***

Congratulations, you’ve got a best answer and 10 extra points!

Your answer to the following question really hit the spot and has been chosen as the best answer:

What are some really good colleges in nyc or the boro’s?

*** end quote ***

[JR: Guess what college I recommended? Be nice if we could convince MC that this is how you can but butts in the seats.]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-29 @ 20:30

JFOUND: Mariani, Paul [MC1962] inspired by Fandel, John [MCxfac RIP]

http://books.google.com/books?id=He3aRBskI_0C&pg=PA155&lpg=PA155

Writers on Writing (Bread Loaf Anthology)
by Robert Pack, Jay Parini
Publisher: Middlebury; 1st edition (August 15, 1991)
ISBN-13: 978-0874515602

Paul Mariani — Beginnings (Page 151)

201111291838.jpg

# – # – #

Mariani, Paul [MC1962]

[JR: In doing http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Reinkefj/John_Fandel, I found this connection.]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-29 @ 18:37

JNEWS: Saulino, Louis [MC1970] writes “Athlete For Hire”

http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/11/prweb8994381.htm

A New Novel about Phenomenal Athlete Released
Louis Saulino’s ATHLETE FOR HIRE takes readers on an E-ticket ride in an attempt to sign a Three-Sport Superstar
Farmingville, N.Y. (PRWEB) November 29, 2011

“Sports is like war without the killing,” according to media mogul and philanthropist Ted Turner. Praise and even outright worship of successful professional athletes, on the other hand, often exceeds our reverence for actual war heroes. If being exceedingly good at one sport makes a man a star, what if he is exceedingly good at three? Avid sports enthusiast and published author Louis Saulino has created an engaging first novel, Athlete For Hire, set in the backdrop of the professional sports industry.

“As an armchair quarter back, I envisioned a scenario where a professional sports team owner of three franchises (baseball, football, basketball) could ponder hiring an all-around athlete,” Saulino explained. “This fictional owner, Scott Thomas, meets with his general managers to discuss a highly acclaimed college athlete featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated. His proficiency is in the three sports intrigues Thomas who becomes disgruntled when all three of his general managers want the athlete for their respective sport. Thomas exclaims, ‘Why can’t we draft this kid for all three of my teams?’ Having time on my hands in the evening with my sons gone gave me the opportunity to try out a ‘what if’ scenario. It was a blast and I hope readers enjoy it as much as I enjoyed writing it.”

As the college senior, Marc Stevens, competes in each sport, a “due diligence” plan is prepared by Scott’s general managers and key staff to have the athlete drafted by all three teams. Will Scott Thomas be successful in signing Marc Stevens to an unprecedented contract requiring him to be available on an as-needed basis for each sport? Will Marc, the three sport phenom, become an Athlete For Hire?

For additional media information, to set interviews, book signings, etc., contact Saulino’s publicist, Carole V. Bartholomeaux, 602.404.8018 or bprworks(at)cox(dot)net. Information is also available at http://www.Xlibris.com.

About the Author

Louis Saulino is a widower, father of two grown sons, and a sports enthusiast. A civil engineering graduate of Manhattan College, he also has his masters in Transportation Engineering and Planning and is a licensed professional engineer. He practiced engineering in the New York metropolitan area, in the private and public sectors, for forty years. In the fall of 2010, Louis Saulino decided to pursue his creative instincts and embarked in writing a television script for an idea he initially conceived in the 1970s. This was developed into a book, Athlete for Hire. He also authored a fictional baseball history book, “8” Center Field in New York © (1951-1957).

Athlete For Hire * by Louis Saulino
Publication Date: November 18, 2011
Trade Paperback; $19.99; 276 pages; 978-1-4653-7468-4
Trade Hardback; $29.99; 276 pages; 978-1-4653-7469-1
eBook; $3.99; 978-1-4653-7470-7

Members of the media who wish to review this book may request a complimentary paperback copy by contacting the publisher at (888) 795-4274 x. 7879. To purchase copies of the book for resale, please fax Xlibris at (610) 915-0294 or call (888) 795-4274 x. 7879.

For more information on self-publishing or marketing with Xlibris, visit http://www.Xlibris.com. To receive a free publishing guide, please call (888) 795-4274.

# – # – #

Saulino, Louis [MC????]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-29 @ 09:14

From: McEneney, Mike (MC1953)
Date: Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 1:56 PM
Subject: Saulino, Louis 1970 writes “Athlete For Hire”

Dear John,

I believe that Louis is a member of the Class of 1970.

Mike

[JR: Thanks, Mike. Much appreciated.]

Saulino, Louis [MC1970]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-30 @ 16:57

JNEWS: Mangan, Thomas [MC1966] The Nutcracker vs. Occupy Wall Street

http://www.examiner.com/independent-in-rochester/tchaikovsky-s-the-nutcracker-vs-occupy-wall-street

Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker vs. Occupy Wall Street

Thomas Mangan, Rochester Independent Examiner

November 28, 2011

*** begin quote ***

The Rochester City Ballet performed Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker this weekend, and their performance on Saturday night was truly superb.

You couldn’t ask for anything more. Short of living in New York City and watching the New York City Ballet’s performance of George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker, or living in Moscow and watching the Bolshoi Ballet, this is as good as it gets.

The music was incredible, as it always is. The sets and the costumes were magnificent. Timothy Draper’s choreography was fantastic, and the dancing was out of this world.

I had an ear-to-ear smile on my face for the entire ballet.

Back in 1966, I was introduced to ballet during my freshman in college. As a poor city kid who grew up in a five-story, walk-up tenement in upper Manhattan, I didn’t know anything about ballet and wasn’t really interested in learning about it.

But as a freshman at Manhattan College, I had to take a music appreciation course, and one of my homework assignments was to go to Lincoln Center and watch The Nutcracker.

But rather than moan about another lousy homework assignment, I decided to turn the assignment into a date. I used twofers to buy two tickets (for the price of one); then I asked a girl to go out to dinner and a ballet (instead of dinner and a movie or dinner and a Broadway play).

She said yes, and I knew I had it made. No matter how bad the ballet was, at least I’d get a kiss goodnight when I walked her home. What else can a teenage boy ask for?

No matter how hard I try, I can’t remember who the girl was, but I met the love of my life that night, when I saw my first ballet.

{Extraneous Deleted}

As I was reading the program before the ballet started, I realized that The Nutcracker debuted on December 17, 1892; just twenty five years before the Russian Revolution.

It dawned on me, that if they had lived, Clara, and her brother Fritz, would have been victims of the Russian Revolution, in much the same way that Doctor Zhivago was; they ether would have been shot; or shipped off to a concentration camp in Siberia.

{Extraneous Deleted}

At one time the sun never set on the great British Empire. Now the British Empire no longer exists. It is as extinct and irrelevant as the dinosaurs.

Our great American culture will go the same way, and if we don’t clean up our act, it will disappear sooner rather than later.

The Occupy Wall Street movement is a sign of discontent at the very foundations of our American society, and we’d better pay attention before our society implodes.

There is an entire generation of Americans in their twenties who have done exactly what we asked them to do, and they have nothing to show for it.

They studied hard. They got good grades. They took those college loans because we told them they would graduate and find good jobs. But when they graduated from college; there were no good jobs; no jobs that would pay them enough to live, and pay off their college loans.

We sold the next generation a bill of goods.

That’s why we have an Occupy Wall Street movement. That’s why our children may be in the same situation that Clara and her brother, Fritz, and Doctor Zhivago were in.

For them, and for Tchaikovsky, the Russian Revolution was right over the horizon, but there was no way they could see it coming.

For us, our society is coming apart at the seams, and if we don’t pay attention to the Occupy Wall Street movement, American society as we know it may cease to exist as fast as Tchaikovsky’s society disappeared in 1917.

Think about it.

It could happen tomorrow if we don’t do something to right the ship now.

# # # # #

Mangan, Thomas [MC????]

[JR: Pretty astute!]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-29 @ 08:30

From: McEneney, Mike (MC1953)
Date: Tue, Nov 29, 2011 at 2:10 PM
Subject: Mangan, Thomas 1966The Nutcracker vs. Occupy Wall Street

Dear John,

I believe that Thomas is a member of the Class of 1966.

Mike

[JR: Thanks, Mike. Much appreciated.]

Mangan, Thomas [MC1966]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-30 @ 07:45

JLINKEDIN: Sokolich, Fred [MC1973] Broker/Owner, SOKOLICH REAL ESTATE

http://www.linkedin.com/in/fredsokolich

Fred Sokolich
Broker/Owner, SOKOLICH REAL ESTATE ENTERPRISES
Greater New York City Area
Real Estate

Summary:

#1 Rental Broker of Northern New Jersey!

With over 25 years of experience and 2 company owned office locations in northern N.J., Fred Sokolich is ranked the #1 Rental Broker in Bergen County according to the NJMLS – a membership of over 10,000 real estate professionals.

Specialties: Rentals and sales of residential and commercial properties, property management, investment properties, relocation, property marketing

# – # – #

Sokolich, Fred [MC1973]

# – # – # – # – # 2011-Nov-29 @ 08:19