Sunday 13 October 2002

Dear Jaspers,

The jasper jottings email list has 1,003 subscribers to the full edition and 5 to the "slim pointer" message by my count. Now, if everyone from the NYC Alumni Club meeting who said they were interested, signed up we'd have a mob.

Don't forget:

Oct 14 - 22  Normandy
            Call Alumni Holiday Travel:  Phone: 847-384-4500
            info@ahitravel.com 

Th Oct 17 - MCLAC conference call
          RSVP Maria Khury <mkhury@khury.com> required.

We Oct 23 - Career Fair Undergraduate
            Draddy Gymnasium from 12 Noon to 4 PM 
            Any organization interested in participating should contact
                  Joe Dillon (718) 862-7997.
            Recent Manhattan College graduates are invited to attend
                  register with Ssive Sola (718) 862-7454.

Fr Oct 25 - MC Young Alumni Happy Hour at The Parlour
                  RSVP: MurphGuide@yahoo.com

Su, Oct 27, 2002 - Manhattan College Open House
        Submitted by Maria Khury mkhury@khury.com

Tu, Nov 12 – 25th Annual John J. Horan Lecture
                               Rudolf Giuliani ‘65

Th, Nov 21 - "Young Patrons Alumni Night" Folger Shakespeare
                    Library, Washington, D.C. on November 21, 2002. 
                    Happy Hour at Thunder Grill in Union Station 5-7pm
                    and Love's Labour's Lost at 7:30pm.

Fr Jan. 24 '03 - MC Young Alumni Happy Hour
                  RSVP: MurphGuide@yahoo.com

Fr Apr. 25 '03 - MC Young Alumni Happy Hour
                  RSVP: MurphGuide@yahoo.com

Th Jul. 24 '03 - MC Young Alumni Happy Hour
                  RSVP: MurphGuide@yahoo.com
===

Rudy has a new book out, but I haven't caught anything on it in my searches?

===

ALL BOILER PLATE is at the end.

===

http://www.msnbc.com/news/780235.asp?0dm=N11RL

Swim with the sharks? Well, not quite, but you can get pretty darn close at this new deep water aquarium.

<nip>

Stocking the aquarium with fish cost only 200,000 pounds — a small portion of the total 45.5 million invested in the project.

Around half the money came from National Lottery proceeds earmarked for projects to mark the millennium. Brown was proud The Deep has so far managed to succeed where other schemes, such as London’s Millennium Dome, have failed.

<snip>

Once again the taxpayer's pocket in England is picked for what some elite think is a great idea. Still it does inspire one to think of the big projects that could have been done if this one hadn't. It can't be overlooked that there are plethora of great ideas but society has an odd way of choosing the one's that get funded. Clearly, it all starts with a vision.

Maybe I'll have one this week. Will you?

Reflect well on our alma mater, this week, every week, in any and every way possible, large or small. God bless.

"Collector-in-chief" John
reinkefj@alum.manhattan.edu

=====

CONTENTS

        2      Formal announcements
        2      Messages from Headquarters (like MC Press Releases)
        1      Jaspers publishing web pages
        3      Jaspers found web-wise
        0      Honors
        1      Weddings
        0      Births
        0      Engagements
        0      Graduations
        0      Obits
        2      "Manhattan in the news" stories
        0      Resumes
        3      Sports
        13     Emails

 

 

[PARTICIPANTS BY CLASS]

Class   

Name  

Section

?

Aiello, Ralph

Email1

?

Heubeck, Michael

Found1

?

Ryan, John J.

Email2

1942

Schlickenrieder, Warren

Email2

1952

Flynn, Br. Anthony

Email1

1953

McEneney, Michael F.

Email8

1959

O'Connell, Bill

Email11

1959

Tuccille, Jerome

News2

1962

Dillon, Joe

Email1

1962

Gildea, Bill

Email10

1963

O’Malley, Tom

Headquarters1

1964

Hesselbacher, Kenneth E.

Announcement1

1965

Delaney, James

Announcement2

1965

Delaney, James

Email8

1967

Coleman, Gregory

Email1

1968

Daly, Bill

Email1

1968

Dolan, Kevin

Email1

1968

Dolan, Kevin J.

Email1

1968

Kelly, Jack

Email4

1969

Feehan, Betty

Email1

1970

Chandler, Bill

Email1

1970

Kelly, Patrick J.

Email4

1971

Maikish, Charles

Email1

1973

Cacciapaglia, Donald C.

Email1

1976

Gunn, Joe

Email1

1976

O'Connell, Bill

Email12

1977

Kosch, James A.

Email5

1978

Capitani, Joseph F.

Found2

1979

O'Bannon, Deborah Jean

WebPage1

1979

Walsh, Meg

Email1

1980

O'Hanlon Steven

Email10

1982

Fields, William A.

Email6

1982

Galante, Michael A.

Found3

1983

Forlini, Stephen M.

Email9

1984

Pellettieri, Gina M.

Email7

1986

Donohue, Noreen

Email1

1988

O'Connor, John P.  (

Email13

1988

Warner, Vincent J.

Email1

1989

McCarra-Fitzpatrick, MaryAnn

Email3

1992

Jalkut, Steve

Email1

1993

Mercurio, Mia Lynn

Wedding1

1999

Coppola, Deborah A.

Email1

 

[PARTICIPANTS BY NAME]

Class   

Name  

Section

?

Aiello, Ralph

Email1

1973

Cacciapaglia, Donald C.

Email1

1978

Capitani, Joseph F.

Found2

1970

Chandler, Bill

Email1

1967

Coleman, Gregory

Email1

1999

Coppola, Deborah A.

Email1

1968

Daly, Bill

Email1

1965

Delaney, James

Announcement2

1965

Delaney, James

Email8

1962

Dillon, Joe

Email1

1968

Dolan, Kevin

Email1

1968

Dolan, Kevin J.

Email1

1986

Donohue, Noreen

Email1

1969

Feehan, Betty

Email1

1982

Fields, William A.

Email6

1952

Flynn, Br. Anthony

Email1

1983

Forlini, Stephen M.

Email9

1982

Galante, Michael A.

Found3

1962

Gildea, Bill

Email10

1976

Gunn, Joe

Email1

1964

Hesselbacher, Kenneth E.

Announcement1

?

Heubeck, Michael

Found1

1992

Jalkut, Steve

Email1

1968

Kelly, Jack

Email4

1970

Kelly, Patrick J.

Email4

1977

Kosch, James A.

Email5

1971

Maikish, Charles

Email1

1989

McCarra-Fitzpatrick, MaryAnn

Email3

1953

McEneney, Michael F.

Email8

1993

Mercurio, Mia Lynn

Wedding1

1963

O’Malley, Tom

Headquarters1

1979

O'Bannon, Deborah Jean

WebPage1

1959

O'Connell, Bill

Email11

1976

O'Connell, Bill

Email12

1988

O'Connor, John P.  (

Email13

1980

O'Hanlon Steven

Email10

1984

Pellettieri, Gina M.

Email7

?

Ryan, John J.

Email2

1942

Schlickenrieder, Warren

Email2

1959

Tuccille, Jerome

News2

1979

Walsh, Meg

Email1

1988

Warner, Vincent J.

Email1

 

 

[FORMAL ANNOUNCEMENTS ABOUT JASPERS]

[Announcement1]

Copyright 2002 Bergen Record Corporation  
The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
October 2, 2002 Wednesday All Editions
SECTION: BUSINESS; PEOPLE IN BUSINESS; Pg. B03
HEADLINE: PEOPLE IN BUSINESS
SOURCE: North Jersey Media Group

<extraneous deleted>

Interchange Bank, Saddle Brook, announced two executive appointments: Kenneth E. Hesselbacher is regional manager of new business development for the equipment lease financing subsidiary, Interchange Capital Co. of Elmwood Park. A resident of Pearl River, N.Y., Hesselbacher graduated from Manhattan College.

<extraneous deleted>

***

Send information to: Business News People, The Record, 150 River St., Hackensack, N.J. 07601. E-mail lapidus@northjersey.com or fax (201) 646-4164.

LOAD-DATE: October 4, 2002   

 

 

[Announcement2]

Copyright 2002 Daily News, L.P.  
Daily News (New York)
October 8, 2002, Tuesday SPORTS FINAL EDITION
SECTION: SUBURBAN; Pg. 3
HEADLINE: ASST. DA CALLS IT A CAREER
BYLINE: By SCOTT SHIFREL DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

When James Delaney started with the Queens district attorney's office in 1971, DNA was the stuff of science and few imagined the changes in store for criminal justice.

But while 31 years have brought a world of difference to the way prosecutors do their jobs, Delaney notes one constant.

"It's the people," he said yesterday, his last day as an assistant district attorney before he retires to pursue such hobbies as photography, genealogy and travel. "Most of the stuff we do in the district attorney's office is just teamwork." Delaney, 58, worked for five district attorneys and on some of the borough's most important cases, including Zodiac killer Heriberto Seda - who was convicted - and the scandals surrounding the late Borough President Donald Manes, who killed himself.

"He has been a great asset to this office, to our community and to our city," District Attorney Richard Brown said, noting Delaney's "meticulous attention to detail."

Raised in Elmhurst, Delaney went to Brooklyn's Bishop Loughlin High School and Manhattan College, graduating the same year from both as did former Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

"I knew he would do well," said Delaney, who chose to remain a prosecutor after Fordham Law School, though he became active with his community board, civic association and church.

Homicide Bureau vet

And while he's had his share of big cases, Delaney, who has spent most of his time in the Homicide Bureau, said it's often the little things that are most important.

Recently, the Parole Board told him a convicted killer he prosecuted in 1977 was eligible for parole. Delaney immediately notified the victim's family.

"They were surprised to see I was still around," he said. "But the father especially was so appreciative."

It's that sort of reward that kept Delaney going for all those years.

"You feel like you are doing a job for people," he said of his role with the district attorney's office. "These are homicides, but you're at least giving some hope to these families."

GRAPHIC: James Delaney

LOAD-DATE: October 8, 2002   

 

 

[Messages from Headquarters (Manhattan College Press Releases & Stuff)]

[Message1]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Heidi W. Giovine
(718)862-7232
hgiovine@manhattan.edu

---

HARRISON, NEW YORK, RESIDENT, FRANK SPINOZZA RECEIVES AMERICAN PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SCHOLARSHIP

RIVERDALE, N.Y. ---  Harrison, New York, resident Frank Spinozza, a junior civil engineering student at Manhattan College, has been awarded a $2,500 scholarship through the American Public Transportation Foundation.  Mr. Spinozza received one of five national Transit Hall of Fame Scholarships.

The Louis T. Klauder Scholarship is awarded to a student intending to pursue a career in the rail transit industry. One of the scholarship prerequisites included participation in an APTF member organization's student internship/mentoring program.  Mr. Spinozza participated in Manhattan College's mentoring program with Fred Werner, chief operating officer of DMJM+HARRIS, an international consulting engineering firm specializing in transportation and infrastructure.

Mr. Spinozza's dedication and enthusiasm in the mentoring program earned him an internship position with the Manhattan College civil engineering department while only a freshman.  He has now completed two successive summers working with civil engineers designing highways, drainage systems and assisting with site designs for infrastructure development in New York City.

The Transit Hall of Fame Scholarship Award was established in 1987 and is administered through the American Public Transportation Foundation.  The purpose of the scholarship award program is to increase and retain the number of young professionals entering the transit field as a career and to offer professional opportunities in order to sustain growth and improvement within the industry.

Celebrating 150 years of excellence in Lasallian education, Manhattan College, located in the Riverdale section of the Bronx, is an independent, Catholic, coeducational institution that offers more than 40 major fields of study in the programs of arts, business, education, engineering and science.

---

MANHATTAN COLLEGE DEDICATES RENOVATED LIBRARY TO MARY ALICE AND TOM O’MALLEY IN RECOGNITION OF $7.5 MILLION GIFT

RIVERDALE, N.Y.  --  On Saturday, October 5, Manhattan College dedicated the Mary Alice and Tom O’Malley Library, in honor of the College’s longtime benefactors Tom O’Malley, class of 1963, and his wife, Mary Alice, of Greenwich, Connecticut.

The naming of the O’Malley Library pays tribute to a distinguished couple dedicated to each other, their family and the concept of giving something back.  A generous alumnus throughout his successful business career, Mr. O’Malley has always supported Manhattan College’s Lasallian education.  Now, through their generous gift of $7.5 million, the largest in the College’s history, the O’Malleys have led the way to building a library for the 21st century.

The creation of the O’Malley Library was a unique project that melded the past with the future, which is especially fitting as the College is celebrating its sesquicentennial year.  The former Cardinal Hayes Library, built in 1937, was renovated and updated; then seamlessly joined together with a modern wing, which added more than 45,000 square feet of space. Other new features of the O’Malley Library include more than 100 computer workstations  with  access  to print  and online information, reading rooms and study carrels wired with data connections, a 24-hour Internet Café, an instructional “smart” classroom-laboratory, and a media center with teleconferencing capabilities.

As Br. Thomas Scanlan, president of Manhattan College, said during the dedication ceremony: “Tom and Mary Alice, no one can conceive a more apt building to forever mark our sesquicentennial and to proclaim what our faculty and students believe Manhattan is all about.  And so, we have placed our admissions complex atop the O’Malley Library as a definitive statement to all future students. This is what you come to Manhattan to do – to LEARN…to develop your God-given talents…to realize your full human potential…24 hours a day, 7 days a week.”

Also speaking in tribute to the O’Malley’s gift was June Dwyer, professor of English at Manhattan College, who noted: “The chapel may be the soul of a campus, but the library is its heart…  Libraries like this one transform campuses, but they also transform students.

In acknowledging their gift to the College, Mr. O’Malley said: “I had the privilege of serving on the Board of Trustees of Manhattan for 15 years.  I gave my time and energy to Manhattan because I believe schools like Manhattan are at the core of the country’s ability to succeed.  Ethics here is not just a three-credit course in a 130-credit program.  But rather it’s a core value in everything that goes on at Manhattan College.  Mary Alice and I hope our contribution will help Manhattan College to continue to provide that Lasallian education to the men and women of New York and its environs for at least another 150 years.”

Mr. O’Malley, a business leader, graduated from Manhattan College with a degree in business administration and economics. In 1990, he was named chairman and CEO of Tosco Corp.  At the time, Tosco owned one oil refinery on the West Coast of the U.S., employed 1,100 people and had sales of $1.8 billion.  During his tenure, Tosco became the largest independent refiner and marketer of petroleum products in the nation, with sales exceeding $24 billion and 25,000 employees.  Fortune magazine listed Tosco as the 72nd largest company in the U.S. in 2000 and the No. 1 energy company in providing total return to investors from 1990 to 2000.  In February 2002, Mr. O’Malley was named chairman of Premcor Inc., a Fortune 500 company, whose principal business is oil refining.

Manhattan College recognized Mr. O’Malley’s business leadership with the De La Salle Medal in 1994.  He has been honored numerous times throughout his career, receiving the Refining Leadership Award from Harts, the Director’s Award for Global Vision from the Mercantile Exchange, the Humanitarian Award from the National Conference of Christians and Jews, and the Ellis Island Medal of Honor.

Mrs. O’Malley is a graduate of St. Vincent’s School of Nursing.  Always an active community member, Mrs. O’Malley has served organizations helping many people – ranging from students to senior citizens.  A former president and board member of the Brunswick Parents Association, she has also been a volunteer driver for senior citizens for the past two decades.  She served on the board of St. Vincent’s Hospital and Medical Center and now serves on the Mission and Development Committees of its Board of Directors.  In 1999, Mrs. O’Malley cochaired the most successful dinner in St. Vincent’s history; celebrating the 150th anniversary of the hospital.  She was recognized for her years of dedication to health care when she was awarded the 2000 Angelus Award by St. Vincent’s.

 

 

[JASPERS PUBLISHING WEB PAGES]

[WebPage1]

Dr. Deborah Jean O'Bannon

Homepage URL http://cctr.umkc.edu/~dmossman/index.html

Now an associate professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, living on a farm out of town, and born-again as a believer in Jesus the Messiah. Happily married. We are both in serious Biblical seminary studies with Messianic Jews.

[MCOLDB: 1979]

 

 

[JASPERS FOUND ON & OFF THE WEB BY USING THE WEB]

[Found1]

http://www.staugustine.com/cgi-bin/printme.pl

A matter of principal
Michael Heubeck expects St. Joseph Academy's students to excel not just in academics but in life
By RON WALTERS Staff Writer
Publication Date: 10/03/02

As St. Joseph Academy's newest principal, Michael Heubeck wants students to know one thing about their teachers and faculty.

"We'll be more a nag than their parents. If a student comes here we're always going to make sure they're a success, not just in academics but as a whole person."

Heubeck, with his mantra of can-do and will-do, isn't a stranger to St. Joseph.

Twelve years ago he began as a religion teacher, moved his way up to dean for two years and spent the last two years as vice principal along with Sister Suzan Foster, S.S.J.

"When I came here that was my hope," to become principal, he said. "It just took a while."

The school's average composite score on the SAT was 1105, higher than the county average of 1026, the state average of 995 and the national average of 1020.

Both the average verbal score of 562 and the average math score of 543 were higher than each respective score on all similar levels.

And, the top 10 percent of students at the school achieved a composite score of 693 for verbal and 713 for math.

Stevie Weimer, the school's director of guidance, said students understand the importance of the tests.

"I think that these results show that they are listening to what parents are saying at home and what their teachers and I are saying at school," he said.

Weimer said rigorous academic courses and faculty commitment are a main part of the students' success.

Also, "smaller class sizes and student accountability are factors that contribute to a student's academic success."

For Heubeck, private school truly began making sense on the days when he walked past public classrooms in New York and looked through their windows.

One day in particular, he said, students' heads were bent down toward their desks, intent on some sort of busy work. The teacher sat at her desk, reading a newspaper and essentially ignoring the students.

Seeing this, Heubeck decided something had to be done to educate teenagers in an environment built both on learning and community togetherness.

He's since found that at St. Joseph.

The biggest asset the school has is its teachers, Heubeck said.

"I think you have teachers who really want to be here. (Students) just have a lot of people hovering around to make sure they succeed."

Heubeck's educational background has always been focused more toward the administration side of things.

He has two master's degrees: one in administration and supervision from Manhattan College in New York; the other in theology from St. Javier College in Chicago.

But what truly set him on the teaching path was his two-year stint in South Africa with the Marist Brothers, a religious teaching order.

"I really had no intention of teaching ... But I joined religious life after college. It was a totally different approach to education."

His experiences have since brought him to a place where he feels he has made and still can make a difference.

At St. Joseph, he said, "it's not necessarily family because you can only have one family. But we really do have that sense; that sense of a purpose for the school."

http://www.staugustine.com/stories/100302/new_1024846.shtml  

[MCOLDB: Has a record but no year listed.]

 

 

[Found2]

http://www.manhattan.edu/science/chembioc/faculty/capitani/capitani.html

J0SEPH F. CAPITANI,
Associate Professor Theoretical Physical Chemistry

B.S., Manhattan College, 1978 (Phi Beta Kappa)

 

 

[Found3]

http://www.i2ivision.com/FPClark/FPClarkAbout.html

Michael A. Galante, Senior Vice President - Associate of Civil Engineering Degree, Westchester Community College; Transportation Planning, Manhattan College. Twenty-three years of experience in traffic engineering and transportation planning. Received a Design for Transportation Commendation for Design Excellence Award from the U.S. Department of Transportation and National Endowment for the Arts. Member of the Institute of Transportation Engineers.

[MCOLDB: 1982]

 

 

[JASPER HONORS]

[No Honors]

 

 

[JASPER WEDDINGS]

[Wedding1]

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company  
The New York Times
October 6, 2002, Sunday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section 9; Page 14; Column 4; Society Desk
HEADLINE: WEDDINGS/CELEBRATIONS; Mia Mercurio, Charles Morse

Dr. Mia Lynn Mercurio, a daughter of Anne and Jon P. Mercurio of Stratford, Conn., was married yesterday to Charles Richard Allan Morse, the son of Reta and James N. Morse of Summerside, Prince Edward Island. The Rev. Richard A. Walsh performed the ceremony at St. Augustin's Roman Catholic Church in Newport, R.I.

The bride, 31, will continue to use her name professionally. She is an assistant professor of literacy education at Lehman College in the Bronx, where she is also the faculty coordinator of the school's teaching fellows program. She graduated magna cum laude from Manhattan College and received a doctoral degree in curriculum and teaching from Columbia. Her father is a project manager for Enviroshield, an oil tank removal business in Stratford. Her mother is the office manager of MK Temporary Services, an employment agency in Stratford. The bridegroom, also 31, is an associate in the Washington office of Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue, the Cleveland law firm. He graduated from the University of Alberta and Harvard Law School. His parents own the Summerside Inn, a bed and breakfast. 

LOAD-DATE: October 6, 2002 

[MCOLDB: 1993 ]

 

 

[JASPER BIRTHS]

[No Births]

 

 

[JASPER ENGAGEMENTS]

[No Engagements]

 

 

[JASPER GRADUATIONS]

[No Graduations]

 

 

[JASPER OBITS]

[Collector's prayer: And, may perpetual light shine on our fellow departed Jaspers, and all the souls of the faithful departed.]

Your assistance is requested in finding these. Please don’t assume that I will “catch” it via an automated search. Sometimes the data just doesn’t makes it’s way in.

[No Obits]

[JR: Thankfully. But, we can still remember all the ones previously reported.]

 

 

[MANHATTAN IN THE NEWS OR FOUND ON & OFF THE WEB]

[News1]

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company  
The New York Times
October 9, 2002, Wednesday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section B; Page 8; Column 3; Metropolitan Desk; Education Page
HEADLINE: BULLETIN BOARD; Library Grows at College in Bronx

BYLINE:  By Mark Glassman

Nearly 500 students, faculty and graduates of Manhattan College in the Bronx gathered outside the school's newly expanded library on Saturday for a dedication ceremony. Reopened in August as the O'Malley Library, it underwent extensive renovations over the last year, financed, in part, by a $7.5 million donation from THOMAS D. O'MALLEY, an alumnus and oil industry executive.

LOAD-DATE: October 9, 2002 

 

 

[News2]

Copyright 2002 Capital-Gazette Communications, Inc.  
The Capital (Annapolis, MD)
October 3, 2002 Thursday
SECTION: NEIGHBORHOODS; Pg. B3
HEADLINE: Author examines Greenspan's life
BYLINE: MIKE UNGER, Staff Writer

A new biography of one of the most powerful financial figures in the world - written by a Severna Park author - will hit bookstore shelves later this month.

"Alan Shrugged," a biography of Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, is the 21st book by best-selling author Jerome Tuccille.

A financial writer and vice president at T. Rowe Price in Baltimore, Mr. Tuccille said Mr. Greenspan was an obvious choice for his latest subject. The Oakleigh Forest resident has written biographies of real estate investor Donald Trump, media mogul Rupert Murdoch and the Hunt family of silver barons from Texas. "It seemed like a natural," Mr. Tuccille said. "I like the financial services industry, but if I'm going to have a legacy as a writer, it will be because of my books."

Mr. Tuccille traveled a meandering path to the pages of The New York Times best-seller list. A psychology major at Manhattan College, he penned three unpublished novels after graduating, fulfilling a "compulsion" to write.

"I felt the need to sit down and fill up paper with words," he said. "It's something that grabs you by the collar and doesn't let go."

Mr. Tuccille later became involved in politics, even running for governor of New York in 1974 as a Libertarian. He finished "a distant third."

Struggling to make ends meet by working a series of odd jobs, he landed a job as a Wall Street stockbroker in 1975.

Though successful in that field, Mr. Tuccille continued to feel the urge to write. When a publisher assigned him the task of examining the decline of the world's silver market in 1981, he began researching Texas' famed Hunt family.

The book turned into a biography of the Hunts, and a new career was born.

"Now all of a sudden I was a biographer," he said. "To me, a biography can read like a novel. It has characters, dialogue, plot. In a way it's easier to write, because you sit down with a road map."

Whatever Mr. Tuccille's formula is, it has proven to be successful. He wrote "Trump," without the help of his subject, who was writing an autobiography at the time. "Trump" sold 500,000 copies and "Rupert Murdoch," more than 100,000.

Mr. Tuccille and his wife, Marie, moved from Connecticut to Severna Park in 1994, when he went to work at T. Rowe Price. An early riser who often wakes at 5 a.m., Mr. Tuccille writes for a few hours before going into the office. He always has held a job while writing his books.

His most recent biography, of original FOX Network President Barry Diller, never saw the light of day. Mr. Tuccille became embroiled in a lawsuit with his publisher, which eventually went out of business.

He began researching Mr. Greenspan's life in 2000. Along the way, he stumbled upon several interesting tidbits about the man, who was appointed to his current position by then-President Reagan in 1987.

"Greenspan originally wanted to be a jazz musician," Mr. Tuccille said. "But he realized he didn't have the talent for it. He was always a whiz kid with numbers."

Despite the fact that Mr. Greenspan ran a successful economic consulting firm and undoubtedly could have used his lofty status to gain personal wealth, he chose not to do so, Mr. Tuccille said.

"A guy who controls trillions of dollars has only about $3 million or $4 million," Mr. Tuccille said. "He looks like he buys his suits at Kmart."

The book includes anecdotes about Mr. Greenspan from journalist and former girlfriend Barbara Walters, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former First Lady Nancy Reagan and former President George Bush.

Mr. Tuccille was able to ask Mr. Greenspan "a few" questions via e-mail. The banker also read much of the manuscript to check it for factual accuracy.

With T. Rowe Price supporting his endeavor, Mr. Tuccille is beginning to promote the book, published by John Wiley & Sons. He has appeared on CNN, Bloomberg Radio and will speak at the Cato Institute, a Washington think tank.

Mr. Tuccille plans to continue writing biographies and working in the financial industry. He hopes to write a volume on the life of the late philosopher and author Ayn Rand.

"You're only as good as your last book," he said. "You have to stick with what works for you."

LOAD-DATE: October 8, 2002   

[MCOLDB: 1959 ] 

[JR: Here's another "Patterson": Big Job yet still develops a writing career. Inspiring!]

 

 

[RESUMES]

FROM THE COLLEGE’S WEB SITE: Your resume can be sent to employers who contact our office seeking to fill positions.  For more information contact the Recruitment Coordinator at (718) 862-7965 or Email to JGlenn@manhattan.edu

Actual jobs at MC are at: http://www.manhattan.edu/hrs/jobs 

[No Resumes]

 

 

[SPORTS]

FROM THE COLLEGE’S WEB SITE: http://www.gojaspers.com [which is no longer at the College, but at a third party. Web bugs are on the pages. (That’s the benefit of being a security weenie!) So, it’s reader beware. Your browser can tell people “stuff” about you, like your email address, leading to SPAM. Forewarned is forearmed.]

[SportsSchedule]

The only reason for putting this here is to give us a chance to attend one of these games and support "our" team.

Date Day Sport Opponent Location Time/Result
10/13/02 Sunday M. Soccer  Niagara*  HOME  10:00 AM
10/13/02 Sunday W. Soccer  Niagara*  Niagara, NY  12:00 PM
10/16/02 Wednesday M. Tennis  Saint Peter's*  HOME  3:00 PM
10/16/02 Wednesday Volleyball  Fairleigh Dickinson  Teaneck, NJ  7:30 PM
10/18/02 Friday M. Soccer  Siena*  Loudonville, NY  3:00 PM
10/18/02 Friday Cross Country  Iona/Manhattan Invitational  HOME  3:00 PM
10/18/02 Friday W. Soccer  Siena*  HOME  3:30 PM
10/19/02 Saturday Volleyball  Villanova  HOME  12:00 PM
10/19/02 Saturday Cross Country  Iona/Manhattan Invitational  HOME  3:00 PM
10/20/02 Sunday W. Soccer  Marist*  HOME  10:00 AM
10/20/02 Sunday M. Tennis  Rider*  Lawrenceville, NJ  11:00 AM
10/20/02 Sunday W. Tennis  Rider*  Lawrenceville, NJ  11:00 AM
10/20/02 Sunday M. Soccer  Marist*  Poughkeepsie, NY  7:00 PM
10/22/02 Tuesday Golf  Saint Peter's  Rock Springs Country Club  9:00 AM
10/22/02 Tuesday Volleyball  Iona*  New Rochelle, NY  7:00 PM
10/25/02 Friday W. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/25/02 Friday M. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/25/02 Friday M. Soccer  Fairfield*  HOME  3:30 PM
10/25/02 Friday Volleyball  Saint Peter's*  HOME  7:00 PM
10/25/02 Friday W. Soccer  Fairfield*  Fairfield, CT  7:00 PM
10/26/02 Saturday M. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/26/02 Saturday W. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/27/02 Sunday W. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/27/02 Sunday M. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/27/02 Sunday Golf  St. Thomas Aquinas Invitational  Rotella Golf Course  9:00 AM
10/27/02 Sunday M. Soccer  Iona*  HOME  10:00 AM
10/27/02 Sunday W. Soccer  Iona*  New Rochelle, NY  1:00 PM
10/28/02 Monday W. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/28/02 Monday M. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/28/02 Monday Golf  St. Thomas Aquinas Invitational  Rotella Golf Course  9:00 AM
10/29/02 Tuesday M. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/29/02 Tuesday W. Tennis  ITA Regional  TBA  TBA
10/29/02 Tuesday Golf  St. Thomas Aquinas Invitational  Rotella Golf Course  9:00 AM
10/29/02 Tuesday Volleyball  Fairfield*  Fairfield, CT  7:00 PM
10/30/02 Wednesday W. Soccer  Saint Peter's*  HOME  3:00 PM

 

[Sports1]

NO new sports on the College's site.

 

[Compiled Sports Reports]

Copyright 2002 Newsday, Inc.  
Newsday (New York, NY)
October 8, 2002 Tuesday NASSAU AND SUFFOLK EDITION
SECTION: SPORTS, Pg. A69
HEADLINE: THIS WEEK; A Look at the Top Games and Players;

<extraneous deleted>

CROSS COUNTRY

Manhattan College Invitational at Van Cortlandt Park (Saturday, 1 p.m.): This 2.5-mile race is one of the largest and most prestigous events in the country, and Long Island's top runners - such as Syosset's Mark Alizzi and Bay Shore's Laura Cummings - will compete.

<extraneous deleted>

LOAD-DATE: October 8, 2002 

===

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company  
The New York Times
October 5, 2002, Saturday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section D; Page 7; Column 6; Sports Desk
HEADLINE: PLUS: CROSS-COUNTRY; Rutgers's Culley Breaks Meet Record
BYLINE:  By Elliott Denman

Julie Culley, a junior at Rutgers who sat out last year's cross-country season with a back injury, raced to a record-breaking victory in the 75th annual Metropolitan Intercollegiate Championships yesterday at Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx.

Culley, who won the 2000 Met title in 18 minutes 12.06 seconds, covered the five-kilometer (3.1-mile) course in 17:21.69. That beat the 1992 record of 17:34.54, set by Lauren Gubicza of Fordham. Matt Spring, a senior at Manhattan College, held off Robert Kiplagat of Iona to win the men's five-mile race in 24:50. Spring won the 2001 title in 25:33.85.

Columbia won men's and women's team titles in the 16-team meet. It beat the Manhattan men, 56 points to 60, and the Stony Brook women, 41-53.   Elliott Denman

LOAD-DATE: October 5, 2002 

===

Copyright 2002 Newsday, Inc.
Newsday (New York, NY)
October 3, 2002 Thursday QUEENS EDITION
SECTION: SPORTS, Pg. A61
HEADLINE: The Lineup

COACHES CORNER

Derrick Harrison stepped down from his job as the CCNY women's basketball coach to become the assistant women's coach at Division I Manhattan College. Harrison was 38-42 in three seasons at Division III CCNY, which had gone 9-40 in the two years before he took over. Gary Smith, the all-time winningest coach in CCNY women's basketball history and currently a CCNY assistant athletic director, has been named interim coach.

<extraneous deleted>

LOAD-DATE: October 3, 2002 

 

 

[EMAIL FROM JASPERS]

[Email 1]

For all those who missed the NYC Club meeting, here's the handout.

<BEGIN>

150
MANHATTAN
COLLEGE

LASALLIAN EDUCATION
Celebrating 150 years of Excellence

Alumni Society
New York City Club
FaIl 2002 Event

“Staying on Top of Your Game
Marketing Yourself in a
Changing Economy”

<new page>

The mission of tile New York City Alumni Club is to provide a forum for graduates living or working in the New York City metropolitan area to maximize their personal and professional experiences, in the varied communities in which they participate; to be bound together by their Manhattan College education, based on the Lasallian Catholic tradition; to capitalize on the locale of New York City in promoting social and business growth; and to be recognized as the premier of all Manhattan College alumni clubs, reflective of its roots in the global marketplace, and cultural center of the world.

<new page>

Program

Registration & Networking

Pledge of Allegiance by All

Invocation by Br. Anthony Flynn, F.S.C.

Welcome & Introductions by Meg Walsh, Chairperson

Executive Panel / Audience Interactive Discussion
Staying on Top of Your Game,
Marketing Yourself in a Changing Economy

Closing Remarks


Panel Moderator

Networking Reception

<new page>

Manhattan College Alumni Society
New York City Club

Bill Chandler ‘70
President, Alumni Society

Committee
Meg Walsh ‘79, Chairperson
Joe Dillon ‘62
Kevin Dolan ‘68
Noreen Donohue ‘86
Betty Feehan ‘69
Br. Anthony Flynn ‘52
Joe Gunn ‘76
Steve Jalkut ‘92
Bill Daly ‘68


Special thanks to our host J.P. Morgan Chase and Company for the use of their facility and to Charles Maikish and Ralph Ailello for making the arrangements.
.
<new page>

Kevin J. Dolan ‘68
Moderator

Kevin received a BBA in Industrial Management and Psychology (cum laude) from Manhattan and an MBA from Fordham University.

Kevin spent the first pan of his career (25 years) in the International Human Resources arena where lie worked in four different industries: Advertising, Wall Street, Banking. and Utilities. He served as Senior Vice President and Director of Personnel for J. Walter Thompson from ‘88 ‘92. Prior to J, Walter Thompson, Kevin was Senior Vice President and Director of International Personnel at Shearson Lehman Brothers. Kevin also spent 12 years at Citicorp in a variety of International Human Resources Roles, four of which were overseas.

Ten years ago Kevin switched careers and moved into the Human Resources Consulting arena. He is currently Senior Vice President and an Executive Coach and Consultant with Right Management Consultants in New York.

** * * * * * * * * * * * *
Panelists

Deborah A. Coppola ‘99

Deborah graduated from Manhattan with a BS (cum laude) in Computer Information Systems and International Business with a minor in Italian.

Deborah is an Associate at JPMorgan Chase and has been with the company since 1998, Deborah is currently working in Human Resources as a Recruiter for the Internal Consulting Services (ICS) Program. A graduate of the program herself Deborah did rotations in Corporate Risk Management, LabMorgan, Private Banking, Asset Management, Fixed Income Trading, and was part of the Program Management Office during the merger of JPMorgan and Chase. Prior to joining JPMorgan Chase full time in 1999, Deborah worked as a summer intern in Mergers and Acquisitions Lath America and worked as an analyst with the Y2K Team


Donald C Cacciapaglia ‘73

Don received his BS in Economies from Manhattan and has also earned degrees in Finance and Organizational Behavior.

Don began his career as Senior Analyst with the Federal Resent Bank of NY after which he held numerous positions at Merrill Lynch including COO, Senior Managing Director of Investment Banking and Senior Managing Director of Global Fixed Income Research and Analytics and Managing Director of institutional sales and trading in San Francisco. In 1995, he joined CS First Boston as COO of the Short and Intermediate Trading Group. Since 1996, Don has held several executive positions al PaineWebber including Managing Director and COO of investment banking.

Currently, Don is CEO of HedgeFund.net. a database of hedge fund information and performance that is available to registered users and hedge find managers.


Gregory Coleman ‘67

Greg received his BBA degree from Manhattan and an MBA from Fordham University,

Greg began his career in human resources at General Telephone and Electronic International, Inc. Greg’s experience includes Director of Personnel and Administration for Paramount Pictures Corporation and Vice President at Chase Manhattan Bank in charge of executive and professional recruitment on a worldwide basis,

Presently, Greg is Managing Director of Korn Ferry Internationals NY’ financial services practice. He specializes in senior-level executive searches for both domestic and international positions in commercja1 banking, investment banking& brokerage, insurance and human resources.

<Note: Greg was absent due to a death in the family. My condolences to him and his family.>


Vincent J. Warner ‘88

Vincent earned a BS in Electrical Engineering from Manhattan and an MBA from Fordham University.

Vincent’s experience includes over 10 years engineering consulting experience with diverse aspects of real estate procurement, as well as planning, design and construction with numerous clients including GSA, FBJ, Verizon, NY’S Power Authority, Empire State Development Corporation and Major League Baseball.

Currently, he is Managing Director of WB Engineering & Consulting responsible for quality control, strategic planning and business development, MPH is an engineering design aid project management firm established in 1999, growing to a team of thirty (30) with offices in NY. Massachusetts and NJ.

<END>

[JR: A great time was had by all. I even won a shirt.]

 

[Email 2]

From: Warren Schlickenrieder
Subject: Obit in JasperJottings
Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2002 14:58:34 -0400

Dear FJ,

Obit 1, of the September 22nd edition of JasperJottings, notes the passing of John J. Ryan, age 75.

You use a listing in MCOLDB to place Mr. Ryan in the Class of 1942.

This is in error. John J., of '42, (I hope he is still around) would be at least 81 years old, as I am, at this point in time. Further, John, of '42, was a student in the Business School (degree - BBA), not an electrical engineer.

My 1979 Alumni Directory indicates that my classmate was a retired VP of Southern Bell Telephone Company.

Keep at it! I enjoy receiving JasperJottings.

Warren Schlickenrieder
Class of 1942

[JR: You get the "Quincy Award", named after the Jack Klugman TV show that I liked. I was wrong. In trying to deduce the Class, I didn't pick up on those clues. Sorry, I'll try to be a better researcher. I'll plead time pressure, as I do for every mistake my eagle-eyed fellow alums spot. (At least I know some one is reading this stuff!) As an non-train driving engineer (A big joke at the NYC Club meeting), I know mistakes are bad. The other night Doctor Zia's name came up with his memorable "Wrong sign. Bridge fall down. No partial credit!". (It's interesting how most engineers can repeat that with the accent with all the surrounding text, like sometimes it includes, "Many people killed", "your paycheck bounce", "very unhappy people". Verbatim. If they didn't learn anything else, they remember that by heart!) I guess there is a use for those old green books after all. Thnaks for the proof reading.]

 

 

[Email 3]

From: MaryAnn McCarra-Fitzpatrick
Subject: Birth announcement
Date: Fri, 4 Oct 2002 13:42:30 -0400

Dear Mr. Reinke:

I would appreciate it if the following birth announcement could appear:

MaryAnn McCarra-Fitzpatrick (Manhattan College, 1989), Mark Eamon Fitzpatrick (Fordham College, 1983), and big brother Aidan Michael Fitzpatrick are pleased to announce the birth of Conor Brian Fitzpatrick on 26 September 2002 at St. John's Riverside Hospital in Yonkers, New York.  Conor Brian was born at 1:28 p.m., weighed in at seven pounds, nine ounces, and was 21 inches in length. 

Thank you!!   I will look forward to seeing the announcement in your email!  I have been so enjoying receiving your emails again.  It's nice to know what other Jaspers are up to!!

Regards,

MaryAnn McCarra-Fitzpatrick (1989)

[JR: When it came in after my deadline, I snipped the announcement and moved it into last week's issue. I couldn't get the email in, but I love to share timely news, especially when it happy news. Congrats again.]

 

 

[Email 4]

Date: Fri, 04 Oct 2002 17:43:00 -0400
From: Jack Kelly
Subject: Re: jasperjottings20020929.htm

John,

Thanks for picking up my brother's (Patrick J. Kelly) obituary and publishing it in the jottings.  Pat was officially a '70 masters grad in Physics but he had completed his studies in '69.  He had started his coursework as Br. Patrick Aquinas in '66 (I think) while he was  teaching at La Salle Academy on E. 2nd Street.  Maybe some of your readers will remember him from that venue.

Anyway, he was a great guy, a fine teacher, and a well respected manager.

We'll miss him a lot.

Jack Kelly
Business '68

[JR: No thanks needed. I am sorry for your loss and all our losses. I really appreciate you giving it some context. It's only unfortunate that we can't go out on a daily basis so that his friends and acquaintances would have time to go and honor him. I know that he must have positively impacted many people, who if give the info on a more timely basis, would have expressed that to the family. Unfortunately, we do what we can. Recognize him and them all as our fellow alums and include them in our private prayers and our hearts. I often wonder where all the replacements for the good people we lose will come from. Thanks for the email.]

 

 

[Email 5]

From: Kosch, James A.
Subject: RE:  jasperjottings2001006.htm
Date: Sun, 6 Oct 2002 11:36:16 -0400

John:

When will there be an old alumni happy hour?

[JR: I guess when we have some "old" alumns. I don't know about you but I don't think of myself as "not young". And as these pages demonstrate weekly, even Jaspers with a few miles on the odometer make some pretty significant contributions. And those are the ones we hear about. How about all the private efforts? I am sure the Right to Life movement has a lot of Jaspers including them in their personal prayers. Not every contribution gets publicized. Although, I do admit a wistful feeling at all the beautiful young female Jaspers at the NY Alumni Club meeting. Good thing they weren't there at MC when I was there or I would have surely learned less (if such is possible) and wouldn't have graduated. Then, I wouldn't be doing this every night. Hmmmm.]

 

 

[Email 6]

From: Fields, William A
Subject: I HAVE A QUESTION
Date: Mon, 7 Oct 2002 12:47:15 -0400

John - Do you have a POC for the John J. Horan lecture?  Bill Fields

Date: Tue, 08 Oct 2002 04:34:36 -0400
From: John Reinke
Subject: Re: I HAVE A QUESTION

No, I would start with grace feeney (Grace Feeney (718) 862-7432 grace.feeney@manhattan.edu) at the alumni office . She has always been helpful to me. john

From: Fields, William A
Subject: RE: I HAVE A QUESTION
Date: Wed, 9 Oct 2002 06:46:42 -0400

Thanks John.

 

 

[Email 7]

From: Gina M. Pellettieri
Subject: MC Alumni Event in D.C.
Date: Tue, 08 Oct 2002 12:16:07 -0400

John,

Invitations to this event should be going in the mail any day now, but I was hoping you could add it to your list of upcoming events.  It is "Young Patrons Alumni Night" at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington, D.C. on November 21, 2002.  Happy Hour at Thunder Grill in Union Station from 5-7pm and Love's Labour's Lost at 7:30pm. 

Thanks!
Gina

[MCOLDB: 1994 ]

 

 

 

[Email 8]

From: Michael F. McEneney
Subject: Jasper in the News
Date: Mon, 7 Oct 2002 23:16:53 -0400

Dear John,

In case you missed it, the October 8, 2002 Edition of the NY Daily News, Queens Section, at page 3QLI, carried the following article:

ASST. DA CALLS IT A CAREER

<extraneous deleted>

[JR: I moved it up to the announcement section]

It is nice to see another Jasper leave a high mark on the Criminal Justice System!

                          Best,
                          Mike McEneney, Esq. '53 BBA

[JR: Yes, indeed. Thanks for the "eagle eye".]

 

 

[Email 9]

From: Stephen M Forlini
Subject: New E-mail Address
Date: Wed, 9 Oct 2002 14:19:43 -0400

Dear John,

Please update my e-mail address as follows:
Old:  <privacy invoked>
New: <privacy invoked>

Thanks,
Stephen Forlini
Class of 1983

[JR: Done. ]

 

 

[Email 10]

Date: Wed, 09 Oct 2002 17:11:50 -0400
From: Steven O'Hanlon
Subject: Jasper newsletter

Hi, my name is Steven O'Hanlon.  I graduated from Manhattan College in 1980.  I was just speaking with Bill Gildea.  He recommended that I contact you regarding enrollment in your Jasper newsletter.  My email address is <privacy invoked>.  My phone number is <privacy invoked> .

Please let me know what you require to get started.

Regards,
Steven O'Hanlon

[JR: That all that's needed.]

 

 

[Email 11]

From: Bill O'Connell (1959)
Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2002 15:01:04 EDT
Subject: Re: Hello from a 1968 Jasper on 10 Oct 2002

John,

I am responding from home to ask that I remain on your mailing list and continue to receive Jasper Jottings (JJ) each week.  The email address where I receive your mailings is my work address, is my preferred email address, and is: <privacy invoked>

I have all emails to my work address forwarded home so that I can read JJ at work or at home as time permits.

I have emailed you several times in the past to commend you for your interest in Manhattan and the work you put into JJ each week.  I look forward to receiving JJ each week and hope you will be able to continue your good work.  Thanks very much for keeping us connected with what is going on at Manhattan.

All the best and thanks again for your good work on JJ.

Bill O'Connell

[JR: Sure, Bill, you can stay addressed however it is. You received this message because I thought I had a "new" Jasper email address. I double check each new one I find with the old invites that I have sent for the last three years. If there is no match, then I send an invite. Sometimes I find subscribers and decliners. Hopefully my prospecting activities don't cause too much annoyance and confusion. Thanks for your kind words.]

 

 

[Email 12]

From: Bill O'Connell (1976)
Subject: RE: Hello from a 1968 Jasper on 10 Oct 2002
Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2002 18:19:59 -0400

John,

I appreciate the invitation to join the list.  Count me in.

Regards,
Bill O'Connell

[JR: You're on.]

 

 

 

[Email 13]

From: O'Connor, John P.  (1988) 
Date: Fri, 11 Oct 2002 00:46:29 EDT
Subject: Re: Hello from a 1968 Jasper on 10 Oct 2002

The only person I will respond to is  JABBER

[JR: We'll if anyone knows JABBER maybe you can have him invite John P. (You have love these 'vacation", "out of office", or auto reply answers.)]

 

 

[END OF NEWS]

COPYRIGHTS

Copyrighted material belongs to their owner. We recognize that this is merely "fair use", appropriate credit is given and any restrictions observed. The CIC asks you to do the same.

All material submitted for posting becomes the sole property of the CIC. All decisions about what is post, and how, are vested solely in the CIC. We'll attempt to honor your wishes to the best of our ability.

A collection copyright is asserted to protect against any misuse of original material.

PRIVACY

Operating Jasper Jottings, the "collector-in-chief", aka CIC, recognizes that every one of us needs privacy. In respect of your privacy, I will protect any information you provide to the best of my ability. No one needs "unsolicited commercial email" aka spam.

The CIC of Jasper Jottings will never sell personal data to outside vendors. Nor do we currently accept advertisements, although that may be a future option.

DISCLAIMER

This effort has NO FORMAL RELATION to Manhattan College!

This is just my idea and has no support nor any official relationship with Manhattan College. As an alumni, we have a special bond with Manhattan College. In order to help the College keep its records as up to date as possible, the CIC will share such information as the Alumni office wants. To date, we share the news, any "new registrations" (i.e., data that differs from the alumni directory), and anything we find about "lost" jaspers.

QUALIFICATION

You may only subscribe to the list, only if you have demonstrated a connection to Manhattan College. This may require providing information about yourself to assert the claim to a connection. Decisions of the CIC are final. If you do provide such personal information, such as email, name, address or telephone numbers, we will not disclose it to anyone except as described here.

CONNECTING

Should you wish to connect to someone else on the list, you must send in an email to the list requesting the connection. We will respond to you, so you know we received your request, and send a BCC (i.e., Blind Carbon Copy) of our response to your target with your email address visible. Thus by requesting the connection, you are allowing us to share your email address with another list member. After that it is up to the other to respond to you. Bear in mind that anything coming to the list or to me via my reinkefj@alum.manhattan.edu address is assumed to be for publication to the list and you agree to its use as described.

Should some one wish to connect with you, you will be sent a BCC (i.e., Blind Carbon Copy) of our response as described above. It is then your decision about responding.

We want you to be pleased not only with this service. Your satisfaction, and continued participation, is very important to all of us.

REQUESTING YOUR PARTICIPATION

Please remember this effort depends upon you being a reporter. Email any news about Jaspers, including yourself --- (It is ok to toot your own horn. If you don't, who will? If it sounds too bad, I'll tone it down.) --- to reinkefj@alum.manhattan.edu. Please mark if you DON'T want it distributed AND / OR if you DON'T want me to edit it.

Fax can be accommodated 781-723-7975 but email is easier.

I keep several of the “Instant Messengers” up: ICQ#72967466; Yahoo "reinkefj"; and MSN T7328215850.

Or, you can USMail it to me at 3 Tyne Court Kendall Park, NJ 08824.

INVITING ANY JASPERS

Feel free to invite other Jaspers to join us by dropping me an email.

PROBLEMS

Report any problems or feel free to give me feedback, by emailing me at reinkefj@alum.manhattan.edu. If you are really enraged, or need to speak to me, call 732-821-5850.

If you don't receive your weekly newsletter, your email may be "bouncing". One or two individual transmissions fail each week and, depending upon how you signed up, I may have no way to track you down, so stay in touch.

 

 

A Final Thought

http://www.salon.com/politics/comics/2002/09/19/protect/index.html

This is so good you just have to see it for yourself. Donna nobis pacem.

Curmudgeon

And that’s the last word.

-30-