PHUN WITH PHOTOS … HAPPY NEW YEAR, EVERYBODY!!!
By DAN VALENTI
PLANET VALENTI NEWS AND COMMENTARY
(FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE, YEAR’S-END EDITION, 2015) — To close out the year, THE PLANET has a little fun in store for you. Below are a series of photographs, each needing a caption. Try your hand at wit, stinging, zinging, and capturing in just a few words the perfect cutline for each of the pictures.
We shall give you our caption for the first photo, as an example. Answer one, some, or all. Just tag your cations with the right number, for instance: “#10: “Gosh, Bobby, when I grow up, I want to live in there … with you.”
Have fun. Be safe. Live healthy. And have a HAPPY NEW YEAR! See you in 2016.
PHOTO 1, SUPERMAN AND LOIS
PHOTO 2, SCHICKLGRUBER
PHOTO 3, UNKNOWN, PUMMELIN’ PAM, AND MELISSA MAZZEO
PHOTO 4, SUE CARMEL
PHOTO 5, PLANET VALENTI TELEVISION
PHOTO 6 NORTH STREET, BACK IN THE DAY
PHOTO 7, LINDA TYER, CHRISTINE YON, BARRY CLAIRMONT, JONATHAN LOTHROP, CHRISTINA BARRETT, UNKNOWN, AND DENIS GUYER
PHOTO 8, DAN BIANCHI
PHOTO 9, CARMEN MASSIMIANO
PHOTO 10, YOUNGSTERS AT A GE OPEN HOUSE, 1950s
That’s it. HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!
——————————————————————————————–
“Hey, Mr. Bluelegs, where are you taking me?” — Alice Cooper, from “Public Animal No. 9,” (1972)
“OPEN THE WINDOW, AUNT MILLIE.”
LOVE TO ALL.
The views expressed in the comment section or opinions published within the text other than those of PLANET VALENTI are not those of PLANET VALENTI or endorsed in any way by PLANET VALENTI; this website reserves the right to remove any comment which violates its Rules of Conduct, and it is not liable for the consequences of any posted comment as provided in Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act and PLANET VALENTI’s terms of service.
Best poster of Pittsfield Sports nostalgia is Chuck, hands down.
Happy New Year! Oh?
I have a way for Pittsfield politics to raise revenue!
The lovely Linda Tyer can publish a college textbook about Pittsfield politics. Is would focus on how not to run a municipality that is near fiscal insolvency and faces future bankruptcy.
She can start Chapter 1 with her FY2017 municipal budget with a predictable 5 percent increase in spending with a recurring shrinking tax base.
Chapter 2 can be about Sabic Plastics move to Houston, Texas with the loss of between 300 to 500 good jobs.
Chapter 3 can be about PEDA and zero private investment in the polluted business property.
Chapter 4 can be about all of the violent crime in Pittsfield.
Chapter 5 can be about dangerous, dead downtown Pittsfield which is populated by the underclass.
Chapter 6 can be about Pittsfield’s public school system with over 650 students per year choicing out and costing the city millions of education dollars.
Chapter 7 can be about her affiliations with the G.O.B. club, including Jimmy Ruberto and the Del Gallo political faction, which is opposed by Dan BIanchi and the competing Wojtkowski political faction.
Chapter 8 can be about the flawed Consent Decree, PCBs, and local cancer patients.
Chapter 9 can be about Senior Citizens choosing between paying Pittsfield’s high taxes or eating food.
Chapter 10 can be about all of the young adults moving away to find living wage jobs that don’t exist anymore in Pittsfield.
Chapter 11 can be about Pittsfield 70% poverty rate with all K – 6 public school students receiving free school lunches.
Chapter 12 can be about Pittsfield one-half billion dollars in opeb debts and other liabilities that will never be paid off in our lifetimes.
Now showing at downtown Pittsfield’s Beacon Cinema!
Theater 1: Violent crimes, deadly shootings and multiple murders, drugs and gangs.
Theater 2: Pittsfield politics Good Old Boys’ club reunion featuring Jimmy Ruberto, Gerry Doyle, Gerry Lee, Carmen Massimiano, Andrea Nuciforo, Jr., and Angelo Stracuzzi.
Theater 3: A third rate daily rag called The Berkshire Eagle, which represents the vested and special interests in Pittsfield.
Theater 4: Pittsfield politics’ unsustainable municipal finances with high taxes, spending, and huge debts.
Theater 5: Useless state government delegates on Beacon Hill who do nothing but being political hacks.
Theater 6: Thousands of local residents, past, present, and future, suffering and dying from GE’s cancer causing PCBs. Plus, a special presentation of old Jack Welch taking his morning swim in Silver Lake!
Theater 7: The lovely Linda Tyer promising to unite Pittsfield politics and thereby solving all of Pittsfield’s many socioeconomic problems.
Theater 8: Several Pittsfield employees, former and current, suing outgoing Mayor Dan Bianchi over alleged wrongdoings.
Theater 9: Jimmy Ruberto’s “rolodex”! Mayor Jimmy Ruberto’s would be political and business connections that failed to materialize during one of Pittsfield’s worst economic crisis.
Theater 10: Pittsfield’s tale of 2 cities! 70 percent of local residents relying on welfare and social services, while a few can weather the depressed and unequal local economy.
Theater 11: PEDA begun in the Summer of 1998 – present with no private investment, no good jobs, and no manufacturing companies.
Theater 12: The resistance! Dan Valenti’s blog and media takes on Pittsfield politics’ systemic corruption, G.O.B.’s, SIG’s, Suits, vested interests, and special interests….with futility or posterity?
JON
One of your best. As for Theater 12, we hear it’s for futility AND posterity. When THE PLANET leaves, they will say, “Danny Boy, we hardly knew ye.”
It is not your fault, Dan Valenti! Pittsfield politics is a China-like one party political system, which is split into 2 factions (Del Gallo, Doyle, Jimmy Ruberto, the lovely Linda vs. Wojtkowski, Hathaway, Bianchi), both of whom report to the same political master: the Massachusetts Democratic Party in Boston.
You, Dan Valenti, are not part of either of these 2 political factions. You do not owe anything to either of them. You will never be on the inside of Pittsfield politics political machine.
There is no difference between the Del Gallo vs. Wojtkowski factions. They both sunk Pittsfield into the proverbial ditch!
Maybe that is why then GE CEO Jack Welch, a Republican, pulled out of Pittsfield during the 1980s. He couldn’t stand Pittsfield politics. Maybe that is why Sabic Plastics is moving to Houston, Texas. The Saudi’s can’t stand Pittsfield politics either.
Pittsfield politics is on a 4 decade long downward spiral! Population loss, job loss, a shrinking tax base, a big underclass that claims about 70% of local residents, the corrupt Good Old Boy club that serves the vested and special interests, a flawed Consent Decree, unsustainable municipal finances with huge OPEB debts that will never be paid off in our lifetime, useless political hacks, low voter turnout, a lack of citizen participation, etc.
Jonathan-That about says it all,
Democrats do this to every city they take over. They run it into the ditch. Actually you could say that about all of Berkshire County. The wealthy Democrats in the area call the shots and throw crumbs to the growing number of poor in the area.
just a mundane question: how do you see the comments that are “hidden”? I only see the last few.
Click on “older comments” highlighted in red at the bottom of this page.
“Theater 10: Pittsfield’s tale of 2 cities! 70 percent of local residents relying on welfare and social services, while a few can weather the depressed and unequal local economy.”
The few being the extremely overpaid teachers in the Pittsfield school system who are destroying what is left of the city, but are more than able to pay the high taxes and survive in a crumbling economy.
This just in…JKrol will be VP
and you will be watching a mayoral grooming in progress. If he is a good boy his gob backers will pave his path to the corner office and beyond,
Less than 48 hours to change. Will the KFC site finally be clean ?? I sure hope !! More police en route too. At least 25. Am I right ?
To World’s Foremost Authority: Where in the world did that come from? Jim Brown was great because of tutelage of Milt Plum. I remember Plum. Good QB for Penn State, drafted by the Browns, and an average pro who never won a championship for the many teams he played for. Plum had no influence in the greatness of Jim Brown. In his senior year at Syracuse Brown was the best running back in America. The next year he was Rookie of the Year and All-pro with the Cleveland Browns. Sorry Foremost, Plum had nothing to do with this type of God given ability.
I was kidding Chuck……. Although Plum was rated the all time number 1 QB for a while.
Chuck, you had to be pretty darn good to suck in the NFL
Plum played quarterback, defensive back, punter and placekicker at Penn State following his prep years playing for Woodbury High School. After using their first-round pick in the 1957 NFL Draft on Jim Brown, the Browns chose Plum in the second round.
Plum got onto the field at quarterback in the fourth game of the 1957 season when starter Tommy O’Connell got hurt against the Philadelphia Eagles. Plum and O’Connell would split time throughout the rest of the 1957 season, in which the Browns went 9-2-1 and won the Eastern Conference.
O’Connell left the NFL after the 1957 season, and over the next four years, Plum was a consistent part of an offense built around the running of Jim Brown and Bobby Mitchell.
According to the NFL passer rating formula in use since 1973, Plum’s rating of 110.4 for the 1960 season was the best of any quarterback before 1989 and remains the fifth-best all-time. For his five seasons with Cleveland combined, Plum had a rating of 89.9, ranking him first among Browns quarterbacks with at least 750 pass attempts.
In 1960 and 1961, Plum’s backup was Len Dawson, who would go on to a Hall of Fame career with the Kansas City Chiefs of the American Football League.
The Browns traded Plum to the Lions as part of a six-player deal before the 1962 season. The Lions lacked the powerful running game of the Browns, forcing Plum to rely more often on his arm. Although he started strong, leading to the Lions to a 3-0 start, things went downhill after a costly interception in Week 4 led to a loss to the Green Bay Packers. Late in the season, head coach George Wilson benched Plum several times in favor of Earl Morrall. The Lions finished 11-3, two games behind Green Bay.
Plum lost the starting-quarterback job to Morrall in 1963, but regained it when Morrall got hurt early in the 1964 season. 1964 wound up being Plum’s best year in Detroit; he threw for 2,241 yards and 18 touchdowns, and the Lions finished 7-5-2. The Lions traded Morrall to the Giants before the 1965 season, and Plum struggled that year, completing fewer than half of his passes. In 1966, Plum suffered a knee injury and was replaced by Karl Sweetan, who shared time with Plum in 1967.
Plum backed up Roman Gabriel on the 1968 Rams and Fran Tarkenton and Gary Wood on the 1969 Giants, playing sparingly both years. He retired after the 1969 season.
Plum went 7-2-1 in starting season openers as quarterback for a .778 winning percentage, the second highest for a quarterback since 1950.[1]
Frank Beall Ryan (born July 12, 1936) is a retired American football quarterback in the National Football League who played for the Los Angeles Rams (1958–1961), Cleveland Browns (1962–1968) and Washington Redskins (1969–1970). Although he led the Browns to their last National Football League title in 1964, Ryan is best remembered for being perhaps the only Ph.D. in mathematics to play in the league, completing a doctorate at Rice University.[1]
Contents [hide]
1 Early years
2 NFL career
2.1 Los Angeles Rams
2.2 Cleveland Browns
2.2.1 1962–1963
2.2.2 1964
2.2.3 1965
2.2.4 1966
2.2.5 1967
2.2.6 1968
2.3 Washington Redskins
3 Academic career
4 Post-NFL career
5 Statistics
6 References
7 External links
8 Other sources
Early years[edit]
Ryan played football while attending R. L. Paschal High School in Fort Worth, Texas. He was recruited by college coaches from across the country, including Bear Bryant, and was admitted to Yale University. Yet Ryan declared a major in physics at Rice University, becoming the first in his family to not go to Yale.[2] He was unable to establish himself during the course of his collegiate career, splitting time behind center with King Hill, who was receiving most of the snaps.
Given his desire to continue toward a Ph.D., Ryan originally decided not to play professional football after the Rams chose him in the fifth round of the 1958 NFL Draft. However, he changed his mind after he was able to enroll at both UCLA and University of California, Berkeley in pursuit of the advanced degree. Ryan then transferred back to Rice, where he studied during the off-season.[3]
NFL career[edit]
Los Angeles Rams[edit]
Ryan spent the first four years of his career primarily in a reserve capacity, making $12,000 per year.[3] He did start a handful of games in competition with teammates Billy Wade and Zeke Bratkowski. In 1961, he and future Hall of Famer Ollie Matson connected on a 96-yard touchdown reception, establishing a new team record. However, after sitting on the bench for the last four games of the 1961 season, Ryan stormed into the dressing room and threatened General Manager Elroy Hirsch that he was going to quit football if he were not traded. He became part of a multi-player deal with the Browns on July 12, 1962, his 26th birthday, as the arrival of highly touted newcomer Roman Gabriel made Ryan expendable.
Cleveland Browns[edit]
1962–1963[edit]
Acquired to back up starting quarterback Jim Ninowski, Ryan moved into the starting slot on October 28 when Ninowski broke his collarbone while being tackled by Pittsburgh Steelers’ defensive lineman Eugene “Big Daddy” Lipscomb. With no other candidates to compete with, Ryan established his leadership and held on to the starting role for much of the next six seasons. In his first full season as a starter, 1963, Ryan threw for 2,026 yards and 25 touchdowns with only 13 interceptions, helping the Browns to a 10–4 record. Thirteen of those touchdowns went to Gary Collins, who tied for the league lead in receiving touchdowns that year.
1964[edit]
In 1964, Ryan established himself as one of the league’s best passers. He threw for 2,404 yards and repeated his 1963 performance by completing 25 touchdown passes, which was enough to lead the league. Ryan had excellent company on the Browns offense: fullback Jim Brown; wide receivers Collins and Paul Warfield; and an outstanding offensive line led by future Hall of Famers Lou Groza and Gene Hickerson. But Ryan was also a clutch performer during the Browns’ memorable 10–3–1 season. Needing a win in the December 12 regular season finale against the New York Giants to clinch a berth in the NFL title game, Ryan completed 12 of 13 passes for five touchdowns and ran for a sixth touchdown in the 52–20 win. Two weeks later in the championship game against the Baltimore Colts, Ryan hit Collins for three touchdowns to win the title, 27–0.
Ryan was rewarded for his performance with the first of three straight Pro Bowl appearances. Unfortunately, on the first play of the second half, he suffered a severe shoulder injury in the game after the combined 800-pound trio of Packer Willie Davis, Lion Roger Brown and Colt Gino Marchetti converged on the signal caller. Speculation persists to this day that Marchetti went out of his way to injure Ryan due to the perception that the quarterback ran up the score in the championship, with Marchetti’s statement that he wanted “one more shot” at Ryan also fueling the rumors. However, a study of the film by Cleveland coaches in the weeks after the game exonerated Marchetti.
After winning the championship, Art Modell raised his salary $25,000, up from about $18,000 per season.[3]
1965[edit]
Ryan’s numbers dropped in 1965, throwing for only 1,751 yards and 18 touchdowns. While his shoulder had completely healed, a sore elbow in training camp and an injured arch early in the regular season played a role in his completing fewer than half of his passes during the campaign. Those struggles resulted in a continuing cool relationship with Browns’ fans, who booed him often during home contests. Part of Ryan’s decline can also be traced to the absence of second-year wide receiver Paul Warfield, who missed much of the season after suffering a double fracture of the collarbone in the team’s first exhibition game.
1966[edit]
In 1966, he bounced back with a superb season, leading the league with 29 touchdown passes and finishing second with 2,976 yards despite playing with intense pain. Ryan’s output helped alleviate the absence of the legendary Jim Brown, who had retired prior to the start of training camp. His 29 touchdown passes in 14 games ranks second in Browns franchise history to Brian Sipe, who got 30 in a 16-game 1980 season.[4]
1967[edit]
On January 25, 1967, Ryan underwent an operation to repair the remaining effects of his injury. The surgery eliminated the pain, but also affected his throwing motion. In the 1967 season opener, Ryan’s injury woes continued as he sprained both ankles in a 21–14 loss to the Dallas Cowboys. Battling through that malady, along with shoulder and knee troubles, Ryan led the team to a 9–5 record to reach the playoffs. The season would see Ryan having a concussion from a head-to-head collision with Dick Butkus. He was knocked out in the second-quarter but came back to throw three touchdown passes in the third quarter to will his team to a 24-0 victory. Ryan credits this collision for the cervical disc replacement he underwent after retiring.
1968[edit]
Ryan’s tenure as the Browns’ starting quarterback came to an abrupt end following a 1–2 start to the 1968 season. Browns’ head coach Blanton Collier replaced Ryan with Bill Nelsen, who went on to lead the team to a division title. The official conclusion of Ryan’s time with the Browns came on September 9, 1969 when he was released, but new Redskins’ coach Vince Lombardi quickly signed Ryan as a backup.
Washington Redskins[edit]
Despite throwing only one pass during the 1969 season, Ryan returned for the last of his 13 years in the NFL in 1970 before officially announcing his retirement on April 13, 1971. With his accurate throwing arm, his 14.7 yards per completion still ranks as one of the all-time leaders.[4]
Academic career[edit]
Ryan attended graduate school during the first part of his playing career, and in 1965, he earned his Ph.D. from Rice. He worked for seven postgraduate years under Dr. G. R. MacLane, one of the best geometric-function theorists, and produced the dissertation “Characterization of the Set of Asymptotic Values of a Function Holomorphic in the Unit Disc.[3]” In 1966, Ryan published two fundamental papers on the set of asymptotic values of a function holomorphic in the unit disc in Duke Mathematical Journal.[5]
He started teaching at Rice during his career and, during his time with the Browns, he became an assistant professor at the Case Institute of Technology in February 1967. Ryan had a full teaching load,[6] which includes undergraduate and graduate courses, and conducting research in complex analysis.[7][8] While at training camp, Ryan taught math in the morning and went to football practice in the afternoon.[9] Ryan taught his last course at Case Western Reserve in the spring of 1971. He was promoted to associate professor that summer. After taking a leave of absence for the next three years, he resigned his faculty position in 1974.
Ryan learned computer programming and software through the Chi Corp., Case Western Reserve’s then newly launched private computer company. He compiled advanced statistics to apply what he learned to football. The Browns were shown his results and liked the project but didn’t offer the extra cash to move it forward.[3]
Ryan’s second career was fodder for many jokes by sportswriters. Red Smith wrote that the Browns’ offense consisted of a quarterback who understood Einstein’s theory of relativity and ten teammates who didn’t know there was one. Ryan was somewhat put off by the focus on his academic life, as he considered himself to be a regular football player.
Ryan considers Sir Edward Collingwood, an expert in meromorphic function and the theory of cluster sets, and Jack Lohwater, the former editor of Mathematical Reviews, as mentors.[10]
Post-NFL career[edit]
Soon after his retirement from the Redskins, Ryan remained in the nation’s capital when he was named Director of Information Services for the U.S. House of Representatives. While there, he helped advance the computer age in politics by playing an integral role in establishing the body’s first electronic voting system. This enabled voting procedures that usually ran for 45 minutes to be shortened to around 15 minutes. By the time he left the post, the office had an annual budget of eight million dollars with a staff of 225.[11]
Ryan resigned that post to become athletic director and lecturer in mathematics at Yale University on March 7, 1977. Ryan served in that position for ten years before resigning to become the school’s Associate vice President for Institutional Planning.
He was a member of the Rice Board of Governors from 1972 to 1976, and Ryan was recognized as a distinguished alumnus in 1987. Ryan became vice president for external affairs at Rice in August 1990, increasing annual gifts to the university to a three-year average of $32.8 million for the fiscal years 1992–94 from $21.4 million for the fiscal years 1988–90. In 1995, he resigned his post as vice president for external affairs at Rice, owing to differences with President Malcolm Gillis concerning the future course of external affairs. Ryan ended his institutional career as a professor of mathematics, and professor of computational and applied mathematics at Rice.[12]
Ryan was president and chief executive officer of Contex Electronics, which designed and manufactured cable and interconnect products for the computer and communications industries. Ryan also served as director for America West Airlines, Sequoia Systems, and of Danielson Holding Corporation. He was an advisory director of United Medical Care Inc.[13]
Now retired, Ryan lives on 78 acres of heavily forested land[14] in Grafton, Vermont with his wife, Joan, a retired sportswriter and nationally syndicated columnist for the Washington Post.[3] One of the first female sportswriters to ever grace a locker room, his wife and Ryan have been married since their senior year at Rice, 55 years.[10] In retirement, he now runs a sophisticated self-designed program that helps micro-analyze statistical behavior of the up-and-down pricing movement that underlies the pricing behavior of the futures market. He is also doing work on Oppermann’s conjecture about the distribution of prime numbers.[3]
Statistics[edit]
Ryan ranks fourth all-time among Browns quarterbacks with 13,499 passing yards and second behind Brian Sipe with 134 touchdowns. His 81.43 passer rating is third-best, behind Milt Plum and Bernie Kosar.
Ryan’s career numbers (including years with the Rams and Redskins): 1,090 completions in 2,133 attempts for 16,044 yards, 149 touchdowns and 111 interceptions. Ryan also rushed for 1,358 yards and six touchdowns on 310 carries.
Is Gino. Peter’s uncle?
Evidently, not the Worlds foremost authority.
Jim Brown, Michael Jordan, Caitlin Jenner, Jesse Owens,ect. but the a greatest of all…Muhammad Ali.
Greatest of All (of all?). Endlessly debatable, but I would, if forced to submit one name, pick BILL RUSSELL.
Thorpe, Jim Thorpe
Can you enter this discussion and not mention Gary Wood and Ralph Guglielmi Dan? You are slipping.
What, WFA, no a word about Gary Cuozzo, Gln Griffing, King Hill, Jim Ninowski, John Huarte, Jerry Rome, Jack Concannon? Sad, WFA, sad.
Andy Stynchula
You’re right Dan. Milt has to be included in the conversation. Dan, are the Kapanski’s invited to the inuagural after party?
http://www.berkshireeagle.com/letters/ci_29333627/letter-building-brigade-take-back-pittsfield
Lanesboro is considering building a new high school, but town residents will have a vote on the issue. Must be nice to get a vote unlike here in Pittsfield where residents were not allowed to vote on a new Taconic High School.
Apparently Lanesboro still adapts a Democracy…..by the people…for the people.
Good for Lanesboro. That’s the way these issues should be handled. Pittsfield is a glaring example of what not to do.
The Disappointing Local Newspaper (DLN) interviewed a few of the city council persons as to their thoughts going into the new year and administration. Not surprisingly only one mentioned keeping an eye on the budget and that was Tony Simonelli. Perhaps it never occurred to the rest of them that controlling a budget is high on the list of things the taxpayers elected them to do. Or perhaps the people who sponsored their elections told them that they were not to w9orrry their pretty little heads about such grown up things.
New mayor, new council, same old bull. Thats why the DNL is the Boring Broadsheet. City is heading fast to ruin.
Vincent Edward Jackson…the only athlete ever to be named an all-star in 2 professional sports…loved it when he ran over The Boz the Blowhard…can I get an Amen from ya Chucky G?
On Sundays Berkshire Eagle I saw a whole lot of what things should be from counselors not so much from the new mayor
Research and writing by World’s Authority is good. To take a quote from Butch Cassidy, “Who is this guy”. Nice pieces WFA. Thorpe was an Olympic star as well as making the major leagues in football and baseball. Not bad. But this was from another era and he did not have to compete against America’s black athletes. Dan’s right that Bill Russell deserves consideration as the key factor in Red Aurbach’s fast break offense leading to a decade run of championships or near misses for the Celtics. Not so for Vince Jackson whose claim to fame is running over the Boz, an overrated Buckeye and lousy pro. Now let’s take a look at my pick for greatest athlete. Jim Brown was a two time Syracuse All-American in football and lacrosse. Did you know he played basketball at Syracuse and was drafted by the pros? I think at certain times he was a track star, too. Football was his game and his first year he was Rookie of the Year and All-Pro. For nine seasons he never missed a minute of play because of injuries. Every minute of every game he was a targeted guy. Yet he still ran over and around other pro athletes. He retired at the top of his game and became a stellar movie star .He went from dodging Sam Huff to snuggling up to Raquel Welch. Now how about that? There is an additional key factor in Jim Brown’s greatness. He accomplished all this in the Jim Crow era.
No question that Jim Brown was a fantastic athlete but I don’t believe that there is a greatest of all time. There are just too many variables and we tend to pick the greatest from when we were young. Brown was and is one of my all time favorites but no one is the greatest.
I just love the quotes from the delusional democrats in today’s BB about Bernie free stuff Sanders………Life must be lonely when you live out in the ozone layer above La, La land.
I read them too. These people are so far left its frightening. No common sense from any of them.
Just read excellent letter to editor by Mr. Gaetani, that was refer enced by Juan Pittsfield, above. Mr. G. credits Mr. Valenti and jonathan Levine as being better sources of reliable news than the Berkshire Eagle and looks to them to help him build the Non-Gob- Sig Brigade. Must read letter for everyone. I also just heard that Mr. G. was released from BMC this morning. It was initially thought he had a stroke. It was ruled out and diagnosed as Bells Palsy. The whole right side of his face is collapsed and he has vision and speech problems. He has no intention of slowing down and will have his tv show with former Mayo,r Charles Smith this coming friday. He wants Planet people who watch his show, not to be too surprised when you see him. Doctors don’t know how long recovery will take but Mr. G.doesn’t let anything get him down and will be working for the city Taxpayers, in any way he can. Mr. G sends regards to all.
Let’s go J E T S!
Just wasn’t meant to be Nota, same old Jests.Just like Pittsfield ,they need higher productivity.
Jets lose againn Go Steelers.
Go Brancoes.
Chuck, if Jim Brown was sooooo great, why wasn’t he able to run a few yards in the Dirty Dozen, he was stopped cold! Personally I would have given the task to John Cassavetes.
He MADE that run in the “Dozen.” Dropped the dynamite down the grates and ran to dalight. Casavettes would have slit his own throat laughing all the while.
May, I would have given the task to Maggot, a guy so stupid and nuts, that he didn’t even succumb to the allures of a fraulein who offered him all to save her life. He would have made it to all the chimney drops.
Sorry t hear that Gaetani took ill. Hope he gets better quickly. The city needs it’s resident watchdog.
I agree. A rare man with his heart in the right place. More than I can say about many of this city’s leadership. Does anyone know if the door hit Bianchi in the ass on his way out?
Chuck, Maggot was a fumbler, Brown was a proven commodity. What is ironic, Brown was cast for the role because of that scene, why was it set up to fail, he was a hero, heroes live, sometimes in the a movies.
May, From beginning of written history heroes have been set up to fail and expire. Remember Icarus and Achilles?
Get Well Wiz!
One more thing with Maggot, he would have been a top five pick in the Draft, but had many disciiplinary problems while in school, go figure.
ma, Disciplinary problem, no problem, watch how high Ohio State’s Elliott goes in the draft. Whoever takes him will be sorry.
When is the Queen Crowned? Who luvs ya baby?
Don’t think Peyton has it anymore, sorry Bronco Fans. You don’t win Super Bowls with just experience. he also looks sheepish and has lost a little weight, just sayin.
I don’t know Chuck, Jamison Winston of F S U has done ok. Maybe it’s an Ohio thing?
Some people learn Ma, maybe he met the right girl. That always helps. Some people can’t learn/mature because of character defects. Jury is still out on Winston.
Starting tomorrow there will be lots on local politics and less on sports. Mayor-elect Tyer will be sworn into office and I wish her good-luck and lots of success.
In a recent bowl game Texas Christion overcame a halftime deficit of 31 – 0 and came back to win the game. We can do the same.
January 3, 2016
Re: Eagle Editors don’t understand what it really like for young people in Pittsfield and North Adams!
Dear Berkshire Eagle Editors:
I understand what it is like for young adults to try to find a living wage job with good benefits in Pittsfield and North Adams. When I was 26 years old in the Fall of 2001 through the Spring of 2002, I worked at a bank in Pittsfield for a little over 8 months. People in Pittsfield came up to my bank’s branch manage and said disparaging things about me from the time I was a toddler in around 1978 through my then current age. My Irish-American branch manager used the racist word “wop” against me because I have an Italian-American last name. When I complained, my employment at the bank in Pittsfield was terminated. I, among others who worked that bank, filed a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination in Springfield from the Spring of 2002 through the Summer of 2003. MCAD ruled in the bank’s favor each and every time. From the mid-Spring of 2002 through late-Spring of 2003, I walked around the Pittsfield area looking for a job with no success. I spent over one year of my young adult life looking for a job in Pittsfield with no success! I feel I was blacklisted from employment in Pittsfield because I had political enemies in Pittsfield, especially with then Pittsfield State Senator Andrea F. Nuciforo, Jr.
The back story with Nuciforo is that he is the consummate Pittsfield political prince. Nuciforo’s late-father was a Pittsfield State Senator and then a Pittsfield Probate Court Judge. Nuciforo’s Uncle, Tom Wojtkowski, was a Pittsfield State Representative. Nuciforo’s late-Aunt, Anne E. Wojtkowski, was a Pittsfield Mayor and a Berkshire Community College Professor. Since the first time I met Nuciforo is the Spring of 1996, when I was 20 years old, Nuciforo used his political network in Pittsfield to have people bully me, including a Becket man who was an Environmental Science Professor at BCC. The Becket man would viciously point his finger at me while verbally assaulting me. The Becket man even threatened to assault me. The Becket man made his adult daughter emotionally abuse me. In the Fall of 1999, the Massachusetts State Police at the Pittsfield Berkshire County District Attorney’s Office handled the case. Since then, the Nuciforo network spread vicious rumors against me to the people of Pittsfield that I stalked a Jewish woman from Otis. Nuciforo set the whole conflict in place, then he deployed the rumor against me. But, Nuciforo doesn’t leave behind his own fingerprints. Rather, Nuciforo is a mean-spirited conspiratorial bully who used his henchmen to manipulate people and situations. Nuciforo also went after my father. My dad worked at the Pittsfield courthouse and was a Berkshire County Commissioner during the period of the Fall of 1997 through the Spring of 1998. Nuciforo filed multiple state government “ethics” complaints against my dad that were submitted to state government officials in Pittsfield and Boston. Nuciforo tried to get my dad fired from his state government job at the Pittsfield courthouse. After Nuciforo failed to destroy my dad’s career and possibly his life, Nuciforo went after me from the Spring through Summer of 1998 when I was 22 years old. Nuciforo filed complaints with the Pittsfield Police Department that I threatened him and that I was to be arrested if I entered his Pittsfield legislative office. Nuciforo did so without apprising either my father or myself. Nuciforo’s end goal was to send me to his close political friend’s, then Sheriff Carmen Massimiano’s, Pittsfield jail where I was to be abused.
What is my point? It is that if you are a Good Old Boy like Nuciforo, Pittsfield will offer you living wage and above opportunities, but if you are someone like me, the best option was for me to move out of the Pittsfield area! Multigenerational, interrelated families run Pittsfield like the one Nuciforo comes from. If you are not a Good Old Boy or you stand up to them, you better prepare yourself to be bullied or leave the area.
The Berkshire Eagle never once stood up to Pittsfield’s Good Old Boy’s club that ran Pittsfield into the proverbial ditch over the past several generations. Even The Boston Globe ran a news story back in January of 2007 about Nuciforo’s blatant political corruption and abuses of power, including strong-arming two women out of a Massachusetts state government “election” to anoint himself to his sinecure at the Pittsfield Registry of Deeds while he lobbied the then new Governor, Deval Patrick’s administration, for a post as Commissioner of Insurance, which he had a conflict of interest in as a corporate Attorney for a Boston law firm that represented Insurance companies. The Berkshire Eagle did not publish a word about Nuciforo’s political scandals that give government and business a bad name!
– Jonathan Melle
———-
“Invitation, challenge to young residents”
The Berkshire Eagle, Editorial, January 3, 2016
North Adams faces daunting challenges, many of which are shared by other Berkshire communities. That includes the need for a youth infusion.
At his swearing-in ceremony New Year’s Day at City Hall, Mayor Richard Alcombright, who is now beginning his fourth two-year term, made the point that between he and John Barrett III, the city has been led by two people for 34 years. North Adams, it seemed to the mayor, had “skipped a generation of leaders.” (Eagle, January 2).
The mayor’s perceptive comments speak to the Berkshires’ severe demographic problem. The population is aging while the younger generations go elsewhere in pursuit of the good jobs that are not available here in sufficient number. This is particularly the case for county students who go away to college and find that they can’t come back to the Berkshires even if that is their goal.
The county must continue to attract new business, which is difficult, while making it easier for local businesses to grow. Most of the Berkshires’ top employers over the generations had roots here and did not move in from elsewhere. The schools, in particular Berkshire Community College and Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, must continue their efforts to prepare students for good-paying jobs, which in this day and age require specific, technology-based skill sets.
At Friday’s ceremony, Mayor Alcombright spoke of the economic progress the city had made on several fronts and of the projects that could pay dividends in the months and years ahead. Challenges aside, there is reason for optimism in North Adams as the year begins. To help assure that progress is made, we encourage young people in North Adams to answer the mayor’s invitation and challenge “to get involved in leadership roles, elected and appointed.” That applies to every Berkshire community, but for it to be realized, the county must do what it can to keep its young people in the Berkshires and attract young people from elsewhere.
“In the face of pain there are no heroes”