Reunion Week was capped with tennis win & Sat. dancing- I’ll do some PR for a Hat-outfit Everybody liked

Sorry, I don’t do many selfies, but if *nobody* got my strutting to entertainer John Eisenhart’s version of ‘Bad to the Bone’ at 50th Reunion, where has our national penchant for wanting to capture *everything* to somehow overlook me & The Hat? Pete Z., you’re a standard-bearer for Forever Young Boomers. John N. great to hear your running-career story re: teaching/sports marketing. Mini! and Linda N., Danny Smith’s date Janie and a visit to FL..? Jean Tafler+, carry on Good Woman and Actress.

Yes, a good time was had by those present. Can’t argue with that. Yeah, Linda and John Zampella are still looking that like fine wine aging deal.

With tennis racket and ‘letter jacket,’ Jock & Journalist

Lacking great hat from Reunion, I’ll sub-in Queens Cup Steeplechases post-races ‘Hotwalkers Ball.’ Blue-blue Bugachi shirt with yellow, multi-color Garcia tie. lol The folding, heavy wicker antique chair was a great prop, except at dancin’ time.

Friday evening was a successful warming up about possibly identifying faces, at ‘Horses (rear end logo)’ on McClellan. I gave Belle Waddington an early AttagalPerson! for the communications and getting a group together. I styled a suitably colorful Tommy Bahama shirt with Hugo Boss blue jacket, Nantucket Red faded pants with sneakers, varsity L with racket, vintage Steffi Graf G200 (small head!) racket slung over shoulder, and yes, The Fab 50th Hat.

On Saturday, Janelle R., another primary org asset for Class of ’75 reunion, (I’m smiling) caught me just *after* they took group picture of Central Park people who went to Linton – but that’s inadequate to explain the lack of coverage for Saturday night reunion gear. Yeah, yeah, sounds like a diva, but maybe its just Colbert. Given that EVERYBODY has a camera now, if somebody captured my dancing, send it along please!

Okay, everybody liked the fedora with bead of ’50’ medallions, and light key-lime green, soft Panama jacket with splashy blue-blue Bugatchi shirt and outstanding yellow-multi-color Garcia tie as Ukraine sympathy symbol plus ‘dancing shoes.’ Nothin’?

Brother David came in a tux- but I did that for 40th. Mini! & Melissa Schein- ?, thanks for dancing near me. YAY! to Tony Malitzia for a welcome report about Bob Massaroni’s heart and him doing well two years after transplant.

LOL Alex Chrys, though not in attendance, donating a second hour of open bar was welcomed by the 90-odd 1975 grads and significant others. Food was finger stuff, all of it tasty-desirable and no mess. Chuck Mohlman says he never chewed glass off a cracked glass at one of those early college year returns to Schenectady, so memories become maybe rumors others buy into. Could have been Comely… Brother David indeed told the story of a Sunday morning tackle game with college-HS buddies, messing up a 3″ wet snow Linton field before ’75 Election Day game vs. MP. Ooops.

The only thing un-great about whole reunion event was the speeding ticket at end of I-88 going home, but ticket wrecking my super-Attitude for the trip? Uhhh, I got ahold of a guy and its working out) I’ve loved checking the mileage and point-to-point-and back, and LeShork wasn’t only one running hot the whole way. Zoom-zoom,12.5 hrs., appreciated thinking time and rock & roll tunes back to Charlotte.

Tennis worked out Great!

No golf or racetrack this time, but got out twice for tennis with my brother David, discovered whatever discomfort I sometimes get in right wrist (yes, I’m officially old, but a fact, not complaint) doesn’t cause actual pain except with mishits when I don’t set up right. What *seems* like a rejuvenated right shoulder meant a LOT better serving than hesitant previous time.

Having played long enough, you can assess what doing wrong/right, and I’m giving a month-plus worth of Tibetan monk circulatory assist exercises on YouTube credit for shoulder strength. There was no throwback clanking in shoulder from major 2020 bike accident. I actually placed serves with pace, gave Dave some trouble. At sixty-eight, out of the tennis closet and ready for Fall leagues in Charlotte!

I’ve previously mentioned how the Central Park courts where I played growing up, and where a big time former event OTB Open was held before the US Open, were end of street and through woods- whole operation is currently dug up. I’m smiling about early days on local backboard, high fencing and balls still making it into often muddy area behind.

It turns out, running has helped bone regeneration in Dave’s left leg, and since last year, he’s played regularly with a buddy. This was first time in years I’ve done more than pound a wall, hitting with ‘live ammo’/spin/location, I’m gratified about the results. Bicycling has kept me within five pounds of best rugby weight (188) for 35 years, tennis is an important social addition. I’ll gladly play doubles there than plock! plock! I can hear from a block away at Myers Park CC pickleball courts. How quickly I’m regaining muscle memory on groundstrokes with pace, yay!

Marking the Difference, 50 years and Always, Family & Relationships

Been there, done that, got the cards to prove it.

I’ve barely written anything solid for most of two weeks, just taking in the social uptick vibe (Come on, Janie!) I count getting invited to Panthers terrific home victory vs. ATL before making 800 mi. trip up on Mon. 22nd in my positives, feel no great sadness NOT seeing more than flashes of New England game while chowing wings (12 meaty ones for $15!) at bar from Reunion on Sunday. Saw that bang! bang! scoring in second and didn’t worry about it further. Laura was the bomb on service, FULL pours on wines and brews at Horse’s +logo was noticed.

That second quickie set of tennis before my heading back Tuesday 30th, and lunch + extra time with Aunt Carol, whom I hadn’t visited in years, cousin Joe staying for a beer Friday, and our scholarly professor-dude nephew (and ex-rugger) Spencer making *excellent* exotic natural mushrooms! pizza was better than prowling Saratoga. I drove by the old house on Lakewood, otherwise soaked in the family/familiarity of life in David and Donna’s house I helped build, before moving to Charlotte in 1995.

Two small kids in cellar was a rare treat, just walking (and crying after long travel upset sleep schedules) was first time seeing as great-uncle. I had small gifts for them, a super-colorful umpire’s coin for heads-tails, and a 100 year old book of childrens tales for future read-alongs. Its obviously way ahead of four-year old AJ now, just following at this point is a start. I’ve always been an advocate for kids reading and writing programs, no reason to fumble the opportunity for passing along a Special old one. https://cdtalententerprises.com/2019/06/28/well-delivered-messages-work-wonders-at-all-levels/

Doing some smaller stuff with good intentions, it still counts. I’ve choked up a little at times when I describe walking two blocks to a bookmobile, parked in the bank parking lot *every other Friday* during early reading years. Yes! I read ‘20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,’ and ‘Robinson Caruso’ too. Profile in Courage and Mark Twain! A ton on Monument books, they let me get as many as I wanted. When 7-9 of us guys at St. Helen’s vied for reading volume, Hardy Boys as often as Franklin W. Dixon cranked them out, and individual quiz A’s (20/20 or they had a better A) yeah, we felt like a pretty smart bunch. High school wasn’t like that.

I admit feeling realistically elite more completely as a three year-Journalism Person than HS Jock I faux-projected with tennis racket and varsity letter Friday. Honest George, you reminding me about McKiernan and Journalist of Year award, which my brother Mike received the year before, does bring back a Whaaaat? memory. Guess I was happy enough with unexpected Sportmanship award for Swim Club.

Still think there should have been more group input on the vein of cursive writing through yearbook by Liz. Just sayin.’ Nobody asked about her and a tennis finale-the Sports Banquet, so I only told that story once.

Class Scribe, Maybe

JOURNALISM and producing a documented, award-winning product every two weeks, that’s truly meant something all these years, and 1st Amendment free speech is HUGE by me. It was lots more than yellow hall pass elitism back then, more like Ray Patterson and WE created some Journalism history at Linton. Isn’t there a John Carter wing of Schenectady HS? I was an enthused and legitimate part of the huge post-Watergate Journalism major group (double major with Business/Marketing) and still consider myself a writing resource in several areas (sports wagering), but yeah, three days of paste up with Bundo was a standard. Good memories for Brian Pollock as a J-man.

There’s no telling how much longer I create as a Writer (nail lid on…), perhaps next book is just a particularly Inspirational Woman for a legend-in-his-own-mind Romance Writer away. I can imagine that working…

Keyboarding is MUCH better than typing, but thanks to Mrs. Eidens and ability to effectively transfer ideas and facts into production/sometimes a living as an admin. Pasting in a specific paragraph and tapping ‘Print Pages X range’ vs. retyping all 9 affected is a God-send for editing.

I mentioned those parochial school years- my folks paid PUBLIC SCHOOL TAXES *AND* extra tab at St. Helens- and top guys like Rooney, Trumble, Ryan, myself, we didn’t care how or what the girls were doing, we judged ourselves absolutely at peer level. While invoking a particular favorite teacher- who also trained all of us as altar boys- and often allowed for second ‘right’ answers if argument was compelling evidence you’d been paying attention, fellow Linton grad AnnMarie DeJohn Kinzel stated flatly Saturday, “No, we girls didn’t do any negotiating extra right answers with him.”

Ahhh yes, different times. The geek captured on my first Linton ID (1972-73), but with Mr. Dieck’s big black signature covering most of me, is an ancient mystery to me . I think there were seven guys I played Pop Warner football with in Saturday group. Bob Houlihan, about PR writing and that Hartford project…? Did I hear that Steve Lussier is some kind of great surgeon, or was I mixing that with Scott Grayman not making it *because* of surgery? Thanks for the drink Mike Osborne. Nate Manley still looks like yearbook photo, which was Christ-like with bandana. Cagnina tried to grab my hat during some pictures, sorry, not happening. Danny- oooo! A *serious* date.

Just for rounding out some Catholic school stuff, 1) I was definitely better prepared/ahead when I changed to public school in 8th grade. Instead of excelling because I knew the material, I sloughed off. We can’t afford to let public school education be buried by a lack of resources. 2) Not too awful long after I left, maybe still in high school, one of the nuns from 6th grade and a priest left together for a different life. Just sayin.’ Oh, never stole hosts, drank wine, or got molested.

My brother Mike and I were also first altar boys ‘when things started changing’ in Sixties, to NOT wear cassocks and surpluses for Mass. Priest came in, said, “Don’t worry about those, you guys look fine,” and out we went. I still wasn’t aware of Vietnam except totals of casualties that was on Nightly News. It was essentially Kent State where myth, “We don’t shoot protesters in America” FACT was destroyed, at least when white protesters got an uncomfortable blast of Reality.

Is that the hill you want to die on? First Amendment- Actually, Yes

In real estate years ago, the word was never talk Retirement with Boomers, the Forever Young. Hence, the rise of 55+ communities with lifestyle choices. We Boomers will always own Man on the Moon. I recently put a Graduation Card/15 pc. puzzle project on ETSY, just sayin’ Creativity isn’t age specific. My niece is finishing a last semester for an art-related Major. We all know its a mo’fo’ of a job market, oohhhh BOY! is it ever. Best wishes to all, my Good Week-plus of calm and camaraderie (gotcha Dave Ryan, and same Goodness for long walks with Hank, Dave’s border collie) for 50th was worth the effort, may you peeps help these Next Couple Gens survive.

Have to admit, I haven’t been subjected to that slack-stare thing so many mention about ‘this generation’ too often. On LinkedIn conversations and general discussions, engaging is still about active communications, and I am great 1-1 from sales and interview situations. I concur with opinions regarding those inter-personal skills vs. reliance on texting. Just sayin,’ ain’t thrilled with AI or (bleeping) Miller neither.

*Hopin’* somebody has a video slice of my stylish behavior to send along, and I *know* I was in front ranks for outside pictures, surprised myself about not taking any…

Best of thoughts to all, may Success, Love, and BoomerwithAttitude wisdom continue to light your steps. What’s in the cards, I dunno.

‘Lights & Hauls the World G.E.’ as Schenectady was Iconic, Our 50th H.S. Reunion is Next Year

The CNN article about GE legally becoming two companies isn’t like it’s wiped from face of Earth, and will they keep the big GE light at end of Erie Boulevard? Gotta be a landmark – 1892, right? GE doesn’t sell lightbulbs, say what?

Last year, the house on Lakewood we grew up in was still a well-situated half-block from Central Park, with playground and Rose Garden, barely a block from Gershon’s Deli at corner of Upper Union St. Mom got every nickel of the $125k she expected as a FSBO. The maple out front is gone, the Diamond’s house looks the same. Where I grew up, that’s Schenectady to me.

I hope Scott Grayman makes it to 50th reunion next year (you too, Mazz, Joey G., and former KK., S.Luscier?). Fingers crossed its more like August-Sept. warmth for once. I like the casino there now, won $1500 last August, but partied at Siro’s and beyond in Saratoga.

Feeling good about big race day at Saratoga in ’23, did well enough to be wine buyer @Wheatfields. Travers Day look was full Boss Blue and hat, yellow-blue check shirt, turquoise tie/pocket scarf, polished shoes.

Telling others where you’re from has always been a natural part of introductions in Charlotte. Then-young nephew Ian often said, ‘We still think of you as Yankees,’ but Memorial Day starts my Year 30 here, he’s getting married in July, and he certainly hasn’t thought that way in a long time.

85-15% of people is a legitimate split between Elsewhere-Homies here. My three outstanding nephews here constitute ‘real’ Charlotteans in cultural terms. I continue telling people to shake hands with natives, even passing through a network mixer and turning into the Spoke Easy http://www.thespokeeasyclt.com shop to get a $3-16 oz. PBR and excellent advice about my Miyata needs.

With a church-related group’s annual dinner tonight, and plans for mingling at Mint Museum’s Kick Back Party Sunday afternoon (1:00-5:00), things are moving well on Social Goodness front in Charlotte. Mental health-wise, get as much Good as you can before election fever starts.

I remember how earlier on, GE shipped the division that made toasters out to Greenville, SC, and in HS some guys talked about being a third shift floor sweeper, because you could sleep on the job. My Dad was a RIF casualty in 1958, about the time third of four boys arrived. All the people from his GE Apprentice Alumni Association group camped together, got pregnant together, got old together.

50th Reunion – Linton HS

I’m unsure how many know that Schenectady and GE had primary parts, as Illium Electrical Works, in Kurt Vonnegut’s ‘Player Piano’ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Player_Piano_(novel). Journalism legend Ray Patterson included several Vonnegut books as required mid-70s reading, but producing Linton Highlights every two weeks remains a journalistic point of pride. Ray sent many of us off to college for Journalism degrees, the most popular major in the post-Watergate, Woodward and Bernstein righteousness. At reunions, I’m always recognized as ‘one of those Journalism guys.’ Close enough. Books written? Sure. I include Charlotte in mine.

In 1975 our graduating class at Linton was 540, which merged in 1992 with crosstown rival Mont Pleasant (at Linton campus) to become Schenectady High. It currently has 2,815 in grades 9-12 (even distrib.,76% grad. = 535). I was working in scholastic fundraising then, and General Electric pauperized three school districts when a tax judgement case forced return of years of previously paid company assessments, and included knocking down a quantity of no longer needed buildings, even historic, to reduce future assessment.

At reunions, I’m often recognized as ‘one of those Journalism guys.’ Close enough. Books written? Sure. I include Charlotte, not Schenectady, in mine.


https://www.wattpad.com/myworks/218725526-a-triple-shot-of-karma-&-platinum-fury-focus –April 13, 2024.

Employment with, or GE stock, was certainly a good thing, but I was never on the payroll. Brother David, new MBA guy in mid-90s, had a short manager gig there, got hit with a wildcat strike early on – 23 workers checked in and left. Perhaps he wasn’t convinced their promise to ‘give him 120% of what third-shift did’ was a best effort, or he might have compared them to a crew in South Korea as being out-produced at every level.

History? Everyone has it

My first job out of college was a direct result of running in the Schenectady Stockade-athon (15k) in 1979. Of all the training things I didn’t do well, running ten miles in cotton shorts gave me hellacious strawberries on inner thighs. For second interview with TIME, Inc., walking in kind of funky, the VP Recruiting said, “Looks like a story goes with that walk.” I told my runner’s story well – job was 20 cold calls a day, road guy with a company station wagon who could talk as soon as they walked in the door was a match.

Schenectady was just part of my territory (the Hudson Valley and Vermont) and where I continued living the first couple jobs out of college.

A favorite hang out was the Electric Grinch bar on Erie Blvd. One evening a bunch of ruggers came through, and I recognized Kush, a guy from Brockport. Don Kushine was literally that guy *everybody* knew. I hadn’t played college rugby, but liked thumping people, comradarie, lifestyle, so I started in 1980. The Schenectady Reds had a significant history, based on a lot of foreign engineers who played while passing through GE headquarters. There was also a feed from Union College for similar smart types who stayed around.

A SuperFund site (or two) discovered as being hazardous buried GE barrels, I think we even covered it in our well-rounded mid-70s school paper, Highlights. The environment was big then, mostly why I keep thinking all the problems GOP is muddling now – like Roe v. Wade overturned and poisons in the water – the whole PCBs in Hudson fiasco from Waterford GE – was checked on back then. (Dredge it or leave it alone at bottom of Hudson? lol Ask Chris Boehm…)

My folks leaving Schenectady was the toughest day of my life. No more stopping by and finding a piece of available pie, or having a beer (or racketball!) with Dad. I cried while hacksawing the basketball rim down, had to use Norm Diamond’s, Dad’s stuff was packed.

–Sept. 1988. The folks leaving Schenectady was a way bigger deal than GE not being ‘First, second, or forget it GE.’

As part of Karen Johnson’s 1984 Project 5000 campaign, I wrote about the prospect of using the former ALCO railroad assets at far end of Erie Blvd. from GE Main Plant, thoughts considered but never disturbed. Former City Councilman Dave Roberts opined back then, “GE was the proverbial dog in the manger – it can’t eat the hay, but it won’t let the cow get to it either.” It’s housing and casino now, so I guess its okay.

#gshorkonsharonroadseam – This is still my view, 50′ from Sharon Road, where it heads uphill to Queens University. Uphill to the left is Myers Park CC pickleball courts. The plock! of wood on plastic is part of my ‘hood. Pandemic? Yeah, I remember that.

The debacle that was GE Capital just about took out the whole company in 2008; June 19, 2018 General Electric was dropped from Dow Jones Average, 30 select companies that had represented the economy since November, 1907. There was the period of time they owned NBC, and Tina Fey got to make fun of them in ’30 Rock.’ There was the inside joke about how GE bought high and sold low. Jack Welsh was selected as ‘Manager of the Century’ in 1999.

Truthfully, I lost track of GE missteps after I came to Charlotte, with brother David and nephew Curtiss, for folks 40th anniversary (up from Tampa) in 1995. 34 days later, Memorial Day plus one, I rolled into Charlotte, having extended my drive time down by making a wrong turn in Roanoke, VA. Driving across a lot of southern Virginia to 85 in Greensboro and south again, hey, nice weather, relax.

My nephew Ian hasn’t mentioned anything about Yankees in a while. In fact, all nephews have worked on regular basis with same, business verdicts linking smarts and money, fuggaboudit on any other consideration. They’ve spent time in NYC, the belly of the Beast Yankee-wise. One was familiar with the sale of property Panthers started their HQ in Rock Hill at. Blowing matters up during construction funding hoo-hah! is not a fact everyone has forgotten. Smart guys, proud to know them. I like walking in my neighborhood too, just up the hill to Queens University.

Where I’m From…

It’s not Stallone doing Brooklyn, or Wess-chestah, or Lang Giland Nuu Yawk, its 90% rest of the state.

–Almost 30th year here, I still made that New York distinction. Now I’ll say, “Schenectady, where GE used to be.”

Albany-Schenectady-Troy became the Capital District and eventually the Capital Region, so nobody felt slighted by being mentioned last or badly (like Gastonia around here, wink nudge). Albany was the capital and legislative center, Schenectady was second mention because it had GE. Just sayin’.

When I hear people say ‘We’ while discussing the Panthers, I sort of resemble that part of the population now. Blogging and online work involves feature style into sports proposition material, betting on my knowledge of Big East hoops worked pretty well during NCAAs. Marquette was a flameout, I liked Creighton too. If the Hornets could get a stud guard like Kolek, well, good wishes for the home team as NBA season ends.

Its been a long, hard slog for years with sports teams in Charlotte, so now its more a deserved Show us! attitude than anything else. That’s both legit and expected by The Powers That Be as the draft is almost here. Prediction is even more serious topics Panther-wise coming, #MrTeppers$ still isn’t making public commentary on football matters. FYI – he’s got two teams, Carolina Panthers and Charlotte FC, with significant presence here in an older, refurbished stadium.

Here’s hoping the local news about Morgan, Canales, and Tillis stays positive. I consider myself a Charlotte guy on most matters, been here exactly as long as Panthers, even have a burial plot here. Maybe 50th reunion will include fun time in Saratoga, no sense worrying about getting back to Schenectady about other event though.

S-C-H-E-N-E-C-T-A-D-Y. Its Alogonquin for, “Place where two rivers meet, and GE will be built.” Yeah, Schenectady. I’m from where General Electric used to be.