Commentary, dissent, opinion, creative writing, photography, discussion, discourse: all of this and more are to be found within this magic box. This blog was created to be a repository for all of those with an open mind. Our slogan is: TalkFrank, where the Talk is always Frank. And we mean it. ALL are encouraged to participate, even those misguided enough to disagree!!
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Brain Droppings: A Personal Lament
Friday, February 25, 2011
Words to Live by 2/25/11
Pics of the Day: The Space Shuttle Discovery STS-121
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Social Commentary: A WTF Moment/follow-up
The dispute between labor and the governor of Wisconsin continues to fester and grow. So much so, that I felt it necessary to add a few more thoughts to my original ones on this subject.
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Social Commentary: A WTF Moment.
Perhaps my favorite slogan is be careful what you wish for, you just might get it. Cat (my wife, Catherine) would certainly say it's one of the MANY that I abuse on a regular basis. It just seems so broad reaching in it's concept because it involves both imagination and the reality of its consequences. That's very appealing to me.
A Quote to Live By
Death is always on the way, but the fact that you don't know when it will arrive seems to take away from the finiteness of life. It's that terrible precision that we hate so much. But because we don't know, we get to think of life as an inexhaustible well. Yet everything happens a certain number of times, and a very small number, really. How many more times will you remember a certain afternoon that's so deeply a part of your being that you can't conceive of your life without it? Perhaps four or five times more. Perhaps not even. How many more times will you watch the full moon rise? Perhaps twenty. And yet it all seems limitless.
Friday, February 18, 2011
Pic of the Day
Who's got it better than BIG RED? Well, no one, of course! Here he is, fully recovered from his broken leg, doing what he does best, sunbathing on a rare, warm, late winters day. Il Mostro, as my Italian friends lovingly call him, has survived his 16th winter and still thrives. He makes me smile. I hope he makes you too. :)
Creative Writing by Ed Carchia: Sicily Dreaming
SICILY DREAMING
By Edward Carchia
From Pangolin Papers, Spring, 2004
(Nominated for the 2005 Pushcart Prize)
Reprinted in “Arba Sicula” a Sicilian-English bilingual publication of St. John’s University, dedicated to the preservation of Sicilian culture.
The café owner was intrigued by Nick because in 1955 few foreigners drove alone through Sicily’s mountainous interior. The man drew the coffee and chatted in the familiar dialect of Nick’s grandmother. Her village was nearby, sitting atop Mount Iato like a war helmet. Nick had gone there the day before and found civilizations lying on the mountain like geological strata. A temple to the Greek Goddess of Love consorted in promiscuity with a ménage of petrified shades and the past loitered even in the approach sign to the town: Italian Iato, Arab Jato and Greek Iatas.
The new road bypassed the café and Nick was the only customer. He drew unhurried sips, appreciative of the resuscitative caffeine jolt, and returned to the road. The man had said yes, it would eventually take him to Iato. The back way was more scenic.
He drove under a painfully blue sky: hungry for this countryside, this wellspring. The hills billowed past in a blur of browns, greens and gold: solitary farmhouses, the occasional hilltop village and the land, ploughed, wooded and fallow. Festive carpets of wild poppies assaulted him with jubilance. The road turned to dirt, winding and climbing; deceptively drawing him into the mountains with subtle seduction until he acknowledged that he was lost. He was high into Mediterranean pines now and had not seen a house for some time. He pulled off onto a shoulder and was surrounded by ancestral hills.
He began to retrace and shortly came to a fork. He took the right one, which descended. After about fifteen minutes on the deteriorating road, he realized his mistake when, rounding a hill, he saw that the way fell steeply into a far valley that was ringed on all sides by high mountains. He continued on, seeking a turnaround, when he came upon a grove of ancient olive trees. Two of the giants lay in wreckage along the hillside. Blowdowns. One, hollowed by age, fell to a high wind and brought down the other: a fall of arboreal archangels. The opening revealed distant cubes, human habitation. He went on, pulled by the remoteness.
The road disintegrated until it was not much more than a mule track and finally expired before a high rock wall, perhaps the side of an eroded caldera. Nick left the car, scrambled over a gap in the rock, and picked up a rebirth of the path. After a few hundred yards he came onto an antique cast iron sign. The raised letters told him that this place was called Vadala and a chill shocked his sun-heated spine. He soon entered the village and passed into a little square, fronted by a small but splendid church.
He was not surprised by the stares; few would come in by this route. But the folk quickly returned to their affairs, avoiding the appearance of probing.
Two men sat at a table on the square. As Nick approached them a third man materialized in the doorway of the adjacent café. Despite his resolve to remain composed, Nick was momentarily startled by the man’s instantaneous arrival and striking features. Ink black curls crowned a vertically scored, narrow, dark olive face, commanded by a majestic aquiline nose that sliced the air like a scimitar. Cobalt eyes questioned the stranger who was clearly not a man of the soil.
“Scusi,” Nick responded to the raised eyebrows. “I was lost and saw your sign with the name of your village. You see my own name is Nicolo Vadala. I am from America.”
The man pulled out a chair and opened his hand in invitation. “Please. Will you have some coffee?” He gave no sign of special importance to Nick’s declaration. But the eyes of the others met momentarily, and Nick noticed. The man brought the coffee and sat with him.
Nick continued. “When I came to visit this country, it occurred to me that I only knew the village of my grandmother, but not of my grandfather. I saw your sign and remembered that the immigration at Ellis Island sometimes gave people the name of their village.”
“Capischo.” The man nodded. “But you speak as the Italians do.” There was an edge of offense. Others began to pause in the square, not as discrete now.
“I studied Italian at my university and lost the speech of my parents. It is pleasant to hear the Sicilian language spoken again. I would like to search the records of the births, the marriages and such things. Would they be in this beautiful church?”
“My name is Carmine Russo,” the man said. “I am the owner of this store and café and also the Headman of the Village of Vadala. You don’t have to move. Cicci here will do everything for you.” He glanced quickly towards the overhead sun. “It is time for la pranza. Would you like something to eat?” Nick passed on to Cicci the little family history he knew while Carmine placed a jug of fruity young wine on the table. A huge bowl of steaming pasta followed and Nick asked his companions to join him.
The talk grew more relaxed, even jovial, as he answered the inevitable questions about Lamerica. Yet, Nick’s own curiosity was deflected by contrived misunderstandings and distractions. As the afternoon wore on, more villagers arrived, drawn into increasing festivity. The men were followed by wondering children and older women. Finally younger women, some veiled in the old manner, appeared with husbands and brothers. A man with sightless eyes and a mandolin plaintively rendered an impromptu ballad of the return of a lost son. A trumpet appeared and then an accordion. A Tarantella was danced as the village celebrated the return of its own. The revelry mingled with evening, when a bloated moon scattered gathering stars. Nick saw that Cicci had rejoined the celebrants. He called to him to hear what he had learned in the church records. Carmine stayed Cicci with a gesture and the warm murmur of the crowd quickly subsided. As a child Nick was initiated into the nuanced communication of the elder Sicilians, a subtle language spoken with the movement of a finger, the flicker of an eyelash, a small pause, sudden silence. The wordless idiom of the helot, slave and subjugated. Unintelligible to the foreign master.
Carmine Russo pulled a chair to face Nick. “There is no need to search the records. Your grandfather Salamone was of my own family and was the only one to ever emigrate from the village of Vadala. It is late, Capische? Please stay with us.”
Nick was not surprised by the precautionary deception. He knew he had penetrated a layer of suspicion. In these old mountain towns, local stories and histories were often enigmatic, sometimes kept to themselves. Revelation was a layered onion, peeled cautiously.
Two figures in black, Carmine’s wife and widowed daughter, silently led him to a stone building beyond the square. A ladder rose from an earthen floor to a loft where he found his luggage waiting. Nick collapsed into sleep in his clothing. Once—he could not know whether moments or hours later—he briefly opened his eyes to the moonlit stare of the young widow. Then he dreamed of a quest through the worn old mountains for a nameless immensity.
It was a year since Nick’s separation and he still mourned her departure as a kind of death. Often, the memory of her alien grace passed through him like a sorrowing wind. He shared the common lot of gaining and then losing time and again during his forty-two years. There were not only those who passed through his life, but past selves that came and went like remembered acquaintances. The street tough, the soldier, the wanderer, the scholar, the businessman. Their insistent ghosts crowded the cramped chamber of his persona, elbowing one another for space. He had never learned to accept the finality of loss. He sold his public relations business and began to wander, as he did when he was a young man just come from the war.
When Nick woke, the sun was already high. His clothes had been neatly folded and stacked onto a chair. Nick dressed and descended to the ground floor. Perhaps animals were once kept here, but it was now almost empty. The doorway framed a stone house a few yards away. Carmine’s wife was drawing a bucket from a well for Nick’s morning wash. He entered the kitchen, where a ball of steam hovered over a large bowl of black coffee on a massive oak table. There were also a small jug of warm creamy milk, aromatic rolls taken hot from the oven and an orange, the size of a grapefruit, that sprayed his mouth with sweet, provocative juices.
When he returned to his quarters, a basin and a massive stone trough of warm water awaited him on the ground floor. Most likely the tub once watered animals. In his bathing reverie he closed his eyes and passed his hands over undulating marble, a hoary relief smoothed by millennia into indecipherable tubercles. Perhaps a sarcophagus. A final home.
Carmine’s wife, Francesca, was of the Greek type, “Tipo Greco,” traced onto thousands of vases strewn from Agrigento to Siracusa. Her genial ovoid face did not completely mask an internal iron. Her daughter Gloria shared her mother’s regal beauty, though it was not yet tempered by time and duty. The young widow had her father’s cobalt eyes and her mother’s fair skin, which contrasted gloriously with raven hair. The effect was disturbingly spectacular.
Nick found it interesting that Sicilians sometimes described one another by ancestral racial type. Was a subtle caste distinction at work here? One could read the layers of invasions in the faces—Berbers, Phoenicians, Greeks, Italians, Arabs, Moors, Norsemen. A cocktail of bloods.
Carmine Russo told him that they would meet with others in the evening. The resplendent façade of the church beckoned, a jewel among rustic stones. Its exquisite Moorish arches were edged with fine tracery and a
slender campanile swept heavenward with Levantine grace. Inside, a dazzling profusion of mosaic danced about the vaulted ceiling and across the underfoot. Not an iota of the brilliant interior was ignored by the rhapsodic hand of the artist. That such a marvel should have been erected here, in this somnolent hamlet. By what gifted artisans? From what patrimony?
When he left the church he turned to appreciate again the façade. He thought he saw, for a moment, the face of the widow Gloria in the narrow open gap of the doorway. Hadn’t he closed it?
She was watching him without his knowing and saw that his eyes were beautiful for a man, though not overly large and not feminine. They were a fickle hazel that flashed green in the light. She flushed hotly at these transmutations: felt that his eyes opened directly onto subterranean pools where she might drown. Once, when she brought fresh linen to his room, she found him asleep. She watched him for a while, fought the impulse to run her hand through his silky-thick chestnut hair. There was gentility to him, a finer strain. His features were well ordered, harmonious. He was good looking but not extremely so, not classically so. Human, not a god.
Nick decided to recheck his car. He followed the path back to the spine of rock and scrambled to the top where he overlooked a two hundred foot drop. The car was visible below, where he had left it. Nick sat for some time atop the wall to consider his condition. Should he leave now or find sanctuary in this place apart? He was both comforted and repelled by Vadala: an ambiguity that had followed him throughout Sicily. A fair knowledge of the history did not prepare him for a past that was everywhere. In this place he recognized something of what slept in his bones. He had come here for that. But it was at the same time alien, vaguely destabilizing. His wife again invested his thoughts. There had been a gap that neither could bridge. For a time they soared above it on the fierce wings of passion. Then there was a sundering and they were severed halves. Parted tendrils searched a void. He waited for her return.
After dinner, Cicci and Orfeo, the mandolin player, joined them. Orfeo carried a strange old lute-like instrument. Carmine raised the flat of his hand vertically like an axehead.
“Orfeo, with this instrument, will sing the story of Vadala, as it has been passed down to us.” The musical style was unlike the contemporary peasant singsong tetrameter: it was instead more reminiscent of the Flamenco. The archaic polyglot was unintelligible. Cicci rendered a simultaneous prose translation.
There was a time without governance, with starvation and every misery. Then Morabit took the whole of western Sicily and the harvests resumed. But Federico returned to reclaim his lands. He was hereditary king over the Two Sicilys by his Norman mother and also Emperor of the German lands by his father. Morabit was killed and his daughter took his army and fought the Normans in the mountains around Jato. Afterwards they founded the village of Vadala and remained a people apart.
When the antique strains played out, Carmine continued. “Our people have long ceased to be of the Moslem faith, though the church is said to have once been a mosque. There is a village of Christian Albanians northeast of Iato in these same mountains, folk who fled the Turks long ago and remain to themselves like the Vadalanos.” I have heard that in America you also have places where people have settled apart, to go their own way in peace.”
Nick’s grandfather had once told him that Vadala meant Valley of Allah.
Carmine said that Nick could remain with them as long as he wished.
That night, Nick woke to the moon-silvered face of Gloria. She was standing at the foot of his bed and moved to his opened eyes.
“I have a wife,” Nick whispered.
“She has left your bed,” she replied. She sat by him, her face close to his. “You speak of it in your sleep.” She added, “I know you cannot stay.”
Nick was weary with loneliness and he rested from it among his kin. He sometimes helped in the fields or with other chores. Mostly though, he walked in the surrounding mountains or talked with the men in the square. Nothing was asked of him. On a high ridge the sun lit a tiny fire in the earth. He disinterred a metallic fragment, dirt encrusted, formless. A gemstone was embedded into it. Nick rubbed it with his spittle and a ruby returned from a sleep of a thousand years. There was writing also, Arabic. The heaven probing word for God. He returned it to its grave.
Gloria came to him in the discretion of night. She pressed to know him: his childhood, his coming of age, his marriage. Nick asked about her husband. He died five years before; they had been married less than a year. She loved him as a young girl loves a man who is her own choice. But it was not like what she had with Nick. There should be different words for love. Nick told her the Eskimos had many words for snow.
Her husband went to Iato to get guns. They went to the mother village from time to time for things they could not produce themselves. Sometimes they brought back someone whose craft was beyond them, or a teacher, such as Cicci. Sometimes young men and girls returned with them, husbands and wives for their children and siblings, so as not to marry only among themselves. On such a trip the men from Piana d’Albanese killed her husband.
“It was for blood revenge that began in the time of the war. Our relatives in Iato asked us to show the American general the way across our mountain pass to the coastal plain. The American general had a fire in him to reach Messina before the English general. He was struck by the lightning for Messina; to his strangeness she was his woman that the English general must not touch.
“A man from Piana d’Albanese told the Germans what we had done and they came to Vadala and killed whoever they found. We killed the informer. And so the vendetta began that killed my husband. The Albanians keep the vendetta for a long time, sometimes for a hundred years. It is the code they brought with them when they fled the Turks.”
Gloria had the old stringed instrument with her. She was entrusted with its preservation during her time. She played it now and sang a love song. He lay back on the hillside, blanketed by the ubiquitous blue of Sicilian sky. He thrilled to the sweet nasality of her voice and fell into a delicious sleep.
The next day she asked him about his wife. “Has she given you children?”
“No.”
“She is barren?”
“Yes.”
“Was she cold?”
“No, but different than you and I. Her center was not easy to touch. But when I least expected it, I would find her suddenly revealed to the innermost. A consummation other than the act of physical love.” Gloria said nothing but became thoughtful.
Then, another time, “Is it true that American women that have no children may do the work of any man, even doctors, and that they may become learned scholars?”
“Inga is a professor of Romance Languages.”
“Then does she speak Italian?”
“Some, not fluently. She teaches French and Spanish. Actually, we met in an Italian class in college. She was a visiting foreign student.”
And the day after, “ Did your wife leave so that you might have children by another woman?”
“I can’t imagine women behaving that way, so it never crossed my mind.”
Two carabinieri appeared in the square and Nick was hidden from them. After a while Cicci came to him and told him that Nick’s wife made an investigation into his disappearance, first through the American Embassy and then she ordered a private search. It had now been five months. They had picked up his trail bit by bit—a gas station attendant, the place where he took coffee and finally to his car outside the cliffs. Nick went himself to speak to the carabinieri. They were Italian and very uncomfortable in this remote place.
“Tell my wife that I am very sorry to have worried her. I didn’t think… Tell her that I am well and that I have found a place to rest for a time. In case she requires more financial access I will give you a letter to the bank.” The carabinieri said they must take the car, as Hertz wanted it back.
Gloria clung to him throughout each night, until the dawn. A week later Nick saw a crowd quickly gather in the square. As he passed through the knot, faces turned to him in wonder. He knew what he would find. In this place without tourism she was like an alien deposited from another planet.
“Inga.”
“Do you mind that I came?”
“Mind? I can’t begin to know how to answer that.”
“Can we speak?”
Nick said a few words and the crowd dispersed. A bottle of wine and two glasses had been left for them.
“You seem to have a great deal of influence here.”
“I am one of them. I found this place by accident. As you know, it bears my name. And yours by marriage.”
“Will you come home?”
“To what?”
“To me.”
“Yes, of course. Though after more than a year I have almost given up on that.” He paused. “We will have things to talk about. This cannot happen again.”
Inga saw a lone woman behind Nick at the edge of the square and Nick saw her too, through Inga’s eyes.
“Is she here then Inga?” he asked.
“ Yes. She is extraordinarily beautiful. Is there love between you?”
“On her part a great deal. On my part a profound gratitude. But love for her as man for woman was never an option for me.”
“How long will it take for us to leave?”
“A half hour at most. I haven’t many things to pack. And I must say goodbye to a few people.”
“Do you mind if I speak to her?”
Nick turned and finally looked into Gloria’s face.
“I think she very much wishes to speak to you too, Inga.”
After Nick went to his room, Gloria went to Inga and sat across from her.
“You speak some Italian?”
“Yes, a little. To understand.”
“It took you a long time to take him back.”
“I was angry.”
“We do not have much time left and there are matters between us. It is unnatural for a woman to pass on the man she loves, as a mother her son or a sister her brother.” She reached into a velvet sack that was saturated with old dust. “Please take this in token of my friendship.” Gloria handed Inga a small jewel-encrusted box. “It is from the tenth century, handed from generation to generation.”
“It is very beautiful. But you should give it to Nick.”
“That would not be proper. I have to tell you something that you must keep from Nick. It would only bring him confusion and help no one. Perhaps some time in the future.”
“I promise…” Inga felt a sudden release, as from a struggle. “…I promise, as to a sister.”
“I am with child by Nick. He does not know. He must not know.” Stunned, Inga moved to take Gloria’s hand. “No. Let no one suspect what we have between us,” Gloria cautioned. “I will send word when the time comes. I hope you will allow him to see the child some day.” Inga slowly pulled the diamond wedding ring from her finger and placed it in Gloria’s palm, squeezing Gloria’s hand onto the gift. “No, no! I can’t. Not that,” Gloria protested.
Nick returned, Cicci helping with his luggage, and
Inga rose to greet him. Nick began to embrace Gloria but she took his hand instead and left. Nick gave Cicci some money for Carmine. “Give it to him after I leave.”
Nick drove Inga’s jeep to the wide turnoff. He stopped once more and they looked together on the Sicilian mountains that waited as silently as an omerta. He took her to Iato, the village of his grandmother, and an endless meal was laid out for them with dishes Inga had learned to prepare from Nick’s mother. The family stood around them as they ate, asking after each of Nick’s aunts and uncles by name, though they had never seen them. Then they lingered in a second honeymoon for a week in the lovely sea-heights of Taormina. He noticed that she no longer wore her wedding ring but didn’t ask why: just went to a jeweler and bought her a new one.
Seven months after their return a letter arrived for Inga bearing the Italian postmark. It was from Carmine. Gloria died shortly after giving birth. There was a letter from her. She wanted Nick to have his son and offered him as a final gift to Inga.
Inga told Nick she had to go to Norway for a family matter but returned in only eight days. When he met her at the airport she held a baby in her arms and her eyes were fired with the light of motherhood. She didn’t tell Nick that Gloria was buried wearing the ring.
Welcome to our new contributor, Edward Carchia
It is with great pleasure that I announce the edition of the first, regular contributor to TalkFrank, Mr. Edward Carchia.
In a former life, Mr. Carchia owned and operated a very successful Advertising Agency in central New Jersey. This provided not only a very good living for Ed and his family, but also an outlet for a wonderfully creative human being. Now in retirement, he can devote his passion and energy to his latest endeavor, writing.
It’s that creative human being which will be on display here, at TalkFrank. And Ed is creative in so many ways, especially in his life. A quote from Port Moresby, the main character in Paul Bowles’ The Sheltering Sky describing his lust for experience probably sums up Ed’s life best; “I am not a tourist, I am a traveler”.
As an Army veteran, he used the post WWII GI Bill to pursue his education and travel the world. Ed traveled to exotic and sometimes dangerous locations long before it was trendy to do so. And he always did it with his eyes open, eager to embrace life on its own terms.
He has injected that passion, knowledge, and experience into his creative writing now to be featured at Talk Frank.
As Ed and I share a Sicilian heritage, I like to look upon him in a term of honor used by Sicilians, uomo di rispetto or man of respect. He is indeed.
Please enjoy the wonderful writing of Mr. Edward Carchia.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Brain Droppings: On Dogs
The 135th WKC Show at MSG
Congratulations to Hickory the Best In Show winner at last nights 135th edition of the WKC's annual extravaganza at Madison Square Garden. The Scottish Deer Hound was the first of her breed to win what is considered the Super Bowl of dog shows. I heard some deride her as ugly. But her breed was created for a specific purpose, and her design is perfect for that very purpose; to hunt deer over the rugged Scottish countryside. She certainly wasn't bread for "lap chair" beauty. But I found a certain elegance in her long, lopping gate, and joy in her smile. I liked her and am glad that she was crowned Champion.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Brain Droppings: On Freedom of the Press
I just watched a very disturbing video on CNN. It was from reporter Arwa Damon and her crew as they were attempting to file a report from Kirdasa, Egypt. The story was focused on the town and earlier reports that the town's people had overrun the police station and forced the pro-Mubarak police force to flee for their lives. Reportedly, 5 civilians were killed in the fierce clashes between the townspeople and the police. Kirdasa had long been sympathetic to the Muslim Brotherhood and a hot bed of anti-Mubarak activity.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Brain Droppings: On Celebrity
As those wonderful few who read and still follow this blog may have noticed in previous postings, my job as a cameraman for a large TV news organization gives me access to virtually all NY Red Carpet Movie Premieres. In addition to the video that I shoot, I carry a small, hand-held digital camera with me as well. I've have often posted the candid photos that I make with that camera on Facebook and here. With those photos I have tried to capture the claustrophobic and downright manic feeling of what it is really like to be on that carpet. I have often used the industry insiders word pig fuck to describe them. The reason being is that they resemble one (at least I would imagine): lots of squealing and jostling for position. Photographers are jammed in like sardines, herded like cattle, and generally treated like shit. And all of this is done so we give the celebrated even more celebrity. They are an experience to have, but, for me, I can't honestly say that I actually enjoy them. I was never a star gazer as a kid and have never been overly impressed with so-called celebrity. In fact, my whole family was that way. In our house, it just wasn't a big deal.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Today's Douche of the Day: Prince
Ok. So I draw a pretty good assignment yesterday: shoot a press conference with Prince presenting a 1 million dollar check to a Harlem youth charity. This is a big deal. First, it's the notoriously shy and reclusive Prince. Second, it's a million dollar donation. The press conference is at MSG and I arrive at the scheduled press check-in time. I wait with the 70-100 other photographers and journalists to be allowed in to take our place at the press conference. We only wait about 1/2 hour to be allowed in - not bad. AND, I get a great spot to set up my camera; right in front of the podium which is set on the stage where Prince will perform later that evening. We wait another 1/2 hour and the press conference begins (again, not a bad wait). A women who is coordinating the event for the charity speaks for a few minutes, explaining why we are all there. She then precedes to present the standard, over-sized checks to the various organizations involved. 2 are for $250,000 and one for $1 million - most impressive. OK, now we wait for Prince to make his appearance with the charities and their checks.
Monday, February 7, 2011
1/29/11
The REAL Football Follies (or Reflections on My College Football “Career”)
The sports world is buzzing with stories leading up to Super Bowl XLV, pitting the Pittsburg Steelers vs. the Green Bay Packers in Dallas, Texas. Certainly, it is one of the largest sports events in the world. Every NFL team and player travels a long and difficult road to get there. As I prepare to partake in what has become an American ritual, the Super Bowl Party, my mind has wondered back to my college football “career” and my own journey to get there. I have italicized “career” because it was not so much a career as it was an adventure. It was short lived, but it was also memorable. I’d like to share it with you.
As a kid, I was always involved in sports and athletics. Although I don’t see myself as a natural athlete, I have a tenacious nature, especially when I want to do something. This allowed me to participate in all shorts of athletic endeavors. My grit was usually enough to make up for whatever shortcomings I had in athleticism. Both my father and uncle were good high school athletes and remained interested in sports their whole lives. So, I had strong role models. I was a hyperactive kid, too. If it involved running, jumping, tackling, grappling, or crashing into something or someone of any kind, then I was interested in trying it. I played football, baseball, and basketball. I boxed and wrestled, too. I pushed a painfully skinny body to the max.
But of all of my athletic endeavors, I loved football the most. For a skinny, relatively gentle kid, it was the ultimate challenge. And I craved challenges. I was the type of kid who if told, “You can’t do that”; would just HAVE to do it. It wasn’t so much to just prove them wrong, as it was to prove to ME that I could.
Football, with its physical nature and lust for violence, proved the perfect activity for me to pursue. I wanted to be tested. And, at that time, it provided that opportunity. So, for a good portion of my young life, I pursued that game with a vengeance. The more people told me, “it’s a stupid game” and “you’re too skinny, you’ll never cut it”, the more I wanted to do it. It was certainly not for everyone and that suited me just fine.
Because I was so skinny at that time (I was going to say “thin”, but I wasn’t. I was skinny), I felt that I needed to build my body to be able to hold up to the rigors of the game and compete on a high level. I started weight training religiously. I was inspired by stories of tough-guy heroes who, by the force of their own will, overcame the odds to become successful players. I KNEW that if I could be as dedicated as they, I could compete too. In fact, I became SO dedicated that I remember coming home early from some high school dates and going into the makeshift “weight room” I had created in my family’s garage for a workout. Now, that’s dedication baby!
And it worked. When I began playing Pee Wee football (we called it Pop Warner football in my town) it was the mid 1960’s. I had not even yet reached the status of “98 lbs. weakling”. I was 9 or 10 and weighed all of about 90 pounds. However, despite my lack of bulk, I found that I was pretty good at the game. Even though lean, I was relatively tall, quick, and strong. I wasn’t afraid either (well, perhaps I was a little against the bigger, older kids). If I ever was, I certainly NEVER showed it. It was part of what I came to love about the game: overcoming your fears and achieving in the face of great odds.
I kept working out and it kept paying off. My size increased from season to season: 105 lbs., 115 lbs., 120 lbs., etc. It had other benefits too. I was always one of the strongest players on the team. But it was more than just a physical thing with me. I had a great feel for the game. I think that because I enjoyed it so much, I came to understand it on a very deep level. Not only could I see the obvious, I also grasped the subtleties of the game. This allowed me to anticipate many plays, off-setting whatever physical shortcomings I might have had. I suppose you’d call them instincts.
It allowed me to compete on a high level. I was the leader, if not bona fide “star”, of every one of my youth teams. I continued this trend in high school. As a 115 lb. freshman I was the starting quarterback and team captain. I jumped to 130 lbs. as a sophomore and, again, started, this time for the JV as a defensive back and running back. As a junior, I had “bulked up” to 145 lbs. and earned my first varsity letter as a starter at defensive back. My senior year found me a lean and muscular 155 lbs. Again, I was a starter on defense and team captain. I was not a “star”, but I was certainly a key contributor on the team. Unfortunately, we were not very good. The year had started with great promise but season-ending injuries to key players and poor coaching left us with just 2 wins in 9 games for the season.
Even though I hated losing, I never lost my passion for the game. I loved the physicality of it. I was not the biggest or strongest player on the field but I played with what coaches call “reckless abandon”. I was not afraid to range from sideline to sideline, hurling my body like a human missile in harms way, producing startling effects. I would often hit a ball carrier so hard (or he would hit me!) that when I righted myself after the tackle I had to re-arrange my equipment. Sometimes, my helmet would actually be knocked sideways so that I was looking out of the ear hole instead of the facemask!
I also loved the camaraderie. I think that the physical nature of the game forces a type of bonding that is not as apparent in other team sports. With football, if you don’t support one another, you will not only lose the contest but you could get your ass kicked as well. The bond that I formed with those teammates all those years ago is still strong. Many of them remain among my closest friends even today.
So, after high school, I thought “I’m 18, strong, smart, and dedicated. Why should I quit now”? I was determined to play college football. A scholarship was out of the question. What major college football program would offer a scholarship to a 155 lbs. strong safety with average speed from a losing program? Well, none would, of course! In fact, when I mentioned my desire to my high school athletic director he replied, “You’re crazy. They’ll kill you”! If I didn’t have enough motivation before, I certainly had it then.
I was hoping to matriculate at Rutgers University in New Brunswick (Piscataway) and “walk on” to the football team. A “walk on” is basically an open tryout for all matriculated students. If you impress the coaches, you get a chance to win a spot on the regular roster. If you are REALLY good, eventually, you might even be offered an athletic scholarship. This was my plan. WAS is the key word. I actually had the audacity to walk into the head coach’s office at Rutgers and ask his secretary about getting an interview with the coach and, perhaps, convince him to give me a try out. I never got past her. She dismissed me saying that “they had all the players they needed and there would be no room for you”. Disheartened, I took her abrupt dismissal at face value and left without pursuing the issue any further. In fact, I abandoned the idea entirely and enrolled in one of the Rutgers satellite campuses in Newark. It was one of the few times in my life where I took a flat out “no” for an answer to something I wanted so badly. I determined to never let that happen again.
Still, I did not play for my first two years at Rutgers University-Newark. College was new and somewhat intimidating. I was very involved with my studies and didn’t want any distractions. But I never lost my desire to play and still harbored dreams of playing again and, perhaps, even playing professionally. So, I faithfully kept working out, hoping that one day I would get that chance. And the working out was, well, working. By the time I was 20, I was nearly 190 lbs. of ass-kicking muscle. I could bench press over 300 lbs. and run the legendary “1,000 Stairs” up the sheer cliffs of the Palisades – without stopping! I had made myself into a force to be reckoned with. It was time to answer all who had said “NO”.
Rutgers University-Newark is not exactly your hotbed of big time college football. In fact, it didn’t even have an “official” football team. Rather, it had what was known as a Club team. Club football teams were exactly that; a group of guys who shared a common interest, got together, and found other schools with similar clubs to compete against. In this case, it was football. In a sense, it was no different than a chess or debating club. There were no scholarships and virtually no facilities, or huge crowds (if any!) to come watch you play. It was like volunteering to play. Guys were there solely because they loved the game. And, as a junior, I became one of them.
We were called the Rutgers Raiders and had basically the same team colors as our infinitely better financed “big brother”, The Scarlet Knights of Rutgers University in Piscataway, N.J. And that is where the comparisons abruptly ended. Where Rutgers in Piscataway is an NCAA Division 1 team with a budget in the millions to fund its program, Rutgers- Newark, the club team, had one just large enough to purchase the basic equipment to play the game safely. Where they had numerous practice fields, both grass AND artificial, we had NONE. We had to rent a practice field from the City of Newark. Where they had a huge, 50,000 seat stadium, we rented a decaying one in which to play our games (Newark Schools Stadium was built in the 1920’s). Where they had carpeted locker rooms and luxurious training facilities, we changed in a converted Quonset hut and worked out with weights under a stairwell in a decrepit gym. Where they flew on private jets to play a big time schedule, we took buses to our games, one as far away as Florida.
But the game remained the same and that’s all that mattered to me.
The team was an amalgam of players with varying degrees of experience and skill. Most of them had played at least high school ball. Some were even stars for their respective teams. In fact, the overall level of talent on the team surprised me. A few of the guys, in my opinion, could have played with almost any program in the country. The key word here is few. Because it was a club, any matriculated student was eligible to come and participate with the team. Remember, there were no scholarships. In fact, no experience was required. One just needed the desire and commitment to be there. So, we also had quite a few players who, quite frankly, if they played high school ball at all, played it with the Z team! This was, after all, the Rutgers-Newark Raiders, not the University of Alabama’s Crimson Tide. Still, some definitely stood out for their prowess.
One of our best players was Jesse Stokes. He was from Newark, 6’2” tall and 225 chiseled lbs. He had received a full scholarship out of high school to play linebacker at Iowa University – big time, Big Ten football. But he had become a father before he left for Iowa. After a few months there, he found himself homesick and missing his son. He returned to Newark to be nearer to his family and continue his education. He figured that, like most of us, he still loved the game, so why not play? And he was lethal. Remember when I wrote earlier that I was never (well almost never) flat out afraid to hit anyone? Well, I was afraid to hit Jesse Stokes. His tackling was so ferocious that I used to count how many players were between Jesse and me for one-on-one tackling drills. If the count meant that I would be paired against Jesse, I would usually have an equipment malfunction that would temporarily take me out of the line, thereby missing my turn with Mr. Stokes. And I wasn’t the only one who did that either. In fact, about the only one who NEVER avoided Jesse was Dave Neglia. Dave was one of those guys who didn’t play high school ball but had always dreamed of one day playing. The football club gave him that opportunity. He was an undersized (about 210 lbs.) defensive end willing to do anything to be on the field. ANYTHING - even if it meant getting knocked into near oblivion on a regular basis by one Jesse Stokes. We always attributed his willingness to be knocked silly on his inexperience and exuberance. He should have KNOWN better than to pair up against Jesse. Jesse would hit Neglia so hard that I actually feared for Dave’s life!! But he would pull himself together, reassemble the gear that Jesse had knocked every which way but lose, and cry out, “Yeah, baby, let’s do that again”. I loved Dave Negila. I heard that he eventually became a doctor. I bet he’s a damn good one, too. Sadly, Stokes left the team after the preseason and dropped out of school. He never played a single down for us.
Joe Cook was one of the more colorful characters and talented players on the team. A 6’3”, 227 lbs. tight end, it looked like catchers mitts had been sewn onto his wrists where his hands should have been! They were huge and he used them to catch virtually anything thrown his way. He had long, blonde hair and a rakish goatee, giving him the appearance of a Rebel from Jeb Stuart’s Calvary. He ran well for a big guy and knew how to position his large body in a way as to screen defenders away. Because of my position on defense, I often covered him in practice and frequently marveled at his skill. He was another guy who, in my opinion, could have played for many, larger programs if he had so chosen. But as I said, Joe was a character too, and resisted the pressure and discipline he felt would come with participating in a larger program. For Joe, that would have taken the fun out of playing, the only reason he still did. After practice, Joe and I would find some dark corner of the campus to light up a fat joint and relax. Hey, it was the 70’s and Joe Cook was OK. I don’t know what ever happened to him after our playing days were over.
Another terrific player who could have contributed on virtually any team in the country was a big (6’3’, 260 lbs.) defensive lineman with an unlikely moniker for a football player; Jed Weintraub. And his name was not the only thing unusual about him. He was Jewish. Of course, being Jewish is not unusual. The fact that he played football was. In the many years that I played organized football, I can still count the number of Jewish players that I remember on one hand. And Big Jed was one of the best, period. He was strong, tough, smart, and dedicated. Why he decided not to play on a bigger, more competitive level, I still do not know. He was, in every sense of the word, a gentle giant. Except when he played. Then, he was relentless.
He also had a prodigious thirst and appetite that matched his physical appearance. I once watched him eat a whole pizza – for a snack! And, one day, after a particularly hot and dusty practice a coach asked, “Where’s Weintraub”? No one could find him. That’s because everyone was looking in the wrong place. They should have been looking down. That’s where they would have found him, flat on his back, under one of the coolers of Gatorade, the spicket of which was wide open so that the Gatorade would flow unimpeded down his gullet! He became my best friend on the team. He is now the Court Administrator for the entire US Southern District and lives with his family in Memphis. I’m very pleased to say that we are as close today as we were then.
Then there were the “Hard Brothers”. Literally. Don and Dennis Hard. If Jed’s name was a misnomer for him, then Hard was perfect for them. Don was the older of the two. He was about 6’5’, but only about 200 lbs. My father would have called him “a tall drink of water”. He played at defensive end where he was pugnacious and competitive but sometimes overmatched by the larger offensive tackles assigned to block him. His younger brother, Dennis, was the physical opposite: shorter and much thicker (6’1”, 230 lbs.). He was an offensive lineman. What made their situation unusual was that while Don was a student at Rutgers-Newark, Dennis was not. Dennis was actually a student/athlete at Jersey City State College. But Dennis was not fond of the head coach or his school and was looking to play elsewhere. Well, Donnie saw some playing opportunities with us and invited his brother to join us. It seemed that we were always short of good, experienced players and Dennis was both of those. The only problem was that Dennis did not have the time or inclination to actually register with the University. So, the two brothers hatched an elaborate plan. Dennis’ girlfriend, Denise Lamb, was actually a student at Rutgers University. They decided to submit Denise’s name as Dennis to the team and claim the discrepancy as a “typo”. Somehow, it worked. From then on, Dennis Hard became “D Lamb” and joined our team. And they were real “Hard” characters! Once, after a game in Florida, the hotel we had stayed at complained that someone had sunk all of their lawn furniture in the hotel pool. No one claimed responsibility. Months letter we found out that it was the Hard brothers. When pressed as to why, they confessed, declaring, “Why? Well, just because we could.”
Of course, this could have never happened at a school with a “real” football program in the first place. Dennis for Denise?! A Typo? But our program was so small and insignificant, even on our own campus, that no one even noticed – or cared!
After graduating, Don became a captain in the Marine Corp. He survived the horrific bombing of the Marine barracks in Lebanon. I saw him at a high school football game a few years after the bombing and it had changed him. He had lost the innocent bravado he had as player. It was kind of sad. As for D. Lamb, I assume that he went back to becoming Dennis Hard. However, I have lost track of them both.
Another team “character” was not even a player. He was the head coach. His name was Tom Zullo. He was in his mid-20’s, very muscular and VERY short. He couldn’t have been more than 5’3”. His dark hair, round face, and squat, muscular build reminded us of the world champion bodybuilder, Franco Colombu. Tom was so short in fact, that it was a natural for us to change his name from Tom Zullo to Tom Toolow! But he was a good coach: knowledgeable and caring. As evidenced by his muscular physique, he was also very solid with weight training, conditioning, and nutrition. I must say that he did his best with what limited resources he had at his disposal to try provide an atmosphere in which we could at least compete.
Since he was not much older than the players (I was 20), and it was a “club” team, the atmosphere was very informal, to say the least. We called him Tom, instead of coach. I don’t even think that he was paid. He may have received a small stipend from the University but I don’t know that for sure. What I do know is that, like all of us, he did it because he had a connection to the game and to the camaraderie it fostered in its participants. He had been a good, if undersized, high school player. I’m sure that once he turned to coaching, he had no plans of ever playing again.
That is, until one fateful weekend in our Nation’s Capitol.
It was the last game of the season of my junior year. It had been a terrible one for the team. We had not won a single game and we were slated to play the Catholic University in Washington, D.C. At that time, they were the #1 rated club football team in the country. They were an undefeated powerhouse and had even supposedly beaten some NCAA teams along the way. We were just plain terrible. Without viable facilities for practice, we just couldn’t get enough cohesion as a team to mount a diverse offense or coordinated defense. We played hard but just didn’t have enough talent, depth, or practice time to be truly competitive. Worse still, this late in the season, we were plagued by injuries and defections. In fact, early in the week before the game, we didn’t think we’d even have enough players left to complete a staring line-up. We would have to resort to drastic measures. I would move from my normal strong safety position to bolster the linebacking corp. Dave Neglia would get his first start, EVER, at defensive tackle. And Tom Zullo would suit up for the first time in years to play on the offensive line. That’s right. The HEAD COACH would suit up and play! It was either that, or forfeit the game.
I remember that the Catholic University stadium in D.C. was at least as decrepit as ours was. It may have even been worse. But that seemed their only shortcoming. Their biggest advantage (of MANY), which became immediately apparent, was the size of their club, both in their physical make-up and sheer number of players dressed for the game. I don’t think that we suited up more than 25 guys that day – including our coach! I estimated that they must have had at least 70. But it looked more like 170. They seemed to be pouring out of their locker room in waves.
Despite the obvious disparity, we actually started the game well. We received the opening kick off and proceeded to drive almost the entire length of the field. The drive stalled however, and our kicker, who was very competent, nailed a field goal to give us a 3-0 lead. However, that meager lead would evaporate quickly and completely. Perhaps the opening kick off itself should have been seen as a harbinger of things to come.
On that kickoff, Dave Neglia, slated to start on the defensive line, was also scheduled to play on our special teams (i.e. kick offs, etc.). He would be used as a blocker for the kick receiving team. I remember clearly how I tried to calm him down just before he was to take his position on the field. He was so damned excited and was pacing back and forth. He had worked so hard to just belong to the team. He was undersized and not very strong. He was slow footed. And he had zero experience. But he was smart and he was game. Always. He never missed a practice or a drill. When yours truly experienced “technical difficulties” in my dealings with Jesse Stokes, Dave Neglia was right there to take my place. He took all of the shit a brutal and insensitive game had to offer and landed on his feet. I admired him. I really did.
Now, here he was, with a chance to START. And he was determined to make the most of it. Just before he tore onto the field to take his place on the receiving team, I encouraged him not to be too nervous and to have fun. I’m not sure if he heard I word I said. Their kicker moved into the ball and I followed its path through the grey winter sky and fall in the hands of our return man. He had a nice run back and gave us good field position. But when I looked back up field, I noticed one of our players was down and not really moving. It was Neglia. He had been knocked out cold during the kick! Following the path of the ball, I didn’t see how it happened. And, as this game can go, I’m not sure he saw it either! Certainly, when taking a hit that knocks you silly, loss of memory of that moment is both frequent and welcomed. After a few anxious moments and a whiff of smelling salts, he came to his senses and was helped to off the field. Of course, he was held out for the remainder of the game with a concussion. Poor Dave Neglia never played a single down. It’s a cruel game.
Coach Zullo, who was only supposed to play on our offensive line, now had to take Dave’s place on the defensive one and play both ways. In today’s game, that’s no easy task. With the bigger, faster players in the modern game, playing both offense and defense in the same game can take a huge physical toll. And that goes for a player who has had a whole season to condition himself to handle the rigors of an actual game. Zullo had no such advantage. Yes, he was in excellent physical condition but that is not the same as being in “playing shape”. Without the benefit of actual contact drills he could not have prepared his body for the pounding it was bound to take. And, man, he got pounded. I recall seeing Tom in the campus center a few days after the game and he said, "I'm so sore that even my hair hurts"! We all took a beating that day. After our initial success, they seemed to wake up and scored in every way imaginable. They scored on runs, passes, kicks, fumble recoveries and just about every other way you can possibly even think of. The first team scored. The second team scored. The “Z” team scored. I think that if their cheerleaders could have participated, they would have scored too. It seemed more a track meet than a football game. We lost 70-3.
Believe it or not, despite the score, I played one of my best games ever. Instead of my normal safety position, about 8 yards from the line of scrimmage, I was moved up to outside linebacker. This moved me closer to the action where I could do what I did best; make tackles. And tackle I did – like a machine. It seemed that I was the ONLY one making ANY. Big Jed was not with us for that game. Jesse was long gone. Tom Zullo was playing on pure guts and there was only so much he could do. At one point in the defensive huddle, I looked at my shell-shocked teammates and implored, “is anyone else going to make a tackle? Please feel free to join me at any time!” Obviously, as evidenced by the final score, not enough of them answered my invitation. My final tally read “18 total tackles; 10 solo and 8 assisted”. That set a team record for total tackles in a single game. I also set our club record for most tackles in a season. My reward for such aggression was a dislocated thumb and a body so bruised that it looked more eggplant colored then flesh. Normally, one would treat such injuries with ice. But we had none. We had run out sometime during the game. So, I rode the team bus from Washington D.C. to Newark, N.J. with a thumb swollen to twice its original size and no ice to alleviate my suffering. This is the way I ended my season and my career. I came back for my senior year, but left the team after the preseason. It was just becoming too futile to continue - even for me.
It’s entirely reasonable for someone to ask, “why”? Why would one subject oneself to such obvious abuse in the first place? Well, it’s complicated and, at the same time, it’s not. It’s complicated because it involves coming to terms with your limitation and fears. It creates situations of conflict that are not ordinary. Therefore, you must think and act in extraordinary ways in order to compete. Yet, ultimately it’s simple, too. It’s almost Darwinian; survival of the fittest. You must have a single mindedness to achieve your goals. And these things can only be achieved through principals like discipline, sacrifice, and teamwork. Look, you either believe in these things or you don’t. It’s either bull shit or it’s not. I have chosen to believe them.
But it was not all blood and guts either. It was fun, too! I enjoyed the physical nature of it and the life-long benefits that came with it, i.e. the need to stay fit. And I loved my teammates, characters all! I remember them still, and all with fondness. I hate to write this, but I guess we were all loveable losers. But we were only losers in the sense of wins and loses. Virtually all of my teammates went on to successful lives. And, if you asked them, I think most would acknowledge their playing days as a big contributing factor to that success.
And the very experience of it was priceless. I had come from a virtually all-white high school. I now found myself playing, showering, and sharing with African-Americans for the first time. I met guys from all over the state of New Jersey. I traveled to places like Florida and D.C., where I had not been before. I made a great friend whom I still have over 35 years later. I’m sure that there are other pursuits that can reward in the same way but you’d be hard pressed to find one more full of real-life lessons than football – on any level.
Yes, Newark School Stadium is a long way from Cowboy Stadium in Dallas, but it was still a road well worth traveling.
PS: Congratulation to the World Champion Green Packers for their exciting win over the Steelers in Super Bowl XLV. It must feel great!!