Two former Pittsfield execs, Ferdinando "Nani" Beccalli and Art Harper, move up the GE corporate lad

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FAIRFIELD, Connecticut--Ferdinando "Nani" Beccalli has been named President and Chief Executive Officer of GE Europe, the company announced on Monday. Art Harper will succeed Beccalli as Executive Vice President, GE Capital Services. Both appointments are effective January 1. Beccalli, 52, has been Executive Vice President, GE Capital Services since May 2001. As GE's new CEO of Europe, he will be responsible for working on behalf of all GE businesses to expand customer and government relationships and to develop new business markets across Europe, the Middle East and Africa. Beccalli will be based in Brussels, Belgium. Harper, 46, has been President of GE Plastics Europe since May 2000. He will join the Office of the CEO at GE Capital in Stamford, Conn., where he will have oversight responsibilities for GE Capital's Equipment Management businesses, which include Global Fleet Services, Rail Services, Penske Truck Leasing and TIP/Modular Space. GE Chairman and CEO Jeffrey R. Immelt lauded Beccalli's leadership ability. "Nani Beccalli is an outstanding GE leader whose depth of global and business experience will serve us well across Europe," Immelt said. "With nearly 80,000 employees and a diverse array of businesses there, Europe is an important priority for GE's growth going forward. Nani will be an excellent resource for our customers and constituents. "Art Harper is an exceptional leader with a wide range of operational skills and a passion for quality," Immelt added. "He has a remarkable track-record of success and terrific strategic vision that will serve GE Capital well." Prior to the position at GE Capital, Beccalli had been at GE Plastics since 1977, when he joined the Strategic Planning group at the Company's European headquarters in Bergen op Zoom, The Netherlands. In 1981, Beccalli joined GE Plastics' global headquarters in Pittsfield, Mass. where he held management positions in Specialty Plastics, NORYL resin, LEXAN resin and Marketing divisions. In 1987, Beccalli returned to Bergen op Zoom as the Director of Marketing, and in 1990, became the Managing Director of SPE. From 1993-1996 Beccalli served as the President of GE Plastics Japan Ltd. He was appointed as the Vice President and General Manager of GE Plastics Americas in January 1997. Beccalli, a native of Italy, earned a master's degree in chemical engineering from the Polytechnic of Torino in Italy and has completed graduate work in business administration at Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio. Harper joined GE in 1984 as a market development specialist in the ULTEM business, where he also worked as an aerospace application field programs specialist and as the aircraft application programs manager. In 1987, he was appointed district sales manager for GE Silicones in Brea, Calif., a position he held until 1991 when he was named plant manager at the Plastics plant in Oxnard. In 1992, Harper was named business leader of CCP in Pittsfield, Mass. And moved in 1994 to the same position in the LEXAN business. In 1996, he was named president of GE Plastics - Greater China. Harper was appointed Vice President of Global Manufacturing for GE Plastics in Bergen Op Zoom in 1998.
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Vermont National Guard Members Depart From North Adams

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff

About 50 people waved flags to the see the Guardsmen off on their bus. The members were staying in North Adams because of a lack of hotel rooms in Bennington, Vt.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Residents came together Friday to see some Vermont National Guard members off.
 
The American Legion Riders organized a send off for a group of 75 or so Guard members who were staying at Hotel Downstreet.
 
"We are going to escort them to the Bennington Armory," Riders President Mike Lewis said. "They are going to gear up there, and then I am not sure where they are going. I don’t even know if they are all going to the same place."
 
Fifty or so people met in the Hotel Downstreet parking lot to show their appreciation. They waved flags and held signs. A bagpiper was also present.
 
The Riders contacted the Fire Department who helped organize the send off. North Adams Police cruisers and Northern Berkshire EMS were also on site to help see the bus off.
 
Lewis said there was not enough rooms in Bennington for the National Guard members. He added because of the trend to use vacant hotel rooms as low-income housing, the group had to look toward North Adams.
 
It's not clear where these Guard were off to, but about 500 members of 3-172 Infantry Battalion were expected to go to the Middle East with U.S. Central Command. According to Vermont Digger, this deployment was scheduled prior to the strikes on Iran. 
 
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