Thursday, March 30

Louie B. Mayor ???

or, How the Standards are Falling at the NYT

The strip ad across the top of the Times' news pages is celebrating a series of American film directors in a Netflix ad.  I scrolled over the John Ford one, having read Scott Eyman's excellent biography (as well as his books about Mary Pickford, Ernst Lubitsch and ... Louie B. Mayer.)

It just jumps out at you, when they spell such a prominent name wrong.

Wonders what other facts they are not catching... despite all the eyeballs paid to check these things before they make it into print, online.  Too busy making the ads wiggle and jump to get the facts correct, I guess...

Wednesday, March 29

Where the White People At...

Ann Althouse and Megan McArdle simultaneously discover the joys of ... Utah!

ADDED:  Isn't that where the movie "Get Out" was set?

“Get Out” has proved to be unusually rich fodder for commentary, a Rorschach test in which shadows and strands of the past and present are visible. It “perfectly captures the terrifying truth about white women,” according to the title of an essay in Cosmopolitan by Kendra James...
Know Your American History:
From the mid-1800s until 1978, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) had a policy which prevented most men of black African descent from being ordained to the church's lay priesthood. Black members were also not permitted to participate in most temple ordinances.These beliefs influenced views on civil rights. 
(I hear Utah has some very colorful ... rocks though.  Very photogenic, and safe for hiking!  Even for the little old white ladies ... ;-)

Thursday, March 23

More Real News...

Henry E. Sanchez Milian






Two teens who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border illegally in 2016 are accused of taking turns raping a 14-year-old girl in a bathroom at Rockville High School during school hours.
...
Border agents held them first, and then, as the law requires, turned them over to an office at the Department of Health and Human Services, which sheltered them and apparently released them to their guardians in Maryland. The teens enrolled in public schools, which are required by federal law to admit them.
...
Sanchez Milian, from Guatemala, was caught by U.S. Border Patrol agents in August 2016, days before he turned 18.
Under federal law, unaccompanied minors from Central America must be turned over to HHS for processing, which is meant to protect them from human trafficking and other dangers. HHS officials did not respond to repeated questions about the teens.
...
At Rockville High, both teens were in a special program for non-English speakers, school officials said this week. They were not in classes with the alleged victim, who prosecutors say was forced into a boys’ bathroom and raped as she cried out in pain and repeatedly told them to stop.
-------------------------------

*  Remind me why we need to import unskilled, uneducated, unaccompanied minors again?  Do we have a deficit in this country?

American Killed in London Terror Attack.

Real news, not fake:

American Kurt Cochran was killed Wednesday.
His wife Melissa remains hospitalized.
















‘This pain is so heart wrenching and raw it has rocked our family and all that knew him to its core. We will miss Kurt beyond words.
We love you Kurt. RIP.'

They were believed to have been in England visiting Melissa’s parents, who are missionaries at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in London.


ADDED: The screen-grab spelling is correct.


UPDATED: Another victim is named:

Aysha Frade, 43 years of age.




























Spanish press said that Aysha Frade, 43, who was from Betanzos, Spain, had died in the atrocity.

They said that she was born in Britain and had a Portuguese husband.

She was ‘a highly regarded and loved’ member of staff at DLD College London, her principal Rachel Borland said.

Unless You Count Indifference as a Problem...

America does not have an anti-Semitic problem.

JERUSALEM — The police on Thursday arrested an Israeli teenager who holds American citizenship in connection with scores of threats to Jewish institutions, including dozens of community centers in the United States, law enforcement officials said. 
A spokesman for the police here, Micky Rosenfeld, said the suspect, from the Ashkelon area in southern Israel, had also made threats to institutions in Australia and New Zealand, as well as at least one commercial airline flight, forcing an emergency landing. 
“This is the guy we are talking about,” Mr. Rosenfeld said. The authorities did not immediately identify the teenager, who they said was Jewish and 19. Other reports put his age at 18. He was expected to appear in court later Thursday. His motives were not immediately clear, and he was being questioned by the international investigations unit of the Israeli police.

I'll stand by that assessment of what I know of modern  Middle America.  (Remember:  I knew Trump would win too. No polls or twisted data needed. Just everyday life experience.  Don't discount that...)

ADDED:  The only thing we have to fear... is fear itself.

In case you missed it, it turns out that many of the Jewish tombstones reported kicked over in Jewish cemeteries had fallen earlier, but nobody noticed until the fear factor of anti-Semitism was introduced, after President Trump's election.

The stone and dozens like it, no longer standing, were lying flat on the grass. The police were investigating whether someone had climbed the fence and knocked them over.
If true, it would have been a crime that amounts to much more than simple vandalism. Washington is a large and predominantly Jewish cemetery, and many of its headstones bear Hebrew script. The discovery of those fallen stones thrust the cemetery squarely into the spotlight during a rise in anti-Semitic crimes across New York City and the country. Mayor Bill de Blasio addressed those (alleged) crimes last week.
...
Then, as quickly as it began, the investigation ended.
“No evidence of vandalism,” the police said in a statement. ...
Upon closer inspection, dozens of fallen headstones bore environmental hints that they had been down for some time, with thin layers of dried grass and dirt in their exposed crevices. Many had vines snaking up their sides or across the bare bases. A 48-year-old woman’s 1911 headstone, marked “Gone but Not Forgotten,” had a tangle of vines between its new resting place and the base from which it fell. ...
“Those vines had to have grown last year,” Captain Molinari said. It appeared impossible that the stone could have fallen in recent weeks or even months. ..
The police interviewed the cemetery’s managers. Dominick Tarantino, 80, the superintendent, said on Wednesday that he did not suspect vandals. ...
Captain Molinari said that large delivery trucks use the alley alongside the fence to make deliveries to Franklin D. Roosevelt High School opposite the cemetery, which might partly explain why so many stones had fallen in that area.
“A truck going by three feet away from these stones could cause enough vibration to topple a 110-year-old stone,” he said. He planned to return to the cemetery with Google satellite images that show which stones were already down on past dates.

Wednesday, March 22

Goodbye, Mr. Chips.

CHAPTER 15

And once, on a night of full moonlight, the air-raid warning was given while Chips was taking his lower fourth in Latin. The guns began almost instantly, and, as there was plenty of shrapnel falling about outside, it seemed to Chips that they might just as well stay where they were, on the ground floor of School House. It was pretty solidly built and made as good a dugout as Brookfield could offer; and as for a direct hit, well, they could not expect to survive that, wherever they were.

So he went on with his Latin, speaking a little louder amid the reverberating crashes of the guns and the shrill whine of anti-aircraft shells. Some of the boys were nervous; few were able to be attentive. He said, gently: "It may possibly seem to you, Robertson—at this particular moment in the world's history—umph—that the affairs of Caesar in Gaul some two thousand years ago—are— umph—of somewhat secondary importance—and that—umph —the irregular conjugation of the verb tollo is—umph— even less important still. But believe me—umph—my dear Robertson—that is not really the case." 

Just then there came a particularly loud explosion—quite near. 

"You cannot—umph —judge the importance of things—umph—by the noise they make. Oh dear me, no." A little chuckle. "And these things—umph —that have mattered—for thousands of years—are not going to be—snuffed out—because some stink merchant— in his laboratory—invents a new kind of mischief." 

Titters of nervous laughter; for Buffles, the pale, lean, and medically unfit science master, was nicknamed the Stink Merchant. Another explosion—nearer still. "Let us—um—resume our work. If it is fate that we are soon to be—umph—interrupted, let us be found employing ourselves in something—umph—really appropriate. Is there anyone who will volunteer to construe?"

Maynard, chubby, dauntless, clever, and impudent, said: "I will, sir."

"Very good. Turn to page forty and begin at the bottom line."

The explosions still continued deafeningly; the whole building shook as if it were being lifted off its foundations. Maynard found the page, which was some way ahead, and began, shrilly:—
"Genus hoc erat pugnae—this was the kind of fight—quo se Germani exercuerant—in which the Germans busied themselves. Oh, sir, that's good—that's really very funny indeed, sir—one of your very best—"
Laughing began, and Chips added: "Well—umph—you can see —now—that these dead languages—umph—can come to life again—sometimes—eh? Eh?"

Afterward they learned that five bombs had fallen in and around Brookfield, the nearest of them just outside the School grounds. Nine persons had been killed.

The story was told, retold, embellished. "The dear old boy never turned a hair. Even found some old tag to illustrate what was going on. Something in Caesar about the way the Germans fought. You wouldn't think there were things like that in Caesar, would you? And the way Chips laughed... you know the way he DOES laugh... the tears all running down his face... never seen him laugh so much..."

He was a legend.

With his old and tattered gown, his walk that was just beginning to break into a stumble, his mild eyes peering over the steel-rimmed spectacles, and his quaintly humorous sayings, Brookfield would not have had an atom of him different.
...

CHAPTER 17

He sat in his front parlor at Mrs. Wickett's on a November afternoon in thirty-three. It was cold and foggy, and he dare not go out. He had not felt too well since Armistice Day; he fancied he might have caught a slight chill during the Chapel service. Merivale had been that morning for his usual fortnightly chat. "Everything all right? Feeling hearty? That's the style —keep indoors this weather—there's a lot of flu about. Wish I could have your life for a day or two."

HIS life... and what a life it had been! The whole pageant of it swung before him as he sat by the fire that afternoon. The things he had done and seen: Cambridge in the sixties; Great Gable on an August morning; Brookfield at all times and seasons throughout the years. And, for that matter, the things he had NOT done, and would never do now that he had left them too late —he had never traveled by air, for instance, and he had never been to a talkie-show. So that he was both more and less experienced than the youngest new boy at the School might well be; and that, that paradox of age and youth, was what the world called progress.

Mrs. Wickett had gone out, visiting relatives in a neighbourly village; she had left the tea things ready on the table, with bread and butter and extra cups laid out in case anybody called. On such a day, however, visitors were not very likely; with the fog thickening hourly outside, he would probably be alone.

But no. About a quarter to four a ring came, and Chips, answering the front door himself (which he oughtn't to have done), encountered a rather small boy wearing a Brookfield cap and an expression of anxious timidity. "Please, sir," he began, "does Mr. Chips live here?"

"Umph—you'd better come inside," Chips answered. And in his room a moment later he added: "I am—umph—the person you want. Now what can I—umph—do for you?"

"I was told you wanted me, sir."

Chips smiled. An old joke—an old leg-pull, and he, of all people, having made so many old jokes in his time, ought not to complain. And it amused him to cap their joke, as it were, with one of his own; to let them see that he could keep his end up, even yet. 

So he said, with eyes twinkling: "Quite right, my boy. I wanted you to take tea with me. Will you—umph —sit down by the fire? Umph—I don't think I have seen your face before. How is that?"

"I've only just come out of the sanatorium, sir—I've been there since the beginning of term with measles."

"Ah, that accounts for it."

Chips began his usual ritualistic blending of tea from the different caddies; luckily there was half a walnut cake with pink icing in the cupboard. He found out that the boy's name was Linford, that he lived in Shropshire, and that he was the first of his family at Brookfield.

"You know—umph—Linford—you'll like Brookfield —when you get used to it. It's not half such an awful place—as you imagine. You're a bit afraid of it—um, yes—eh? So was I, my dear boy—at first. But that was—um—a long time ago. Sixty-three years ago—umph—to be precise. When I— um—first went into Big Hall and—um—I saw all those boys—I tell you—I was quite scared. Indeed—umph —I don't think I've ever been so scared in my life. Not even when —umph—the Germans bombed us—during the War. But —umph—it didn't last long—the scared feeling, I mean. I soon made myself—um—at home."

"Were there a lot of other new boys that term, sir?" asked Linford shyly.

"Eh? But—God bless my soul—I wasn't a boy at all—I was a man—a young man of twenty-two! And the next time you see a young man—a new master—taking his first prep in Big Hall —umph—just think—what it feels like!"

"But if you were twenty-two then, sir—"

"Yes? Eh?"

"You must be—very old—now, sir."

Chips laughed quietly and steadily to himself. It was a good joke.

"Well—umph—I'm certainly—umph—no chicken."

He laughed quietly to himself for a long time.

Then he talked of other matters, of Shropshire, of schools and school life in general, of the news in that day's papers. "You're growing up into— umph—a very cross sort of world, Linford. Maybe it will have got over some of its—umph—crossness—by the time you're ready for it. Let's hope so—umph—at any rate... Well..." And with a glance at the clock he delivered himself of his old familiar formula. 

"I'm —umph—sorry—you can't stay..."

At the front door he shook hands.

"Good-bye, my boy."

And the answer came, in a shrill treble: "Good-bye, Mr. Chips..."

Chips sat by the fire again, with those words echoing along the corridors of his mind. "Good-bye, Mr. Chips..." An old leg-pull, to make new boys think that his name was really Chips; the joke was almost traditional. He did not mind. "Good-bye, Mr. Chips..." He remembered that on the eve of his wedding day Kathie had used that same phrase, mocking him gently for the seriousness he had had in those days. He thought: Nobody would call me serious today, that's very certain...

Suddenly the tears began to roll down his cheeks—an old man's failing; silly, perhaps, but he couldn't help it. He felt very tired; talking to Linford like that had quite exhausted him. But he was glad he had met Linford. Nice boy. Would do well.

Over the fog-laden air came the bell for call-over, tremulous and muffled. Chips looked at the window, graying into twilight; it was time to light up. But as soon as he began to move he felt that he couldn't; he was too tired; and, anyhow, it didn't matter. He leaned back in his chair. No chicken —eh, well—that was true enough. And it had been amusing about Linford. A neat score off the jokers who had sent the boy over. Good-bye, Mr. Chips... odd, though, that he should have said it just like that...

CHAPTER 18

When he awoke, for he seemed to have been asleep, he found himself in bed; and Merivale was there, stooping over him and smiling. "Well, you old ruffian —feeling all right? That was a fine shock you gave us!"

Chips murmured, after a pause, and in a voice that surprised him by its weakness: "Why—um—what—what has happened?"

"Merely that you threw a faint. Mrs. Wickett came in and found you— lucky she did. You're all right now. Take it easy. Sleep again if you feel inclined."

He was glad someone had suggested such a good idea. He felt so weak that he wasn't even puzzled by the details of the business—how they had got him upstairs, what Mrs. Wickett had said, and so on. But then, suddenly, at the other side of the bed, he saw Mrs. Wickett. She was smiling. He thought: God bless my soul, what's she doing up here? And then, in the shadows behind Merivale, he saw Cartwright, the new Head (he thought of him as "new," even though he had been at Brookfield since 1919), and old Buffles, commonly called "Roddy." Funny, the way they were all here. He felt: Anyhow, I can't be bothered to wonder why about anything. I'm going to go to sleep.

But it wasn't sleep, and it wasn't quite wakefulness, either; it was a sort of in-between state, full of dreams and faces and voices. Old scenes and old scraps of tunes: a Mozart trio that Kathie had once played in— cheers and laughter and the sound of guns—and, over it all, Brookfield bells, Brookfield bells. "So you see, if Miss Plebs wanted Mr. Patrician to marry her... yes, you can, you liar..." Joke... Meat to be abhorred... Joke... That you, Max? Yes, come in. What's the news from the Fatherland?... O mihi praeteritos... Ralston said I was slack and inefficient —but they couldn't manage without me... O nobile heres ago fortibus es in aro... Can you translate that, any of you?... It's a joke...

Once he heard them talking about him in the room.

Cartwright was whispering to Merivale. "Poor old chap—must have lived a lonely sort of life, all by himself."

Merivale answered: "Not always by himself. He married, you know."
"Oh, did he? I never knew about that."

"She died. It must have been—oh, quite thirty years ago. More, possibly."

"Pity. Pity he never had any children."

And at that, Chips opened his eyes as wide as he could and sought to attract their attention. It was hard for him to speak out loud, but he managed to murmur something, and they all looked round and came nearer to him.

He struggled, slowly, with his words. "What—was that—um —you were saying—about me—just now?"

Old Buffles smiled and said: "Nothing at all, old chap—nothing at all—we were just wondering when you were going to wake out of your beauty sleep."

"But—umph—I heard you—you were talking about me —"

"Absolutely nothing of any consequence, my dear fellow—really, I give you my word..."

"I thought I heard you—one of you—saying it was a pity —umph—a pity I never had—any children... eh?... But I have, you know... I have..."

The others smiled without answering, and after a pause Chips began a faint and palpitating chuckle.

"Yes—umph—I have," he added, with quavering merriment. "Thousands of 'em... thousands of 'em... and all boys."

And then the chorus sang in his ears in final harmony, more grandly and sweetly than he had ever heard it before, and more comfortingly too... Pettifer, Pollett, Porson, Potts, Pullman, Purvis, Pym-Wilson, Radlett, Rapson, Reade, Reaper, Reddy Primus... come round me now, all of you, for a last word and a joke... Harper, Haslett, Hatfield, Hatherley... my last joke... did you hear it? Did it make you laugh?... Bone, Boston, Bovey, Bradford, Bradley, Bramhall-Anderson... wherever you are, whatever has happened, give me this moment with you... this last moment... my boys...

And soon Chips was asleep.

He seemed so peaceful that they did not disturb him to say good-night; but in the morning, as the School bell sounded for breakfast, Brookfield had the news. "Brookfield will never forget his lovableness," said Cartwright, in a speech to the School. Which was absurd, because all things are forgotten in the end. But Linford, at any rate, will remember and tell the tale: "I said good-bye to Chips the night before he died..."

"...(T)he Irish Understood..."

that the matters known by humans, when placed together in all the libraries and written in all the languages of the world, were meager in comparison to what is not known...

~ Jimmy Breslin, Table Money

Chuck Berry, Chuck Barris... who's next?

Chuckie Bears:  Look out for yourselves out there now...

Tuesday, March 21

"Stop feeling sorry for Chris Collins and Northwestern"

Chris Chase at FoxSports has excellent analysis of the 'Cats' loss, although a good editor could have condensed his repetitive telling.  (Get in, get out, make your point and don't repeat.)

Read the whole thing:
With Northwestern in the midst of a stunning 20-5 run that cut No. 1 Gonzaga’s second-round lead to five points with five minutes left, Collins threw a temper tantrum after a horrible no-call by the officials, running out onto the court to shout at a referee and quickly getting T’d up. The call effectively halted Northwestern’s momentum and, for all intents and purposes, ended the comeback hopes.  
The problem is, Collins was right and not just in a “we looked at this in super slo-mo for five minutes and think refs got the call wrong” but in a “how did you miss this call live, it was obvious to everybody in the building, watching on television and probably even listening on radio?” On the play in question, Northwestern’s Dererk Pardon went strong to the hoop for a dunk and was rejected by Zach Collins of Gonzaga. But it was clear that Collins had stuck his hand up through the rim, which is basket interference. The field goal should have been awarded, Gonzaga’s lead should have been cut to three and with Mark Few’s Bulldogs in complete meltdown mode, it felt like the game was going to be Northwestern’s to lose. 
Instead, Collins got the tech, Gonzaga made both free throws and there was a backbreaking four-point swing. The momentum was done and though Northwestern still had chances to get back in the game over the last four minutes, the team saw its last, best chance blow up along with its coach’s temper. (Granted, it has to be tough for Collins; after years of playing and coaching for Duke, seeing an officiating decision go the other way must be jarring.) 
Collins will get a pass because the call was so egregiously bad. He shouldn’t. Bad calls happen all the time. Bad calls in important, tight situations do too. They’re an unfortunate part of sports. It’s your job to keep your cool. Collins flew off the handle and it might have cost his team its greatest victory in school history.
...
Collins is right about this.
Here’s what he told reporters after the game:
“You guys saw it. I mean, it would have been a three-point game. We had all the momentum. The guy puts his hand through the rim. It’s a very easy call, in my opinion. But it’s an honest mistake. Referees are human beings. They’re here for a reason, because they’re outstanding officials. They made the calls, we have to live with them. In my heart, do I think if we get that call and cut it to three, we have a great chance to win? Yes, I believe we had a great chance to win if the correct call was made.” 
All of that’s true but it leads to an incorrect implication. Collins speaks as if the game was a lost cause following the missed basket interference, that the “momentum” would have stopped with the block that wasn’t. And yes, it “would have been a three-point game,” but if the coach could have kept his head for an instant, and not gone into hysterics like he was Northwestern Kid’s far younger brother, it still only would have been a five-point game, the game situation that seconds before had felt so advantageous for Northwestern. 
Gonzaga still would have been in the midst of a freefall, with their seven previous offensive possessions having been: miss, miss, foul, turnover, miss, turnover, missed free throw and missed free throw. That was part of a 6-0 Northwestern run which was just a sliver of the 23-8 run that got the Wildcats back into the game. Down five with five minutes left and all on the momentum on your side while your opponent confronts fears over choking away its No. 1 seed during the chaos of collapse — that’s not as good as being down three, but it’s not bad.
Collins ensured Northwestern wasn’t in that position though. Instead of being down those five points with Gonzaga still in the middle of its meltdown, the ‘Cats were down seven because Collins acted the fool and watched Gonzaga hit its two technical free throws while catching its breath, relaxing a bit and resettling after the Northwestern onslaught.

Table Money.

RIP Jimmy Breslin.

He was a writer's writer.

I wouldn't waste my time with The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight, but Table Money is not to be missed. Excellent character development. Men and women.

In Vietnam, Owney Morrison was a hero, winner of the Medal of Honor. Back home in Queens, married and father of a baby daughter, Owney is following family tradition and working as a tunnel builder. He is also following the family tradition of heavy drinking, and he is losing the battle of the bottle. Desperate, his wife Dolores leaves him, determined to make her life more meaningful than the lot usually decreed for Queens housewives. This is more than simply another novel of marital problems. By focusing on the Morrisons and their extended families, their friends and neighbors, Breslin dramatizes the changing relationships of men and women, parents and children, in contemporary America. This is a serious book that is frequently very funny, filled with Breslin's trademark hilarious dialogue and his usual supporting cast of zany eccentrics. Easily Breslin's best novel. Literary Guild dual main selection. Charles Michaud, Turner Free Lib., Randolph, Mass.Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Thursday, March 16

Chief Justice John Roberts Plays Silly Boy.

They want us to think they are smart, cool and funny -- and intimately familiar with the lines from Tom Sawyer.

I think Chief Justice John Roberts looks like a tone-deaf fool here, myself.  Even in the Age of Trump, he clearly has still not gotten the message of seriousness and sobriety.  He thinks this is the elites' idea of funny...

“It was a movie about a big monkey. Did I lose my dignity? Yes, I did. Did I lose my self-respect? Absolutely. Fool me once, shame on me. That is the same lesson I think these boys learned from transacting with Tom Sawyer.”

Chief Justice Roberts let out a hearty laugh.

After a brief deliberation, Chief Justice Roberts announced that the matter was moot in light of the high-price legal talent in the case, Rogers v. Sawyer, No. 47-022. The trinkets at issue — the rat, cat, marbles, tadpoles and the rest — could not be returned to the boys, he said.

“It doesn’t make any difference because wherever the objects were sent, they would immediately be seized by their respective lawyers for attorneys’ fees,” he said. “So the lawyers win.”

There was laughter and applause in the ballroom, followed by Baked Alaska.

Tell me again,
how far is Ferguson, Mo. from Washington University School of Law in St. Louis?

(Between 7 to 12 miles, depending on what route you take...)

Mr. Roberts should resign and leave Washington already, and let the people who understand what is taking place today in this country rule over our nation.  Roberts is out of touch, and never should have agreed to this rich-man's stunt.

Mark Twain was a wise man, who wrote books (Huck Finn is the better example) about serious social issues the United States confronted.

John Roberts, as he has proven again and again, is a fool...

Thursday, March 9

The Best Things in Life Aren't Things.

The gift sisters give... Thank you!  Aunt Mary


Celebrating 85 years of life, with a new grandchild!


"Here's looking at you, kiddo!"


Three Generations Strong.


"We Are Family ... "

Proud Parents:
"... and baby makes 3!"

Thursday, March 2

What the Games Teach Us...

Men’s Basketball: 

Wildcats top Michigan as Welsh-Ryan Arena goes berserk

Tim Balk, Managing Editor
The Daily Northwestern
...Senior forward Nathan Taphorn had just tossed a picture-perfect full-court inbound pass with 1.7 seconds remaining to (Dererk) Pardon, who laid in a bucket as time expired. The score broke a tie and gave the Northwestern Wildcats (21-9, 10-7 Big Ten) a 67-65 win over Michigan (19-11, 9-8) on Wednesday night. 
After the dust settled and the pandemonium subsided, NU was left to bask in a crucial victory that could deliver the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament bid.
...
Following the team’s latest loss, a 63-62 last-second heartbreaker at Indiana on Saturday, (Coach Chris) Collins said he altered his message to his team.
“I came in, and I challenged them,” Collins said. “It was the first time I said, guys, there is pressure. And anything good in life involves handling pressure and succeeding under pressure. … We’ve got to go out and win if we want to do something great.” 
The Cats responded... 
“This is why we all came here,” (sophomore forward Vic) Law said. “We knew coming in that if we wanted to be different, then this was the game that we needed to take.”
It wasn’t easy, but NU found a way earn its program-record 21st win. Collins said throughout the game his players kept telling each other “we’re not losing tonight.” 
With the critical victory under their belt, Pardon said the pressure is finally off as a battle with conference-leading Purdue looms Sunday. 
“We have the monkey off our back,” the sophomore center said. “We can just play free. Just play basketball like we played all year.”
 VIDEO:  Respect is Earned.

Wednesday, March 1

Greeting Our President ...

Thank you, President Trump, for that fabulous address, for finally focusing us on our nation's future, and for reminding us that sobriety is a necessary trait for a nation still at war. Success is no laughing matter.

Keep up the good work!
We stand behind you, ready to serve...
-------------------

And now, 40 days of Lent.
#mementomori

Memento mori ("remember that you have to die") is a Latin expression, originating from a practice common in Ancient Rome; as a general came back victorious from a battle, and during his parade ("Triumph") received compliments and honors from the crowd of citizens, he ran the risk of falling victim to haughtiness and delusions of grandeur; to avoid it, a slave stationed behind him would say "Respice post te. Hominem te memento" ( "Look after you [to the time after your death] and remember you're [only] a man.").
-----------------------
ADDED:
Overheard:   "Man, he out-Reaganed Reagan!"