Seven iconic basketball posts post

I played a fair amount of basketball between ages of 12 and 17 — I was on four teams — one at Terman, three at Gunn. I recall leaving practice at Terman about ten times to sneak in a peak at the Torah in the run-up to my Bar Mitzvah and then Rabbi Sidney Akselrad mentioning that, praising my versatility and saying it reminded him of his youthful fondness for handball. I took a ball with me on trips to Europe and Oaxaca. I played on one more time at the JCC when I was in my twenties — I recall Don Yarkin and Steve Yescies as teammates and leaders (Noodles and I both played for Hans Delannoy). When I met Nick Peterson I discerned that he and Hans were rivals in 1969, which is 55 years ago this winter.

Regarding the NBA, I’m a so-so fan. I have at arms length more than a handful (and less than a box full) of 1975 Topps cards.

A brief take on the above, all “bigs” — that is a recent term for forwards and centers (source: 2023-24 NBA Book A360/Future Publishing Ltd):

Kareem — invented or perfected the sky hook; icon of both basketball and thoughtful modern Islam. I saw him once at LAX;

Mikan — I still practice and sometimes recommend to younger players “The Mikan Drill” which is a succession of left and right hand layups combined with a climbing or leaping action. A skilled player can make 20 layups, 10 each hand, in a Mikan Drill in about two minutes. Takes me four.

Shaq–I remember having a theory that correlates the weather with whether he hit 50 percent or more from the charity stripe. Wishful thinking or magic but not Magic. He met my friend Norzin once in Palo Alto and filmed their interaction. (She thought he was Barkley).

Bob Pettit – I don’t know much about him, actually; there is some footage of him in his prime — off topic, but I also watched Rudy LaRusso my fellow Dartmouthian score 6 points at the NBA 1969 All Star game – -I started following basketball in about 1972. He was with the Hawks in St. Louis. He scored 20,000 points but never dunked. From LSU.

Hakeem Olajuwon — played for only one team, Houston Rockets; or two if you count Phi Slamma Jamma, also known as Houston Cougars NCAA. I recall him as Akeem before Hakeem. And that they said he carried an ice chest with popsickles, which they didn’t have in Nigeria. Makes me wonder: Igbo or Yoruba.

Interlude: I am 6 feet tall, although I am more accurately five foot eleven and one half inches. In 7th grade, for Terman Tigers I once lined up as a center in the zone when Koijane took a blow. By my sophomore year, and meeting Hans it was suggested I need to learn to dribble and move to back court. But I learned a bunch of moves in the paint and near the boards, offensive and defensive. In retrospect, maybe I should have just perfected those inside moves. Or worked harder on the dribble. Light is both particle and wave; Weiss is both too small for forward and too clumsy for guard. Against Buchser – -what is now Santa Clara High gym — in my lone varsity field goal for Gunn in 1980-81, I caught the ball from Alan Ng beating the press in the high post, took one dribble, wheeled and kissed the ball of the glass for two! (The next possession, exactly the same, got fouled, sank two; the third time, missed front end of 1-and-1).

Parrish — people forget he was a Warrior before a Celt.

Karl Malone — the mail man, played against my teammate Lockhart in NCAA. Mike Norman never made the NBA but was an all time great for Saint Francis of Mountain View, then Santa Clara Broncos and worked out at least once at Gunn gym, now known as Bow but not Titan. Titan might change to Lockhart if they ask me.

And1: Stanford beat #4 Arizona the other day, in the breakout game, 28 points for Kanaan Carlyle, whose father I met at Springline dog run. From ATL, like Ja Morant. One and done from the Farm. Hope to catch in person his next set of flow or magic.

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Michael McFaul summary of Israel-Hamas situation

Hamas’s horrific, barbaric terrorist attack against Israeli civilians on October 7 compelled Israel to launch a major war against this terrorist organization in Gaza. Too many civilians have already died, and the war has no end in sight. Here, in the United States, the Israeli-Hamas conflict divided our politics, university campuses, and society, leading to the rise of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia. Just days after the terrorist attack, I wrote Terrorism Is Terrorism, in an attempt to reconcile the obvious need to denounce this horrific act but also find longer, sustainable solutions to this conflict. This year also revitalized other older conflicts: the Republic of Artsakh ceased to exist, falling under Azerbaijan’s control, and the civil war in Sudan wages as I write. Beyond military conflicts, Turkey, Syria, and Morocco experienced devastating earthquakes. U.S.-China relations continue to simmer, global temperatures set records, and the global democratic recession persists.  

 

Clicking thru leads to:

Last week, Hamas carried out horrific, barbaric acts of terrorism against innocent Israeli civilians, resulting in over a thousand killed, including 22 American citizens. The brutality and scale of their slaughter – including killing grandmothers and babies – was shocking. No previous injustice, prior wrong, or longstanding grievance justifies these heinous actions. Hamas launched its terrorist attacks knowing very well that Israel would retaliate, deliberately triggering more suffering for the people they claim to defend. As an act of self-defense, the democratically elected government has the responsibility to protect its citizens and the legitimate right to use force for self-defense, first and foremost against Hamas and Islamic Jihad, but also in response to other actors in the region – Hezbollah and their Iranian backers – if they try to expand the scope of this war.

In waging its military offensive, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) must abide by international law and minimize civilian casualties and civilian suffering. Hamas must do the same and stop using Palestinian civilians as human shields to protect their terrorists and military supplies.

 

Note: I know McFaul slightly due to the fact that his first two years here he dated a close friend of mine. I’ve seen his book lecture three times and as recently as September said hello to him on campus. I suggested to members of the pro-Hamas tent at Stanford that they try to take his class. or write to him, in the case of A_ who said she is from Angola, to check his take. Last, I said something snide and unfounded by text to a local landlord about the possibility of money laundering here. Palo Alto is 7,000 miles from Tel Aviv but the capital here makes us seem much closer. That also creates noise. 

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Terry and I met Hilda in Martinez on December 12 and we’re so sad to have learned of her passing, while looking at her piano piece at the De Young today

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Shout out to Cazzie Russell and the 1985 New Jersey Jammers from the ghost of Kent Lockhart (1963-2023) and Plastic Alto

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Post article draws 6,000 antisemitic responses

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Laker fake service dog three degrees away from Bacon

..that almost explains it; does the dog think he’s getting actual bacon meaning it’s a fake a pork product?

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Happy Tanaka to Greg and friends


Greg’s running for congress? All I can say is it’s about time! 

Look at his stellar record on the Palo Alto city council. During his eight years he initiated:
1. Council agreed to consider a new skate park as part of the Parks master plan.
2. That’s it. 

The record speaks for itself. 

He also has a spotless record advancing the cause of stacked, mechanical parking. During his eight years, he never missed an opportunity to propose stacked parking, whether it was relevant to the situation or not. On social issues his support for the robots who power these systems is solid. 

I’m sure his donors will be thrilled with how he spends their donations. Hopefully the FPPC will be as well. 

I don’t see how any other candidate can possibly compete.

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Jean Knight ‘Mr Big Stuff’ on Soul Train vs Hugh Grant ‘Love Actually’ dance to Pointer Sisters ‘Jump’

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EI FTW

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No title necessary

prologue: or as Chekhov said: if there is a rifle in the first scene you better shoot someone by the curtain:

Sorry for your loss. Thank him for his work with our kids (I don’t have kids but I say that in an abstract sense to teachers).

I am both a concert promoter and high school basketball coach. Kansas Jayhawks you likely know are big in hoops. Here we have Becky Beacom whose grandfather was Phog Allen and the Haase’s who played for KU but now coach Stanford and have a boy at Palo Alto High (whereas I coach JV assistant coach at rival Gunn of Palo Alto – -but I did meet Mrs Haase the other night, nice lady).

And in their honor — but retroactively and as an exercise in — what’s the word for re-writing history? – -at the flea market of Alameda Sunday — near Oakland – -near Berkeley where your Buddhist thing with Cynthia Shih workshopped — I was there – and if you excuse the digression – I was also at the staged reading in SF of the Steve Jobs opera in the same month — and my father had a business one mile from Apple for 20 years — and bought for 3 zuzim a old beat up doll with a blue and white stripped K sweater and I was not sure if it was Kentucky or Kansas and then I left it in front of a 7-11 in Hayward — my car — which was my father’s car — it says PEW ZL — which is Jewish for may his memory be a blessing — his name was PEW — ok, Paul — and not to distract from Prof Harry — gave me a “CHECK ENGINE” light so I pulled off the highway for a spell. Anyhow I sacrificed the K doll to the gods of Hayward people who pick up old toys in front of convenience markets in exchange for safe passage back to Palo Alto (I also have a cousin who died at the Jayhawk hotel but I will save that or keep my own counsel…)

Mark Weiss (to Tanya who writes with Vienna Teng)

 

I am at Coupa per typical but dressed slightly more spiffily, which is not saying much if you know me: chinos not Vouri, fancy sneaks not functional — I am wearing a G but I won’t say why.

Gee, why not?

On the way out the door I grabbed Veronica De Jesus People Are a Light to Love: Memorial Drawings (with text by Garrett Caples, who I met apropos of Alden Van Buskirk in 2011, although most Veronica drawings have about 100 words, written in her script on the drawing, like a eulogy or obituary— she is the one whose drawings filled the window of a bookstore in the Mission — she also worked there before going to grad school — she also played in one of my concerts, a Nina Simone tribute at the BOTH – -which was also a tribute to Lisa Fay Beatty of the Mudwimin and TK — she also did a series of drawings of people who played Earthwise —about a dozen or so — and have transited — but the drawings in a self-similar fashion also transited so to speak in that they were lost in a burglary or break-in -I forget the details — but they sort of live on on the Internet here — in Plastic Alto…excuse the digression, all seventeen of them).

I opened the book at random and notice ed fixate fijate Armando Morales who she says is one of Nicaragua’s most recognized painters, he was born circa 1927 and died about 10 years ago. 

The internet says that he has one work in the MOMA in NYC which also has more than 2,000 paintings that you can see on the internet but probably not at the museum itself. When Terry and I went to NYC on our luna de Miel which was only a week only five years ago we went to the Whitney and the New Museum of Bowery or whatever but not the MOMA the Met or the Guggenheim.

Speaking of Gug, if you let me drift out of my lane again, I am wearing a G for Gunn not Gug but also a fancy type of shoes that starts with Gu but has no “N’ and only one “G”. 

I also met a man named Gregorio who is new in town — he was delivering food to someone probably not named for a Saint and I hipped him to the San Gregorio general store and a beach, in that order. He seemed pleased. 

I was also dancing to the tunes in Coupa – -I cannot explain why. I am in a good mood.

I have to leave in a few minutes to have my car fixed. I want to sell my car to a neighbor from Barcelona because he taught me how to drink Bourbon. Kind of sorta. Or as Foster Brooks I think would say “shminda shmorta”.

The auto fix on my computer as Duffy the dog wearing a French sounding sweater style =—my wife tried to hip me — is sort of offing with me not helping me but I forgot the rest of my pronto-thought. Oy. 

I had a nice time with Pablo Tut, Marian Gill, Marla Allison, Mateo Romero —- not the painter the comic book dude but not a chongo brother per se — and Santiago Romero. We saw: the thinker by Rodin, the masks by Ruth Asawa but few others. Per typical, we were more interested in each other than the masterworks. 

At the Dartmouth event — although yesterday was also a Dartmouth event due to me, Santi and Marian all having a connection — I hired two young musicians: a drummer from China and a piano player from Kazakhstan. Now I think I am going to make them play together, either at the Lizzie No show, or the Yale Docks show, both in January at the Art Center, or in April in the piano series, which is mostly solos. 

There’s a longer riff about a piano player who does not consider herself a musician but I think she is— her father is a famous player and her mother is a professor of nursing. I am trying to challenge herself to learn just enough piano to fool the Earthwise audience. Or, she can be like that guy who did four minutes of silence — to call attention to the ambient sound. He has a literary equivalent who once famous said:

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