Leonard Frey of 201 Streeter

leonard frey
Leonard Frey, Dartmouth class of 1949, lived at 201 Streeter, one of the older dorms, in the so-called Gold Coast, west campus, closer to the river, by my sense. When Harry Hillman died, Frey contributed $5 to a memorial fund. In 2003, when Richard Thorner, my classmate, sold me Hillman’s scrapbook, I researched other info on the famous coach and Olympian, and on a hunch cross-referenced his name with Blunt Alumni records, who reported then-current contact info, in San Diego. Ten minutes ago, for no reason whatsoever other than, as Shakespeare sometimes suggests, storms portend, I fished a 2003 notebook from my storage space, here at Oak Creek. This is the first item in the book.

here is a prologue, courtesy of a recent Dartmouth Alumni Magazine class notes, for 1949s Dr. Frey’s class:
Gene Miller, with his health (no pills or walkers) and memory intact, found an old reminiscence of the 49 ’49ers (including me) who entered in March 1945. Some tidbits: “[We] were housed mostly in Richardson, Wheeler or a barely habitable Crosby. The campus was awash with ‘Swabbies’ and ‘Gyrenes.’ War raged in Europe and Asia. The immediate future looked grim [for us] mostly 16- and 17-year olds. For [us smokers] begging inferior brands at Allen’s Drug or the Indian Bowl was a major pastime. The pool table in the back of a basement barbershop was the center of a pitiable recreation effort (which included water fights. dodging Wormwood (campus security) and carrying the Dartmouth tradition to Smith, Colby, et. al., usually by hitchhiking on gasless, deserted roads).” Gene currently resides in Greensburg, Pennsylvania.


“Interview with Dr. Leonard Frey, PhD ’49”
(619) 295-XXXX – I tried the number but it is disconnected; the search-injun offers little immediate clue to my main question: How is Dr. Frey?

“In the package sent by Barbara Krieger at Rauner/Baker, I noticed that one of the correspondences was a donation to the Hillman fund from Dr. Frey. Written at the bottom of the letter was “$5 – 201 Streeter” — a dorm address — and I inferred first that this donation was from a student and second that the student may still be living. Sure enough, a check of my alumni directory (2001) showed that Dr. Frey lived in San Diego. I called directory assistance and then reached him.

First, he hung up on me when I said I was calling from Dartmouth. Then I called back and said I was calling about Hillman and he did indeed want to talk to me. ”

Ok, I am interrupting the flow here, of transcribing my notes from 2003 to Plastic Alto, to paste in a woman, Meisue Francis, who in 2006, i.e. during the time I was more avidly a Hillmanite, won the 2006 championship 4×400 with some LSU teammates and she went to the same high school Brooklyn Boys and Girls, as did Hillman 100 years prior. This was in my notes, or the version of such I posted here in June, 2014. Not sure how I got there but worth noting.
meissuefrancis4002006champion

Brooklyn Boys and Girls, since 1886, is the oldest public school in Brooklyn, in Bed-Stuy and has 3,600 students. I recall taking subways and buses to get there, hoping to flip thru the yearbook archives to find more info on Hillman, and when I got there the guards had no record of my appointment so I was denied access. So meeting a Dartmouth student, in front of Hanover Inn, waiting to get home for holidays, from the same school was kind of a thrill for me. For a second here, 11 years later I thought the LSU athlete and the Dartmouth co-ed were the same person. I wonder if the 2006 female athlete was as fast as the 1904 male Olympian. Will check that. 1700 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, NY 11213

Well, no, the 2006 NCAA women’s featuring Meisue on leg 2 and Brooklyn Morris on leg 1 they each ran about 51 seconds to Hillman’s 49 and one-fifth.

And not to detract from our subject, dear Dr. Frey, but here is more of Meisue so to speak in 2010 tweeting under the name “tracshortie01” which I think translates into “attractive person who runs fast, the first”:

I was noting, at Phil Hanlon’s lecture, that times have changed a wee bit since my day but I am fairly certain that this former track champion is someone “Men of Dartmouth” and alumni would give a rouse for.

If we could catch her, I mean.
“Frey entered Dartmouth in the summer of 1945. Hillman died shortly thereafter, in August of 1945. (August 9, 1945) (Frey had gone up early)

He was from Northern NJ. Near Morriston. He went to public school (a good one, that offered six languages). His family summered in New Hampshire so he knew the area. He was an English major, but switched to linguistics. He went on to teach German and linguistics at San Diego State but is now — as of 2003 — retired. He’s 76. (Ok, he is 86 or 87 by now, lwatcdr.).

He also did some work as a journalist. He worked for the New York Herald Tribune, as a sportswriter. He worked with Red Smith. He called Smith “a really nice guy…from Notre Dame”.

He contributed to a Sports Encyclopedia published in Iowa, by a David Porter. He said he wrote 40 to 50 stories. He said there is an article on Hillman which he is sending along. He is also sending an article on Guy Broberg the basketball player, father of Pete Broberg. Ok I gotta paste in a Topps Broberg or I may have one in my apartment to Swede in, Rangers, 1972.

Meanwhile and this is egregious Plastic Alto bull roar here is a book on Palm trees recommended by Pete Broberg, the former Dartmouth and Rangers hurler, because Dr. Frey told me what a hero Broberg’s father was, the War hero pilot who lost his arm in a crash but went on to be a lawyer and judge and father of another Dartmouth hero. Gus Broberg had just passed away when I researched all this.

And I did spend 90 minutes today bending the ears of Steve Staiger of PAHA warming up for being the moderator of a panel on jazz history; I said worst case scenario I read my 20,000 word treatise, or repeat half of what I said just now. And I pulled a copy of Errol Morris “Fast Cheap and out of Control” out of my pack: Rod Brooks of MIT robotics, the lion tamer, the topiary gardener and expert on mole rats, 1996, re-wired me brain.

the cap is airbrushed because Washington had just gone to Texas, worth $3

the cap is airbrushed because Washington had just gone to Texas, worth $3

I am sparing you the link to the Errol Morris film but here is info on Streeter, which I presume still has a 201 although my old dorm Richardson went from about 50 rooms to about 30, because they added fire escapes and took out all the end singles:

Heat Control in Streeter Hall
For Streeter, each room has a small thermostat that is usually tan or gray and has numbers on it. It is located on one end of the radiator. This thermostat is really a valve that allows differing amounts of steam to enter your particular radiator; the more steam that enters the radiator, the warmer you will be. As noted above, the times steam is delivered to your building is controlled by a computerized program, and that steam is either all the way on or all the way off. Your room thermostat will only affect the heat output of your radiator when the building is receiving steam. If you have trouble setting this thermostat, call the ORL Operations Office at 6-1203 during normal business hours, 8 AM until 4:30 PM, M-F. Report the problem and we will send someone to your room to check it with a digital thermometer. If it is found that the heat is below 66°F or above 70°F, we will call Facilities, Operations and Management and ask them to send someone to correct the problem. After business hours and on weekends, you may call 6-2344 to report heating problems.
If you have any questions, call or blitz: Woody Eckels, Director of Residential Operations, 646-1203.

Streeter has 67 beds to 61 for Richardson. The second floor is now all female, I think Streeter was still all-male in my day. For comparison, Dartmouth was all male, 1769 to 1972, for instance for Dr. Frey. Here is a floor plan, 124 square feet.

Here is a picture of the glorious Richardson, where presumably Frey sometimes called on friends:

richardson, not streeter, and I'm sure we beat them in football

richardson, not streeter, and I’m sure we beat them in football

I lived in 204 Richardson, with Teddy Conway of New Orleans and David Williams of Greenwich for freshman fall and winter, 1982-83, then switched up to a double with Brian Gaul of Chevy Chase or DC area, for the spring. Our 204 is probably now part of 202, which they call a three room quad to our two room triple.

Frey lived at 201 Streeter for three of his four years meanwhile, back at the ranch, and then Butterfield. His father had seen Hillman compete so Leonard arranged to introduce him to Hillman “And he was thrilled.

“But I (Frey) only knew him (Hillman) briefly. He was an awfully nice man. Very kindly. A fatherly sort.”

He was succeeded at the helm of the Dartmouth track and field program by Elliot Noyes.

“I have a picture right here next to me of myself standing next to Elliot Noyes. It’s the 1945 Dartmouth cross country team picture ” he told me in 2003.

And then at the bottom of the page I write: I should ask him about Moe Berg!

And then at the top of the page I jot: “Earl Brown” in quotes and “Goering” not in quotes. I think I pulled this file when I was introduced or made aware of Goering a former basketball player of that era. As in a couple years later, ten years ago.

Dartmouth archive only lists 3 of 5 players, with Coach Brown

Dartmouth archive only lists 3 of 5 players, with Coach Brown

And continuing I realize that although I claim to find the new public radio Ira Glass stuff annoying maybe it is an influence Frey was a fan of basketball and said that Dartmouth had a dynasty won seven Ivy titles and played for the national championship twice, against Stanford in 1942 and Utah in 1944. He attended the games at Madison Square Garden in 1944 (i.e. before matriculation)

Well if you are still with me you are in for a real treat in that here is 27 minutes of highlights from that 1944 NCAA game, I was researching just the other day, Dartmouth versus Utah, so you can see what you Leonard Frey saw, and maybe you can actually see him in the crowd shots.

The other hoop athletes he mentioned were Jim “Chip” Coleman* and “Gut”. (I struck thru the second guy)

Broberg was a pilot during WWII got shot down, and lost his arm in the crash. He went on to law school and became a municipal judge in Florida. Frey interviewed him.

Frey was a classmate of Slade Gorton “of the Gorton codfish family”. He was a Senator (and I mean in Congress, unlike young Broberg the baseball variety Ranger and maybe Senator0 from Washington (I think we mean West Coast, above Oregon) for 24 years, “an awfully nice fellow”.

Dartmouth was national champs in football in 1925, undefeated (Swede Oberlander era, I write in later, should be a ?)

The track at Alumni Gym was “a big track”. It was 6 laps to the mile, compared to 11 laps at Madison Square Garden. He remembers Glen Cunningham’s record performance in Hanover as “4 minutes 4 seconds and 4 tenths” (4:04:04, I had not previously noted it, although there is actually a clip that Hillman had put in his book, loosely marking that event).

“It was so unusual to have a track that big and a real pleasure to run on it” Frey recalled, in my 2003 interview by phone.

He recalled that he followed Jessie Owens’ career and that Hitler snubbed him, but suggested that Roosevelt snubbed him, too.

He recalled that Marty Glickman later an announcer, was replaced from the mile relay in Berlin ’36 Olympics because he was Jewish, “two of them were Jewish”.

Frey remembers a Dartmouth Professor of German named “Schlossbacher” who was very strict — “he had a scar we surmised was from dueling”.

“Schlossbacher once called on a another ’49 Van Hamburg first and Van got the answer wrong and the prof said ‘You are a discredit to your name’ and called on me next.”

Frey reported that despite these fond memories he had not been back, as of 2003 to Hanover, New Hampshire campus of Dartmouth since the nineteen-fifties. He said he remembered, nonetheless, how remarkably beautiful is the campus. He was a Kappa Kappa Kappa “a luca” — no idea — but “went inactive”. It was a track team fraternity.

“I was in tears when I head that Harry Hillman died.”

He said Hillman seemed shorter than the 5’foot 11 I suggested.

Coaches:
Tesreau (I was quizzing him, or cross-referencing my various notes): “I knew him well”
Eddie Jeremiah – hockey
Ozzie Cowles — hoops
“Gus” “McGloughery” I guess this means that I need to proof the names – football
and yeah so that I had Ozzie Cowles here, I must have pulled this when I got a chance to talk by phone to a former Dartmouth 1944 collegiate championship game player named Vince Goering, toward the end of his life, a year or so later. I had them ask him “did he play for Ozzie Cowles?” and the response was no, Earl Brown. Which I had to check later. Cowles had just retired.
Blaik — went to Army to coach, Blanchard and Davis slash West Point

Tesreau he noted was a teammate of Christy Mathewson. Big Six (and what was Griffin Boninis statement about an all-time great nickname of a pitcher of that era(“Meal Ticket” Carl Hubbell?)

45 minutes: 5:45 stop (and here I am about 7:30 or about two hours into this trip down a couple simultaneous memory lanes.

The next page in my book has NYAC New York Athletic Club, a 212 number, then below that, a separate entry, dated 11/5/03 four days later “Brooklyn Boys and Girls” some basic facts like A Train C Train a Ms. Bell librarian for 14 years x550 or x215 which again was a wild goose chase or dead end when I actually tried to visit. I remember being someone out of place on the bus.

The next page has two numbers in 603 for C. Everett Koop and I know in the file is a short note back that he barely knew Hillman. And then I have a cite about a new book in 2003 about the 1903 Word Serious “Autumn Glory”

and there is a listing for a current Class of ’49 columnist I may ring him or offer to fax this over, although people might be put off by the rambling style or lack of editorial discipline: John Adler, 1623 Pelican Cove Road, BA123, Sarasota, FL 34231; (203) 622-9069; note that he does not list an email address.

edit to add: Tesreau note the proper spelling, and he deserves his own post, even in Plastic Alto, died in September 1946 so if asked Frey would or may have to someone expressed sadness at being in close proximity to that occurrence, in Hanover. Here is a pic.

And Judge and former Titan hoops star Griffin Bonini is absolutely correct that the pitcher and HOF of the next generation of Giants Carl Hubbell was known as King Carl or “Meal Ticket” check out the plaque:

edit to add, next morning; I am tempted to call this number and tell Pete Broberg’s secretary that there is a Dartmouth alum writing an article about basketball and see if he picks up. (561) 655-5166, in Florida. I asked Rick Kimball a Dartmouth trustee if he thinks Murray Bowden the star of the 1970 football team would take a call from a writer asking him about Ed Marinero: “Of course!”. We shall see. But first, let’s get some update on Dr. Frey. I will have to go search for his clips he sent me. And I think not far from those would be a 1972 Topps Broberg, so I can say “I have your card, right here — I bought it when I was 8”. And Kimball ad libbed the other night after being introduced as a Yaz fan by Martha Beattie that he could also recite some stats on her man Jim Beattie.

later that afternoon: I did reach Mr. Adler the ’49 newsletter editor or class scribe who says that his records show that same phone number for Dr. Frey as of August of this year, as current, living and breathing and we hope supporting the Old Mother. He gave me some leads on other athletic memoirs of that era and, on another thread, set me straight about the V-12 program. Enjoying his winter in Florida when not in Greenwich himself.

*from Feb. ’47 Crimson: A revamped tribe of Dartmouth Indians will do its inhospitable best tonight to spoil the Varsity basketball team’s annual hegira to the hills of Hanover, where the teams meet in an Ivy League contest.

Since the Green suffered a 58 to 45 defeat at the hands of the Varsity earlier this month, Coach Elmer Lampe has lost the services of two of his players. Center Aud Brindley was graduated, and forward Paul Campbell was declared scholastically ineligible.

But the Indians’ new lineup, which includes Andy Carstensen at center and Emil Hudak at guard–Captain Chip Coleman was moved to forward–has shown surprising strength. Dartmouth gave Holy Cross a dogged battle before bowing by 11 points last week, and held league-leading Columbia to a five-point victory at Hanover Saturday night. Always tough on its home floor, the Big Green has lost only six games in ten years on native grounds.

edit to add: Ozzie Cowles lured away by Michigan, then featured on Wheaties box:
ozziecowleswheatiescirca1945

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I’m not stalking him, he is stalking me

Palo Alto' s best pokerer, court side, on TV, next to owner

Palo Alto’ s best pokerer, court side, on TV, next to owner

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365 from the 512

Jordan Williamson from Austin Texas has scored 365 points for the Stanford Cardinal football team, as the kicker. One of the secrets to his success, Plastic Alto has exclusively gleaned, is that his hair never falls in front of his face and eyes obscuring his view of the goal post because Gerardo the Barber, at, where else, The Cardinal Hotel, on Ramona, keeps the Williamsonian locks in check.

I happened into him today as Gerardo was doing me “a touch-up”.

It was his Texas t-shirt that got us going. I asked him about a dozen or so Texan bands, artists and venues (Slaid Cleaves, Curtis McMurtry, Asylum Street Spankers) before he let on that he was more about football than Austin City Limits.

“I’m actually on the Stanford team” he said. “I’m Jordan Williamson”.

I’m just enough of a follower to, without syncopation, hit my mark: “The kicker?!”

He humored me enough to pose for a 2-fer, shot by Gerardo.

I said I was most def going to the Bowl Game, Dec. 30 versus Maryland. I suggested that Stanford would either win by 40 or call on Jordan to win it from 40 yards out.

“I would love that shot!” he said.

His bio says that he is 5’11” and 194. My CDL says I am 6′ 180. David Shields say all memory involves a wee bit of fiction. See for y’all selfs.

my twin, Jordan Williamson, or did you mistake me for Russell Erxleben?

my twin, Jordan Williamson, or did you mistake me for Russell Erxleben?

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TvNeYaRDs merry merril

No water in the water fountain but lot money in me banky count

No water in the water fountain but lot money in me banky count

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Taylor blank secret tv

IMG_20141209_221031811

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Annette Gordon-Reed a good read

Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings as depicted in 1804, "A Philosophic Cock"

Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings as depicted in 1804, “A Philosophic Cock”


I believe I was first hipped to Annette Gordon-Reed via the Dartmouth Alumni Magazine. “The Hemingese of Monticello: An American Family” came out in 2008, but I just got my paws on it last week, from the new Mitchell Center library in Palo Alto.

I also coincidentally or providentially met yesterday Constance Dixon-Sorogane who hails from the Richmond, VA-area and is a recent hired at PAUSD in special education but I believe her when she says she is musical.

I have two friends, Dartmouth classmates, from or in Richmond: John Samuel “Jack’ Martin, an attorney and Jack Bocock, a former Navy Seal and maybe OSS and maybe a Homeland-type spy — he actually looks or looked like the redhead in the TV show and played lacrosse at Dartmouth and was in the Sphinx secret society; Martin meanwhile was the only one in a four-man suite at Phi Delt who was not in the secret society and let out a type of respectful cock-a-doodle-doo about the elitism. I had, and this is really a typical Plastic Alto shaggy dog, leather-sack thingy, written about 5,000 words about Senior Societies and I recall getting an interview with Mr. Kimball of Buildings and Grounds who was faculty advisor to the Sphinx — and I think he must be a relation of Rick Kimball Dartmouth 1978 and a Trustee I met for the first time last week at The Palace, and he says his office, it turns out, TCV, is less than 100 yards from where I sit, at Coupa Cafe on Ramona.

So far I’ve only flipped open at random, shot this 1804 cartoon and pasted it above. What I am dreaming about is putting Annette Gordon-Reed, who teaches law at NYU and history at Rutgers and is also a Dartmouth Trustee, I think, in the same room as guitarist Jeff Parker of Tortoise fame, I’ve met thru Scott Amendola (who I saw Saturday at Z Space with Rachel Garlin, Julie Wolf and is in Portland tonight with Charlie Hunter — Plastic Alto is after all or foremost a jazz story) and I am wondering about an oratorio set to through-composed music. And maybe Ms. Dixon-Sorogane and or PAUSD students could help develop this?

Stuff of dreams.

and1: wow, luck or providence, Jeff Parker is actually in Oakland and San Jose this week,as a sideman. Will have to hit him on this account.
now his bio says he is from Bridgeport, CT born but I swear he said he was growed in VA.
He is with Andrew Bird tomorrow at Largo Something almost worth jumping to check.

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Genuine Filseth

this is a recent and real picture of Eric Filseth, caught working in his Downtown North yard; I edited out our other neighbor since I might have caught a better likeness of her

this is a recent and real picture of Eric Filseth, caught working in his Downtown North yard; I edited out our other neighbor since I might have caught a better likeness of her


Earlier or above I had a post called “Not a Genuine Filseth” based on a photo I took of a stranger at Peet’s who I thought resembled Eric Filseth,

Here is a recent photo of our council-member-elect. He and Tina were working the yard, unawares that a Stanford game they might want to watch was about to commence. One of our other neighbors was in the photo but I cropped her out on account of I might have caught a more flattering take.

Good luck, Eric. One of these days you may have to take those gloves off.

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Open letter to Bill Johnson (draft of post to PAW site)

prologue August 30, 2013 or less than a year before the campaign:
HE KNEW HIM WHEN … Palo Alto developer Jim Baer said he was inspired to help organize Monday night’s “I Have a Dream” commemoration in front of City Hall because of his lifelong friendship with the brother of Andrew Goodman, one of three young civil-rights workers murdered in Mississippi on June 21, 1964. Baer said he had roomed with Goodman’s brother at Stanford and — though personally not an activist in the civil-rights movement — felt it was important to hold the Palo Alto commemoration, which highlighted the work of Stanford University Professor Clayborne Carson, editor of the papers of Martin Luther King Jr.

This is what I actually look like. Taken by David, a total stranger, at Menalto Cleaners, December 2014

This is what I actually look like. Taken by David, a total stranger, at Menalto Cleaners, December 2014


It’s not just that you don’t cover me but you sit around and scheme up ways to undermine me. “the Agitator“? Sounds like Andrew Goodman in Mississippi in 1964, which by the way you did write about recently.

You are not actually The Fourth Estate. You are just another special interest group. Ever since the move to 450 Cambridge surely; it is hard to date the sell-by expiration.

When I become mayor, we will take that building by eminent domain and let the police dog shit there.

Veronica you make me smile inside

Veronica you make me smile inside


And for the record — soon to be deleted from Palo Alto online like so many other posts of mine — in 2012 I told your photog that I would not turn in your survey but she convinced me to pose nonetheless. Then she ran a photo of me staring into space — one of 30 takes, and the other five candidates you pictured looking into the camera. This time you run an outtake from same session of me scowling or blank-faced and the other 11 candidates you have smiling. And I strictly did not sit for you or your condescending taped sessions, which you film or edit in such a way to make me look like a dick, reflection in my glasses to darken them, uneven lighting et cetera.

ok, so I resisted posting under the article per se, and turned it into the basis for a selfie style post. I went next door to David of Menalto Cleaners, who works with Gary the owner and he took this basic current shot. It’s not whether I am handsomer or heavier than in 2012 but just that this basic look, smiling for a camera, even shot by a virtual stranger, I look as I normally am: I am basically a friendly person. Moon in cancer, type O Positive, whatever. I was student body president at Terman and Editor in Chief at Gunn –and on the literary board at The Dartmouth — and no one has ever mistaken me for an “agitator”. Except at the Palo Alto Weekly.

This is just one element of my “Analysis” phase post election. Like Bobby Fisher going thru the 50 moves of a chess match for hours the next few days or weeks later, I may take thru the spring to figure out what to make of the 100 day experience running for Palo Alto City Council. It certainly generates a lot of information, just what to do with it.

What is also never covered:

a) the fact that in addition to my campaign I also wrote close to 100 article about the campaign or policy for Plastic Alto, plus a bunch of posts to the Weekly and probably 20 talks at public hearings and council and commission meeting. I would think the 1,000 articles as Plastic Alto is relevant background for imagining my impact as Council or my general qualifications, but it is never discussed or analyzed. I was trained as a reporter, to cover local government, as far back as 1984 — and was a public policy fellow for the Nelson Rockefeller Center at Dartmouth to do so, in 1984, plus whatever life experience the ensuing 30 years. And the blog is informed by that rigor. Even the arts and culture and non-policy (non-“Plato’s Republic”) — and some are goofs or larks — tells you something, something positive about who I am. Not that someone could not comb thru the nearly 500,000 words and pick out a handful of clams, if they so chose. But the nature of the internet is in fact that I can revise if I need to. There may be limits, as Molly Stump said to somebody recently, on what a seated official might say in public during term, not sure.

b) second part, that I left corporate America in 1992 and came back to Palo Alto, from San Francisco, to start something grass-roots and social action oriented. That is never mentioned. That is, my actual work, over a period of 20 years is consistent with someone claiming plausibly that he wants to serve. Earthwise Productions is or was an engine or change, and community building and good. Not that I made a bundle in industry and want to give back or some such cliche. Or sometimes I say I was tapped by Palo Alto in 1977, when Cheryl Preising my classmate and Jean White my teacher asked me to run for ASB at Terman. But generally it is barely glossed over: “concert promoter”; GS had me as “former concert promoter” very dismissive. My ballot statement says: Small business owner CEO slash activist slash writer. They just play up the “small”.

The main question is: how is it that the one who was here the second longest, 1974 to JF’s 1970, and one of only two as products of PAUSD, like Cory but with twice the life experience, does not lead with 12,000 votes to scorched and marred incumbent Karen Holman’s 11,000? Where are the missing 10,000 Weiss votes?

I will leave the headline intact but this has pivoted: I am not asking Bill the second question. But he should have to explain or rebut that he is not trying to torpedo me. Someone who really knows Sullivan v. New York Times might have to advise me here. Jocelyn Dong wrote back privately a weak rebuttal that GS use of “anti-government” is a secondary use meaning “anti-incumbent” which would be too obvious to state more plainly. It is not that I was vowing to resign in protest if elected. No I am saying very directly that Palo Alto deserves and can have better than: Pat Burt, Larry Klein, Liz Kniss and Marc Berman.

And yes, I think in a fair race Palo Altans would rank me as offering everything that Eric Filseth and Tom Dubois offer. Only in the most superficial “horse-race” atmosphere, totally manipulated, would you class them ahead of me. Sure, they are more useful to military/industrial/information/computer/games complex. And still are.

and1: here is the exchange with Jocelyn:
Hi Mark,

I wanted to respond to your concern over the phrase “anti-government” in the profile Gennady wrote about you, as I think you might be attributing an extreme interpretation that wasn’t intended. A pretty straightforward definition is:

an·ti·gov·ern·ment -ˌantēˈɡəvər(n)mənt,ˌantī-/
adjective
adjective: anti-government
against a government or the administration in office

If your stance is NOT that the current council has done a poor job, sided with developers at the expense of residents, approved a “pork project” in the Highway 101 Bridge, etc., then let us know. (But if that’s not your opinion, then why would you use rhetoric such as, “There are more of us so in the end we will take back the city”??). I would think you would wear the adjective with pride, but in any case, no offense was intended. I hope, with this email, that none is lingering.

Best regards,
~Jocelyn

On Sun, Oct 12, 2014 at 11:52 PM, mark weiss wrote:
the Weiss campaign is filled with anti-government (rhetoric)

This is untrue.
Please prove this or retract it.

Mark Weiss
650.305.XXXX

i’ve written close to 500,000 words on my own blog, Plastic Alto, in 950 posts since 2010 and probably 10,000 words on your site — please cite one example of “anti-government (rhetoric)” let alone that my campaign is “filled with” such.

I am anti-Despot and critical of current leadership, true enough. But I actually stress being “we the people” and government is a we not a they.

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TLBAS at earthwise@20 Cafe Zoe Menlo Park soon

A group of young beautiful people out of Brooklyn and Philadelphia have a Lindsay Buckingham tribute called TLBAS and I am hereby inviting them, at most favored nation status, to play Cafe Zoe as part of the Earthwise Productions 20th Anniversary Series.

Here is one of their recent flyers. They have some vague connection to Best Coast.

tlbas

I guess I can announce here to hold the date Friday, January 30, 2015 for Earthwise@20 at Cafe Zoe 1926 Menalto, but I don’t mean to imply that I am flying someone out from Brooklyn and Philly for this.

I am also possibly producing a panel on the history of jazz in Palo Alto at Lucie Stern Ballroom Sunday, Jan. 25 at 2 p.m. Free, with Palo Alto Historical Association, sort of a launch of the pseudo-publication of my 20,000 word treatise “Jazz contrafacts or whatever’* that one can view above. I can say the panel will not include Herb Wong (deceased), Danny Scher (in South America, traveling) nor Ted Gioia (stuck in Dallas, but gave me another 22 minutes of encouragement and info yesterday). Gioia has a son at Stanford, a classmate of that young organ player from Los Altos.

* try: Jazz time travels or jazzscribe contrafacts: from full faith and credit to fregulia and back

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Dick Allen for HOF

unless my wires are crossed today, this is the same photo I used for the poster

unless my wires are crossed today, this is the same photo I used for the poster

William C. Rhoden in the Times Sunday “Weighing the Complexity of a Hall Candidate, and His Times” states that Dick Allen was the first black to play for AAA Little Rock, and Orval Faubus threw out the first pitch? And he went on to be the 1972 AL MVP nine years later, despite the spiritual beaning he had to endure?

That alone gets my vote.

(Also, in 1999, I used a photo Richie Allen or Dick Allen from his White Sox days, from I think a 1974 Sport Magazine calendar I had saved 25 years, for a show involving Pansy Division, the Peechees, The Electrocutes (aka The Donnas) and J Church -although Kemura from Japan filled for the ailing Lance Hahn and company, although Lance hung side stage nonetheless; actually his illness might not have presented yet, but merely personel problems–yes, there was some kind of sublet joke between the all-gay headliners and the phallic nature of the baseball player and photo, he of the big stick and all that).

If this poster is not posted above I will swede it in later today. Please vote for Dick.

and1: this has nothing to do with a private joke between Ken Dauber, who is being sworn in as PAUSD trustee Tuesday his wife and I and a reference to Mel Brooks. Don’t let your dauber down, ken. And its not often that someones wife says I was thinking exactly what you were thinking. Another version: Ken’s not hens’.

and1:
The Golden Era Committee of the National Baseball Hall of Fame rejected all 10 candidates on its ballot Monday, denying election to former players like Dick Allen, Tony Oliva and Gil Hodges.

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RELATED COVERAGE

Dick Allen of the Phillies in 1964, when he hit .318 and was the N.L. rookie of the year. He is one of 10 finalists on the Hall of Fame’s Golden Era ballot.Sports of The Times: Weighing the Complexity of a Hall Candidate, and His TimesDEC. 6, 2014
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Allen and Oliva received 11 of the 12 votes necessary for election from the 16-member panel. Jim Kaat drew 10 votes, Maury Wills 9 and Minnie Minoso 8. (I generally chat with Gerardo the Cuban barber at Cardinal Hotel and in fact want to offer to swap him a duplicate Minnie Minoso for a haircut valued at $23, but did not the day I met Jordan Williamson).

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