Power to

Seven oh eight on Friday and my car is mis-parked so will rush thru this:

1. Rachelle at Peet’s helped me thru my story about Tracy Turner the Gunn cheerleader circa 1978 and viewing the documentary about Harvey Milk riots, for me, 2009.

2. I told Rachelle of “River’s Edge” Marcy Conrad and Broussard.

3. Post has short story about Oscar murder rap, the South African sprinter.

4. Ray Rice item

5. Henry Ford and Rochelle Ford, at PAHA, say that their inter-racial affair, now in year 50 or so, got them blackballed from the NFL.

6. I showed Fred Mertz my CCS press pass, to cover tonight’s Gunn-Carlmont tilt.

….whooop you!

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Crippled inside by Jacob Jeffries duo at Cogswell Plaza, Palo Alto

hey these kids from new york are pretty good

originals and an old john lennon chestnut, keyboard, guitar and vokes

Jacob Jeffries and Jimmy Powers playing John Lennon

Jacob Jeffries and Jimmy Powers playing John Lennon

Kudos to Ali Williams, Russ Cohen and Stanford Federal Credit Union for a great season. When I ran for City Council in 2009, one of the only things on my platform, in the ballot statement booklet, is that I thought it odd to cut a $20,000 music series, the Brown Bag, from a $100 million budget. So I was glad when five years later it was restored, thanks to privatizing and a sponsor.

edit to add, I posted this under the article about last night’s PATC i did attend mostly:

Or as Ben Folds says, if you can’t draw a crowd, draw dicks on a wall.
(and I actually get paid to do this, more or less)

look it up.

Didn’t catch Commissioner Alcheck’s analogy about the rolled oats lobby relative to the billion dollar building industry here putting tremendous pressure on leadership to build build build. I’d trade rolled oats to dollars to doughnuts that my opinion means dick or in this case big bagel to the powers that be.

I get paid but not as much as the $1.7 million people in Berkeley who are magically helping the ouija board we call the comp plan, or Laura Stetson the consultant to last night’s shin-dig, probably rakes in $1,000 an hour, from Pasadena.

Or, as Randy Newman says, via joe cocker or jacob jeffries: leave your hat on.

–mark weiss reporting from cogswell plaza nooner, forgetting which hat i am wearing today of my several

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Jacob Jeffries, Sun Kings, Deerhoof, Gregg Rolie mix

TAYLOR HO BYNUM OR !TAYLOR HO! FREE CONCERT AT LYTTON PLAZA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2014 1 P.M. PRESENTED BY EARTHWISE PRODUCTIONS RIDE YOUR BIKE TODAYS POST SPONSORED BY

I would think “Helter Skelter” and not “Come Together” would be the theme for this event.

Actually I had spoken to a member of the SF-based art-rock band Deerhoof about possibly doing a show here to dedicate the famous/infamous Bruce Beasley arch here, at Mitchell Park library. Will look into that.

Another one in my dreamcatcher if not in my daybook per se yet: we had Leo Herrera Paly class of 1968 doing his Santana Tribute “Caravanserai” this summer on Cali Ave: what about getting Gregg Rolie, a former Cubberley Student, who was founding member of both Santana Band and Journey, to play Cali Ave next summer when all the construction is finally over.

Also, Greg Brown about a year before he died told me he found in his archives an Old Davis flyer he had designed from that same era, late 1960s. When I called him back, he couldn’t find it. Old Davis, further research shows was a Neal Schon (and probably not Gregg Rolie) project, back in the day.

Also, I ran into Paul De Barros, a Cubberley 1964 recently up at Zot’s. He had rode his bike there from the old family home. He is a jazz writer for the Seattle Times but said that in 1964, “before the Beatles” he was a rock and roll saxophonist, and had his first gig there, in Zot’s (now called Alpine Inn).

To mark that occasion, Tim Harris and I had some burgers that also seemed pre-Beatles, or at least very last week, Billy Corgan.

Jacob Jeffries closes out the PADBID/Ali Williams Cogswell Plaza not just Brown Bags nor Brown Act Naturally nooner null set click to picks today in about a half hour:

I’m having a bahn mi sandwich from Three Seasons not pizza and its Jacob not Charli but check this meanwhile, prompted by Caramanica of the Times:

Deerhoof is the best band that I’ve never seen. I love them I love them I love them but I am afraid to see them, like Schoedinger’s cat or the grecian urn in that I don’t want to wear them out.

or, because there is a tempting full page in the Times, The Beatles in Mono, comp lee set for $199 or 180 gram vinyl

I am zipping over there on either a purple Schwin or an elephant six;meanwhile reads this
Back in September, we reported the (literally) mind-boggling news that Apples in Stereo frontman Robert Schneider had invented a new instrument, the Teletron, that you basically play with your mind. (Or, in Schneider’s own words, it’s “a circuit-bent Mattel MindFlex toy that enables you to play a Moog synthesizer by varying your thoughts.”) Last week, Schneider debuted an original Teletron composition written by Neutral Milk Hotel mastermind and notable recluse Jeff Mangum. (Thanks to James Hindle for the tip.)
In a statement, Schneider explained that he and noise musician Robert Beatty (Hair Police, Three Legged Race, Ulysses) performed Mangum’s Teletron piece with Duke University’s Dr. Marc Sommer during Dr. Sommer’s neuroscience class last week. “Jeff has been generating collage art and experimental music since we were teenagers, so he was a natural composer for the Teletron,” Schneider said. So, how exactly does one go about composing music for something like the Teletron? We’ll let Schneider take this one over:
“A Teletron score is a collage-like sequence of opposing pages, where the right page speaks to the left side of the brain, which is more logical, and the left page speaks to the right brain, the intuitive side. Two opposing images are to be understood by the reader as a single thought or statement. The images are also projected for the audience to view. The melody played by the synthesizers is completely based on the conductor’s thoughts, while Robert and I adjust the Moog filters to taste, each of us playing the role of one side of the brain and reading only one side of the score. Finally, the synthesizers are sent through stereo speakers set up to feed the sounds to corresponding hemispheres of the listeners’ brains.”
As of now, plans for a repeat performance of Mangum’s score, or whether it’ll ever see official release, are “TBD”. Schneider will perform with his Teletron, as well as 3D visuals of the projected images, as “Robert Schneider and colleagues” at the AUX Festival, which goes down next week, May 7, in downtown Athens, Georgia.
Oh, and Jeff Mangum’s playing shows again. No big deal or anything.

six hours later: I do have notes on my lunch with Jacob and Jimmy, but first I promised self I would do 40 minutes trying to update my busy schedule:

At Coupa, 5:10 between the 4 p.m. Regional Housing Mandate update and the 6 p.m. open house for candidates on 7th floor with development staff

At Coupa, 5:10 between the 4 p.m. Regional Housing Mandate update and the 6 p.m. open house for candidates on 7th floor with development staff

Fri, Sept 12:
1. HRC retreat at Art Center 9 a.m. and I wrote I would talk about my recent burg in my bonnet.
2. my Friday breakfast klatch will soldier on without me
3. there may be something about the Gunn 50-years-50-classes reunion, like a pre-game BBQ. Thanks, Marie Miller for trying to keep me loopy I mean in the loop.
4. Gunn hosts Carlmont at 7 and I think I am covering this for the Weekly, having discussed this with Keith Peters (a Gunn 1968) for an hour yesterday. I have a CCS field pass. #149

Sat, Sept 13
Pacific Art League, 1-4 grand opening
Dracula at Stanford Theatre, 6:05 or 8:45 (the Claw is playing Thursday if something falls off my schedule)

Sun, Sept 14
1. Midtown ice cream social, 1-4 p.m. Hoover Park, but for me that’s more like 12:30 to 2:35>>
2. Michael McFaul World Affairs Council talk at residence in Atherton, 2 tix — with my girlfriend the two-term former Palo Alto Arts commissioner Terry Acebo Davis, check in 2:30, program, 3, reception 4:30 — former U.S. Ambassador to Russian, I met a couple times in 1982 and 1983 when he was at Stanford. Will he remember me? mcFaul event flyer
4. Also, check my email for more Gunn activities
or Black Cat 4:50, Dracula 6:05 or 49ers?

Mon, Sept 15
1.City Council 6 p.m. will have to read packet and if I need a break there is>>
2. Casey Turner presents Jacob Jeffries duo at Osteria in SF, 8ish?

Tues Sept 16
Finance Committee 7 pm

Wed Sept 17
Historic Resources Board 8 a.m.
Pace Gallery opening, Menlo Park, 6 to 9 p.m.

Thurs, Sept 18
1. ARB 8:30
2. City School liaison 8:30 nearby
3. Art commission 7 p.m.
4. Charlie Chan in Honolulu, “Sherlock Holmes versus the Creeper” 7:30

Fri

Mon Sept 22
Rotary Club noon at Elks Club on El Camino, candidate debate
organized by Diana Diamond who also has this painting at the Art League show: very colorful stuff! This is a dete:

color by diana or she comes in colors

color by diana or she comes in colors

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Gaspar y yo

A Fiskars blue, not unlike the one that Jack Porterhouse uses

A Fiskars blue, not unlike the one that Jack Porterhouse uses


Steve Staiger, historian, greeted Jack Porterhouse, avid archivist and a whiz with a Fiskars — our version of Edward Scissorhands — and since I happened to be sharing a table with Jack, at Downtown Library — I hit up Steve with my latest whimsy:

I am applying for Historic Resources Board, and would he back my claim that the four week period in October, 2013 in which I was at H-1 (now K-7) every Tuesday, 4-8 and Thur, 1-5 as an ad hoc “junior historian” qualify me for a reserved seat on the board.

He said “sure”.

I am, if you are an avid reader of Plastic Alto you already know, running for City Council, but I figure sitting down and thinking hard — composing thoughts, maybe even some editing — about 1769 to 2014 will do me some good. You also get about 10 minutes in front of 8 and sometimes 9 council members (although it was 8 when I applied for Planning and Transportation Commission a couple clicks ago, as Larry Klein took that time to excuse himself from the room) to let them hear your thoughts.

I wrote a 20,000 word history of jazz here. A copy of which is on file at Palo Alto Historical Association, if you excuse the Bertrand Russell set of all sets reference therein embedded.

2.
And speaking of brevity, brief candles, ironic, iconic or otherwise, last night I set a Politico efficiency record in that I walked into Policy and Standards (a council subcommittee) at 7:01, ascertained in a flash that they were talking about, or as it happened had just concluded talking about — the screen had the name of a large corporation in that realm — “social media’ or “social media strategy” filled out, or half-filled out a card, asked to speak, Greg Scharff of all people set “Let the man speak” to chair Gail Price — and I said gesturing “inch” or “close” with my hands, “I’ll be brief, one minute” and then I approached the mike and said something about how although I was one of the first PAUSD students, back in 1974, at Fremont Hills, to be brought to the district office to use the HP 3000 (or was it HP 2000?), and have been using computers therefore for three-fourths no four-fifths of my life, I actually, in keeping with Jerry Mander and William Davidow, of Mohr Davidow who wrote “Overconnected” about “feedback” think we should be “cautious” with our social media plan. And then I sat down and within 30 seconds concluded that, as Sam Adams would say, there is nothing further at this meeting to advance our country/city, and left. So that’s 1 minute of being heard in 2 minutes of sitting around, compared to Monday night when I spoke twice for 3 minutes a spell in a meeting that started at 6 and went until about 11:30 pm. Comparing 50 percent efficacy of my time to 6 minutes out of 5.5 hours, 330 minutes or less than 2 percent efficacy; so I was more than 20 times as efficient with my time yesterday. And that, rather than a reduction of council from 9 to 7 or elimination of a commission or board would speed up and maybe improve our self-governance. Think fast and be brief. That, and a Weissbier as Eric Rosenbloom and his Palo Alto Forwards are advocating (ok, so Monday was also atypical, in that I was in and out of council and 250 paces to Scotty’s and chugged two biers, a weissbier and something domesticated but you get the idea. It takes longer to explain this than it did to do it. And I have been consistently on record about not playing to the hand of the computers cartel, or to corporate interests too easily. Not to be a (Philip K.) dick.

3. I was going to report on the PADBid meeting. Nice meeting you, Rita Comes (co-mess) Whitney of C is For Craft on Bryant (where PAPAC Nia Taylor works). more TK but first pre-empted thrice by

4.

GRAND JURY REPORT DAMAGE CONTROL BY PRESS AND ESTABLISHMENT

Good point about my imprecise reference to my constitutional rights vis a vis theirs: the Weekly can pretty much say what it wants and tells us that 250 Hamilton is made, like a Wallace Stegner story, out of rock candy, if that will sell ad space and not completely alienate readers.

Pat Burt meanwhile says that when I criticize him, an elected official and public figure — or call him a “pussy bully” that it is slander, and I told him personally, at the Mads Tolling concert that what I do is protected by First Amendment and is not “reckless disregard for the truth…actual malice”. (Ok, I have not actually called him a “pussy” meaning coward or “bully” to his face, and likely will not)

Meanwhile, plot thickens in that apparently I am blacklisted from posting under Jason Green’s article in the Mercury/Daily News.

A review of the recently released ROI documents on 27 University show that Pat Burt was among the leading proponents of the project at the time. My feeling and strong sense — personal observation – -is that further, and perhaps consistent with the problems described in the Grand Jury report — Pat personally would not bear criticism of the plan, and would try to discourage comment. He did this to me, at least. 

So I am not buying his mock-contrition nor do I think he is an appropriate person to write the response. How about Greg Schmid and Alan Davis?

And Tom Jordan, a campaign advisor and friend since at least 2012 but not, so far at least, an endorser of Weiss 2014, said I should lie low on this point until after the Schmid-Burt report, but I think Pat should resign. From that and from Council.

Fair comment?

I will repost this in entirety at my own blog.

I left a vm for Jocelyn trying to get their official position.

at 12:30 and I have to move my car and “red-shift” out of lime but:
I have a riff comparing leadership to NFL John Harbaugh in that they say a lady on the floor gee that’s too bad how she got that but will not suspend the wife-beater thug until someone releases the rest of the tape. Perhaps a bit crass.

edit to add, later that night, while at PATC:

5.
I’ve done dozens of hours of work on the 27 University Ave deal — and made its opposition a point of my 2012 Council campaign — and got nearly 6,000 votes — but have read or written considerably less about the 7.7.

My current thrust is the assertion that beyond a) the secrecy and b) the lack of response there may be, based on my observation c) an attempt to stifle dissent or further investigation at the time the proposal -27 Uni — was on the docket by at least one council member who I say bullied me into not furthering my request or speaking out.

Bill Johnson told me today that he is deleting my posts — at least five so far — because my claim is based on my version of events that happened in a cafe and were not filmed in council chambers so it is my word against the council member, and I countered by pointing out that he has not verified the identity of the 80 or so other posters here beside myself and Sea Reddy (another candidate for council).

Today I verified with a second source on or former council members that my description of the events is consistent with things that have happened to them, that said council member has a habit of bullying not just his inferiors (so to speak) like me but his peers.

So d), we will not get a straight story on this from the Palo Alto Weekly, compounding the problem. They are protecting the status quo and prioritizing that over my rights for example to be treated in a public place with civility or to speak my mind, or dissent.

Be forewarned. Caveat emptor.

I also made a version of this speech tonight at PATC planning in first 10 minutes of that meeting, and will do again Friday at Human Relations Commission Retreat Friday at 9 a.m. at Palo Alto Art center and will keep on repeating this story until the council member apologizes or resigns or is censured. Or I am heard. Dig?

Bless!

6. this has been up for at least 11 minutes now, a record, and I did have a side-bar with GS of the Weekly, who says he appreciates that I use my real name on “town square” their comments forum.
here is the link.

7. the next morning: gone, most of it at least.
someone defended me. I reply:

I am not confused about “bullying” versus “abrupt”, and I have read Sullivan v. The New York Times and Pat Burt has not. Anymore than I would confuse a quick kick with a leg whip, in football terms.

Thanks for voting for me.

At this moment I feel that getting to the truth on this matter is more important than my campaign. I may end up resigning from the race if that is the only way to be taken seriously on this matter (as compared to if someone says I am only doing this to gain attention for my campaign).

I have two sources, people who served with Pat Burt who tell me, so far off record, that I am right and not imaging or exagerating this BULLYING because he has done it to them or they have observed it.

Read Plastic Alto my blog for the content of the six deleted messages.

And maybe we should re-read The Weekly archive on bullying, but also any social issue like domestic violence or rape or abortion rights or gay marriage and figure out if there is a pattern of Bill Johnson edited reality to fit his world view and biases, and bigotry.

I wondered if victims of abuse would think my claim trivializes their’s but maybe the opposite is true: that people who have been victimized in some way, or forced to feel small, will see in me that I feel their pain. That part of me that does make me want to know the name of a panhandler — yesterday, “Chester” — is exactly what the Pat Burts and the bullies of the world seize on, and attack it as a weakness.

We can do better, I said at end of PATC. And someone said, “You sound like ____” (who I endorse).

By the way, see Bryan Stevenson of the innocense project Nov. 6 at Kepler’s I will be there (he enforces Gideon v. Wainwright in states like Alabama where the state gov refuses to follow the law of the land in this land, re right to fair trail, especially for the poor).

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Kathy Aoki detail in Palo Alto

kathyAokiSignDetailIn July, 2011 for Patch I posted a detail of a new sign painted by children but supervised by Kathy Aoki, for the renovated Palo Alto Art Center. (I think it says “Palo Alto Art Center”).

KQED “Spark*” showed their six minute segment from 2007 on Kathy Aoki which made me think of this, and re-posting it here.

I’ve met her, Kathy Aoki several times either in PA or Santa Clara, where she teaches at the University.

She has shown at Smith-Andersen a couple times.

Ok?

edit to add: here is what i wrote . i also mentioned a student journalist named Hannah Park did a better (and more normal, thorough journalistic, not impressionistic) version of covering the opening event):

Mies Van der Rohe said “God is in the details.” Here is a photo of part of a triptych painted mostly by Palo Alto school children Saturday at the ground breaking of the new Palo Alto Art Center. The mural reads PALO ALTO ART CENTER. This photo shows the part of the third “A” plus part of the first “R”.

Speakers, listeners, supporters and ground-movers (literally and figuratively) at the event included Sid Espinosa, Melissa Baten Caswell, Mark Cavagnero, Pat Burt, Lee Caswell, Gail Price, Karen Kienzle, Karen Holman, Yiaway Yeh, Judy Gittelsohn, Linda Craighead, Greg Betts, Darlene Katsanes, Nancy Shepherd (who made a rather rococo paper shovel sculpture) Jack Morton, Jim Keene, Craig and Susie Thom, numerous Foundation board members including Teri Vershel and Roxanne Mehta, Sally Bemus (I think), and Terry Acebo Davis.

Two rather poised teenagers described their experiences as volunteers at the old art center, formerly known as the Palo Alto Cultural Center.

If the rest of the $7.9 million project goes as well as the mural, and ceremony, then we are truly blessed.

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Good luck, Zephyr Teachout in New York

I am running for Public Office in Palo Alto, California.
I am very inspired by Zephyr’s work, as described in The New Yorker and The New York Times. (see “The Crooked and The Dead, by jill lepore)

I was wondering if she would endorse my campaign for Palo Alto City Council.

I am running on a type of reform candidacy. For instance, in two election cycles and 60 days of a third election day, I have not accepted any campaign cash contributions and have not spend any money on my campaign, in sympathy or antipathy with Citizens United and now McCutcheon (I got 800 votes in 2009 and 5,700 in 2012 and need about 8,000 to be seated).

I was the first Palo Altan to urge a repeal of Citizens United (I texted our then Mayor while listening to a Jeff Clements lecture in SF).

Palo Alto is in trouble. A Grand Jury report of June, 2012 concurs with this view, and maybe we need an anti-corruption effort here.

I am a Dartmouth grad (English, but read government, philosophy and history) and a product of local schools here. I lived in Brooklyn for one month in 2001 and visit on business — concert promoter and artist manager.

My blog, Plastic Alto, has about 900 posts, a subset of which comprises 200 articles under a tag “plato’s republic” about policy.

So far the only national figure to endorse me is Matt Gonzalez, a former Green party nominee for Vice President of US.

Good luck today, Ms. Teachout. By the way, we have a Teachout here! (Hi, Star, we need to keep on keeping on with your teen programming suggestion).

I will post this to my blog, in solidarity. Either way, I am rooting for you and look forward to reading more of your work.

Sincerely,

Mark Weiss
candidate, Palo Alto City Council

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Why does Council member Pat Burt remind me of Sam the Sham?

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Matt Gonzalez III w. Beth Bunnenberg

I found this cool Matt Gonzalez for Mayor circa 2005 by Sperry in my flat files recently. Meanwhile as Pat Burt drones on during council study session on traffic parking and zoning, I caught the eye of Historic Resources Board mainstay Beth Bunnenberg sitting across aisle and showed her this triple portrait, she, me in bus window and Commish Ray Bachetti.
IMG_20140822_120437290

IMG_20140823_073317587_HDRedit to add 8 pm Eric Rosenblum spoke to council re retail

Kate downing who lives on Pepper wants tall dense housing

Kate downing who lives on Pepper wants tall dense housing

IMG_20140908_192410387

Oddly I could not discern Rosenblum from Uang who they said had to put her child to bed

Oddly I could not discern Rosenblum from Uang who they said had to put her child to bed

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Coverage of Gunn football by Sphinx Fitzwater II in the Palo Alto Weekly

Gunn football photo by Mat t Maltz class of 1982 which feature coincidentally his son Andrew Maltz, (74)

Gunn football photo by Mat t Maltz class of 1982 which feature coincidentally his son Andrew Maltz, (74)

Despite forging a tie in the fourth quarter, the Titans gave up a late touchdown and dropped a season-opening decision to San Mateo on Friday. The game was moved from the Bearcats’ field, which wasn’t ready to host due to work on their grandstands.

Gunn senior running back Nozo Imanaka burst through the line on fourth-and-1 in the fourth quarter and outran the San Mateo secondary for a 31-yard game-knotting touchdown.

With 2:48 left in the fourth, however, San Mateo’s Watson Filikitonga iced the Titans with a 22-yard burst to give the Bearcats the win.

Gunn played San Mateo even for 43 minutes as Imanaka and fellow seniors Noah Riley (QB), Bubba Larson (RB) and Jared Bibo (RB) kept the game close with an arsenal of moves, jukes, sticks and grit. Larson scored on a 40-yard run to tie the game in the first period and Imanaka added a 21-yard scoring run in the second quarter.

“Our guys made a tremendous effort,” Gunn coach Shinichi Hirano said. “We had 18 guys battling, and they kept battling. They showed a lot of heart”

Other standout Gunn players included Fred Li, Jonah Wager, Etiene Daadi, Dietrich Sweat, sophomore interior lineman Andy Maltz and clutch receiver Sharod Miller.

“This was the best game we’ve seen in two years” said parent, and former player Matt Maltz, who also coaches softball at Gunn.

Gunn hosts Carlmont this Friday in a nonleague game that will serve as a celebration for Gunn’s 50th year of football.

and this is how I wrote it:

San Mateo 27, Gunn 20
at Gunn, Friday night, September 5, 2014

Titans tilted in classy grid clash
By Sphinx Fitzwater II

When Gunn senior running back Nozo Imanaka burst threw the line on fourth and 1 in the fourth quarter and outran the San Mateo secondary for a 31 yard game-knotting touchdown Friday, it reminded some of John Riggins famous gallop in the 1984 Super Bowl. Classy and iconic it seemed to portend happy days for the more typically hapless Titans, who for 43 minutes matched the Bearcats. Moments before, Bearcats co-captain Line Latu uncorked a twisting and traversing run reminiscent of Steve Young against the 1988 Vikings (NFL, not Hod Ray types); the Titans were out-archetyped more than out-played. With 2:48 left in the fourth, however, San Mateo’s Watson Filikitonga (rhymes with Csonka) iced the Titans with a 22-yard burst to give the scoreboard it’s final tally of 27-20 for the visitors.

Imanaka and fellow seniors Noah Riley (QB), Bubba Larson (RB) and Jared Bibo (RB) kept the game close with an arsenal of moves, jukes, sticks and grit.

“Our guys made a tremendous effort” Gunn coach Shinichi Hirano said. “We had 18 guys battling, and they kept battling. They showed a lot of heart”

There was a sequence in the fourth quarter where Gunn appeared to score a touchdown in the east end zone but the referees called them on downs, and then Gunn players felt they had pinned the Bearcats for a safety. But coach Hirano said in a post-game interview that the officiating was less significant than a failure to execute and that, in the end “we ran out of gas”.

My Droid was no Mattch for Maltz' SLR but I did catch the spirit

My Droid was no Mattch for Maltz’ SLR but I did catch the spirit

Other standout players included Fred Li, Jonah Wager, Etiene Daadi, Dietrich Sweat, sophomore interior lineman Andy Maltz and clutch receiver Sharrod Miller.

Gunn hosts Carlmont next week and the “Friday Night Lights” atmosphere should continue as Gunn alumni are organizing a 50-year 50-class reunion around the game.

“This was the best game we’ve seen in two years” said parent, and former player Matt Maltz, who also coaches softball and snapped some photos of the game.

Gunn scoring table:
Larson 40-yard run to make it 6-6 in 1Q (Riley kick)
Imanaki 21-yard run to make it 13-13 in 2Q (kick failed)
Imanaki 31-yard run, to make it 19-20 in 4Q(Riley kick)

Austin Perez played well for Jeff Scheller’s team.

— Palo Alto Online Sports

edit to add: I ran into former 49er stalwart Harris Barton at both Palo Alto farmer’s markets the other day and gave him the elevator pitch about my views on Democracy and citizen engagement.

and:
I am meaning to write about a blog post and potential non-item for SF Chron Gossip Columnist Leah Garchik, the new Herb Caenchik, about Akira Tana the jazz musician and former quarterback for a Gunn SPAL championship team, circa 1970, and the fact that he went to Japan recently and raised money playing jazz for disaster relief and has a new album and new instinctively or thru learning lifelong when I prompted him but did not give it away on how to pronounce the name of the guy from Star Trek, George Takai and deserves a mention for the football-jazz nexus as much as anyone, certainly as much as Eric Hartland of SFJazz fame. No dissin’ Eric, we just sayin’. And is it coincidence or what that Gunn has a Japanese coach and star player today, Nozo and Hirano, questions Mark. Sensei?

outro, Matt Maltz, my 8th grade teammate, photo of Jared Bibo, son of Phil Bibo, of the Franciscan Glass Bibo’s, our classmate at Gunn and maybe Matt’s teammate:

Photo by Matt Maltz THANKS, MATT

Photo by Matt Maltz THANKS, MATT

edit to add, three weeks later: when I finally introduced myself again to Phil Bibo, father of current Titan Jared Bibo (30), he clarified that although he was classmate to both me and Matt Maltz for six years at Terman and Gunn, he was never a teammate, in that he played golf not football or tennis or water polo or hoops. And in the exact moment, after 32, and four games, that I sat with Phil, his son took a kick return 90 yards for a TD. Pretty cool, timing wise! And he came out as a landsman to boot, and told me about Bibo, New Mexico, land of enchantment indeedy.

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Helen Sung West Coast October window

Helen Sung contemplating a West Coast mini-tour and a large bottle of Belgian ale

Helen Sung contemplating a West Coast mini-tour and a large bottle of Belgian ale


The lovely and talented composer and pianist Helen Sung, from Brooklyn and Houston but friend and cousin of Chilombicans worldwide will grace us on the West Coast for a too-scant five day window next month, October 4 thru October 7, with stops in LA at Blue Whale, Yoshi’s Oakland, the Berkeley JazzSchool for a clinic — and I thought there was something at Bach Dancing and Dynamite but they may have been bounced by a force majeur in the passing of Pete Douglas — they have October 4 and 5 as a set of tribute shows featuring 50 musicians. With due respect to Pete — with whom I had a lunch once I fondly recall — I might honor his spirit more by trying to catch up with Helen – – who is a Palo Altan indirectly in that her cousin Juliet Lee is married to Andres Fajardo — the founders of the Chilombican movement: part Chinese, part American, part Colombian.

October 6 is also my dad’s 90th birthday if that portends something dramatic and jazzy, as in Shakespeare when trees fly and strange noises fill the air. Or maybe I am dipping into too deeply my Monk branded Belgian ale.

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