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.
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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

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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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St. Ignatius Upsets Marin Catholic Football

I first wrote to Ron Greene’s blog because he posted some skeptical comments about Palo Alto’s Downtown Streets team being duplicated or syndicated to Marin. Here I posted on his coverage of Marin Catholic Football, recent victims of the marauders from across the bridge, the SI gang:

I have a Dartmouth classmate, Brian Stretch, who was an SI quarterback back in the day (1982) and is now a U.S. attorney, I think for Marin County. Also another Dartmouth footballer of our day, Greg Hulbert sent his boy recently to SI and not nearby Serra.

I am writing about Gunn of Palo Alto football for the Palo Alto Weekly, but under a pseudonym Sphinx Fitzwater II because I am running for public office and the Weekly does not want me getting too much unfair name recognition.

Also: have you seen the Hollywood version of De La Salle football, “When the Game was Tall”? very inspiring film even for us Philistines, relatively speaking.

Ron Greene's avatarRon Greene's Blog

Marin County | California

St. Ignatius staged a convincing 21-14 victory over rival Marin Catholic last Saturday, something that doesn’t often happen. Coupled with a loss to Cosumnes Oaks two weeks ago, this was the first time since 2007 that the Marin Catholic Wildcats went down back-to-back.

Our local newspaper noted that this defeat broke a streak of 32 home victories going back to 2010. From my position behind the camera, it looked like quarterback Darius Peterson (7) was the only Wildcat on the field. He threw for 102 yards and two touchdowns, and added 108 running yards. A one-man show, his milage wasn’t enough to manage a victory against his school’s San Francisco rivals. Peterson’s teammates added just 17 yards to the day’s totals.

Clearly he’s going to need more help if the Wildcats stand a chance next Friday against the Heritage Patriots of Brentwood.

Many more photos are at VarsityPix.com

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Palo Alto’s poker politics

Steve Cohen is a dear friend, and fellow Gunn alumnus, and an Oracle staffer, Stanford grad, son of a famous math professor. He helped edit my ballot pamphlet statement, as he did in 2009.

He is an avid poker player and we talked today about poker mindset vis a vis the election and Palo Alto politics per se.

He recommends a book called Cowboys Full by McManus — “cowboys” being poker slang for “kings”. The book has a chapter about U.S. politicians and their proclivity. I said that Richard Nixon was a poker player and Steve added that Nixon financed his first campaign thru poker winnings.

Palo Alto has a poker champion named Phil Hellmuth. I spoke to him briefly this afternoon, although, in truth, he was more in the mode of fending off approaches from fans than schmoozing. If he was impressed by anything I said, he had a poker face and did not show it. Of course, if he really wanted to be alone, he might not have worn his 3Bet gear. (Steve said that he wore that in a hamburger commercial, as well; Steve is raising me).

“Palo Alto needs some poker mentality on its dias. A little math, a little moxie, a litte luck,” I said.

“You are preaching to the chorus,” World Champion Phil Hellmuth replied. I gave him my card and suggested that he read “Plastic Alto” and then might possibly vote for me come Nov. 6.

In truth, I was bluffing. I have read about poker, and discussed it with Steve, but am not a poker player. If, for instance, Phil Hellmuth put up a $10,000 stake and had up to 12 of us candidates for City Council play off for prize money, I doubt I would win. Maybe with a little coaching from Steve, and about three weeks to prep, I could make a dent; that’s how I think, the liberal arts / lifelong learner / Dartmouth guy / Titensity mind-set.

I am more about “All The Kings Men” by Robert Penn “Red” Warren than Cowboys Full, although even here, I am bluffing a little: I have James D. Hart’s companion to literature and have not, as I keep claiming I will eminently do, re-read the text. I also have, in my pocket, Sherwood Anderson’s “Winesburg, Ohio”. I have a pocket pair of good books to read, by November 4, if you will. (And definitely don’t cheat by watching the movies. Or if you do, the Gregory Peck as Jack Burden version is significantly better than the Sean Penn re-make).
Like me here in the 94304, Jack Burden is “a newspaperman and ‘student of history’ in search of the truth”(Hart, 1986, page 13). In “Winesburg…” from 1919, George Willard is a young reporter who also sought truth: “It was the truths that made the people grotesques…The moment one of the people took one of the truths to himself, called it his truth, and tried to live his life by it, he became a grotesque and the truth he embraced became a falsehood.” This post is about poker, but most of my cards are books. (Sherwood Anderson, p. 6)

When I am not pondering the poker, vote, I am making more progress with the votes of: basketball, arts, elderly, Gunn graduates, Dartmouth grads, residentialists.

Besides potentially a crash course of poker, when I am not campaigning or working on my day job (music management and concert production — free show with Taylor Ho Bynum at Lytton Plaza, September 20, 1 p.m. Saturday — I hope to swim my laps 20 more times by November 4.

Although by some estimation I am trailing in this race, I hope to crack it on the river.

(Phil Hellmuth poker book)

(Cowboys full)

(All the Kings Men)

(Winesburg Ohio)

(James D. Hart Oxford Companion to American Literature; there is a sixth edition, 20 percent more pages than my 5th:

edit to add: according to either James McManus or his readers/reviewers, President of the United Status (POTUS) Barack Hussein Obama also plays a little poker. McManus teaches writing at the Art Institute of Chicago.

Sean Penn plays Willie Stark, the Broderick Crawford role, while first John Ireland and then Jude Law play the character I identify with, the reporter Jack Burden. I was thinking of his portrayal of Atticus Finch some 12 years later when I mentioned Peck, who was in “To Kill A Mockingbird” a book by Harper Lee made into a movie, which was being taught at Gunn this fall and read by my friend Sam Rothstein the football star. K? I’m out.

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Veterans art panel

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Ehren Tool, September, 2014 Palo Alto

Ehren Tool, September, 2014 Palo Alto

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Let my dog pee where the app and property rights (Ventura Park)

Let our dogs pee, at new park in the Ventura District

Let our dogs pee, at new park in the Ventura District


Not to be baited too easily, and I do note that my relationship with Dr. Levy is experiencing a type of glasnost, I worry that when people say “property rights” they are somehow commingled with the “corporations are people” crowd, which I admit, includes the majority of the Roberts court.

Do you mean that a pile of gold, for example, which weighs 10 ounces has a “right” to grow to be a pile of gold someday weighing, for instance 20 ounces?

I spoke to a Tim Steele of The Sobrato Organization the other day on the instant matter of the 15-acre parcel in Ventura and he seemed to be in that exact camp, that the purported $80 million his firm spent on that land — and the lease of Fry’s — seems to have its own right to become, for instance, a $500 million property if he or they build 500 homes there, such that he seemed taken aback that a mere citizen, one of only 60,000 such entities, would imply that it is not inevitable, this growth or alchemy. But I say the opposite, that if enough voters (maybe 20,000 of us here) choose via the Democratic process a pro-resident and in the instant case a pro-Parks council, with five of nine seats at play, so to speak, that indeed we could have some input and maybe if not 15 acres than how about 8 acres of park and maybe something the size of Villa Torino in St. James Park (Sobrato built and manages or owns)?

As it stands and in the current real estate rout they are probably figuring on 500 homes and a patch a grass suitable for one dog to pee on, by appointment. There’s probably an app for that: Let My Dog Pee Where?

Did I mention I am running for Palo Alto City Council, and this discussion came out of Our Palo Alto scoping meeting at Elks Lodge some months ago, Dr. Levy and I in same “scope”?

and one:

If I was Leland and not Steve Levy, I would write a song parody about a dog’s right to pee, based on the Negro Spiritual “Go Down Moses”:

When Spaniards were in Ohlone land,
Let my Frida pee…
etc

(Frida was our beloved Cocker Spaniel who was deaf and blind but could navigate Downtown North and Johnson Park by an uncanny sense of smell, and did, several times a day, relieve her bladder on public and sometimes discretely private lands, such as tree-lawns in front of houses).

Maybe I will write the rest of this, in honor of 2019 the 250th anniversary of Portola finding El Palo Alto, and sing it at council, although I am not Paul Robeson. I skew younger than Leland Levy, however.

And it is true that I am doing a be-baited-and-switch in that when I heard from Steele of Sobrato, he had been flipped my call, apparently by Chase Lyman his associate and the former St. Francis, Cal and NFL receiver, to whom I had left a message suggesting that a park in Ventura could, for instance be a home to the venerable Palo Alto Knights pee-wee (!) football organization, and then here I switch to dog lovers not football…My bad. Woof. Woof.

Interestingly, Tim Steele I reference, senior development for Sobrato, in 2000 was in outreach for City of San Jose and worked on a Sobrato project there, for the public sector (sort of like our Steve Emslie revolving door to a land use lobbyist). As Hunter S. Thomsons said, when the going gets tough, the weird turn pro:

From SJ Business Journals archive, 2000:

Cisco will build its 6.6 million square feet across the street; and once they get started, then I’m sure the market pressures will be in [John Sobrato’s] favor,” said Tim Steele, manager of corporate outreach for the San Jose Office of Economic Development.

And this fits perfectly in my blog’s coverage of these types of things, if not in Levy’s or Bill Johnson’s wheel-house.

I am suggesting we look into a large park in Ventura District, on land that Sobrato reportedly bought for $80M.

My gold piles story was rhetorical. But yes elements are elements, people are people, and neither piles of gold nor corporations should have the rights of people.

I think equating the rights of the 1 Percent to make the greatest profit with the Civil Rights of blacks is pretty insulting, to all of us.

I’ve also said and will continue to say that leadership here should be brokering a deal with the owners of Buena Vista mobile home park, despite a gag order issued by city attorney Molly Stump, telling us to not talk about it.

Other than that, thanks, Stev,e for this week’s Talmud lesson and good luck next week, Shavuah tov.

Remind me, did Solomon suggest we split the baby or did he yank out its teeth so that his descendants could sell them on EBay,?

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Zipcar and corporate creep

Zipcar means the loss of 10 parkings spots, two here at Lot N Lytton Plaza and further erosion of the distinction between public sector and our corporate colonizers, thanks to Nancy and Jim

Zipcar means the loss of 10 parkings spots, two here at Lot N Lytton Plaza and further erosion of the distinction between public sector and our corporate colonizers, thanks to Nancy and Jim


My first reaction to seeing public lands and mind-share and resources given to a private car company is that this is further example of Palo Alto being a dupe of the corporate sector.

Sorry Nancy, Jim and unnamed corporate lieutenant.

Palo Ato Mayor and candidate for election Nancy Shepherd, City Manager Jim Keene and unnamed corporate clone trysting for the sake of the One Percent, at the expense of We The People. Keep it zipped, dudes!

Palo Ato Mayor and candidate for election Nancy Shepherd, City Manager Jim Keene and unnamed corporate clone trysting for the sake of the One Percent, at the expense of We The People. Keep it zipped, dudes!

I shot a picture of parking spaces in our lot before I got this message from the city.

Let’s keep the public sector public and not fertile grounds for corporate encroachment. Or, why not purchase our own fleet of car share vehicles? Again, why spend $1.7 million on a consultant to undermine our General Plan / Comp Plan — think of all the other better ways we could spend our tax dollar.

Zipcar is owned by Avis, by the way. They try harder, so that their corporate One Percent owners can eat that many more lobster salads while million of Americans are poor or hungry.

edit to add: Wow this is post 888 on Plastic Alto!!!!!!!!

further:
they say:
Along with the new Zipcars, the City is also looking to technology to help alleviate some of the parking problems downtown, and is soliciting proposals on two new parking technologies that could improve occupancies in City-owned parking garages. The goal is to make more spots available, and reduce the number of times drivers have to circle the block looking for a place to park.

we say:
No, that is 15 fewer parking spots for We The People or our customers and tax-base adding payers. If you want to put this thing at 135 Hamilton, let’s talk.

edit to add: so far, after 36 posts, PAW readers are 2-to-1 against this:
I find this problematic on several grounds, as others have stated above, and call it “corporate creep”.

I would rather not have spent, for example $1.7 million to undermine our current General Plan / Comp Plan and maybe, after a study or discussion and not secret meetings, we could have bought or own 10 cars to share. What about the idle black and white? Maybe they can shuffle us to soccer practice and the market. With little brown not pink mustaches.

Nancy and Jim: zip it with your corporate trysts!

edit to add, the next day: Nancy Shepherd, our mayor, wrote me back to say, among other things, that this was voted on by council and therefore not part of a “secret meeting”. Nancy is having her kick-off event today for her bid for re-election.

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My 12 picks: Stanford, Northwestern, Army, Missouri, Vanderbilt, Michigan State, Schauer, New Mexico, Michigan, Texas, UCLA and UTEP

Devon Cajuste at Lytton Plaza, August, 2014: a serious baller, curious about the congo drummers downtown, hoping to build on his 5 touchdowns and record 22.9 yards per catch and go pro, don't we all have such dreams?

Devon Cajuste at Lytton Plaza, August, 2014: a serious baller, curious about the congo drummers downtown, hoping to build on his 5 touchdowns and record 22.9 yards per catch and go pro, don’t we all have such dreams?

I am not actually a gambler nor do I advocate such. I picked 11 teams plus the Democratic challenger for the gubernatorial seat of Michigan, Mark Schauer just as an experiment. It is more like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern picking a coin flip 10 times straight* for surrealist effect than Jimmy the Greek with a tout.

I am trying hard to appreciate football this fall, as an escape from my ordinary obsessions.
(And let me interject with a shout out to Butch “Make it Look Easy” Veazey who led the 1972 Mississippi Rebels with 8 touchdown receptions, most of which from Norris Weese my distant cousin. He is in his 23rd year coaching high school and Baptist football players in the Southern Theatre of conflict).

Stanford home at USC, Stanford favored by 4. I am still recalling Mr. Howard Evans, father of my 5th grade buddy Brian “Bubba” Evans driving a bunch of us to games in the old family wagon. Thanks, Mr. Evans! I saw Bub the other night at our Fantasy Football league draft, as well as former Fremont Hills playground legends Todd Kjos and Noel Kidd. I met Zlotnick in the fifth grade, at Beth Am, but did not play with or against him until 8th grade flag football where Sturiale to Zlotnick on a post and go was a big winner. I ought to be able to hear if Hogan’s Heroes find pay dirt, but doubt I will find the time or bandwidth to take in the game, either at Terry’s, the Oak Creek common room or knot-holing from here on Ramona, outside the Old Pro. (I am taping for future not-viewing). One of these days I will surprise myself and sneak into a game. I realized that I may never have the joy of pulling up to the fields outside and Eucalyptus groves with a payload of lads. Oh, well. I briefly thought of rousing my own Pops from his blissful weekend rest; we may still make it to an A’s game this year. Maybe 9/18 Rangers or 9/24 Angels, both matinees). I did meet Devon Dejuste at Lytton Plaza, both of us taking conga lessons from “Mike the Drummer”. Will try to post that.

Northwestern home over Northern Illinois. I’m from Chicago, plus I visited Noah Metz there in 2009; we had Himalayan cuisine and watched a bike race. Noah is a decent piano player and took some notes on John Ellis’ then-unpublished cd, the one recorded in Brooklyn that ended up on Hyena. I can probably post some photos of that campus visit.

(I didn’t pick anyone in Purdue versus Central Michigan yet caught one play on tv, a CM guy returning a pick six; Purdue features a Gunn grad as a walk-on, Sean Lydster).

Army over Buffalo. Patriotic fervor over animal rights. I should try to catch a minute of this in case I do make it to Stanford hosting Cadets next week.

Missouri over home Toledo. My cousin Laurie Blumfield married Greg Moats a big Mizzou fan and their son — also my cousin — Ryan RyMo Moats was a walk-on at Mizzou but didn’t last too long. On field. In classroom he has an engineering degree and works in construction development in St. Louis. So I tend to root for the Tigers and dream of visiting Columbia someday in the family motor home traveling tailgate machine.

And in fact Ryan’s sister, also my cousin, Jenny Moats was a Vandy cheerleader so I do lean in sometimes to their games and therefore pick Vanderbilt plus the 20 points at LP Field (where? %) against Ole Miss, despite my weird deep south knowledge of Weese-to-Veazey — it was mentioned in my first year of receiving Sports Illy, when I was 8.(Missouri wins 49-24 – W)

Michigan State Spartans plus 12 at Oregon. Since having met the scrappy Democratic challenger and Albion College grad Mark “Rhymes with shower” Schauer I have been channeling a lot of Great Lakes State stuff. So despite having sat thru a fun first half of Gunn game last night with Cubberley 1979 and Gunn parent Brent Baird, who was wearing a Duck jersey and cap, I am going with the Lansing gang. Gunn by the way had a player named Forrest Bubba Larson, which reminds me and probably others of Bubba Smith, the Spartan (and later Colts) legend. I also have my David Raynor Cooker Perkins story, about watching MSU at Old Old Pro (on Pepper) with the then-fiance of the future NFL kicker. And it turns out that Rob Lederer pka Rob Craig and Number Nine (or Numba Nine) actually featured at Cubberley circa 1998 Dayna Stephens the 35 year old sax player who was only 16 at the time and doubled on Rob’s vocals, he and I just deduced the other day, while hanging at the Oakland Museum. God speed to Dayna in his upcoming procedure. (Oregon covers, 46-27 L)
Schauer Headshot Web (1)Dayna also gave me the skinny on his recent trip to Detroit Jazz festival and Red Sea Festival in Elat, Israel. Apparently Miles Davis recorded a 1949 song called “Israel”. Or am I out of bounds? I think one foot college style is better than two feet NFL style but overall I am about women’s college lacrosse where you can go past the sidelines as long as the defense is still pursuing, I have adapted as a literary style. Any body?

And this is a good a place as any to amend in my head and now here the dispatch I sent to Keith Peters last night about the excellent Gunn 20 San Mateo 27 tilt. I said Gunn was not so much out-played as out-archetyped, in that our “Riggins 1983 Super Bowl” run was matched by their “Steve Young versus Vikings” run plus a Larry Csonka or really Bronko Nagurski. When I paraphrased Shinichi Hirano as saying Gunn failed to execute I meant in both figurative sense of clearly touching down the ball in end zone for a winning score and in the sense of more literal and perhaps too explicit “kill shot”. They had the Bearcats on the ropes, so to speak, but could not knock them out. It was 18 or 17 versus 45 so it was pretty close to a draw. And I was worried about my friend Sam Rothstein playing linebacker at 5’11” 195 going up against Watson Filikitonga (rhymes with Csonka) who is 6’2″ 230. He did pull down that load a couple times as well as a td-saving near-horse-collar drag down of either Austin Perez or maybe Line Latu. Sam dislocated a finger on very first play but got close to his normal minutes nonetheless. If his brother Michael reaches 140 pounds by his sophomore year – if he goes to Gunn, he is now at Jordan — the hand of Saturn will reach out and Titanize him for Gunn grids. I recall Michael at age 5 (and 60 pounds) wanting to 1 v. 1 one me in soccer in his family’s yard, me at about 200 and clumsy. Noah Riley of Gunn at 5’9 145 had quite a command of the troops, so to speak. Baird told me that there is a family of coaches in his tree. And,not to digress, he said that Bob Melvin’s cousin went to Cub and is an NFL assistant coach, latched to Andy Reid via their mutual SF State days. I believe that, close enough for Plastic Alto and upon further review in the suss-injuns. (Central Michigans are Chippewa I learn, speaking of the how and howl).

Great segue and I am by the way wearing my Cody Sanderson Navaho Silver cuff today to New Mexico and 25 versus Arizona State. Wish I was there — I am four years late for a meeting with Jody Naranjo my partner in Pueblo Girls rock band. (ASU covers 58-23, L)

Michigan where my mom matriculated in 1951 and 5 at Notre Dame — the Michigan theme here is to help Mark Schauer take back that state from the evil right-winger Snyder.(Their mother but not mine spanked them but not me, 31-0 so that’s another L on my forehead, and a reminder to visit my mother)

Texas over BYU, even though Gunn current parent Sweat has a boy there, perhaps also a former Titan gridiron stalwart. And am enjoying Stone Parker Broadway soundtrack if that fits here and is not offensive.(BYU rolls 41-7, as Austinites have another round at the Continental, listening to Jon Dee Graham, L)

UCLA hard to cover over Memphis, because it is my tax dollars at work and in respect of Dr. Lorrie Frankel their former center and father of Gunn stalwart (and onetime Dartmouth rugby ringer) Eli Frankel. Lorrie told me of his days playing behind Dave Dalby the eventual Super Bowl champ with Raiders. They were centers. He is now a retired Stanford pediatrician but still working, in SF. He is most probably at the game (the Stanford game, I meant — meanwhile UCLA won 42-35 but probably an L for failing to cover).

UTEP and 20 hosting Texas Tech Red Raiders. Someday in El Paso to practice my Spanish, eat enchiladas and “song-catch” stories about the Bear, my teammates coach Don X and Kent Lockhart, who is down under but probably aware of “gridiron” as he now calls it. Football was Kent’s first love but when the 7th graders of Wilbur beat the 8th graders, in 1977, he knew his fate was rounder ball not spheroid and that has made all the difference, and very much like a Stoppard or Sam Shepherd story, directed by Baz Luhrman.(Texas Tech eeks it out or slides by like an eel as the spellchecker suggests but 30-26 helps anyone who actually bet on the game with a bookie, and for me a humble W)

Also: go see “When the Game was Tall” which I hope to take it, again, with the Rothsteins. Did I mention my recent stroll on Bellarmine campus and only recalling the grotto? The Sam Liccardo Center.

Did I mention Chris Strausser at Washington assistant coach for offense and o-line, moving over from Boise State with Chris Peterson? Chris was 3rd team all SCVAL at quarterback when Jim Harbaugh was 1st team, in 1981 season. Baird somehow knew that a family friendship with John Ralston somehow catalyzed the Strausser path.

My buddy since 7th grade but never actually a Titan teammate, Chris Strausser, our answer to Jim Harbaugh at QB, now a coach in Pac-12 with Washington, on tv, in Hawaii.

My buddy since 7th grade but never actually a Titan teammate, Chris Strausser, our answer to Jim Harbaugh at QB, now a coach in Pac-12 with Washington, on tv, in Hawaii.

Speaking of Michigan but not very football: good on you, Lessa Bouchard of Detroit and your show upcoming at Dragon Theatre in Redwood City, which I hope to check out and maybe eat before or after with friends at Helena Sol’s Quinto Sol. Will update with the actual name of her production. A Moment Unbound.

Lessa Bouchard, yard sale Downtown North, Labor Day, 2014: Michigan's gift to Palo Alto arts scene

Lessa Bouchard, yard sale Downtown North, Labor Day, 2014: Michigan’s gift to Palo Alto arts scene

where did photo of devon cajuste go?

also: add photo of mark schauer from his website and link

*in Tom Stoppard’s 1966 play, Rosencrantz correctly picks heads 92 straight times: if I pick all 12 here, vote for me, and Schauer. If I pick 92 straight, head for the hills! Coin, coincide. The more people view an event, the more real it becomes?!

& LP Field is in Nashville, home of Tennessee Titans and today’s Vandy Ole Miss clash; LP is Louisiana Pacific building supplies — think wood, lumber — formerly of Portland Oregon moved to Nashville and actually came out of breakup of GP Georgia Pacific in the 1970s, although do think “long playing” music not football if you read enough Plastic Alto, or know the guy from Shellac.

Former Earthwise intern and analyst Noah Metz (Gunn, Northwestern) Evanston, 2009

Former Earthwise intern and analyst Noah Metz (Gunn, Northwestern) Evanston, 2009

edit to add the next day: Good luck, Noah on your new house! Smaller than LP field but bigger than my man-cave, so Law’s gain is music’s loss. I got 3 W’s at most and 8 L’s which I guess is a good thing for a jazz manager, sports writer and politician in waiting. But don’t take my word on Mark Schauer for Governor of Michigan, check out his website for yourself, or fly out to Detroit on Halloween for about $600 on Southwest if you are super-curious or psyched.

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Of haps and hap tics

1. I ran into my Oak Creek neighbor Serkin at Farmer’s Market and gave him my only Weiss for Council pin, from 2012.

New York Times article about robotics, Stanford byline, by John Markoff: “Brainy, Yes, But Far From Handy: Software Aims to Clear Hurdle To Robots Working with Humans, (9/2/14) backed with Stanford Theatre, upcoming September 20 and 21, “Dinner at Eight” (1933, George Kukor, written by George S. Kaufman or based on his Broadway play, features line, by Kitty (Jean Harlow) You know, I read a book the other day. It’s all about civilization or something — a nutty kind of book. Do you know that the guy said that machinery is going to take the place of every profession?

I saw my neighbor Serkin at Farmer’s Market and gave him my only campaign button, made by Terry Acebo Davis and Rob Syrett. I mistook him for a professional piano player — back when Oak Creek had a piano. Supposedly WORKS Gallery in San Jose a cachet of my buttons — we originally or she originally made about 100. They were part of an art installation in 2012; Joe Miller would know.

What is the Kurzweil theory? The convergence? (When computers or AI surpass humans, like when Big Blue could beat chess masters). Compared to Grey goo, when little bits of lab fabs replicate themselves and take over the world (subject of a movie “Welcome to Dopeville” by a former Dead camera-man Len D’Amico)

J. Kenneth Salisbury and Sonny Chan robotocists
see also Fast Cheap and Out of Control, Errol Morris featuring Rod Brooks of MIT

virtual surgery with haptics, mimic the sensations of touch in a computer simulation

Of haps and haptics

other movies of note:

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