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Politics : Ask Michael Burke -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Knighty Tin who wrote (94326)2/2/2002 3:43:47 PM
From: Kapusta Kid  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 132070
 
Michael, good news. Penn should win the Ivy title in hoops.

I've never been much of a hoops fan, but I got over to Princeton last night to meet my Columbia roomie for the B-ball game. Princeton is currently leading the conference, but from what I saw, the Quakers should not have much trouble (despite a road loss to Harvard, whom Princeton has already beaten at Jadwin). Last night's game was a horror show on several levels. The Blue led 25-12 with 5 minutes left in the half (you read that right), then Princeton rolled to cut the deficit to 26-20 at intermission. The Tigers kept it going and put on something like a 17-2 streak to begin the 2nd half, but Columbia cut it to 43-41 with under 2 minutes to play. There was a very bad goal-tending call against us, and our coach was hit with a technical for arguing a 10-second violation. His point was that only 9 seconds had elapsed on both the game clock and the 35-second clock when the whistle blew -- he was correct, of course. But that's Columbia sports -- after nearly 40 years, I'm accustomed to heart-breaking, gut-wrenching losses.

What was really awful was the way the game was played. You've probably seen Princeton once or twice under Pete Carill. Well both the Princeton and Columbia coaches played for Carill and both (John Thompson, Jr. and Armand Hill) adopted his style. It's probably impossible to imagine more boring basketball. Take the air out of the ball? These guys fileted it. Also, in my day, players like Bill Bradley and Jim McMillan were around. Despite not being a hoops fan, I'm relatively certain that I didn't see any future NBA types last night. Anyway, go ahead and make your bets on Penn -- they're a lock.

So much for girly sports.

I did manage to enjoy another visit to Princeton on Wednesday. The Columbia rasslers beat the Evil Empire in a more manly sport. And the dual meet came down to the final match, making for more excitement -- and satisfaction. Makes me want to go down to the basement and lift again, although I'm not scheduled for that until Monday. I'm wondering if an attitude like this is healthy for a near-geezer like me.<G>

Oh, yeah. The Quakers are the class of Ivy wrestling, too. Columbia's up there tonight, but enough's enough, and PHA is not that easy a trip for me. Penn's ranked #8 nationally in duals, right behind Oklahoma and Oklahoma St. Big 10 teams are 1-4.



To: Knighty Tin who wrote (94326)2/2/2002 9:08:00 PM
From: JHP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 132070
 
Jesus Makes The Point Spread
Forget that enlightened-soul BS. You really want
to get in touch with God, you watch pro
football
By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist
Friday, February 1, 2002
©2002 SF Gate

URL:
sfgate.com



Praise Jesus and pass the Funyuns, the Lord does
love His football.

Basketball? Occasionally. Baseball? Sometimes,
but insufficient violence and something like 782 games
per season
breeds enormous heavenly boredom. Plus there's
all that spitting.

But while the seraphim have been known to get a
little raunchy after too much Bud Light at Red Wings
games and the
Dalai Lama has a little harmless Man U fetish and
everyone knows Satan loves nothing better than a
little televised PGA
tour to lull the nation into a khaki stupor,
Jesus with an Astroturf Bible, the Creator really
cranks on the football, baby.

Just look. There's Rams QB and noted Jesus maniac
Kurt Warner with his epically-coiffed missus, gushing
to reporters
like he just witnessed the Resurrection out there
on the field as he openly thanks Christ for a game
well played, for
passes received, for the inner fortitude to
scramble out of the pocket and avoid the crushing
sinful blows of his
depraved opponents who dare to try to part the
waters of his sacred offensive line or disrupt his
holy passing game.

There are terminally annoying athletes like Deion
Sanders or Cris Carter or untold other defensive
tackles and wide
receivers and sundry placekickers, pumping their
fists and hastily making the sign of the cross when
they snag a
wobbly endzone pass or slam the QB for a nice
concussion or split the uprights from 45 yards out or
get off on a
misdemeanor after getting busted with an 8-ball
of premium Colombian blow at the MGM Grand in Vegas.
Yes! Jesus is
with me!

There's the bulk of just about any NFL team in
the league, huddling around in testosterone-thick
prayer meetings
before and after the game like clusters of
Promise Keeper rejects on steroids, the coach or maybe
a special self-taught
preacher-slash-running back-slash-rehab candidate
leading the team in a fervent supplication, invoking
God and
Corinthians and Moses and whatever else and
everyone having total pious faith that they'll kick
the living crap out of the
Redskins before the bye.

And God, He just can't wait for the Super Bowl.
He's got the Rams giving the points, but given how
He's All-Knowing
All-Seeing He's also got even money on the Pats
to cover His holy ass, so He's good. This is what God
does. He
watches a ton of football. Jesus makes the dip.
Jesus makes a wicked-good onion dip.

Super Sunday, the teams will be praying like
they've never prayed before. Kneepads will be touching
Astroturf, very
large heads will be bowed, huge undereducated men
in tights beseeching the Almighty to please please
please not let
their knee blow out again before the fourth
quarter and please please please let them get a decent
tackle in on national
TV that they can leverage come contract-renewal
time because they could sure use that extra $4 mil and
that Nike
endorsement.

I suppose it all hearkens back to the Romans,
that glorious and righteous time when good upstanding
Christians were
nothing more than tasty and deliciously pious
snacks for angry lions, praying vehemently to be
spared the glorious and
bloody ripping-to-shreds that awaited them in
front of the WWF-- er, Colosseum crowds.

Or perhaps it's all got something to do with the
eerie similarities between church and sports arena,
both towering
overlit cathedrals full of bombast and violence
and homoerotics and stories of bloody wartime glories
long past, of
pious and self-righteous battles yet to come,
wars yet to be declared invoking His name, the USA
Imperialists versus
the Swarthy Evildoers and you just *know* who God
favors.

This is religion, American-style. Football and
antediluvian athletic prowess and war and good versus
evil and really
nothing at all about divine growth of the soul or
nuanced spiritual connection or finding God in
yourself, deeply,
esoterically, a profound and sensual connection
with one's personal spirituality, aiming for
enlightenment and
illumination and subtlety. You know, all that
quiet Eastern crap.

Not when there's 1:52 left and the Niners have a
two-point lead and the Pack has the ball on SF's 40
and it all comes
down to who's prayed more vigorously and who
deserves it more in the eyes of God who by the way is
really sick of
those dumbass Styrofoam cheese hats.

And the fans eat it raw, the Bible Belt in
particular cheering wildly and with zero irony
regarding the scope and breadth
and true concept of religion as a wide receiver
pulls down a TD pass and immediately kneels on the
field and makes
the sign of the cross and points to the sky as if
to say "it's you and me all the way, Jesus!" and all
is righteous and good
with the world because God is all about
ultraviolent sports sponsored by Chevy Trucks and
pisswater domestic beer.

Should we mention the Olympics? Utah? Medal
winners breathlessly thanking Jesus, their parents,
the opportunity to
live their weird and sort of sad, sheltered
little lives, their rare and glorious chance to become
a gleaming footnote in
American sports history, in that order. God has a
thing for luge, by the way. Call it a quirk.

The Olympics, where we can also expect to be
treated to a very different sort of sports-addicted,
slightly creepy God,
one with very special underwear who doesn't touch
that demon alcohol or coffee and actively dislikes you
gay people
and prefers His temples to resemble hideous
knockoffs of the Magic Kingdom but with far more bad
lighting and more
secret dungeons and weird brainwashing practices.
Anyone else read that incredible New Yorker article on
the
Mormons? Amazing. Revelatory. Scary as hell. So
to speak.

Yes, God will be all over the Olympics. He does
prefer football, but the Rams are gonna cream the Pats
and besides,
that whiny little Kurt Warner is really starting
to annoy Him.

Thoughts for the author? Email him.

Mark Morford's Notes & Errata column appears
every Wednesday and Friday on SF Gate, just like a
special magic
bunny of love. He also writes the Morning Fix, a
deeply skewed daily email column and newsletter.
Subscribe at
sfgate.com/newsletters/



To: Knighty Tin who wrote (94326)2/3/2002 9:38:09 AM
From: Kapusta Kid  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 132070
 
Mike, ignore my last post<g>.

I picked up the paper this morning and the basketball score jumped out at me:

Columbia 54 Penn 53

It was Columbia's first win at the Palestra since 1990 and the first by an Ivy team other than Princeton since 1997. It also marks Columbia's 2nd consecutive win over Penn.

But in some cases, the natural order of things prevails: in wrestling, Penn 46 Columbia 0.

So I'm tossing out my hoops prediction and concentrating on rooting against the Evil Empire of Princeton.

Bulldog, bulldog....



To: Knighty Tin who wrote (94326)2/3/2002 12:11:23 PM
From: Knighty Tin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 132070
 
To All, the best mutual fund families from Barron's. I never look at the 1 year rankings because they are not long enough to determine quality. The 5 year and 10 year rankings are the important ones.

American Funds shined through in all the rankings. This is no surprise. Those of us who have worked in the business have always considered them the class act and any time one of our funds outperformed its American Funds counterpart, we cheered.

My two old firms, Van Kampen and Waddell& Reed did very well, ranking 6th and 8th out of 69 (odd number) of fund mgt. cos. for five years. Janus, still coasting on the gambling years, squeezed in between them. Waddell ranked 6th of 24 in the ten year list. Van Kampen wasn't on that list for some reason. Also, another firm I worked for, Fortis, seems to have fallen off the radar screen completely.

Some pretty big names are near the bottom rungs of the five year list: American Express, Aim, Putnam. I think there is big trouble in little china at at least two of these cos. But The Principal has been the worst on the five year list since the Earth was cooling. Odd, when I sent out resumes looking to see if I could find a mutual fund co. that actually wanted to make money, I got several unproductive interviews (they didn't really wanted to make money. They wanted to score high in their Morningstar box), many polite letters saying that shareholders really didn't want "absolute return" and that I needed to upgrade my approach, and one no reply at all. That was Principal. <g>

Every day I am bombarded with how good a certain brokerage firms' money managers are. I have made the comment that most of these schlubs would be booted out of Waddell or Van Kampen for leaving home without their brains. They love me at these meetings. <g> Anyway, the rankings show that I have been overly critical. They are middle of the pack. It's just that I've always worked with the creme de la creme. For example, Pioneer now ranks #2 among taxable bond fund managers. Why? Because they hired Margie Patel, who worked with me at American Capital (Van Kampen is the alias today).

Salami Brothers is actually a very good money manager, but they are nowhere on the list. I guess their number of offerings is too limited.

Anyway, one of those issues of Barron's you can't miss, despite the fact they allowed my nemesis, cub reporter Jon-Jon Laing, to write Abelson's column this week. Oh, how the mighty have fallen. <VBG>