Not his old Self

April 9th, 2008

SAN ANTONIO - Kansas guard Mario Chalmers was the hero of Monday night’s national title victory against Memphis in overtime at the Alamodome.
His three-point shot with 2.1 seconds left in regulation tied the score, 63-63, and gave Kansas the extra time it needed to pull off one of the most memorable comeback victories in NCAA Tournament history.
But the big winner of Monday’s game is going to be Kansas coach Bill Self, who before this tournament wore the label of ”Mr. Can’t Win The Big One.”
This is the same Self who couldn’t get his Jayhawks out of the first round in 2005 and 2006, losing to Bucknell and Bradley.
A bounce here, though, and a shot there, and Self will now be assured.
He can expect to double his salary, maybe quadruple it, build a new home on a lake, all because his player made a life-changing three-pointer and, a week before, Davidson’s Jason Richards missed a three that would have kept Kansas out of the Final Four.
”I don’t think just because a guy makes a guarded shot with 2.1 seconds left [it] makes me any different than if he hadn’t made the shot,” Self said Tuesday morning during a news conference at the Alamodome.
Maybe not, but Self will be a changed man.
The timing on Chalmers’ shot was perfect, but Self’s timing isn’t bad either.
He played for
and graduated from Oklahoma State, where the coach, Sean Sutton, announced his resignation April 1.
That set the stage for the school, backed by bushels-of-money booster T. Boone Pickens, to make a run at Self once Kansas’ tournament run ended.
”I would answer the phone,” Self said. ”Good gosh. I know all those people. I’m not going to lie and say I’m not going to answer the phone. But I certainly wouldn’t answer the phone unless everybody at Kansas knew exactly what was going on.”

sltrib.com


Tags: , , ,

Read full article | 8 Comments »

Speed-Camera Bill Casts A Wide Net in Pr. George's

March 29th, 2008

The deadly crash on Route 210 prompted Sen. James C. Rosapepe (D-Prince George’s) to introduce the Safer Roads Act of 2008. It would not apply to the Capital Beltway and Interstate 95. But it would allow cameras on many more roads in Prince George’s compared with a proposal by Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) moving through the legislature.
The O’Malley bill would allow police departments to install roadside cameras in work areas, school zones and residential neighborhoods in any jurisdiction that wants them but not on major roads.
"All we’re trying to do is make sure that when you come to our county, you obey the speed limit," Sen. C. Anthony Muse (D), who leads the Prince George’s Senate delegation, said on the Senate floor.
Some of the senators who spoke against the governor’s more limited bill were even more vocal in opposing the Prince George’s proposal.
"There’s no due process," Sen. E.J. Pipkin (R-Queen Anne’s) said. "You’re basically guilty, and you have to prove you’re innocent."
The Senate is scheduled to continue debating the bill Monday. If it passes, it would go to the House of Delegates, which would need to vote on it before the General Assembly’s scheduled adjournment April 7.
A Proposal Much Too Sweet for the House?
Don’t cut the cake just yet.
Supporters who want to make the Smith Island cake Maryland’s official dessert say the confection is in trouble in the legislature. A bill to honor the many-layered cake sailed through the Senate, but it has stalled in the House. Lawmakers adjourn for the year in little more than a week.
Supporters say the cake should be added to the list of 21 state symbols. Lawmakers are hesitant to pass a bill that critics could call trifling.
Supporters say they plan to blitz House members this weekend with pleas to pass the bill before the final gavel falls April 7. Supporters say the designation could draw attention to the unusual dessert and boost business in a community hurt by the decline of fishing and crabbing.

washingtonpost.com


Tags: ,

Read full article | 1 Comment »

Bill Buckley

February 28th, 2008

created a generation of committed conservatives who finally came to power and influence within the ideas of Reagan and Bush I. When asked what job he wanted in the Reagan administration, Buckley replied "ventriloquist."
Mine is a more personal memory that began with a phone ringing unexpectedly in my Tokyo home around 1977. The caller had that distinctive, erudite Buckley vocabulary, a wisp of a Southern accent and patient cadence, as if… he… spoke… slowly… to… kindly… allow.. me time to grasp his meaning.
Buckley, concluding a long Asian trip, wondered if I could tutor him in Japanese politics that evening in exchange for a dinner at his hotel. Me, teach William F. Buckley Jr. about politics. I said I thought I could squeeze him into my otherwise impossible schedule.
I assumed he called because of my newspaper employer, but he soon displayed a writer’s heart and a wide knowledge of my past articles, even recalling our brief meeting in Milwaukee five years before after a taping of his PBS "Firing Line," which became the longest-running TV program ever with the same host.
For a television personality, Buckley was a remarkably good listener. But as the long evening and early hours quickly passed and his tie came down and he proffered cigars, I turned the questioning around. He talked of contemporary politicians and the ones from before. But not critically. There were disagreeable ideas and policies but, surprisingly, no enemies.
And then his eyes lit up and he smiled. He wanted to share a recent story about "a dear friend." That dear friend, again surprisingly, was Hubert H. Humphrey, the former pharmacist, Minneapolis mayor, Minnesota senator and vice president whose liberal politics were about as far from Buckley’s as Tokyo from Connecticut.
Buckley was famous for skewering liberals lke Humphrey during the 1,504 episodes of his TV show, recalling on-air to one famous New York Democrat how many times he’d been on "Firing Line." And then, adding, "Tell me, Mark, have you learned anything?"
Humphrey was called "the Happy Warrior" for his endless enthusiasms and energies to fix things. He had returned to the Senate after being crushed by Richard Nixon and Humphrey’s own badly-fractured Democratic Party in the antiwar violence, assassinations and political violence of 1968.
As Buckley talked that evening, the world silently knew that Humphrey was dying from cancer, slowly and surely. But the Minnesotan wouldn’t let on.
Buckley had been on a recent flight from New York to Britain, he said. The in-flight movie projector had broken so he was reading, legs crossed, Santa Claus spectacles perched on his nose. When, abruptly, a noisy ruckus erupted behind and above him.
Buckley wheeled and there, coat off, sleeves rolled up, he saw Hubert H. Humphrey mounting a ladder and inserting himself into the broken projector situation and the aircraft’s ceiling, muttering constantly to himself while he tried to fix the balky machine, without success as it turned out. "That’s Hubert," Buckley thought with affection.
A flight attendant approached. She said the captain was a fan and was inviting Buckley into the cockpit to watch the landing in the London night. Buckley recalled being awed by the scene approaching ahead, the horizon aglow from the ancient city, the modern airport closer with all the lights, some flashing, many colored as the giant plane slowly descended through the darkness toward the earth.
Suddenly, the cockpit door flew open. "Bill!" shouted the senator. "What are you doing in here? Why wasn’t I invited? What’s going on? Oh, my goodness! Bill, will you look at that sight? Isn’t that beautiful? Oh, my. Look!"
And, Buckley recounted, instead of the outside scenery, he ended up that night in the dark cockpit watching instead his dying friend in admiration, still excited, still himself, exulting at the world’s beauty as he came down slowly for a landing at the end of a long trip.
Then, Buckley looked at me and took a sip of his drink. "I hope at the end," he said, "I come in for my last landing the same way."
I think he did.
Photo: Frank Franklin II / Associated Press

latimesblogs.latimes.com


Tags: ,

Read full article | 7 Comments »