Tim returns to football

Well, he hadn’t played since his fluke sideline knee injury in his second game as a freshman. And the surgical repair, And the comeback in the spring, throwing the discuss, shot put, and javelin, etc., etc. BUT, now he’s back. He played defensive end, as well as punting and doing the kicking chores. His JV … Read more

NY Times fascinating review of the new SEAL book, “No Easy Day”

UPDATE: Another NYT column aboutthe ebook No Easy Op, which discusses this book and it's author. The reviewer is long-time NYT critic and reviewer, Janet Maslin (Who is married to Benjamin Cheever, sone of the very acclaimed fction writer and Ossining resident, the late John Cheever). I didn't know this, but Maslin lives in Pleasantville, … Read more

Neil Armstrong

Certainly for anyone my age or thereabouts, a great American hero. First moonwalker Neil Armstrong's death at the age of 82 marks the passing of a "reluctant American hero," as well as the dimming of the Space Age's brightest moment. Armstrong has been immortalized in human history as the first human to set foot on … Read more

Sally Ride – I shared two things with her

Remember "Ride, Sally Ride!" The first American woman in space. We shared two things – we were both born in 1951, and we both played rugby! Here are a couple of articles about her – By becoming the first U.S. woman—and youngest astronaut—in space, Sally Ride, who died Monday from pancreatic cancer, was a pioneer … Read more

Alexander Cockburn

The columnist – a true left wing socialist, quasi-communist. For several years he had a weekly column in the Wall Street Journal. He used to remind me of the late Christopher Hitchens, who according to the article below, he didn't like. Not pure leftist enough, I guess. Like Hitchens, he was a clever writer but … Read more