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Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Great Savior v. Great Religion

Unfathomable Zealotry

By Richard Cohen
Tuesday, March 28, 2006; Page A23

What strikes me about the threat to execute Abdul Rahman, the Afghan who converted to Christianity, is not that Afghanistan remains deeply medieval and not even remotely the democracy that George W. Bush would like it to be, but that with the exception of the (largely) Christian West, the rest of the world has been mostly silent. The Americans have protested, the Brits have protested, the Vatican has protested and so (I assume) have some others. But if there has been a holler of protest from anywhere in the Muslim world, it has not reached my ears. That is appalling.

The murder of a person for his religious belief ought to be inconceivable. It is something we in the West stopped accepting hundreds of years ago, and while Americans and others continued to kill on account of race deep into the past century, the right of the government to take a life on account of religion has not even been argued in the longest time. We are way beyond that...

I don't often agree with Mr. Cohen, but in this case he's dead on! We are constantly told that Islam is a great religion that's been hi-jacked by radicals. Really?! Excuse me if I'm less than enthusiastic in my willingness to believe that! I don't believe that Christ ever told the disciples to chop the head off of anyone who failed to except him as their Lord and Savior. While people have done some pretty atrocious things in Christ's name, you will not find him teaching and encouraging any such behavior. No where in the New Testament can I find any admonition of violence, but neither can I find any place where he says that we are just supposed to lay down and be slaughtered. Any admonitions of violence can be attributed directly to Islam, which is responsible for the slaughter of millions of Christians since it's founding (continuing to this very day)!

Mr. Cohen ends his piece thus, "The groupthink of the Muslim world is frightening. I know there are exceptions -- many exceptions. But still it seems that a man could be killed for his religious beliefs and no one would say anything in protest. It is also frightening to confront how differently we in the West think about such matters and why the word "culture" is not always a mask for bigotry, but an honest statement of how things are. It is sometimes a bridge too far -- the leap that cannot be made. I can embrace an Afghan for his children, his work, even his piety -- all he shares with much of humanity. But when he insists that a convert must die, I am stunned into disbelief: Is this my fellow man?" The Muslim worlds silence says all I need to know about where they stand regarding these issues! If they want my trust, then it's time that they start earning it!

I'll end on this note. Islam may or may not be a great religion, that can be debated, but I most definitely have a GREAT SAVIOR, who is Christ The Lord! I would rather have a Great Savior than a great religion any day of the week!!! Mr. Rahman, I will see you in Heaven one day!


Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Bucknuts TV Stadium Series

OSU Traditions

By: Bucknuts.com Staff

Date: Mar 26, 2006
Ohio State football games are filled with tradition, and we have a video look at a few of them today. We focus on pregame tradition, with a look at the OSU marching band's famous ramp entrance, shot from field level. Then we move on to Carmen Ohio as well as the entrance of the OSU football team, as seen from the stands. Finally, we have... er, a bizarre (unflattering?) look at one of OSU's oddities -- what goes on at Mirror Lake before the Michigan game. Check it all out here.

Michigan Pep Rally
(courtesy ABC 6 WSYX-TV, via Bucknuts)
I can honestly say that I never remember this particular aspect of the late night pep rally. It was always just the band playing and the students TP'ing the heck out of the trees.

Band Ramp Entrance(Courtesy Bucknuts)
I get chills every time I experience it. I still remember the very first time I ever saw it!

Carmen Ohio and Team Entrance
Quite possibly the best Alma Mater song ever! It brings a tear to my eye every time I sing it!

All bring back wonderful memories and thoughts of times past. If I could go back and relive it all over again I would, without hesitation. They are by far some of the greatest times and memories that I have! If I had a regret, it would have to be the year I left and attended elsewhere as well as coming home on the weekends. 2 big mistakes that cost me additional memories, and possibly other things that I'll never know.

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Not a good day for racing


Driver involved in race warm-up crash with Carpenter


By Dave Lewandowski
indycar.com


HOMESTEAD, Fla. – IndyCar Series driver Paul Dana was pronounced dead at Jackson Memorial Hospital – a Level 1 trauma center – in Miami just before noon (EST) from injuries suffered in a race warm-up crash at Homestead-Miami Speedway.


This is the worst news any race fan can hear! We all know it is one of the most dangerous sports in the world, but you are never prepared for something like this. Paul had worked himself into a top flight ride through much hard work and preseverance. Why the Good Lord decided that now was his time we won't know until the end comes. I just wish he'd have waited a bit longer. My prayers go out to Paul's family and Rahal/Letterman Racing! I cannot even imagine the loss they are most certainly feeling right now!

Saturday, March 25, 2006

Now That's Funny!!!

The Cleveland Plain Dealer

University President's Bio Smeared Online

Someone with grudge says she's a witch in Wikipedia entry
Saturday, March 25, 2006
Bill Sloat
Plain Dealer Reporter

Cincinnati - Somebody with a grudge against University of Cincinnati President Nancy Zimpher performed a little black magic on the Internet.

The educator's biography on Wikipedia was altered to say she was a prostitute who practices witchcraft. By midday Friday, the spell was broken. The offending spiel scrubbed.

Zimpher was no longer described as flying around on a broomstick. And a saucy photograph showing a leggy strumpet attired with big hair and garter belts had disappeared...

That is one of the funnier things that I've read in a long time! The only thing that would have been funnier would have been to have had her as the Wicked Witch of the West and AD Thomas morphed into a flying monkey next to her. In all honesty, having read how she's infecting that place with as far left liberals as she can, I feel sorry for the alumni and students having to deal with her! I'm just glad she's at UC and no longer infecting my alma mater.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Reemphasizing the Regular Season

Emphasis on NCAAs is madness

JASON WHITLOCK

I’m sorry. It’s Christmas time for college basketball fans, and I’m the only hoops fan screaming “Bah, humbug.” The whole overemphasis of the NCAA Tournament has me down. I just can’t let it go.

It’s popular to say that college football can be immensely improved by jazzing up the end of the season with a tournament. Well, let me be the first to say that college basketball can be immensely improved by strengthening the ties between the regular season and the postseason.

You follow?

College basketball isn’t perfect. In fact, as each year passes and Dick Vitale and Co. spends more and more time hyping March Madness rather than the regular season, college basketball moves closer to becoming the Jr. NBA circuit. There’s no reason to pay attention until the playoffs.

My take is that there has been too much emphasis placed on the conference tournaments as opposed to the regular season. The regular season has been deemphasized more so by the conference tournaments than they have been by the NCAA tournament.

Mr. Whitlock makes the following statement later in his article that, "Next year it wouldn’t surprise me if a smart coach — Bill Self — rested some of his regulars in the conference tournament. College players are not used to playing three games in three days or four games in four days (as Syracuse did). It’s difficult to recover from that and turn back around and play a talented Missouri Valley foe that has been resting for 12 days." I agree, but for a different set of reasons. I think Bill Self (and every other major conference coach) should rest his players. The conference tournements are a pointless exercise, other than just to have some more basketball. Let's look at Ohio State for example. What's more impressive, a 12-4 regular season conference record or 3-0 conference tournement record (had they won it)?! Next question, which takes more work and effort to accomplish, there by making it the greater accomplishment? Thad said as much himself when he said that he wanted the regular season championship more.

The fact that both UConn and Villinova got No. 1 seeds after being bounced in their opening round tournement games tells me all that I need to know. I'm going to rest my players come conference tournement time. If I'm a mid or small major conference coach and I won my regular season but didn't make the NCAA's because another team managed to get hot and win our tournement, I start pitching a fit and demand changes. The question I immediately ask and continue to ask until things change is, why did we bust our butt's all season and then get screwed because of not winning the confernce tournement?! The next question would be why should I put out any effort in the regular season when the tournement winner is going to determine the automatic bid recipient?!

I agree with Mr. Whitlock's suggestion of tying NCAA seedings to the regular season results more than the tournements. The emphasis should be squarely on the regular season not the conference tournement. If D-IA college football ever gets over their case of crainial rectal inversion and institutes a playoff they could do it right from the get go and use the regular season champs, not the conference championship game winner (except in the case of a large conference regular season tie when there is not a head-to-head game to be a tie breaker).

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

BuckNuts Season in Review

Buckeyes Reflect On Year, Look Ahead To 06-07

Thad Matta
Thad Matta

By Steve Helwagen
Managing Editor
Date: Mar 21, 2006

Following Sunday's NCAA Tournament loss to Georgetown, we polled the players and coach Thad Matta on their 26-win campaign, which included an outright Big Ten championship. Plus, we have comments from Matta and his returning players on next year. And, we examine the personnel leaving, staying and coming in next year for the Buckeyes. Check it out.

“This team never lost two games in a row,” said OSU coach Thad Matta, who boasts a two-year mark of 46-18 with the Buckeyes. “They put together some incredible win streaks. It’s hard to believe it’s over. Coaching this team, it feels like it’s still October because it has been so much fun. It was unfortunate for it to end the way that it did. But all good things do come to an end...

“For this team to accomplish what they did and go 26-6 and win the Big Ten championship, it was a great accomplishment. I’ve never seen a basketball team play harder...”

“I think with Terence, Matt, James and Je’Kel, what they’ve given us the last two years and the leadership they have provided and the focus they had for what we were doing, I hope they will never be forgotten at The Ohio State University because they deserve a ton of credit for what they’ve done,” Matta said...

The Players’ Take

“This was a year of overachieving,” Sylvester said. “It was a year of making bonds that will last forever. We’ve had our ups and downs, like every team has. But nobody in this room has anything to be ashamed of. I love Thad and this staff. It was a great season. No one can take the outright Big Ten championship away from us. No one has regrets here...”

“It meant a lot,” Foster said. “Every college basketball player plays this game to get to the NCAA Tournament. We did a good job of playing together to get to this point.

“We accomplished a lot of things this season. Before the year started, nobody gave us any credit. We won the Big Ten championship outright. We were the only ones who believed in ourselves...”

“No one ever gave us any credit," Sullinger said. "We were always underdogs even when we weren’t supposed to be. This team has a lot to be proud of. Ohio State basketball is back. I’m just proud to say I was part of the group that helped this program get back into the NCAA.

“Right now, I’m just happy to say I was a part of something that was as special as this. This team went through a lot on and off the court. We tried so hard and we worked so hard. This team was my family away from home. I’m going to miss them so much. It’s hard....”

Looking Forward

Six scholarship players are due to return in 2006-07. They would be joined by a five-man recruiting class ranked as the nation’s No. 2(No. 1 by several other services) class behind only North Carolina...

“We’re going to take some time and rest,” Matta said. “We have four guys playing for state high school championships this coming season and I hope they finish that off. We’ll come back after spring break and get ready to start building again. That’s the beauty of what I love to do in coaching. Put all the pieces together and go in the right direction.

“We’ll start the weight training and then we have skill instruction for two hours a week. That will mainly be ballhandling, shooting and offense stuff...”

My Take

As I said earlier, these seniors deserve a great deal of respect and credit. They fought through a great deal of adversity and did this university proud. My gratitude for them as an alumn is great. They represented us with great strength and character and gave us a season to rememeber. Thanks guys for everything!

The incoming class of Oden, Conley, Cook, Lighty, and Hunter are, imho, going to be unbelievable and along with the guys who are returning make the anticipation of next season all that more great. I can't wait till next season! Gee, how long has it been since we could say that about basketball?! The great thing about it, with Thad at the helm, it's only going to get better!

Well, that's a wrap on this season and time to look to Baseball and hope that they can add yet another Big 10 title to this great year!


The Spirit of Ronaldous Magnus Lives!

Some t-shirt logos I thought I'd share with everyone.

I still believe in that "Shining City on a Hill!"

Monday, March 20, 2006

It was a fun ride!


Buckeyes Upset By Hoyas In Second Round

Ohio State guard Ron Lewis (12) goes up for a basket against Georgetown center Roy Hibbert in the first half of the second round of the NCAA basketball tournament, Sunday, March 19, 2006, in Dayton, Ohio. (AP Photo/Ed Reinke)




DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -- John Thompson took over a losing Georgetown program and needed four years to win two games in an NCAA tournament.

Well, yes I'm disappointed with the loss, but they had a great season. I wish it hadn't ended so quickly (take a look at my Final 4 picks) and I do have my gripes about the game, but hey, I'll save that for another time. Thad is truly one of the best coaches going and these seniors have been terrific, especially considering what they've been through. Thanks guys!

Friday, March 17, 2006

Buckeye Basketball

Lewis Leads OSU over Davidson, 70-62

Friday, March 17, 2006
AP Sports Writer

DAYTON, Ohio -- Ron Lewis scored 19 points to lead the second-seeded Ohio State Buckeyes to a 70-62 first-round win over Davidson in the NCAA.

Matta, 'I will be back' as coach

Friday, March 17, 2006
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

DAYTON — The regular season came to a close Sunday, and the window in Thad Matta’s contract that permits him to talk about other jobs came open.

So yesterday, Matta actually said the word "Indiana " for the first time in the context of the soon-to-be-vacant job. And the Ohio State men’s basketball coach said definitively what OSU fans have been waiting a month to hear — that he will be coaching the Buckeyes next season.

Good news x's 2!!!

Happy St. Patrick's Day Chicago Style













Photo From the Chicago Sun-Times


Turing the Chicago River green!

Hey Matt, were you there? :D

Still don't care?

US eliminated from WBC with 2-1 loss to Mexico

ESPN.com news services ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) --Roger Clemens was looking for a much better finish to his brilliant career.

Clemens pitched well Thursday night, but a lineup loaded with All-Stars couldn't get the job done for the United States.

Well, so much for winning the championship of the game WE invented!

Thursday, March 16, 2006

ESPN

Korea beats Japan, clinches semis; US still alive

AP

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Team USA still has a chance to win the World Baseball Classic thanks to Korea.

The Washington Times

P&O Ports to find U.S. buyer

By William Glanz
March 16, 2006

The port-operating company that DP World bought this month will oversee the sale of U.S. port operations and expects to find a buyer in four to six months.

I can live with this, but as I stated earlier, I don't believe that it's neccessary.

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Read With Revelation in Mind

A Contintent Splits Apart

Normally new rivers, seas and mountains are born in slow motion. The Afar Triangle near the Horn of Africa is another story. A new ocean is forming there with staggering speed -- at least by geological standards. Africa will eventually lose its horn.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Random Sports Thoughts

Well, where to begin? First the conference tournaments that we just had this past weekend. I think that they are a waste of time. They diminish the importance of the regular season. How so you may ask?! Well here's how. They allow a team that has had a poor season to get hot over a 3 or 4 day period and end up taking the automatic bid to the NCAA championship tournament when they didn't earn it. This is especially important when you look at most of the mid to low major conferences that will likely only get 1 bid regardless of what else happens. I don't have a problem with conferences having the tourneys, but the automatic bid should not be awarded to their winner. If you want them then fine, by all means, play them and give the teams that didn't have such a great year a chance to win something, but don't tie the automatic bid to it. What you do over the entire 4 months or so of the season is more important than what happens over a 4 day period. A team should not be penalized for having 1 bad game! Now don't get me wrong, I like watching the games. I like watching any college basketball. Heck, I went to the Big 10 tournament this past weekend and enjoyed myself, but I consider Ohio State the conference champs. I know, I know, you think I'm just saying this out of bias because my alma mater lost in the championship game, but that isn't so. I would have said the same if Iowa and Ohio States positions had been reversed. This has been and will continue to be a long held position.


As an alumna of The Ohio State University and some one who's never been a big fan of UC I must say that UC got screwed!!! How in the world can UC be excluded from the tournament in favor of the likes of Air Force Academy? Let's do a little comparison shopping.

  • UC: RPI-40, W/L-19/12, SOS-5, vs. Teams 1-50 - 4/8, vs. Teams 51-100 7/3
  • AF: RPI-50, W/L-22/6, SOS-158, vs 1-50 - 0/1, vs. 51-100 - 5/2

There are other school comparisons that can be made, but to me this is the most egregious. UC being left out of the field in favor of Air Force cannot be justified. To be honest, the selection process cannot be justified. It's time to make the process open and bring in people to do it that actually know something about basketball.


My NCAA Final 4:
  1. Duke (I hate them, but they'll probably make it)
  2. Connecticut (Other than North Carolina and, maybe Illinios, no one in that bracket will challenge them)
  3. Ohio State (Hey, you expect me to pick against my alma mater?!)
  4. Kansas (Just not impressed with Memphis or UCLA)

Well, that's enough for now. I'll have more later.


The Lantern - OSU Student News Paper

The sun will come out tomorrow - Sports

Ports Storm

Well, I'm going to jump right into the fire. If you've been paying attention there's been this huge debate about letting Dubai Ports World purchase operational control of some terminals at various Docks in this country. A large portion of the population seems to be of the mindset that this would put our national security at risk. Ok, let me ask this one simple question. Why would they invest 8 BILLION dollars in these operations and then allow it to be blown up?! I don't know of anyone that would be radical enough to do that! Besides that, we (actually our idiot Representatives and Senators) just blew a golden diplomatic opportunity. Which doesn't surprise me because of the fact that they are totally governed by how the political winds blow.

To what am I referring? Well, the chance to use the approval of the port operations purchase to get them (Dubai) to agree to change how they do somethings and gain access to much needed natural resources (OIL). If we had thought about it rather than just following the "conventional wisdom" We had the opportunity to lay out a laundry list of things that we wanted in order to grant approval. This could have been anywhere from recognizing Israel as a nation, or just even their right to exist (which they currently do neither), to permanent bases for our military and increased production of oil for us. It could have also been negotiated that a stand alone subsidiary, based and completely operated in this country be created to control these operations. None of this is possible now that Dubai has pulled out of this portion of the deal. Oh yes, this was only a small portion of the purchase. There were several other operations around the world that were included, and none of them seemed to have a problem with it, including one of our two closest allies, Great Britain. Diplomacy is what was needed here, but we went with reactionary, knee jerk isolationism, and dare I say from some a bit of discrimination based on where they are from.

Dubai is now right fully ticked. They are talking about having us leave their port and bases. With Iran less than 100 miles away from there across the Straits of Hormuse(sp?) we could end up being less secure than we are at present. We could also end up with a lower oil supply than we currently have. Neither of these 2 are good things! The other thing that no one seems to give any thought to is the loss of intelligence that we've been getting from Dubai. That easily could dry up now. It's my guess that we have things going on with them that are covert and cannot be revealed that are helping protect this country. Guess what folks?! These vital operations may now be gone. What we may have done is push them to deal more with folks like the Communist Chinese rather than us. All I can say to that is NICE GOING! Instead of having all sorts of opportunities militarily, politically, and economically at our disposal, we may now have none. We most definitely have FAR FEWER than we would have had! I do hope that this doesn't come back to bite us in the arse, but I have a sneeking suspicion that it's going to do just that!

It's A Start

Well, here goes nothing. This blogging thing is new to me, so I'm sure that this will evolve over time. As time goes by I'll be posting things that have made me think or that I find interesting. I'll give links to articles that I find fascinating or are relevent to what's happening at the time. I'm sure some will agree with me while others I'll tick off, but hey, that's life. Agree or not all are well come to post comments. All I ask is that you be civil. Well, having said that, off we go...

A Proud Alumn

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