May 14, 2008

Temple Rugby's Out On The Piss Again!

Temple Rugby's Out On The Piss Again!

THESE YOUNG BOYS PLAYING RUGBY THESE DAYS. What they could learn from the old boys, even if those old boys are just a couple of years or 20 removed from their playing days at Temple University Rugby Club. The annual Temple Alumni Game was played Saturday at Memorial Hall field in Fairmount Park, and I'm pleased to say that the old boys in red jerseys had their way with Temple's current squad of players.

Unlike last year's 25-22 squeaker won by the Alumni, this year's spanking was closer to 48-22. I can't say exactly because even the referees weren't keeping score. But the alumni tacked on eight of nine splendid tries to the young boy's four. It was a great turnout and a terrific party afterwards that continued late into the night at the Temple Rugby house near campus on 16th Street near Oxford.

Five of my former players from Temple RFC 1989 when I coached showed up for the game and acquitted themselves with distinction, if not blazing speed. Like athletes in any sport, the first thing to go is the legs, but the last rugby skill to desert an old boy is the cunning. And the extra pounds don't hurt in applying the cunning to action.

Now, if we could only teach these young boys to sing.

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May 10, 2008

Thanking Sgt. Liczbinski

Thanking Sgt. Liczbinski

IT WAS A LITTLE AFTER two o'clock yesterday afternoon when I wrote the following email to my friend, Al Nitzsche, who works for a TV news station in Baltimore. We had been trading emails about the cop beating video, which as a national news story had completely eclipsed the murder last Saturday of Sgt. Stephen Liczbinski. I was already more than two hours into watching the live TV coverage of Liczbinski's funeral when I wrote:

"I don't know whether to be touched or appalled by this. All three stations (make that four, including Channel 29) are covering the cop's funeral live. It started at noon. It continues even now. Dear God, they're talking about following the funeral procession to the cemetary in Bensalem.

"They're covering it like the funeral of a head of state. The full Catholic mass at the Cathedral with Jim Gardner (a hat) explaining the ritual. It's been raining hard in Philadelphia all morning. It's clearing now as they bring the casket out of the Cathedral. Bagpipes are playing, drums are drumming.Michael Nutter just looked at his watch.

"Inside the Cathedral the dead officer's son spoke. He said tonight is game one of the NHL Eastern finals between the Flyers and the Pittsburgh Penguins. He asked everyone in the Cathedral to sing the Flyers cheer with him loud enough that his father could hear. And then the entire Cathedral sang,'Let's Go Flyers! Clap, clap, clap-clap-clap.' I honestly don't know what to make of this."

I still don't. I'm trying to wrap my brain around the whole thing. In life, I can't imagine Stephen Liczbinski ever dreaming that his death would cause Channels Six, Ten, Three and 29 to suspend their regular programming, includng the noon news, to cover his funeral. I didn't know Sgt. Liczbinski, but I'm sure he would be the first to laugh when I add, "but he's no Jack Kennedy."

Al, crusty curmudgeon that he is, replied quickly:

"Trying to attract viewers, and not be the guy that DOESN"T carry it. Plain and simple. Not that deep.
Sheepish, disingenuous bull shit. I know that's MY line of work these days. And I hate it. And everyone else."

Did Philadelphia really need all four network affiliates to devote close to two-and-a-half hours of programming for live coverage of a somber religious rite. The Pope's mass at Yankee Stadium didn't get this kind of blanket coverage. And I fear Al is right. It wasn't a decision made by four individual news directors who honestly believed it was in the public's best interests to devote this much air time to the funeral of a slain Philadelphia police officer. This over-the-top live broadcasting had the stink of cover-my-ass all over it. Nobody wanted to be the "guy" didn't do it. And it's not like each didn't know what the other was doing. "Oh, Jeez, if I had known three, six and ten were doing this I wouldn't have spent all this money and lost all that advertising revenue."

No, they did it because nobody would criticize them for doing it (except for guys like me and Al). They did it because they didn't know what else to do without appearing insenstive to a city's grief. They clicked into their default mode. They didn't want to be the only kid in class who didn't jump off the roof when the rest of their friends did. They didn't want to be the station who dared to air The Young and the Restless, All My Children, Days of Our Lives or Divorce Court like they do ever other weekday. Thank God Channel 17 didn't interrupt Jerry Springer. At least viewers had a choice between dreadfully off-key priests singing and shirtless hillbilly misogyny.

And then into the midst of this insincere media genuflection in front of the coffin of a murdered hero comes the son, Matt Liczbinski, doing a Flyers cheer in the FREAKIN' CATHEDRAL , for crying out loud. I didn't know whether to shit or go blind. Like I said to Al, I didn't know whether to be touched or appalled. Matt, who mentioned that he was 24 (and I know I wasn't the only one quietly doing the math -- Sgt. Liczbinski's 40th birthday was Tuesday) described his father as being the kind of father who could beat up any other father in the neighborhood.

This was a compliment. I understood that. But it sounded as dissonant and off key as the priests' singing,
Matt went with his heart, and I appreciate that, but no sooner had he said that than he led the hushed Cathedral mourners in a Flyers chant. And then he was gone. That was it. My dad could beat up your dad. Go Flyers.

And there were four TV stations capturing the honesty live.

And you know what the worst part is, for me, because it revealed something to me about the way I think. My immediate reaction was, "He just jinxed the Flyers." What a sorry asshole I am. But beyond that, it puts pressure on the Flyers. Someone asked me later, "Do you think the Flyers know?" Well, DUHHHH. We're talking live TV coverage by four network channels in a world where a snarky comment on someone's blog gets emailed to China within seconds. Yes, the Flyers know. And I'm sure they are as in awe of it all as I am.

What does it all mean? Stephen Liczbinski is the new Kate Smith? Will they win one for the Gipper? Will we forget that this Gipper wasn't Ronald Reagan dying quietly off screen but a Philadelphia cop torn in half by an assualt weapon fired by a burqa-wearing bandit whose family can't find a mosque willing to bury him. Is it fair to say that all this is unfair to the Flyers. I'm not talking if they lose. But what if they win?

God bless America, but I'd hate for a dead cop to be the lucky charm that wins the Stanley Cup.

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May 04, 2008

What's The Story With All These Clowns

What's The Story With All These Clowns

WELL, HELLO-O-O-O-O BETTY! That's the name of this comely clown who I met Friday evening during the Second Annual Clown Crawl through Old City during the booming First Friday art openings. Betty is a member of Carnivolution, a troupe of grease painted carney performers who swallow swords, eat fire, lie on beds of nails, lift cinder blocks with their ear lobes, and staple dollar bills to various body parts. They also perform in a kickass rock fusion band called The Hydrogen Jukebox, and they appear every second Friday evening of the month, from this Friday through October, at the Ellen Powell Tiberino Museum at 3819 Hamilton Street in the Powellton Village section of West Philadelphia. It's a freak show worthy of the $7 price of admission.

Actually, Betty and I go way back -- at least two weeks -- when we started to work as actors in a movie about the incredible Ellen (that's the nickname for the museum featuring the works of the late Ellen Powell Tiberino, her husband, Joe Tiberino, and their children Raphel, Gabriel and Ellen, accomplished artists all. In the movie under production on weekends and whenever the cast and filmmakers can get together I play the role of a TV reporter (don't I look like one in the photo above) who is investigating the influx of clowns who have migrated across the Schuylkill from subterrainean caverns and sewer inlets in Center City where they practice their clown craft in
secret.

Betty plays a beautiful and gifted clown who can swallow two-and a half feet of a stretched out wire coat hanger and then bend her head forward and look you in the eye with the hook part of the hanger sticking out of her mouth. And people ask me why I like clowns!

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April 30, 2008

IN DEFENSE OF THE NUTCASE THE REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT

IN DEFENSE OF THE NUTCASE THE REV. JEREMIAH WRIGHT

I KNOW PEOPLE, people who are friends of mine, white people who are friends of mine, who use the word nigger like you or I would say motherfucker or cocksucker. Which is to say not often, but often enough to recognize that we say motherfucker and cocksucker more often than we should. I miss a shot in a game of pool and I bark, "Cock-SUCK-er!"


Sometimes afterwards I apologize in front of women. But it's less of an apology than a "God bless you" after a sneeze. "Cocksucker." Sorry. "Motherfucker." Sorry. They're naughty words without the meaning of nigger.

To me nigger isn't only a bad word, it is the unreachable star of bad words. It is the Arc of the Covenant of the unspeakable. It is the frozen flagpole of tongue-worthiness. You could say that nigger is the new cunt but nigger was the old cunt as well. Nigger is a word that has frightened and fascinated me since I was old enough to know not to say it.

I guess my parents never had to tell me not to say motherfucker. They never had to tell me not to say nigger either. My mother set the tone. She was cultured. Academy of Notre Dame and Manhattanville College educated. She used the word jigaboos. Or jigs for short.

The Rev. Jeremiah Wright has reminded us why the word nigger will never go away. Not that he is one, but that he thinks I think he's one. He thinks that I go back to that secret society of white people and say, "Did you see what that nigger said?" And he's right in a way. Except that my secret society of white people is as public as Dirty Franks or the Daily DeLeon. And the words that I used to describe the Rev. Wright were, "Did you see what that nutcase said?" There was a nigger lawyer sitting to my left when I said it, and a athiest professor sitting to my right. Neither of them had to ask which nutcase I meant.

Jeremiah Wright, who has become the pedophile priest in Barack Obama's background -- "Why didn't you report this abuse the first time it happened?" -- flew over the cuckoo's nest on Monday at the National Press Club in Washington. After a thoughtful and restrained appearance on PBS with Bill Moyers on Friday night in his first public interview since his famous "God damn America! God damn America!" video became the focus of one of his congregants presidential campaign, Wright allowed the Holy Spirit to reveal his true nature on Monday. And his true nature is pissed off. And not in a Jesus way. Jeremiah Wright is an Old Testament preacher, weaned on Hebrew prophets of doom, not redemption. In other words, a nutcase.

Curiously, while watching him speak I thought of Adolph Hitler -- and, yes, I am comparing Jeremiah Wright to Hitler, another nutcase (albetit a nutcase with one testicle) -- whose manner of speaking was more communicative than the words he used. Jeremiah Wright could have been speaking German, but I would have understood that he was pissed off and not going to take it anymore. And my understanding would have been just as nuanced as my understanding of Hitler speaking a language I do not understand. I didn't need to understand the language to comprehend the anger.

And for Barack Obama this was like presidential candidate John Kennedy hearing Fr. Patbottom explain why he likes altar boys.

What I found incomprehendible about Wright's remarks on Monday was his lack of Christian conscience regarding the impact of his statements on Obama. He knew exactly what he was saying -- nutcases aren't crazy -- and he said it anyway. As distrustful as he is about white America, sounding like a World War II great uncle raging about the Japs until the day he died, Wright did what black people distrustful of authority know not to do. He snitched.

In front of white people he revealed the Gordian knot of rage in the heart of so many successful African Americans. By calling the criticism of his remarks an attack on the Black Church he sounded like a Roman Catholic bishop describing the spiritual sanctity of a confessional booth equipped with a glory hole and saying it's no one else's business . It's a Catholic thing. You wouldn't understand.

Well it isn't. A black thing. A Catholic thing. An anything but American thing. Wrong is wrong, you nutcase. And now you may have poisoned the well for the first black man to have a chance to show this country that "it doesn't have to be this way." You have renewed white America's license to be suspicious. And believe me, I know how many white racists are racing around out there without a valid license.

Let me tell you a story: I was in a bar in South Philly having a terrific time talking to a funny guy I've known for years. This is a racist-friendly Irish bar where I am known to be racially sensitive. Which is to say that when they use the word nigger they look at me and smile. So I see a lot of smiles. This funny guy is telling me a story about this Iranian guy who has become his friend and at first I think it's a story about getting over false impressions or prejudice. But it turns out that the point of the story is that this Iranian guy broke off with a white woman he was dating because he found out that she had a child by a black guy.

The funny guy looks at me with a "YouknowwhatImean?" look and I reply, "Did I ever show you a picture of my granddaughter?" He sort of ignores my first mention and continues seeking my confirmation about the correctness of his and his immigrant friend's revulsion to the white girlfriend's unforgivable past. I persist. "Did I ever show you a picture of my granddaughter?" and something about the way I pull out my wallet to show him Daphne DeLeon's photo leads him to interrupt, "Don't tell me you've got a nigger baby."

And as happily as I could muster, I replied, "As a matter of fact, I do."

I haven't been back to that bar since. Not because of that. Not because I'm angry or hurt or bewildered or even disgusted. But if someone were to ask why, I suppose they would understand if I replied, "The chickens have come home to roost."

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April 26, 2008

Molly Is My Daughter And I am Proud of Her

Molly Is My Daughter And I am Proud of Her

I AM NOT GOING TO SAY THAT this is a perfect photograph that perfectly describes the scene at my youngest daughter Molly's senior prom leaving-in-the-stretch -limo photo opportunity last night. It is unfair to Molly because she looked graceful and lovely and fun in every other of the 22 photos I was allowed to take. "Dad, don't take my picture" Molly said almost meaning it. But why am I here, sweetheart? When have you ever looked so beautiful walking up a rowhouse block in a golden dress. So I took her picture anyway. Am I a jitbag or what? Because I knew she would want this moment, our moment, to be fine.

And now I've spoiled it by sharing it with you.

Am I a Dad or what?

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April 19, 2008

Sheeeee' if he ain't the one, who be?

Sheeeee' if he ain't the one, who be?

THIS IS AS CLOSE AS I GOT to Barack Obama the other night at Independence Mall in front of the Constitution Center. But this was pretty cool. In fact the whole deal was petty cool. It was like Dr. King speaking. "I dream of a moment when black people and white people can stand together, shoulder to shoulder, hour after hour, on a picture perfect April evening in Philadelphia, waiting, waiting, waiting, without getting angry,"

It was kind of like that. I mean, when was the last time you spent three hours standing shoulder to shoulder with someone, lots of someones, you've never met before?

What, last week?

Well it's still new to me.


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April 18, 2008

Independence Is a Beautiful Thing

Independence Is a Beautiful Thing

THIS LOOKS LIKE SOMETHING OUT OF A MOVIE but this was the scene on Independence Mall Tuesday night when protestors from-and-for Tibet autonomy used the guarantees of the American Constitution to speak out against China during the Democratic debate between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.

I'm headed down to the Obama rally at Independence Hall Friday evening. Hope to get some great shots.

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April 16, 2008

Outside The Great Debate in Philadelphia

Outside The Great Debate in Philadelphia

THEIR SIGNS SAID HILLARY but their wallets said, "Gimme one of those Obama shirts." At least that's what it looked like to me outside the Constitution Center Wednesday night minutes before the beginning of the great debate between Democratic presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Hillary people and Hillary posters outnumbered Obama mammas, papas and union members, but not street vendors.

This entrepenuer said he staked out the southwest corner of 6th and Arch Streets across from the Constitution Center around noon and despite his corner being overwhlemed by Hillary-poster bearing enthusiasts, he managed to do a brisk business in Obamabalia such as T-shirts, buttons and longsleeve shirts reading, "He's Black and I'm Proud!!"

Despite being outnumbered something like 100-to-one (The Hillary people were organized out the kazoo) the Obama sign bearers seemed to co-exist harmoniously with everyone, including the anti-abortion protesters who showed up with eight foot-tall signs showing aborted fetuses magnified to the size of full grown men.

A block away the right to protest guaranteed by the Constitution was was being demonstrated by a group of about 100 people holding up "Free Tibet" signs with Independence Hall in the background. In the foreground was a large chest-high pale granite block with the words, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abriding the freedom of speech or of the press; or the right of people peaceably to assemble and petition the government for redress of grieveances." Below that it said, "The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution."

Sometimes it all seems too good to be true.

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April 12, 2008

Kutztown defense allows easy late try to UConn

Kutztown defense allows easy late try to UConn

WHAT DOES A WORLD CLASS THUMPING look like? Well, it looks a lot like this, even though this doesn't accurately reflect the hurtin' that Kutztown University's rugby club put on the University of Connecticut this afternoon in Berks County under apocaplytically gray Grantland Rice skies that turned into sugary April sunshine by the end of a match that gave new meaning to the losing team's "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall" songfest on the miserable five-hour bus ride home.

I chose this photo to illustrate today's column because it is both representative and ironic. Representative because it illustrates Kutztown's "in your face" defensive pressure that thwarted the Huskies at every bark. Ironic because it is one of the few photos I have of the game without the ball in Kutztown hands. And you have to have a lot of ball possession to score as many points as the Fightin' Amish poured upon The English from Yankeeland.

How many points? Well, I've watched, seen, played, refereed, coached or run touch in thousands of rugby matches since I was first blooded in 1968, and I never saw one team score as many points as Kutztown did against UConn. It was like New Zealand vs Namibia. I've read about matches with scores like this but I've never seen one live. What's impressive, before I tell you the score, is that UConn never gave up. Kutztown has it's ticket punched to the dance next week in Albuquerque, N.M. where the NCAA collegiate rugby Sweet Sixteen playoff tournament has Kutztown seeded number four. But UConn, a solid, but on this day, undermanned, side, showed up to play. In fact, they scored their only try late in the second half.

That's why I have that headline on this piece.. Not because I'm being nice to UConn, but because it's an opportunity to bust Gregg Jones balls. And Gregg, my former Whitemarsh teammate, is Kutztown's well-known rugby coach the same way Joe Pa is the well known football coach of another state-supported college in Pennsylvania. The only difference between the two is that Paterno looks younger.

So let me pick up the story on the sideline of today's match shortly after the final whistle. I had walked over to congratulate Coach Jones on his team's fine "tuneup" for Kutztown's national championship run, but he was muttering testily while pouring over a scorecard that looked harder to figure out than Chinese arithmetic. So many fives, so many twos. And they didn't add up to the number he wanted. He gave me a look like I knew what he was talking about. "Do you believe these guys? Six lousy points and they couldn't do it.." It reminded me of the Superman movie sequel where evil mastermind Robert Vaughn complains to Richard Pryor, "One little thing I ask you to do and you couldn't kill Superman."

What was the final score, I asked? "Ninety. . .eight. . . no, four! Ninety-four."

"To five," I added helpfully.

"To FIVE!" he repeated in disgust.

That's it for now, guys. Wake me when Kutztown scores a hundred.

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April 08, 2008

CAN'T ANYBODY HERE PLAY THIS GAME EVEN WEIRDER

CAN'T ANYBODY HERE PLAY THIS GAME EVEN WEIRDER

YOU KNOW WHY I LOVE THE PHILLIES? Because they hurt so good. Just when you think you've seen it all -- as Harry and Whitey used to say in disbelief at least once a week years ago -- something happens that no one has ever seen before. For instance, I've never seen an individual Phillies batter get hit by a pitched ball three times in a single game. And I saw that yesterday in the top of the seventh inning when Mets reliever Scott Schoeneweis plunked Chase Utley in the back -- Utley's third hit batsman notation on the scorecard --with the New York Mets leading 2-0 in their last home opener at Shea Stadium. Until today the Phiilies had never beaten the Mets during a home opener in Queens.

What happened next is, well, pillow talk between Phillies fans and the devil they sold their souls to win this game against all the odds. With the bases loaded and one-out, Ryan Howard bounced a soft grounder to first for an inning-ending double play -- EXCEPT! -- Mets first baseman Carlos Delgado threw the ball into Chase Utley's back (his FOURTH hostile ball bruise of the game) as Utley headed to second. The ball skittered into right field and instead of being out of the inning with a two run lead, the Mets were now tied 2-2 with the Fightin's who end up winning 5-2, breaking the Shea Opening Day curse while arriving at .500 for the first time this young season.

Four-four seems a pleasant plateau after a first week that promised so much less. On opening day at the Bank, the Phillies rallied late to tie the game against the Nats only to see Flash Gordon pitch like Ming the Merciless Mets Fan. When your closer gives up five runs in the ninth inning, Phillies fans tend to become ill tempered and impatient, if not actual al Queda terrorist operatives. In game two of the Nationals series, Cole Hamels one run surrendered was enough to decide the outcome. On the following afternoon during a Businessperson Special the Phils fell behind 6-1 to the Potomac pests, and the home crowd was in danger of beginning a spontaneous chant of "Give us Barrabbas!"

And then. . .and then. . .baseball happened. It was 7-7 going into the bottom of the 10th. And when Jayson Werth walked with the bases loaded on four pitches for the Phillies first win of the season, there was something in the air that you could identify as hard core Philly addytood. Just look at the body language of those fans (photo above) ACTUALLY DARING the National's ill-fated reliever to throw a freakin' strike, for crying out loud. Oh, yeah, baby. It's going to be a long and bumpy season. And the homeboys and homegirls are amped to the max.

And this is only April.

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April 06, 2008

A sad day in an epic year that changed everything

A sad day in an epic year that changed everything

WE ALL KNOW WHAT IT FEELS LIKE to witness history as it happens. Anyone reading this is old enough to remember Sept. 11, 2001, undoubtedly the most historic day in our lifetimes. Even before the second tower had fallen, the events of that morning were being described as moments that "changed everything." None of us were quite sure what that meant, but we were all in tacit agreement that nothing would ever be the same again.

Many of us had felt the same way when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated. And most of us who remember that day cannot believe that it happened 40 years ago.

Black people were still called Negros in the newspapers that reported Dr. King's death in April 1968. There was a continuing disagreement among blacks (and whites) whether the term "black" was pejoritive. Many whites had just graduated to the use of the term Negro from the still common, but unhip, term "colored." What bears remembering in 2008 is that at the time of his death Dr. King was not the universally beloved icon that four decades of martyrdom have bestowed upon his memory.

In the increasingly radical velocity of the Black Power movement in the spring of 1968, Martin Luther King was demeaned by some as the house Negro of the Civil Rights movement. Too accomodating, too non-violent, too "churchy" to represent the true struggle playing out on the streets of Oakland where a new group called the Black Panther Party led by Huey Newton and a Philadelphian named Bobby Seale was practicing civil rights through the barrel of a gun.

If 9/11 was single day that changed everything, the assassination of Martin Luther King was an epic event in an epic year that changed everything. It started with the Tet Offensive, the turning point in the Vietnam War, followed by the My Lai massacre (which we learned of a year later), followed by President Johnson's announcement he would not seek re-election , followed by the assassinations of King and Bobby Kennedy, followed by the police riots at the Democratic Convention in Chicago, which led to the election of Richard Nixon, who campaigned on his "secret plan" to end the war in Vietnam, which did not officially end until 1975, a year after Nixon was forced to resign from office.

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April 02, 2008

As likely a bunch of welshmen as you'd expect

As likely a bunch of welshmen as you'd expect

THIS GUY I KNOW WHO TALKS A LOT to me and anyone else who hasn't run for cover -- let's call him Jim -- comes up to me at a bar we share. Jim enjoys reading the Daily DeLeon and reminds DeLeon when it isn't daily. Jim measures his words before speaking and yet always speaks the wrong words at the right time. "Enough with that rugby already," says Jim. He's tired of reading about rugby.

He's tired of reading about rugby. He's tired. . .of reading. . .Certain people can say just the right words to effect the opposite result they sought.. So I should shut up about rugby, is that what I'm hearing Jim? You say this on the same day that Bucky the Cat disses Rob Wilco in Get Fuzzy "Now you Pinky. What's your favorite type of entertainment?" the scheming cat says to his human uber-underling. "Rugby," replies the slacker chested Rob in a backwards baseball cap. "No, not rugby," says the black faced one-fanged Bucky with paw to chin. "Nobody cares about stupid rugby." And Rob Wilco says what any human would say in response to an insulting comment by a cat. "Dude, you're like the meanest media consultant ever."

If Jim is tired of reading about rugby, just imagine how tired he'd be. . . nah. That's unfair. That's apples and bowling balls. Point is, I have failed to amuse Jim with my rugby yarns. I have failed to reach his heart of oakness. So I've decided to call out the cavalry. I defy anyone to read what follows without laughing out loud at the wit and in awe of the language. This was written by actor Richard Burton, a Welshman who bedded both Cleopatra and Elizabeth Taylor, after hanging up his rugby boots.

The guys in the photo above remind me of the "sub-Welshman I submitted myself to that cruel afternoon" in Burton's reminiscece of his last match. This game was played in 1953 or thereabouts and I am stealing it wholsale and spreading it around the internet. This is Richard Burton writing. Note the second sentence. Awesome.

By Richard Burton

IT'S DIFFICULT FOR ME to know where to start with rugby. I come from a fanatically rugby-conscious Welsh miner's family, know so much about it, have read so much about it, have heard with delight so many massive lies and stupendous exaggerations about it and have contributed my own fair share, and five of my six brothers played it, one with some distinction, and I mean I even knew a Welsh woman from Taibach who before a home match at Aberavon would drop goals from around forty yards with either foot to entertain the crowd, and her name, I remember, was Annie Mort and she wore sturdy shoes, the kind one reads about in books as “sensible,” though the recipient of a kick from one of Annie's shoes would have been not so much sensible as insensible, and I even knew a chap called Five Cush Cannon who won the sixth replay of a cup final (the previous five encounters, having ended with the scores 0-0, 0-0, 0-0, 0-0, 0-0 including extra time) by throwing the ball over the bar from a scrum ten yards out in a deep fog and claiming a dropped goal. And getting it.

What's more I knew people like a one-armed inside half – he’d lost an arm in the First World War - who played with murderous brilliance for Cwmavon for years when I was a boy. He was particularly adept, this one, at stopping a forward bursting through from the line-out with a shattering iron-hard thrust from his stump as he pulled him on to it with the other. He also used the misplaced sympathy of innocent visiting players who didn't go at him with the same delivery as they would against a two-armed man, as a ploy to lure them on to concussion and other organic damage. They learned quickly, or were told after the match when they had recovered sufficiently from Jimmy's ministrations to be able to understand the spoken word, that going easy on Jimmy-One-Arm was first cousin to stepping into a grave and waiting for the shovels to start. A great many people who played unwarily against Jimmy died unexpectedly in their early forties. They were lowered solemnly into the grave with all match honours to the slow version of Sospan Fach. They say that the conductor at these sad affairs was noticeably one-armed but that could be exaggeration again.

As I said, it's difficult for me to know where to start so I’ll begin with the end. The last shall be first, as it is said, so I'll tell you about the last match I ever played in.

I had played the game representatively from the age of ten until those who employed me in my profession, which is that of actor, insisted that I was a bad insurance risk against certain dread teams in dead-end valleys who would have little respect, no respect, or outright disrespect for what I was pleased to call my face. What if I were unfortunate enough to be on the deck in the middle of a loose maul… they murmured in dollar accents? Since my face was already internationally known and since I was paid, perhaps overpaid, vast sums of money for its ravaged presentation they, the money men, expressed a desire to keep it that way.

Apart from wanting to preserve my natural beauty, it would affect continuity, they said, if my nose was straight on Friday in the medium shot and was bent towards my left ear on Monday for the close-up. Millions of panting fans from Tokyo to Tonmawr would be puzzled, they said. So to this day there is a clause in my contracts that forbids me from flying my own plane, skiing and playing the game of rugby football, the inference being that it would be all right to wrestle with a Bengal tiger five thousand miles away, but not to play against, shall we say, Pontypool at home. I decided that they had some valid arguments after my last game.

It was played against a village whose name is known only to its inhabitants and crippled masochists drooling quietly in kitchen corners, a mining village with all the natural beauty of the valleys of the moon.. and just as welcoming, with a team composed almost entirely of colliers. I hadn't played for four or five years but was fairly fit, I thought, and the opposition was bottom of the third class and reasonably beatable. Except, of course on their home ground. I should have thought of that. I should have called to mind that this was the kind of team where, towards the end of the match, you kept your bus ticking over near the touchline in case you won and had to run for your life.

I wasn't particularly nervous before the match until, though 1 was disguised with a skull-cap and everyone had been sworn to secrecy, 1 heard a voice from the other team asking “Le ma'r blydi film star 'ma? (here's the bloody film star here?) as we were running on to the field. My cover, as they say in spy stories, was already blown and trouble was to be my shadow (there was none from the sun since there was no sun - it was said in fact that the sun hadn't shone there since 1929) and the end of my career the shadow of my shadow for the next eighty minutes or so. It was a mistaken game for me to play. I survived it with nothing broken except my spirit, the attitude of the opposition being unquestionably summed up in simple words like “Never mind the bloody ball, where's the bloody actor?” Words easily understood by all.

Among other things I was playing Hamlet at that time at the Old Vic but for the next few performances after that match I was compelled to play him as if he were Richard the Third. The punishment I took had been innocently compounded by a paragraph in a book of reminiscence by Bleddyn Williams with whom I had played on and off (mostly off) in the RAF. On page 37 of that volume Mr. Williams is kind enough to suggest that I had distinct possibilities as a player were it not for the lure of tinsel and paint and money and fame and so on. Incidentally, one of the curious phenomena or my library is that when you take out Bleddyn’s autobiography from the shelves it automatically opens at the very page mentioned above. Friends have often remarked on this and wondered afresh at the wizardry of the Welsh. It is in fact the only notice I have ever kept.

Anyway, this little snippet from the great Bleddyn's book was widely publicized and some years later by the time I played that last game had entered into the uncertain realms of folk legend and was deeply embedded in the subconscious of the sub-Welshmen I submitted myself to that cruel afternoon. They weren't playing with chips on their shoulders, they were simply skeptical about page 37.

I didn’t realize that I was there to prove anything until too late. And I couldn't. And didn't. I mean prove anything. And I'm still a bit testy about it. Though I was working like a dog at the Vic playing Hamlet, Coriolanus, Caliban, The Bastard in King John, and Toby Belch, it wasn't the right kind of training for these great knotted gnarled things from the burning bowels of the earth. In my teens I had lived precariously on the lip of first-class rugby by virtue of knowing every trick in the canon, evil and otherwise, by being a bad bad loser, but chiefly, and perhaps only because I was very nippy off the mark. I was 5 ft 10 ½” in height in bare feet and weighed, soaking wet, no more than 121 stone, and since I played in the pack, usually at open side wing-forward and since I played against genuinely big men it therefore followed that I had to be galvanically quick to move from Inertia. When faced with bigger and faster forwards, I was doomed. R. T. Evans of Newport, Wales and the Universe for instance - a racy 141 stone and 6 ft 1 ½” in height - was a nightmare to play against and shaming to play with, both of which agonies I suffered a lot, mostly thank God, the latter lesser cauchemar. Genuine class of course doesn't need size though sometimes I forgot this. Once I p1ayed rather condescendingly against a Cambridge college and noted that my opposite number seemed to be shorter than I was and in rugby togs looked like a schoolboy compared with Ike Owen, Bob Evans or W. I. D. Elliot. However this blond stripling gave me a terrible time. He was faster and harder and wordlessly ruthless and it was no consolation to find out his name afterwards because it meant nothing at the time. He has forgotten me but I haven’t forgotten him. This anonymity was called Steele-Bodger and a more onomatopoeic name for its owner would be hard to find. He was, I promise you, steel and he did, I give you my word, bodger. Say his name through clenched teeth and you’ll see what I mean. I am very glad to say that I have never seen him since except from the safety of the stands.

In this match, this last match played against troglodytes, burned to the bone by the fury of their work, bow-legged and embittered because they weren't playing for or hadn't played for and would never play for Cardiff or Swansea or Neath or Aberavon, men who smiled seldom and when they did it was like scalpels, trained to the last ounce by slashing and hacking away neurotically at the frightened coal face for 7 ½ hours a day, stalactitic, tree-rooted, curved out or granite by a rough and ready sledge hammer and clinker, against these hard volumes of which I was the soft cover paper-back edition. I discovered some truths very soon. I discovered just after the first scrum for instance that it was time I ran for the bus and not for their outside-half. He had red hair, a blue-white face and no chin. Standing up straight his hands were loosely on a level with his calves and when the ball and I arrived exultantly together at his stock-still body, a perfect set-up you would say, and when I realized that I was supine and he was lazily kicking the ball into touch I realized that I had forgotten that trying to intimidate a feller like that was like trying a cow a mandrill, and that he had all the graceful willowy-give and sapling-bend of stressed concrete.

That was only the outside-half.

From then on I was elbowed, gouged, dug, planted, raked, hoed, kicked a great deal, sandwiched, and once humiliatingly taken from behind with nobody in front of me when I had nothing to do but run fifteen yards to score. Once, coming down from going up for the ball in a line-out, the other wing-forward - a veteran of at least fifty with grey hair - chose to go up as I was coming down if you'll forgive this tautological syntax. Then I was down and he was up and to insult the injury he generously helped me up from being down and pushed me in a shambling run towards my own try-line with a blood-curdling endearment in the Welsh tongue since during all these preceding ups and downs his unthinkable team had scored and my presence was necessary behind the posts as they were about to attempt the conversion.

I knew almost at once and appallingly that the speed, such as it had been, had ended and only the memory lingered on, and that attacking Olivia De Havilland and Lana Turner and Claire Bloom was not quite the same thing as tackling those Wills and Dais, those Twms and Dicks.

The thing to do I told myself with desperate cunning was to keep alive, and the way to do that was to keep out of the way. This is generally possible to do when you know you're out-classed without everybody knowing, but in this case it wasn't possible to do because everybody was very knowing indeed. Sometimes in a lament for my lost youth (I was about 28) I roughed it up as well as I could but it is discouraging to put the violent elbow into the tempting rib when your prescience tells you that what is about to be broken is not the titillating rib but your pusillanimous pathetic elbow. After being gardened, mown and rolled a little more, I gave that up, asked the Captain of our team if he didn't think it would be a better idea to hide me deeper in the pack. I had often, I reminded him, played right prop, my neck was strong and my right arm had held its own with most. He gave me a long look, a trifle pitying perhaps but orders were given and in I went to the maelstrom and now the real suffering began. Their prop with whom I was to share cheek and jowl for the next eternity, didn't believe in razor blades since he grew them on his chin and shaved me thoroughly for the rest of the game taking most of my skin in the process, delicacy not being his strong point. He used his prodigious left arm to paralyze mine and pull my head within an inch or two of the earth, then rolled my head around his, first taking my ear between his fore-finger and thumb, humming “Rock of Ages” under his breath.

By the end of the game my face was as red as the setting sun and the same shape. Sometimes, to vary the thing a bit he rolled his head on what little neck he had around, under and around again my helpless head. I stuck it out because there was nothing else to do which is why on Monday night in the Waterloo Road I played the Dane looking like a Swede with my head permanently on one side and my right arm in an imaginary sling intermittently crooked and cramped with occasional severe shakes and involuntary shivers as of one with palsy. I suppose to the connoisseurs of Hamlets it was a departure from your traditional Prince but it wasn't strictly what the actor playing the part had in mind. A melancholy Dane he was though. Melancholy he most certainly was.

I tried once to get myself removed to the wing but by this time our Captain had become as, shall we say, “dedicated” (he may read this) as the other team and actually wanted to win. He seemed not to hear me and the wing in this type of game I knew never got the ball and was, apart from throwing the ball in from touch, a happy Spectator, and I wanted to be a happy spectator. I shuffled after the pack.

I joined in the communal bath afterwards in a large steamy hut next to the changing-rooms, feeling very hard-done-by and hurt though I didn't register the full extent or the agonies that were to crib, cabin and confine me for the next few days. I drank more than my share of beer in the home team's pub, joined in the singing and found that the enemies were curiously shy and withdrawn until the beer bad hit the proper spot. Nobody mentioned my performance on the field.

There was only one moment of wild expectation on my part when a particu1arly grim sullen and taciturn member of the other side said suddenly with what passed shockingly for a smile splitting the slag heap of his face like an earth tremor,

“Come outside with us will ‘ew?” There was another beauty with him.

"Where to?” I asked.

“Never 'ew mind,” he said, “you'll be awright. Jest come with us.”

“O.K.”

We went out into the cruel February night and made our way to the outside Gents - black-painted concrete with one black pipe for flushing, wet to the open sky. We stood side by side in silence. They began to void. So did I. There had been beer enough for all. I waited for a possible compliment on my game that afternoon - I had after all done one or two good things if only by accident. I waited. But there was nothing but the sound of wind and water. I waited and silently followed them back into the bar.

Finally I said: “What did you want to tell me?"

“Nothing,” the talkative one said.

“Well, what did you ask me out there for then?'”

“Well,” the orator said, “Well… us two is brothers and we wanted to tell our mam that we'd 'ad a…”

He hesitated, after all I spoke posh except when I spoke Welsh, which oddly enough the other team didn't speak to me though I spoke it to them. “Well, we jest wanted to tell our mam that we had passed water with Richard Burton” he said with triumphant care.

“Oh ‘ell!” I said.

I went back to London next day in a Mark VIII Jaguar driving very fast, folding up and tucking away into the back drawer of my subconscious all my wounds, staunched blood, bandaged pride, feeling older than I've ever felt since. The packing wasn't very well done as from time to time all the parcels of all the games I'd ever played wrapped up loosely in that last one will undo themselves spill out of the drawer into my dreams and wake me shaking to the reassuring reaching-out for the slim cool comfort of a cigarette in the dead vast and doomed middle and with a puff and a sigh mitty myself into Van Wyk, Don White and Alan Macarley and winning several matches by myself by 65 points to nil, re-pack the bags.

Continue reading "As likely a bunch of welshmen as you'd expect" »

April 01, 2008

Which way to the Walt Whitman Bridge?

Which way to the Walt Whitman Bridge?

POOR JOHNNY LEE REED IV of Sicklerville, NJ. He's the phycho whack job who went off his meds during rush hour last week and ended up stranding thousands of motorists in an interstate gridlock spanning the Delaware River when Johnny Lee stopped his Cadillac Escalade on the Walt Whitman Bridge and threatened motorists with a baseball bat in one hand while holding his one-year-old son, Johnny Lee Reed V, in the other. It took police five hours to end the standoff peacefully, but not before Johnny Lee revealed what had driven him over the edge.

Apparently, Johnny Lee told police that his email had been compromised by ominous messages from a "Nigerian prince" who had contacted him with an offer that he found difficult to refuse without paying a bridge toll first. I know how Johnny feels. I just received this email from the African prince's scam moll. "Dearest One," she began.
"Good day and which i believe you will be of great assistants to me that will make the beginning of never-ending family relationship. I hope that this proposal will not be an inconvenience or embarrassment to you.I must not hesitate to confide in you this simple and sincere business

"My name is Lilian, I am 20 years of age, the only daughter of late Mr and Mrs Williams Cissa Republic of Sierra Leonia. My father before his death was a prosperous Cocoa and Gold merchant before his untimely death, after his business trip to Abidjan -Cote d'Ivoire, to negotiate on a Cocoa and Gold business he wanted to invest in Abidjan - Coted'Ivoire. My mother died when I was little ,and since then my father took me so special.

"Before his death on 12th November 2005 he told me that he has the sum of Eight Million,Five Hundred Thousand United State Dollars.(USD $8.500.000USD) he deposited with one of the security companies here in cote d,ivoire. that he wanted to use this fund to invest his cocoa business in cote d,ivoire. After the burial of my late father i came down to Abidjan here in Cote D,iviore .

"I am just 20 years old and a university undergraduate and really don't know what to do.and the normal option is for me to claim this fund out from the security company and to transfer it to a safe country , through a reliable person for investment and also continue my education in the country. because I have suffered a lot of set backs as a result of incessant political crisis here in cote d'ivoire.

"The death of my father actually brought sorrow to my life. as i,m writing to you now i,m writing with tears and pains. all the documents regarding to the deposit of the fund that was given to me by my late father is intact with me.I am in a sincere desire of your humble assistance in this regards.Your suggestions and ideas will be highly regarded.

"Now permit me to ask these few questions:" Uh-oh, I hope Lil.ian doesn't ask for my PIN number. She didn't. She doesn't know me well enough yet. So she asked,

"1. Can you honestly help me.
"2. Can I completely trust you?
"3. What percentage of the total amount in question will be good for you after the money is in your custody. Please,Consider this and get back to me as soon as posible.Thank you so much and God bless you.

"My sincere regards,

"Miss Lilian Cissa"

I don't know about Johnny, but I know a sure thing when I see one. Sweet Jersey, here I come.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Envoyé avec Yahoo! Mail.
Plus de moyens pour rester en contact.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Envoyé avec Yahoo! Mail.
Plus de moyens pour rester en contact.

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March 24, 2008

A Question For the Monday Morning After

A Question For the Monday Morning After

WHEN I QUESTION MY FAITH which I do constantly, I find myself stumped over the basic questions. Simplest among them being, do I believe in Jesus? I say "simplest" because if you answer yes to Jesus then God is a snap. There is no Jesus without God. And I don't mean that in the father/son way. Could Jesus exist as a concept, let alone a belief, without a God? So the answer is yes to both, but now we get down to the Clintonian definitions: what you you mean by "believe?"

Do I believe in Jesus? Damn right I do. Do I believe Jesus is God, or the son of god, born flesh by Mary, herself born without original sin, a virgin mother who got schtupped by the Holy Ghost? That's not a religion that's a Jerry Springer show. And yet if I don't believe it, I know that that story informs my belief in . . . what? Jesus? Jesus Christ our lord? Jesus H. Christ? Christ almighty? The Christ of my parents or the Jesus the nuns would always bow to at the very sound of the name. Jesus.

Do I believe in Jesus. Hell yes.

But I have no words. You either get Jesus or you don't. At least my own personal Jesus, the one I talk to without opening my mouth. The answer quicker than the thought itself. What would Jesus do? Don't ask. He might do it. And if not Himself, a multitude of transparent lunatics and opportunists speaking for Him. I call him Him. I'm like Flo at the check-out counter in the Progressive car insurance commercial who answers a customer's wow with "Wow! I say it louder." He's a Him to me. So I guess that makes me a Christian.

And to think I was just getting over being Catholic.

Jesus, will you give a guy a break? Knock wood. Oh, sorry. That was inappropriate.

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March 18, 2008

No, no, Mr. Mayor, I mean the other Beirut

No, no, Mr. Mayor, I mean the other Beirut

SO THIS RACISTS IS SITTING on a barstool at a neighborhood tavern when in through the front door walks a priest, a minister and a rabbi. "What is this -- a joke?" says the racist. . Suddenly a blonde walks in the front door. The bartender tells her, "Three. You'll need three and at least one lighbulb for each."

As the blonde leaves by the front door, Elton John enters from the rear, followed seconds later by Michael Jackson who is holding a sturdy leather leash with what looks like an alligator on the other end. "Excuse me," calls Jackson to the bartender "Do you serve komodo dragons? " Meanwhile, in the corner sits a jazz drummer awaiting the punchline and the signal for a rimshot, "Drump-CHISH!"

But seriously, racists don't tell racist jokes because they hate. They tell racist jokes because they love. . . to laugh. Especially at racist jokes, which are as common as herpes and as easy as to spread. All you need is one forced -- or even consensual -- incident of unprotected humor to be infected by schadenschwartzfreude (the guilt-filled glee one takes in laughing at a racist joke).

For instance, "Why are there only 49 contestants in the Miss Black America Beauty Pageant?" "Because nobody wants to be Miss Idaho." Drump-CHISH. A good racist joke has to pass liberal muster by being so clever you can't imagine some hate-filled troglodyte would even get it, let alone have the unique wit to create it. Back in the 1980's Philadelphia's first black mayor, Wilson Goode, had a President Bush style "nuke-u-lar" speech impediment that manifested itself, seemingly, every fifth word. The racially uncomfortable joke back then was Goode's response to a question about the Middle East. "Mr. Mayor, what's your opinion of Beirut?" "I think he was the greatest white baseball player of all time."

Oh, sorry. . . Drump-CHISH! Since the November election there's been a joke going around some of the less circumspect watering holes frequented by paler Philadelphians. It's a joke that I believe ought to be on the public record because it's -- kes ca say? -- unique to our town. Unlike the way I heard it, I'll substitute the B word for the mayor. "First we elected a good brother. Then we elected a street brother. Now we got a nutter brother." If it weren't true, it would't be funny. And if someone accuses me of being a racist, I will respond by quoting the advice of my Colorado attorney, William Tecumseh Levy, who told me, "Not only deny the allegation, deny the alligator."


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February 28, 2008

What's in a name, fellow co co students? Plenty!

What's in a name, fellow co co students? Plenty!

I WAS SURPRISED by a recent story in Metro that reported a decided coolness by students at Community College of Philadelphia (above) to Mayor Nutter's idea to change the name of the school to City College of Philadelphia. Few of the students quoted in the article seemed to engage the name-change idea enthusiastically, a typical reaction being that of a 19-year-old freshman who dismissed the mayor's new name proposal in an almost aggravated manner, "It won't make any difference," said Terell Watson of North Philadelphia. "If you want to change something, change these murder rates."

You were expecting, maybe, "Huzzah, Your Honor!"?

Young Mr. Watson can be forgiven for his rather impatient assessment. As a first year student, the name Community College of Philadelphia still seems freighted with delicious possibilities. It is, after all, College. It looks like a college and feels like a college. It's his college and he's proud to be there. Will changing the name to City College of Philadelphia give him a better education?

Well, maybe not him, but perhaps his younger brothers and sisters.

Forgive my bias as a proud graduate -- and current adjunct faculty member -- of Montgomery County Community College, but the label "community" college has sort of outlived its 1960's fuzzy-wuzzy inclusiveness. The architects of Pennsylvania's Community College Act in 1964 used the word "community" as a way of signalling taxpayers that "Hey, this is your college too! Come on over and take a course. It's just like a Big Y, except you can transfer the credits to Temple or Penn State." Or Harvard or Yale as it turns out.

"Community" college sounded so much more progressive and grown up than "junior" college, which is what most two year colleges were called back in those days. This was back when West Chester University was known as West Chester State Teachers's College, which in itself was a great improvement over it's original designation as neither a "university" nor a "teacher's college" but rather a "normal school." Teachers recieved degrees to teach at state normal schools, a name that sounds as strange today as community colleges will in another couple of decades.

Even when I was a student at Montgomery County Community College in the late '60's I didn't like the name. I loved the school; it changed my life. But the name sucked. In those days we attended classes in what had been Conshohocken High School on Fayette Street in downtown Conshy. I'm sorry, but the Montgomery County Community College of Conshohocken was a mouthful I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy. "Where do you go to school?" asks a LaSalle student at a kegger. And I would reply, "I go to Em Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee (I never knew when to stop.) Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee Cee . . ."

These days students, faculty and administrators refer to the sprawling campus off Rte 202 in Whitpain Township as Mc3, which is easier written than abbreviated in spoken language (Em Cee Cubed?).

In those innocent Conshy High days we called it Montco, even though that name was better known and trademarked as a bargain brand of canned fruit and vegetables in all caps -- MONTCO. Others chose to refer to it in its fully abbreviated and awkward sounding nickname, "Montco Com Co." And there were a diabolical few who made it sound like a Latin dance craze: "Mo Co Co Co."

Oh, No No No.

In Philadelphia (Phila Co Co?) the college is known universally by the appellation "Community." Which is fine. Except if you walked into a Foot Locker and ordered a pair of sneakers with the brand name "Community" all the other college customers would be snickering "Bobos." And, frankly, bobos are fine. I made my kids wear them all through high school just to prove that footwear does not make the boy or girl. Of course they are now man and woman and they haven't spoken to me since.

I like the name City College of Philadelphia. It's classy. In New York, where City College is known simply as "City" rather than its full name (the City College of the City University of New York), the institution of higher learning shares a level of prestige and respect enjoyed by Temple in Philadelphia. Of Pennsylvania's 67 counties eligible under the Community College Act, Philadelphia is the only city that is also an entire county.

Why not celebrate that distinction? City College of Philadelphia. I could get used to that.

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February 20, 2008

Every Son Must Find His Own War

Every Son Must Find His Own War

I AM PREPARING MY OBITUARY. I The older I get the more I read about men whose lives are defined, to some, by their acts during wartime. My father's generation is dying off so fast I can't appreciate the heroes as they flash past. And there are so many of them . I like to think that rugby cured me of feeling like a weakling in front of my father. It wasn't easy. And I wasn't alone.

There was the rugby, of course. The hardness. The voluntary hurt. The friendships. Rugby was my Vietnam and I embraced it. I wanted, I needed, to feel tested. And I had everything to lose by playing rugby. There was nothing in it for me except what it made me feel about myself. Play rugby every week for ten or so years, two seasons a year, and you get to know something about madness. The good kind. The "I can't believe I cared that much about that back when I cared about that." And to realize I still care about all that. Still crazy after all this rugby.

My father never got it. I can speak of this now because I am a man, and in the maul of my life I have learned how to speak of hurt without it sounding pitying. I pitied my father. He was the biggest influence in my life . He was the huge. And he was completely out of his mind. There was alcohol involved. The more I understand my father the more it breaks my heart. All that stuff left unsaid because he never found the language of his own life.

I understand his rage
, his rage against the dying of the light. I just wish he had found the words or gestures. My father used to talk about World War II when I was a kid. I remember everything he said except where he was, and he never talked about the stories we found eight years after he died in letters he wrote to his sister. He was in Okinawa in August 1945. The first letter he got through to his sister was dated Oct. 16, 1945.

He filled in the blanks as best he knew them. He had been part of the invasion of Okinawa, saw frightened Japanese-hostage Okinawains emerge from a cave, and since then had been placed on a ship off the coast of Japan awaiting the order to invade. Which is where he was the day America went mediaval on Hiroshima. In his letter my father never mentions the means. He described the atomic bomb as "the Japanese surrender proposal." Regarding his feelings about invading Japan my father wrote "but the Japanese surrender proposal put an end to that interesting assignment." And then, to prove he's human, he added, "Thank God." My father was 36 years old. I wouldn't be born for another four years.

This new knowledge of how close my father was dying in the awful battle that never happened because of the Atomic bomb was the first time I was forced to consider life without me in it. I quickly came to the conclusion, "That sucks!" Suddenly I felt more pride than pity toward my father.

Boo-fuckin'-hoo. Am I breakin' any hearts here? We all had it rough. Or if we didn't, we do now because we play rugby. Or try to. Or did. I'm all fucked up from playing rugby. Won't begin to name the places. But let me point out that the heart of ruck and roll is till beating. I regret nothing. Not the waste of time. Not the misplaced values. Not the sad inventory a rugby braveheart has to submit himself to when he confronts the reality of how much time he spent on rugby rather than on family. Or job. Or success. Did I mention I'm also a mummer?

Oh, to get back to that opening "obituary" remark, I want rugby mentioned in my obituary. I want the world to know in the last story of my life how how much I loved the game of rugby football. And I love the game. Then and now. The game is better than ever. Much better than back when I played. But back then I actually played it. I played rugby as hard as I could. And now I feel like a man, for having played it, with purpose, year after year.

To speak such feelings iin front of rugby players is to feel like a fruit in front of the ripest bunch of bad apples I ever met. Slap a pair of tits on me, I'm a woman. But ask yourself this: "Would I have ever met this asshole if it weren't for rugby?" I could name names, and maybe I will. But let me speak the great unspoken about rugby players: We Love Each Other Because.

There was a bumper sticker back when I first started to play in the late '60's. All it said was "Rugby Because"

To this day I have no idea what that means and yet that's my best explanation for how I feel. In my wisdom gathered from years of living in my own skin, I know I needed to play rugby. Besides being the coolest sport I ever heard of, my older brother played it. And my older brother Bill was the coolest guy in the history of the world. Short, but cool.

I didn't realize my big brother was short until he beat me up when I was 18. He'd be away at college or something and I had taken over his room on the third floor to get beyond smelling distance of my younger brother Doug, who slept next to me for the first 18 years of my life. I had my reasons. But Billy would hear none of them. Like the Tank Man in Tianamin Square I stood defiant in front of my older brother. He proceeded to kick the shit out of me.

I remember this because it was the last time he ever kicked the shit out of me and I remember each moment like a bad scrum. I blame myself. I could have done better. I ended up running like a scolded dog down the stairs, even though I was six inches taller, 50 pounds heavier and eight years younger. Of course, Bill was drunk. And I was still a boy. And so, once again, I slept next to my brother Doug.

Rugby became a symbol for me. It was different. It was manly. It was out of it's freakin' mind. Oh, the adventures. And I wanted that. I wanted that bad. And I found it with the Whitemarsh Rugby Club, a name that gives me chills as I write it, because it means nothing except everything. We were brothers once, and young. We became men in front of our own eyes. I would trust them with my life, my fortune and my sacred honor. Beyond that, I got no time for any of them.


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February 14, 2008

Dude, way to ruin a picture!

Dude, way to ruin a picture!

SOME GUYS PLAY POOL. Some guys play cool. Some guys play hard to get. But then some guys just jump into the shot when another guy is trying to take a picture of some pretty girls. I'm not going to name names, but the ugliest girl in this picture is a guy like that. This was last Friday night at a bar in Grays Ferry. The good looking girls, of course, are from Second Street.

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February 12, 2008

I want my students to read this because. . .

I want  my students to read this because. . .

I JUST FOUND OUT SOMETHING I DIDN'T KNOW BEFORE and I am so excited to tell you about it. The tenth largest city in China is called Harbin. I didn't know this until yesterday when my wife emailed me with a message saying that Harbin is a city in Russia where they have this magical ice palace with snow sculptures (like the one above) and an ice version of the Great Wall of China.

I was sort of disappointed when I found out that Harbin is in China instead of Russia. I wanted to believe that my wife cared, even though she's Irish. But Harbin cares where it is, doesn't it? I never heard of Harbin before. Would never have looked it up if my wife hadn't sent me these pictures like the one above. But Harbin is in China, not Russia. The Internet was wrong. At least the first voice you heard about Harbin was wrong. And the internet made it easy to find out the truth.

Point is, I'm glad I know this. This gives me pleasure. I have learned something today I didn't know yesterday. It is a small fact that opens up an enormous anything. What if I really like Chinese geography? What if I'm fascinated by the other? What if Harbin was the capital city of Alaska while Hong Kong was Miami?

I must be trippin'. I'm thinking like a student.

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February 07, 2008

Hello pretty ladies. Welcome to Philadelphia

Hello pretty ladies.  Welcome to Philadelphia

I'VE NEVER KNOWN ANYONE who lives in Philadelphia to actually take a horse drawn carriage ride through the city. I don't know why, it's just something we never get around to doing. Like a native New Yorker visiting the Statue of Liberty, or taking a hansom cab ride through Central Park.

I have no idea if these lovely ladies bundled up against a rainy night and clip-clopping up Spruce Street near Broad the other night were tourists, but their smiles as I took this picture made me feel like they were seeing Philadelphia for the first time.

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January 27, 2008

Why are great men always so short?

Why are great men always so short?

I WOULD TRUST ROCKY NATALE with my life, my fortune, and my sacred honor. Other than that I got no time for the guy.

He enjoys busting my balls too much. And the day he stops doing that is the day I'll worry.

Rocky Natale, my friend, is almost too Rocky to be true. A native son of South Philadelphia, born before the legend of Marciano, or Balboa, he fits his nickname like a dictionary definition: "ROCKY -- tough guy with a heart of gold; muscular, Italian-American, dark curly hair." Add to that description "ham-sized right arm biceps tattooed with 'Big Re