photo


15
Oct 11

Florida at Auburn

Lemonier

Suddenly Auburn’s defense is looking worthy, mostly on the strength of a young and angry defensive line, led tonight by Corey Lemonier. This was Florida’s first pass of the game, where they thought they’d challenge a defender deep. The pass was intercepted, and that was the biggest threat of the night from the Gators.

Auburn’s offense is still struggling, but the defense, the special teams and a few odd calls from officials kept an inept Florida team at bay. In the end, the Tigers won 17-6. It should have been at least 23-6, or perhaps 27-6.

Binoculars

It wasn’t the best game to see — a common theme in college football today, based on what I was able to see — but it was a win. Auburn used all three of their quarterbacks and generated less than 300 yards, but held the misfiring Gators to less than 200.

Auburn wasn’t expect to win any games during this stretch of October, but they’ve won two. They are now 5-2 on the year and headed next weekend into Baton Rouge for a big clash with LSU.

More here tomorrow.


14
Oct 11

Dear sir

Spent a significant portion of the day doing my most favorite computer chore ever: going from Excel to Word in a repetitive fashion. There’s a database in a spreadsheet that must be displayed in another way.

Copy, click, paste, return, return, format, scroll. Page break, click, copy, click, repeat.

There’s probably an easier way to do this. Someone will send me an email about it. And you’re brilliant someone’s for doing so. It wouldn’t have helped today, though.

From this effort letters will be mailed, in support of emails and phone calls already made. There may be another round of one of those. Our department is thorough in its correspondence.

I worked on this project last weekend, when this was my view, come to think of it:

autumn

Autumn is here. But not there. That picture is from our trip to Indiana. That much autumn has not arrived in our part of the world yet. The evenings are cool, the nights are sharply crisp. Everything is still green, as we expect it to be. The high today was 81. Tomorrow is 85. Last night I could see my breath while standing over steaks on the grill. Autumn is a quirky thing this far south.

But, hey, a section of that tree is now the big picture on the rest of the site, so that’s why the wide angle shot is here.

Brian is here. He’s down for the football game. We stood in line for hours for dinner tonight. Don’t go out to eat on a homegame weekend. One day we’ll learn.


13
Oct 11

Math and rain, and also traffic

storm

I drove through that this morning. As it was later described, by several people, as “Suddenly here” and “hurricane-like.”

That last description came from a writer, so we’ll excuse the hyperbole. Even still, it was an imposing wall of active weather.

And I drove through two of them. The second was less impressive, but no less guilty of fraying the nerves of other drivers. Apparently it has been a while since it rained here — checking the drought monitor, why, yes, severe and extreme drought — because no one remembers how to drive in this stuff.

“I seem to recall something about hazard lights and … what was that other thing? Oh, BRAKES!”

Usually, applying a little less pressure to the accelerator and coasting to a speed slightly more comfortable allows one to press on, but not these good drivers. No sir. Today was a 45-mile-per-hour rain, which is to say that’s the speed I could safely maintain on the interstate in the heart of the storm.

Old timers remember a time of a 10-mile-per-hour rain, but their grandchildren, at Thanksgiving, just sigh and roll their eyes. “Not the monsoon story again, grandpa … ”

I recall stopping more with my grandparents in the rain than I’ve done myself, and my grandfather was a truck driver. He’d know from road weather. I have stopped for rain exactly twice in my driving career. Once it was raining so hard I mildly feared for my life. The other time it was merely difficult to see. And I believe it was late in the day and all the crazies were on the road.

No problems in the storms today, though, happily. The pine tree frontier was uneventful. Made it back to civilization just as the roads dried and the traffic thinned. I was able to stop by an engraving shop and ordered gifts for this year’s inductees to the Samford JMC Wall of Fame. Two gentlemen, alumni, success stories, are going on the great wall. They also need plaques.

Visited one of my banks, where I filled out paperwork. I will not be surprised at all to receive a phone call in three weeks informing me that the paperwork was incorrectly done and will need further attention. The helpful young teller was new and she knew as much about this particular procedure as I did. And I’m sure this will cost me $6. Processing fees, you understand.

On campus I received marching orders. I marched to and fro, doing things that were asked of me. I discovered, just before class, that I’d almost duplicated a colleague’s plan, almost to the letter. This required a last minute change of plans for my afternoon lecture.

I discussed math for journalists. Everyone wins.

Here I wrote some other things, my browser crashed and the WordPress draft sequence didn’t kick in. This is frustrating, but you’re not missing much. There was a story about bumper-to-bumper traffic and how, for the first time in the history of overcrowded interstates and freeway construction, it was beneficial. There was also a whimsical anecdote about the moon, which was lovely tonight.

I made this, though, so enjoy. I’ve put a few of these up here in the past, but not for some time. Thought I’d do this one, since I shot it from the hip today and remembered how much I like raindrops on glass. Something about the focus of the droplets and the blurring of the world beyond. I want to write about rain, there’s some great meaning behind it all, but precipitation isn’t my strongest subject matter, it seems. Best leave it to the experts:

rain

Rain more. We need it.


12
Oct 11

Auburn exonerated; terms Bammerfreude, Urbanfreude, Mullenfreude coined

Cam

On a dark Thursday last November I remember finding myself in a tough spot, thinking: Either an institution I love or members of the journalism profession will be embarrassed.

Sorry national sportswriters, couldn’t happen to a better class of folks. From al.com:

The NCAA did not find any major rules violations in Auburn’s signing of quarterback Cam Newton and has concluded its investigation.

The NCAA enforcement staff also concluded its investigation into charges by four former players on HBO who accused the school of providing extra benefits. Again, it found no wrongdoing.

The NCAA issued a statement Wednesday saying it interviewed more than 50 people to see if Auburn provided Newton or his family improper benefits. The NCAA said it could not find any reason to keep the investigation open because its findings did not meet a “burden of proof” that Auburn did anything wrong in signing the quarterback who led the Tigers to the national title last season.

And, also:

The NCAA took some of the constant scrutiny to task, saying charges must “meet a burden of proof, which is a higher standard than rampant public speculation online and in the media.”

“The allegations must be based on credible and persuasive information,” the NCAA said.

As I would tell any journalism student, or anyone else: your assertion does not mean evidence.

Cam

(Apparently true to my word, I did not write much about this here over the last year. In the archives I find two mentions. One, here, just after this “story” broke and something else the night Newton declared for the NFL draft.)

Just because why not:

Toomers

War Eagle.


9
Oct 11

Catching up

The Notre Dame edition. We’re spending a lot of time behind the windshield today, but that doesn’t mean you have to go with out. Here’s more from our brief trip to South Bend.

You know of Touchdown Jesus. This is First Down Moses:

Moses

And, no, this isn’t awkward at all.

They have red squirrels on campus. Figures, since their Irish.

squirrel

This is one of 12 faux fresco paintings in the Main Building. On the border of one painting there is a carefully hidden Kermit the Frog. In another, a hula dancer. These came along with a restoration at some point, as the original Luigi Gregori work dates to between 1882-1884, predating Jim Henson and discerning hula art by some time.

squirrel

They all detail Christopher Columbus’ place in the American story, or one representation of Columbus at any rate. The university now takes great pains to point out that these paintings are symbolic of the predominately white perspective.

There’s no word on Kermit’s role.

Anyway. The local media came out to the tailgate to talk to some of the troops going to the game through the Gameday for Heroes program. This lady asked which team he was cheering for:

interview

I guess she didn’t see the ND tattoo on his calf.

The blimp was there:

Goodyear

Michael Floyd wasted little time opening up the game’s scoring. He would finish with six catches for 78 yards, including this acrobatic score:

Floyd

Air Force would try to respond with their dangerous offense. Quarterback Tim Jefferson ran the option with Asher Clark. He snapped off a nice 29-yard rush — speed to the corners was Notre Dame’s only weakness on the day — but fumbled near midfield. That would later become the Irish’s second score of the game:

Jefferson

Theo Riddick had eight catches for 84 yards:

Jefferson

And the leprechaun had a lot of work to do:

leprechaun

He’s just a short guy with a good beard, living the dream …

leprechaun

Jefferson led the Falcons with 159 total yards, a passing touchdown and another rushing score:

Jefferson

Finally, here’s a panorama of Notre Dame Stadium. Click to enlarge:

Stadium