воскресенье, 30 сентября 2012 г.

Their Comeback Is Complete - The Washington Post

There was one current player in the Riggs Library that day, onegawky high school senior who sheepishly approached his new coach andput out his hand.

'C-congratulations, Coach,' Roy Hibbert said to John ThompsonIII, the day JT III was chosen to resurrect Georgetown's moribundprogram in April 2004.

'He told me they were having workouts,' Hibbert remembered. 'If Iwanted to come work out, I could work out.'

'He had braids,' Thompson said, half-smiling, rolling his eyes.

Thirty minutes earlier, Big Roy, the all-growed-up senior, hadlowered his shoulder and scored, and the will and resolve ofThompson's players outlasted a deeper and a hair more talentedLouisville team in a 55-52 scrum for their second straight Big Easttitle -- something not even Pops's Georgetown teams had done.

Hibbert had 12 points and four blocked shots in the game, andmade an impossibly tough basket inside to give his team the lead inthe final four minutes. He got help from 6-feet-nothing JonathanWallace, who with less than two minutes left maneuvered his compactframe through mounds of Louisville muscle in the key and -- grimacing, fading away off one foot -- released the prettiestteardrop from maybe five feet.

All net.

In a mucked-up game in which good looks at the basket were at apremium, DaJuan Summers then made the most of a rare unobstructedview, knocking down a three-pointer from the right baseline thatbroke the tie with 40 seconds left and sent the Phone Booth intoanother state of delirium.

After Louisville's last gasps from beyond the arc, the wallflowerrecruit from four years ago grabbed his jersey. His voice bellowingloudly, Hibbert kick-started the student section on one side of thearena with the first two words of a familiar chant: 'We are!'

The bare-chested boys and face-painted girls hollered back:'Georgetown!'

In about a week, some well-intentioned television analyst willsurmise why the Hoyas don't deserve a No. 1 seed in the NCAAtournament. Or point out how Georgetown is too flawed to win thenational title a year after its scintillating run to the FinalFour.

And, as usual, they will miss the point completely.

See, before worrying about where Georgetown is going, we need tobreathe for five seconds and see how far the Hoyas have come since2004 -- the year the program's national relevance was lost amidits 13-15 finish and one-and-done in the Big East tournament.

Running on memories more than fumes, Georgetown had become St.John's South -- that esteemed, private Catholic university thatkept waiting for its time-machine transport back to the 1980s.That's the program JT III inherited when he left the security ofPrinceton and the nonscholarship Ivy League for his old man'spressure-cooker job.

Big John, who knew there would be cries of nepotism, was alsothere to wish his son well four years ago in that perfectly chosenon-campus library -- a beautiful, Victorian cast-ironprefabrication, a room that just oozed old Washington.

'I don't know, it's hard to think about that for me,' JT III saidwhen asked whether he ever imagined such a quick turnaround. 'We hada plan. We actually wanted to win a national championship that firstyear. But then you just go about your business. That's how Iapproached it, not, 'Ooooh, let's by year X accomplish this.' Wereally wanted to just improve and get better. And we still do.'

Recalled Hibbert: 'At the time, Georgetown wasn't playing toowell. I just couldn't believe it what they were going through. Ithink we changed it around.'

Ya think?

For the final two minutes yesterday, the masses stood andscreamed -- all 19,116 of the Verizon Center capacity. They werecompletely enraptured by the most exhilarating college basketballgame anyone could remember in this building since George Masonrocked Connecticut's world to go to the Final Four in 2006.

A very talented team coached by Rick Pitino, who 21 years agoshocked Big John's Hoyas to go to the Final Four with Providence,went down hard.

Bill Raftery called the game on national television. Secretary ofState Condoleezza Rice clapped wildly from courtside. Jason Campbelland Patrick Ewing Sr. posed with Mayor Adrian Fenty for a photo opat halftime.

Georgetown is not merely back; the Hoyas have become boffo boxoffice, the place to be on a sporting Saturday in Washington.

The postgame news conference was standing room only in a smallroom, drawing a crowd unlike the Wizards and Capitals had seen.

In his usual seat along a table in the back of the room was BigJohn -- proud father, Washington icon, talk-radio host, and, now,unpaid ombudsman.

'Are you going to hold it over Pops, now that you've donesomething he's never done?' Thompson III was asked. Confirming thefeat, JT III replied, 'No.'

'Ask him when they're going to compare you to your peers, and notPete Carril and your father,' John Thompson Jr., said, his voicegrowing a bit stern. 'You'll never make a damn dime if you have tobe compared to ancient people. When will you be compared to yourpeers, which you have done extremely well against, as opposed toyour ancient dad and Pete Carril?'

JT III beat Pitino, his father's old peer, today -- siphoningevery bit of resilience from his determined kids, who amazinglyfinished unbeaten at home for the first time in 12 years.

Looking back to that day in 2004, with JT III and young RoyHibbert standing there, it's safe to say almost every hoop dream aplayer and coach could have imagined four years ago has come true:dropping top-ranked Duke two years ago; stunning North Carolina lastMarch; just two wins away from a national title; and another BigEast crown Saturday before a deafening crowd at home.

Almost every dream imaginable, even the one in which the coachenvisioned his future center in a clean, dark suit, his hair neatlytrimmed, before the cameras.

'The braids?' Hibbert said, smiling. 'Senior year of high school.I was going through a phase.'

суббота, 29 сентября 2012 г.

Devils have no prayer against Iverson, Hoyas.(Sports)(Ncaa Tournament) - The Washington Times (Washington, DC)

RICHMOND - Second-seeded Georgetown began its march toward the Final Four with a merciless pounding of No. 15 Mississippi Valley State, methodically drubbing the Delta Devils 93-56 in the first round of the NCAA tournament.

The Hoyas will meet No. 7-seed New Mexico at 12:15 p.m. tomorrow in the second round. The Lobos were 69-48 winners over Kansas State in the other early East Region first-round game.

Inspired by first-round upset victories by low seeds Princeton and Drexel, the Delta Devils - sporting new Nike basketball shoes and warmups courtesy of alumnus and San Francisco 49ers star Jerry Rice - took the court hopeful of creating some unexpected drama of their own.

But the game marked a homecoming of sorts for Allen Iverson, and no upstart team from Itta Bena, Miss., was going to spoil his fun. The sophomore guard from Hampton, approximately 30 miles from Richmond, made 13 of 18 shots and scored 31 points in only 25 minutes as Georgetown (27-7) built a 23-point halftime lead and smothered the Delta Devils in the second half.

The 6-foot Iverson, a first-team Associated Press All-American, treated the crowd of 11,859 at Richmond Coliseum to a 'SportsCenter'-worthy collection of perimeter jumpers, slashing layups and baseline jams and exited to a standing ovation. Among the spectators was former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, whose grant of conditional clemency after Iverson's 1991 conviction for maiming by mob allowed him to attend Georgetown.

'It was nice having everyone there,' Iverson said, 'but I can't let all the attention become a distraction. We're here for a reason, and I have to stay focused.'

Georgetown coach John Thompson spoke kindly of the overwhelmed opposition, saying, 'This is a whole different environment for Mississippi Valley State. We play on national television an awful lot; we're in the [NCAA tournament] a lot. It's very difficult for some of those kids to get in this setting and relax right away. I'm sure they are far better than they played against us today.'

After nine minutes of relatively good basketball, the Delta Devils disintegrated. Georgetown (27-7) went on a 19-3 run that gave them a 40-15 lead with 4:26 remaining. As the Delta Devils (22-7) wilted under Georgetown's fullcourt trapping zone defense, committing 13 turnovers in the first half, Iverson and reserve center Jahidi White (13 points, eight rebounds) took turns converting those turnovers into transition baskets.

'During the time we got that spurt, our defensive intensity picked up,' senior center Othella Harrington said. 'We ran a little trap at them and they couldn't handle it. Jahidi was doing a great job on the inside, too. The guards were getting him the ball, and he was too big for them to guard, so I think his play contributed a lot to the run.'

And when the Mississippians weren't kicking balls out of bounds or throwing panicky passes to phantom teammates, they were forcing outrageous shots en route to a 24 percent first-half performance from the field.

'Today you witnessed a good country whipping,' Mississippi Valley State coach Lafayette Stribling said. 'We got careless with the basketball, and we couldn't throw it in the well. But the best team won today. This Georgetown team is really something. . . . The Iverson kid is everything we expected and maybe some more. . . . We were just overmatched.'

The second half mirrored the first as Georgetown's Harrington (15 points, eight rebounds), and Ya-Ya Dia (10 points, six rebounds) joined White in the middle to give the Hoyas a 50-34 rebounding edge despite the efforts of Delta Devils center Marcus Mann (24 points, seven rebounds). Mann entered the game as the nation's leading rebounder but was swarmed under by the Hoyas' frontcourt horde.

****BOX

HOYAS REPORT

Analysis and commentary from yesterday's game:

ALL IN THE FAMILY - Coach John Thompson used No. 13-seed Princeton's Thursday night upset of No. 4-seed UCLA as an inspirational warning to his Hoyas before yesterday's first-round matchup with No. 15-seed Mississippi Valley State. But the Tigers upset win was more than just a motivational tool for Thompson.

'The Princeton vs. UCLA game had special meaning to me because my son [John III] is one of the assistant coaches at Princeton,' Thompson said. 'Shortly after the game he called me from a pay phone, and when the phone rang I knew exactly who it was. And Pete [Carril] has special meaning to me because my child loves him, so I love him, too. So, I was glad about that and certainly I used it.'

VICTIMS - While the rest of the Hoyas had a field day against the overmatched Delta Devils, posting a 66 percent shooting effort, freshman guard Victor Page had one of his least auspicious games of the season. After starting out 4-for-4, Page missed 10 of his next 11 shots and committed five turnovers, finishing with an ugly 14 points.

пятница, 28 сентября 2012 г.

Orangemen squeeze Hoyas into another last-minute setback.(Sports) - The Washington Times (Washington, DC)

The show gets more polished with each performance, but the curtain keeps falling on the Hoyas' heads. For the third time in Georgetown's last six games, the Hoyas pushed an upper-echelon Big East team to the brink, impressing with improvement but losing just the same.

Yesterday's double-edged rendition came against No. 18 Syracuse before a season-high crown of 15,983 at MCI Center. The luckless Hoyas matched bows with the ballyhooed New Yorkers for more than 38 minutes before yielding 81-79 in the game's final act.

The Hoyas (8-8) have lost six of seven Big East contests, three by a total of five points.

Georgetown's locker room was predictably somber after yesterday's loss. Coach Craig Esherick, now 1-2 since taking over for John Thompson on Jan. 8, searched for hope amid the hapless trend.

'The three games seems like three years right now,' said Esherick, whose Hoyas also recorded a near-miss against No. 11 St. John's (71-69) last Monday. 'It's very hard for me today to feel good about it. Syracuse was a ranked opponent and St. John's was a ranked opponent - they're both very good teams. We did not play poorly in either game. We had a chance to win both games, and we have to build on that. . . . We have to build on playing better, but we also have to win some games.'

Just as they did against St. John's, the Hoyas battled from 10 points down yesterday to claim a 68-67 lead with 5:08 remaining. Guard Anthony Perry, who had a game-high 26 points and five steals, hit two free throws to give Georgetown the lead.

Surprisingly, the Hoyas contained the vaunted Syracuse frontcourt tandem of Etan Thomas (nine points, eight rebounds, three blocks) and Ryan Blackwell (10 points, eight rebounds) and seemed to survive an unexpected first-half explosion from sophomore forward Damone Brown (19 points, 11 rebounds). But the same player who tortured the Hoyas throughout the game, junior point guard Jason Hart (20 points, eight assists), proved too much in the game's final minutes.

Hart responded to Perry's free throws with a pull-up 3-pointer from well beyond the arc on the left wing to put Syracuse (12-4, 4-3) back on top. He then harassed Georgetown point guard Kevin Braswell (four of 21 from the field) into three consecutive misses over the Hoyas' next four possessions, and when Perry struck from behind the arc with 1:48 left to pull Georgetown within a point, Hart again rose to the challenge.

On the Orangemen's next possession, the Los Angeles native drew a double-team near the top of the key, leapt into the air as if to shoot and then flashed a pass across the top of the circle to an unguarded Blackwell. Despite his subpar day, Blackwell buried the open 3-pointer and the Hoyas. His shot

gave Syracuse a 75-71 lead with 1:33 remaining, and the Orangemen converted free throws down the stretch to seal the victory.

'Jason's really the key to our basketball team - when he plays well, we win,' said Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim of his playmaker. 'That was some good basketball from both teams. Today you had a case where we played our best and they still could have won. Georgetown's playing as well as I've seen them play all year, and I think that's a tribute to the players and Craig and the staff.

'[With Thompson resigning], it would be very easy to go the other way, but they've stepped up and there's no comparison between this Georgetown team and the one I watched at the beginning of the year. That's a very good basketball team, and they're going to win a lot of games and make some people pay as the year goes on.'

But even a bevy of compliments from a man stingy with superlatives can't sugarcoat reality.

Sure, Georgetown starts essentially three first-year players (Braswell, Perry and center Ruben Boumtje Boumtje, who played a total of 80 minutes last season) and a sophomore swingman Nat Burton).

Sure, they nearly beat a sluggish St. John's team on the road and followed with another 'almost' despite Syracuse's best effort.

But when the Hoyas take the court Tuesday against West Virginia, they will arrive sporting the school's worst Big East start and will be the first set of Hoyas sitting at .500 after Christmas since 1974.

****BOX

HOYAS REPORT

Seen and heard yesterday at MCI Center:

BOEHEIM ON BIG JOHN - The rivalry that built the Big East wasn't quite the same without John Thompson cussing down the sideline at longtime nemesis Jim Boeheim. In his 23rd season at Syracuse, Boeheim met briefly with Thompson before the game, then discussed the coach's departure afterward.

'I don't know if any two coaches have had the wars that we had for the 20-plus years that we've been going at it,' said Boeheim. 'It was bitter, it was harsh, it was a war for a long time, but the last five or 10 years we've gotten a little older and grown to respect each other. We've been through so many battles, and it's different not seeing him out there.

'But like I said earlier, Craig [Esherick] is such a great coach - he knows the league. So many times you bring coaches in from outside the league, and they can't coach in this league. Craig knows the league, he's smart, he's a good basketball coach. And like I said, they're playing better than they've played all year.

'John Thompson is a legend in this game. I don't have to butter John up anymore, or say anything nice about him, but he deserved to be in the Hall of Fame a long time ago for everything he's done in coaching. . . . But as I said to somebody earlier today, you know we lost Lou Carnesecca [1992], and St. John's is [No. 11] in the country right now. So, this is about programs, and it's about teams and players.

'You know, John and I haven't made a basket in a long time. And he's going to be missed, but people come along who are going to get the job done.'

BLANCHARD SIGHTING - Coveted blue-chip recruit Lavell Blanchard from Pioneer High School attended the game as a part of his weekend visit to the Hilltop. The 6-foot-7 swingman from Ann Arbor, Mich., ranked by recruiting analyst Bob Gibbons as the top senior prospect in the nation, is rumored to have narrowed his candidates to Michigan, Georgetown and Virginia. Blanchard looked rather subdued behind the Hoyas' bench, and many felt Thompson's resignation (Blanchard's mother liked Thompson) would hurt Georgetown's chances. But the fact that Blanchard still chose to use one of his precious campus visits on the Hoyas has to be a good sign for Georgetown.

четверг, 27 сентября 2012 г.

After a Long Climb, Braswell Is Peaking - The Washington Post

Georgetown Coach Craig Esherick needed time to retrieve theanecdote that would properly illuminate his relationship with pointguard Kevin Braswell, which for four years has been rather like abouncing basketball, down one moment and quickly back up.

Esherick has immense affection for Braswell, who has started to gothrough a series of ends to a career as distinctive as anyone hasever had at Georgetown. In his final home game Saturday, Braswelltied the school record for assists with 16. That clearly wasn'ttypical, but it shows how creative he can be when under control.

'That was the happiest I've ever been for Kevin,' Esherick said asGeorgetown continued preparations for Wednesday's game againstProvidence here in the first round of the Big East Conferencetournament. 'It was his best game as a college player.'

A moment later, Esherick was recalling another game, more than twoyears earlier, when Braswell was neither so brilliant nor so mature.He'd taken the weekend to rummage through his memory bank.

More than two years earlier, Braswell had a poor practice beforethe Hoyas left for a league game against West Virginia in Charleston.Then he forgot to pack his game shoes, which required going to asporting goods store and buying a pair. Worst of all, Braswell fouledout on what Esherick thought was a monumentally dumb play and hisabsence helped the Mountaineers to a five-point upset.

'I was ready to kill him,' Esherick said.

Now he's more than ready to praise Braswell.

'He's as resilient and dependable as almost anyone we've everhad,' Esherick said. 'He has been hurt, but doesn't think about notplaying, doesn't think about not practicing. Nobody ever plays wellevery single game. But I've never thought the entire time Kevin hasbeen here that he wasn't ready to compete every single game.

'He's intelligent, interesting and charismatic. But he also hasfound a way to drive me crazy at times, and that makes me like andrespect him even more because things have not been one way all thetime. He's handled my idiosyncrasies very well, and I've handled hisvery well.'

As many gifted high school players do, the 6-foot-2 native ofBaltimore thought his college career would be a series of him sinkingshot after glorious shot and his team at least close to if notwinning the national championship each year.

Braswell has been brilliant lots of times, scoring 40 points as asophomore in a triple overtime NIT victory over Virginia and makingseveral game-winning baskets in the final seconds when everybody inthe gym knew he'd be taking them.

'At the end of games, when the score's close, that's when hethrives,' said front court reserve Courtland Freeman. 'That Virginiagame was amazing to watch. He was so strong-willed.'

Braswell has started every game at Georgetown, 31 as a freshman,34 as a sophomore, 33 last year and 27 so far this season. His 686assists are the most in school history. His career scoring average,13.5 points, is second among Georgetown guards, behind Allen Iverson(23.0) and Eric (Sleepy) Floyd (17.7). His rebounding average, 3.9,is the best ever for a Georgetown guard; his average for steals (2.8)is just behind Iverson's school-leading 3.2.

Much of the friction between Esherick and Braswell has been overhis role: Braswell's scoring guard instincts vs. his assignment ofsetting up the offense. Braswell has accepted Esherick's quick hookafter a too-clever pass has gone out of bounds, and Esherick hasacknowledged Braswell's clear leadership qualities.

'There's been a lot of pressure on Kevin this season,' forwardGerald Riley said, 'because he's the only senior.'

Particularly in his sophomore year, Braswell was more than willingto pass up a difficult shot. But he was smart enough to realize thatno teammate at the time was able to catch a hard pass or make a shotbeyond 12 feet. Had Georgetown had today's players two years ago,Braswell might have 50 more assists.

'Coach has been there for me, time after time, on and off thecourt,' Braswell said. 'He's probably given me a chance to play atthe next level.'

Esherick said that barring 'a major earthquake or apoplexy'Braswell would get his degree in May. His major is sociology, with aminor in English and theology.

Individual records are close to meaningless for Braswell. Whatgalls him is Georgetown having to settle for the NIT his first twoseason and having to win at least two and probably three games inthis week's conference tournament to earn a bid to the NCAAtournament. He still figures the Hoyas have enough talent to go asfar in the NCAAs as they did last season, to the round of 16.

'We're playing our best ball now,' he said, referring to a three-game winning streak he hopes the Hoyas will build on, postponing aslong as possible one more last experience.

среда, 26 сентября 2012 г.

Hoyas' speed leaves Orangemen in dust.(Sports) - The Washington Times (Washington, DC)

Georgetown vs. Syracuse. It's the game that built a conference; the Super Bowl of Big East basketball. And just like most of those Super Bowls, last night it wasn't even close.

The sixth-ranked Hoyas jumped out to a 15-6 lead in the game's first three minutes and didn't slow down until the final buzzer, dismissing the 17th-ranked

Orangemen 83-64 before 18,753 delighted fans at USAir Arena.

Georgetown (17-2, 7-1 Big East) dominated every facet of the game, out-hustling, out-shooting, out-rebounding and simply out-running an overmatched Syracuse team that's now lost three straight conference games. The win gives the Hoyas a commanding three-game lead over the Orangemen in the Big East-7 division. The Hoyas follow this win, their first over a ranked team this season, with a trip to St. John's on Saturday.

Everything was working for the Hoyas against Syracuse (13-5, 4-4). Sophomore Allen Iverson (26 points, six assists, four steals) and freshman backcourt mate Victor Page (17 points, four assists) performed a virtual clinic on turning intense defense into transition points. Iverson was one step ahead of the Syracuse transition defense all night, routinely streaking up the court on Syracuse misses to receive long outlet passes for easy scores.

'We did a very good job defensively early,' said Georgetown coach John Thompson. 'We wanted to pressure them defensively and get out on the break.'

And on those rare instances when Iverson and Page weren't racing past the slower Orangemen for layups and jams, Othella Harrington was playing like the Othella of old in the paint. Harrington connected on eight of his 10 shots from the field, posting 23 points and nine rebounds in upstaging Syracuse big man John Wallace.

Over the first four minutes of the game, Harrington followed a sloppy Iverson layup attempt for a score, made two impressive turnaround jumpers from the foul line, delivered a 60-foot pass to Iverson for an assist and came from nowhere to block an Otis Hill jam. In short, it was Harrington who staked the Hoyas to an early nine-point lead.

'I think the difference in the game was Harrington,' said Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim. 'When he plays like that, they are a very difficult team to contend with.'

Sporting a menacing new goatee, Harrington did most of his offensive damage from the foul line, capitalizing on a soft spot in the sagging Syracuse zone.

'That was the shot they were giving me, so I was taking it,' Harrington said. 'If I had been called upon to get down inside and bang, I'd have done that, too. The big thing is that I've gotten more touches of late.'

Syracuse power forward Wallace, who entered the game averaging almost 24 points per game, didn't get many touches last night. Thompson used 6-foot-7 sophomore Boubacar Aw on Wallace for most of the night, and the Hoyas' defensive stopper held Wallace to a quiet 17 points.

'I thought Boubacar and Jerry [Nichols] did an excellent job on Wallace,' said Thompson. 'Boubacar was so excited about playing him that when I told the kids I wanted someone to run at Wallace everytime he touched the ball, Boubacar said, `No, no. I'll guard him myself.' '

In fact, there wasn't much Georgetown didn't do well. Only Syracuse center Hill (19 points) was able to find open shots consistently for himself.

****BOX

HOYAS REPORT

Analysis and commentary from last night's game:

MAKING A POINT - In the latest in a long line of new looks out front for the Hoyas, Boubacar Aw spent much of last night's first half running the point for Georgetown. The spread set with Aw flanked by Allen Iverson and Victor Page seemed to work well for the Hoyas, as the 6-7 Aw was easily able to pass over the Syracuse zone, while keeping clear of the lanes of penetration so key to Iverson and Page.

ALL CYLINDERS - Georgetown's Allen Iverson spent most of last night's postgame news conference describing the benefits of having everyone involved in the offense. 'When Victor [Page] and Jerry [Nichols] are making their shots and Othella's opening things up in the middle, teams can't focus on me,' Iverson said. 'It's great to see everyone involved like that.'

AW-ESOME - Even after holding Syracuse power forward John Wallace to a quiet 17 points, Georgetown swingman and defensive specialist Boubacar Aw wasn't the least bit happy. After a performance applauded by all, Aw could only comment, 'I didn't want him to score double-digits, so I am not happy.'

вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

WILLIAM KELLEY; AIDED DISABLED WITH TECHNOLOGY - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)

William Geoffrey Kelley, who touched the lives of numerousdevelopmentally disabled adults during the 25 years he worked atHogan Regional Center in Danvers, died Monday from head injuries hesustained after falling from a ladder at his Georgetown home. He was53.

'My dad was an incredible person, and he inspired many, manypeople during his life,' said his son, Matthew J. Kelley of Brooklyn,N.Y. 'His drive to touch lives and help people in his work sproutedfrom his genuine warmth and good spirit.'

Born in Waltham, Mr. Kelley graduated from Watertown High School,where his father, the late John J. Kelley, served as a longtimeprincipal.

Five years later, Mr. Kelley received a bachelor's degree inforestry from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He earnedhis master's degree in applied management from Lesley College in1986.

In November of 1974, he married Irene Vouros of Georgetown. Heworked for five years in state parks in the Amherst area.

Mr. Kelley moved to the Georgetown area 25 years ago and beganworking at Hogan Regional Center. As the center's director ofassistive technology, he was in charge of providing equipment andsupport for a population of hundreds of developmentally disabledadults throughout the area.

According to his son, he was an advocate for the advancement ofassistive technology through research, training, and professionaldevelopment.

Mr. Kelley recently worked as a member of a committee thatorganized the annual conference for the New England AssistiveTechnology Association, which showcased advances in the field.

Outside of his work, Mr. Kelley attended his children's sportingevents and after-school activities, either coaching or watching onthe sidelines. He 'believed in sports as a means to build communityand personal development,' said his son.

Mr. Kelley, who played hockey in high school, held virtually everyposition at the local youth sports organization, the GeorgetownAthletic Association. He started a softball team and worked toimprove soccer and baseball programs.

'The whole town loved my dad, and he deserved it,' Matthew said.'He was everywhere.'

When he wasn't busy working or volunteering in the community, Mr.Kelley took great pride in his Georgetown home. The avid outdoorsmanwas also known for his sense of humor.

'He could get a room full of strangers to laugh out loud,' Matthewsaid. 'He would never fail to find out the name of a waiter orwaitress, electrician or taxi driver, and make them smile with acorny pun. His jokes and quirks are one of a kind, and will live onlike much of his life's work.'

In addition to his wife and son, Mr. Kelley leaves a daughter,Corinne A. of Georgetown; three brothers, Richard D. of Potomac, Md.,John J. of Acton, and Edward C. of Attleboro; and three sisters,Elaine Tocci of Watertown and West Yarmouth, Joanne Arsenault ofWinchester, and Kathleen K. Lockyer of Watertown and Harwich.

Old footsteps still echoing on city streets: Treading familiar territory, walkers find . . .(Washington Weekend) - The Washington Times (Washington, DC)

It's a stunning spring morning in Washington, and men and women cluster in a small group at Second Street NE and Constitution Avenue, listening to a man wearing a battered fishing cap. He is about to lead them, Pied Piper-like, all the way to the White House, tracing the route of the British troops who burned Washington.

Across town, some 20 people gather at 3051 M St. NW in Georgetown as a passionately gesturing woman tells the story of this building, the Old Stone House, built in 1766 and reputedly the oldest building in the city. When she has finished, the group steps off to tramp through a section of Georgetown alive with stories.

It's the walking-tour view of Washington. Whether it meanders through neighborhoods as different as Adams Morgan and Georgetown or down streets bejeweled with embassies or amid nature's greenest gardens, it's a style of tour that abounds here.

Why shouldn't it? Such jaunts through the centuries offer an up-close-and-personal, anecdotal way of looking at sections of the capital steeped in lore, led by people with a passionate - and carefully researched - love of history.

Both Anthony Pitch, pointing the way down Pennsylvania Avenue, and Mary Kay Ricks, guiding the historic walk through lower Georgetown, are examples of a Washington presence, the one-person guide, the history buff sharing a passion (for a modest fee), the storyteller and tour guide all rolled into one.

Their style of tour is one that's more intimate, lingering, full of stories and details that a visitor - and even a long-time resident - might not get on more conventional and expansive bus tours or other tourist excursions.

Not to mention the fact that on a perfect Washington spring day, it's great exercise.

The best of these 'alternative' tour guides - such as Mr. Pitch and Mrs. Ricks - differ in style and method but share a love of history and an expertise acquired through meticulous research and avid interest.

Mr. Pitch, 60, still sporting an accent that identifies him as a native-born Englishman, schedules a variety of two-hour tours for 11 a.m. on Sundays. Two of them - a walk around Lafayette Park and the White House and a trek down Pennsylvania Avenue from the Capitol to the White House - feature anecdotal material from his recent book, 'The Burning of Washington: The British Invasion of 1814.' Another of Mr. Pitch's tours is a walk through the Adams Morgan neighborhood. The fourth centers on historic Georgetown.

Mrs. Ricks, 51, is a self-described 'recovering lawyer,' a free-lance writer and mother of two who decided to take up walking tours after researching a story on the Underground Railroad in Georgetown. She conducts two Georgetown tours on alternate months, one featuring the C&O Canal and historic N Street NW, the other centering on Q Street. She also is planning to start a Dupont Circle tour in the fall.

* * *

Follow either of them on their tours, and ghosts will fall in step beside you. Lafayette Park gives us the violence-prone Gen. Dan Sickles, who as a congressman shot and killed his wife's lover in the park; historian and novelist Henry Adams and his doomed wife, Marian ('Clover') Hooper, who committed suicide in 1885 and is commemorated by Augustus Saint Gaudens' shrouded figure of 'Grief' in Rock Creek Cemetery; Major Henry Rathbone, who was Abraham Lincoln's guest in the box at Ford's Theatre the night John Wilkes Booth put a bullet in the president's head; and Stephen Decatur, a hero of the war against the Tripoli pirates in 1804.

You'll hear the footsteps of British troops and feel the panic of what was left of Washington's population in 1814 as you walk toward the White House along Pennsylvania Avenue.

In Georgetown, entrepreneurs, freedmen, society arbiters, builders and the son of Lincoln make spectral appearances, along with American Indians, the usual clerks and contemporary faces such as Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

To go on these walks is to know how the past and the present coexist and intermingle, sometimes the one commenting on the other. After hearing Mrs. Ricks' story about how pioneer businessmen rolled barrels of goods down Wisconsin Avenue to get them to the Georgetown waterfront, one never looks in the same way at a brightly painted Budweiser delivery truck.

'History is not dead,' Mr. Pitch says emphatically. 'It just keeps on going on and on. It is carried forward. It just continues to live in every colorful story.'

Mr. Pitch, who has lived in Washington since 1980 and is a naturalized citizen, started doing tours seven years ago as a way of luring people into the District. As a publisher of tourist guidebooks, among other things, he saw it as a way of supplementing and promoting his main business.

'Truly, it started out as a hobby of sorts, although a passionate one,' he says. 'The first two years or so, I didn't charge at all. Finally, my wife objected.'

He now charges $10 per person.

'In some ways, I'm in seventh heaven,' he says. 'I research everything carefully and exhaustively. I spent five years researching the book on the burning of Washington. And if you love research - and I love it passionately - this city is a treasure, an absolute treasure. You have the Library of Congress, the Archives, the Peabody Room at the Georgetown Library.'

His Adams Morgan tour pays tribute to the eclectic nature of the neighborhood.

'It's one of the most cosmopolitan neighborhoods in the city,' he says. 'It's vibrant, very alive. I think I helped put it on the map.'

He discovered that Watergate lion Carl Bernstein used to live at one of the many apartment buildings in the area, on Biltmore Street, paying $190 a month rent. He dubbed Lanier Place, a relatively quiet residential street two blocks off mercurial Columbia Road NW, 'the radical street' because a number of '60s radicals used to live there, including Renny Davis.

Still, being a veteran journalist and book author is one thing. Standing up in front of complete strangers and getting them to follow you and listen to you is quite another.

'I would have to say I was pretty putrid at the start. I was a little petrified the first time,' Mr. Pitch says. 'But you learn. Somebody said to me, just be yourself. And I think I found myself a little bit. You'd be surprised. People want to know, to learn, to experience history at a closer view.

Tour guides are licensed through the Business and Regulation Administration of the District's Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs and are tested on federal and District history.

On the tours, Mr. Pitch has a little bit of the air of a self-deprecating but down-to-earth professor. He doesn't lecture. He tells stories.

'Somebody told me I popularize scholarship, and I think that's pretty accurate,' he says.

Sickles, Rathbone, Decatur, Adams and the Puerto Rican nationalists who tried to assassinate President Harry S. Truman all figure prominently in his Lafayette Park tour.

He tells how Lewis Payne, a fellow conspirator of John Wilkes Booth's, broke into the home of Secretary of State William H. Seward and stabbed him in the throat. In vivid terms, he tells how the two would-be Truman assassins converged on the guards outside Blair House on Oct. 31, 1950, as Truman watched from above, and describes the shootout that ensued.

On a different Sunday, Mr. Pitch takes an eclectic group along the route of the 1814 British invaders of Washington. He describes what the Capitol looked like, how clerks tried to save documents, how the remaining populace was in a panic, fearful of British burning and looting. Only 100 British soldiers burned the Capitol and marched toward the White House, he says. People were terrified.

Marching along behind Mr. Pitch are Guy Harriman, 64, a lawyer from Howard County who brought his 14-year-old son, Jason, for the tour, and Quinton Jones, a carefully turned out Library of Congress retiree and history buff (magnificently white-haired) who can remember dining in long-gone cafeterias along the route, drinking nickel cups of coffee.

Behice Ertenu, a Turkish business consultant here for a week on business, is bemused and delighted by the tour.

'I like to walk, and when I found out about this tour, well, I decided to come,' she says. 'I find it so fresh that Americans . . . find this war with the British, the burning, so horrific and terrifying. Or that they would not bear a grudge over time. In Europe, people never forget.'

That's another thing about walking tours: They're parades of American as well as international types. Mrs. Ricks calls the most avid of her companions on tours 'my gifted and talented.'

'They immerse themselves,' she says.

* * *

Mrs. Ricks, who is in her third spring of Georgetown tours, had wearied of her job as a lawyer with the Department of Labor. She was doing free-lance writing, including historical articles on Georgetown, and had built up a storehouse of stories, anecdotes and information, when she decided to do a tour.

'It's hard to break into,' she says. 'You have to find the best ways of marketing yourself, get your brochure into hotels, that sort of thing.

'I was really nervous the first time,' she says. 'Three people from a trolley tour decided to come with me, and that's how it started.'

Mrs. Ricks is keen on architecture in her tours, and by the time you have completed one of her walks, you're pretty sure to know the difference between Federalist and Victorian styles of houses.

She's also an enthusiast.

'I guess you could say I'm emphatic,' she says. 'But you've got to realize, I've got the best gig in town. At our house, history lives. My children are history buffs. My husband is Pentagon reporter for the Wall Street Journal. So history is a subject at the dinner table.'

Mrs. Ricks' husband, Thomas Ricks, is also the author of the recent book 'Making the Corps,' which advances the idea that military and civilian societies are drifting dangerously far apart.

In Mrs. Ricks' walks, a certain edge, an alternative history, slides in amid the gossip, the tidbits, the stories about Ben and Sally Bradlee and Jackie Kennedy and the house where she lived briefly.

'I think we don't talk about history enough,' she says. 'In Georgetown and elsewhere, there were always a certain percentage of people who were slaves. It's not something we should ignore.'

She doesn't ignore it, telling stories of the Underground Railroad, which figures prominently in the history of some Georgetown houses and the Mount Zion Cemetery adjoining Oak Hill.

Now, as she stands surrounded by people, mostly women, in the gardens at the Old Stone House, Mrs. Ricks throws in warring Indian tribes, Lord Calvert (Maryland's first governor), the rise and fall of tobacco and the rise and fall of the C&O Canal. She describes in vivid detail the lives of the canal workers and families who lived on the boats that moved slowly up through a series of locks, including the one in Georgetown.

She resurrects a prominent free black citizen of Georgetown, Dr. James Fleet. She brings back Robert Todd Lincoln, who ended his days after serving as Secretary of War in the 1920s and who walked the streets of Georgetown, where he lived on N Street.

'When I'm on a tour,' Mrs. Ricks says, 'I'm in heaven.'

This day is a bit like heaven, a clear-blue-sky, Bermuda-shorts day when even the normally reclusive Georgetown mansions cannot quite hide their splendor, and they reveal their past with the help of Mrs. Ricks.

The tour flows across Wisconsin Avenue, past the house once owned by John F. Kennedy and his young wife when he was a senator. It winds around a corner to the house where Mrs. Albright lives under the watchful eyes of police and the Secret Service.

When, at the end of this 1 1/2-hour tour, Mrs. Ricks has finished, the people around her applaud, giving up $12 and cheers. Mr. Pitch's group does the same as he concludes the story of British forces standing in front of a burned White House and of their commander, Adm. George Cockburn.

History, as Mr. Pitch and Mrs. Ricks will tell you - not to mention their fellow travelers on these walking tours - is very much alive.

****BOX

WHERE TO WALK INTO THE PAST

'Let your fingers do the walking' may get you through the Yellow Pages, but when it comes to learning about a neighborhood or an environment the byword is, 'Feet, do your stuff.' Here's a sampler of what is available:

Celebrity Georgetown Walking Tour: Author Jan Pottker leads tours from 10 a.m. to noon Thursday through Saturday. The walk includes the homes of John F. Kennedy, political cartoonist Herblock and gossip writer Kitty Kelley. $15. 301/762-3049.

Discover Downtown D.C.: Licensed guides lead a 1 1/2-hour tour of four blocks around the MCI Center, including museums, historic homes and the Discovery Channel Store. 1:30 p.m. Saturday, 11:30 a.m. Sunday. $7.50 adults, $5 children and seniors. 202/639-0908.

Doorways to Old Virginia: Two one-hour walking tours of historic Alexandria: 'Footsteps of George Washington' daily at noon (weekends only after July 5) and 'Ghosts and Graveyards,' 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Sunday. $5. 703/548-0100.

Georgetown Walking Tours: Mary Kay Ricks alternates her lower-Georgetown tour with her Q Street tour monthly. May is Q Street, June will be lower Georgetown. 10:30 a.m. Thursday and Saturday. $12. 301/588-8999.

Guided Walking Tours of Washington: Anthony Pitch tours different sections of the city at 11 a.m. Sunday. May 16, Adams Morgan; May 23, the White House and Lafayette Square; May 30, Georgetown; June 6, Capitol Hill to the White House. $10 per person. Groups can go any time or any day for $200. 301/294-9514.

Life in Rock Creek Park: A park ranger leads a walking tour of the park. 2 p.m. Saturday. Free. 202/426-6829.

Mount Vernon Walking Tour: Tour of Mount Vernon estate grounds. Self-guided tours 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. $8. 703/780-2000.

Spring Wildflowers Along the C&O Canal: Biologist Marion Lobstein guides 2-hour walks in the Carderock and Marsden Tract areas of the canal for the Smithsonian Associates. 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. May 15. Members $12, others $16. No infants, children under 14 or pets. 202/357-1677.

A Tour de Force: Historian Jeanne M. Fogle offers specialized tours of little-known sites, neighborhoods and nooks and crannies. Groups of 15 or more only, by appointment. 703/525-2948.

понедельник, 24 сентября 2012 г.

BENGALS IN THE BLUEGRASS MIKE BROWN MOVES CAMP TO HEART OF HOOPS COUNTRY.(NEWS) - The Cincinnati Post (Cincinnati, OH)

Byline: Todd Archer Post staff reporter

GEORGETOWN, Ky. -- There was something different about the applause. It wasn't just polite clapping. It was purposeful, serious and prolonged, and Doug Pelfrey knew it.

''I feel like Richie Farmer or Rex Chapman when they signed their letters of intent to UK,'' the Bengals kicker told the crowd.

Kentucky is basketball, and Pelfrey, an Edgewood, Ky., native and University of Kentucky graduate, knows how to grab attention in the Bluegrass State. From former UK stars Farmer and Chapman to coach Rick Pitino and his defending national champions, most Kentuckians live for basketball year around.

Now, there may be room for another sport, at least in Scott County.

The Bengals and Georgetown College agreed on a deal for the NFL team to hold its training camp at the school of 1,340 students some 70 miles from Cincinnati. The contract is for seven years, beginning next July, provided the facilities are completed in time. If not, Bengals president Mike Brown said the team will find a temporary home for a year.

''Kentucky's going to have to be a football state sooner or later,'' said Don Gillespie, owner of Scott County Sporting Goods on Main Street.

For 29 years, the Bengals called Wilmington College home. Wilmington's sleepy downtown and quiet nightlife in Clinton County, Ohio, about 50 miles north of Cincinnati, were the antithesis of the bright lights of the NFL, but at the same time were a perfect fit.

Georgetown's downtown is similar to Wilmington's. You still can park on Main Street for free while visiting the antique stores, the two pharmacies or the diner in this town of fewer than 13,000.

Bengals fever has not yet gripped Georgetown, but in Gillespie's store he was selling a Bengals T-shirt, albeit from the 1989 Super Bowl.

''Besides the school,'' said John Plymire, a sophomore defensive lineman on the Georgetown College football team, ''there's not much in the town.''

Scott County is dry. No alcohol is sold. It will be football, football, football for the four weeks the Bengals are in town.

''Being a player myself briefly and around it all my life, (players) are going to find whatever it is they're going to find,'' Bengals coach Dave Shula said. ''But we keep them pretty busy. If that's their No. 1 priority, we tend to find that out pretty quickly.''

While Georgetown College and Scott County rejoice in their newfound fame, Wilmington College is disappointed. School president Daniel DiBiasio made two proposals to the team, but Georgetown's offer was better.

''They assess the needs of their organization just as we assess ours,'' DiBiasio said. ''There's nothing but good will and good feelings from both sides. We hold the Brown family in high regard, and I'm sure they have similar feelings for Wilmington College.''

Brown said it was difficult to leave Wilmington, the team's home since 1968.

''They've been friends of ours for years,'' Brown said. ''It was hard, but it's time to start fresh.''

It can't be much fresher than the location of Georgetown/Scott County Stadium. At the facility's dirt road entrance, a sign welcomed the Bengals to their ''new Kentucky home,'' a play on Stephen Foster's state song. A tree marks where the 30-yard-line will be located next summer. Construction could begin as soon as today, but ground preparation has been going on for about two weeks.

Where now lie green grass and wildflowers, a 4,500- to 5,000-seat stadium and two practice fields will be built. In addition, the school will build a Leadership Center and Residence Park where the Bengals will be able to work, sleep and eat without interruption.

The Scott County Fiscal Court and the Georgetown City Council each kicked in $500,000 to the deal, while the Scott County School District was reported to give $1 million. The college was to contribute $1.25 million.

The facility, which will be named Georgetown/Scott County Community Stadium, will have an underground training facility complete with weight rooms, locker rooms, offices and conference rooms.

The college plans to spend another $3 million to build a 100-room dormitory, 125-seat auditorium, six new classrooms and a 150-seat cafeteria - things that Bengals officials want for a training camp and college officials say the school needs anyway.

To the area businesses, the Bengals arrival could mean a boon. More than 500 people would show up at Wilmington for practice each day, bringing added money to the community.

''There are no negatives,'' Gillespie said. ''Only positives. What it's going to mean to people like me I'm not sure yet, but on the entire community, it's going to help.''

The impact training camp will have on the college is obvious. A fine arts building is being constructed now and a $12 million learning resource center project will get under way soon. With the addition of an NFL team, Georgetown College will enhance its visibility.

Not only is the college growing, but so too is the county. And that may be of more importance to the Bengals. Ten years ago, a Toyota plant came to the area, spawning several businesses, including malls along Cherry Blossom Way off of Interstate 75.

From the Bengals' point of view, Scott County is a potential source of additional revenue, particularly when a new stadium is built.

Communications between the club and Georgetown College began in April. School president Bill Crouch pushed hard for the Bengals to come to his liberal arts school, located about 12 miles north of Lexington.

''We heard they were beginning to look ahead and that's all we needed to get our foot in the door,'' Crouch said. ''We put together a sophisticated marketing plan, showing them the impact Kentucky can have on Cincinnati in terms of selling seats and sky boxes.''

CAPTION(S):

Photo (4)

JIM OSBORN/The Post - The proposed football stadium and training facility to be built for the Cincinnati Bengals in Georgetown, Ky.

JIM OSBORN/The Post - First the Toyota plant. Now the Bengals training camp. Once tiny Georgetown, Ky., is now a hub for shoppers, a major employer and a football town.

воскресенье, 23 сентября 2012 г.

Lord of the flies - Missoulian

PHILIPSBURG - During the past dozen years or more since I became hopelessly addicted to fly-fishing at Georgetown Lake, I've made a ritual stop in Philipsburg each time I go to the lake.

I pull in at either the Sunshine Station, out on Highway 1, or the hardware store on the main drag in the middle of town.

Then I make a beeline for a glass case under an inconspicuous sign that modestly proclaims 'Locally hand tied flies.'

The cases contain all the traditional Montana favorite patterns - Adams, Joe's hopper, salmonfly, royal Wulff. They're all fine flies and I can attest to their durability and trout-fooling effectiveness.

But the ones that I make my ritual stop for are distinctive not quite like any standard patterns, deceptively simple, yet definitely 'buggy' looking. The labels on their case compartments grabbed my attention right away: 'Georgetown special,' 'Georgetown nymph,' 'Medicine Lake special' and 'shrimp special.'

Over the years, those patterns have proved deadly for me in my perennial pursuit of Georgetown Lake's lunker rainbows.

I often wondered about the identity of the angling genius who created those wonderful patterns.

Finally, my curiosity drove me to find the source - 61-year-old Bob Harris, born and raised in Philipsburg, and a lifelong fly-fisherman.

'I kind of grew up on Georgetown Lake and Rock Creek,' said Harris. 'I started fly-tying in high school, just as a hobby, something to do. I'm just self-taught. There was an old guy who ran a sporting goods store in Anaconda, Don Hornbacker, who had Don's Sports Center, I used to fish with him all the time up there, and he taught me a lot about fishing Georgetown. He kind of explained the flies to me and I kind of perfected 'em. I tied flies for him for a long time.'

Later, when Harris attended college in Missoula, his flytying education was furthered by his association with legendary fly-tier Norman Means, aka Paul Bunyan, the creator of the famed Bunyan Bug.

'I used to buy Bunyan Bugs from Paul Bunyan in Missoula when I was in college,' Harris said. 'I'd go down and watch him tie flies in the Turf Bar. I'd go in and BS with him. He kind of got me tying some different flies, too. I still have some Bunyan Bugs he tied.'

Fly-tying is really just an avocation for Harris, who is the assistant student supervisor at the Anaconda Job Corps Center, where he has been employed for 34 years. He started work there in 1967, a year after the center opened. The facility has an enrollment of 240 students, who study such career skills as heavy equipment operation and mechanics, carpentry, welding, cooking and office occupations.

In recent years, he said, he hasn't been fishing as much as he used to.

'Now I got those,' he said, pointing to a bag of golf clubs leaning up in the corner of his den, next to his fly-tying bench. 'They kind of take up my time these days.'

His fly-tying stalled since the end of December, when he had a triple bypass heart surgery.

Fortunately, (for him and fans of his flies) Harris said he's feeling much better, and he's back tying flies again.

'I just enjoy it for something to pass the time,' he said, 'especially in the winter.'

He usually ties about 200 dozen flies a year. He's sold them at the Sunshine Station and hardware store for years. But the hardware store recently closed, he said.

The patterns Harris 'invented' for fishing Georgetown Lake and other local waters aren't revolutionary. They just incorporate materials and design adaptations, based on his experiments and observations, that make them particularly effective in the waters he fishes.

Harris' 'Georgetown special' is a dry damsel fly pattern that looks much like other versions. But his has a body made of blue nylon baling twine that Harris found at Osco Drug in Butte.

With its grizzly hackle wing, the simple pattern floats like a cork, and can withstand repeated maulings by ravenous rainbows.

The blue baling twine is an example of his innovative approach to fly-tying.

'I like to experiment with different materials,' Harris said. 'I use this rubber tubing as the body for a hopper. It's something a picked up in an automotive shop. I'll just go through some fabric shops, and if anything catches my eye, I'll get it. My drawers are full of all kinds of stuff. I've probably got a lot of stuff you'd never think of using for fly-tying materials.'

His 'Georgetown nymph' probably imitates a damsel nymph, but it's nondescript enough to pass for a dragonfly nymph, or some other aquatic trout delicacy. It is made of a green rug wool that Harris found in a fabric shop, with a turkey feather wing case, and an olive grizzly hackle trimmed top and bottom. Harris can whip one up in his vise in a flash. It's my favorite Georgetown fly.

The 'Medicine Lake special' is the pattern Harris devised for imitating the giant caddis that hatch in the evenings at Georgetown in early fall. Trout go crazy for the naturals and Harris' imitation.

He came up with the idea for the pattern while watching the big caddis. hatching at Medicine Lake located not far from Philipsburg in the Skalkaho area.

The 'Medicine Lake special' is his most popular fly pattern, particularly among local flyfishers, Harris said.

Like it in Rock Creek as well as anything,' he said. 'It's my most popular fly around here for some reason. It works for everything - a hopper, a caddis, a stonefly. It's just buggy.'

His 'shrimp special' pattern originally was created as an icefishing pattern, Harris said.

'We always used freshwater shrimp for ice-fishing at Georgetown,' he said. 'So that fly was an experiment to use icefishing up there. But then I found that one worked better in the summer.'

His personal favorite fly for Georgetown, Harris said, is his dry damsel.

'I always found the dry damsel most effective for me,' he said. 'But I'm not a great nymph fisherman. I like the surface fishing better than underneath. Both work. But I prefer the ones that float. I like to get into the real shallow water in Georgetown. Right in the weeds. You lose more fish than you catch when those big old rainbows get down in the weeds. I mostly float-tube up there, or just wade in the shallows, in Comers and Eccleston bays.

'I like it best, probably when the damsels first start hatching, in early July. Then, again, I like to fish the big caddis in the early fall. Right at dark, those big babies start flopping around on the lake like big, old dive bombers.'

The fishing at Georgetown has waxed and waned over the years, said Harris.

'When I was a kid,' he said, 'we used to catch fish seven and eight pounds down by the dam. Then you could still use minnows for bait. God, they'd hit those. They had a hatchery on Flint

Creek where it comes in by the Seven Gables. You couldn't fish right there. But you could fish below that and catch some big spawners.

'I saw it there where you couldn't hardly catch any fish for a few years. And now it's come back. You can catch seven- and eight-pounders there again, and a few big brookies up to three, three- and -a-half pounds. That's a nice brookie.'

When he gets bored tying regular patterns, Harris said, he experiments with colorful, detailed, classic Atlantic salmon flies. He follows old pattern directions for some, and his imagination for others, he said.

'I just like the colors,' he said.

Charlie Dirkes, owner of the Sunshine Station, said Harris' flies are always in demand at his store.

An avid fly-fisherman and flytier himself, Dirkes pronounced Harris' flies 'damn good. If I don't have time to tie 'em, I'll use his. He does things right. His flies stay together. It's simple: They're built with quality. I like his rat-faced McDougal and his Medicine Lake special. That's a damn fine fly. But you've got to have it put together correctly. If not, you're dead meat. He also ties a very, very, very good streamer.'

Although he said he's never fished the fabled skwalla stonefly hatch on the Bitterroot River and other local streams, Harris said he gets so many requests for a skwalla pattern that he's adding one to his repertoire this year.

Another recent twist in his flytying craft, Harris said, is creating flies as jewelry.

In collaboration with Philipsburg's Sapphire Gallery, Harris produces flies as a centerpiece for tie tacks, pins, pendants and earrings.

'He'll tie whatever fly you want,' said Mellonee Grange, a sales clerk and jewelry designer at the Sapphire Gallery. 'He

even did a hot pink one for us we call a bar fly.'

The jewel flies are tied by Harris on a 14-karat catch-and-release hook, Grange said. Each piece features a Rock Creek sapphire mined nearby and mounted on the hook at the gallery.

суббота, 22 сентября 2012 г.

Freeman emerges in Hoyas' rout of Bison.(SPORTS) - The Washington Times (Washington, DC)

Byline: Ken Wright, THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Has the ghost of Mike Sweetney been exorcised from the building? The Georgetown Hoyas think so.

Georgetown senior center Courtland Freeman had a career game yesterday. If it wasn't an aberration, the Hoyas might have made a smooth transition in the post after losing the rugged Sweetney last summer to the NBA.

Freeman scored a career-high 21 points and added a career-high six blocked shots and six rebounds as Georgetown pounded Howard 89-58 before 4,412 at MCI Center. When the game was over, coach Craig Esherick boldly proclaimed that his undefeated Hoyas (8-0) have found a tower of power to lead them into the Big East season.

'I think we just found ourselves a big man,' Esherick said. 'He's been on our team all along, but hopefully this is his coming-out party. This is as well as Courtland Freeman has played. On the inside, he blocked shots, he rebounded, he scored in the post and he forced people to foul. This is the way, certainly I'm hoping, that we can see Courtland play the rest of the season.'

Perhaps this game was a tuneup for Freeman going home to his native South Carolina tomorrow when the Hoyas play The Citadel in Charleston. But just playing another District school yesterday was enough to fire up the 6-foot-9 Freeman. 'It's an inner-city game and so you know they're going to be talking if something were to happen the opposite way, so we had to make sure that we came out and established ourselves,' he said.

Georgetown's excellent start enabled Freeman to operate almost uncontested in the second half. Freeman scored 14 of his team-high 21 points with the Hoyas comfortably in control.

The red-hot Hoyas couldn't miss in the first half, shooting 61.3 percent (19 of 31) from the floor, their best shooting half of the season. Georgetown's marksmanship all but started up the bus for Howard, which trailed 50-21 at halftime.

The Bison (2-6) weren't prepared to deal with Georgetown's perimeter firepower. In the first 3:07, Georgetown made three of its four first-half 3-pointers and led 14-5. The Hoyas' 15-2 run midway through the first half turned the game into a rout.

'We did a great job on both ends in the first half,' said Esherick, who is just two wins shy of 100 for his five years as coach. 'Offensively, I thought we did a great job. I thought our shot selection in this game was much better.'

The game was a good indication of what the Hoyas can do when they are clicking. During the week, Esherick stressed to his team to use this crosstown clash as a tuneup for Rutgers in Georgetown's Big East opener Jan.3 at MCI.

Other than committing 19 turnovers, Georgetown responded well. The Hoyas received balanced scoring behind Freeman as senior swingman Gerald Riley contributed 17 points, forward Brandon Bowman added 16 and small forward Darrel Owens matched his career high with 14.

'When you're playing that well, it's kind of hard to see some of the mistakes you make,' Riley said, referring to the turnovers.

The Hoyas had a 41-28 rebounding edge and forced Howard into 18 turnovers. Frankie Allen, Howard's fourth-year coach, compares this year's Georgetown team to last season's Sweetney-led squad and likes what he sees.

'They're physical like they've always been, but I think this unit seems to play well together,' Allen said. 'There's an old adage in basketball that sometimes it's not your five best players, but it's your best five players. I think what [Esherick] has is a combination of guys that kind of understand their roles on the team and play well with each other.'

+++++

HOYAS REPORT

Seen and heard yesterday at MCI Center:

CELEBRITY FAN - National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice was a guest of Georgetown season-ticket holder and Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage. Rice sat near the baseline and left with 10:44 remaining and the Hoyas leading 66-47.

CLASHING COLORS - A violent midcourt collision between Howard senior forward Seye Aluko and Georgetown freshman guard Ray Reed sent the 6-foot-6 Aluko back to the locker room in the first half. After receiving four stitches over his right eyebrow, Aluko came out sporting a hot pink bandage that definitely clashed with Howard's traditional blue, red and white uniform.

'I don't know where that came from,' Howard coach Frankie Allen said. 'It might be something they got from here. Luckily, the crowd didn't pick up on it. It could have been a hard day for him.'

BLAST FROM THE PAST - Former Georgetown guard Anthony Perry watched the game. Perry played four seasons (1998 to 2001) on the Hilltop and is 14th on Georgetown's career steals list with 161. Perry was introduced at halftime and received a smattering of applause from the crowd of 4,412.

CAPTION(S):

Darrel Owens matched a career high with 14 points as Georgetown improved to 8-0. [Photo by AP]

пятница, 21 сентября 2012 г.

Chowder served to take off chill - The Boston Globe (Boston, MA)

David Marcus of the Globe staff contributed to this report.

Roger Berkowitz, president of Legal Sea Foods, personallysupervised dispensing 40 gallons of Legal's clam chowder to chillyguests in Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's office after the inauguralceremony yesterday. While Legal's employees scooped the soup,Berkowitz handed out plastic spoons and paper napkins. This was thefifth presidential inauguration for the Massachusetts-basedrestaurant.

A power trip, a power gripChynna Cunningham may be only 6 months old, but she already has aneye for powerful men. The infant, sporting a headband with a silverstar, went to her first political party at the Georgetown residenceof Sen. John Kerry and his wife Teresa Heinz on Sunday. Whenintroduced to Rep. Joseph Kennedy 2d, she latched onto his finger andrefused to let go. She did the same thing to Kerry. 'I was afraidto tell him, `Senator, you weren't the first,' ' said her father, BobCunningham of Norwood, who attended with wife Katherine and son Sean,14.Boston youth has brush with fameDan Hunt, 16, a Latin Academy sophomore who lives in the Neponsetsection of Dorchester with his politically active parents, Jim andJean, met Chelsea Clinton at the Red Sage restaurant. The verdict?'She looked good,' Hunt said of the first daughter. He was a littlemore excited when Sen. John Kerry introduced him to singer SherylCrow. 'She talked to us for five minutes,' Hunt said.Kerry serenaded by 40 studentsA bus load of 40 Boston public school students came to Washingtonto attend their first inauguration under the auspices of 'Save OurYouth.' They serenaded Sen. John Kerry with a rousing rendition of'Stand for the Children of the World' at a breakfast he held forconstituents yesterday. Last night, outfitted in tuxedos donated byRead & White, at the request of Boston City Councilor Diane Modica,and gowns provided by Filene's Basement, they danced at the specialyouth ball.Hard-working aide seeking a ticketPity those unsung heroes of Inauguration Weekend '97. No, not thefolks who cleaned up the parade route, but the ever-loyal aides tocongressmen. Glenn Saunders, who works for Rep. William D. Delahuntof Quincy, was stuck inside fielding calls from constituents whowanted last-minute tickets to events yesterday as guests headed forthe Capitol to see the president take the oath of office. Would hego to the black-tie inaugural ball? Like many congressional staffmembers, he didn't know if there would be a ticket left, but just incase he had his best clothes pressed and ready. 'Have tux, willtravel,' he said.Kennedy watchers get to see eyefulKennedy watchers got an eyeful yesterday as three generations ofthe famous family celebrated the first time a Democrat wasinaugurated for a second term since Franklin Delano Roosevelt. WhileSen. Edward M. Kennedy and his three sisters, Jean, Pat and Eunice,attended the inaugural ceremony with their children, Ted Kennedy'stwo grandchildren, Gracie and Kiley, held forth in his Senate office.Gracie, the daughter of Kara, and Kiley, the daughter of Teddy Jr.,are both 2 years old. Granddad took them to the Washington Mall onSunday to meet Baby Bop and Barney. Also at the Capitol yesterdaywere President Kennedy's children -- John Jr., with his new wife, andCaroline Schlossberg -- as well as Sydney and Robin Lawford, TimShriver and Will Smith.

четверг, 20 сентября 2012 г.

SIENA ADDS ONE DURING EARLY SIGNING PERIOD.(SPORTS) - Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)

Byline: TIM WILKIN Staff writer

One letter came into the basketball offices at Siena College Wednesday and its contents confirmed what Paul Hewitt already knew: Michael Buhrman, a 6-foot-8, 235-pound forward will play his college basketball in Loudonville.

It was hoped that another letter would come, but there was no fax from a 6-6 guard named Prosper Karangwa from Montreal. That letter could come today or the player might decide to play elsewhere.

Hewitt can't comment on a player he hasn't received a national letter-of-intent from. That period started Wednesday and ends on Nov. 18.

Buhrman is from Chambersburg High School in Pennsylvania. He gave a verbal commitment to Siena last month. He gave the commitment after his official visit to the school; Siena was the only place he visited.

``Michael is a big, strong kid,'' Hewitt said Wednesday night. ``He likes to play physical around the basket and that is the kind of player we are looking for. He also has an ability to shoot the ball and has pretty good range. He's a hard-working kid.''

Buhrman averaged 9.3 points and 6.4 rebounds for Chambersburg last season.

That leaves Hewitt with two scholarships to play with, and Karangwa could be a player that takes one, maybe as early as today. However, sources in Canada said the player cannot make up his mind where he wants to go -- either Siena or Radford University in Virginia.

Other players the Saints have looked at include Justin Wilson, a 6-foot guard, and Uka Agbai, a 6-7 forward. Both are from Archbishop Molloy in Queens and both visited the campus. Banged up: It wasn't a pretty sight at the Alumni Recreation Center Wednesday as Siena was losing players left and right to injury.

Sophomore guard Scott Knapp went down with an ankle injury, freshman forward James Clinton was on crutches after straining his right Achilles' heel, and junior forward Jim Cantamessa was sidelined with a sore back.

With the season set to start Saturday, Hewitt says he doesn't think Clinton will play but expects Knapp and Cantamessa to be in the lineup when the Saints play at Bethune-Cookman.

``I'm not worried about it,'' Hewitt said. ``The guys that are ready will step up and play. You can't use injuries as an excuse if you lose any time.'' Opener not easy: It would seem that Siena has nothing to worry about as it travels to Daytona Beach, Fla., to play Bethune-Cookman in its season opener Saturday. The Wildcats are coming off a 1-26 season. After winning its first game last year, Bethune-Cookman dropped the rest of its games. Going into this season, coach Horace Broadnax (yes, the same guy who played at Georgetown) has a team rated 310th out of 314 teams playing Division I basketball by the Sporting News. Siena is ranked as the 95th best team in the country.

``This is a dangerous game for us,'' Hewitt said.

Dangerous indeed. Last season is over. The Wildcats haven't lost any games this year and will be primed for a big effort in the opener.

At least one: The Saints figure to see one big name at Moore Gymnasium on Saturday. Former North Carolina Tar Heel Vince Carter, the fifth pick in this year's NBA draft (Toronto Raptors) lives in Daytona Beach. With the NBA lockout, Carter has a lot of time on his hands.

Before going to North Carolina, he was recruited a little bit by Hewitt, who was an assistant at Villanova.

Kenner League Displays Top College and High School Talent - The Washington Post

Walking down the streets of Georgetown on a humid summer eveningis an enjoyable stroll for many Washingtonians, but stuffy McDonoughArena on the Georgetown University campus is where fanatic areabasketball followers can often be found.

The attraction on the court is the James 'Jabbo' Kenner summerleague, one of the nation's top showcases of collegiate talent.

The league has made great strides over the past three years sinceEddie Saah was named commissioner. Saah, who also directs one of thearea's top high school summer leagues, immediately set out to restorenew direction to the league, which had experienced a feworganizational problems.

It did not take him long to accomplish that goal, but now he hasa new problem. More college teams and individuals want a chance toplay against the top competition the league offers, but Saah wasforced to turn many of them away. This year, the league has grown to16 teams; before Saah became commissioner, it had 10.

'If I would have said, 'Yes,' to every team, we would have had 30teams in the league this summer,' said Saah. 'But then the quality ofplay wouldn't have been that great.'

The league is open to college and high school players, althoughfew high school athletes are talented enough to compete in theleague. Although some colleges try to put several of their playerstogether on a Kenner team for experience, the league rules allow nomore than one senior from a particular college on a Kenner team.

Saah has worked hard to establish teams that are equallybalanced, and that can be depended upon to follow the leagueschedule.

'{The Kenner League} used to be hit or miss-sometimes playerswould show up and sometimes they wouldn't,' said Saah. 'But now, theyknow that it's a quality league with quality players.'

The league's purpose lends itself to almost every game providingpotential material for a highlight film. In the past, the league hasbeen a summer home to players like Georgetown's Alonzo Mourning andCharles Smith, Georgia Tech's Dennis Scott and Maryland's JerrodMustaf and Walt Williams.

This summer, the league will be perhaps as flamboyant, intenseand competitive as ever due to an influx of big men and versatileforwards. The two-time defending champion DCI Eagles, even thoughstacked with talented players such as 6-foot-9 American Universitysenior Ron Draper and Georgetown senior guard Mark Tillmon, will findit a challenge to come away with a third straight title.

DCI will be counting on several highly-touted freshmen to aid inits title defense, but the inexperienced Eagles will not have aproblem filling spots down low. Among the team's newcomers are 6-10Sean Stevens, 6-8 Craig Sednak and 6-7 Brian Gilgeous.

But DCI, like most teams in the league, will need all that heightto contend with CLP's frontcourt of Mourning and recent Flint Hillgraduate George Lynch, a 6-8 power forward who will play for theUniversity of North Carolina next winter. CLP is furtherstrengthened upfront with James Madison's 6-5 William Davis.

Many Georgetown University players compose the roster of TheTombs, which should also be a Kenner contender.

The Tombs will be anchored by 6-10 sophomore Dikembo Mutombo;The Washington Post's high school player of the year Mike Tate ofOxon Hill High; 5-10 David Edwards, a freshman point guard from NewYork and 6-4 guard Antoine Stoudamire.

Both The Tombs, and Georgetown University followers, hope theKenner League helps Mutombo improve his offense play. If thathappens, The Tombs should be in the middle of the summer league race.

Smith Litho, with the 6-10 Mustaf, 6-7 Georgetown senior AnthonyAllen and 6-8 senior All-Met forward Grant Hill from South LakesHigh, is a team that will be able to get up and down the courtswiftly enough to make other teams quiver.

James Madison University is making its initial entry into theKenner League with a significant number of its players together asthe Dukes, and it should have an immediate impact. Leading the Dukesare former DeMatha star Steve Hood, a 6-6 junior swing man whotransferred to James Madison from Maryland; George Leftwich, asophomore point guard from Princeton; and Todd Dunnings and 6-8forwards Jon Fedor and Chancellor Nichols.

Another team that could be a factor is the Firebirds, which has anucleus of players from the University of the District of Columbia.Heading the Firebirds will be Maryland forward Tony Massenburg, 6-9junior Brian Tucker, 6-8 sophomore Joe Lucas and University ofNevada-Las Vegas junior point guard Greg Anthony.

SINGERS WHO'VE MADE THE GRADE - The Record (Bergen County, NJ)

Barbara Jaeger, Record Music Critic
The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
07-05-1991
SINGERS WHO'VE MADE THE GRADE
By Barbara Jaeger, Record Music Critic
Date: 07-05-1991, Friday
Section: LIFESTYLE / PREVIEWS
Edition: All Editions -- Four Star B, Three Star P, Two Star, One Star

What began at a high-school assembly has turned into an education
in stardom for the vocal group Riff.

As students at Paterson's Eastside High School, Steven Capers Jr.,
Anthony Fuller, Dwayne Jones, Michael Best, and Kenny Kelly were asked
to perform for the filmmakers who had come to the school to scout
locations for the movie 'Lean on Me.' The boys' spine-tingling a
cappella rendition of the school's alma mater so impressed the movie's
producers that a bit part was written into the film for them.

A little more than two years after the film's premiere, the quintet
has seen 'My Heart Is Failing Me,' the first single from its debut
album, score on both the R&B and pop charts. A second, recently released
single, 'If You're Serious,' is beginning its climb up the charts.

Riff, whose members range between 19 and 21, has played before
sell-out crowds across America, opening for L.L. Cool J and Vanilla Ice.
After a whirlwind tour of the United Kingdom, where Riff performed 10
shows with Vanilla Ice, the group returned to the United States last
Sunday to sing its reworked arrangement of the national anthem at a
North Carolina homecoming celebration for the Desert Storm troops.

At 8 p.m. Tuesday, Riff will be featured on the CNBC show 'The Real
Story.' They also will fly to California for a July 18 appearance on
'The Arsenio Hall Show.'

It's been heady times for the Paterson natives, who grew up singing
gospel music. But their heads haven't been turned by all the attention.

At the Manhattan offices of SBK Records, the men tell their stories
with youthful enthusiasm. They're casually attired, a couple sporting
baseball caps emblazoned with the college emblems of UNLV and
Georgetown, and seated around an oval table in a conference room. They
punctuate the interview with impromptu harmonizing and a little lead
singing, a display of some good-natured rivalry and much laughter, and a
pause for an apple-juice break.

A certain business savvy also surfaces. At the start of the
interview, for instance, they make sure to identify themselves before
answering:

'This is Steven speaking. We went a little crazy after the movie
came out.'

'Oh, yeah! By the way, this is Anthony. Our heads were big, and we
went wild for a while.'

'This is Michael. We were all going shopping and buying new
clothes. We went to the mall practically every day.'

But Fuller, summing up for the group, acknowledges that their star
trip was short-lived. 'We got [the craziness] out of our system early.
Now, when we get lumps of money, we bank them.

'Eventually, we'd all like to have nice cars and homes and be able
to help our families.'

Over the course of the afternoon conversation, the young men
reiterate the importance of faith and family.

'God has been blessing Riff,' says Best, pausing to remove his
sunglasses. 'We have to give thanks to Him first of all. Without him,
none of this could be possible.'

As Best completes his statement, a resounding 'Amen' comes from the
other group members.

'This business can spoil you,' says Kelly. 'You have to have
confidence in what you do but not get too cocky.

'We're lucky that we were raised right. And it helps that we've
been together for a while.'

The five -- Fuller and Jones are brothers, Best and Capers cousins,
and Kelly a lifelong friend -- have been singing together for more than
eight years. Their first foray was with Kenton Rogers and the Gospel
True-Tones. Later, they would sing with the Spotlight Gospel Singers.

'We really didn't have an interest in pop music at the time,' says
Jones. 'We were praying and keeping the faith that a demo -- a 45 with
two songs -- would get us a deal with a gospel label.'

But as the boys entered Eastside High School, their musical
interests broadened. They began listening to jazz stylists such as Sarah
Vaughan and Mel Torme, blues great Billie Holiday, and Motown masters
Stevie Wonder and The Temptations. Contemporary performers such as New
Edition and Take 6 also piqued their interest.

Best makes known his fondness for Whitney Houston. Pointing to his
T-shirt, featuring Houston's portrait on the front, he declares: 'She's
the best.'

Kelly, Fuller, Jones, Capers, and Best took their vocal cues from
these artists and crafted a soulful, rhythm-and-blues and pop sound that
prominently featured their five strong lead voices, as well as their
potent harmonizing.

It was as members of Eastside's glee club that the five reworked
the school's alma mater into a soul-stirring showcase that made
marvelous use of their complementary voices.

'Mr. Clark [Joe Clark, the school's controversial principal and
subject of the film 'Lean On Me'] wanted to show us off because we were
the only ones who did the alma mater that way,' says Fuller, explaining
how the group, then known as the Playboys, came to perform at the school
assembly. 'He's the one really responsible for helping us get our
break.'

That break, of course, was not instantaneous. One label, they
reveal, passed on the group because they didn't have 'an image.'

'We had never thought about that,' says Capers. 'We had always just
wanted to sing.'

And live singing in the offices of SBK is what eventually led to
Riff being signed to the new label, which includes among its
best-selling acts Wilson Phillips and Vanilla Ice.

'For two weeks, we kept coming back and forth so everybody [at the
company] could get to hear our sound,' says Best.

Once the contracts were signed, Riff -- the name change came when
the boys learned another group had recorded under the name the Playboys
-- headed to Los Angeles to record its debut.

'The recording was completed in two weeks, which is very fast,'
says Capers. 'But we were prepared.'

All the preparation in the world, however, couldn't have readied
the five for a recent chance encounter with one of their idols.

Completing a taping for 'Friday Night Videos,' the group members
were walking down a studio hallway when they encountered Stevie Wonder.

'Michael asked him for a vocal tip,' says Fuller. 'He showed us
some vocals, and then he asked if we liked Take 6.

'The next thing we know, he starts vocalizing, and we're following
right behind him.'

Frankie Crocker, the host of the show, heard the singing in the
hall and immediately asked if they'd want to go into the studio and get
it on tape. Wonder and Riff agreed and teamed on the gospel song, 'Mary
Don't You Weep.'

'We were just flabbergasted, blown away,' says Fuller. 'We were on
cloud nine for the whole day.'

'I'm on cloud eight now,' adds Best. 'I'm just starting to come
down.'

Returning from the United Kingdom earlier this week, their spirits
were still soaring.

'Going to England was like a dream come true for us,' says Capers,
in a voice filled with awe and excitement. 'We had only seen places like
that on television.'

The group's first British performance coincided with the release of
Riff's first single in the United Kingdom, Caper explains. And the
British received Riff with so much warmth, he says, 'it was almost like
they were expecting us. It was pretty shocking and something we'll never
forget.'

Sidebar, page 003

A sound approach to vocalizing

While many of their contemporaries took the rap route, the members
of Riff chose a different path, one traveled by such veterans as the
Temptations, the Four Tops, the Stylistics, and others.

'Everybody's throwing out these thumping bass, booming hip-hop
sounds now,' says Steven Capers Jr. 'If we came from a different
direction, we knew we would turn some heads.'

To ensure that would happen, Riff's members say much care went into
selecting the songs that appear on the group's self-titled debut.

'We looked for songs where the words would touch the heart and have
some meaning,' says Dwayne Jones.

The young men also spent a fair amount of time 'deciding who sings
lead and drilling and rehearsing,' adds Kenny Kelly.

'Each individual has a different vocal texture,' says Jones, 'so we
usually listen to the song to see what is needed and decide that way.'

'But sometimes we'll try out,' says Michael Best. 'Whoever sings it
the best will get it. But you have to win it the first time; there are
no second chances.'

A bit of kibitzing follows Best's comments, as Fuller breaks into
'If You're Serious' to prove his point that 'if Dwayne ever gets hoarse,
I could do his songs better.'

'You can't afford to get sick in this group,' says Jones with a
laugh, 'because someone else is always waiting to step in.'
-- BARBARA JAEGER

Sidebar, page 007

Perfect together

Riff is following a grand New Jersey musical tradition that goes
back at least as far as Ol' Blue Eyes and the late band leaders Ozzie
Nelson and Glenn Miller.

Among the pop and rhythm-and-blues acts that at one time or another
have called the Garden State their home: Frank Sinatra, Les Paul (and
the late Mary Ford), Pat Boone, Phoebe Snow, Cissy and Whitney Houston,
Dionne Warwick, Tommy Page, Kool & the Gang, The Roches, Wilson Pickett,
Lesley Gore, Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, Sybil, Stevie Wonder,
the Isley Brothers, Connie Francis, Regina Belle, Tony Bennett, the late
Sammy Davis Jr.

From the rock ranks come Bruce Springsteen, Southside Johnny & the
Jukes, Bon Jovi, Skid Row, The Feelies, Richard Barone, Glen Burtnik,
and John Eddie.

And the list of New Jersey jazz greats includes George Benson, Red
Rodney, Dizzy Gillespie, Ray Drummond, Rufus Reid, Bucky and John
Pizzarelli, Houston Person and Etta Jones, the late Sarah Vaughan, the
late Teddy Wilson, and the late Count Basie.
-- BARBARA JAEGER

Illustrations/Photos: 2 PHOTOS - (1)From Eastside to England: Riff is, from
left, Steven Capers Jr., Anthony Fuller, Dwayne Jones, Michael Best, and Kenny
Kelly. (2)Taping 'Friday Night Videos,' Riff joined with Stevie Wonder and hosts
Frankie Crocker, third from left, and Tom Kenny, second from right.

Keywords: PATERSON. MUSIC

Copyright 1991 Bergen Record Corp. All rights reserved.

среда, 19 сентября 2012 г.

The Mufti In the Chat Room; Islamic Legal Advisers Are Just a Click Away From Ancient Customs - The Washington Post

His e-mail flickering, his brain churning with 7th-century versesfrom the Koran, Muqtedar Khan--sporting a trim beard, Indian pajamabottoms and a Georgetown University T-shirt--hunches over his FallsChurch computer at midnight.

Beneath a Chicago Bulls schedule and a picture of the Muslim holycity of Medina, Khan, 31, begins his favorite late-night activity:his life as an Internet alternative mufti.

Once Muslims seeking muftis--Islamic legal experts--would have hadto travel from village to village to find wise and respected folk.The muftis--some of whom had no formal education, but committed theKoran to memory--would sit face to face with questioners issuingfatwas. These were legal opinions on questions that came up ineveryday life: Was it permissible to use perfume tinged with alcohol?What kind of man was ideal for marriage?

The demand for a good fatwa continues. But to get one today,Muslims can just surf and click. Poof! A whole World Wide Web ofcyber-fatwas appears, including those laid down by respected muftisfrom Egypt, some iconoclasts with no credentials at all and a fewyounger, hipper alternative muftis like Kahn with Islamic legalbackgrounds but without official titles.

Khan won't formally label himself a mufti--in part because of thepolitical baggage the phrase brings these days. Today, 'grandmuftis' in some Muslim governments issue controversial fatwas--likethe well- known 1989 edict from Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, which ineffect condemned author Salman Rushdie to death.

But Khan, a doctoral candidate at Georgetown, admits that he andothers like him have added their voices to a traditional custom andmade it a detached, e-mail, virtual highway of muftis and fatwas.

'The Internet has made everyone a mufti,' says Khan. 'In the pastthere was only the local mufti. The Internet has opened up a varietyof opinion. It's the globalization of the mufti.'

The Internet mufti is part of the endless stream of God on theInternet. From cyber-Seders to virtual confession rooms, religion isalmost as big as sex on the Internet. (Type 'God' into the Googlesearch engine and, at last count, you get 14,994 hits, the exactnumber you get from keying in 'sex.')

But like virtual monks and online meditation centers, Internetmuftis are both lauded and loathed for unconventional methods andspins on their religion.

'Muqtedar is part of the new phenomena where people on theInternet--some may want to call them the New Muftis--give an opinionon Islamic legal issues,' says John Esposito, director of the Centerfor Muslim-Christian Understanding and a professor of Islamic studiesat Georgetown University. 'The Internet allows for this absolutefreedom and free play. The downside is any idiot can say anything.The upside is it allows for what Muqtedar winds up doing--addinganother voice.'

Khan is a tidy-looking man--he usually wears pressed khakis, poloshirts and white sneakers--who likes to giggle after saying veryserious things.

He didn't plan to plunge into the world of Islamic advice, letalone advice on the Internet. He was born to a father who had anengineering degree and a grandfather who worked for Indian railwaysin the southern India city of Hyderabad. Khan thought he, too, wouldlive in the mechanical, business side of the world. He studiedengineering and computers and earned an MBA.

He toiled in corporate jobs in India, first as a managementconsultant and then in advertising. Six years ago, he came to theUnited States to study for his PhD in business management at FloridaInternational University. He lasted one year.

'I realized I wasn't intellectually engaged,' Khan says as herushes out of the library on the leafy Georgetown campus. 'Islam andGeorgetown saved me.'

Four years ago he arrived at Georgetown to study for his PhD ininternational relations and political theory. He plunged into thearea's active Muslim life, writing articles for journals, speaking atconventions and surfing the Muslim sites on the Internet.

He soon became managing editor of the American Journal of IslamicSocial Sciences and editor in chief of American Muslim Quarterly, twoprogressive academic journals for Muslims in America. Last year hewas named one of the 40 most influential Muslims in America byMajalla, an Arab weekly newsmagazine in London.

'It's just one magazine's opinion,' Khan says. 'I'm sure thereare other ones that would put me in the worst lists.'

Khan bristles at government-appointed muftis, calling them 'state-sponsored' ulema, an Arabic word meaning scholar.

'They are using conservative interpretations that are out ofcontext,' he says. 'I offer something more modern, more in context,more of the philosophy behind Islam. That's the appeal of a guy likeme.'

Khan believes his more liberal voice highlights a historicaltension between traditionalist Islamic theologians, who tend tofurnish more conservative fatwas, and Islamic philosophers, who gofor the more flexible rulings.

On a recent night in his living room, Khan's more liberal voicepops up in bits of several questions.

'Are homosexuals allowed in the mosque?'

'There is no room for gay-pride parades in the mosque,' he says,thinking for a while and knowing that homosexuals are strictlyforbidden, according to many muftis. 'It is not a public squarewhere you flaunt your dissent. But, I think in societies whereMuslims live as minorities, Clinton's 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' is aperfectly Islamic solution.'

Another sticky question: 'Can couples who are engaged or havedecided to marry have sex or some physical contact before theyactually wed?'

'Sorry, I cannot give you the green signal to have irresponsibleor casual sex,' Khan answers. 'But also remember that Allah is all-forgiving, especially to those who repent sincerely (this is in caseyou have already been naughty).'

Khan--who is married to a former Hindu who converted to Islam,with whom he has a 4-month-old son--isn't queasy about answeringquestions of a sexual nature. He is just surprised that he getsasked intimate questions so frequently.

While muftis and Islamic legal scholars have always answeredhighly personal questions--even about a spouse's lack of virility--the Internet has made people more willing to, as Khan says, 'gothere.'

'I don't know who these people are and they don't send theirname,' Khan says quietly as he eats some charbroiled lamb kebab at anAfghani restaurant in Georgetown. 'The Internet allows a lot moreprivacy. People ask questions more freely.'

At the 'Ask the Imam' site at IslamiCity--a California-based Webpage (http://islamicity.com) that has 15 muftis and legal scholarsanswering questions--people also have been asking private questionsanonymously.

'It has opened up such an alternative for people,' said DanyDoueiri, vice president of the site, which receives about 50questions a day and which has answered 9,000 questions since theservice started about three years ago. 'About 20 percent of ourquestions, people would normally be too shy to ask.'

People seeking advice sometimes engage in 'fatwa shopping' if theydon't initially hear the answer they want, says Yvonne Haddad, aprofessor of Islamic history at Georgetown University who researchedfatwas and muftis on the Internet. She is working on a forthcomingarticle called 'Fatwas for the Perplexed: Muslim Colonization ofCyberspace.'

This kind of fishing for the answer they want to hear--sex beforemarriage, anyone?--is what some scholars and members of the Muslimcommunity find troublesome about looking for fatwas and muftis overthe Internet.

'I personally find the cyber-fatwa ill-advised,' says YusufDeLorenzo, who lives in Ashburn and is the former adviser on Islamicaffairs to the president of Pakistan. 'First you don't always knowwho the mufti on the Net is. In the old days, people knew the muftias a member of the community and he was respected for more than a Webpage.'

He knows and respects Khan, but thinks fatwas or advice over theInternet about marriage problems or family issues can be out ofcontext and too impersonal.

'In difficult questions you really need to be face to face,' saysDeLorenzo. 'You need to look in their eyes and get a feel for theperson and see what they are wearing and how they sit down.'

Mark Kellner, author of 'God on the Internet,' worries that afaceless person on the Net may give bad advice.

'I could set up my mufti Web site today,' Kellner says. 'Ifpeople believe me, I could start saying, 'Go ahead, have a hamsandwich. Want a couple of cocktails? Oh, go ahead.' '

Khan acknowledges such criticism. But he sees himself as ayounger, Muslim American voice, who won't lead people to Hell butmight lead them to a realistic life in the United States.

It's a philosophy of fatwas that mirrors the swirl of old and newthat is Khan's life. His favorite hobbies: cricket (he rose at 4:30a.m. to watch a recent match) and watching 'Seinfeld' ('my favoriteJew').

His typical day: Pray five times, watch C-SPAN and CNN, doresearch at Georgetown, eat a dinner of Indian or Italian food withhis family and log on to the Internet in his modern alternative muftirole.

Recently he gave advice to a young convert to Islam whose Catholicparents didn't want her wearing the hajab, a head covering worn bysome Muslim women.

'Should I disobey them to wear it?' she asked Khan.

'No, you don't have to wear it right now,' Khan responded. 'Thereare other ways to express your feelings as a Muslim. Be a gooddaughter, a good person in every other way, every other small issue.When they ask you about your change tell them it's because of Islam.All of a sudden their attitudes will change.'

Khan's answer was very different from what some muftis would say.