Southern California Trojans & the Radisson

a perfectly cooool place to stay!
Every school has these secrets. You KNOW what I mean! The secret of where you can stay that is actually in walking distance from the stadium!

In Gainesville, we found a hotel actually ABOVE the student union on campus! We could even view the SWAMP (football stadium) from our room. At SMU, it’s the Holiday Inn. At the University of Oregon, it’s the Phoenix…. you get the idea… a lot of ‘secrets’ out there.

The University of Southern California is no exception. The big secret is the Radisson Hotel right next to campus! Aaaaah…. it was wonderful to walk into bed right after the game and watch everyone else struggle with the traffic. We have done that before all too many times!

let the good times roll!
Sometimes you take a picture that everyone takes… the rainbow running from one side of the stadium to the other was on everyone’s list! My lovely bride is all smiles in victory and a shot of the entrance to the stadium and the ever present ‘white horse’!

Fight On!

Roger Freberg

Want More Trojan Action… CLICK Here!
Ok… Tyler Rose Swimwear
 

Cal Poly learning censorship by doing

the contrast between good and not good

Here’s a small plug for  Fire.Org.  These are the wonderful guys & gals who run around the country defending students, faculty and an assortment of other nice folks from the whims and callousness — I say “capriciousness” — of university bureaucrats. They have offered up their own evaluations of universities across our great land.  Do you know where your college stands? CHECK it out! Each analysis comes with links to media coverage.

Did you that in some universities you can not even discuss whether or not any differences exist between the sexes … even in an academic setting? If you dare, then the full force of the university can land on you? 

Once some enterprising student takes them to court, these neanderthal regulations will fall, …. but until then, they will act as a law unto themselves. Sensoring speech is but the tip of the authoritarian iceberg in a lot of these schools… but it is their key stone and must be removed.

Roger Freberg

Kudos to the University of Tennessee

 

Trojans SHUCK the Cornhuskers

Trojans IMPRESS

The game was far different that the score indicated. If it was close it was only in the beginning.

If the Trojan coaches looked at all frustrated … it was the failure of some of the second and third stringers sent in for experience letting them and the team down. Fortunately, they’ll get time to redeem themselves down the road.

Here’s what others are saying:

Maualuga’s Motor is always running
Staying in Omaha

Smash Mouth
Trojan Update
Stafon Johnson & student body right
Yahoo News
Irish-Trojan in Tennessee

Another great week.

Fight On!

Roger Freberg

What, No Trojan Pasta?

Hey... I like their Spirit!

Today, I received in the mail a little present from one of my daughters…. she’s at the University of Tennessee.  I opened it up and this is what I found! It appears that this little pasta company —  Pasta Shoppe  in Nashville — cooks up some spirited pasta for the Volunteers, Gators, Tar heals, Tigers, Seminoles, Bulldogs, Yellow Jackets, Hoosiers (whatzers?), Hurricanes, Wolverines ( you know, the poor guys we beat last year that are still having severe trouble in the third quarter with the monastery of St. Give-it-up), Gamecocks, Badgers… but … alas… no SC Trojans.

On Game day, I’ll cook these up and pretend the “T” is for Trojan!

Fight On!

Roger Freberg

 

Helicopter Parents …. and why they work

I have always felt that “Helicopter Parents” are made and not born …. and a very logical and predictable result of the many problems of both our society and our often dysfunctional educational system.

They are made by the simple recognition that children and sometimes ones ‘adult children’ need some advice, financial help or comfort in meeting the challenges of today’s world. Sometimes the inmates are running the schools… and this is when a child may need help, intervention and representation.

Have you ever seen a school ‘circle the wagons’ to protect a recognized ‘inappropriate’ teacher? Where does a child then go for help in dealing with the bureaucracy? Representation and advocacy must then come from outside the system.

The biggest concern for administrators is in dealing with parents at the college level as discussed by  Patricia Somers. Two opposing forces are at work: parents who feel they have some rights for information since they may be bankrolling their student, versus administrators who had hoped making all 18 year olds ‘adults’ would circumvent any involvement by parents. Wishful thinking by both sides.

It is clear that some parents are way too involved in their adult-children’s lives … but those folks have been around forever. As a result, most parents have wonderful stories about relationshsips with their in-laws. However, what appears to be new is the greater scrutiny given by parents to higher education. Most Americans view higher education, universities and the professorate with far less esteem than in the past. It is well deserved. Examples from the slow justifiable termination of Ward Churchill to the unjust firing of the Harvard President Lawrence Summers for political incorrectness, lead many people to question the ‘value’ of today’s American education. Of course, many of us have our own personal stories.

My take: it is very probable that with the emphasis of smaller American families, parents are distributing more of their energies into their one, two or three children. Much like a result of China’s one baby policy where millions of pampered male baby ‘Buddhas” were produced, parents are working overtime to ensure that their ‘legacy’ is maintained with their diminished brood.

My advice: Universities are far from responsive to the needs of students, parents, employers or the American people…. at first blush, a more ‘market driven’ curriculum and better ‘customer service’ department might be a step in the right direction.

Roger Freberg

nope... no professors here

When you look at the state of our educational system… it’s hard not to understand why the military holds such an attraction to our youth. A ‘meritocracy’ has tangible value.