I never got a chance to post this after it happened, so we'll step back in time a couple of weeks and relive "the shot" that beat hated Indiana in the Big Ten tournament.
Friday, March 28, 2008
North Dakota Cheap Shots vs, Gophers
In honor of the NCAA hockey tournament starting today I thought I'd post this video of the scum at North Dakota in the closing minutes of a Gopher game earlier this season.
North Dakota is a #1 seed in the tournament, the Gophers a #3.
North Dakota is a #1 seed in the tournament, the Gophers a #3.
Gopher Football Spring Practice: Day 1
The University of Minnesota football team opened preparations for the 2008 season Thursday afternoon at the indoor practice facility at the Gibson-Nagurski football complex with the first of 15 spring workouts.
The Golden Gophers practices for 2 ½ hours in shells and will work in helmets and shorts again on Saturday afternoon before moving into full pads next week.
Head coach Tim Brewster addressed the media following Thursday afternoon’s first spring practice and indicated that he was pleased with the initial workout.
“I think (today’s first practice) was exactly as I expected it to be,” said Brewster, who leading the Gophers through the second spring practice regimen of his tenure at Minnesota. “There was tremendous attention to detail, tremendous energy and focus. There were a lot of good things going on with our football team in there.”
Brewster said that it’s clear that the Gophers were much more comfortable on the field compared to last spring, resulting in very productive first practice.
“Obviously we’re so far ahead of where we were last year at this time,” Brewster said. “The challenge is that you only have 15 opportunities to get better as a football team during the spring. We’ve got to make certain that on Saturday we have the same focus, the same attention to detail and the same energy we had today.”
Minnesota spent the majority of the practice working on individual fundamentals among position groups and in tandem with other units.
The last 20 minutes of the workout were devoted 11-on-11 team drills, with the Gophers offense even running a no-huddle concept at times.
The Minnesota defense wasn’t phased, however, and more than held its own during the team session as the coaching staff drilled ones-versus-ones and twos-versus-twos.
Sophomore safety Scott Jilek came up with the lone turnover of the team session, intercepting a Tony Mortensen pass over the middle.
Defensive end Willie VanDeSteeg was also impressive throughout the team segment, registering a tackle for loss and a sack of quarterback Adam Weber as the practice wound down.
“I was really excited by the way our defense flew around today,” Brewster said. “We have a ton of work to do, but it was a good first day.”
In addition to the defense, Brewster also noted the play of Weber, who smashed virtually every Minnesota passing and total offense record during a very productive freshman campaign.
“Adam (Weber) really had a good first day,” said Brewster. “You can see that he’s poised and confident. The biggest challenge for him is to become a leader and I was pleased with how he took charge in the huddle today.”
Minnesota returns to the practice field on Saturday at noon for its second of 15 spring workouts.
“We’ve got to make great strides this spring,” Brewster said. “To do that we’ve got to utilize each one of these practices to the fullest.”
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Students, Workers Rally at U of M to mark 5 year Anniversary of Iraq War
Rally in Front of Coffman Union, march through campus.
Members of Macalester SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) chain themselves to Army and Navy recruiting centers on Washington Ave., shutting them down for the day.
Activists sit in at National Guard recruiting center, are arrested.
Protesters shut down Washington Ave. in the heart of U of M Minneapolis campus for over 30 minutes.
Minnesota Daily story
Terrible Video story from Star Tribune
WCCO story
KSTP story
KARE 11 story
FOX 9 story
Members of Macalester SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) chain themselves to Army and Navy recruiting centers on Washington Ave., shutting them down for the day.
Activists sit in at National Guard recruiting center, are arrested.
Protesters shut down Washington Ave. in the heart of U of M Minneapolis campus for over 30 minutes.
Minnesota Daily story
Terrible Video story from Star Tribune
WCCO story
KSTP story
KARE 11 story
FOX 9 story
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Secret Service Agent Abraham Bolden Interview with Chicago Sun-Times
http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/books/856394,SHO-Books-chilit23.article
If a novelist set out to rewrite Franz Kafka's The Trial as a modern-day horror tale, it might read much like Abraham Bolden's The Echo From Dealey Plaza.
Kafka's character Josef K. is tried by some faceless bureaucracy but never learns why he is on trial. He maintains his innocence.
Bolden, the first African-American Secret Service agent assigned to the presidential detail, at the request of John F. Kennedy, was tried twice for bribery and convicted. He has always maintained his innocence, and now he meticulously backs up his claim with a blow-by-blow chronology of his legal ordeal.
The Chicago lawman forfeited a promising career, spending three years and nine months in prison. He felt the crushing weight of a bureaucracy fighting to save itself after JFK's assassination.
Just 28 years old when Kennedy was killed in 1963, Bolden is now telling his story at age 73. Speaking by phone from his South Side home, Bolden shows no bitterness or disillusionment. That's a testament to his unbending faith and indomitable spirit.
"I've always had faith in the American system of justice," he explains. "I spent a great deal of time in police work, where I came to believe if a person sticks to the truth and continues to seek justice, somewhere along the line that justice is going to prevail."
Bolden's problems began the day he arrived in Washington in 1961 for his White House assignment. He describes a month of harassment and bigotry at the hands of the good old boys on Kennedy's detail, some of whom he says drank heavily, chased women and were lax in following procedures. Although JFK showed him special kindness, he couldn't wait to get back to Chicago and his family, and turned down any permanent Washington post.
Later, when Kennedy was assassinated, Bolden's warnings to his superiors became a threat to the agency. He doesn't believe his presence in Dallas would have prevented the slaying. But the Secret Service dropped the ball after learning of assassination plots in Chicago and Miami that might have led to beefed-up security in Dallas, he says.
"If I had stayed there [with Kennedy], my very life would have been in danger," he says. "After my run-in with [senior agent] Harvey Henderson where he denigrated my race . . . we all carried guns, and accidents do happen -- and yes, you could put 'accidents' in quotes."
When the agency brought charges against Bolden, he was in Washington on a training assignment and was flown back to Chicago, where he says he was forced to take a Secret Service-administered polygraph exam. His superiors questioned him about a phone call he had placed to the White House switchboard in which he had asked about giving information to Warren Commission general counsel J. Lee Rankin.
The Bolden case made front-page news, and the next day he went public with his criticism of the agency's Kennedy detail. That led to a more vigorous prosecution, he says, admitting he should have handled things differently.
"I would have done it in a different venue," he says. "What I should have done was resign my position as a Secret Service agent. That would have been difficult to do because I was a family man and had no other job to go to. The best avenue would have been to resign and come to people like . . . newspaper reporters. Going to the chief and so-called bad-mouthing them at meetings was not the best way to do it. I became known as not a team player."
If there's a villain in Bolden's story, it's U.S. District Judge Joseph Sam Perry, who presided over both trials. Perry, Bolden writes, browbeat the holdout juror in an 11-1 vote for conviction at the first trial, telling her that Bolden was guilty. During the retrial, Perry seated an all-white jury, then closed the courtroom to the defense and media while he charged the jury. After Bolden was convicted, one of his two accusers admitted at his own counterfeiting trial, also before Perry, that the prosecutor had told him to lie at Bolden's trial. Instead of causing a mistrial or a reversed verdict when the prosecutor took the Fifth Amendment about suborning perjury, higher courts ruled there was insufficient cause to retry Bolden. Still, the former agent lets Perry off the hook.
"What he was doing was making sure that the mandates from the higher-ups were carried out," he explains. "He was influenced by people who were far above him who said, 'Bolden's got to go.' The conspiracy was formulated in Washington, D.C., itself. After Oswald was assassinated, the sole purpose of the Secret Service was to save itself."
When the prison bars slammed shut, Bolden's real nightmare began. He landed in a psychiatric ward, kept in isolation and heavily drugged. Then he experienced two vivid, prophetic visions for which he has no explanation.
"I think about it even today," he says. "It was not something I expected or conjured up by doing anything special. They just seemed to come. When I had the first one in [the psych ward], I thought I was going nuts. I became afraid that something had happened to me mentally. I was doing everything I could to maintain my mental balance while I was near those psychiatric patients who were screaming and being beaten. Had not that event of the fire [in an adjoining cell] freed me the next morning, I probably would have ignored it as a dream or something."
He finally left prison in September 1969 as an unemployed parolee, then rebuilt his life. He worked for 15 years in quality control consulting with machining companies.
Now retired and widowed from Barbara, his tower of strength through the darkest hours, Bolden says he's telling his story out of obligation to Kennedy -- and because it's what Barbara wanted.
"Right now today, I tell you, sometimes it's difficult to relive the chapters in that book. They're very emotional to me. It affects my life in that in taking my case to the public, I feel somewhat relieved. I've carried out my charge and my duty to President Kennedy, who entrusted me with his life. I owed that to President Kennedy to bring forth the facts I have surrounding his death. It helps to pay that debt.
"The American people deserve to know the truth about the tragic day of Nov. 22, 1963. I know it's a very optimistic statement, but I really believe the truth is going to come out."
If a novelist set out to rewrite Franz Kafka's The Trial as a modern-day horror tale, it might read much like Abraham Bolden's The Echo From Dealey Plaza.
Kafka's character Josef K. is tried by some faceless bureaucracy but never learns why he is on trial. He maintains his innocence.
Bolden, the first African-American Secret Service agent assigned to the presidential detail, at the request of John F. Kennedy, was tried twice for bribery and convicted. He has always maintained his innocence, and now he meticulously backs up his claim with a blow-by-blow chronology of his legal ordeal.
The Chicago lawman forfeited a promising career, spending three years and nine months in prison. He felt the crushing weight of a bureaucracy fighting to save itself after JFK's assassination.
Just 28 years old when Kennedy was killed in 1963, Bolden is now telling his story at age 73. Speaking by phone from his South Side home, Bolden shows no bitterness or disillusionment. That's a testament to his unbending faith and indomitable spirit.
"I've always had faith in the American system of justice," he explains. "I spent a great deal of time in police work, where I came to believe if a person sticks to the truth and continues to seek justice, somewhere along the line that justice is going to prevail."
Bolden's problems began the day he arrived in Washington in 1961 for his White House assignment. He describes a month of harassment and bigotry at the hands of the good old boys on Kennedy's detail, some of whom he says drank heavily, chased women and were lax in following procedures. Although JFK showed him special kindness, he couldn't wait to get back to Chicago and his family, and turned down any permanent Washington post.
Later, when Kennedy was assassinated, Bolden's warnings to his superiors became a threat to the agency. He doesn't believe his presence in Dallas would have prevented the slaying. But the Secret Service dropped the ball after learning of assassination plots in Chicago and Miami that might have led to beefed-up security in Dallas, he says.
"If I had stayed there [with Kennedy], my very life would have been in danger," he says. "After my run-in with [senior agent] Harvey Henderson where he denigrated my race . . . we all carried guns, and accidents do happen -- and yes, you could put 'accidents' in quotes."
When the agency brought charges against Bolden, he was in Washington on a training assignment and was flown back to Chicago, where he says he was forced to take a Secret Service-administered polygraph exam. His superiors questioned him about a phone call he had placed to the White House switchboard in which he had asked about giving information to Warren Commission general counsel J. Lee Rankin.
The Bolden case made front-page news, and the next day he went public with his criticism of the agency's Kennedy detail. That led to a more vigorous prosecution, he says, admitting he should have handled things differently.
"I would have done it in a different venue," he says. "What I should have done was resign my position as a Secret Service agent. That would have been difficult to do because I was a family man and had no other job to go to. The best avenue would have been to resign and come to people like . . . newspaper reporters. Going to the chief and so-called bad-mouthing them at meetings was not the best way to do it. I became known as not a team player."
If there's a villain in Bolden's story, it's U.S. District Judge Joseph Sam Perry, who presided over both trials. Perry, Bolden writes, browbeat the holdout juror in an 11-1 vote for conviction at the first trial, telling her that Bolden was guilty. During the retrial, Perry seated an all-white jury, then closed the courtroom to the defense and media while he charged the jury. After Bolden was convicted, one of his two accusers admitted at his own counterfeiting trial, also before Perry, that the prosecutor had told him to lie at Bolden's trial. Instead of causing a mistrial or a reversed verdict when the prosecutor took the Fifth Amendment about suborning perjury, higher courts ruled there was insufficient cause to retry Bolden. Still, the former agent lets Perry off the hook.
"What he was doing was making sure that the mandates from the higher-ups were carried out," he explains. "He was influenced by people who were far above him who said, 'Bolden's got to go.' The conspiracy was formulated in Washington, D.C., itself. After Oswald was assassinated, the sole purpose of the Secret Service was to save itself."
When the prison bars slammed shut, Bolden's real nightmare began. He landed in a psychiatric ward, kept in isolation and heavily drugged. Then he experienced two vivid, prophetic visions for which he has no explanation.
"I think about it even today," he says. "It was not something I expected or conjured up by doing anything special. They just seemed to come. When I had the first one in [the psych ward], I thought I was going nuts. I became afraid that something had happened to me mentally. I was doing everything I could to maintain my mental balance while I was near those psychiatric patients who were screaming and being beaten. Had not that event of the fire [in an adjoining cell] freed me the next morning, I probably would have ignored it as a dream or something."
He finally left prison in September 1969 as an unemployed parolee, then rebuilt his life. He worked for 15 years in quality control consulting with machining companies.
Now retired and widowed from Barbara, his tower of strength through the darkest hours, Bolden says he's telling his story out of obligation to Kennedy -- and because it's what Barbara wanted.
"Right now today, I tell you, sometimes it's difficult to relive the chapters in that book. They're very emotional to me. It affects my life in that in taking my case to the public, I feel somewhat relieved. I've carried out my charge and my duty to President Kennedy, who entrusted me with his life. I owed that to President Kennedy to bring forth the facts I have surrounding his death. It helps to pay that debt.
"The American people deserve to know the truth about the tragic day of Nov. 22, 1963. I know it's a very optimistic statement, but I really believe the truth is going to come out."
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