
THE FOUR HORSEMAN OF NOTRE DAME
The Four Horsemen of Notre Dame comprised a group of American football players at the University of Notre Dame under coach Knute Rockne. They were the backfield of Notre Dame's 1924 football team. The players that made up this group were Harry Stuhldreher, Don Miller, Jim Crowley, and Elmer Layden.[1] In 1924, a nickname coined by sportswriter Grantland Rice and the actions of a student publicity aide transformed the Notre Dame backfield of Stuhldreher, Crowley, Miller, and Layden into one of the most noted groups of collegiate athletes in football history, the Four Horsemen of Notre Dame.[ from Wikipedia FOOTBALL Blocking is something you have to make yourself do. Catching is natural; but it isn’t natural for a civilized man to run around hitting people. Besides, it hurts. Lance Alworth If a man watches three football games in a row, he should be declared legally dead. Emma Bomback Football is not a contact sport. It’s a collision sport. Dancing is a good example of a contact sport. Duffy Daugherty Football –a sport that bears the same relation to education that bullfighting does to agriculture. Elbert Hubbard I love to hit people, and I admit it – blockers as well as ball carriers. Defensive football players are innate hitters. It’s a joy to me. I tell people it’s how I work off my daily hostilities. During the week I’m as gentle as anybody. Sunday is my time to hit. Dave Robinson. Green Bay Packers’ player/ (1969) Asking about the secret to the (ALABAMA’S) Tide’s success is like asking an elephant for his secret of squashing bugs. They have the best coach and the players. There is no second sentence. Michael Rosenberg. Sports Illustrated (October 20,2017) He (BUNNY LARKIN) would line up all the candidates for the Carlisle football team, show them a football, and in a few words he would explain to them how the game was to be played. Said Bully Larkin: “When white man has ball get him. When Indian has the ball, knock down white man.” Bill Stern. Bill Stern’s Favorite Football Stories. “I have two weapons. My legs, my arms, and my brains.” Michael Vick (Atlanta Falcons Quarterback, 2006) If you’re going to be a champion, you must be willing to pay a greater price than your opponent will ever pay. Bud Wilkinson ** FAIRS I saw at Southwark, at St. Margaret’s Faire, monkies and asses dance and do other feats of activity on a rope; they were gallantly clad a la mode, went upright, saluted the company, bowing and pulling off their hats; they saluted one another with as good a grace as if instructed by a dancing master. They turned heels over heads with a basket having eggs in it, without breaking any; also with lighted candles in their hands and on their heads without extinguishing them, and with vessels of water, without spilling a drop. I also saw an Italian wench dance and perform all tricks on ye tight rope to admiration; all the court went to see her. John Evelyn, in his diary (September 11, 1660) To Southwark Fair, very dirty, and there saw…Jacob Hall’s dancing on the rope, where I saw such action as I never saw before, and mightily worth seeing… Samuel Pepys, in his diary (September 21,1668) *** To THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW Dear Editors: Although I love some books much more than some people, I believe I was not the only Book Review reader who was shocked by Geoff Dyer's confession to his wife that he'll "just never love another human being as much as I love my books.' Does he have children? I do believe,however, that Mr. Dyer dislikes change. Human beings change; books do not. Our perceptions, rereadings, and interpretations of books change. Don Quixote is one book for a college-age student. It will be a completely different book when read by that same student some 40 years later. Dyer and I may also share a sense of disappointment that Dante did not create a special circle of Hell for persons who borrow books but do not return them. Sincerely, Louis Phillips **
Long live the circus with its sandy ring, its
prideless palfreys, its jovial clowns, its
gracefulness, its robustness, its mockery,
its rides, its mimicry, its trapeze at the top,
its carpet at the bottom, its somersault, its
gibberish, its acrobatic prowess and the mystery
of its morals.
Le Couriere francais
ON AUTOGRAPHS & H.ALLEN SMITH AT PARAMOUNT PICTURES "Smith found other ways to amuse himself during his stay with us. He spent one afternoon at the studio's main gate with an autograph book and a pen. Each time one of our stars passed in and out he'd approach the performer, open the book, write his own autograph, tear out the sheet, hand it over, and say, "There you are. Thanks very much for asking." B.G. DeSylva in his introduction to Lost in the Wild Horse Latitudes by H.Allen Smith (NY:Doubleday, Doran & Company,1944) ** AUTOGRAPH HUNTING Autograph hunting is the most unattractive manifestation of sex-starved curiosity. Sir Laurence Olivier

ACADEMY AWARDS …the Dorset coast – or, as it is occasionally and inadequately known, the Jurassic Coast. The crumbing cliffs along it, dating from the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods, are a happy hunting ground for anyone seeking the fossilized remains of ancient creatures. The nearest American equivalent would be the Academy Awards Anthony Lake , reviewing Ammonite in The New Yorker (November 16, 2020) ** BEATLES (THE) When reporters at their first press conference asked the cheeky Brits to sing a song, John Lennon set them straight: “We need money first.” Time. Visions of the 1960s.

Thank you, Louis. Makes my quarantine liveable.
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Love the football quotes although Ms. Bomback would say I’m writing this from the grave.
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It’s Sunday afternoon, pre NFL championship games; just had a tasty lunch and thinking of something entertaining to read. “Bits & Pieces….” was PERFECT!!
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I liked the Louis Phillips piece best.
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