Blog
A book deal!
After parting company with my literary agent several weeks ago, I implemented a new strategy for getting my book — Out of Prague: A Memoir of Survival, Denial, and Triumph — published. Following the example of several other first-time American authors of books dealing with the Second World War and/or the Holocaust, I decided to try to get my…
Read MoreI can’t resist!
Everyone else in America is writing about the LeBron James debacle, and I can’t resist chiming in. Up front, I must say that I love basketball too much to be able to watch the game played by today’s National Basketball Association. There was a time — that of Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Oscar Robertson,…
Read MoreThe Big Twelve Lives!
My last blog, “Goodbye, Big Twelve!” lamented the death of “my” collegiate conference. Just a few short days ago, it looked as though the top football and basketball conference in the nation was about to dissolve, following the departure of the Universities of Colorado and Nebraska. But, not so fast! When the “big dog” of…
Read MoreGoodbye, Big Twelve!
How sad that money drives college sports — particularly football and basketball! The Big Ten (which is really an “Eleven”) has its own TV network and, consequently, millions of dollars in revenues. At the same time, it is very weak in the two big revenue sports. In football, it has two powers and nine also-rans and, in…
Read MoreAnother book by another friend
It seems that many of my writer friends are busy publishing these days. In recent blogs, I’ve talked about books by Lillian Lincoln Lambert, as well as Jim Rosapepe and Sheilagh Kast. This week, I finished a provocative book by one of my newest friends, Peter Hruby, a distinguished historian. Peter and I have a couple of…
Read MoreThe Road to Someplace Better
I’ve been derelict in that I’ve failed to blog for an entire month. The main reasons: I’ve been attending board meetings, writing — and reading (o.k., I admit to the fact that I’ve played a little golf, too). Interestingly, most of the books I’ve read recently have been written by friends. I’ve reported on a couple…
Read MoreSeeing one’s name in print
One of my favorite writers, Anna Quindlen, says that “the stages of a writer’s professional life are marked not by a name on the office door, but a name in ink.” For some 30 years — as CEO of two software companies and later head of a nonprofit organization — I had my “name on…
Read MoreDracula Is Dead
I am privileged to know some wonderful and accomplished people. In my last blog, I wrote about Bernie and Rita Turner, and the book about their founding of Walden University. I had just finished reading Aspire toward the Highest at the time. Yesterday, I completed another wonderful book by yet another terrific married couple I know. The…
Read MoreAspiring toward the highest degree and purpose
For several years now, I have served on the Board of Directors of Walden University, a unique international institution. Walden is a for-profit, accredited, university which — by virtue of offering all its courses online — is designed for the nontraditional student, typically a professional who is working full-time, has a family, is looking to…
Read MoreAn “Orange Power” weekend
What a weekend for my alma mater! On Saturday, the Oklahoma State Cowboys took on the number one basketball team in the nation, the Kansas Jayhawks, in Stillwater. In no time, we led by 16 points, as James Anderson, Keiton Page, and Obi Muonelo destroyed KU with their sharpshooting. We handed the Jayhawks their second…
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