Thomas Jefferson said in 1802: "I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies."

"The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."-- Thomas Jefferson

"When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout." .... jbd

"When once a job you have begun, do no stop till it is done. Whether the task be great or small, do it well, or not at all." .... Anon

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. - Albert Einstein

Television is one daylong commercial interrupted periodically by inept attempts to fill the airspace in between them.

If you can't start a fire, perhaps your wood is wet ....

When you elect clowns, expect a circus ..............




Tuesday, May 31, 2011

People forget - history just repeated itself ....

One more, and no more. When OSU hired Tressel I was upset, I was aware of his shenanigans at YSU. His Baptist Minister passade never fooled me. What he preached and what he actually did himself were two different things. Winning programs cost SOMEONE money, at YSU it was PharMor thaat paid the bill. Tress was invvestigated there, yet OSU overlooked that and hired him. They got what they paid for. He used that vest to "pull the wool" over everyones eyes.

Jim Tressel had to be aware of football program violations that occurred during his tenure as Youngstown State University’s head coach, according to a Sports Illustrated investigation.

Tressel on Monday resigned as head coach at The Ohio State University.

In February 2000, 11 months before OSU hired Tressel, Youngstown State acknowledged football violations and announced self-imposed sanctions, states the SI article, which appeared online Monday night and will be in print June 6.

“What bothered me was that the family knows,” retired YSU President Leslie Cochran. “Inside the family everyone knows what’s going on.”

YSU hired Tressel in December 1985. “In 1990, with hometown hero Ray Isaac under center, the Penguins went undefeated in the regular season. In ‘91 they won the Division I-AA national title,” the article states.

But in 1988, according to court documents from a jury-tampering trial involving Mickey Monus, a YSU trustee and the founder of the Phar-Mor chain of drug stores, Tressel had called Monus about arranging a job for Isaac. By the time he left Youngstown State, in 1992, Isaac had collected more than $10,000 in cash and checks from Monus and Monus’s associates and employees, the article states.

In January 1994 the NCAA’s director of enforcement sent Cochran a letter saying that according to an anonymous source, Isaac had been driving a car provided by a local business, which would turn out to be Phar-Mor; 13 Penguins had had jobs with Phar-Mor during the season, in violation of NCAA rules; and nonscholarship student athletes were being illegally paid by the university’s director of athletic development.

After YSU announced self-imposed sanctions, and because it was satisfied with those steps and its statute of limitations on the violations had run out, the NCAA allowed Youngstown to keep the ‘91 national title.


“I’m sad because he’s such a good guy and he’d do anything for you,” said Dan Wathen, the strength and conditioning coach at YSU during Tressel’s tenure