Vet's Memorial, part six, Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band, September 5th, 1978 - by Ricki C.

(I should have mentioned at the end of Vet’s Memorial part 5 back in May that there would be no entries in the series for June, July or August because every year Vet’s was taken over by The Kenley Players – a kind of early traveling Broadway Series – for the summer months.  Yes, Spotify boys & girls, show tunes did indeed take precedence over the rock & roll back in the 1960’s & 70’s and now people flock to see Green Day concept albums presented on Broadway.  I cannot wholly condemn that fact, but I certainly don’t go along with it, either.)

 

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN & THE E STREET BAND / SEPTEMBER 5TH, 1978


The first time I heard Bruce Springsteen was in the old Pearl Alley Discs record store on 13th Avenue, just off High Street, WAY back in the day, when you could still turn off High onto 13th.  From perusing my Springsteen reference materials I see that Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. was released on January 5th, 1973.  That seems about right because I was at Pearl Alley that day with my first – and best – rock & roll friend of all time, Dave Blackburn, and he moved to Boston sometime later that year (where, by the way, he got to see the original configuration of The Modern Lovers AT A HIGH SCHOOL, WEARING MATCHING CASHMERE SWEATERS, with some youngsters called Aerosmith OPENING the show).  But I digress……

“Blinded By The Light” must have just been ending when we walked into the store, because I remember looking up at the speakers as Bruce started singing, “Well, I stood stone-like at midnight / Suspended in my masquerade / I combed my hair ‘til it was just right / And commanded the night brigade.”  Then the band kicked in at “I was open to pain and crossed by the rain and I walked on a crooked crutch / I strolled all alone through a fallout zone and came out with my soul untouched” and I was SOLD, son!  

I said – out loud, without meaning to – “WHO IS THIS?” and Dave glanced over at the Now Playing station of the store, then said, “Oh, that’s Bruce Springsteen, he’s one of those New Dylan guys everybody’s writing about.”  (Dave ALWAYS knew more about rock & roll than I did, back then.)  Thus began the Bruce Springsteen chapter of my life of rock & roll.    

I covered the first time I saw Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band live pretty extensively in a Pencilstorm blog called The Perfect Age For Rock & Roll, part two, back in January 2014, you might wanna check that out.  

This 1978 show, however, was a completely different animal from that ’76 outing: gone was any lingering trace of hippie-ism in the E Street Band presentation; gone were the beards, bell-bottoms, wooly Bob Marley hats and multi-hued 3-piece suits on band members.  Everybody – including, most crucially, Springsteen himself – was clean-shaven and dressed in some combination of vests, suit jackets and straight-leg black or blue jeans (except Clarence Clemons, of course, ultra-sharp in a sparkling white suit, befitting of his Big Man status).  Also  gone were any lengthy, meandering jams of the old days.  Even when songs got expanded (“Prove It All Night,” Bruce’s take-back of “Because The Night” from fellow Jersey-ite Patti Smith) those expansions were pounding, driving fever-beat extensions of the tunes, Springsteen’s WAILING lead guitar blowing the songs open, rather than the multi-section The-Band-meets-prog-rock stylings of earlier years.  As much as I loved (and still love, to this day) "Incident On 57th Street" from The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle, watching Bruce & the band sear through "Candy's Room" on that warm September evening in 1978 was just a whole other level of rock & roll genius entirely.

The band opened with an insane, joyful take on Eddie Cochran’s “Summertime Blues,” blasted straight into “Badlands” and “Adam Raised A Cane,” didn’t really take a breath until easing into a perfect, swinging version of “Spirit In The Night,” that  served notice that this was a band who could do ANYTHING.  You want rockers?  We’ve got rockers.  You want angry rants between fathers, sons & brothers goin’ all the way back to Cain & Abel?  Yeah, we’ve got those.  You want richly overly-romanticized depictions of a boozy Saturday night excursion to some New Jersey lakeside back in the early 70’s?  Done and DONE, Jack.

Really, in my now 50th year of seeing live rock & roll shows (1965-2015), I have never witnessed a better-paced, better-sequenced set of rock & roll than that night in 1978.  I have never seen a show with the emotional & musical length and BREADTH of that show.  I have never seen a show of that INTENSITY.  I’ve often told anybody who would listen that this was the SECOND greatest rock show I ever saw.  (For a list of the Top Ten, check out The Best of Everything, part one on my old blog.)  The Who in November of 1969 was the only show that topped this Springsteen outing, but The Who accomplished that task by COMING OUT ROCKING, AND THEN ROCKING SOME MORE, AND THEN ROCKING EVEN MORE AFTER THAT, until the Vet’s Memorial crowd I was a member of was basically pummeled into submission by their Sheer Rock & Roll Command.  (Seriously, I went to high school for THREE DAYS after that show not hearing one word clearly.  I thought I was gonna have to learn to lip-read.  I don’t know how Daltrey, Townshend, Entwistle & Moon had any hearing left after 1970.)  

Bruce & the guys did essentially ALL of the Darkness On The Edge Town album in the first set that night, with detours over to the first record for “It’s Hard To Be A Saint In The City” (capped by a killer twin-guitar duet call & response coda with Miami Steve Van Zandt), the aforementioned “Spirit In The Night” and ending with truly heartbreaking performances  of “Racing In The Street,” straight into “Thunder Road,” and concluding with “Jungleland,” all from Born To Run.  Really, just that first set would have been enough to be better than 95% of all other rock concerts I’ve attended, and there was another whole set to come, announced simply by Bruce as, “We’re gonna take a 20 minute break and be back to play some more for ya.”

(For those of you scoring at home, there are ample bootlegs available of the Cleveland Agora show from August 9th, 1978 – broadcast live over Cleveland's WMMS – that is essentially the same set-list as the Columbus show I witnessed.  I have a double-CD set of that show made from cassettes I recorded when it was simulcast over Q-FM-96.  I sat mesmerized at the kitchen table of my apartment in the old Lincoln Park West complex off Georgesville Road that hot August night, staring at the radio, barely registering the sky and the room growing dark, scarcely able to believe what I was hearing coming out of that beat-up boombox.  If I could take only one CD-set to a proverbial desert island, THAT would be the one.  The Cleveland Agora show is now also available over live.brucespringsteen.net.  Send away for it, it’s a triple-disc set now and CHEAP at 20 bucks.)

Okay, fuck it, that’s already 1000 words and I’ve barely gotten to the point.  Here’s the point: I could write ANOTHER 2000 words about this show and not do it justice; I could tell you how sometime during this show the mantle of My All-Time Rock & Roll Saviour got passed from Pete Townshend to Bruce Springsteen, where it remains to this day (Keith Moon died two days later, September 7th, 1978, sealing that deal, The Who would NEVER be the same after that); I could tell you how that night Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band were the Greatest Bar Band EVER in the Universe, right before they became An Arena Band; I could tell you how Bruce has never sold a song to a commercial, has never cheapened himself to make a buck, has never lost his faith in the Power of Rock & Roll to get through hard times.  (Though, I fully admit, I have at times.)

Let me say this quite simply: I have seen at least one show of every major Bruce Springsteen tour since Born To Run - including the Human Touch/Better Days non-E Street shows and the Seeger Sessions band - right up to last year's High Hopes outings.  Many of those shows have been great, some were magnificent, most have been better than just about anybody else I've witnessed in any bar, club, theater, arena or stadium, but none of them have been as all-consuming, or as life-changing as the 1978 Darkness On The Edge Of Town tour.  

Here’s all I can ask you to do: There is a series of videos on YouTube from a show at the Passaic Theater in New Jersey on September 19th, 1978 - exactly two weeks after my beloved Columbus show - that will say more to you than any 50,000 words I could write here on Pencilstorm.  Just watch and enjoy………      

my receipt for the 1978 show (note spelling of Springsteen, nobody knew who Bruce was)

Yeah, you're readin' that right, cats & kittens, in 1978 you could purchase EIGHT Bruce Springsteen tickets for $62.20, including the service charges (a whopping $2.20).  Today the Ticketmaster fees alone for eight tickets would probably set you back more than sixty bucks.

 

Today's blog entry is dedicated to Jodie Weaver and Chris Clinton, my two best Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band friends.  I've known Jodie since high school, and we met Chris in 1984, when he wound up next to us in an overnight line for tickets to the Born In The U.S.A. tour, at the old Buzzard's Nest Records on Morse Road, where Jim Johnson worked at the time.  I think I still owe Chris upwards of $150 for tickets to Springsteen shows last year in Cincinnati and Columbus, but I do not expect this dedication to go towards repayment of that debt.

Jodie & Chris, I love ya, and thank you for always helping me to remember that it ain't no sin to be glad you're alive.  (Someday, Chris and I are gonna put our heads together and come up with our list of the Top Five Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band shows we've ever seen.)

 

Oh hell, let's go for one more stand-alone video from Passaic, 1978 (If I had to explain rock & roll to a being from outer space, I would show them 2:39 to 2:59 of this clip, Bruce & Steven moving up & back from the mics in total bad-ass harmony for verse two of "She's The One.")




Va Tech Week - Baver Answers Colin's College Football Questions

 

Colin:  What do you think is Bud Foster's best approach to yet again bottle up the Buckeye offense and shock the world?

Baver:
Va Tech will have to scale back the blitzing they did a year ago against the Buckeyes. The Ohio St coaches, O-line, and QB will be much better prepared for Va Tech’s blitz packages this time around. But, if I’m Bud Foster, I think I stick with the thought that my corners can handle OSU WR’s one-on-one when the Bucks go vertical. Kendall Fuller and Brandon Facyson are by far the best cornerback tandem in the country; I think Foster takes his chances with those two. And I think Foster at times revisits the double eagle (with two extra nose guards) with the Va Tech D-line having so much success with that look against OSU in The ‘Shoe last year.

Colin:  In light of the suspensions, what players have the best opportunity to step up take advantage of the playing time?

Baver:
Braxton Miller obviously, but digging deeper….. Torrance Gibson and Johnny Dixon (if both are full-go, health wise). Torrance Gibson, who missed some of fall camp with an injury, is probably your next great pure WR at Ohio State. He is probably the best bet to stretch the field against Va Tech. Dixon has been banged up for some time, but has big upside if healthy. Curtis Samuel will get more touches as well and is always a threat to take it to the house. At DE, Sam Hubbard and Jalyn Holmes will get most of Joey Bosa’s PT. Hubbard has the makings of a future star and Holmes is a pass rush specialist who may struggle defending the run.

Colin:  Sure, on paper everything looks good. But, the longest winning streak in Ohio State history is 24 games. To repeat as National Champions, the Buckeyes would likely have to win 27 consecutive games ending with wins over Michigan State, Michigan, Big Ten Title game, National Semi Final, National Title game. Do Buckeye fans have a short memory about all the surprises a college football season has in store?

Baver:
I’m with you, here. The BCS title game era began in 1998, so you had 16 title games from ’98 through ’13, with only one of those BCS championship teams repeating the following year (Alabama in ’11 and ’12). 1 for 16…those aren’t very good odds. Okay, maybe the sample size is too small. But this year’s Vegas odds tell me that the Bucks have about a 2 in 7 chance of winning the Nat’l Title. So, taking Ohio State against “the field” is not a wise bet. With that being said, if Ohio State plays close to the level they are capable of, they will repeat as national champs. I tend to think it won’t happen as it’s too hard for a defending champ to avoid complacency, but Meyer usually proves me wrong when I doubt him.

Colin:  A couple interesting Big Ten match-ups feature new coaches. Any chance Wisconsin or Michigan pull off a win or are they both stuck riding the Harbaugh to hell?

Baver: Certainly possible, but I see both Wisky and Michigan losing.  Wisconsin is so one dimensional on offense and will have trouble moving the ball against the Tide, who has the best front seven in the country.  Just a bad matchup for the Badgers and I see them getting rolled. Both teams are replacing a lot of experienced talent, but that’s so much easier to do at Bama than Wisky. Michigan should be a good football team by year end, with a major upgrade in head coaches, but they are going to struggle early. Utah is a better team than Michigan right now and Rice-Eccles Stadium is such a tough venue for schools that haven’t played there. 

Colin:  What lines will you be keeping your eye on in week one of the season?

Baver:
I like Ohio State ….laying the 12 pts. I had Va Tech plus the points pegged a year ago, but Urban is 35-9 against the spread when he has 7+ days to prepare. Again….not 35-9 outright….35-9 “against the Vegas spread.” Unheard of. The Bucks will want to make a statement in this revenge game; I’ll say Ohio State 34-17, but I am probably being overly conservative. I like Bama laying the 10.5 against Wisky, with thoughts on that game above. Finally, I like Arizona State getting 3.5 against A&M. The so-called neutral field still heavily favors the Aggies, but I think this game will be very close and a 3 ½ pt spot is enough for me. Good looking 2015 Sun Devil team.

Colin:  What teams do you think have a chance to be this year's Ohio State and rise out of nowhere to contend?

Baver: If you consider Auburn or USC sleepers, neither of which finished Top 15 last year, they would be my picks. But those 2 are among your top 7 or so Vegas favorites this year. So, looking further down, I think Clemson and LSU are two schools that could possibly win the title this year. Of course, either team could make me look silly and lose 4 or 5 games as well, especially LSU in the SEC West. But Clemson QB DeShaun Watson, when healthy, is maybe the only QB I would take over what Ohio State has right now. Kid is an absolute stud. If Clemson’s several new starters on defense can come of age quickly, this is a dangerous Clemson team. As for LSU, this is the best looking Les Miles team I have seen since the 2011 team that went to the BCS title game.

Below: How Va Tech beat Ohio State and Deshaun Watson Highlights.

Virginia Tech beat National Champion Ohio State in 2014, handing the Buckeyes their only loss of the season. Watch as ACCDN host Jeff Fischel gives the top 3 reasons the Hokies took down OSU in this ACC Now.

Read below for more info! Deshaun Watson with an amazing freshman season! He was a big impact on the Clemson offence. Watson suffered a broken finger against Louisville, and was out for surgery. He came back, to play against Georgia Tech, were he sprained his lcl.

Revisit the Entire OSU 2014 Championship Season with Brent Baver

Brent Baver covered the entire 2014-15 Ohio State Football season ending in an unlikely romp to the national title. Please enjoy this recap of every Baver Buckeye Bag from this season never to be forgotten. Click the games below to relive the magic. ALL articles by Brent Baver except where noted. Check back every Thursday this season from college football bloggin' from Baver.

OSU vs Navy                         

 Baver's Answers Colin's Questions OSU vs Navy 

OSU vs Virginia Tech  preview 

Crawling from The Wreckage. Virginia Tech recap. 

Baver Answer's Colin's Questions post Virginia Tech 

Baver Answers Colin's Questions 9/19/14 

Baver Answers Colin's Questions 9/25/14

Cincy Recap / Maryland Preview 

Baver Answers Colin's Questions - predicts OSU still has shot at making playoff 

Rutgers Preview / Baver AGAIN predicts if OSU wins out, they make the four team playoff. Crazy talk. 

Baver Answer's Colin's Questions 

Rutgers Recap / Penn State Preview

A Trip to Happy Valley and Baver Answers Colin's Questions

Penn State Recap/ Illinois Preview

OSU vs MSU / Colin's Questions

MSU Recap / Gopher Preview 

Baver Answers Colin's Questions 

Gopher Recap / Indiana Preview  

Baver Answers Colin's Questions 11/21/14 

Why Do the Dead Schembechlers Swear So Much? - by Jeff Hassler 

Indiana Recap / Michigan Preview 

Michigan Recap/ Big Ten Title Preview. Can Cardale Do It? 

Baver Answers Colin's Questions 12/5/14 

TCU Nerds Better Get Ready For a Course in Football Economics 101 by Colin Gawel 

Wisconsin Recap / Alabama Preview 

Full Alabama Preview 

Dead Schembechlers "I'm So Bored With the USA". 

Bama Recap / 10 Biggest Buckeye Wins Ever

SEC Bias? What Do the Fact Say? by Scott Plez 

Should Your Kid Miss School to Watch a Football Game? by Colin Gawel 

Bucks vs Ducks Preview 

 

I'd Pay Anything to See This Show by McCartney - by Wal Ozello

Sir Paul McCartney is embarking on one of his last tours around the world and he’s picked Columbus, Ohio as one of his few stops in North America.  Tickets go on sale to the general public Monday, August 31.

My immediate reaction was to pay whatever to see this show.  This is my last chance to see a Beatle.

But after a few minutes, my mood changed. Why would I pay good money to see him play songs I have heard over and over again on my record player, tape, CD, or iPod?  I recently watched Paul crash & burn during the SNL 40th anniversary show and this made me wonder if his Columbus show would be everything I would want it to be.

I know Sir Paul is a Beatle and has a vast amount of experience, wisdom, and gut instinct when it comes to live performance, but he’s getting up there in age.  Comparing him to his peers, he’s really like 150 in rock star years. This may be the last time any of us will get to see him. And I’d like it to be more spectacular than anyone’s ever imagined.

So what would it take for me to put down my hard-earned money to see Sir Paul at Nationwide Arena?  The perfect set list (clear and free of anything post-Wings) and the perfect band to back him up.

Here’s a dream set list of all the Beatles and Wings songs I’d love to hear… in the perfect order… and even a few covers.  

Open:
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
A Hard Day's Night
Back In The U.S.S.R.
Day Tripper
Satisfaction (The Rolling Stones)

(Break)

Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
Live And Let Die (Wings)
Eleanor Rigby
Penny Lane
We Can Work It Out

(Break)

Blackbird
I'll Follow The Sun
When I'm Sixty-Four
Here, There And Everywhere / My Love (Wings)

(Break)

One (Three Dog Night)
Helter Skelter
Good Day Sunshine
Jet
She Loves You
Paperback Writer

(Break)

Michelle
Oh! Darling
All My Loving
Silly Love Songs (Wings)
Can't Buy Me Love
I Saw Her Standing There
Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Queen)

(Break)

Got To Get You Into My Life
With A Little Luck (Wings)
Get Back
I Will
Lady Madonna

(Break - Close)

Yellow Submarine – (Ringo)
The Long And Winding Road
Yesterday
Band On The Run
Hey Jude

Encore:
Imagine (Tribute to John)
While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Tribute to George)
Why Don't We Do It In The Road
Carry That Weight
Let It Be

I know I threw in a few weird covers. A cover of "Satisfaction" by The Rolling Stones makes perfect sense.  But "One" and "Crazy Little Thing Called Love?"  After listening to those songs many times in my life, Paul’s voice would sound amazing on a McCartneyesque version of Three Dog Night’s "One." And his casual baritone phrasing would make "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" ten times better than the Freddie Mercury version. 

And think about how Paul could totally blow everyone’s mind when he comes back to the encore with a piano riff of "Imagine" and simply saying, “This is for John.” And then following it up with George’s "While My Guitar Gently Weeps." It would be one of the most poignant moments ever in rock n roll history.

THE BAND
This spectacular set list needs a band that can step up to the task.  Paul needs more than just session players, he needs the best.  Any one of these guys are stars in their own right and have filled stadiums across the world, but each would leap at the chance to play with Sir Paul McCartney

Lead Guitar – Eric Clapton
There’s only one person in the world who could fill George Harrison’s shoes and that’s Clapton.  First, it’s well known that he played on "While My Guitar Gently Weeps." But Eric could also shine on songs like "Blackbird," "Back in The U.S.S.R," "Day Tripper," "Oh! Darling," and all the older Beatles songs.  Everyone knows Eric’s connection to Columbus (his wife is from here), which is why Paul may have picked it as one of his stops.

Rhythm Guitar – Izzy Stradlin
You need a guy who knows how to play rhythm and not another lead guitarist. The rhythm guitarist from Guns 'n' Roses should fill Lennon’s shoes. John was a tremendous player to George’s lead which is what Izzy was to Slash.  Izzy is widely respected in the guitar world for being one of the best rock rhythm guitarists alive with amazing feel and groove. He can nail songs like "Paperback Writer," "Eleanor Rigby," "Band on The Run," and add hardness to songs like "Live and Let Die," and "I Saw Her Standing There." And seriously, imagine him on "Helter Skelter."

Piano and Keyboards - Paul Shaffer
There is no keyboardist alive with the diverse range of Paul Schaffer. This set list calls for someone that can groove out the clean, classical sound of "Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da," then go right into the power synths of "Live and Let Die."; someone who can add deep emotion to "Hey Jude," "The Long And Winding Road" and "Let It Be,"; someone who can then rock out "Lady Madonna" and "Good Day Sunshine."  Plus, Paul can lead the band.  That’s what he did for The Blues Brothers, Saturday Night Live, and The Letterman Show.  There’s no short list here – there’s only one name and that’s Paul Shaffer’s. Paul doesn’t have much going on now since his Letterman gig is over and I’m sure he’ll do it for just the chance to get stoned with McCartney.

Drums – Dave Grohl
Dave says his entry into music was the Beatles and his reference to everything musical. His respect for Ringo runs deep. (His words, not mine. Take a listen here.) He can lay down the backbeats of "Penny Lane," "Get Back," "Can’t Buy Me Love," "Got To Get You Into My Life," and just kill it on "Day Tripper," "Live And Let Die," "Eleanor Rigby," "Hard Day's Night," and "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."

That's my wish and I doubt it will ever come true.  But I'll still be going to the show in Columbus in the event any of it actually happens. If I can get a ticket before it sells out.

 

Wal Ozello is Music and Lifestyle contributor at pencilstorm.com. When he's not blogging about rock n roll or supporting others, he's writing science fiction novels. His suspense filled time-travel books, Assignment 1989, Revolution 1990, and Sacrifice 2086 can be found at Amazon.com.

 

 

 

Ohio State Should Brew Their Own Beer to Sell at Ohio Stadium - by Colin G.

So the cat is coming out of the bag with the big $$$ signs on it. Starting this season, beer will be sold at Ohio State Football games. Sure, it will only be available in 4% of the stadium - coincidentally holding the top 1% of patrons - but you can now officially start the countdown to vendors eventually selling Hang on Sloopy Jello Shots in the South Stands.

Is it a shameless money grab? Of course, but it does make sense on many levels and let's face facts: the next time a major college football program turns down a buck, it will be the first time.  Beer is and always has been a huge part of the tailgating "experience" since Woody knows when, so let's quit making everybody sneak it in and sell it to them for a tidy little profit right in the Shoe. The red solo cup lobby is going to pitch a fit, but they had a good run. I hope they socked some cash away.

I even agree with starting sales in the pricey sky-box seats before eventually caving to the freshmen in the Block O section. Those luxury-suite seats are not cheap and if somebody is that big a supporter of the football program, as far as I am concerned they can drink any damn thing they please. It's also a good way to iron out bugs in the system. Flush the lines, so to speak.

But what lucky beer company gets the right to shooting all those drunken fish in a beer barrel? Is it Bud? Miller? Those crazy bastards at Coors? Some hipster craft label?

I had a thought. Why doesn't Ohio State brew their own beer to sell at the stadium? Last I checked, they have a school of business, marketing, science and agriculture. They have a shit ton of capital and an endless stream of cheap labor (interns/students). Do you need more than that to brew and market your own beer?

Additionally, there has been much ado about higher education doing a poor job training people for real world jobs and charging a whole hell of a lot to do it. Craft beer is exploding.  Could you imagine how many people would apply to be accepted to the "Buckeye Beer" program? To grow the hops, maintain the manufacturing facility, make & deliver a tasty product, keep the books straight and market the whole thing? 

Hell, even I could market beer to a captive Buckeye football crowd. Here is your slogan free of charge, Mr. Smith: "Buckeye Beer, you want one or not?  NEXT!"

Seriously though, what better way to integrate the University with a real world business and make money doing it? It's really no different than the Lantern, except people would actually care.

And OSU, think about the money…..Oh, I have your attention now. (Brutus drooling.) Raking cash for $10 beers while your labor cost is kids paying you tuition. Where else can you bank untold millions on the backs of free student labor? Well, the football program of course, but not many other places. 

It is the easiest money. You make it coming AND going. Besides, anybody not drinking Buckeye Beer is a bad Buckeye. Could jinx the team. Asshole.

"But Colin, this could never happen, it's just too, you know… Aren't there laws or something?"

Two Reasons this can definitely happen:

1) Nobody Says "No" to The Ohio State University when it comes to money.

2) And absolutely nobody says "No" to The Ohio State University Football Program when it come to anything.

Remember when our hard-ass Governor demanded Ohio State come up with a plan to lower the skyrocketing cost of tuition? After 6 months, the OSU committee - led by former President Gordon Gee - came back and pretty much said, "Actually, we are pretty happy on our end, why don't students just take out bigger student loans and you guys all piss off?" Kaisich basically said, "Yeah, that sounds good," and that was the end of the discussion. My point is, OSU is bigger than Government. They could do this. 

Will they? I doubt it. Like any big bubble, even easy money is hard work. Way easier to just take the money up front and the future be damned.  That's why they sold the parking rights. There was no reason to do that, really. They sold a guaranteed money maker for the rest of time to pocket some cash right now. How is that working out for everybody?

I suspect a big company will write a big check over a working lunch at Scioto Country Club and that will be the end of it. Back up the Bud trucks. Still, it would be nice to see a supposed place of higher learning actually put that brain power to work and think of an innovative approach that could be good for all involved and generate some much needed positive publicity for my beloved alma mater. 

Anyway, enough of my yappin'. Let's get back to enjoying what is going to be a very exciting Ohio State Football season. Make sure to check in with Pencilstorm.com every Friday in September to read what The Baver has to say about the Buckeyes and college football in general. He is the best.

Go Bucks, Colin G.

Colin Gawel founded Pencilstorm.com and wrote this at Colin's Coffee. He also plays in the band Watershed. You can read all about him in the book Hitless Wonder. He is a big Buckeye fan.