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Clarence Darrow Hooper—Senior and Junior

Clarence Darrow Hooper—Senior and Junior

Robert T. Hill Junior High School was not exactly a cornucopia of athletic talent in the 1966−67 school year, at least among the ninth graders. The Highlanders football team went 1-8, and most of its top players were eighth graders like Blake...

August 5, 2019 Richard Olympics, sports history, Texas A&M 16 Comments
Geumwang, Jincheon and Jeungpyeong—July 20–21, 2019

Geumwang, Jincheon and Jeungpyeong—July 20–21, 2019

Shocked if not flabbergasted to realize that I had yet to visit three small towns in the northwest corner of Chungcheongbuk Province, I set out to rectify the matter with a mid-summer excursion. Although Tropical Storm Falcon coming up from the...

July 25, 2019 Richard history, Korean travels 2 Comments
Lamentation for the Fall of Constantinople in 1453

Lamentation for the Fall of Constantinople in 1453

May 29 is a festive holiday in Turkey. That is when people—most of them, I should say—celebrate the conquest of Constantinople in 1453 by the forces of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II, also known as Fetih or “the Conqueror”; that day culminated a long...

July 12, 2019 Richard Christian history, Turkey 3 Comments
I Have a Hungry Brain, and It Must Be Fed

I Have a Hungry Brain, and It Must Be Fed

Less than two weeks have passed since I came back to Korea. Now, nine boxes of books—all of the nonfiction genre—have been delivered to my office, carted to my apartment nearby, catalogued and stored. As a bibliophile, I find this deeply...

June 28, 2019 Richard books, reading 4 Comments
My June 2019 TX Trip

My June 2019 TX Trip

Almost three years had passed since I visited the city, state and country of my birth, so I had to return (temporarily, of course). I said a warm goodbye to my GF, Audrey Lim, went to Seoul−Incheon International Airport and got on a big jet...

June 19, 2019 Richard Abilene, Austin, Dallas, Houston, Texas 12 Comments
Unsettling News from the World of Collegiate Track & Field

Unsettling News from the World of Collegiate Track & Field

I have already riffed on Bruce (“call me ‘Caitlyn’”) Jenner, the former Olympian who struggled with gender-identity issues for four decades before deciding that he was a she. I have compassion for Jenner. He apparently thought he had to take such...

June 4, 2019 Richard gender relations, sports, track & field 9 Comments
The 1954 Cotton Bowl, “Starring” Dickey Maegle and Tommy Lewis

The 1954 Cotton Bowl, “Starring” Dickey Maegle and Tommy Lewis

Now that Bart Starr has entered eternal rest, I had to look into his life and career. Sixteen years as the Green Bay Packers’ quarterback and five championships (including the first two Super Bowls, in both of which he was named MVP) say...

May 30, 2019 Richard college football, Cotton Bowl, SWC 4 Comments
A Crisis of Conscience in My Kitchen

A Crisis of Conscience in My Kitchen

Audrey and I were going through an outdoor market in Seoul’s Jamsil district in early May. I saw a basket of five large, bright-red tomatoes on sale for the low price of 5,000 won. I was raised in a city (Dallas, Texas) and not on a farm...

May 28, 2019 Richard famine, hunger, North Korea 6 Comments
Clemenceau, Lloyd George and Wilson Ignored the Koreans at 1919 Paris Peace Conference

Clemenceau, Lloyd George and Wilson Ignored the Koreans at 1919 Paris Peace Conference

About this time a century ago, the “war to end all wars” was over. Some 17 million people died in World War I, along with 23 million wounded. Germany had been defeated along with its ally Bulgaria, and the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires...

May 20, 2019 Richard Korean history, Paris Peace Conference of 1919 6 Comments
Dr. Freud, Paging Dr. Freud!

Dr. Freud, Paging Dr. Freud!

One of the monster classes I took at the University of Texas in the early 1970s was Psychology 301. It included an overview of the writings and theories of the key figures in that field: B.F Skinner, Ivan Pavlov, Jean Piaget, William James, Erik...

May 14, 2019 Richard psychology, Sigmund Freud 14 Comments
Not even the Greatest College Football Coaches Could Win ’Em All

Not even the Greatest College Football Coaches Could Win ’Em All

I enjoy corresponding on a semi-regular basis with John Mackovic. This man had a long career as a college football coach at Wake Forest, Illinois, Texas and Arizona (not to mention a stint with the Kansas City Chiefs of the NFL). He’s...

April 23, 2019 Richard college football, college football coaches 7 Comments
The Circassians

The Circassians

Some people, I must say, hold a rather circumscribed view of historical suffering. They speculate as to whether blacks, Jews or Native Americans have suffered the most. There is an unseemly competition for primacy—the No. 1 spot, as it were. Each...

April 21, 2019 Richard Circassia, Circassian genocide 10 Comments
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About Me
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Writer and Traveller
An American expat living in Korea with no wife, no kids, no dogs or cats. I have written 23 nonfiction books and worked on behalf of the Dallas Chaparrals, Jerry LeVias, Abner Haynes and the return of Jikji from France.
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