Rudy and Tony

Rudy and Tony

College Football Quiz (Division I-A): 1) Who holds the record

for yards rushing in a game? [Hint: 1999] 2) Most yards rushing

in a season? 3) Yards rushing career, 3-years and 4-years?

Answers below.

New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, speech to UN, 10/1

On Sept. 11, 2001, New York City, the most diverse city in the

world, was viciously attacked in an unprovoked act of war.

More than 5,000 innocent men, women and children of every

race, religion and ethnicity are lost. Among these, people from

80 different nations. To their representatives here today, I offer

my condolences to you as well on behalf of all New Yorkers who

share this loss with you.

This was the deadliest attack – terrorist attack – in history. It

claimed more lives than Pearl Harbor or D-Day. This was not

just an attack on the city of New York or on the United States of

America. It was an attack on the very idea of a free, inclusive

and civil society. It was a direct assault on the founding

principles of the United Nations itself.

The preamble to the UN Charter states that this organization

exists to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the

dignity and worth of the human person, to practice tolerance and

live together in peace as good neighbors and to unite our strength

to maintain international peace and security.

Indeed, this vicious attack places in jeopardy the whole purpose

of the United Nations.

Terrorism is based on the persistent and deliberate violation of

fundamental human rights. With bullets and bombs and now

with hijacked airplanes, terrorists deny the dignity of human life.

Terrorism preys particularly on cultures and communities that

practice openness and tolerance. Their targeting of innocent

civilians mocks the efforts of those who seek to live together in

peace as neighbors. It defies the very notion of being a neighbor.

This massive attack was intended to break our spirit. It has not

done that. It”s made us stronger, more determined and more

resolved.

The bravery of our firefighters, our police officers, our

emergency workers and civilians we may never learn of, in

saving over 25,000 lives that day, and carrying out the most

effective rescue operation in our history, inspires all of us.

The determination, resolve and leadership of President George

W. Bush has unified America and all decent men and women

around the world.

And the response of many of your nations, your leaders and

people, spontaneously demonstrating in the days after the attack,

your support for New York and America and your understanding

of what needs to be done to remove the threat of terrorism gives

us great hope that we will prevail.

The strength of America”s response, please understand, flows

from the principles upon which we stand. Americans are not a

single ethnic group. Americans are not of one race or one

religion. Americans emerge from all of your nations. We”re

defined as Americans by our beliefs, not by our ethnic origins,

our race or our religion.

Our belief in religious freedom, political freedom, economic

freedom – that”s what makes an American. Our belief in

democracy, the rule of law and respect for human life. That”s

how you become an American.

It”s these very principles and the opportunities these principles

give to so many to create a better life for themselves and their

families that make America and New York a shining city on a

hill.

There”s no nation in the history of the world, and no city that has

seen more immigrants in less time than America. And people

continue to come here in large numbers to seek freedom,

opportunity, decency, civility.

Each of your nations, I”m certain, has contributed citizens to the

United States and to New York. I believe I can take every one of

you someplace in New York City and you can find someone

from your country, someone from your village or town, that

speaks your language and practices your religion. In each of

your lands, there are many who are Americans in spirit by virtue

of their commitment to our shared principles.

It”s tragic and perverse that it”s because of these very principles,

particularly our religious, political and economic freedoms, that

we find ourselves under attack by terrorists.

Our freedom threatens them because they know if our ideas of

freedom gain a foothold among their people, it will destroy their

power. So they strike out against us to keep those ideas from

reaching their people.

The best long-term deterrent and approach to terrorism,

obviously, is the spread of the principles of freedom and

democracy and the rule of law and respect for human life. The

more that spreads around the globe, the safer we will all be.

These are very, very powerful ideas and once they gain a

foothold, they cannot be stopped.

In fact, the rise that we”ve seen in terrorism and terrorist groups I

believe is in no small measure a response to the spread of these

ideas – freedom and democracy – to many nations, particularly

over the past 15 years.

The terrorists have no ideas or ideals with which to combat

freedom and democracy. So their only defense is to strike out

against innocent civilians, destroying human life in massive

numbers and hoping to deter all of us from our pursuit and

expansion of freedom.

But the long-term deterrent of spreading our ideals throughout

the world is just not enough, and may never be realized, if we do

not act, and act together, to remove the clear and present danger

posed by terrorism and terrorists.

The United Nations must hold accountable any country that

supports or condones terrorism. Otherwise, you will fail in your

primary mission as peacekeeper.

It must ostracize any nation that supports terrorism. It must

isolate any nation that remains neutral in the fight against

terrorism. Now is the time in the words of your charter, the

United Nations Charter, to unite our strength to maintain

international peace and security.

This is not a time for further study or vague directives.

The evidence of terrorism”s brutality and inhumanity, of its

contempt for life and the concept of peace is lying beneath the

rubble of the World Trade Center less than two miles from where

we meet today.

Look at that destruction, that massive, senseless, cruel loss of

human life and then I ask you to look in your hearts and

recognize that there is no room for neutrality on the issue of

terrorism. You”re either with civilization or with terrorists. On

one side is democracy, the rule of law and respect for human life.

On the other is tyranny, arbitrary executions and mass murder.

We are right and they are wrong. It”s as simple as that. And by

that I mean that America and its allies are right about democracy,

about religious, political and economic freedom. And the

terrorists are wrong, and in fact evil, in their mass destruction of

human life in the name of addressing alleged injustices.

Let those who say that we must understand the reasons for

terrorism come with me to the thousands of funerals we”re

having in New York City – thousands – and explain those insane

maniacal reasons to the children who will grow up without

fathers and mothers and to the parents who have had their

children ripped from them for no reason at all.

Instead, I ask each of you to allow me to say at those funerals

that your nation stands with America in making a solemn

promise and pledge that we will achieve unconditional victory

over terrorism and terrorists.

There”s no excuse for mass murder, just as there”s no excuse for

genocide.

Those who practice terrorism, murdering or victimizing innocent

civilians, lose any right to have their cause understood by decent

people and lawful nations.

On this issue – terrorism – the United Nations must draw a line.

The era of moral relativism between those who practice or

condone terrorism and those nations who stand up against it must

end. Moral relativism doesn”t have a place in this discussion and

debate. There”s no moral way to sympathize with grossly

immoral actions. And by so doing, and by trying to do that,

unfortunately a fertile field has been created in which terrorism

has grown.

The best and most practical way to promote peace is to stand up

to terror and intimidation.

The Security Council”s unanimous passage of Resolution 1373

adopting wide-ranging antiterrorism measures into the

international community is a very good first step. It”s necessary

to establish accountability for the subsidizing of terrorism.

As a former United States attorney, I am particularly encouraged

that the United Nations has answered President Bush”s call to cut

terrorists off from their money and their funding. It”s

enormously important.

We”ve done that successfully with organized crime groups in

America by taking away their ability to amass large amounts of

money. You take away their ability to have others carry on their

functioning for them, even if they”re removed, arrested,

prosecuted or eliminated through war or through law

enforcement. It cuts off the lifeblood of the organization. So I

believe this was a very good first step.

But now it”s up to the member states to enforce this and other

aspects of the resolution and for the United Nations to enforce

these new mechanisms to take the financial base away from the

terrorists. Take away their money, take away their access to

money, and you reduce their ability to carry out complex

missions.

Each of you sitting in this room is here because of your country”s

commitment to being part of the family of nations. We need to

unite now as a family as never before, across all of our

differences, in recognition of the fact that the United Nations

stands for the proposition that human beings have more in

common than divide us.

If you need to be reminded of this, you don”t need to look very

far. Just go outside for a walk in the streets and the parks of New

York City. You can”t walk a block or two blocks in New York

City without seeing somebody that looks different than you, acts

different than you, talks different than you, believes different

than you.

If you grow up in New York City, you learn that. And then you

learn something, if you”re an intelligent or decent person, you

learn that all those differences are nothing in comparison to the

things that unite us.

We”re a city of immigrants unlike any other city, within a nation

of immigrants.

Like the victims of the World Trade Center attack, we”re of

every race, we”re of every religion, we”re of every ethnicity.

And our diversity has been our greatest source of strength. It”s

the thing that renews us and revives us in every generation – our

openness to new people from all over the world.

So from the first day of this attack, an attack on New York, on

America, and I believe on the basic principles that underlie this

organization, I”ve told the people of New York that we should

not allow this to divide us because then we would really lose

what this city is all about.

We have a very, very strong – we have very strong and vibrant

Muslim and Arab communities in New York City. They are an

equally important part of the life of our city. We respect their

religious beliefs; we respect everyone”s religious beliefs. That”s

what America is about; that”s what New York City is all about.

I”ve urged New Yorkers not to engage in any form of group

blame or group hatred. This is exactly the evil that we”re

confronting with these terrorists. And if we”re going to prevail

over them, over terror, then our ideals and principles and values

must transcend all forms of prejudice. This is a very important

part of the struggle against terrorism.

This is not a dispute between religions or ethnic groups. All

religions, all decent people, are united in their desire to achieve

peace and understand that we have to eliminate terrorism. We”re

not divided about this.

There have been many days in New York when I was running for

mayor and since I”ve been mayor – many times when I would

have a weekend in which I would go to a mosque on a Friday

and a synagogue on a Saturday and a church, sometimes two

churches, on a Sunday. And by the time I finished, I would say

to myself, I know that we”re getting through to God. We”re

talking to him in every language that he understands; we”re using

every liturgy that exists and I know we”re getting through to the

same God. We may be doing it in slightly different ways.

God is known by many different names and many different

traditions, but identified by one consistent feeling: love. Love

for humanity; particularly love for our children. Love does

eventually conquer hate. I believe that; I”m sure you do.

But it also needs our help. Good intentions alone are not enough

to conquer evil. Remember British Prime Minister Neville

Chamberlain who, armed only with good intentions, negotiated

with the Nazis and emerged hopeful that he had achieved peace

in his time. Hitler”s wave of terror was only encouraged by these

attempts at appeasement. At the cost of millions of lives, we

learned that words alone, although important, are not enough to

guarantee peace. It is action alone that counts.

For the United Nations and individual nations, decisive action is

needed to stop terrorism from ever orphaning another child.

That”s for nations.

For individuals, the most effective course of action they can take

to aid our recovery is to be determined to go ahead with their

lives.

We can”t let terrorists change the way we live. Otherwise they

will have succeeded.

In some ways the resilience of life in New York City is the

ultimate sign of defiance to terrorists. We call ourselves the

capital of the world in large part because we”re the most diverse

city in the world. And we”re the home of the United Nations. So

that spirit of unity amid all our diversity has never ever been

stronger.

On Saturday night I walked through Times Square. It was

crowded, it was bright, it was lively. Thousands of people were

visiting from all parts of the United States and all parts of the

world. And many of them came up to me and they shook my

hand and patted me on the back and said, “We”re here because

we want to show our support for the city of New York.”

And that”s why there”s never been a better time to come to New

York City. I say to people across the country and around the

world, if you were planning to come to New York sometime in

the future, come here now. Come to enjoy our thousands of

restaurants and museums and sporting events and shopping and

Broadway.

But also come to take a stand against terrorism.

We need to heed the words of a hymn that I and the police

commissioner and the fire commissioner have heard over and

over again at the many funerals and memorial services that

we”ve gone to in the last week – two weeks. The hymn begins:

Be not afraid.

Freedom from fear is a basic human right. We need to reassert

our right to live free from fear with greater confidence and

determination than ever before here in New York City, across

America and around the world. With one clear voice,

unanimously, we need to say we will not give into terrorism.

Surrounded by our friends of every faith, we know this is not a

clash of civilizations. It”s a conflict between murderers and

humanity.

This is not a question of retaliation or revenge. It”s a matter of

justice leading to peace.

The only acceptable result is the complete and total eradication

of terrorism.

New Yorkers are strong and they are resilient. We are unified

and we will not yield to terror. We do not let fear make our

decisions for us. We choose to live in freedom.

Thank you and God bless you.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair

Excerpts from Blair”s speech to the Labour conference, 10/3/01:

In retrospect the millennium marked only a moment in time. It

was the events of September 11 that marked a turning point in

history, where we confront the dangers of the future and assess

the choices facing humankind.

It was a tragedy. An act of evil. From this nation goes our

deepest sympathy and prayers for the victims and our profound

solidarity with the American people. We were with you at the

first. We will stay with you to the last.

Just two weeks ago, in New York, after the church service, I met

some of the families of the British victims. It was in many ways

a very British occasion. Tea and biscuits. It was raining outside.

Around the edge of the room, strangers making small talk, trying

to be normal people in an abnormal situation. And as you

crossed the room, you felt the longing and sadness, hands

clutching photos of sons and daughters, wives and husbands,

imploring you to believe them when they said there was still an

outside chance of their loved ones being found alive, when you

knew in truth that all hope was gone. And then a middle-aged

mother looks you in the eyes and tells you her only son has died,

and asks you: why? I tell you: you do not feel like the most

powerful person in the country during times like that. Because

there is no answer. There is no justification for their pain. Their

son did nothing wrong. The woman, seven months pregnant,

whose child will never know its father, did nothing wrong. They

don”t want revenge. They want something better in memory of

their loved ones.

I believe their memorial can and should be greater than simply

the punishment of the guilty. It is that out of the shadow of this

evil, should emerge lasting good: destruction of the machinery of

terrorism wherever it is found, hope among all nations of a new

beginning where we seek to resolve differences in a calm and

ordered way, greater understanding between nations and faiths

and above all prosperity for the poor and dispossessed, so that

people everywhere can see the chance of a better future through

the hard work and creative power of the free citizen, not the

violence and savagery of the fanatic.

I know that in Britain people are anxious, even a little frightened.

I understand that. People know we must act, but they worry

what might follow. They worry about the economy and talk of

recession. And, of course, there are dangers; it is a new

situation. But the fundamentals of the US, British and European

economies are strong. Every reasonable measure of internal

security is being undertaken. Our way of life is a great deal

stronger and will last a great deal longer than the actions of

fanatics, small in number and now facing a unified world against

them. People should have confidence. This is a battle with only

one outcome: our victory not theirs.

What happened on September 11 was without parallel in the

bloody history of terrorism. Within hours, up to 7,000 people

were annihilated, the commercial centre of New York was

reduced to rubble and in Washington and Pennsylvania further

death and horror on an unimaginable scale. Let no one say this

was a blow for Islam when the blood of innocent Muslims was

shed along with those of the Christian, Jewish and other faiths

around the world.

We know those responsible. In Afghanistan are scores of

training camps for the export of terror. Chief among the

sponsors and organizers is Osama bin Laden. He is supported,

shielded and given succor by the Taliban regime.

Two days before the September 11 attacks, Masood, the leader of

the opposition Northern Alliance, was assassinated by two

suicide bombers. Both were linked to bin Laden. Some may call

that coincidence. I call it payment – payment in the currency

these people deal in: blood. Be in no doubt: bin Laden and his

people organized this atrocity. The Taliban aid and abet him.

He will not desist from further acts of terror. They will not stop

helping him.

Whatever the dangers of the action we take, the dangers of

inaction are far, far greater. Look for a moment at the Taliban

regime. It is undemocratic. There is no sport allowed or

television or photography. No art or culture is permitted. All

other faiths, all other interpretations of Islam, are ruthlessly

suppressed. Those who practice their faith are imprisoned.

Women are treated in a way almost too revolting to be credible.

First driven out of university, girls not allowed to go to school,

no legal rights, unable to go out of doors without a man. Those

that disobey are stoned.

There is now no contact permitted with Western agencies, even

those delivering food. People live in abject poverty. It is a

regime founded on fear and funded by the drug trade. The

biggest drugs hoard in the world is in Afghanistan, controlled by

the Taliban. Ninety per cent of the heroin on British streets

originates in Afghanistan. The arms the Taliban are buying

today are paid for with the lives of young British people buying

their drugs on British streets. That is another part of their regime

that we should seek to destroy. So what do we do?

Don”t overreact some say. We aren”t. We haven”t lashed out.

No missiles on the first night just for effect.

Don”t kill innocent people. We are not the ones who waged war

on the innocent. We seek the guilty.

Look for a diplomatic solution. There is no diplomacy with bin

Laden or the Taliban regime.

State an ultimatum and get their response. We stated the

ultimatum; they haven”t responded.

Understand the causes of terror. Yes, we should try, but let there

be no moral ambiguity: nothing could ever justify the events of

September 11 and it is to turn justice on its head to pretend it

could. The action we take will be proportionate, targeted. We

will do all we humanly can to avoid civilian casualties.

But understand what we are dealing with. Listen to the calls of

those passengers on the planes. Think of the children on them,

told they were going to die.

Think of the cruelty beyond our comprehension as among the

screams and the anguish of the innocent, those hijackers drove at

full throttle planes laden with fuel into buildings where tens of

thousands worked. They have no moral inhibition on the

slaughter of the innocent. If they could have murdered not 7,000

but 70,000, does anyone doubt they would have done so and

rejoiced in it? There is no compromise possible with such

people, no meeting of minds, no point of understanding with

such terror. Just a choice: defeat it or be defeated by it. And

defeat it we must. Any action will be against the terrorist

network of bin Laden. As for the Taliban, they can surrender the

terrorists or face the consequences and, again, in any action the

aim will be to eliminate their military hardware, cut off their

finances, disrupt their supplies, target their troops, not civilians.

I say to the Taliban: surrender the terrorists or surrender power.

It”s your choice.

Man”s Best Friend

The Wall Street Journal had a story the other day explaining that

bomb-sniffing dogs go through a 17-week training program.

Their handlers then live with the dogs for the 6-8-year career.

The FAA reported that the cost to train 90 saviors of civilization

is $6 million.

Top 3 songs for the week of 9/28/63: #1 “Blue Velvet” (Bobby

Vinton) #2 “Sally Go ”Round The Roses” (The Jaynetts) #3 “Be

My Baby” (The Ronettes)

College Football Quiz Answers: 1) Yards rushing in a game:

LaDainian Tomlinson (TCU) 406 (43 carries) vs. UTEP in 1999.

[Tomlinson”s yardage per quarter was 59, 60, 121, 166.]

2) Yards rushing, season: Barry Sanders (Oklahoma State) 2,628

(344 carries, 11 games), 1988. 3) Yards rushing, career: 3-yrs. /

Herschel Walker (Georgia) 5,259. 4-yrs. / Ron Dayne

(Wisconsin) 6,397.

College Football Tidbits

–Ed Marinaro (Cornell 1969-71) still holds the record for highest

average yards per game, career…174.6.

–Emmitt Smith and Marshall Faulk hold the record for reaching

1,000 yards as a freshman in their 7th game.

–Byron “Whizzer” White (former Supreme Court Justice) was

the first player to officially gain 1,000 yards (Colorado, 1937).

Others had done it earlier but ”37 was the first year the NCAA

kept formal records.

–Archie Griffin (Ohio State 1972-75) and Tony Dorsett (Pitt

1973-76) hold the record for number of 100-yard games, 33.

[Griffin did it in 42 games; Dorsett, 43. Griffin had 31 in a row.]

–Marcus Allen and Barry Sanders hold the record for

consecutive games with 200 or more yards, five. [Allen: 210,

274, 208, 233, 211. Sanders: 320, 215, 312, 292, 332!!!!

Goodness gracious.]

Next Bar Chat, Monday….from South Dakota.