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      Practically Idealistic
         blog   The title for this blog originated with use of the term “practical idealist”
         in this 1996 opinion piece, which asked: “To what kind of work should a practical idealist aspire?” A century and a half earlier, Emerson,
         in his 1841 essay Circles, wrote: “There are degrees in idealism.  We learn first to play with it academically.
         . . .  Then we see in the heyday of youth and poetry that it may be true, that it is true in gleams and fragments. 
         Then, its countenance waxes stern and grand, and we see that it must be true.  It now shows itself ethical and practical.”  John
         Dewey and Mahatma Gandhi embraced practical idealism in the 20th century, as did UN Secretary General U Thant.  Al Gore
         invoked it in a 1998 speech. In the context of this blog, the term is meant to convey idealism tempered but not overwhelmed
         by realism: a search for the ideal on a path guided by common sense. 
      
      	
         		
         			
         
            				
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            | Friday, April 26, 2024Great Giving Opportunity, and Media Coverage 6:46 pm edtConnecticut CASA is participating in the April 26-May 2 online “Great Give”;  it includes matching incentives, so please consider donating, and  circulating information about this online philanthrophy
                  event, including our profile. In
                  recent weeks the New Haven Register cited several committed volunteer advocates in discussing Connecticut CASA's statewide growth. Also, the Arts Paper  covered our April 17 Benefit, held at the Yale Child Study Center with a  musical performance
                  by the Shades of Yale. Lead sponsors included Yale  University and Claire's Corner Copia, with sponsorship also from Yale
                   New Haven Children's Hospital, the Community Foundation for Greater New  Haven, the NewAlliance Foundation, and Better Rhodes.
                  The Wine Thief  donated wine. Thanks to everyone who attended/contributed, as well as to  all who support our child advocacy
                  work year-round! In previewing the event earlier, a shoreline outlet noted two local neighbors among our new Board members.  (We also have Advisors and Ambassadors.)
 
 Wednesday, April 10, 2024Another Title for the UConn Men 7:16 am edtThis blog has periodically reflected on UConn men's  basketball, for example in
                  April 2011, April 2014, and April 2023.  Each  of those years produced titles, as in 1999 and 2004.  Now, the Huskies  have done it again. One pre-season ESPN collection of predictions  had excluded UConn altogether from the predicted final four for  2023-24; one pundit (M. Medcalf)'s forecast was that a
                  "title hangover"  from 2023 would doom the Huskies to an early exit from the tournament in  2024. Yet UConn has  shown that, with what is now a 12-1 record across 7 final  fours in the last
                  25 NCAA men's tournaments, and a 6-0 record in title  games, it isn't hyperbole to call Storrs the "basketball capital
                  of the  world"--at least the college world, particularly with the UConn women as  holders of 11 championships and a remarkable
                  23 final four appearances  during the past three decades or so.  (The UConn women are 11-1 in title  games, making the
                  men and women a combined 17-1 in those games.) 
 "How can this possibly be put in context? UConn’s back-to-back  national titles have come at a time
                  when mass parity is flattening the landscape of college basketball.  That the place was dormant only a few years ago is impressive, but also  typical. While so many awaited the Huskies’
                  demise in recent years,  they somehow only grow stronger.  The
                  real feat  here? Six titles won by six radically different teams by three different  coaches playing out of two different
                  leagues in 25 years. Six titles  that come on top of the women’s program’s 11 national titles since  1995.  Connecticut’s six-pack of men’s banners has  passed Duke
                  and Indiana and now stands even with North Carolina. The  only remaining programs with more titles are Kentucky with eight
                  and  UCLA with 11. The difference? Kentucky has won one in the time that  UConn has piled up its entire share and UCLA has
                  zero. The Bruins’ last  title came in 1995, when Dan Hurley was a junior guard at Seton Hall....  The only place that’s fully proven it most belongs is  Connecticut,
                  a one-time regional program with some marginal success back  in the day, one that also went from 1968 to 1989 with only two
                  NCAA  Tournament appearances." Quinn underscored the distinction
                  in Storrs: 
"UConn is in a club of
                  its own.... All this history comes as a means of answering the question  everyone remains perpetually stuck with.
                  UConn? Why? How? Of all places,  this program has played in roughly a quarter of the national title  games since 1999 and
                  is 6-0 in those appearances. 6-0!..."     "...UConn finished this tournament winning its six games  by an average of 23.3 points.
                  The 140 combined points they won those six  games by blows away the next most dominant title winner, which was North Carolina winning by a total
                  of 125 in 2009....  
                                    Despite different personnel and different eras, UConn displayed
                  unprecedented dominance. No other team in NCAA history has won all six NCAA tournament games by 13 or more. UConn did it back-to-back." As noted in one
                  of my Connecticut opinion pieces, back in 2015, I've been a fan of UConn basketball since the 1970s and in the 1980s myself attended basketball camps run by Jim Calhoun's
                  predecessor (Dom Perno, a graduate of New Haven's Wilbur Cross H.S. as well as of UConn). Never could I then have imagined
                  the success that Coach Calhoun in particular, then briefly Kevin Ollie and now Dan Hurley, have brought to this sport, this
                  state, and this university. As
                   the Huskies' 2024 pre-NCAA tournament hype video suggests, Coach Hurley  inspired his team by invoking the legacy of prior UConn teams' success  while driving this year's
                  squad to play as hard and as together as  possible, offensively and defensively.  Tenacious effort, unity, and  talent
                  combined to fuel a 2-year run of what Coach John Wooden surely would  have called "competitive greatness." 
 The result was yet another "shining moment." 
 
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