ON LILA’S GEM

December 31, 2025

January 1, 2026

This one is personal. Very personal. I rarely talk about our grandkids (there are three) but every now and then, something comes up that catches my fancy.

Five years ago, at age 11, our granddaughter Lila Theodore wrote the following essay for class where she was asked to “reflect on a time when you were intellectually challenged, inspired, or took an intellectual risk – inside or outside the classroom. How has that experience shaped you?”

Her essay follows:

“Do you want to co-author a book?” my grandpa asked.

On a sunny June afternoon during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, I was lounging on my grandparents’ red brick patio. We had just finished a meal, our weekly pandemic tradition. My grandfather had retired from his job as a professor many years ago, but instead of fully retiring, he continued writing books on topics that he is interested in (although not always an expert), which range from chemical engineering to basketball. He had grown interested in infectious diseases and wanted to put together a reference guide on pharmaceutical companies.

I said yes to co-authoring this book without fully realizing how much of an intellectual challenge I had just taken on. This was something outside of  my comfort zone, especially since I had never done research on that scale, and I was only eleven years old. It was intimidating that my writing would be published and distributed, especially on a topic that I knew little to nothing about. I also wondered if I really wanted to spend a good chunk of my summer researching the very thing that was making my life miserable:  infectious diseases! Still, it was an amazing opportunity. I was in the midst of a quarantine, but there wasn’t much else to do. So, I accepted.

While I had always enjoyed writing, this was a major new challenge: there was a huge amount of work, there were hard deadlines, and in the end my work would be published. The thought of anybody being able to read this book with my writing in it was a bit scary. My part of the book was to research pharmaceutical companies and write short company profiles. At first this research seemed a little bit boring, and after my first few pharmaceutical companies, I wondered how I would get through the dreadfully long list.

After I had gotten into the flow of it, though, I started to enjoy it. In the beginning I thought of pharmaceutical companies as being these abstract anonymous things, and I knew my audience might think that way as well. As I worked my way through the list, I became interested in all of the individual stories of people who did research, invested things, started companies, went bankrupt, profited from unethical practices, and so on. I knew that my writing challenge would be to make my readers aware of the fascinating and sometimes shocking history of pharmaceutical research.

There was also something empowering about this work: being able to plan out a large project, stretch my writing skills, and making the deadline made me proud, even if I did hit a few bumps along the way. And, it gave me the opportunity to better understand some of the aspects of the disease that seemed to completely dominate my life at the time. The risk I took when I was eleven years old helped me become a better much more organized and responsible researcher and writer.

*****

NOTE: The book “Virus Contacts: Agencies and Organizations” was published by Amazon. It serves as a research guide for the practitioner and traveler.

Visit the author at:

www.theodorenewsletter.com

and / or

Basketball Coaching 101 on Facebook

NEXT POSTINGS

FEBRUARY 1:          On Purely Chaste, Pristine and Random Thoughts XXXVIII

MARCH 1:                 On the Ultimate Quiz

APRIL 1:                    On Dining Out


HELLO BASKETBALL, GOODBYE BASEBALL

December 1, 2025

December 1, 2025

Once again, this one is for those in the reading audience who bet on sports. And, it’s transition time; it is time to leave a baseball season (particularly disastrous for both Met and Yankee fans) and return to the tainted and corrupt world of college basketball. Both are important to many of us since sportsbooks have now become front and center for the betting public. For me, it’s DraftKings. For others, it’s FanDuel. In any event, here’s how baseball came down for me and what’s coming up with basketball.

BASEBALL. What a season for those of us who are Met fans. It was just as bad for the Yankees (even though they made it to the first round). But, what about my bets? I probably won a couple of bucks only because of partnerships with two of my dearest friends (who are still around). Mary and I naturally had several bets on the Mets. My key bets were on Pittsburgh (ouch!) and a host of other losers. Believe this or not I did have $10 on Oakland and over at 71.5!

I had been spoiled earlier with winning seasons the last five years. Then this year arrived and the roof fell in as I had losers in all sports, not only baseball. To compound problems, I got destroyed during my last visit to the Resorts casino in Monticello after five winning trips in a row. Oh well, that’s gambling. Yet, hope springs eternal.

BASKETBALL. As noted last year, I previously caught Connecticut at 40-1 two years in a row. I’m hoping that the 2025-26 season will start another similar streak.

Keep in mind that there are primarily two types of bets available in sports betting: the point spread and the money line. My recommendation is future bets (that I refer to as seasonal bets). These are bets on a team or individual winning a championship, league, division, award, etc., and the good news is that each of these bets (hopefully) applies over an entire season. In college basketball, it is primarily who is going to win the NCAA Championship or make the Final Four. For me, last year was a disaster. But that was last year. What remains is what do I have for this year?

Here are some of the approximate early future odds to win the NCAA Tournament:

PURDUE        9                                              ILL                  17

DUKE             9.5                                           GONZ             18

HOUSTON     10                                            ALA                25

CONN             12                                            TENN              40                                                           

Do I have any suggestions? Of course I do! I’ll be putting some money on the following teams:

CONN, ILL, ALA, and keying on GONZAGA.

This also hurts: St. Johns will have to be reckoned with this year; but I hope I’m wrong. One of my sources claims (I can’t attest to this) that the Storm shelled out nearly $20MM in their recruiting of this year’s team. I am certain they are going to be tough. Whatever you do, if anything, good luck.

Don’t forget that it is also the season for the NHL, NBA, NFL, and college football. I offer these comments:

NHL:  Tampa and the Islanders (100-1) should be considered. I’ve passed on this early date for the Rangers and the Devils.

NBA:  Pass here.

NFL:  My money is still on Green Bay. My two key bets were the Jets and over, and Steelers         

and under; I mean, how bad can I get?

College Football:  I’m lukewarm on Mississippi (often referred to as Ole Miss) at 25-1. You might

also consider Georgia (10-1) and Texas Tech (15-1).

In any event, good luck if you get involved with any other sportsbook activity.

I haven’t recommended a stock since the turn of the century. Because of my involvement with geothermal energy, I recommended Novell (NOV) three months ago to all those close to me. No one bought. The stock is up nearly 30% and still moving.

Visit the author at:

www.theodorenewsletter.com

and / or

Basketball Coaching 101 on Facebook

NEXT POSTINGS

JANUARY 1:             On Lila’s Gem

FEBRUARY 1:          On Purely Chaste, Pristine and Random Thoughts XXXVIII

MARCH 1:                 On the Ultimate Quiz