clichés have their role to play in polite conversation. He wondered if Wintheiser could translate his remark into Hittite.
What Wintheiser thought would be helpful was to make fun of the critics, lampoon them, hold them up to ridicule.
âYou know any kids on these alternative campus papers?â
âAs a matter of fact, I do.â
âGood. Letâs unleash them on these yo-yos. Cartoons, funny names, the whole thing. Picket their classes. Kids will know what to do.â
âIâll get right on it.â
Wintheiser rose. Standing, he need only lift his arms and he could touch the ceiling.
âHereâs my cell phone number,â Wintheiser said, putting a card on the desk. âKeep me posted.â
Alone, without the thought that he and Wintheiser were acting as a team, he wondered how he could implement Wintheiserâs idea. Advocata Nostra was out, and the other conservative paper. The Observer ? Forget it. Then he had it. Common Sense . They were furious with the efforts of Weeping Willow to turn back the clock as far as Catholicism went. Did they give a damn about football? Then he remembered the several cutting remarks about Roger Knight that had appeared in Common Sense  ⦠and Rogerâs name had appeared on the list of professors supporting Lipschutz. How to approach them? Ah. Gordie Finlayson was the faculty advisor of Common Sense . His poems often appeared in its pages. Finlayson nursed a deep hatred for all chaired professors. Maybe that had been the reason for those slams at Knight.
He would talk to Finlayson. Let the campaign begin.
11
It should have been easier to track down football players to interview, but Bartholomew Hanlon found them an elusive bunch. Their size alone should have made them easy to spot, but then many of them allegedly went around campus in electric carts, so their height was hidden. Did they eat in dining halls with mere mortals?
âWhy do you ask?â The young manâs shaved head gave him an infantile look, as if he were still awaiting his first growth.
âIâm a reporter.â
The bald one backed away. âWeâre not supposed to talk with reporters.â
âYouâre on the team?â
Bartholomewâs incredulous tone didnât help. âIâm the kicker.â
âOf course. I didnât recognize you out of uniform.â
Bartholomew had fallen into conversation with John Wesley just outside the South Dining Hall. Now he led him to a bench, where Wesley reluctantly sat down. Bartholomew got out a notebook.
âNothing about football.â
âAbsolutely not.â
Bartholomew realized that he was being less than truthful. In fact, he was lying. He had got hold of a team roster and then checked out the names in the campus phone book. Few players seemed to live on campus. Wesley, however accidentally encountered, was thus a real prize.
âHow did you become a kicker?â
Wesley started to rise. âI mean it. Coach doesnât want us giving interviews.â
âI donât blame him.â
âWhat do you mean?â Wesley sat again and looked at him narrowly. âNo games. We canât talk about them.â
âNo football, period. What hall do you live in?â
That got the ball rolling. Wesley was from Nebraska, someplace west of Omaha that Bartholomew had never heard of. âWhy did you come to Notre Dame?â
âThey came to me.â Wesley raised a hand as if to stop himself.
âWhat attracted you to a Catholic school?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWell, after all, this is the premier Catholic university.â
A look of pain spread over Wesleyâs face. âYou sound like my mother.â
âI have a cold.â Wesleyâs eyes widened, and then he roared with laughter. Bartholomew had made a friend. âWhat about your mother?â
âSheâs worried Iâll become a
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