NU's Dark Ages ('76-'81)

NJCat

All-Conference
Mar 7, 2016
21,498
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Where did you get your dates for the scholarship cuts? From the N.Y.T. Archives: "The 10 percent cut in football will reduce the annual limit of scholarships per school to 92 from 95 in Division I-A during the 1992-93 academic year, to 88 during the 1993-94 year and to 85 during the 1994-95 year. The cuts in Division I-AA football will also reduce the annual allotments from 95 to 85. In all, most sports will lose an average of two scholarships."
Well, everyone knows the "failing New York Times" is full of fake news.....;)
 

Alaskawildkat

Senior
Dec 28, 2005
20,803
553
113
I want to get personal professions as to why the Northwestern Football program was so poor from 1976-1981 (and beyond). I have my thoughts and have done some research but I want to compile the reasons from all of you stakeholders. Also, if any of you have any literary resources to point to (articles, text, etc.), please point me in the right direction (perhaps I have not uncovered them yet). I am trying to develop a good thesis as to why Barnett succeeded in 95 where Pont, Venturi (and even Green and Peay) could not. I value the opinions and info from Wildcat nation.

Thanks in advance!

-ChappyCat

With regard to the book you are writing on Northwestern as an Underdog making it to the Rose Bowl, I did just come across a briefcase full of clippings from that year which include articles with not only text but photos. Had actually contemplated doing some type of writing myself at some point in time. I assume some of it might be available on internet archives in some abbreviated form, but if you are in need of the print in the original print format for demonstrative purposes I can help.

 
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ChappyCat

Redshirt
Sep 19, 2015
581
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With regard to the book you are writing on Northwestern as an Underdog making it to the Rose Bowl, I did just come across a briefcase full of clippings from that year which include articles with not only text but photos. Had actually contemplated doing some type of writing myself at some point in time. I assume some of it might be available on internet archives in some abbreviated form, but if you are in need of the print in the original print format for demonstrative purposes I can help.


Alaksawildkat, yes! Please email me at [email protected]. Thanks!
 

DaCat

All-Conference
May 29, 2001
25,718
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With regard to the book you are writing on Northwestern as an Underdog making it to the Rose Bowl, I did just come across a briefcase full of clippings from that year which include articles with not only text but photos. Had actually contemplated doing some type of writing myself at some point in time. I assume some of it might be available on internet archives in some abbreviated form, but if you are in need of the print in the original print format for demonstrative purposes I can help.

Wow what a goldmine!
 

Alaskawildkat

Senior
Dec 28, 2005
20,803
553
113
Wow what a goldmine!

Speaking of gold and Northwestern history, your posted comment caused me to reflect that our university was founded concurrent with the California Gold Rush that gave birth to the first $20 U.S. Gold pieces (Double Eagles) which were first minted for general circulation in 1850. In 1851 Northwestern received its official charter. That same decade a ship (SS Central America) which was transporting to the East Coast millions of dollars (by today's values) of those Double Eagles which had been minted at the San Francisco Mint went down in a storm off of the Carolinas. Some three decades ago the ship was disovered and two major deep sea gold recovery efforts followed. The most recent recovery effort was this past year and those coins are just now hitting the numismatic market.

So if one wants to be directly "connected" to the era of our university's founding, one can do so by acquiring a Double Eagle gold coin which has remained untouched from that time to the present.

Pictured is the "gold mine" of coins as photographed by an undersea robot during the original discovery. The accompanying coin is one of the $20 Double Eagle gold pieces minted in San Francisco which was brought up from the ocean depths during the more recent recovery effort.



FWIW further below pictured is one of, if not the first, $20 Double Eagle which was minted at the Philadelphia mint in 1850, the first year of circulation. After acquiring it I learned that it was once in the possession of its designer James Longacre and had been subsequently auctioned from his estate. (The 1870 Longacre Estate auction description for the coin read "1850 Double Eagle Proof. This piece was from the first dies used for the double eagle, and might be termed a trial piece.")



For anyone interested in the historical implications that followed from the sinking of the ship SS Central America, here is a link to an interesting article suggesting that the loss of its gold was a major cause of an economic crisis that followed - a crisis that evidently impacted our own fledging university as well. (Both the Illinois Central and Chicago Railroads shut down. Per the Wikipedia article on the Panic of 1857, the evident impact upon Northwestern is further suggested by this comment: "The results of the Panic of 1857 were that the largely agrarian southern economy, which also had few railroads, suffered little, whereas the northern economy took a significant hit and made a slow recovery. The area affected the most by the Panic was the Great Lakes region ...")

https://seanmunger.com/2013/09/12/the-s-s-central-america-the-ship-that-helped-wreck-a-nation/
 
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