Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
If you want to be real Irish, have a harp,
have a Guinness a harp? Yeah, harp, I have harp
at home. You want to harp? Why can't you make
the Guinness green? Just put some food coloring.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
It's disgusting. Why is it grows? It doesn't change the plan?
Great bear. In Ireland they do not drink grain beer.
We do here because we take people's things. And I
don't know what I'm trying to say.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Yeah, yeah, we take people's things and americanize them and
make them terrible.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
That's all you're saying.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
All right, speaking of green things given to us from
somebody else. How about the Statue of liberty. That's clever,
that's good. I get paid to do this for a living.
The Statue of liberty. Apparently there's some French guy, some
French politician who was just like, hey is the statue
of liberty? Oh, we want it back. America no longer
serves the values that it once did. Let let's do
(00:46):
you have the audio? Did you send the audio? Uh?
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Just what do we? What do we? What are we
doing here?
Speaker 1 (00:54):
We really like to this point where now France is
trying to like take back what it once gave to US.
Marline Levitt was doing her press secretary stuff in the
White House, and Peter Doucey, of course, was the guy
who asked the question.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
He's what he said something different.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
There is now a member of the European Parliament from
France who does not think the US represents the values
of the Statue of Liberty anymore. They want the Statue
of Liberty back. So is President Trump going to send
the Statue of Liberty back?
Speaker 2 (01:22):
It's to France, absolutely not.
Speaker 4 (01:24):
And my advice to that unnamed low level French politician
would be to remind them that it's only because of
the United States of America that the French are not
speaking German right now, so they should be very grateful
to our great country.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Really, whoa whoa carol lot, but some sauce for Raphael
Gluxman even sALS German?
Speaker 2 (01:49):
Do you think? No? Interesting? No?
Speaker 1 (01:52):
No, I mean, come on, it was a stupid low
level it's I mean, it's small left wing party in France.
President Raphael is in the European Parliament, so it's not
even like an actual French parliament.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
Memory. Look, it's what are you gonna do?
Speaker 1 (02:09):
First of all, we also kind of helped them with
their revolution. If you think about it, our revolution inspired
their revolution. Yeah, and walk it back a skoshire France.
You guys were lopping people's heads off left and right. Oh,
you have to go back read about or watch videos
about the French Revolution.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
That thing was nasty.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Yeah, they were not messing around, and even the guys
that were like putting the thing together eventually got turned
on and got their heads chopped off.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Spoiler alert. You bring the guillotine to somebody and they'll
eventually bring it back to you.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
Yeah, it's about what happened because the guy got wanted
to have too much power for himself. We didn't even
they didn't really know what they were fighting over, and
it ended up not even really working out that much.
And you know who ended up, you know, ascending the
power through all of this, that was that was our guy, Napoleon.
It didn't really work out all that great at the
end of the day, and then of course the World
(03:00):
War started, and yeah, the United States played a factor.
And that's what Caroline is referencing, is that if the
United States wouldn't have been involved in World War One
or World War Two, France would be probably just a
part of Germany at this point, as would most of Europe.
I don't know if that necessarily tracks, because you know,
a lot of things that get too big for their
britches ended up getting you know, defeated at some point anyway.
(03:20):
But alas, what a stupid thing for them to even
bring up. We did have a talkback on that, a
that somebody send a talk back about that. Yeah, I
can find it all on Yeah, yeah, you're doing all
sorts of things over there. Yeah, let's see, I didn't
even know this was a thing. I didn't even know
this was a thing. He mentions it briefly. Raphael Gluxman,
who do you think because because uh, we all of
(03:43):
a sudden aren't going to help Ukraine anymore, like in
the same way, like that's that has led you to
be like, now, give us that statue back and we're
going to be like, oh, yeah, no big deal, we'll
just take it.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
Do we know the name for this person? Paul? He
kind of he's kind of summarrating, summarizing, summerrating. It's a
new word. Use it, folks, and don't use it. Uh. Oh,
Bill Shakespeare gets to invent words. But I don't. Yeah,
that's Bill Shakespeare did a few different things. Paul summerrated
his a couple different topics on the show today, And
here it is.
Speaker 5 (04:16):
Amory is just another holiday to say, hey, let's go
on and drink the hell just say super Bowl or
New Year's Eve or whatever the case would be. But anyway,
I'm I'm going to call you and ask you what
is up do it to this deal that the French
I want to statue with liberty back?
Speaker 3 (04:39):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (04:40):
Is that? Have a great day, guys, Thanks, thanks Paul.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
Wow, I think Paul might might have had a few
green beers already today.
Speaker 2 (04:51):
It is just an excuse to drink. And we we
have talked about that. That's going to be available on
the podcast Pager. Yeah, that the part of it is already.
I'm working on the other half.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Yeah, So there you go if you want to listen
to us opine about Saint Patrick's Day and our americanization
of that and other holidays and what other holiday we
can corrupt?
Speaker 2 (05:08):
We did that.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
But yeah, what do I think about it? I think
it's stupid. What do we talk about here? Yeah don't
Why doesn't Ukraine? Then if we're all like give give
basis when you go through a breakup when you were
like seventeen, and you gave like necklace or you know,
one of those cubic circonium bracelets to your significant other
(05:33):
who's not really that significant when you're sixteen years old,
But did you ever do give these basis or did
you just like, I don't want any of.
Speaker 2 (05:40):
That stuff back. It's going to remind me of that person.
I've always been pretty like, i'll leave the past in
the past same. I'm a pretty big minimalist honestly, Like
I don't need a whole lot of stuff, So I
like the I've always been. I don't know how you'd
characterize it, but I don't need stuff around me. That's
part of my old life. And when I'm moving on
like that, I'll leave in the past gives these back
(06:00):
season You're just like, fine, we're breaking up. Yeah, they
want something, they can have it, all right. I don't
like getting it back though, don't give it back to me. Yeah,
I'm not generally not interesting. Yeah, just keep it, do
whatever you want with it. I don't care. Yeah, And
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
After a couple like like like when did we get
the statue of liberty. You remember, like it was a
long time ago. Get the was it in the seventeen hundreds, No,
eighteen eighty four, Oh, it was July fourth, eighteen eighty four.
A gift, And apparently it was a joke. Rafael was
making some sort of joke like saying something like, they
don't even they don't even represent what the statue of
(06:35):
liberty meant when we gave it to them.
Speaker 5 (06:39):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
They said we were tyrants. We're siding with tyrants, are we?
Speaker 3 (06:44):
Though?
Speaker 2 (06:44):
Are we? I mean, what are we talking about here?
Speaker 1 (06:46):
The French president was just here like two weeks ago,
and he didn't have a whole lot of bad things
to say at all. All right, I mean they had
a good time, him and Donald Trump. So McCrone remember
Ol mccroney, all the French guys. Yeah, he was the
president of France.
Speaker 5 (07:03):
He was here.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
He actually matters, unlike Rafael over here. Yeah, we're siding
with tyrants. Give me a break and use your brain there, pal. Anyway,
five sixteen, we got some more stuff. Donald Trump says
he's got a pretty important meeting coming up with the
leader of Russia. We will tell you about that coming
up on News Radio eleven ten K for me, Songer,
do they just think that not very many people under
(07:24):
two hundred thousand dollars a year in their family would
get into Harvard? Because I mean, that's you're probably right.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
Well, look, I mean people I know personally people who
have gotten into an Ivy League school, but you know,
just frankly, you know can't afford it. I mean, doubt
of actually being able to go there unless unless you're
able to secure a lot of scholarship, a lot of
scholarship money.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
And yeah, so this is I mean, I think this
is pretty cool. If he asked me, I agree. I
just I'm surprised. It's kind of strange. I mean, that's
instead of just lowering tuition for everybody, they're just going
to keep tuition the same and just offer free tuition.
Like I wonder what the catches like, do you also
have to pay like fifteen thousand dollars a year in
like room and board?
Speaker 2 (08:06):
Is that still not covered? Yeah? It makes you wonder.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
Anyway, Congratulations to anybody that now is no longer priced
out of going to Harvard, though we'll see if that
changes people's perspective on that school. Negotiators trying to end
this Russia Ukraine conflict. Well, we're going to get a
little bit more details on this. I think Donald Trump
said he's going to speak with Vladimir Putin tomorrow. And this,
(08:31):
of course is on the heels of trying to get
Russia to accept a ceasefire deal to end the fighting
in the killing while they try to come to some
sort of agreement on what that looks like moving forward.
So this is what Donald Trump is saying of you know.
Beyond that, he says, we're doing pretty well with Russia.
(08:52):
I think, if you know, we'll see if we'll have
something to announce, maybe by Tuesday. I'll be speaking to
President Putin Tuesday. A lot of work's been done for
the weekend. We want to see if we can bring
that war to an end. Maybe we can, maybe we can't,
but I think we have a very good chance. We'll
be talking about land. A lot of land is a
lot of different than it was before the war. As
(09:13):
you know, we'll be talking about land, We'll be talking
about power plants. That's a big question, but I think
we already have a lot of it already discussed very
much by both sides. Ukraine and Russia. We're already talking
about that, dividing up certain assets. So the Kremlin, they
have a spokesperson. They did say that they were going
to speak on Tuesday, so confirming that, but that essentially
(09:36):
is all that they would say. So hopefully by tomorrow
and the time that we get to talk with you
in the afternoon, it would be well pasted Vladimir Putin's bedtime,
you would figure, So we will have details about what
was discussed. You would imagine Donald Trump has been very
open about these types of things. But what kind of
land concessions would Ukraine have to make to get this
(09:57):
to end, and would they agree on that, and what
would be the reason they would agree on that. Well,
the first thing that you would think is, well, the
United States would have some hand in making sure that
Russia agrees not to invade further. According to people who've
drawn this up, about a eleven percent of Ukraine's land
is now occupied by Russia. And if that is accurate,
(10:19):
would part of this, like you we just talked about,
gives these bacxies if you had a you know, significant
other gift in regards to the statue of liberty, Well,
in war, there's no gives these backseas in war?
Speaker 3 (10:32):
Is there?
Speaker 2 (10:32):
Is it all fair in love and war? Like?
Speaker 1 (10:34):
Like, you're not gonna just agree, yeah, we'll stop fighting
and give Ukraine some of their land back.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
Like that's not gonna happen.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
They're just gonna keep fighting if that's If that's the case,
So like, how badly does Ukraine want this to end?
And I guess that's just the bigger question. If Ukraine
wants the fighting to end badly and they are pushed
by enough people to get the war over with, do
you think that they would accept, Okay, you can have
that eleven percent of our land if we have an
(11:02):
agreement that you can't actually invade ever again without starting
another complete regional or world war, that's possible. The next
thing I suppose beyond that conversation would probably have to be,
you know, would Russia agree to that? Vladimir Putin is
getting into his seventies, He's an older gentlemen. I really
(11:24):
don't know what his end goal was. It seems like
all of Europe thinks that he really just wants to
get the Soviet Union itself back together. And who knows
with this tyrannical as he seems to be and how
dangerous he acts, and him being aligned with places like
Iran and China and North Korea makes it kind of
feel like that's the kind of side we don't want
(11:46):
to mess with, because those are guys that just don't
care about anybody else. Those are not a friend of ours. No, no, no,
the those countries, like you can try to say, well,
Russia really isn't the bad guy that they're made out
to be in this whole thing. Ukraine has done their
share of star darding this conflict. Also, Well, I would
just say be careful about trying to align yourself with
Russia because I don't think I want to be on
(12:07):
the same side as China or on in North Korea.
Russia has aligned with all three of those countries. That's
just a fact. So I don't know what Russia will
need to accept that, And I don't know what the
United States role would be in helping protect Ukraine, because
you would think that have to be part of the
deal for Ukraine to accept losing eleven percent over a
(12:28):
tenth of their land in a war that has been
raging over there for the better part of three years.
Over three years now, so time will tell.
Speaker 2 (12:38):
We will see.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
Hopefully by this time tomorrow we'll have a chance to
kind of break that down and talk about it from
that standpoint, But we'd like to see it end. I
think for peace in the world, it'd be important for
that thing to end, because geopolitically, that could grow to
a massive conflict in all of Europe. We're talking World
War three for sure. Whereas the Israel Hamas thing is
(13:01):
definitely a little bit more regional. It's all targeted around
Israel and its existence, but seemingly things it's not all
over with yet, but things are continuing to kind of
move and the United States also is kind of targeting
another group, the Huthis and Yemen, who are terrorists organization
as well, and they have also been messing around with
(13:22):
our presence in that region for over a year or
a year and a half now. Something to keep in
mind there, five twenty eight. All right, when we come
back a little bit more about basketball and the JFK files,
well we learn about what exactly are in those tomorrow.
We will tell you about that too, coming up on
news Radio eleven ten kfab Oh Maurice, I guess.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
The Yale guy myself, I've actually had some relatives who
went to Yale. So that's right. So you cheering for them?
An attorney? Oh, you better believe they They made the NCABLA.
Oh day baby. I go for Yale anytime they That's
the only Ivy League team I really root for the
Yale Bulldogs. You know who I'm pulling for, all right?
Speaker 4 (14:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:00):
Yeah, So if I had my choice, yeah, sure, I'd
love to go to Yale.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
Those kind of depend on what you want to be though.
Is it really necessary to like have schooling that hard? Yeah,
you don't need to go to Yale for radio, I'll tell.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
You that much. I didn't even go to school for radio.
Does that make you mad? No, It's it's the way
the game is, man, I mean that's that's just how
it is. And also you I uh uh oh bring
it on?
Speaker 5 (14:20):
What well?
Speaker 1 (14:21):
Yeah, family and the biz that never hurts I did.
My father was a traffic and billing guy behind the scenes.
Speaker 2 (14:29):
Yeah, so that helps you. I mean, it really is.
I mean I've gotten a job that was a classic.
It's not what you know, it's who you know. I
worked in finance for a few years. Let me tell you,
Emory Songer, I don't know nothing about it. Oh, but
I had a good buddy who worked there. He's like,
I'll get your job, and I said, no, you won't.
I don't know a thing about I don't even know
what a bond was. I'm just dead serious. I know now,
(14:50):
but I didn't then. Okay, I didn't even really know
the difference between a stock and a bond. But he's like,
I'll get your job, no worries. It's good. And you did.
And I said, there's no way they'll hire me. So
many other people I was going to be an advisor
to their funds. What, yeah, that's right. And they hired you.
Get me go, And they hired me. They hired me
because my good buddy vouched for me. And that's all
(15:12):
he told me. He's like, that's all you need to know.
You just they need, they need to know you're a
good dude. You can learn it.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
Well, I guess that's true. You have to have the
right attitude. I'd rather have somebody who doesn't know quite
as much, who's willing to learn and willing to like
be a good vibe energy in in my in my space,
I got the greatest energy, let me tell you. And
instead of a good person that has really bad energy
and is like Einstein, you know, yeah, just like kicking
the printer for no reason.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
It's the thing.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
I don't think we'd like Elon as much if he
wasn't doing crazy shenanigans all the time.
Speaker 2 (15:40):
He's got some bad energy. No, he's got good energy.
Speaker 3 (15:43):
He does.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Yeah, it's the good energy Elon. Yeah, you doesn't take
himself too seriously.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
I don't know. He's up there, he's throwing the sprinkler
out at weird angles, and he's got the he's got
the chainsaw and all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
That's good, you know why, because it's like, oh, that
guy could be fun to hang out with.
Speaker 2 (15:59):
He's I don't need creepy stuff at Taylor Swift. I
don't know if this guy's has good ACA. Yeah, that's
the kind of thing though.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
It's just like, you know, I'd rather be around the
guy like that than the guy is just moping around
all the time and likes to recluse himself from everything,
you know, Like, I'd rather have that guy.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
So I don't know.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
Anyway, Speaking to Tarvard, we mentioned this because Harvard is
free tuition allegedly. Now, if your family makes listen two
hundred thousand dollars a year, which I think most of
us I certainly would qualify before, like when I was
a kid, I think I qualify now, Like you know,
that's quite a bit of change, but it makes sense. Right,
you have to have like seventy thousand dollars a year
(16:36):
with room and bard and all that stuff to even
go there. Take that times four years. I mean we're
talking like two hundred and eighty thousand dollars. But if
you need a fifth or sixth year because you're getting
your masters or even a doctorate, that's a lot of
a lot of money you're gonna be going back. Yeah,
all right, anyway, Teresa says, hey, Emriya Matt happy Sat
Patty's Day about Harvard tuition. I wonder if jad Vance
(16:59):
had input on this decision. He didn't go to Harvard initially,
but he did go to Harvard Law School, and at
least his first year paid almost nothing and was grateful
for the opportunity. He had no money and no family
with money, but got in. I recently finished his book
He'll Billy Elogy, and would look up, look it up
to make sure that details my.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Son's borrowing it. Have a good night. You know that's good. Yeah, no,
maybe right like you said it too.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
You know, if jd Vance is up there saying we
need to allow people that don't have all of these
resources to have the ability to get this type of
education because Ivy League schools, for whatever it's worth, the
education that they get does. It's a big stick to
be carrying around for your career, you know, you know,
you know, oh for sure, you know, I know, like
I know, you know, I mean, you know, I know,
(17:52):
like it's not gonna get old. It's funny anyway. The
people who didn't listen in like the two and three
o'clock hour have no idea why laughed about that. It's good, dumb,
it's good.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
I think.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
The other thing that I wanted to speak on here
politically is that Donald Trump announced the JFK files will
be released tomorrow. So make your pick. What do you
think JFK files. Will we know what the government knows
in full? Or will it be greatly reacted and very
very lean. That's my fear here is that we're going
(18:25):
to get all this hype and it's going to be
very much like those binders and all these guys got
right and you're just you're sitting there almost with anticipation
that you're going to have all these answers that we've
been waiting for sixty years to know, and we know
nothing more than what we already knew. If there was
really something out there that was like a poison pill
(18:45):
of info, like something that would absolutely change the way
we view the entire event, guaranteed that's already been a
raised from the world, either a race from the world
or uh, how do I how do I put this? Yes,
maybe race from the world is the way that you
could put it. I think it's more I do. I
do think that it would just be so red acted
(19:08):
or even burned in the files. Yeah, you're probably right.
I mean, just the you wouldn't want to risk anything
that is super crazy, especially if the government was at
all involved, which I really think that we've over complicated
that entire event. I understand people and their concerns about
the CIA being involved, and you know, they wanted to
(19:28):
assassinate Kennedy for five hundred different reasons, did they really
achieve much of anything? Like was Kennedy really the kind
of guy that was that much of a difference maker
that everybody was just like, yeah, you know what we
should do. We should kill that guy and put Lyndon B.
Johnson in charge of the country. That'll show them, I
mean what changed. He was not well liked in Dallas
(19:49):
where he got assassinated. He was not well liked locally.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
Yeah, and he was discouraged on doing the court, the
court the convertible, Yeah, for the exact reason why he
should have been. And then he was.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
And we don't really have a perfect motive from Oswald
because Jack Ruby made sure we didn't get one for
whatever reason. And that's that interesting. Well, that's what I
think was led to the conspiracies. We didn't get answers
from the guy who perpetrated the crime.
Speaker 2 (20:13):
Where has it. Jack Ruby was quite relieved when he
heard that Oswald succumb to his injuries to the gunshot wounds.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
But we know that Jack Ruby had a lot to
do with the police department in Dallas. He was also
well connected, and he just really hated the fact that
that guy did vigilante justice on JFK for whatever reason.
Vigilante justice whatever it was, I don't know. Oswald was
a crazy man, like nobody knows. He denied all involvement.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
But like Oswald was Batman all of a.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
Sudden, Well, it's just weird. He's up in this depositor,
in the depository, like.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
He's taking this depository. I get you. I'm sorry. No
he used the rifle for this. No no, no, no,
no no no.
Speaker 1 (21:04):
But he was like, I'm gonna kill this guy because
people want him dead or something. I don't know, you know,
we don't know because we had less than twenty four
hours to investigate the man because Jack Ruby killed him.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
And of course there's some Russian connection, because somehow Russia
is connected with everything.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
Well, we were in the middle of the I mean
the Cuban missile crisis. There was all sorts of bad
stuff going on. We were in the throes of the
Cold War, like we were halfway through it. There was
a lot more where that came from. So people want
to act like this is all crazy. You should be
like remembering how the Cold War felt. I wasn't alive
for it, but reading about it, watching videos about it,
it really felt like nuclear war was could have happened
(21:42):
at any point for like forty years. So I don't
really know what we're even talking about it anymore. I
don't feel that is, we are eminently closer to that
now than we were than if that makes sense, and
maybe that had something to do with it. Anyway, if
there is something in those JFK files, we'll be sure
to pass it along. I just would tell you be
(22:04):
careful about getting your hopes up because I'm not anticipating
it being that big.
Speaker 5 (22:08):
Of a deal.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
Five forty eight.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
We'll wrap it up by recap in some basketball for
you on news radio eleven ten kfab behind North Carolina,
who had their athletic director as the lead man on
the board. He's the chairman of the board of the
selection committee. But I was looking back two thousand, how
many first round upsets do you think happened in the
two thousand in c DOAA men's basketball tournament in the
(22:30):
first round, say it was sixty four teams. So the
year two thousand, two thousand, how many upsets in the
first round? So it's thirty two games. I'll carry thirty
two games.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Well for the thirty two, twelve of thirty two, that'd
be about right. For these days, you know, we have
ten to twelve probably every year. Three oh wow, there
were only three ten seed seat in Hall beat Oregon,
eleven seed Pepperdine beat Indiana, and ten seed Gonzaga beat Louisville.
Those are the only upsets in the entire first round.
(23:00):
Eventually would happen to eight seats made it to the
final four, but they were both guests. Wisconsin and North
Carolina in two thousand. In two thousand, yeahs in Michigan State,
who was a one seed, made it all the way
and ended up putting the teen Cleves teen Cleeves. It
was the outstanding player of attorney. Now was that the
year that Oklahoma had a run too? Did they not
make the final four? They were not in the final four? No,
(23:21):
huh no, nope, nope. Iowa State was in the Elite eight. Okay,
Oklahoma State was in the Elite eight. Who was Ioway stated?
Is that when they had the Marcus Pfiser Marcus Pfiser. Yeah, yeah,
that's a name right there. Now, he's working in the corporate,
you know, pharmaceuticals, is he? I don't think so?
Speaker 2 (23:38):
Yeah. I think he made that up. Yeah, I made
it up. Yeah. Okay.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
By the way, Eudonnis Haslam also made the All Tournament team.
He was playing for the Florida Gators at the time, Aha,
and they made the Final four anyway back, you know,
just saying all this to say congratulations to all of
our team's playing apparently Omaha. First of all, he's going
to be playing a night, a late game against Saint John's.
That's going to be a lot of fun. On Thursday,
Creighton is taking on Louisville and Lexanon, Kentucky. That's a
(24:02):
tough draw that's going to be happening Thursday, early game.
That game will be over by the time we even
hit the airwaves on Thursday. Then what else we got?
The Nebraska Cornhusker women are ten seed in the NCAA
Women's basketball Tournament, which is always very exciting, very proud
of them. It was a little bubbly for them most
of the last chunk of the year, But yeah, what
(24:26):
do you think you're happy about that?
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Go Skurts.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Yeah, play Louisville also, by the way, that's going to
be in Fort Worth, Texas. And then the Creighton women
also are going to be playing, and that's on First
of all, that's Friday for the Husker women, and then
Saturday is Creighton against Illinois and that is going to
be in Austin, Texas, so both of our Nebraska teams
are in Texas.
Speaker 2 (24:50):
And then the Nebraska man somehow got into the.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
College Basketball Crown Tournament, and I'm sure we're really excited
to see how that goes.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
Yeah, well, talk to you tomorrow too. On news radio.
Evited Cathy B.