we were looking for a restaurant. Actually we were trying to figure out which one we wanted to patron. So many choices! While we were wandering up the street comparing menus we heard one of the door guys turning away would-be patrons. He was telling them they were booked for a private party. Naturally we started to just walk past the place when the door guy grabbed my husband's arm and asked, "Jayhawks?" to which hubby said "yes." He then proceeded to quietly tell us he had room for Jayhawk fans and ushered us into the place. He signaled the hostess and told us that the other fans were rude or poor tippers but they liked the Jayhawks. Sure enough, as we walked to our table we noticed we were surrounded by a sea of Jayhawk t-shirts. Our waiter told us that they felt Jayhawk fans were
classy people and they (the staff) had adopted them as their favorite team. It was pretty cool.
BTW, the restauarant was called the "Star" or something like that. It was near Canal Street. We came upon it on our way back from using a couple of JFK books as our walking guides around New Orleans. We were just returning from the Federal courthouse which stands on the site of the infamous Guy Bannister/Lee Harvey Oswald shared building address (on, what we called, the other side of Canal Street). We had just passed a Ghost Tour joint where the guy gave us the "low down" on Clay Shaw, Guy Bannister, tht Ferris guy, Lee Harvey and the mob. This guy did
not like Kennedy and we got an earful. I don't know how much of it was true and I really don't actually remember a lot of it. Anyway, the restaurant we ended up eating at was, according the guys who ran the B&B we stayed at, more of a local favorite.
My brother in the south Dallas area found a Jayhawk friendly bar. He went there to watch basketball games. An old friend of mine found one nearer to Irving found one near Los Colinas. The hubby said there was one out in Silicon Valley that he went to. That's no surprise considering KU's connection to Silicon Valley beginning (for me) with Lou Montulli.
Lou Montulli's Short Bio from (
http://www.montulli.org/lou/)
* In 1991, while at The University of Kansas, I started writing a program that eventually became known as Lynx. (One of the first web browsers)
* While working on Lynx, I was heavily involved with the development of HTTP and HTML, and was responsible for innovations such as web proxying. That time period was one of most exciting and fast paced periods I can remember. Innovations that are completely ubiquitous now, were proposed and implemented in incredibly fast cycles. It wasn't until the later days at Netscape that we coined the term "Internet Time". I recently came across archived messages of the original WWW-Talk mailing list and found the thread that sparked the creation of forms on the web.
* In 1994 I moved to California to become one of the founding engineers at Mosaic Communications Corporation, which later changed it's name to Netscape.
snip
* I'm largely to blame for several innovations on the web including, cookies, the blink tag, server push and client pull, HTTP proxying, proxy authentication, HTTP byte ranges, HTTPS over SSL, and encouraging the implementation of animated GIFS into the browser.