Wednesday, February 25, 1970

The Beatles and February 1965


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Again....do we love the Beatles or are we getting old?  YES and YES!

We are looking back at 1965, the second year of The Beatles in the US, and much of the world as well.

1965 began with a great 45.  Here are the digital versions of "I feel fine" & "She's a woman".   They showed up in “Beatles '65", a very good LP from the vinyl days!

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Tuesday, February 24, 1970

1965: The Beatles started working on "Help" this week

Help! (1965) Retrospective Review | The Film MagazineThe Beatles made two movies in a year.    They started filming "Help" in the Bahamas this week in 1965.   

The first one ("A hard day's night") was basically the group on tour. 

The second one ("Help") was a bit of a spy story.   The story saw The Beatles on the beaches of the Caribbean and skying in the Alps.   There was a lot of music in between!

The Beatles' movies were great and I still enjoy them a lot.

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Sunday, February 22, 1970

We remember President George Washington (1732-99)


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We remember another of George Washington's birthdays.

He was so vital to the success of the new American nation.   
Our friends at Power Line call him the indispensable man and they are right.  

Washington led an army of colonists and then held together the new constitution by serving as the first president.  He could have been "president for life" or reelected to a 3rd term.  However, he respected the constitution and set the example by walking away from power.

Washington was indeed the indispensable man to the new nation.  Where would we be today without the example of George Washington?

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We remember Senator Kennedy (1932-2009)


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Politically speaking, I was always on the other side of Ted Kennedy. Nevertheless, we recognize his long work in the US Senate.

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1968: We won the Tet offensive on the ground but lost it on the front pages


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During February 1968, thousands of North Vietname and Viet Cong troops crossed into South Vietnam.  It came to be known as "The Tet Offensive".  

Overall, US soldiers successfully beat back troops in the Vietnam War.

By any measurement, the offensive was a crushing military defeat for the communist invaders.   

Unfortunately, the media reported a smashing communist victory and lied about what happened on the ground.

Shame on the news media.

Indeed, we were caught by surprise but US troops fought back and stopped the offensive.

Sadly, President Johnson was so weak that he could not go over the news media and talk to the American voters.  He allowed the news media to tell us that Tet was a defeat when it really wasn’t.

In my opinion, the best book about Vietnam was written by President Nixon after he left office.
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Happy George Washington Day

We remember today George Washington's birthday.  

He was born on this day in Virginia in 1732.  His father was a colonial plantation owner,

No one is indispensable but George Washington is the closest thing to it.   The US was so lucky to have a man like Washington at every important turn in the early days of the nation.

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1968: The Tet Offensive and the Vietnam War


Back in January 1968, the presidential candidates lined up for the primaries and upcoming election.  Everyone was talking about the Vietnam War and then we heard about something called The Tet Offensive.    

Within days, The Viet Cong attacked South Vietnamese forces and US military installations.     In fact, the effort was a huge Viet Cong defeat.  The US forces fought back and defeated the incoming forces.  

On the ground, US troops won but the media coverage was totally negative and useless.   On the political front, the biggest loser was President Johnson who chose not to run for reelection in 1968.

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Thursday, February 19, 1970

Happy # 82 to Smokey Robinson


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Smokey Robinson was born in Detroit back in 1940.

He recorded several hits with The Miracles and later as a solo artist.

He wrote The Temptations' "My girl" and The Beatles recorded "You really got a hold on me"!

Robinson was a vital force in "The Motown Sound" that dominated the pop charts for such a long time.

What's my favorite Smokey tune? It's gotta be "More love".

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1953: Ted Williams' emergency landing in Korea






It was a very scary day for pilot Ted Williams on this day in 1953:



Flying with the 33rd Marine Air Group, Ted Williams was one of the 200 flyers in a huge air mission aimed at Kyomipo, fifteen miles south of the North Korea capital of Pyongyang. Coming in low over his target, a troop encampment, Ted lost site of the plane in front of him.

He dropped down to regain visual contact, but went too low. North Korean soldiers in the encampment blasted him with small arms fire. He completed his run over the target and tried to pull up. Every warning light in the cockpit was lit and the plane was vibrating. The stick started to shake and he knew he’d sprung a leak in the hydraulic system.

The landing gear came down and the plane was hard to control. Ted got the gear up and started climbing. He knew he was in trouble and got on the radio, but the radio went dead. Another pilot pulled close and tried to signal Ted to bail out, but he didn’t know his plane was on fire.

He increased altitude and turned the jet toward the nearest American base. Nearly all his instruments were out. The airspeed indicator read zero. The wing flaps were frozen and Ted was unable to lower the landing gear. Every message given by the plane told him to eject.

He continued to climb, still not knowing the plane was on fire, but took the precaution of climbing to higher elevation anyway. A companion aircraft, piloted by Lieutenant Larry Hawkins, led Ted back to the field and radioed ahead that he was in trouble.

Ted again considered bailing out but resisted the idea. He was afraid if he
ejected his kneecaps would crash against the cockpit.

With the field in site, Ted turned to land when an explosion rocked the craft. A wheel door had blown off. Smoke was pouring from the brake ports. Down below, the residents of a small Korean village on the outskirts of the field scattered. His plane was a mass of fire and smoke.

Unable to check his air speed and almost powerless to do anything about it, Ted approached the ground at 225 miles per hour, almost twice the recommended speed. He dropped the emergency wheel latch and only one wheel dropped into position. He hit the strip level, but with no way to slow the plane. Soon the plane settled on its belly, sparks, fire, and smoke trailing after it, as Ted held on, hoping it would stop.

The F-9 screamed down the field out of control for more than a mile, shedding strips of metal and on the verge on exploding. Twice the plane nearly barreled into fire trucks waiting for the inevitable blowup. Finally, at the very edge of the field, the plane groaned to a stop.

Ted popped the canopy. With the exception of the cockpit, the entire plane was aflame. He dove headfirst to the tarmac, where he was grabbed by two Marine flight crewmen and hustled away. Angry, both at himself and the close call, Ted took off his helmet and threw it on the ground. When he returned to look at the plane, it was a blackened hulk, completely destroyed. He avoided death by the narrowest margin.

Ted Williams lost several seasons to military service.   He was in World War II and then later in the Korean War.    He probably lost 1,000 hits, 150 HR and 500 RBI.    He ended his career with 2,654 hits, 521 HR & 1,839 


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Wednesday, February 18, 1970

1953 and "I Love Lucy"

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Tuesday, February 17, 1970

Feb 17, 1904: "Madame Butterfly" made its debut in Milan

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Monday, February 16, 1970

1786: Future President James Monroe married Elizabeth Kortright

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On this day in 1786, future President James Monroe married Elizabeth Kortright.     

Monroe was 26, a famous revolutionary and practicing lawyer.   She was 17 and quite a beautiful young woman.

The new couple settled in Virginia and had two daughters plus a son.  

In 1794, President Washington named Monroe ambassador to France.   Soon later, the family moved to Paris and Elizabeth came to be known as "la belle americaine".

Monroe was the 5th President of the United States (1817–1825).    We remember him for The Monroe Doctrine and for being the last president of The Founding Fathers generation.

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Sunday, February 15, 1970

1898: Remember the Maine


On this day in 1898, the USS Maine exploded in Havana harbor. Not much later, President McKinley called on the US Congress to declare war on Spain.

McKinley tried to keep a distance from the terrible situation in Cuba, i.e. a long and bloody war of independence. However, everything changed after that explosion. It certainly caught the interest of newspapers and their readers. 

And so started the 4-month Spanish American War that changed Cuba forever. It also made a national hero out of Theodore Roosevelt. After the quick victory over Spain, President McKinley selected Mr. Roosevelt as his running mate in 1900. A year into his second term, TR assumed the presidency when McKinley was assassinated.

And Cuba? The island became an independent country in 1902 and you know the rest of the story.

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"Cinderella" made its debut in 1950


1950 was the year of "Cinderella".    It became a Disney classic.   

The movie was re-released in 1957, 1965, 1973, 1981 and 1987.  It made new fans with the new generations.    

As a father of 3 sons, let me say that "Cinderella" was never tops in our household.    Nevertheless, it is a classic!

P.S. You can get your copy here!

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Saturday, February 14, 1970

Happy Valentines Day


We hope that you and your special one have a very romantic day!  
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Friday, February 13, 1970

A World War II note about Joseph P Kennedy and FDR




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Back in World War II, there were many critical of President Roosevelt.  

It was not just Republicans who felt that the fault laid with FDR. 

Read this Bad Choice for an Antiwar Voice By Charles Krauthammer:
"Harry, what the hell are you doing campaigning for that crippled son-of-a-bitch that killed my son Joe?' [Joseph P.] Kennedy said, referring to his oldest son, who had died in the war. Kennedy went on, saying Roosevelt had caused the war. Truman, by his later account, stood all he could, then told Kennedy to keep quiet or he would throw him out the window." -- "Truman" by David McCullough, Page 328
The angry man was Joseph P. Kennedy, whose son Joe had been killed in Germany.  He was speaking to Harry, or Harry Truman who succeeded FDR.

Here is the book.

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Thursday, February 12, 1970

We remember General Omar Bradley (1893-1981)




Remembering Ray Manzarek (1939-2013)


Critics' Choice - A CELEBRATION FOR RAY MANZAREK
We remember Ray Manzarek who was born on this day in 1939 and died in 2013.

The Doors were so closely identified with Jim Morrison that it was tough to continue playing after his death in 1971.   Nevertheless, The Doors were very talented specially keyboards player Ray Manzarek.


They recorded their first LP  “The Doors” in one  week.   “Light My Fire", one of the tracks, hit # 1 that summer.   They followed that LP with several more best sellers.

From 1967 to 1971, the Doors had a prolific and stormy career. 


He was good, very good.  He was the man who "opened The Doors."  

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Wednesday, February 11, 1970

The great Vince Lombardi

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In 1964, our family arrived in Wisconsin from Cuba.   We did not know a thing about the NFL or what they call American football.    

It did not take long for my brother and I to fall in love with the Green Bay Packers, or the team coached by the late Vince Lombardi.    

I remember watching a weekly TV show and listening to Coach Lombardi discuss the last game and look ahead to the next team.   It caught my attention and I never missed a show.

Lombardi won 3 NFL titles and the first two Super Bowls.   He was an amazing man.   

In this book, David Maraniss wrote about Lombardi's character, a big part of his success as a coach and man.    It's a great book.




I have watched every Super Bowl, ever


Am I showing my age?  I remember every Super Bowl, from the Packers to whoever won the last one. 

Of course, it was not called the Super Bowl back then.  It was the NFL-AFL Championship game when Green Bay beat K.C. and then Oakland the next year.  I am not sure what they called it when the Jets beat the Colts in #3 or when K.C. beat Minnesota in #4.

Nevertheless, the game has been a part of my life, and I have some favorite Super Bowl memories.

Without question, the best game for me was #13, or Pittsburgh-Dallas in '79.  Around here, this is remembered as the day that Jackie Smith dropped a Staubach TD pass and kept the Cowboys from winning back-to-back titles.  Well, we don't know if that's true, but it sure felt that way back then.  I had a chance to see an ESPN Classic of this game, and it was great.  The Steelers and Cowboys were the two best teams of their era, and it showed on the field.

The Green Bay wins in I and II were fun because I was rooting for the Packers.  But they were not good games.  In fact, I remember that many purists were calling off the whole AFL vs. NFL because it was a gimmick or mismatch between a senior and junior league.  There were lots of empty seats, and school bands performed in the halftime show in those two.

The history of the Super Bowl really started with the Jets beating the Colts in January 1969.  I recall a sportscaster in Milwaukee predicting a 36-0 Colts victory.  He said that it was no contest.  Don't hold it against him, because most experts saw the Colts killing the Jets.

Like most people, I was stunned to see the Jets beat Baltimore.  Actually, I was hoping for an upset because most teens back then were impressed that Joe Namath was so popular with the girls.  Namath was cool.  "Broadway Joe" was a rock star playing QB in the NFL.

The Jets were perfect that day.  The Colts looked like a team that didn't take their opponent seriously.  Later that year, the baseball N.Y. Mets beat the Baltimore Orioles in the World Series.  Nineteen sixty-nine was a year for upstart N.Y. teams to beat favored veteran Baltimore teams!  Neil Armstrong walked on the moon in '69, so maybe it was a year for unexpected things.

The Dolphins vs. Redskins or #7 was curious because Miami finished a perfect season.  A funny thing happened in that game, as we see in this report from George Solomon:

Miami had a commanding 14-0 lead with 2:10 left when Garo Yepremian attempted a cake-frosting field goal from the Redskin 42. But Bill Brundige blocked the kick. The slight Yepremian picked it up and tried to pass. Brundige tipped it and Mike Bass plucked the ball out of the air and dashed 49 yards for the Redskins' only touchdown.

When Curt Knight added the extra point to slice Miami's lead to 14-7, there was still 2:07 left to play. A miracle was still possible, particularly after the Redskins forced a Miami punt and got the ball back with 1:14 left on their own 30.

But Bill Kilmer, enduring one of his most frustrating days as a Redskin, could generate nothing on his final four plays of the game.

Twice he threw incompletions; a swing pass to Larry Brown lost four yards; then on the last play of the season, Vern Den Herder and Bill Stanfill overwhelmed Kilmer, crushing him to the turf for a nine-yard loss.

It was perhaps fitting that the game should end with two Miami linemen sitting on top of the Washington quarterback. The Dolphins had similarly flattened the Redskins much of the game.

In other words, the Dolphins were two minutes away, and the field goal would have meant winning the game 17-0.  Amazing finish to their 17-0 season.  But the Gods of football had a different plan and made it interesting for the Redskins fans at the end.

Most of the games in the 1980s were pretty bad, or so I think.  The next decent game was in 1991, when the Giants beat the Bills in the last minute.  We were fighting in Iraq, and I recall the air of patriotism.  The Denver–Green Bay or #32 was interesting because the Broncos ended a long NFC streak.  The NFC won the Super Bowl from 1985 to 1998, something that is still hard to believe.  Of course, the NFC sent San Francisco, Chicago, Washington, and Dallas to the Super Bowl.

In recent years, the game turned into The Tom Brady or the Manning Brothers Show.

The Super Bowl has not always lived up to its promotion, but it's not really about the game anymore.  It's about the food and tolerating the halftime show or commercials.  Let's hope today's game is good football and that the "virtue" ads stay away.

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Tuesday, February 10, 1970

We remember Luis Donaldo Colosio (1948-1994)




We remember Luis Donaldo Colosio who was born on this day in Mexico in 1948.    

In 1994, Sr. Colosio, the PRI candidate for president. was assassinated in North Mexico.     As the PRI candidate, he was the favorite to win the election.     He was replaced by Ernesto Zedillo who turned out to be a very centrist president.

As expected, there are still many questions about the assassination and whether or not the gunman acted alone.

It's hard to believe that it happened so many years ago.

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"The woman in green"...Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson


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A classic 1945 film.   Holmes is brought in to investigate the murder of young women in London.....each with a finger severed off............Scotland Yard suspects a madman, but Holmes believes the killings to be part of a diabolical plot........and he thought that Moriarity was hung in Montevideo.........great stuff!

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We remember Laura Ingalls Wilder who died in 1957

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We remember Laura Ingalls Wilder who died on this day in 1957.

We know Laura from "The Little House in the Prairie" TV series.  

In real life, Laura Ingalls Wilder was born in Wisconsin back in 1867.   She lived in Kansas, Iowa and Minnesota with her family:  Charles her father, Caroline her mother & sisters.    Eventually, Laura became a school teacher and married Alonzo Wilder.

In 1932, she wrote her family story in "The Little House" series.   It became a TV series in 1974.

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Sunday, February 08, 1970

We remember Laura Ingalls Wilder (1860-1957)


Most of us learned of Laura Ingalls Wilder when we got hooked on "Little House on the Prairie".    We fell in love with the cast, from Pa to Ma and the cute girls.

The real Laura Ingalls Wilder was born in Wisconsin on this day in 1860 and died in 1957.  The Ingals lived in Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa and South Dakota.  In 1885, she married Almanzo Wilder and they had one daughter.  

Frankly, I never read the books but the TV shows were fantastic.

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February 1958: George joined John & Paul






George Harrison joined the band that we'd later call The Beatles this week in 1958.    John & Paul needed a strong lead guitarist and George was available.

In the early days, George was always in the background.  He got the nickname of "the Quiet Beatle".

He sang background vocals.  Once in a while, George sang "lead".

One of those early examples was "Devil in her heart", a tune made popular by US groups.

In the US, the song was released on "Second album", an LP thrown together from early songs recorded in the UK in 1963.    

So we remember the day that George joined John & Paul.

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Friday, February 06, 1970

1957: Big pay day for Ted Williams

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On this day in 1957, Ted Williams signed a one-year $100,000 contract with the Boston Red Sox.  He remained baseball's highest paid player.

Williams followed that contract by leading the AL in batting with a .388 average & 38 HR.   

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Thursday, February 05, 1970

We remember Hank Aaron (1934-2021)

We remember Hank Aaron who was born on this day in 1934 and died January 2021.

Aaron hit # 1 in 1954 and # 755 in 1976.   His record was eventually "broken" by Barry Bonds in 2007.   Aaron still holds the records for most career RBI (2,297), most career total bases (6,856) and most career extra base hits (1,477). 

After retiring as a player, Aaron became one of baseball's first black executives, with the Atlanta Braves.    He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1982.

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Wednesday, February 04, 1970

A word about Rosa Parks (1913-2005)


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Rosa Parks was born on this day in 1913.    She died in 2005.

There are two kinds of people in the world. There are those who accept injustice and then there is Rosa Parks.

Many years ago, Parks refused to sit at the back of the bus. She challenged an injustice and sparked a movement.

Parks did not seek fame but she left us quite a legacy.   It's quite a story.

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Tuesday, February 03, 1970

We remember Norman Rockwell (1894-1978)


Norman Rockwell was born in New York City on this day in 1894.   He started painting at a young age and became an American Treasure.   His paintings are just wonderful.
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Buddy Holly is still making fans years later!


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We recall what they call “the day that the music died”.

Like most of my generation, we learned of Buddy Holly when Don McClean released “American Pie”.    

I just  remember reading the lyrics and asking a friend:  What’s this guy singing about?   

He said:  “Buddy Holly”, the guy who sings “Peggy Sue”.    

We didn’t have “You Tube” or downloads back in the 1970’s.   So I went to the record store and bought me a copy of a “Best of ” Buddy Holly vinyl LP.    I became a fan instantly when I heard those guitar rifts and catchy songs like “That’ll be the day” and “Maybe baby”.

It was many ago that Buddy Holly (along with Ritchie Valens & The Big Bopper) were killed in a plane crash .    I don’t think that anyone in 1959 had a clue that we’d be talking about them so many years later.

Holly touched a nerve with his music.  One of his biggest fans was a teenager in Liverpool, Paul McCartney.   (The Beatles recorded “Words of Love” in a 1965 LP)

Holly’s impact was huge, as Phillip Norman wrote from the UK:

”Holly and Elvis Presley are the two seminal figures of Fifties rock ‘n’ roll, the place where modern rock culture began. Virtually everything we hear on CD or see on film or the concert stage can be traced back to those twin towering icons – Elvis with his drape jacket and swivelling hips and Buddy in big black glasses, brooding over the fretboard of his Fender Stratocaster guitar.
But Presley’s contribution to original, visceral rock ‘n’ roll was little more than that of a gorgeous transient; having unleashed the world-shaking new sound, he soon forsook it for slow ballads, schlock movie musicals and Las Vegas cabarets. 
Holly, by contrast, was a pioneer and a revolutionary. 
His was a multidimensional talent which seemed to arrive fully formed in a medium still largely populated by fumbling amateurs. 
The songs he co-wrote and performed with his backing band the Crickets remain as fresh and potent today as when recorded on primitive equipment in New Mexico half a century ago: That’ll Be The Day, Peggy Sue, Oh Boy, Not Fade Away.
To call someone who died at 22 “the father of rock” is not as fanciful as it seems. 
As a songwriter, performer and musician, Holly is the progenitor of virtually every world-class talent to emerge in the Sixties and Seventies. 
The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, the Byrds, Eric Clapton, Pete Townshend and Bruce Springsteen all freely admit they began to play only after Buddy taught them how. 
Though normal-sighted as a teenager, Elton John donned spectacles in imitation of the famous Holly horn-rims and ruined his eyesight as a result.”

We will never know what other great songs Holly would have recorded.  We do know that he had a monumental influence on rock groups and even country stars.

Who knows what kids in 2059 will be listening to?  I’ll bet you that quite a few will be marking the 100th anniversary of Holly’s death.

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