Sunday, March 15, 1970

1820: Maine joined the Union



We salute our friends in Maine.    

The "Pine Tree State" joined the union as # 23 on the way to the current 50.

Maine is one of the most beautiful regions of North America.    

It has a border with Quebec and New Brunswick in Canada plus New Hampshire and Vermont in the US.

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We remember Bobby Bonds (1946-2003)


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Bobby Bonds was born in California on this day in 1946.   He died in 2003 at age 57.

In the early 1970s, Bobby Bonds was one of the greatest players in baseball.    He was a "30 home run 30 stolen bases" player in five different seasons.   

In 1973, he came within one home run of being the first "40-40" player in history:  39 HR and 43 stolen bases.    Jose Canseco did it in 1988.

Bonds had some great years with the Giants.   He was traded to the Yankees and played with several AL teams.   I had an opportunity to watch him and appreciate his incredible talents.   

By the late 1970s, he was no more than a DH.   In his early days, he was a complete player with the Giants.

He is probably better known today for being Barry Bonds' dad.


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1957: "Run of the arrow" a great movie


"Run of the arrow" is not your typical western.   It's the story of a bitter Confederate veteran who joins a Sioux tribe to keep his war against the Union going.  

This is from the TCM summary:    

A revisionist Western that makes complex statements about the nature of race, identity, and loyalty, Run of the Arrow (1957) is a key film in the oeuvre of renegade director Samuel Fuller. Though Fuller was often criticized for lacking a social conscience - his taste for lurid pulp fiction usually excluded it - this picture paints as open-minded an image of the American Indian as you're likely to find in 1950s cinema. 

The main character, played by Rod Steiger, actually sides with the Indians for the better part of the film, a stance that runs decidedly counter to what John Wayne and his ilk had been doing for the previous 20 years.

Steiger plays Pvt. O'Meara, a Confederate soldier who fires what turns out to be the final shot of the Civil War. A Union lieutenant named Driscoll (Ralph Meeker) is on the receiving end of the bullet, but he recovers from his wound. 

Unwilling to accept the "death" of his beloved South once the peace treaty is signed at Appomattox, O'Meara heads West. There, after establishing his worthiness through an endurance test known as "the run of the arrow," he joins a Sioux Indian tribe. Eventually, he falls in love with a beautiful maiden named Yellow Moccasin, played by Sarita Montiel, whose voice was dubbed by RKO contract player Angie Dickinson!

It's a neat story and worth watching.  By the way, Sarita Montiel from Spain was a very popular actress and singer in the Spanish speaking world.  

You can click here to watch the movie.

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