Friday, April 17, 1970

April 15, 1947 or the day that Jackie Robinson & Dodgers changed baseball


On this day in 1947,  baseball changed when Jackie Robinson opened the season playing first base with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Robinson turned into one of the key players in those Dodgers’ teams that won the NL pennant in 1947, 1949, 1952, 1953, 1955 and 1956.  The Dodgers finally beat the Yankees in the 1955 World Series.    Along t he way, he won the 1949 National League MVP.

Before he broke with Brooklyn, Robinson and his teammates spent spring training in Cuba in 1947. It gave many Cuban fans a chance to see the man who would open the door to so many players from the island. This is how Cesar Brioso recalls the moment:

The overflow crowd spilled into foul territory where ropes cordoned off fans from the field of play. Beyond the outfield wall, those who failed to gain entrance climbed the light towers for a glimpse of the contest.

The decisive game of the Cuban League season riveted the packed house at Havana’s El Gran Stadium on Feb. 25, 1947, but Cuban fans briefly diverted their attention to acknowledge the presence of a special guest.

After Jackie Robinson was introduced over the public-address system, “he took bows to the wild shouting of 38,000 jabbering fans,” Sam Lacy wrote in the Baltimore Afro-American 75 years ago, pointing out that several members of the Brooklyn Dodgers sitting in the same reserved section “were hardly noticed.”


The Cuban fans anticipated the historic moment. First, they were knowledge of major league baseball, Secondly, they knew that Jackie was ready to jump from AAA to the majors. They knew that history would be made in a few weeks.

Of course, Jackie was followed by black Cuban baseball players, from Orestes Minoso to the many others.

Happy Jackie Robinson Day.

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April 17, 1961: Bay of Pigs by Victor Andres Triay..a good book about that day

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We remember Roberto "Bob" Peña (1937-82)



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Roberto Peña was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on this day in 1937.  

By the time Roberto Peña got to the Brewers in 1970, he was 33 and had played for the A's, Phillies, Cubs and the expansion 1969 Padres.   

Nevertheless, he became very popular in Milwaukee because he hustled like Pete Rose and played all 4 infield positions.  His 42 RBI in 1970 were 4th best in the team.


Bob, or Bobby as I recall, played 6 seasons and retired with a .245 average.    He must have been one of the most popular .245 career hitters in major league history.  Again, the fans loved him in Milwaukee.


Bob was 45 when he died in 1982.    


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We remember Don Kirshner (1937-2011)


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We remember Don Kirshner who was born in New York on this day in 1937.   He died in 2011.

They called Kirsher "The Man with the Golden Ear" because of his talent for understanding what the record buying public wanted to purchase.

His resume included the songwriter teams of Carole King and Gerry Goffin, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, and Neil Sedaka and Howard Greenfield.     The list of artists and hits includes The Righteous Brothers’  “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” and the Shirelles’ “Will You Love Me Tomorrow.”   

He ran record labels such as Dimension, Colpix, Colgems, Chairman, Calendar and Kirshner.   

Last, but not least, Tne Monkees & Tony Orlando got his start with him, too.

Quite a story!  Do you see why they called him "the man with the golden ear"?
 

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Remembering the morning that changed my life


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For weeks, most Cubans anticipated an invasion of the island.  It's hard to understand today just how tense things were in Cuba 61 years ago this month.

My parents were living in a polarized country, where neighbors kept an eye on their neighbors through something the CDR, or, translated, The Committee for the Defense of the Revolution.  You could not trust anyone, and Cubans, normally very loud and outspoken about their politics, had to whisper their political sentiments.

No one had a clue that the men of Brigade 2506 would land at The Bay of Pigs, a place that only a Cuban with a specialty in geography had ever heard about.  Years later, I learned that many crabs go The Bay of Pigs every year:

This year, the crabs started their journey early. 

At the end of March, the municipal authorities issued a warning to drivers to avoid travelling in the morning and evening hours — the favourite crossing times for the crabs. Environmentalists usually demand the closure of the main road, especially at key migration times.

The passage of the red crustaceans — the species is called gecarcinus ruricola — could last until July. 

The largest amount of traffic occurs between April and May. Residents have to be careful: When the crabs feel threatened, they can puncture car tyres with their pincers.

Then it happened — the invasion, not the crabs.  A plane woke me up, and I rushed to the window to see an aircraft dropping leaflets about the liberation of Cuba.  How many 8-year-old kids can say something like that?  I had no idea that morning that all of these events would end up with me growing up in the U.S. someday.  All I knew about the U.S. back then was that they played baseball and the burgers were huge.

By midday, everyone was talking about the invasion and how the brigade was actually succeeding in pushing back Castro's troops.  It was true.  By evening, everything changed when we learned that the men were running out of bullets and the air support did not come.  To this day, every man I've spoken to from that brigade said they were promised air support.  No one expected U.S. soldiers to fight for Cuba, but air support would have broken the back of the very small and disorganized Cuban militias.  As a Cuban veteran said to me: "The sight of a couple of old jets" would have done the trick!

In a couple of days, Castro was boasting about the defeat of U.S. imperialism, and every Cuban associated with the "counter revolution" was picked up and thrown in prison.  One of those men was my father's cousin, or Dr. Ignacio Segurola-Canto, a young man in his 30s who had spoken about the communist influence in Castro's regime.  He called Castro a communist in a speech.  The regime spokesmen denied it.  Later that year, Castro said in a speech that he had always been a communist, but Ignacio was not released from prison.  He stayed in prison until 1975.

Many brave Cubans died at the Bay of Pigs.  Castro put thousands in prison because they supported the invasion or opposed his sudden love for communism.  Many were executed or spent years in some of the world's worst political prisons.

I choose to recall the events of this week by remembering the heroes of Brigade 2506.  It's too late to dwell on whether President Kennedy fumbled or whatever else.

Time is taking its toll on this great generation.  There are funerals in Miami often.  Most of them picked up after the experience of invasion and became successful businessmen and family men.  I've had the honor of meeting many.

They were Cubans determined to fight for their country.  This is how I remember these men, and the families who supported them.

On Easter Sunday, God bless my late parents and that generation of Cubans.  They lost Cuba, came here, and started their lives.  Best of all, they taught us about freedom and how communists are always out to take it from you.

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God bless the men of Brigade 2506

On this day in 1961, my parents and lots of other Cubans woke up to “la invasion,” or the military operation that most of us expected and were ready for.  There were groups in Cuba who had been fighting Castro, from sabotage to confronting the regime block by block.   By the spring of 1961, a lot of the Castro magic had faded because promises about elections and reforms never happened.
The veterans of the brigade have a museum in Miami, a reminder to the young about the men who were willing to fight and remove communism from the island.
The politically correct explanation is that the invasion failed because Cubans did not rise up against Castro.  Actually, it failed because the total plan was never carried out, and the men were left stranded, as Michael Sullivan wrote:   
The invasion force, with four supply ships, landed at dawn, with a strength of 1,400 men. Initially things looked promising, American planes struck at Cuban air force bases and destroyed Cuban planes on the ground. However, the tide quickly turned on the insurgents. President Kennedy, anxious to cover up America’s role, inexplicably called off all American air support, leaving the rebels stranded on the beach. Cuban army and militia units, organized by Castro himself, swarmed the invasion site to block the rebels from gaining the interior of the island. The Cuban Air Force rallied to strafe the landing site and the supply ships moored in the bay.One ship sank and the remaining three barely made it out to sea. Without resupply or air support, the men of 2506 Assault Brigade managed to hold out for two days, until nearly all were either killed or captured by pro-Castro forces. When the smoke cleared, 114 died and 1,189 languished in Cuban prisons. There they remained for 22 months, until the Kennedy administration paid more than $50 million in food, medicine and cash for their release.The accusations flew around Washington, as well as Havana, in the aftermath of the Bay of Pigs and an administration struggled to retain its credibility.
It was a bad day, and many Cubans were thrown in jail after that.
Over the years, I have personally spoken to many of the veterans of Brigade 2506.
Like my parents, they started their new lives in the U.S., and many served in the U.S. military.  Every one of them tells me the mission would have succeeded if the plan had been carried out.
The lesson of The Bay of Pigs is simple.  Presidential weakness, and confusion, has consequences way beyond the event in question.
God bless the men of Brigade 2506.  They are heroes in my book.
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The other Bay of Pigs story

(My new American Thinker post)

Fifty-five years ago, my parents and lots of other Cubans woke up to "la invasion," or the invasion that most of us expected and were ready for.  There were groups in Cuba who had been fighting Castro, from sabotage to confronting the regime block by block.

This is about The Bay of Pigs, an event that most people have forgotten unless you're a Cuban of my parents' generation or someone like them who was impacted by it.

The plans for the invasion were passed on to new president Kennedy by the outgoing Eisenhower administration.   

The men who invaded Cuba were primarily refugees trained by the CIA in Nicaragua

They adopted the name of Brigade 2506 in honor of a member killed accidentally during training exercises.  

The veterans of the brigade have a museum in Miami, a reminder to the young about the men who were willing to fight and remove communism from the island.

The politically correct explanation is that the invasion failed because Cubans did not rise up against Castro.  Actually, it failed because the total plan was never carried out, and the men were left stranded, as Michael Sullivan wrote:
The invasion force, with four supply ships, landed at dawn, with a strength of 1,400 men. Initially things looked promising, American planes struck at Cuban air force bases and destroyed Cuban planes on the ground. 
However, the tide quickly turned on the insurgents. 
President Kennedy, anxious to cover up America's role, inexplicably called off all American air support, leaving the rebels stranded on the beach. 
Cuban army and militia units, organized by Castro himself, swarmed the invasion site to block the rebels from gaining the interior of the island. 
The Cuban Air Force rallied to strafe the landing site and the supply ships moored in the bay.
One ship sank and the remaining three barely made it out to sea. 
Without resupply or air support, the men of 2506 Assault Brigade managed to hold out for two days, until nearly all were either killed or captured by pro-Castro forces. When the smoke cleared, 114 died and 1,189 languished in Cuban prisons. 
There they remained for 22 months, until the Kennedy administration paid more than $50 million in food, medicine and cash for their release.
The accusations flew around Washington, as well as Havana, in the aftermath of the Bay of Pigs and an administration struggled to retain its credibility.
It was a bad day, and many Cubans were thrown in jail after that.

It was a worse day for the credibility of the Kennedy administration.  He was confronted by Mr. Khrushchev in Vienna and challenged in Southeast Asia.  He left Vienna a very frustrated man after being pushed around by the Soviet leader, as Frederick Kempe wrote:
As he drove away from the Soviet embassy with Secretary of State Dean Rusk in his black limo, Kennedy banged the flat of his hand against the shelf beneath the rear window. Rusk had been shocked that Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev had used the word "war" during their acrimonious exchange about Berlin's future, a term diplomats invariably replaced with any number of less alarming synonyms.
Despite all the president's pre-summit briefings, Rusk felt Kennedy had been unprepared for Khrushchev's brutality. The extent of Vienna Summit's failure would not be as easy to measure as the Bay of Pigs fiasco six weeks earlier. There would be no dead, CIA-supported exile combatants in a misbegotten landing area, who had risked their lives on the expectation that Kennedy and the United States would not abandon them.
However, the consequences could have be even bloodier. A little more than two months after Vienna, the Soviet would oversee the construction of the Berlin Wall. That, in turn, would be followed in October 1962 by the Cuban Missile Crisis. Already in Vienna Kennedy was distraught that Khrushchev, assuming that he was weak and indecisive, might engage in the sort of "miscalculation" that could lead to the threat of nuclear war.  He didn't know then that his prediction would become prophesy.
Over the years, I have personally spoken to many of the veterans of Brigade 2506.  Like my parents, they started their new lives in the U.S., and many served in the U.S. military.  Every one of them tells me the mission would have succeeded if the plan had been carried out.   

The lesson of The Bay of Pigs is simple.  Presidential weakness, and confusion, has consequences way beyond the event in question.  

God bless the men of Brigade 2506.  They are heroes in my book.

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Lessons learned on Bay of Pigs anniversary

(My new American Thinker post)

Back this week in 1961, my father had a meeting on the other side of town in Havana where we lived at the time. Cuba was in turmoil and opposition to Castro was widespread as more and more people saw communists in positions of responsibility.

At mid-morning, my dad called my mom and told her that something was happening in Cuba.  Our phone kept ringing as friends and neighbors spread the news.

Humberto Fontova recalls the events of that day:
""Freedom is our goal!" roared commander Pepe San Roman to the men assembled before him 48 years ago this week. “Cuba is our cause! God is on our side! On to victory!” Fifteen hundred men crowded before San Roman at their Guatemalan training camps that day. The next day they’d embark for a port in Nicaragua, and the day after that would be bound for a landing site in Cuba named Bahia De Cochinos. We know it as the Bay of Pigs.

Their outfit was Brigada 2506, and at their commander’s address the men (and boys, some as young as 16) erupted. A scene of total bedlam unfolded. Hats flew. Men hugged, sang, cheered, and wept. The hour of liberation was nigh – and these men, all volunteers, were putting their lives on the line to see their dream of a free Cuba fulfilled.

The Brigada included men from every social strata and race in Cuba. There were sugar cane planters and cutters, aristocrats and their chauffeurs. Mostly, they hailed from somewhere in between, fitting for a nation with a larger middle class than most of Europe.

"They fought like Tigers," wrote CIA officer Grayston Lynch, who helped train these Cuban freedom-fighters. "But their fight was doomed before the first man hit the beach."

Lynch, knew something about fighting – and about long odds. He carried scars from Omaha Beach, the Battle of the Bulge, and Heartbreak Ridge. But in those battles, Lynch and his band of brothers could count on the support of their own chief executive.

At the Bay of Pigs, Lynch and his band of Cuban brothers learned – first in speechless shock and finally in burning rage -- that their most powerful enemies were not Castro's Soviet-armed and led soldiers massing in Santa Clara, Cuba but the Ivy League's Best and Brightest dithering in Washington.- "
The Bay of Pigs had two terrible consequences.  The first one was in Cuba.  The second one was for President Kennedy and the US.

Down in Cuba, 1500 men were left on a beach without the assistance promised.  They were eventually captured and traded for agricultural supplies a year later. The invasion was also followed by very harsh repression, as any Cuban will tell you. The regime used the moment to crackdown and fill up the political prisons.

Here in the US, President Kennedy was forced to accept responsibility for the failure.  

A month later, he met Chairman Khrushchev and it did not go well, as George Will wrote on the 50th anniversary of the Vienna meeting:
"On May 25, six weeks after Yuri Gagarin became the first man to orbit Earth, Kennedy said that “extraordinary times” demanded a second State of the Union address. In it he proclaimed “the whole southern half of the globe” a “great battleground,” especially emphasizing a place on few Americans’ minds: Vietnam. Then he flew to Vienna to meet Khrushchev — “Little Boy Blue meets Al Capone,” a U.S. diplomat said.  
Khrushchev treated Kennedy with brutal disdain. In excruciating pain from his ailing back and pumped full of perhaps disorienting drugs by his disreputable doctor (who would lose his medical license in 1975), Kennedy said that it was the “worst thing in my life. He savaged me.” British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan said, “For the first time in his life, Kennedy met a man who was impervious to his charm.” Kempe writes, “From that point forward Khrushchev would act more aggressively in the conviction that there would be little price to pay.” Kempe says that when Robert Kennedy met with his brother back in Washington, “Tears were running down the president’s cheeks.” 
As Khrushchev turned up the temperature on Berlin, Kennedy studied the modalities of conducting a nuclear war. On July 25, he gave a nationally televised address, referring 17 times to the U.S. commitment to West Berlin, although the entire city was under four-power (U.S., Soviet, British, French) rule.    
On July 30, in a Sunday morning television interview, Sen. William Fulbright said: “I don’t understand why the East Germans don’t close their border because I think they have a right to close it.” He was wrong regarding the four powers’ rights, and five days later he apologized for giving “an unfortunate and erroneous impression.” But Kennedy, who did not dispute Fulbright’s mistake, evidently welcomed it.   
After Aug. 13, an unsympathetic Kennedy, who never asserted the indisputable legal right of free movement of people throughout Berlin, told New York Times columnist James Reston that East Germans had had 15 years to flee to the West. Reston wrote that Kennedy “has talked like Churchill but acted like Chamberlain.” Clearly, there was a causal connection between Kennedy’s horrible 1961 and the Cold War’s most perilous moment — Khrushchev’s 1962 gamble on putting missiles in Cuba."
The Bay of Pigs is obviously something of interest to my parents' generation and those of us who grew up hearing about it. 

I've met men from Brigade 2506 and they are impressive fathers and grandfathers who now run businesses and recall that fateful day.

The historical value of The Bay of Pigs is that it confirms that the bad guys will always test the US president and push more and more when they sense weakness.

I hope that Valerie Jarrett is letting someone into The Oval Office who is reminding President Obama that weakness will definitely invite aggression.  

As a Mexican businessman once said to me about President Reagan:  "This guy Reagan is tough.  I hope that he stays that way."

Yes, we need a tough US president.  The Bay of Pigs is one example of what happens when he "dithers" rather than leads.

P. S. You can hear my chat with Barry Jacobsen, military historian,

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1961: The Bay of Pigs


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My life changed on April 17, 1961 or the Bay of Pigs invasion. 

Without question, this invasion was the biggest political event of my childhood.

Over the years, both sides have argued about what happened on that beach.  On one hand, the Kennedy apologists blamed it on the CIA.  On the other hand, Cuban-Americans blamed it on President Kennedy.

On this one, the Cuban Americans are right because President Kennedy let us down. 

Candidate John Kennedy inspired us during the 1960 election. It was Senaor Kennedy who delivered the tough anti-Castro speeches during the debates and the election.     In fact:
"By the time Kennedy took office in January 1961, he had already made serious commitments to the Cuban exiles, promising to oppose communism at every opportunity, and supporting the overthrow of Castro. 
During the campaign, Kennedy had repeatedly accused Eisenhower of not doing enough about Castro.
The Bay of Pigs made the October 1962 missile crisis possible. It projected the image that Kennedy was weak and indecisive. It probably forced Kennedy to overreact in Vietnam.

Many brave Cubans died at the Bay of Pigs. Castro put thousands in prison because they supported the invasion. Many were executed or spent years in some of the world's worst political prisons.

Let's remember the heroes of Brigade 2506. They were Cubans determined to fight for their country.

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The other Bay of Pigs story

(My new American Thinker post)

Mention "The Bay of Pigs" and most people will remember the failed invasion of Cuba and President Kennedy taking responsibility a few days later.

Most people do not know that most of the men of Brigade 2506 were captured and sentenced to prison in Cuba.

They were eventually released 50 years ago today:
"In the days before Christmas 50 years ago this weekend, 1,113 Bay of Pigs fighters captured by Fidel Castro's forces and imprisoned for 20 months were finally released to a heroes' welcome in Miami.   

The first planeload of POWs arrived at Homestead Air Force Base on Dec. 23, 1962. Gaunt and betrayed by the John F. Kennedy administration, members of the proud Brigade 2506 were bused to Miami's Dinner Key Auditorium, where waiting relatives engulfed them with hugs at a massive reunion that made front-page news. Five days later, JFK and his wife Jackie would be at the Orange Bowl to welcome them, too.  

On Saturday, the 50th anniversary of those pivotal days will be observed as surviving brigade members - now in their 70s and 80s - hold a and 11 a.m. Mass and reunion at the Bay of Pigs Museum in Little Havana."
A few years ago, I spoke with several of these men in Miami.  They are still confused about President Kennedy's decision to leave them stranded on the beach.  At the same time, most of them became great citizens in Miami and did not dwell on the events.

There is still another part of the story that many people don't know. 

Thousands of Cubans were incarcerated right after the invasion and there was a huge wave of repression on the island. 

A few months later, Castro declared that he was a Marxist Leninist.  The odd thing about this is that people were arrested in the early days for calling Castro a communist.  None of these people were released after Castro admitted that he was a communist.

The Bay of Pigs had a big impact on Cubans and President Kennedy, who had to spend much of 1961 fighting accusations of weakness and indecision. 

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Bay of Pigs: The morning that a plane woke me up


On the morning of April 17th 1961, I woke up when a plane flew over our home.  I looked out the window and saw the aircraft flying very low.  I learned later that the plane dropped leaflets and was part of the invasion.

The Bay of Pigs invasion impacted my life in several ways:

1) It confirmed what my parents had been saying about an imminent attack from Cuban exiles determined to liberate the island from communism.  My parents knew that Castro had betrayed the democratic aspirations of Cubans who wanted change not a communist dictatorship;

2) The invasion failed and my dad's cousin Ignacio was arrested.  He spent the next 14 years in a political prison without a trial.  He was eventually released when French President Mitterrand persuaded Castro to release some political prisoners to improve the regime's image in Europe;

3) The repression in Cuba went into high gear.  All of us were targeted by the Castro dictatorship.  Our lives were hell when the CDRs (The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution) threatened my parents  and made a boy like me understand that there was no guarantee that your dad would come home that evening; and,

4) It reminds me again of what could have been.
 
President Kennedy chose not to support the men of Brigade 2506.  His decision sealed their fate and killed the invasion.

Let me tell you that no one in the Brigade, or the active anti-Castro movement inside Cuba, was looking for US troops to die for Cuba's freedom.
 
My parents would often say:  "This is our fight.  We just need Pres Kennedy to put a couple of jets in the air".  The US jets were intended to decapitate the very small Cuban force and to break the morale of very undisciplined and unprepared Cuban troops. 

A lot of years have passed and I am now living in this wonderful land that opened its doors to us many years ago.  Nevertheless, every April 17th I remember cousin Ignacio and all of the brave men and women who were ready to fight against Castro.
 
They deserved a better fate.  They really did!
 
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The Bay of Pigs 1961 with Jorge Ponce (a show from 2012)

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CLICK TO LISTEN:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/cantotalk/2012/04/24/todays-message

Guest: Jorge Ponce, contributor to The Babalu Blog, discussed the latest from Cuba his article about of The Bay of Pigs.

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April 1961: We remember The Bay of Pigs with Barry Jacobsen, military historian


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April 17, 1976: Mike Schmidt hit 4 HR vs Cubs.




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