Thursday, August 28, 1980

Race before it went woke

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Tuesday, August 26, 1980

1939: The first baseball game on TV

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We take baseball on TV for granted these days. In fact, I’m watching a game on TV as I write this post.    For much of the 20th century, baseball was a radio game.   Baseball on TV became popular in the 1960’s and flourished with cable TV and other media.
So when did “baseball on TV” start? The answer is 1939.  It was a game between the Philadelphia Phillies and Brooklyn Dodgers.   By the way, Red Barber called the game and Brooklyn won 5-2.

The game was broadcast from New York City’s Empire State Building, completed just eight years earlier, and could be seen in homes up to 50 miles away.

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Tuesday, August 12, 1980

We remember Alexei Nikolaevich (1904-18)


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We remember Alexei Nikolaevich who was born in St. Petersburg on this day in 1904.  He was the only son of Nicholas II, the last tsar of Russia, and Tsarina Alexandra.  The entire family was brutally executed in 1918.

A few years ago, I caught "Nicholas and Alexandria" again.  It's a great film about this family and Russian history.
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Wednesday, July 02, 1980

July 1963: The day Marichal and Spahn took the work ethic to a higher level

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They say that the July 4th weekend is a good time to take a break from the news and check out the Major League Baseball standings.  Based on today’s records, it looks like the Rangers and the Cubs will play each other in the 2016 World Series.
It is also a weekend to remember the greatest pitching duel of the last 60 years.  In fact, they even wrote a book about it: The Greatest Game Ever Pitched: Juan Marichal, Warren Spahn and the Pitching Duel of the Century!
Let’s take a quick look at the two pitchers.
Warren Spahn was an established veteran by the time this game started in San Francisco.  He came to Milwaukee with the Boston Braves in 1953.  He won 363 games, a 3.09 ERA and completed 382, or more than he won!
Juan Marichal was 25 and establishing himself.  He would go on to win 244 games with 2.89 career ERA, and he also completed more games (244) than he won.
I should add that future Hall of Famers Willie Mays, Orlando Cepeda, Willie McCovey, Hank Aaron, and Eddie Matthews took the field that night.  Add Marichal and Spahn, and the game featured seven of the greatest players of recent history.
My guess is that most fans expected another low-scoring night game at Candlestick Park.  However, they got thegreatest pitching duel in modern baseball history:
At slightly past eight o’clock, Marichal took the Candlestick Park mound. 
Four hours and 15 innings later, he was still toiling there. 
And so was Warren Spahn–in a scoreless pitching duel.
The Braves had mounted a serious scoring threat in the top of the fourth inning. Marichal disposed of the first two batters before trouble arose. 
The right-hander walked Norm Larker, and Mack “The Knife” Jones followed with a single to left, moving Larker to second. 
Del Crandall hit a soft single to center that Willie Mays caught, then lasered to the plate to nail Larker trying to score. It had been a charmed half-inning for the Dominican pitcher. 
Henry Aaron led off the frame with a drive to deep left field that Marichal said, the next day, he thought was gone.  Willie McCovey hauled the ball in a few feet from the fence, as Candlestick Point’s strong westerly winds knocked it down.
McCovey nearly ended the game in the bottom of the ninth. The Giants’ left fielder smoked a pitch deep to right field, just missing a home run–or so said the first base umpire. Local beat writer Curly Grieve expanded: “McCovey was so enraged when Chris Pelekoudas called the blast a foul that momentarily it appeared he would push the arbiter around the outfield and wind up ejected in the clubhouse. McCovey, [manager] Alvin Dark and [first base coach] Larry Jansen surrounded Pelekoudas, claiming the ball left Candlestick fair. Pelekoudas stuck to his call, which took courage.”
“I followed the ball all the way out but evidently the umpire didn’t. It was at least three feet fair when it left the park. I think the umpire was watching where it landed and made his call on that. As hard as I hit the ball it didn’t have a chance to curve before leaving the ball park,” McCovey said after the game.3 When he stepped back into the batter’s box, a miffed McCovey grounded out to first base, with Spahn covering. After a two-out single by Felipe Alou, Orlando Cepeda popped up to third base, and the scoreless game moved into extra innings.
With two outs in the top of the 13th, Braves’ second baseman Frank Bolling singled off Marichal, ending a string of 16 batters in a row retired by the Giants’ workhorse since a walk to Aaron in the eighth. Bolling was left stranded by the next hitter, Aaron, who popped up to first baseman Cepeda in foul ground.
Marichal was scheduled to bat third that inning. Cepeda later recalled the moment in a 1998 memoir. Manager Alvin Dark asked Marichal if he had had enough. Cepeda remembered Marichal barking at Dark, “A 42-year-old man is still pitching. I can’t come out!”  Dark accepted — or was startled into acceptance by Marichal’s ardor — and let him bat. Marichal flied out to complete the inning, and the game pushed forward.
The Giants made a strong bid to get Marichal a win in the lower half of the 14th. With two outs, they loaded the bases on a double, walk and error by Denis Menke, in at third base for Eddie Mathews. But Spahn then coolly retired Giants’ catcher Ed Bailey on a fly to center, ending the inning and extending the deadlock.
Marichal went back out for the 15th time and retired the side in order. Likewise, Spahn put the Giants down cleanly in the bottom of the frame. The pitchers had recorded 90 outs through 15 innings of gritty pitching, neither yielding a run.
In the 16th, Marichal allowed a two-out single to Menke, and then registered his 48th out of the night on Larker’s comebacker to the mound. It was Marichal’s 227th pitch.
When the Giants hit, Spahn retired Harvey Kuenn on a fly out. That brought up future Hall of Famer Mays, still hitless on the long night. Now, Mays drove Spahn’s first pitch through the teeth of the wind in left. The ball cleared the fence, and with that, a masterfully-pitched game dramatically ended. Marichal was the exhausted victor; Spahn, the valiantly defeated.
“I’ve been around a long time and that’s the finest exhibition of throwing I’ve ever seen,” Henry Aaron assessed. “It may be 10 years or even 20 before you see another its equal.”  
Only once, in the more than half-century since, has one pitcher thrown as many innings in one major league baseball game as Marichal did that night against Spahn.
After the game, Spahn’s teammates greeted their aged warrior–the last player to enter their clubhouse because of an interview session–with their own tribute. 
Quoting Spahn’s fellow starting pitcher Bob Sadowski, writer Jim Kaplan described it: “When Spahn arrived, everyone stood, applauded, and lined up to shake his hand. ‘If you didn’t have tears in your eyes, you weren’t nothing,'”
Over the 16 innings, Marichal allowed eight hits and four walks and struck out 10. Spahn, who threw 201 pitches of his own, yielded nine hits, walked only one (intentionally), and fanned a pair. Both men made their next scheduled starts five days later, the Sunday before the All-Star Game. Spahn complained of a sore elbow, which apparently flared up enough to cause him to miss two starts later in the month, but he pitched through it to lead the 1963 National League with 22 complete games.
Today, we call it a quality start when a guy goes six innings.  We count pitches and start talking about it around 100.
Years ago, Marichal and Spahn battled each other until Mays ended the game with a homer.  They didn’t quit; they just kept going and going.   
It was more than a pitching duel.  It was a demonstration of character and work ethic.  We could use a bit of that these days.
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Thursday, May 01, 1980

Billboard: The Top 10 singles by Rolling Stones


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The Rolling Stones' top singles on Billboard over the years:   

1, "Honky Tonk Women," The Rolling Stones, No. 1 (4 weeks), Aug. 23, 1969

2, "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," The Rolling Stones, No. 1 (4 weeks), July 10, 1965

3, "Start Me Up," The Rolling Stones, No. 2, Oct. 31, 1981

4, "Angie," The Rolling Stones, No. 1 (1 week), Oct. 20, 1973

5, "Miss You," The Rolling Stones, No. 1 (1 week), Aug. 5, 1978

6, "Brown Sugar," The Rolling Stones. No. 1 (2 weeks), May 29, 1971

7, "Paint It, Black," The Rolling Stones, No. 1 (2 weeks), June 11, 1966

8, "Get Off of My Cloud," The Rolling Stones, No. 1 (2 weeks), Nov. 6, 
1965

9, "Emotional Rescue," The Rolling Stones, No. 3, Sept. 6, 1980

10, "Ruby Tuesday," The Rolling Stones, No. 1 (1 week), March 4, 1967

You can find most of them in this great double album!

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Friday, April 25, 1980

A word about April 25


25 april calendar sheet with red pin. — Stock Photo © iCreative3D ...


The great Ella Fitzgerald was born on this day in 1917.   She is known to many as "The First Lady of Song", a well deserved title in my opinion.  She died in 1996.

On this day in 1980, President Carter addressed the nation to give us some very bad news.  As the president explained, the operation intended to rescue the US diplomats held in Iran since November 1979, was called off due to technical problems.  Regrettably,  8 US servicemen were killed when one of the departing helicopters collided with a AC-130 transport airplane on the ground.  It was a terrible morning to say the least.    Very bad morning.

Did you read "Robinson Crusoe" by Daniel Defoe published on this day in 1719?  We understand that it was based on the experiences of Alexander Selkirk, a Scottish sailor lost off the coast of South America in the early 1700's. 

Back in 1976,  Rick Monday of the Chicago Cubs took his position in center field at the legendary Wrigley Field.  He was playing catch with José Cardenal, his teammate.    
Rick saw a couple of guys trying to burn the U.S. flag; he ran and grabbed it before they could light the match. The two idiots were arrested, and Monday gave the flag to one of the security guards.  And Monday saved the US flag!     

We spoke with Leopoldo Lopez-Gil about Venezuela:  CLICK HERE TO LISTEN.

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April 1980: President Carter between Mariel and the failed Iran rescue mission



If you remember April 1980, then you recall two huge front page stories that rocked the Carter presidency.
Second, it was Iran and the US diplomats held hostage when the US Embassy was attacked the previous November.
On this day in 1980, President Carter approved a mission to go into Iran and rescue the diplomats held hostage. Unfortunately, he had to address the nation hours later to tell us what went wrong.   
It was a terrible morning to say the least. The operation was called off due to technical problems but 8 US servicemen were killed when one of the departing helicopters collided with a AC-130 transport airplane on the ground.
It was horrible.
The hostages were eventually released a few minutes after President Reagan was sworn in on January 1981.
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Tuesday, April 22, 1980

Earth Day has become kind of a joke


 (My new American Thinker post)

Fifty-three years ago, The Beatles broke up, and they started Earth Day conveniently on Vladimir Lenin's birthday.  After all, what a better way to celebrate your hatred of capitalism than to schedule your big festival on commie #1's birthday?  Anyway, I am not sure how Lenin would feel about all of the predictions about the Earth that were posted since then.  Let's take a look:

Here are some of the hilarious, spectacularly wrong predictions made on the occasion of Earth Day 1970.

"We have about five more years at the outside to do something."

—Kenneth Watt, ecologist

"Civilization will end within 15 or 30 years unless immediate action is taken against problems facing mankind."

—George Wald, Harvard Biologist

"We are in an environmental crisis which threatens the survival of this nation, and of the world as a suitable place of human habitation."

—Barry Commoner, Washington University biologist

"Man must stop pollution and conserve his resources, not merely to enhance existence but to save the race from intolerable deterioration and possible extinction."

—New York Times editorial, the day after the first Earth Day

"Population will inevitably and completely outstrip whatever small increases in food supplies we make. The death rate will increase until at least 100-200 million people per year will be starving to death during the next ten years."

—Paul Ehrlich, Stanford University biologist

"By ... [1975,] some experts feel that food shortages will have escalated the present level of world hunger and starvation into famines of unbelievable proportions. Other experts, more optimistic, think the ultimate food-population collision will not occur until the decade of the 1980s."

—Paul Ehrlich, Stanford University biologist

"It is already too late to avoid mass starvation."

—Denis Hayes, chief organizer for Earth Day

Check out the long list, because there are more and more examples of how these predictions missed their targets.  Aren't you glad that you didn't pay these people to give you financial advice or introduce you to some girl?  You would have ended up broke and with some angry feminist complaining about everything.

Moral of the story: Be careful with the latest generation of alarmists telling you to drive an electric car and to stop having babies.

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Monday, April 14, 1980

"A Night to Remember", a good movie about The Titanic 1912


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Friday, January 18, 1980

2015 podcast: D-Day 1944 with Barry Jacobsen




We recorded this show in June 2015 with 
Barry Jacobsen, military historian and blogger, joins us for a discussion of D-Day 1944.  We will celebrate the 70th anniversary in a few days.   
Also, we will hear from Barry, a US Army veteran, about the Sgt Bergdahl controversy and release of 5 high rank terrorists from GITMO.  

And this another anniversary of The Battle of Midway.

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