Donald Trump told Americans, "You've been through hard times. It's not your fault. See those people over there? It's their fault! Vote for me, and I will punish them for you!"
Joe Biden told Americans, "You've been through hard times. So have I. I understand. It doesn't matter whose fault it is. Let me help."
In 3 voyages, Cook sailed thousands of miles across largely uncharted areas of the globe. He mapped lands from New Zealand to Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean, in greater detail and on a scale not previously achieved. As he progressed on his voyages of discovery he surveyed and named features, and recorded islands and coastlines on European maps for the first time. He displayed a combination of seamanship, superior surveying and cartographic skills, physical courage and an ability to lead men in adverse conditions.
Cook was attacked and killed in a confrontation with Hawaiians during his 3rd exploratory voyage in the Pacific on February 14, 1779. He left a legacy of scientific and geographical knowledge which was to influence his successors well into the 20th century, and numerous memorials worldwide have been dedicated to him.
NASA named a space shuttle after his flagship, Endeavour, even keeping the chiefly British spelling. Also, his name has been parodied: The villain of Peter Pan was named Captain Hook, and the pirate character in the McDonald's commercials was Captain Crook.
However, the natives of Oceania -- including the Aborigines of Australia and the Maori of New Zealand -- think of Cook in much the same way that Native Americans think of Andrew Jackson, as the beginning of their colonization and their oppression, as a villain rather than as a hero.
What does he have to do with sports? Well, if he hadn't been the 1st European to discover Hawaii, the NFL's Pro Bowl wouldn't be played there. And his visits to Australia and New Zealand made those countries possible, as well as their traditions of cricket and rugby. And they've also taken to baseball in the last 25 years.
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November 7, 1811: The Battle of Tippecanoe is fought in northwestern Indiana, about 68 miles northwest of Indianapolis, 122 miles southeast of Chicago, and 7 miles northeast of the Purdue University campus in West Lafayette.
General William Henry Harrison, then the Governor of the Indiana Territory, led U.S. Army troops to a decisive victory over Native Americans of Tecumseh's Confederacy. Tecumseh was away, trying to gain allies from other tribes, and his brother, Tenskwatawa, was in command. Known as The Prophet, he was recognized as a spiritual leader, but he was a lousy tactician. He ordered an attack on Harrison's men, and this was a huge mistake.
Two years later, as Tecumseh's Confederacy joined the British cause in the War of 1812, Tecumseh's and Harrison's troops met in battle again, at the Battle of the Thames near present-day Chatham, Ontario, and Tecumseh was killed. Tenskwatawa lived on until 1836, and Harrison was elected President in 1840, under the nickname "Old Tippecanoe" or "Tip" for short.
The Battle of Tippecanoe wasn't nearly as important as the Battle of the Thames, which eliminated Tecumseh as a threat. But because of the 1840 Presidential campaign's rhyming slogan of Harrison and John Tyler -- "Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too" -- it is more remembered. It did, however, make it easier to settle what became the Midwest, including Chicago, thus making that city and its teams possible.
November 7, 1837: Elijah P. Lovejoy is assassinated. He was not a politician, but a newspaper publisher and a Presbyterian minister. He had founded a newspaper, the St. Louis Observer, that printed anti-slavery stories and editorials. This angered people in the city, and they destroyed his printing press. He got a new one, and they destroyed that one, too. He got another new one, and they destroyed that one, too.
He got the message: He wasn't welcome in St. Louis, and, in 1836, crossed the Mississippi River from the slave State of Missouri to the free State of Illinois, to nearby Alton, starting a new abolitionist newspaper, the Alton Observer.
Gun-wielding advocates of slavery caught up with him, and attacked the warehouse where he had his 4th printing press. He and his supporters thought they were ready, with their own guns, and a shootout commenced. Lovejoy was shot, and both he and his printing press were thrown into the river.
He was just short of his 35th birthday, and became the 1st white martyr in the cause against slavery. A 110-foot monument crowns his gravesite in Alton.
Hearing of his murder, John Brown dedicated his life to the abolition of slavery, but his cause would also end with gunfire. Not his life, though: That was by hanging, through due process, if not justice.
November 7, 1848: Zachary Taylor is elected the 12th President of the United States. The leading General of the recently-concluded Mexican-American War, nicknamed Old Rough and Ready by the men who served under him and revered him, had never previously run for office, and later admitted that he'd never voted in his life, not even for himself.
However, as the nominee of the Whig Party, he beat the Democratic nominee, Senator Lewis Cass of Michigan, and former President Martin Van Buren, who was running to regain the office as the nominee of the Free Soil Party, opposed to slavery.
Because of the 3-way race, Taylor was a plurality President, getting 47 percent of the popular vote, to Cass' 42 and Van Buren's 10. And Taylor and Cass split the States between them, 15 apiece. But Taylor got a majority of the Electoral Vote, 163 to 127, while Van Buren took no States and got no EVs.
Taylor was inaugurated on March 5, 1849 -- he refused to take office on the traditional day, March 4, because it was a Sunday, and so, in a way, for 24 hours, the nation was without a President -- and died on July 9, 1850, from food poisoning.
(It was accidental. In 1991, in response to historians' suggestions that he was poisoned on purpose, and thus assassinated, his body was exhumed from the veterans' cemetery that bears his name in Louisville, Kentucky, and tested. No traces of artificial poison were found.)
Vice President Millard Fillmore became the 13th President. No Whig was ever again elected, as the party was broken over the slavery issue. Therefore, the Whigs have the odd status as having as many Presidents rise to the office without election as with it: 2. (John Tyler had become President when William Henry Harrison died in 1841.) Here's the count:
Republican Party, 20: Abraham Lincoln (formerly a Whig), Andrew Johnson (formerly a Democrat), Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, Benjamin Harrison, William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Warren G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert C. Hoover, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M. Nixon, Gerald R. Ford, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush and Donald Trump.
Democratic Party, 18: Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, Andrew Jackson, Martin Van Buren, James K. Polk, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, Grover Cleveland (his nonconsecutive terms sometimes get him counted twice, which would make 18 "Democratic Presidents"), Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S Truman, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
Whig Party, 4: William Henry Harrison, John Tyler (formerly a Democrat), Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore.
Federalist Party, 1: John Adams.
National Republican Party, 1: John Quincy Adams (formerly a Federalist, later a Whig).
No party, 1: George Washington (sometimes incorrectly called a Federalist).
Total years in office: Democrats, 112; Republicans, 96; Whigs, 8; No party, 8; Federalists, 4; National Republicans, 4.
November 7, 1851: Christian Friedrich Wilhelm von der Ahe is born in Hille, Prussia -- now in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. He immigrated to St. Louis, then with a large German community, and bought a saloon near Sportsman's Park, the baseball park in town.
He bought the team that played there, the St. Louis Browns of the American Association, in 1882, proclaiming, in his accent, "I am der boss president of der Prowns!" There's some dispute as to whether his saloon, or Michael T. "Nuf Ced" McGreevy's Third Base Saloon across from Boston's South End Grounds was the first "sports bar," but von der Ahe did something Nuf Ced didn't: Built a championship team, as the Browns won 4 straight AA Pennants from 1885 to 1888.
In 1892, the AA folded, and he was able to move the Browns into the National League. But a dispute with his 1st baseman and manager, Charlie Comiskey -- later the infamous owner of the Chicago White Sox -- led him to sell the star, and the Browns' glory days were over, as they wouldn't win an NL Pennant until 1926.
His glory days were over, too: By 1898, he was bankrupt, and had to sell the team. In 1908, the team, now called the Cardinals, and the new Browns, in the American League, played a benefit game for him. He died of cirrhosis in 1913.
Chris von der Ahe was baseball's 1st celebrity team owner. He was one of the most famous men in America in the 1880s and '90s. But he has been virtually forgotten, and has never been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
November 7, 1857: Edward Sylvester Nolan is born in Trenton, Ontario, Canada, and grows up in Paterson, Passaic County, New Jersey. A journeyman pitcher from 1878 to 1885, his career record was 23-52, in spite of being, for his time, unusually fast with a variety of curveballs.
He became known as "The Only Nolan," because he reminded people of a popular minstrel performer of the era, Francis Leon, who was so often copied that he began calling himself "The Only Leon." Ed Nolan became a policeman in Paterson, and lived until 1913.
November 7, 1867: Maria Salomea Skłodowska is born in Warsaw, in what was then "Congress Poland," in the Russian Empire. In 1891, she and her sister, eventually known as Bronisława Dłuska, fled to Paris, and became renowned scientists.
Maria married French scientist Pierre Curie, and became known in France as Marie Curie or, more popularly, "Madame Curie." Together, the Curies conducted pioneering research into radioactivity. She was the 1st woman to win a Nobel Prize, the 1st person and the only woman to win 2 Nobels, and remains the only person to win in 2 different scientific fields: Chemistry and Physics.
She discovered the elements polonium (atomic number 84, named after her homeland) and radium (atomic number 86). Once synthesized, curium (atomic number 96) was named for her. She died in 1934, probably from the effects of long-term exposure to radioactivity.
Pierre had died in 1906. Their daughter Irène Joliot-Curie (1897-1956) and her husband Frédéric Joliot-Curie (1900-1958) shared a Nobel Prize in 1935, but they also died young due to exposure to radioactivity. In contrast, their daughter Hélène Langevin-Joliot became a scientist and still teaches at the University of Paris at the age of 92, and their son Pierre Joliot is still working at 87. Between them, the Joliot-Curie grandchildren have 3 children of their own, all scientists.
Marie Curie has been played by Greer Garson in the 1943 film Madame Curie, Isabelle Huppert in the 1997 film The Palms of Madame Schutz, fellow Pole Karolina Gruszka in the 2016 film Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge, and Rosamund Pike in the 2019 film Radioactive.
November 7, 1868: Royal Samuel Copeland is born in the Detroit suburb of Dexter, Michigan. Very few politicians have been elected to public office as both a Republican and a Democrat. Even fewer have been elected to public office in 2 different States. Royal Copeland achieved both of these distinctions.
A doctor and a professor at the University of Michigan's medical school in Ann Arbor, he was elected that town's Mayor in 1901, and to its Board of Education and its Board of Park Commissioners, all as a Republican. He moved to New York to take an official's position at a hospital, served on the City Board of Health, and helped to maintain calm in the City during the 1918-19 Spanish Flu epidemic.
In 1922, he ran for the U.S. Senate, as a Democrat, with Franklin D. Roosevelt as his campaign chairman. He won, and was re-elected in 1928 and 1934. In spite of this, when FDR became President, Copeland's innate conservatism kicked back in, and he was opposed to the New Deal. He ran for Mayor against Fiorello LaGuardia in 1937, and lost, and died in office as U.S. Senator the next year.
November 7, 1876: Samuel Jones Tilden, former Governor of New York, wins the popular vote and the Electoral Vote in the Presidential election, defeating the Governor of Ohio, Rutherford B. Hayes. Tilden got 51 percent of the popular vote, to Hayes' 48; and 204 Electoral Votes, to Hayes' 165.
What's that? You've never heard of Tilden? Unless you're a history buff, or are from Brooklyn where there's a high school named for him, that's not surprising. He didn't get to become President, because the Republicans stole the Electoral Votes of Louisiana (8), South Carolina (7) and Florida (4), plus 1 in Oregon.
So the final count, not made official until the Electoral Commission made its ruling on a pure party-line vote of 8-7 on March 2, 1877 -- 2 days before the Inauguration -- was Hayes 185, Tilden 184.
Hayes, nicknamed "His Fraudulency" and "Old 8 to 7," announced he would serve only 1 term, and kept his promise. Tilden was convinced he was robbed, but did not run again in 1880 or 1884, due to ill health, and died in 1886.
But was he robbed? The Democrats, then the nation's conservative party, may have engaged in serious intimidation of newly-enfranchised black voters in Southern States. It's possible they tried every bit as hard to steal those States on Election Day as the Republicans did afterward. We may never know who truly deserved to win. Regardless, there is absolutely no known evidence that either Hayes or Tilden participated in any election fraud on their own behalfs. (Behalves?)
Also on this day, Culbert Levy Olson is born in Fillmore, Utah. Like Royal Copeland, he was elected to office in 2 different States, but, in his case, was always a Democrat. He has another slight connection to Copeland, having gone to the University of Michigan for its law school.
He was elected to the State Senate in Utah in 1916, and that of California in 1934, having established a practice devoted to liberal causes like labor law in each State. In 1938, he was elected Governor of California. But he feuded with the conservative Democrats that controlled the State's Assembly, and they offered him no help when he ran for re-election in 1942, and lived another 20 years.
But it might be a good thing that he lost in 1942. It was the State's Attorney General that defeated him. He was re-elected in 1946 and 1950. In 1948, the Republicans nominated him for Vice President with Thomas Dewey. In 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed him Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, and he became the greatest jurist of the 20th Century. His name was Earl Warren.
November 7, 1878: Elise Meitner (no middle name) is born in Vienna, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Like Marie Curie, born on the same day 11 years earlier, "Lise" Meitner became a pioneer in the study of radioactivity. She was among a group of German-speaking scientists who discovered nuclear fission, launching the race to build the 1st atomic bomb.
But she was Jewish, and fled in 1938, before her contributions could be published, and they were published without giving her credit. This would become a pattern: She would be nominated for the Nobel Prize 19 times for Chemistry and 29 times for Physics, but never won it. She died in 1968. When the element with the atomic number 109 was first synthesized in 1992, it was named meitnerium for her.
The show contains 2 of Cohan's legendary songs: "Yankee Doodle Dandy" and "Give My Regards to Broadway." The former not only becomes the title of the 1942 film biography of Cohan, starring James Cagney, but also helps to popularize "Yankees" as an alternative name for the New York Highlanders of baseball's American League.
The Liberty Theatre still stands, but has been converted into retail space, including a Ripley's Believe It Or Not Museum and a Famous Dave's restaurant. With some appropriateness, a Yankees Clubhouse Store is almost right across the street, at 236 West 42nd.
Also on this day, James Stein is born outside Glasgow in Coatbridge, Scotland. An outside left (today, we would say, "left winger"), Jimmy Stein (like the great Glasgow Celtic manager Jock Stein, that's pronounced "Steen," not "Stine") helped Everton-based Liverpool win the Football League in 1932, and scored the opening goal in Everton's victory in the 1933 FA Cup Final. He died in 1979.
Attempts to determine whether this was true have thus far failed. It has been alleged, including by Cassidy's sister, that Butch left Bolivia and was still alive as late as 1937. (He would have been 72.) A suggestion that Sundance was still alive as late as 1936 has been proven by DNA testing to be false, but, so far, that's as close as DNA testing has come to proving anything. For all we know, the old Utah and Wyoming bank and train robbers of the 1890s may well have had a good laugh about it all for a long time thereafter.
November 7, 1913: Albert Camus is born in Mondovi, French Algeria -- now Dréan, Algeria. Like many Europeans, including Frenchmen, the author of The Stranger was a soccer fanatic. He was a goalkeeper for Algiers club Racing Universitaire d'Alger (RUA, now defunct), but tuberculosis ended his athletic career.
He wrote, "What I know most surely about morality and the duty of man, I owe to sport." In his novel The Plague, he included a professional soccer player as a character, and discusses the sport in the dialogue.
In 1957, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. At 44, he was, and remains, its 2nd-youngest recipient. (Rudyard Kipling was 42.) On January 4, 1960, he was killed in a car crash in Sens, France. He was only 46, and had already written about the wars of independence from France by Vietnam and his native Algeria. He should have lived long enough to see the revolution of 1968 (he would have been 54), and perhaps even the dawn of the European Union (he would have been 85 when the Euro currency went into effect).
November 7, 1916: America elects a President. The Democratic nominee is the incumbent, President Woodrow Wilson, campaigning against American entry into World War I. His slogan was, "He kept us out of war." The Republican nominee is Charles Evans Hughes, who had been Governor of New York and a Justice of the Supreme Court, who believes America should enter the war. It should be noted that each man's party is roughly evenly divided on the subject, for various reasons.
When the night is over, Hughes appears to be the winner. But, as with President Samuel J. Tilden, there's a reason most of you have never heard of President Charles E. Hughes: He, too, went to bed as the President-elect, and woke up as not that.
The problem turns out to be the communication systems of the time, with the results in rural areas not getting to the State capitals quickly, and thus not being sent on to the national capital quickly. For example, New Hampshire: Wilson ended up winning it by 56 votes. Not 56,000, not 5,600, but fifty-six. That's the smallest margin ever recorded in a State in a Presidential vote.
The key State is California, then having 13 Electoral Votes (about 1/4 of what it has now). At first, Hughes is winning it, and he goes to bed believing he has won it. Wilson, too, had gone to bed, thinking he had lost the Station, and thus the country.
With 266 Electoral Votes then needed for victory, Wilson wins 277-254. If Hughes had won California, he would have won 267-264. Wilson won 49.2 percent of the popular vote, Hughes 46.1 percent. For both of his terms, Wilson would be a plurality President -- which had already happened to Grover Cleveland, and would later happen to Bill Clinton.
By the time he is Inaugurated again on March 5, 1917 (the usual date until 1933, March 4, was a Sunday that year), it is clear that Wilson will have to take America into the war. The war will make him beloved around the world. The peace process will make him despised at home.
A stroke in October 1919 paralyzed him, and when he left office in March 1921, he was, physically and emotionally, a broken man. He died in 1924. Hughes was appointed Secretary of State by Wilson's successor, Warren Harding, in 1921, and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court by Herbert Hoover in 1930. He served until retiring in 1941, and lived until 1948.
November 7, 1917: The Winter Palace in Petrograd is stormed by Bolshevik troops, and the Bolshevik Revolution is complete. It is also known as the October Revolution, since Russia was still using the Julian Calendar, and they thought it was October 25. The new national leader, Vladimir Lenin, switches the vast country to the Gregorian Calendar.
Lenin also moved the capital to Moscow, and after his death in 1924, Petrograd was renamed Leningrad. After the end of the Soviet Union in 1991, that city's name was restored to what it was before the failed Russian Revolution of 1905: St. Petersburg. As was said at the time, "Better to name it for a saint than for a monster."
Soviet dictators Lenin and Josef Stalin did not. Lenin was too busy trying to keep his country from flying apart to care. Stalin is only known to have attended 1 sporting event in his life, a soccer demonstration on Moscow's Red Square itself.
But Nikita Khrushchev certainly used the Olympics to spread Red propaganda, and Leonid Brezhnev used the 1980 Olympics in Moscow to do so. Vladimir Putin is a former judo champion, although he's not nearly as good at hockey as he's been allowed to think he is -- much like Fidel Castro and his pitching. Putin used the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi to spread the Russian image, and did so again with the 2018 World Cup.
One thing is for sure: If the Bolsheviks had failed, the 1972 Summer Olympic basketball tournament, the 1972 "Summit Series" between Canada and the Soviets, and the 1980 Winter Olympic hockey tournament, while still exciting, would have had far less controversy. Also, movies such as WarGames, Red Dawn and Rocky IV might still have been made, but would have had very different enemies -- possibly more than one.
Also on this day, the Tulsa Outrage occurs. Judge T.D. Evans convicts 12 members of the Industrial Workers of the World of the crime of not owning a war bond. This was during World War I. The IWW were opposed to WWI, and not because of the reverse of their initials. Evans also convicts 5 men who were witnesses for the defense, even though they were not IWW members.
These men are delivered into the custody of not the police, or the Oklahoma penal system, but a group calling itself the Knights of Liberty. They are driven to the outskirts of town, bound to a tree, whipped, and tarred and feathered.
This was done under the leadership of W. Tate Brady, one of the city's founders, and a member of the Ku Klux Klan. Four years later, he became one of the men responsible for the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921. Four years after that, Brady shot and killed himself. It wasn't due to a guilty conscience: Rather, he was despondent over the recent death of his son John in a car crash.
But he's best known as the voice of the Boston Bruins from 1963 to 1997. While Foster Hewitt of the Toronto Maple Leafs made, "He shoots, he scores!" a catchphrase, Cusick would simply yell, "Score!" In 1984, when the Foster Hewitt Award was introduced by the Hockey Hall of Fame, tantamount to election for broadcasters, Fred Cusick was one of the charter honorees. He died in 2009, at age 90.
Also on this day, William Franklin Graham Jr. is born in Charlotte, North Carolina. From 1947 until illness forced him to retire in 2005, he was America's leading Protestant evangelist. His "Billy Graham Crusades" packed auditoriums, arenas and stadiums all over the world, including Yankee Stadium and Madison Square Garden. Despite being a white man from a Southern State, he supported integration, and preached with Martin Luther King on a few occasions.
He was an unofficial spiritual adviser to Presidents from Harry Truman to Barack Obama, becoming particularly close with both Democrat Lyndon Johnson and Republican Richard Nixon. He was a guest of LBJ's on his last night in the White House in 1969, and of Nixon's the next night, his first night in the White House.
Billy Graham died in 2018, not quite making it to 100. Unfortunately, his son, Franklin (William Franklin Graham III), has taken a very harsh turn to the right, taking some stances in favor of Donald Trump that Jesus would never recognize as Christian.
November 7, 1920, 100 years ago: Edward S. Steitz (I can't find any reference as to what the S stands for) is born in Brooklyn, and grows up in Beacon, in Dutchess County in the Hudson Valley. He served as head basketball coach and athletic director at Springfield College in Massachusetts, the birthplace of basketball, and the location of the sport's Hall of Fame.
He also worked with the NCAA Men's Basketball Rules Committee, and led them to institute the 45-second shot clock in 1986 and the 3-point field goal the next year. He was elected to the Hall of Fame, and lived until 1990.
November 7, 1923: Billy Miske, "the St. Paul Thunderbolt," gets into the ring against Bill Brennan at the St. Paul Auditorium in Minnesota. Three years earlier, he had been good enough to get a shot at the Heavyweight Championship of the World, but Jack Dempsey knocked him out in the 3rd round. (He had previously faced Dempsey before he was champion, and lasted until the 6th round.)
But now, Miske was dying. He had Bright's disease, a kidney disorder that can be treated today, but couldn't be then. It was a death sentence. It had killed President Chester Arthur, the first wives of Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, Canadian independence leader George-Étienne Cartier, department store pioneer R.H. Macy, and poet Emily Dickinson. After Miske, it would kill Baseball Hall-of-Famer Ross Youngs, Broadway producer and former Boston Red Sox owner Harry Frazee, and science fiction writer H.P. Lovecraft.
In spite of his precarious condition, Miske knocked Brennan out in the 4th round. The money he made from this fight allowed him to buy his kids one last Christmas. He died on January 1, 1924, at age 29, with a record of 72-15 with 14 draws. In 2010, he was elected to the International Boxing Hall of Fame.
November 7, 1927: Dmytro Prystai is born in Yorkton, Saskatchewan. Known as Metro Prystai, the center played in the NHL from 1947 to 1958, and helped the Detroit Red Wings win the 1952 and '54 Stanley Cups. He made 3 All-Star Games, and was elected to the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame. He died in 2013.
Still in charge in the 1970s, he embraced the video game revolution, developing Donkey Kong in 1981, the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in 1983. In 1991, he approved Nintendo's purchase of the Seattle Mariners, making him the 1st Japanese person to own an MLB team. He died in 2013, having never attended a game played by the team he owned for 22 years. Nintendo sold out in 2016, and now owns just 10 percent of the team.
November 7, 1932: Richard Lee Stuart is born in San Francisco, and grows up in nearby Redwood City, California. In the 1956 season, playing for the Lincoln Chiefs, a Nebraska-based Class A farm team of the Pittsburgh Pirates, 23-year-old Dick Stuart hit 66 home runs.
This was the absolute worst thing that could have happened to him, as people expected him to be one of the great sluggers of his generation. He even signed autographs, "Dick Stuart 66."
He debuted with the Pirates in 1958, and he certainly could hit the ball over the fence, far and frequently. On June 5, 1959, he became the 1st player to hit a home run over the center field fence at Forbes Field, over 457 feet away. That earned him a place on the 1960 TV show Home Run Derby. That year, he helped the Pirates win the World Series, and was on deck when Bill Mazeroski hit the winning home run.
The problem was, he couldn't play any position. His manager at Lincoln, Bobby Bragan, said, "Dick Stuart is the worst outfielder I ever saw in my life." In those pre-designated hitter days, they put him at 1st base, where they figured he could do less damage than anywhere else. But he was horrible, worse than Marv Throneberry was at that position for the Mets.
His fielding was so bad! How bad was it? One time, Art McKennan, the Pirates' long-time public address announcer, said, "Anyone who interferes with the ball in play will be ejected from the ballpark," and manager Danny Murtaugh was overheard saying, "I hope Stuart doesn't think he means him."
They called him The Ancient Mariner -- not because he played for the Seattle Mariners (he was long retired by the time they debuted), but because the opening line in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem is, "It is an ancient mariner, and he stoppeth one of three." Another literary allusion, to Alexandre Dumas' The Man in the Iron Mask, got him nicknamed The Man in the Iron Glove.
He also struck out more often than Mickey Mantle, which caught people's attention. He was also slow: Twice, he grounded into more than 20 double plays in a season.
In 1963, despite his having hit 117 home runs for them in less than 5 full seasons while playing in a pitcher's park, and making the All-Star Team in 1961, the Pirates had had enough. They traded him to the Boston Red Sox, who spent the last 2/3rds of the 20th Century looking for a great righthanded slugger who could send enough balls over the Green Monster in Fenway Park's left field to lead them to the Pennant.
Stuart became one in that long line, and in 2 seasons with them, he hit 75 home runs and had 232 RBIs, including leading the American League in 1963, when he set career highs with 42 homers and 118 RBIs.
But his fielding actually got worse. In 1963, he made 29 errors, still a record for a major league 1st baseman. In 1964, he made 24. He killed so many games for the Sox, he was nicknamed the Boston Strangler. Two movies released in 1964 would give him more nicknames: Dr. Strangelove led to him being called Dr. Strangeglove, and Goldfinger would brand him Stonefingers.
Pitcher Dick Radatz said his license plate should read, "E-3." One time, the swirling Fenway wind sent a hot-dog wrapper toward the field, and he made a diving catch of it, and got the biggest ovation of his Boston tenure.
For 1965, the Sox traded him to the Philadelphia Phillies. In 1966, the Phils traded him to the Mets. In June, the Mets released him. In July, the Los Angeles Dodgers picked him up, and he did help them win the Pennant, and he played in another World Series. The Dodgers released him, he played the 1967 and 1968 seasons in Japan, he was signed by the California Angels in 1969, and released. At 37, he was done.
He hit just 228 home runs in the major leagues. He wasn't a bad guy -- though managers like Murtaugh and the Red Sox' Johnny Pesky might have disagreed -- he was just a one-dimensional player. But sometimes, that one dimension was amazing.
He moved to Stamford, Connecticut, making him a neighbor of Jackie Robinson, and made quite a bit of money (by the standards of retired ballplayers in the 1970s) in the financial sector. He died of cancer on December 15, 2002, in his hometown of Redwood City, at age 70.
November 7, 1936: Alvin Austin Attles Jr. is born in Newark, New Jersey. A graduate of Weequahic High School, he played guard, for 1 franchise for his entire NBA career, starting with the Philadelphia Warriors in 1960, and moving west with them as the San Francisco Warriors in 1962. He helped them win the Western Conference title twice, but they lost in the Finals both times, to the Boston Celtics in 1964 and, with some irony, to the team that replaced them, the Philadelphia 76ers, in 1967.
November 7, 1938: Jerry Dean Gibbs is born in Grenada, Mississippi. Jake Gibbs was the 1st great quarterback at the University of Mississippi, before either Archie Manning or his son Eli. He led them to a 10-0-1 record in 1960, with only a tie against Louisiana State spoiling their record. They won the 1961 Sugar Bowl. He is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame and the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame.
But he never played a down in the NFL, probably because he thought he could make more money playing baseball. He was a Yankee from 1962 to 1971, a backup catcher to Yogi Berra and Elston Howard on the 1962 World Champions, of which he is 1 of 9 surviving players. He was the starter in the 1967, '68 and '69 seasons, but lost his job to Thurman Munson.
He returned to Ole Miss, coached their baseball team to the 1972 Southeastern Conference Championship and into the College World Series, and was named Coach of the Year, winning that award again in 1977. He later coached in the Yankees' system.
Also on this day, James Lee Kaat is born in Zeeland, Michigan. Jim Kaat debuted for the Washington Senators in 1959, and was the last active player who had played for the original version of that franchise. The lefthanded pitcher moved with them, and as the Minnesota Twins he helped them win the 1965 American League Pennant and the 1969 and '70 AL Western Division titles. He won 25 games in 1966, and probably would have been named the AL's Cy Young Award winner, except that this was the last season in which it was given only to the most valuable pitcher in both Leagues.
He won National League Eastern Division titles with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1976, '77 and '78, and the AL East with the Yankees in 1980. Finally, in 1982, his 24th season in the majors, a record wait, he won the World Series, with the 1982 St. Louis Cardinals.
He closed his career with the Cards in 1983, making him the last player who had played in the 1950s. He retired with a record of 283-237, 3 All-Star berths, and 16 Gold Gloves. (Admittedly, the Gold Glove is not a big deal for a pitcher, but 16!) And yet, he is not in the Hall of Fame. The only eligible-but-not-in pitcher in the post-1920 Lively Ball Era with more wins is his 1979-80 Yankee teammate, Tommy John.
Like TJ, "Kitty" became a broadcaster, for the Yankees, the Twins and CBS, and was one of the most astute in the business, winning 7 Emmy Awards. Maybe he can get into the Hall of Fame that way.
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November 7, 1940, 80 years ago: Clarence Woodrow Jones is born in Birmingham, Alabama. A right fielder, he had "cups of coffee" with the Chicago Cubs in 1967 and '68, and then played 8 seasons in Japan, leading the Pacific League in home runs in 1976, with 36 for the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes. He is still alive. His son Richard T. Jones is an actor.
A new Tacoma Narrows Bridge opened in 1950, and became the new model for suspension bridges standing up to high winds. It was nicknamed Sturdy Gertie, and is still in use. Due to increasing traffic as the Seattle-Tacoma area has developed, a parallel span was added in 2007. As far as I know, this one has no nickname.
November 7, 1942: Tony B. Jackson -- he was born "Tony," not "Anthony," and I can find no record of what the B stood for -- is born in Brooklyn. A forward, he played at Thomas Jefferson High School Brooklyn and St. John's University in Queens, and was drafted by the Knicks, but never played in the NBA.
It wasn't that he wasn't good enough: St. John's retired his Number 24. But he and fellow Brooklyn natives Connie Hawkins, Roger Brown and Doug Moe were all indicted in a point-shaving scandal in 1962. Although none was ever convicted of any crime, all were banned for life by Commissioner Walter Kennedy.
All would make their mark in the ABA, though. Jackson played for the New Jersey Americans in that league's 1st season, 1967-68, making him an original member of the team now known as the Brooklyn Nets. That season, he set the ABA record for free throws in a game with 24, and made the All-Star Game.
He only played 1 more season of pro ball, so it wouldn't have mattered if he had been reinstated. He lived until 2005. Brown helped the Indiana Pacers win 3 ABA titles, but also retired before the leagues merged in 1976. Hawkins was reinstated in 1969, and made 4 NBA All-Star Games. He and Brown went on to be elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame. Moe also retired before the leagues merged, went into coaching, and was reinstated as part of the merger agreement, eventually winning 628 games as a head coach over both leagues.
They moved to Detroit, and while the city was bubbling with Motown and proto-punk, she kept playing folk-rock. By 1967, she had recorded her 1st album, but her 1st hit as a writer was not a hit record for herself: It was Judy Collins who had the hit version of "Both Sides Now."
And not only did she not have the hit version of the song "Woodstock," she wasn't even there. Crosby, Stills & Nash, who were, had the hit version, whose citation of the phrase, "We were half a million strong," embedded the number 500,000 as the attendance figure in American minds, although it may not have quite been that many. (Rolling Stone magazine, right after the festival, said 450,000.)
By the early 1970s, she was having hits under her own name. She kept writing and performing until a brain aneurysm in 2015. She has recovered enough to appear in public, but hasn't played any concerts since.
November 7, 1944: President Franklin D. Roosevelt is elected to an unprecedented 4th term, defeating Thomas E. Dewey, who held FDR's former post of Governor of New York. FDR won 432 Electoral Votes to Dewey's 99, and 53 percent of the popular vote to Dewey's 46.
FDR was not well, struggling with heart disease and high blood pressure, brought on by the pressure of fighting, essentially, 2 major wars at once, against the Nazis in Europe and the Japanese Empire in the Pacific. His smoking and drinking didn't help. He was 62 years old, and looked at least 72. The Republicans began a "whispering campaign," saying that the Democratic titan was too old and tired to handle the Presidency, and possibly dying.
To counter this, FDR held a parade down Broadway in Lower Manhattan. In the rain. Not good for his health. The parade went over the Manhattan Bridge into Brooklyn, and he held a rally at Ebbets Field. "I've got a confession to make," he said. "I come from the State of New York, and I've practiced law in New York City. But I have never been in Ebbets Field before." He was not booed.
He did say, "I've rooted for the Dodgers" -- even though he had, on numerous occasions, been to Yankee Stadium to cheer on the Yankees and the Polo Grounds to cheer on the Giants, and saw them both at the Polo Grounds in Game 2 of the 1936 World Series. "And I hope to come back someday and watch 'em play." That got a huge roar.
FDR would be unable to go back. He had not been to a major league game since before Pearl Harbor, thinking it inappropriate for the President to do so. (There was Presidential precedent: Woodrow Wilson loved baseball, and threw out the first ball at every Opening Day of his first term, but not in 1917 and '18 due to World War I, not in '19 due to his trip to the postwar peace conference, and not in '20 due to his health.) FDR died at the dawn of the next season, of a stroke brought on by working himself to death to save civilization from fascism.
In 2016, there was no "whispering campaign": The Republicans came right out and said that the year's Democratic nominee, also (officially) from the State of New York, Hillary Clinton, was "dying" and "doesn't have the stamina to be President." She did 3 90-minute debates and kicked Donald Trump's ass in each of them. In 2020, when it became clear that Trump was becoming more and more unhealthy and unhinged, they said it was Joe Biden who had "dementia." He did 2 debates that, because of Trump's interruptions, lasted more than 90 minutes, and mopped the floor with him both times. So, you tell me.
Also on this day, Joseph Franklin Niekro is born in Martins Ferry, Ohio. He pitched in the major leagues from 1967 to 1988, and won 221 games. He combined with his brother Phil (who was only his teammate on the 1973 and '74 Atlanta Braves and the 1985 Yankees) for 539 wins, a record for a pair of brothers. Both had the knuckleball as their main pitch. In 1976, he hit his only major league home run, off Phil.
Joe led the National League in wins in 1979, and reached the postseason with the 1972 Detroit Tigers, the 1980 and '81 Houston Astros, and the 1987 Minnesota Twins, finally winning a World Series in his 21st season, just before turning 42. He died of a brain aneurysm in 2006. His son Lance Niekro also played in the major leagues.
Also on this day, Luigi Riva is born in Leggiuno, in Lombardy in the Italian Alps. "Gigi" Riva was a forward for his hometown soccer team Legnano when, in 1963, he was sold to Cagliari, on the island of Sardinia. Based on what he had heard of this island backwater, he thought he was going to Africa. (Sicily is closer to the African continent.)
He became the greatest player Cagliari have ever had, nicknamed Rombo di Tuono (Roar of Thunder). Three times, he was the leading scorer in Serie A (Italy's national league). In 1969, he was voted 2nd in the Ballon d'Or (Golden Ball) for World Player of the Year, behind fellow Italian Gianni Rivera of AC Milan.
In 1970, he led Cagliari to their one and only Serie A title, bringing them enough revenue that they could build a new stadium, and finishing 3rd in the Ballon d'Or voting behind Gerd Muller of Germany and Bobby Moore of England. He also helped Italy win Euro 1968 and reach the Final of the 1970 World Cup.
He later became an executive with Cagliari, which has retired his Number 11, and is now a consultant to the Italian national team.
November 7, 1947: Bernhard Hugo Goetz is born in Kew Gardens, Queens, New York City. On December 22, 1984, in a scene that appeared to be out of the 1974 Charles Bronson movie Death Wish, Goetz, a white electronics salesman living in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, faced a mugging attempt from 4 young black men on a Subway train. Fearing for his life, he took out a .38-caliber revolver and shot them. One of them ended up paralyzed.
Goetz ran, but surrendered to the police 9 days later. Ultimately, the more serious charges against him were dropped, and he was convicted only of one count of carrying an unlicensed firearm. He was sentenced to 1 year in prison, and served 8 months. "The Subway Vigilante" became a in cause célèbre among white New Yorkers sick of crime, but more intelligent people recognized that he did not have a viable excuse for shooting one of the men after he was already down.
Episodes of the New York-based crime drama Law & Order were based on this story, as were the 1993 Los Angeles-based movie Falling Down and, in part, the 2019 film Joker. Goetz as mentioned in songs by Lou Reed, The Beastie Boys, and, in "We Didn't Start the Fire," Billy Joel.
Now 73, he is the most-recently-born individual mentioned in that song, and thus has the best chance to be the last survivor. The other people specifically mentioned in it who are still alive as of November 7, 2020 are 94-year-old Queen Elizabeth II, 86-year-old actress Brigitte Bardot, and 79-year-old singers Chubby Checker and Bob Dylan.
November 7, 1948: John Albert Martinez is born in Redding, California. Unlike most people with the name, who pronounce it "Mar-TEE-nez," Buck Martinez pronounces it "MAR-tin-ez." He played in the major leagues from 1969 to 1986, reaching the Playoffs as a backup catcher with the Kansas City Royals in 1976 and '77, and the Toronto Blue Jays in 1985.
He later managed the Jays, and the U.S. team at the 1st World Baseball Classic in 2006. He later broadcast for the Baltimore Orioles, and is now in the Jays' booth.
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November 7, 1950, 70 years ago: Vladislav Bogićević is born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia (now Serbia). A midfielder, he helped hometown club Red Star Belgrade win the Yugoslav First League in 1969, '70, '73 and '77, and the Yugoslav Cup in 1970 and '71 -- meaning they "did the Double" in 1970. He also played for Yugoslavia in the 1974 World Cup.
In 1978, he came to the New York Cosmos. Local fans, not familiar with South Slavic names, called him "Bogie," and he helped the Cosmos win the North American Soccer League title in 1978, 1980 and 1982, leading it in assists in 1981, '82 and '83.
He later coached the New York Centaurs of the of the A-League, became part of the Serbia coaching staff, and founded a soccer school that bears his name in Clifton, Passaic County, New Jersey. He is a member of the U.S. Soccer Hall of Fame, and is a coach with the women's team at Nyack College, an NCAA Division II school in Rockland County, New York.
November 7, 1951: John Felix Tamargo is born in Tampa. The Yankees drafted him in 1969, but he chose to go to college instead. He played in the major leagues as a backup catcher from 1976 to 1980, mostly with the St. Louis Cardinals. He is now the Latin American coordinator for the Seattle Mariners' organization.
Also on this day, Chris Mortensen (I don't have a full name for him) is born in the Los Angles suburb of Torrance, California. He covered the NFL for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and has been at ESPN in 1991.
Also on this day, James M. O'Brien (I can find no reference as to what the M stands for) is born outside Washington, D.C. in Falls Church, Virginia. At this point, unless your college basketball team was an independent, only Conference Champions qualified for the NCAA Tournament. Jim O'Brien and Len Elmore led the University of Maryland to the Final of the 1973 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament, but lost a triple-overtime thriller to North Carolina State.
A forward, Jim never played in the NBA, but was a member of the 1974 ABA Champion New York Nets. He is still alive.
November 7, 1954: Michel Dubois (no middle name) is born in Montreal. A defenseman, he was a member of the Quebec Nordiques when they won the World Hockey Association title in 1977. He is still alive.
Also on this day, Billy Clyde Gillispie is born in Abeilene, Texas, and grows up in Fort Worth. BCG was head basketball coach at Texas-El Paso, Texas A&M, Kentucky and Texas Tech. Although he won the Western Athletic Conference title at UTEP in 2004, he was a flop at Kentucky, and has battled alcoholism. He is now dry, and since 2015 has served as head coach at his alma mater, Ranger Junior College in Fort Worth.
November 7, 1962: Frank Ahearn dies in Ottawa at age 76. He owned the Ottawa Senators when they won the Stanley Cup in 1920, 1921, 1923 and 1927. But he had to fold the team as a result of the Great Depression. He also served in Canada's House of Commons from 1930 to 1940. He was elected to the Hockey Hall of Fame shortly before his death.
The midfielder helped Hertfordshire club Watford rise to 2nd place in the Football League in 1983, and to the FA Cup Final in 1984, where they lost to Merseyside club Everton. He was soon snatched up by the bigger Merseyside club, Liverpool F.C. He helped them win the League in 1988 and 1990, the FA Cup in 1989 and 1992, and the League Cup in 1995. He also played for England in the 1986 and 1990 World Cups, and later managed the Jamaica national team to the 2008 Caribbean Cup.
He is famous for 2 things. At a point when Liverpool were embracing the rise of black players in the British Isles, Everton were not, and their fans were proud of the club's all-white status. That is no longer the case: Everton would have been relegated long ago if not for many fine black players, including New Jersey native goalkeeper Tim Howard.
On February 21, 1988, in an FA Cup 5th Round match that was also a Merseyside Derby, at Everton's Goodison Park, an Everton fan threw a banana onto the field, an overt suggestion that black people are apes. Noble in the face of darkness, Barnes backheeled it off the pitch, and a picture of it became one of the iconic photos of English football. (Liverpool won the game, 1-0, and advanced to the Final, losing to Wimbledon in one of the all-time FA Cup shocks.)
That's the sublime. The ridiculous is his music career, including the songs that Liverpool recorded as the FA Cup Final songs for 1988, "Anfield Rap (Red Machine In Full Effect)"; and 1996, "Pass & Move (It's the Liverpool Groove)." To be fair, he was hardly the only offender, and the other players in the videos, all white, looked even more ridiculous.
Also on this day, Randy Fichtner is born in Cleveland, where his father Ross Fichtner is playing for the Cleveland Browns. He grows up in Meadville, Pennsylvania, outside Erie, and, like his father, plays football at Purdue University.
Unlike his father, he wasn't good enough to play in the NFL, so he went into coaching, serving on the staffs at Michigan, Southern California, Nevada-Las Vegas, Memphis, Purdue and Arkansas State. Since 2007, he has been on Mike Tomlin's staff with the Pittsburgh Steelers, including winning Super Bowl XLIII. He is now the team's offensive coordinator.
Also on this day, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World premieres, produced and directed by Stanley Kramer. It was a "cast of thousands" movie, and a caper film, with everyone in pursuit of $350,000 buried by a dying crook played by Jimmy Durante. (That's just under $3 million in today's money.)
Aside from Durante, the main cast includes Spencer Tracy, Edie Adams, Milton Berle, Sid Caesar, Buddy Hackett, Ethel Merman, Dorothy Provine, Mickey Rooney, Dick Shawn, Phil Silvers, Terry-Thomas and Jonathan Winters. (Apparently, Tracy wanted top billing rather than alphabetical order, despite some other rather large egos involved.)
In supporting roles: Eddie "Rochester" Anderson, Jim Backus, William Demarest and Peter Falk. In cameos: Rochester's longtime "boss" Jack Benny, Joe E. Brown, Selma Diamond, Norman Fell, Stan Freberg, Leo Gorcey of the Bowery Boys, Sterling Holloway, Edward Everett Horton, silent film legend Buster Keaton, Don Knotts, Jerry Lewis, ZaSu Pitts, Madlyn Rhue, Arnold Stang, future "Maytag Repairman" Jesse White, and all of the last lineup of the Three Stooges: Moe Howard, Larry Fine, and Curly Joe DeRita.
With the death earlier this year of Carl Reiner, only 2 actors from the film are still alive: Nicholas Georgiade and Barrie Chase. Georgiade is also the last survving regular castmember of the 1959-63 TV series The Untouchables, as Agent Rico Rossi.
November 7, 1964: Leeds United defeat Everton 1-0 at Goodison Park in Liverpool. It becomes known as the Battle of Goodison. The game was so rough (How rough was it?), it was the 1st time in the history of England's Football League that a referee sent all the players off for a cooling-down period.
The referee, Ken Stokes, sent Everton's Sandy Brown off for punching Leeds' Johnny Giles. In spite of an already-established reputation for rough play by the Yorkshire outfit, which would earn them the nickname "Dirty Leeds," Brown was the only player punished by the Football Association: A 2-week suspension.
The game got rougher, and, in the 40th minute, Stokes had seen enough: Unwilling to wait for halftime, he sent everyone off for 10 minutes. At the end, the Everton fans could be seen spitting on the Leeds players, and they needed a police escort out of the stadium.
Also on this day, Arsenal sell forward Geoff Strong to Liverpool for £40,000, considered a ludicrous transfer in hindsight. He had scored 69 goals in 125 league games for Arsenal, and went on to become a legend at Liverpool where he was remembered with much affection upon his death in 2013.
Also on this day, East Brunswick High School beats South River High School in football for the 1st time. In their 1st 3 seasons of varsity football, EBHS, established in 1958 so the growing school-age population of E.B. would no longer have to attend South River, lost to them. In this 4th season, led by sophomore quarterback and future ABA and NBA player Dave Wohl, they get their 1st win against their forebears, 14-7.
Eventually, enrollment changes meant that some schools were now too small to compete in the Middlesex County Athletic Conference, and the Bicentennial Athletic Conference (so named because it was founded in 1976) was founded. South River, reduced to a student body of around 500 by this point, was put in the BAC.
Bressler had started as a pitcher, but had converted to an outfielder. He had a 26-32 career record, and a .301 lifetime batting average. He won the American League Pennant with the 1914 Philadelphia Athletics and the World Series with the 1919 Cincinnati Reds. Like most of that 1919 Cincy team, he maintained to the end of his life that the Reds would still have won even if the 8 players on the Chicago White Sox who were accused of "throwing" the Series had played on the level.
Also on this day, Calvin H. Borel (I can find no record of what the H stands for) is born in St. Martinville, Louisiana. The jockey has won 5,146 races, including the 2007 Kentucky Derby aboard Street Sense, the 2009 Kentucky Derby on 50-1 longshot Mine That Bird, the 2009 Preakness on Rachel Alexandra (the 1st filly to win that race in 85 years, and making him the 1st jockey to win both races in the same year but on different horses), and the 2010 Kentucky Derby on Super Saver. He is still active, and a member of the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame.
November 7, 1968: The St. Louis Blues beat the Philadelphia Flyers 8-0 at The Spectrum in Philadelphia. Red Berenson scores 6 goals -- the NHL record remains 7, by Joe Malone in 1920, but this was the most anyone had scored since, and while 6 has been done since, 7 has not. Berenson remains the only player ever to score a "double hat trick" in an away game.
Also on this day, Russell Paul Springer is born in Alexandria, Louisiana. A pitcher, Russ Springer began his career with the Yankees in 1992, and reached the postseason with the California Angels in 1995, the Houston Astros in 1997, the Atlanta Braves in 1998 and '99, the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001 (beating the Yankees in the World Series), the Houston Astros in 2004 and '05, and the Cincinnati Reds in his final season of 2010. He was 36-45 for his career.
"The Rock" was recognized by the WBC again from August 13, 2005, when Vitali Klitschko retired and Rahman defeated Monte Barrett at the United Center in Chicago in the last elimination bout, until August 12, 2006, when Oleg Maskaev beat him in Las Vegas. He fought until 2014, and his career record is 50-9-2. He is a member of the Maryland Sports Hall of Fame.
November 7, 1975: Michael Mintenko (no middle name) is born in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. A swimmer, Mike Mintenko won medals for Canada in the Pan Pacific Championships, the Commonwealth Games, and the World Championships, but never a Gold Medal. Nor did he ever win an Olympic Medal, despite competing in 2000 and 2004. His luck was rotten: He ran into the end of Ian Thorpe's medal run, and the beginning of Michael Phelps'. He is a member of the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame.
In the show's 1st season, 1976-77, the setting was World War II, which was fitting, as the character debuted in 1941 and fought Nazis on behalf of the Allies. But ABC canceled the show after the 1st season, due to the cost of the period costumes and cars. CBS picked it up for the 1977-78 TV season, and, to save money, moved it up to the present day, putting her to work as a secret agent alongside Steve Trevor Jr., like his father played by Lyle Waggoner. The show ran until 1979.
Also on this day, on CBS, M*A*S*H airs the episode "Quo Vadis, Captain Chandler?" Alan Fudge plays a bomber pilot, so horrified at the damage he has caused in the Korean War that he imagines himself as the least harmful person he could think of, telling people, "I'm Jesus Christ."
The psychiatrist sent to talk to him, Major Sidney Freedman (Allan Arbus), is Jewish, and while the Jews revere Jesus as a teacher and a prophet, they don't consider him the Son of God or the Messiah. (They're still waiting for the First Coming, not the Second.)
Sidney asks him, "Is it true that God answers all prayers?" With a single tear rolling down his face, Chandler says, "Yes... but, sometimes, the answer is, 'No.'" This may have been the first sign that Chandler realized that his own prayer, to become someone harmless, has been answered with a "No."
Sidney's diagnosis: "He's not Christ. But he's not Chandler, either." Sidney thinks Chandler can be led back to his true personality, but doesn't think they should try to turn him back into a bomber pilot.
By the end of the episode, when he's shipped out to the 121st Evacuation Hospital in Seoul, he still acts as though he thinks he's Jesus. Corporal Walter "Radar" O'Reilly (Gary Burghoff) asks him to bless his teddy bear. He does, and blesses Radar, too.
Winter died in 2001. Fudge would later play Ed Hobbs, Roy's father, in The Natural, and died in 2011. Arbus died 2 years later. Burghoff is still alive.
The film of the fight shows Tunney carefully watching the count made by referee Dave Barry, and getting up at 9 -- what should have been 14. Could he have gotten up at 4 (what should've been 9)? Certainly. Would he have been steady enough to avoid one of Dempsey's legendary knockouts? We'll never know. Tunney hung on, and won the fight. In spite of the controversy, the 2 men stayed friends for the next 51 years.
November 7, 1980, 40 years ago: Steve McQueen dies at age 50, in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, where he had been seeking alternative treatment for the asbestos-induced cancer that was killing him. The legendary actor and daredevil had starred in The Blob, The Sand Pebbles, The Magnificent Seven, The Great Escape, Papillon, The Cincinnati Kid, Bullitt, The Thomas Crown Affair, The Getaway and The Towering Inferno.
Shortly after his death, Yogi and Carmen Berra were watching TV at home, and one of McQueen's films came on. Yogi said, "He must have made that before he died."
Steve's son Chad and his grandson, billed as Steven R. McQueen, also became actors. The original Steve remains an exemplar of macho Hollywood charisma. Sheryl Crow had a hit song titled "Steve McQueen" in 2002. Starting in 2006, Disney began an animated film franchise titled Cars, and the lead character, voiced by Owen Wilson, is a race car named Lightning McQueen in his memory.
November 7, 1981: The Washington Capitals retire their 1st number, the 7 of Yvon Labre. They lose to the New York Rangers, 3-1 at the Capital Centre in Landover, Maryland.
Also on this day, supermodel and actress Lauren Hutton hosts Saturday Night Live. At this point in her career, before playing a vampire opposite a young Jim Carrey in Once Bitten, she was best known to my generation for her Pepsi Light commercials. Beat Generation writer William S. Burroughs appears, reciting poetry. And Rick James performs "Super Freak" -- known to people born after this date as MC Hammer's "U Can't Touch This."
November 7, 1983: Able Archer 83 begins. It is the codename for wargames by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), which had been an annual event for a few years. The purpose was to simulate a period of conflict escalation between NATO and the Warsaw Pact, meaning the Soviet Union and their satellite nations in Eastern Europe. It was coordinated from NATO headquarters in Casteau, Belgium.
This came while President Ronald Reagan was placing Pershing II missiles in Western Europe; 8 months after he made a speech declaring the Soviet Union to be "an evil empire"; 67 days after the Soviets shot down Korean Air Lines Flight 007; 42 days after Soviet Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Petrov figured out that the detection of 2 U.S. nuclear missiles heading for Russia were a false alarm, and refused to give the order to launch a retaliation, thus becoming known (years later, once the world found out) as "The Man Who Saved the World"; and would be followed, 13 days later, with ABC airing the TV-movie The Day After, which imagined a nuclear attack on the U.S.
Able Archer 83 includes some steps forward that previous exercises had not. These, on top of everything else that had happened in 1983, led the Soviet government to consider that this was a setup for an actual war. So they placed their military units on the highest possible alert.
Able Archer 83 ended on November 11 -- appropriately enough, the anniversary of the Armistice that ended World War I -- and so the Warsaw Pact forces, seeing that nothing further had happened, were ordered to stand down. This may have been the closest the world came to nuclear war, except for the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 and Col. Petrov's moment.
Also on this day, Esmerling Vásquez is born in Tenares, Dominican Republic. He had a 5-12 record pitching for the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Minnesota Twins from 2009 to 2012. He pitched in Japan in 2015 and '16, pitched in the Texas Rangers' system in the 2020 season, and is now a free agent.
November 7, 1984: Jonathan Rey Bornstein is born in the Los Angeles suburb of Torrance, California. The son of a Romanian Jewish father and a Mexican mother -- hence his middle name is Spanish for "King" -- he naturally became an American soccer player.
A centreback, he played for Chivas USA in Los Angeles, before winning the Liga MX in Mexico with Monterrey club Tigres UANL and the Copa MX with Querétaro in 2016. He helped the U.S. team win the 2007 CONCACAF Gold Cup, and also played in the 2010 World Cup. He now plays for the Chicago Fire.
November 7, 1986: East Brunswick High School defeats Cedar Ridge of Old Bridge, 28-0. I was a senior at EBHS in the 1986-87 schoolyear, and this was the one football game I missed that season. I was with my family in Central Florida. We went to Walt Disney World, Sea World, Cape Canaveral, and to visit relatives in the Tampa Bay area.
On this night, I called the sports department at The Central New Jersey Home News, as the New Brunswick paper was then known (prior to its 1995 merger with the Perth Amboy-based The News Tribune, making it The Home News Tribune), from my hotel room in Kissimmee. Sports editor Gene Haley, who I knew a bit (his son John now holds that post at the combined paper), and asked him for the result. He recognized my voice, and couldn't believe that I was calling for the result of a high school football game from 1,064 miles away.
Due to declining enrollment, Cedar Ridge would only play East Brunswick once more, the next year, another EB win. We had a 16-3 record against them. In 1994, with enrollment declining further, Cedar Ridge was merged with the other Old Bridge school, Madison Central, to form a combined Old Bridge High School.
Also on this day, Lawrence McFarlane "Baldy" Northcott dies in Winnipeg at age 78. A left wing, he helped the Montreal Maroons win the 1935 Stanley Cup. The 1937-38 season was bittersweet for him: He played on the combined Canadiens-Maroons team in the Howie Morenz Memorial Game, but that was also the last season for the Maroons, as they folded due to the long-term effects of the Great Depression. He finished his playing career with the Chicago Blackhawks.
He went into coaching, and in 1941, he led the Winnipeg Rangers to the Memorial Cup, the championship of Canadian junior hockey. He later ran a sporting goods store, and was elected to the Manitoba Hockey Hall of Fame.
November 7, 1988: The Ottawa Sun is founded. Like the other Sun papers in Toronto, Winnipeg, Calgary and Edmonton (but not Vancouver), it is a tabloid, liberal with the language in its headlines, but conservative with its politics.
November 7, 1989: David Dinkins, President of the Borough of Manhattan, is elected the 1st black Mayor of New York City. A Democrat, he wins a close election over the Republican nominee, former U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani.
Jim Florio, a Congressman representing the Philadelphia suburbs of South Jersey, is elected Governor. In a landslide, the Democrat gets 61 percent of the vote to defeat Jim Courter, also in the House, whose District included my hometown of East Brunswick. In 1981, Florio had lost to State Assembly Speaker Tom Kean by less than 1,800 votes, the closest election in the office's history. After 2 terms, Kean was term-limited, and couldn't run again.
And Doug Wilder, Lieutenant Governor of Virginia, is elected the 1st black Governor of any State since Reconstruction. He defeats Marshall Coleman, a former Attorney General of the State.
None of these 3 victorious Democrats would serve a 2nd term. Governors of Virginia are limited to 1 term, although Wilder would return to public life, being elected Mayor of Richmond, the State capital. In 1993, both Dinkins and Florio would lose close and very nasty races for re-election, the former in a rematch with Giuliani, the latter to Somerset County Freeholder Christine Todd Whitman.
Also on this day, Sonny Douglas Gray is born in Nashville. Yes, he was born with the name "Sonny," and it's not a nickname. The pitcher debuted with the Oakland Athletics in 2013, made the American League All-Star Team in 2015, and was acquired by the Yankees in 2017.
He has reached the postseason 4 times: The 2013 ALDS and the 2014 AL Wild Card Game with the A's, and twice with the Yankees. Of course, it could be argued that the Yankees reached the 2017 ALCS in part because of him, and the 2018 ALDS in spite of him.
He was traded to the Cincinnati Reds, and made the 2019 All-Star Game. Apparently, he and the Yankees are both better off without each other. His career record is 75-63.
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November 7, 1990, 30 years ago: David de Gea Quintana is born in Madrid, Spain. The goalkeeper won the 2010 UEFA Europa League with Atlético Madrid, before being bought by Manchester United, with whom he has now won the 2013 Premier League, the 2016 FA Cup and the 2017 UEFA Europa League. Don't let anyone tell you he's "world-class," though: Hit it anywhere but right at him, and he can't stop it.
He wasn't yet ready to play for the Spain teams that won Euro 2008 and 2012 or the 2010 World Cup, but he did play for them at the 2012 Olympics, the 2014 World Cup, Euro 2016 and the 2018 World Cup -- none of which they won. Typical Man United player: In international play, without English referees to fix things for them, they win nothing.
Along with Ryan White, the teenage boy who fought the disease for himself and others, Magic changes the face of AIDS. No longer is it presumed to be a promiscuous gay man: It could be any of us, even a straight, world-famous multi-millionaire athlete.
The announcement also makes fellow Los Angeles Laker legend Wilt Chamberlain's book, Wilt: A View From Above, containing a claim about 20,000 women, one of the most ill-timed books ever.
The next day, Magic appears on The Arsenio Hall Show, to further explain, because he doesn't want anyone else to have to go through what he's going through.
A few weeks later, Magic appears in an Ancient Egypt-themed scene in Michael Jackson's video "Remember the Time." Eddie Murphy plays the Pharoah. And Eddie's pal Arsenio says, "I hope Magic lives a long time, so, someday, we can go up to him, and say, 'Hey, Magic: Remember the Time?'" It wasn't the only way we dealt with it through laughter: People joked that Magic was the only man who had HIV and gained weight.
It is 29 years later. A lot of progress has been made in preventing and treating HIV and AIDS. And Magic Johnson is alive, one of the richest men in the world, the owner of the World Champion Los Angeles Dodgers, and the operational part-owner of the World Champion Los Angeles Lakers, meaning he can tell both LeBron James and Clayton Kershaw to call him "Boss." Magic is alive... and Michael Jackson is dead. Not from AIDS.
The man known as O Fenômeno (The Phenomenon) played 1 season with Barcelona and 5 with their arch-rivals, Real Madrid. Yet he remains beloved by fans of both teams. He played 5 seasons with Inter and 1 with their arch-rivals, A.C. Milan. Yet he remains beloved by fans of both teams. And his performance reminds us all that Cristiano is not even the greatest Ronaldo to play for Real Madrid in the 21st Century.
November 7, 2006: Johnny Sain dies in the Chicago suburb of Downers Grove, Illinois. He was 89. A 3-time All-Star pitcher who won 139 games, he won the Pennant with the Boston Braves in 1948, and the World Series with the Yankees in 1951, '52, and '53.
He may have been the greatest pitching coach ever, winning Pennants with the Yankees in 1961, '62 and '63; the Minnesota Twins in 1965; and the Detroit Tigers in 1968.
Also on this day, Jackie Parker dies in Edmonton at age 74. A multiple threat, a passer, a runner, a defensive back and a placekicker, he starred at Mississippi State, and helped the Edmonton Eskimos win the Grey Cup, the championship of the Canadian Football League, in 1954, 1955 and 1956.
He was elected to the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame, the College Football Hall of Fame, the Canadian Football Hall of Fame, and the Edmonton Eskimos Wall of Honour, where his Number 91 is retired.
November 7, 2011: Joe Frazier dies of liver cancer in his adopted hometown of Philadelphia. The 1964 Olympic Gold Medalist boxer, Heavyweight Champion of the World from 1968 to 1973, was 67. It appears that he and his arch-rival, Muhammad Ali, had patched things up by the time he died.
Also on this day, Castle airs the episode "Heartbreak Hotel." A murder in New York leads to a casino in Atlantic City, leading to Richard Castle (Nathan Fillion) and Detectives Kevin Ryan (Seamus Dever) and Javier Esposito (Jon Huertas) disguising themselves as Elvis impersonators.
November 7, 2012: Darrell Royal dies in Austin, Texas, from complications from Alzheimer's disease. He was 88. A quarterback at the University of Oklahoma, he turned their arch-rivals, the University of Texas, into one of the great college football programs, using the wishbone formation to win 11 Southwest Conference titles from 1959 to 1975, and the National Championship in 1963, 1969 and 1970.
Also on this day, Carmen Basilio dies in Rochester, New York. He was 85. Welterweight Champion of the World in 1955-56 and again in 1956-57, and Middleweight Champion in 1957-58, the Marine Corps veteran famously stood up to the Mob men who controlled boxing in New York and Chicago in the 1950s.
November 7, 2015: Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump hosts Saturday Night Live. His daughter Ivanka Trump also appears. The musical guest is Australian singer Sia -- a woman, a foreigner, and bisexual, 3 things Trump hates. Larry David, best known for co-creating Seinfeld and basing the George Costanza character on himself, plays Democratic Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders.
November 7, 2017: Roy Halladay is killed in a plane crash off the coast of St. Petersburg, Florida. He was 40 years old. An 8-time All-Star, he won the Cy Young Award in the American League with the 2003 Toronto Blue Jays, and in the National League with the 2010 Philadelphia Phillies. That made him only the 5th pitcher to win the Cy Young Award in both Leagues. There has since been a 6th.
In that 2010 season, he joined Don Larsen as the only pitchers to throw no-hitters in postseason play, and became the 5th pitcher to throw 2 no-hitters in the same season, andthe only one ever to throw one in the regular season and the postseason in the same season. If you had told someone then that 81-year-old Don Larsen would still be alive on November 8, 2017, and 33-year-old Roy Halladay wouldn't, no one would have believed you.
Injuries cut his career short: He finished 203-105, for a .659 winning percentage. His ERA was 3.38, his ERA+ 131, his WHIP 1.178. He had 2,117 strikeouts against only 592 walks. The Blue Jays retired his Number 32 and named him to their Level of Excellence, and the Phillies named him to the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame this year, in his 1st year of eligibility.
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