Thursday, August 31, 2023

1963: The Last Summer, Part II

The Summer of 1963 was a beginning for some, and an ending for many more. America would never quite be so young again as it was that year.

On July 1, ZIP Codes came into use. Most towns weren't big enough to need more than one postal zone. For those that were, there were simple numbers, one or two digits, starting in 1943. For example: From the time he was born in 1943 until he went off to war in 1965, my father lived in the Forest Hill Section of the North Ward of Newark. People living in the North Ward would write their addresses as "Newark 4, New Jersey." With ZIP Codes, it became "Newark, NJ 07104." Note that the 4 became the last digit. An address of "New York 17, NY" became "New York, NY 10017."

Outside cities, ZIP Codes were arranged alphabetically. For example, I grew up in East Brunswick, in Central New Jersey. Our ZIP Code was, and remains, 08816. A town neighboring us both geographically and alphabetically, Edison, had 08817, 08818 and 08820, with 08819 available for overspill. (So far, despite Edison's huge growth, it hasn't been needed.) Oddly, they also use 08837. 

Of all the changes that happened in America in the 1960s, and particularly during the Administration of President John F. Kennedy, two that were huge parts of our culture, but are rarely talked about now, are the institutions of Area and ZIP Codes.

On July 2, baseball pitchers Juan Marichal of the San Francisco Giants and Warren Spahn of the Milwaukee Braves faced off against each other in a National League game that one author would later call "the greatest game ever pitched." Marichal was 24 years old. Spahn was 42. Tied 0-0 after 9 innings, the game was won in the 16th by the Giants on a home run by Willie Mays.

On July 5, actress Edie Falco was born. And a delegation from the People's Republic of China, led by Prime Minister Zhou Enali, departed from Beijing on a train bound for Moscow, to attend talks in an effort to repair the poor relations between the Chinese Communists and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The talks, intended to mend the Sino-Soviet split, broken down on July 14, when the Soviets published a rebuttal to Chinese charges that the Soviets had departed from the Communist ideology.

On July 10, the all-white University of South Carolina was ordered to admit its first African-American student, Henri Monteith, by order of U.S. District Judge J. Robert Martin. On the same day, Judge Martin ordered the desegregation of all 26 of South Carolina's State Parks.

On July 11, in South America, there was a military coup in Ecuador, and the Argentine ferry Ciudad de Asunción sank in the River Plate between the capital cities of Buenos Aires, Argentina and Montevideo, Uruguay. Hockey Hall-of-Famer Al MacInnis and actress Lisa Rinna were born.

On July 12, 16-year-old Pauline Reade was abducted and murdered by Myra Hindley and Ian Brady in Manchester, England. It was the 1st of their 5 "Moors Murders." On July 13, Kenny Johnston was born. He played the Flash in the 1997 Justice League of America movie. Also born that day was Anthony "Spud" Webb, who became an NBA slam-dunk artists despite being only 5-foot-6. Danish actress Brigitte Nielsen was born on July 15, and American actress Phoebe Cates on July 16.

At the height of the Summer, "Wildwood Days" was a Top 20 hit. Wildwood is on the Jersey Shore, and attracts people from New York City, 155 miles to the north; and Philadelphia, 90 miles to the northwest. It was sung by a Philadelphia-born, -bred and -based doo-wop singer, Bobby Rydell.

On July 22, Sonny Liston retained the Heavyweight Championship of the World, by winning a rematch with the man from whom he took the title, Floyd Patterson. Both fights ended in 1st-round knockouts. Liston is now on a collision course with challenger Cassius Clay. Clay would take the title from him in 1964, and change his name to Muhammad Ali. Also on July 22, actor Rob Estes was born.

On July 24, the American Legion-sponsored Boys Nation event was held at the White House. JFK shook hands with all of the delegates, including an Arkansas delegate soon to turn 17: Bill Clinton. Clinton would be elected President in 1992. Also on July 24, Karl Malone, a future member of the Basketball Hall of Fame, was born. On July 26, an earthquake in Skopje (then in Yugoslavia, now the capital of North Macedonia) killed 1,800 people.

On July 30, the Soviet newspaper Izvestia reported that British diplomat Kim Philby, who had disappeared on January 23, had been given asylum in Moscow, as a double agent. And actress Lisa Kudrow, famous for her role on the 1990s sitcom Friends, was born. So was another Basketball Hall-of-Famer, Chris Mullin.

*

Artis Leon Ivey Jr., eventually to become the rapper known as Coolio, was born on August 1. On August 2, the Green Bay Packers were upset in the Chicago College All-Star Game. It would be the last time that the defending NFL Champions lost the game, which was played from 1934 to 1963. On August 3, Phil Graham, the publisher of The Washington Post, shot and killed himself. His wife, Katherine Graham, inherited the paper, and ran it better. The same day, Metallica singer James Hetfield was born.

Keith Ellison, the Minnesota Democrat who became the 1st Muslim elected to the U.S. Congress, was born on August 4. On August 5, Mark Strong was born. The bald English actor became known for playing villains. That day, the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty was signed by U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, British Foreign Secretary Alec Douglas-Home (soon to become Prime Minister), and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko.

On August 7, First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy gave birth to a son, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy. The boy was born with bad lungs, and died just 2 days later. Supposedly, the tragedy brought the President and the First Lady closer together.

On August 8, a Royal Mail train headed from Glasgow to London is robbed at Bridego Railway Bridge in Ledburn, Buckinghamshire, about 45 miles northwest of London. It becomes known as the Great Train Robbery. A gang of 16 men, led by Bruce Reynolds, without using firearms, escaped with £2.61 million pounds -- about £70 million in 2023, or $88 million with the current exchange rate --  mostly in £1 and £5 notes. The police soon cracked the case, and most of the gang was convicted, with the ringleaders were sentenced to 30 years in prison.

On August 9, Lee Harvey Oswald and 3 Cuban men were arrested in New Orleans after fighting. Each man spent the night in jail, and was released. Singer Whitney Houston was born that same day. Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee died on August 10. He had launched hearings into organized crime, and run for President in 1952 and 1956, becoming the Democratic nominee for Vice President in the latter year.

Valerie Plame, CIA Agent turned 2003 cause célèbre, was born on August 13. On August 14, playwright Clifford Odets died, and actress Emmanuelle Beart was born. On August 15, convicted murderer Eddie Mays was executed in the electric chair at Sing Sing Prison. He remains the last person executed in the State of New York. Actor John Stamos was born on August 19. The future King Mohammed VI of Morocco was born on August 21, and singer Tori Amos on August 22.

August 24 saw American John Pennel become the 1st pole vaulter to top 17 feet. It also saw the first games played in the Bundesliga (meaning "federal league"), the 1st professional soccer league in Germany. Due to its culture of sports clubs, Germany was well behind the rest of Europe in starting pro soccer. That would change, as Bayern Munich and, to lesser extents, clubs such as Borussia Mönchengladbach, Borussia Dortmund, and Hamburger SV would become among the best in Europe.

*

W.E.B. Du Bois, once a leading figure in the Civil Rights Movement, died in exile in the African nation of Ghana, at the age of 95, on August 27. On August 28, the March On Washington for Jobs and Freedom brought 250,000 people to the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. It was organized by union leader A. Philip Randolph and organizer Bayard Rustin.

Mahalia Jackson, then America's greatest living singer of gospel music, sang "How I Got Over." Marian Anderson, who had sung at the Lincoln Memorial in an Easter concert before 75,000 in 1939, sang "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands." Joan Baez sang "We Shall Overcome," Bob Dylan sang, "Only a Pawn in Their Game," and, then a couple, together they sang Bob's song "When the Ship Comes In." Peter, Paul and Mary sang "If I Had a Hammer" and Bob's song "Blowin' in the Wind." Odetta sang "I'm On My Way."

Other celebrities on hand: Singers Josephine Baker, Harry Belafonte, Sammy Davis Jr., Diahann Carroll, Lena Horne, Judy Garland and Bobby Darin; actors Sidney Poitier, Marlon Brando, Burt Lancaster, James Garner, Robert Ryan, Rita Moreno, married couple Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, married couple Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, and, surprising many people only old enough to remember him as a conservative and a gun-rights advocate, Charlton Heston; novelist James Baldwin; and baseball trailblazer Jackie Robinson.

But it would be remembered for the speech by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., chairman of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Early in his speech, he said some things that many white Americans did not want to hear -- and probably still don't, because they are largely still true:

In a sense, we have come to our Nation’s Capital to cash a check. When the architects of our great republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir.
This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the inalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given its colored people a bad check, a check that has come back marked "insufficient funds."
But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt. We refuse to believe that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this nation. So we have come to cash this check, a check that will give us upon demand the riches of freedom and security of justice.
A little later, he said, confronting the differing challenges of South and North:
We cannot be satisfied as long as a colored person in Mississippi cannot vote, and a colored person in New York believes he has nothing for which to vote.
No, no, we are not satisfied, and we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.
When he seemed to be wrapping up, Mahalia Jackson remembered a speech he had given a few weeks earlier, at Cobo Hall in Detroit, in which he spoke of a dream he had. She said, "Martin, tell them about the dream." He did:
I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that, one day, this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: "We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal."
I have a dream that, one day, out in the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slaveowners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.

I have a dream that, one day, even the state of Mississippi, a State sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice.


I have a dream that my four little children will, one day, live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today.

He went on a little longer with this point. And his closing was unforgettable: 

And if America is to be a great nation, this must become true. So let freedom ring from the hilltops of New Hampshire. Let freedom ring from the mighty mountains of New York. Let freedom ring from the heightening Alleghenies of Pennsylvania. Let freedom ring from the snow-capped Rockies of Colorado. Let freedom ring from the curvaceous slopes of California.

But, not only that, let freedom ring from Stone Mountain of Georgia. Let freedom ring from Lookout Mountain of Tennessee. Let freedom ring from every hill and molehill of Mississippi.

"My country, 'tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing. Land where my fathers died. Land of thy pilgrims' pride. From every mountainside, let freedom ring."

When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every tenement and every hamlet, from every State and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old spiritual, "Free at last, free at last. Thank God Almighty, we are free at last."

Watching the speech on television, President John F. Kennedy told the others in the room, "He's damn good." Afterward, Dr. King was among the figures from the demonstration invited to meet him at the White House.

*
On August 30, the Moscow-Washington hotline began operations, as the U.S. Department of Defense made a one-sentence announcement to the world press: "The direct communication link between Washington and Moscow is now operational." Because the spoken word could be misunderstood, the hot line was actually a link of teletype machines, rather than the red telephone commonly depicted in television and film.
On the same day, the modern audio cassette tape, and the tape recorder that used it, were both introduced to the public by the Philips Company. For the next 30 years, the "cassette" would be the standard form of portable recorded music. Kansas City Chiefs rookie Stone Johnson, a former U.S. Olympic sprinter, sustained a fractured vertebra in his neck during a kickoff return in a preseason game against the Houston Oilers. He would die on September 8 as a result of the injury. Actors Michael Chiklis and Mark Strong were born.
On August 31, French cubist painter Georges Braque died. On September 1, The Spy Who Came In From the Cold was published by David John Moore Cornwell, under the pen name John le Carré. He had worked for both MI5 (Britain’s FBI) and MI6 (its CIA). The novel became a landmark of spy fiction, and was filmed in 1965.
Also on that day, Avengers #1 was published, Marvel Comics' attempt to copy DC Comics’ Justice League of America. Iron Man, Thor, the Hulk, Ant-Man and the Wasp took on Thor’s brother Loki. In Avengers #3, the Hulk went rogue, and the others went go after him. In Avengers #4, Captain America was thawed out.

September 2, Monday, was Labor Day, the symbolic, if not meteorological, end of Summer. At 6:30 PM U.S. Eastern Time, Walter Cronkite, who had become the anchor of The CBS Evening News the year before, began the broadcast by saying, "Good evening from our CBS newsroom in New York, on this, the first broadcast of network television's first half-hour news program." Cronkite would remain the anchor until 1981.

The first show included a prerecorded segment of Cronkite's interview with President John F. Kennedy, live from the Kennedy Compound in Hyannis Port, on Massachusetts' Cape Cod. He asked JFK about his 1964 re-election campaign (on who his opponent would be, he said, "There are a good many of them"), civil rights, the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, and the U.S. role in the civil role in Vietnam.

JFK said something that has led people to think that, eventually, he would have pulled U.S. troops out: "In the final analysis, it is their war. They are the ones who have to win it or lose it. We can help them, we can give them equipment, we can send our men out there as advisers, but they have to win it, the people of Viet-Nam, against the Communists."

But, next, he said something that made others think that he would have kept the troops in for the long hault: "All we can do is help, and we are making it very clear, but I don't agree with those who say we should withdraw. That would be a great mistake. I know people don't like Americans to be engaged in this kind of an effort. Forty-seven Americans have been killed in combat with the enemy, but this is a very important struggle even though it is far away. We took all this -- made this effort to defend Europe. Now Europe is quite secure. We also have to participate -- we may not like it -- in the defense of Asia.

Over the months of September, October and November 1963, JFK would deepen the U.S. effort in Vietnam. Would he have continued that in 1964, knowing that he had to get re-elected? Would he have taken a 1964 win as a mandate to keep it going? Would he have taken a 1964 win as a mandate to get out of Vietnam safely, since he could tell people he was "chickening out" that the people were behind him?

Because of the events of November 22, 1963, we will never know.

*

Jacqueline McDonnell made a living as a backup singer, and had one hit record, under the name Robin Ward: It was titled "Wonderful Summer," but it wasn't released until November. In December, it reached the Top 20. Perhaps, in the wake of the Kennedy assassination, people had already begun to be nostalgic for an era that had been lost.

A few weeks later, The Beatles came, and people began to feel good again.

Monday, August 28, 2023

Things Aren't Looking Good for My Teams

After dropping 2 out of the 3 to the execrable Tampa Bay Rays -- and that's a comment on their character, though they've also fallen from their exalted early-season perch -- the Yankees are now 62-68. This means they will have to go 20-12 the rest of the way, just to finish the season above .500.

That's a 101-win pace.

For this Yankee team.

I don't think so.

*

Someone wrote on a Yankee-themed Facebook page: "I was just watching the replay of yesterday’s game and Boone’s post game presser was depressing. He looks and sounds like a defeated man. I think he’s been told he’s gone. I almost felt sorry for him but then I realized that he is partially responsible for the state of this team so screw him."

If this guy is right, and Aaron Boone knows he's going to be fired after the season, why doesn't he just go now? Seriously: More people would respect him for getting out of a bad relationship than would call him a quitter.

And who is Brian Cashman going to get to replace Boone? Who is willing to take Cashman's orders and Hal Steinbrenner's money, while subverting his own ideas about managing?

*

Across town, the Mets aren't doing any better, despite setting a new record for highest MLB payroll ever. Proving that it's not how much you spend, it's how wisely.

The Mets also announced that, next season, they'll retire the Number 16 of Dwight Gooden and the Number 18 of Darryl Strawberry.

Met fans: The Yankees retire too many numbers. It devalues the honor.

Also Met fans: Finally, Dwight Gooden and Darryl Strawberry are getting their numbers retired.

Yankee Fans: We've got 20 honorees for 27 titles. You've now got 8 honorees for 2 titles. (Note: These numbers do not include managers.) You've got Bud Harrelson in your team Hall of Fame. We don't have Bucky Dent in Monument Park. Also, why didn't you retire Gary Carter's number while he was, you know, still alive? Oh, by the way: Doc and Darryl did more for us than they did for you.

*

My Alma Mater, East Brunswick High School, had its earliest football game ever last Friday night, losing to Franklin, a school only 2 towns away, but in a different County.

At least we have a home field to play on this year: Last year, we had to play all our games on the road, because a hurricane had damaged our artificial turf, which was all of 15 years old. I thought part of the point of the plastic stuff was that it was cheaper to take care of than real grass.

And Arsenal dropped 2 points they shouldn't have on Saturday, allowing Fulham -- the West London team is not exactly a powerhouse -- to draw with them at the Emirates.

And the Red Bulls stink, having just lost to Inter Miami, which was the worst team in MLS until they signed Lionel Messi.

Rutgers won't be any good. Again.

Things aren't looking good for my teams.

How soon until the Devils start up?

August 28, 1963: The March On Washington

August 28, 1963, 60 years ago: The March On Washington for Jobs and Freedom is held at the Lincoln Memorial. A crowd usually listed as 250,000 or 300,000 attends.

It is organized by A. Philip Randolph, the leading figure of the black wing of America's labor movement, who had canceled a similar march in 1941, after getting concessions from President Franklin D. Roosevelt; and Bayard Rustin, who had organized the anti-segregation Freedom Rides in 1961.

Mahalia Jackson, then America's greatest living singer of gospel music, sang "How I Got Over." Marian Anderson, who had sung at the Lincoln Memorial in an Easter concert before 75,000 in 1939, sang "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands."

Joan Baez sang "We Shall Overcome," Bob Dylan sang, "Only a Pawn in Their Game," and, then a couple, together they sang Bob's song "When the Ship Comes In." Peter, Paul and Mary sang "If I Had a Hammer" and Bob's song "Blowin' in the Wind." Odetta sang "I'm On My Way."

Other celebrities on hand: Singers Josephine Baker, Harry Belafonte, Sammy Davis Jr., Diahann Carroll, Lena Horne, Judy Garland and Bobby Darin; actors Sidney Poitier, Marlon Brando, Burt Lancaster, James Garner, Robert Ryan, Rita Moreno, married couple Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, married couple Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, and, surprising many people only old enough to remember him as a conservative and a gun-rights advocate, Charlton Heston; novelist James Baldwin; and baseball trailblazer Jackie Robinson.

The speakers were, in order: Randolph; Walter Reuther, the President of the United Auto Workers (UAW), who'd been bringing black leaders into the labor movement since the 1930s; Roy Wilkins, the Executive Director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); John Lewis, the Chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); Daisy Bates, a journalist in Little Rock, Arkansas, who had aided the Little Rock Nine in 1957; Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, of the United Presbyterian Church and the National Council of Churches; Floyd McKissick, the National Director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); Whitney Young, President of the National Urban League; and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Chairman of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

Dr. King's speech turned out to be the highlight of the demonstration. Already famous since his role in the Montgomery Bus Boycott in Alabama in 1955 and '56, he had written Letter from Birmingham Jail earlier in the year, so his speech was highly anticipated.

Early in his speech, he said some things that many white Americans did not want to hear -- and probably still don't, because they are largely still true:

In a sense, we have come to our Nation’s Capital to cash a check. When the architects of our great republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir.
This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men, would be guaranteed the inalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given its colored people a bad check, a check that has come back marked "insufficient funds."
But we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt. We refuse to believe that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of opportunity of this nation. So we have come to cash this check, a check that will give us upon demand the riches of freedom and security of justice.
A little later, he said, confronting the differing challenges of South and North:
We cannot be satisfied as long as a colored person in Mississippi cannot vote, and a colored person in New York believes he has nothing for which to vote.
No, no, we are not satisfied, and we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.
When he seemed to be wrapping up, Mahalia Jackson remembered a speech he had given a few weeks earlier, at Cobo Hall in Detroit, in which he spoke of a dream he had. She said, "Martin, tell them about the dream." He did:
I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that, one day, this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: "We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal."
I have a dream that, one day, out in the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slaveowners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood.

I have a dream that, one day, even the state of Mississippi, a State sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice.


I have a dream that my four little children will, one day, live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. I have a dream today.

He went on a little longer with this point. And his closing was unforgettable: 

And if America is to be a great nation, this must become true. So let freedom ring from the hilltops of New Hampshire. Let freedom ring from the mighty mountains of New York. Let freedom ring from the heightening Alleghenies of Pennsylvania. Let freedom ring from the snow-capped Rockies of Colorado. Let freedom ring from the curvaceous slopes of California.

But, not only that, let freedom ring from Stone Mountain of Georgia. Let freedom ring from Lookout Mountain of Tennessee. Let freedom ring from every hill and molehill of Mississippi.

"My country, 'tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing. Land where my fathers died. Land of thy pilgrims' pride. From every mountainside, let freedom ring."

When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every tenement and every hamlet, from every State and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old spiritual, "Free at last, free at last. Thank God Almighty, we are free at last."

Watching the speech on television, President John F. Kennedy told the others in the room, "He's damn good." Afterward, Dr. King was among the figures from the demonstration invited to meet him at the White House.

Martin Luther King was assassinated in 1968. Walter Reuther was killed in a plane crash in 1970, which may have been the result of sabotage, and thus also an assassination. Whitney Young lived until 1971, A. Philip Randolph until 1979, Roy Wilkins until 1981, Eugene Carson Blake until 1985, Floyd McKissick until 1991, and Daisy Bates until 1999.

The last survivor among the speakers was John Lewis. Among the victims of the police attack on civil rights demonstrators in Selma, Alabama in 1965, he was elected to Congress from an Atlanta-based district in 1986, and led anniversary celebrations at the Lincoln Memorial and at Selma's Edmund Pettus Bridge for as long as he could, until he made his march to Heaven in 2020.

In another speech, Dr. King said, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice." Some of his dream has come true. This nation is the better for it. But hardly all of it. And, in many ways, the nation still suffers for that.

*

I don't know why this demonstration was scheduled for a Wednesday afternoon, instead of a weekend. There were baseball games scheduled for this day. The Yankees beat the Boston Red Sox, 4-1 at Yankee Stadium. The Yankees hit no home runs. The only Boston run came on a homer by Dick Stuart, the slugging 1st baseman whose fielding was so bad, he was known as "Dr. Strangeglove."

Whitey Ford pitched a complete game, outpitching Earl Wilson. In spite of the Red Sox' poor record on race relations, a year earlier, pitching for them, Wilson became the 1st black pitcher to throw a no-hitter in the American League. (The 1st in the National League was Sam Jones of the Chicago Cubs, in 1959. Like an earlier white Yankee pitcher named Sam Jones, he was known as Sad Sam.)

And the Mets lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates, 7-2 at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh.

Monday, August 21, 2023

The Sky's the Limit

The Yankees have been swept. At home. By the Red Sox. Every time we think this bunch of gutless wonders has hit rock bottom, they dig deeper.

On Friday night, Jhony Brito got torched for 7 runs in the 1st 2 innings, and The Scum cruised to an 8-3 win. On Saturday afternoon, Gerrit Cole proved that even he was not immune, allowing 6 in the 1st 4. The Yankees lost, 8-1, getting only 2 hits: A home run by Aaron Judge in the 6th inning, and a single by Greg Allen in the 7th.

And then yesterday afternoon, they got a decent start by Clarke Schmidt, but the game went back and forth, and was tied 5-5 after 8 innings. Clay Holmes was just not quite good enough to allow a run, and the Yankees lost, 6-5.

George Steinbrenner must be wishing he could hold a "reverse séance," so he can tear into his son Hal, Brian Cashman, Aaron Boone and the players. I'm sure he's asking the Vince Lombardi question: "What the hell's goin' on out here?"

What's goin' on is that, with the season 76 percent done, the Yankees are 60-64, including 8 straight losses. They are 17 games out of 1st place, 9 games out of the last American League Playoff spot. They are set for their 1st miss of the Playoffs in 7 years, and their worst season in 31 years.

Let's look at the on-base percentages, for this team that was built on "Bomb the opposition out of the yard, who needs pitching": Aaron Judge .407, Gleyber Torres .335, Greg Allen .333, Anthony Rizzo (injured) .328, Oswald Peraza .328, Billy McKinney .320, Isiah Kiner-Falefa .318, DJ LeMahieu .315, Willie Calhoun .309, Anthony Volpe .293, Jake Bauers .289, Harrison Bader .286, Giancarlo Stanton .281, Kyle Higashioka .272, Oswaldo Cabrera .270, Aaron Hicks (traded) .263, Jose Trevino (injured) .257, Josh Donaldson (injured) .225, Franchy Cordero .211, Ben Rortvedt .208.

Cashman thought he was building a new Murderers' Row. This team can't even fucking jaywalk.

With the condition of the team's starting rotation (which I'll get back to in a moment), we need a strong bullpen. We don't have one, in large part because we have no closer. Saves: Clay Holmes 16, Michael King 6, Wandy Peralta 4, Ron Marinaccio 2, and 1 each for Ian Hamilton, Tommy Kahnle, Ryan Weber (injured) and Deivi Garcia.

Finally, the injuries. This team can't stay healthy. Of the 5 men who were supposed to be in the starting rotation, only Gerrit Cole has avoided the Injured List. His ERA is 3.03. Every other pitcher who has started at least 6 games for the Yankees this season has an ERA of 4.86 or higher.

And the lineup? Volpe has played in all 124 games. Torres has missed only 1. Take everybody else who has played the most games at a particular position for the Yankees this season, and they have averaged missing 39 games, or 31 percent of the season -- nearly 1/3rd.

Cliché Alert: This is the team that Brian Cashman built. And it is the team for which Aaron Boone stands in as manager, though he seems to only follow Cashman's orders.

When Cashman threw four All-Stars -- outfielder Carlos Beltrán and pitchers Aroldis Chapman, Andrew Miller and Ivan Nova -- away for countless "prospects" at the trading deadline is 2016, we were told it was to "rebuild the farm system." Even though our top 5 farm teams all made the Playoffs that year.

It's been 7 years. That farm system should have a bumper crop by now. Instead, its biggest product has been Gleyber Torres, and we never know if he's going to be any damn good on any given day.

Brian Cashman has thrown 7 years away. It is time to throw him away. And start over. Tear it all down. Blow it all up. "Break up the Yankees," to use an expression from when the Yankees were feared. Use your own analogy.

But Hal Steinbrenner won't do that. Because he's still making money. Even though the Yankees won't make the Playoffs this season, he's still making money off of attendance, concessions and parking revenue. And if regular fans don't show up? He'll still be making money off of luxury boxes and YES Network TV ratings. He doesn't care enough to remove Cashman. He doesn't have to care.

George cared: He liked to say: "Winning is second to me, only to breathing."

He breathed his last in 2010. Since then, 14 seasons, the Yankees have reached the AL Championship Series 5 times, but haven't won a Pennant, much less a World Series.

Nobody fears the Yankees anymore. Except their own fans.

And still, the team digs deeper.

In 1979, the Knicks were at a similar point, and perhaps their best player at the time, Micheal Ray Richardson, seemed to channel Yankee Legend Yogi Berra, or perhaps a recent Yankee player, Mickey Rivers, and told the media, "The ship be sinking." Asked, "How low can it go?" he said, "The sky's the limit."

How low can it go?

Someone once said, "Don't tell me the sky's the limit, when there are footprints on the Moon."

First of all, it's been over half a century since man set foot on the Moon. Solar wind has erased the footprints. Second of all, what's above the Moon? More sky.

In that great ballpark in the sky, George Steinbrenner, and all the departed Yankee greats going back to Babe Ruth, must be shaking their heads in despair.

How low can they go? Do we really want to know?

Thursday, August 17, 2023

It Is, But Hadn't Ought to Be

Today is August 17. The Major League Baseball regular season is three-quarters over. And the New York Yankees are 60-61.

They are below .500 at this point of the season for the 1st time since 1992, which is also when they last finished a season at below .500. That was 31 years ago. Almost a third of a century. 

To give you an idea of how long ago that was: George Bush was President. The father, not the son. Joe Biden had probably already given up on the idea of being President. Donald Trump was between his 1st and 2nd marriages, and the worst thing we thought he'd done was call for the death penalty for 5 innocent men.

How long ago was it? Red Barber, Charlie Gehringer and Roy Campanella were still alive. Of the current 30 Major League Baseball teams, 2 did not yet exist, 2 only existed on paper, 1 was in another city, and only 9 are playing in the same stadium today.

Commissioner Rob Manfred was a lawyer working for MLB. Brian Cashman was the Yankees' assistant farm system director. Aaron Boone had just started his senior year at the University of Southern California.

How long ago was it? The Internet was barely a rumor for most of us: We were calling it "the information superhighway." Mobile phones could not yet fit in your pocket. There had been 3 Star Wars movies, 6 Star Trek movies, and 3 Star Trek shows (and that's if you count The Animated Series). Superman still hadn't died and come back yet. Seinfeld was just becoming a hit. Friends hadn't debuted. Sinéad O'Connor was still considered a rising star. Kim Kardashian was 11 years old. Lady Gaga was 6. Margot Robbie was 2. Harry Styles hadn't been born yet. Nor had any members of BTS.

Bill Dickey, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle were still alive. Phil Rizzuto was still broadcasting for the Yankees. Derek Jeter had just been drafted by the team. And Aaron Judge had just been born.

In 2023, the Yankees are 14 games out of 1st place. "Big deal," you say: "They were 14 games out of 1st place in 1978, and they won it." That was on July 20. This is August 17. They're even 6 1/2 games out of the last Playoff spot.

Every single relief pitcher is a crapshoot as to whether he's going to be any damn good that day. Every starting pitcher except Gerrit Cole is that, and also a crapshoot as to whether he's still going to be healthy next week. Same with the entire lineup. Having Judge be healthy again hasn't mattered.

The Yankees are scoring 4.25 runs per game, 10th out of 15 teams in the American League. They have 76 stolen bases, 10th. Their collective on-base percentage is .306, 11th. Slugging percentage, .400 even, 10th. They've grounded into 95 double plays, 3rd. Their fielding percentage is .985, 11th. They've made 66 errors, 5th.

They have 5 walkoff wins. They also have 8 walkoff losses. They are 10-18 in 1-run games, and 5-8 in extra innings.

These guys are not winners. They are not, as Boone likes to call them, "grinders." They certainly are not, as Boone once put it, "fucking savages in that box."

Remember the movie Major League? The list of Spring Training invitees? A member of the team's board of directors says, "I never heard of half of these guys." The implication being, "If they were good enough to make the major leagues, I would have heard of them." He adds, "And the ones I do know are way past their prime!" The general manager adds, "Most of these guys never had a prime." Sounds like a team that Brian Cashman would have assembled.

At the same point in the season that the Yankees are at now, the manager tells the GM, "60-61 is not a record to be proud of." The GM, "With this team, it's a miracle." The manager disagrees, saying the team should be better.

As it turned out, he was right. The Yankees? Of course, they should be better than 60-61. But half of these guys are past their prime, and the other half shouldn't be on the roster. It's Aaron Judge, Gerrit Cole, maybe 5 current Giancarlo Stantons, and 18 guys named Billy McKinney.

It has been 14 years since the New York Yankees have won an American League Pennant, much less a World Series. Since that time, they are 30-37 in postseason games, including 7-20 in the AL Championship Series.

Cashman has been the general manager through all of this. And since the Capitulation of 2016, designed to "rebuild the farm system" and achieve a championship team of "Baby Bombers," it's 21-23 in postseason games, 5-12 in the ALCS.

The consensus seems to be that, as long as the fans are coming out, and the Yankees are still making the Playoffs, then he's making money, and he's satisfied with the job that Cashman is doing. Cashman has replaced Joe Girardi with Aaron Boone, because Girardi got tired of being a yes-man. And he might replace Boone after this season with another yes-man. Well, as I've said before: Why fire the doll and keep the ventriloquist? I think we now know which one's the dummy: Hal.

The great poet John Greenleaf Whitter wrote, "For all sad words of tongue and pen, the saddest are these, 'It might have been.'"

To which Bret Hart wrote, "More sad are these we daily see: 'It is, but hadn't ought to be.'"

And now, with the Yankees in this unenviable position, we have the eternal enemy, the Boston Red Sox, coming in.

As they say in Star Wars, I've got a bad feeling about this.

August 17, 2013: NBC Begins Broadcasting the Premier League

Rebecca Lowe, flanked by the Men In Blazers:
Michael Davies (left) and Roger Bennett
#LivingTheDream

August 17, 2013, 10 years ago: NBC begins broadcasting soccer games of England's Premier League in America. This leads to an explosion of fandom for the League, and the sport in general, in the U.S.

Let me tell you what the American media's coverage of soccer was like in America when I grew up, in the 1970s and '80s:

* If your metropolitan area had a team is the North American Soccer League, one of the local independent stations -- that is, not affiliated with 1 of the 3 major networks of the time, NBC, CBS or ABC -- might broadcast their games, but probably handle them the same way they handled the NBA and the NHL: Broadcasting them on tape delay instead of live, and often at 11:30 at night.

* Every year, ABC Wide World of Sports would broadcast England's FA Cup Final, and the European Cup Final (the tournament now known as the UEFA Champions League) -- also on tape delay. (The FA Cup Final having been played earlier in the day, Saturday, but the European Cup Final having been played the preceding Wednesday.) And, when the World Cup or the European championships were held, ABC would broadcast a highlight show, followed by the Final, which, if the time zone worked out right, could be live.

* Magazines like Sports Illustrated and Time might have mentions of major results, days after the fact.

* If you found a newsstand that sold out-of-town and foreign periodicals, you could get a British newspaper on a 2-or-3-day delay, and get the results of Saturday's games on Monday or Tuesday.

* But the only way you could get a broadcast of a Football League Division One game, or a game in a European league, was through "ham radio": Find a fellow fan of said team, in the city in question, and have him put his ham radio microphone next to his regular radio's speaker.

And that was about it. At the dawn of the 21st Century, the growth of cable and satellite TV allowed bars in cities with expatriate populations, including New York, to broadcast the games live. Other than that, if you were a fan of a particular team in England, or elsewhere in Europe, and you wanted to watch them, you had to pay through the nose to your cable company to get the games yourselves, or go to one of those bars, or else you were out of luck, Jack.

By the time I began to get interested in Europeans soccer, following the 2006 World Cup, the tide had begun to turn. American cable systems began to get British networks like Sky Sports, Ireland's Setanta Sports, and Qatar-based beIN Sports, which broadcast games from France, Spain and Italy.

And so, fans like me would go to places like Nevada Smith's (R.I.P.) in New York's East Village, the Phoenix Landing in Cambridge outside Boston, the Globe Tavern in Chicago, the Fox and Hound in Los Angeles, the Mad Dog in the Fog in San Francisco, and various outlets of the Fadó chain (most of them now gone, though the ones in Philadelphia and Atlanta remain open). We would get out of bed early to catch a 10:00 AM start, because of the 5-hour time difference between New York and London. And if you were on the Pacific Coast, well, one of the earliest U.S.-based Arsenal blogs came out of Seattle, and was titled 7AM Kickoff.

At first, the vast majority of Americans watching were fans of one of the teams then comprising the "Big Four": In descending order, Manchester United, Liverpool, West London team Chelsea, and North London team Arsenal. This was because they were the most successful at the time, and thus the most shown on TV, just as NFL fans of the 1970s became fans of Dallas, Pittsburgh, Miami and the Whatever City They're In Now Raiders, because they were on TV and winning when their local team might not have been.

There were a few fans who had been indoctrinated into watching other teams, usually by expats they'd met at such bars. But if you were a fan of Man United's neighbors Manchester City, Liverpool's neighbors Everton, Arsenal's neighbors Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United, or another Premier League team, perhaps Birmingham's Aston Villa or Newcastle United, you were part of a special breed indeed, who got in on the ground floor of this phenomenon, before the explosion of watching possibilities.

Finally, NBC decided to strike while the iron was hot, and allowed its various sub-networks to broadcast the games. As with American football, they had a studio show to do pregame, halftime and postgame analysis.

Unusually, it was hosted by a woman, Rebecca Lowe, a West London native who had attended the private Mercersburg Academy in Pennsylvania for a time, and was familiar with American culture; and included American goalie Tim Howard, and "The Two Robbies," former Middlesbrough midfielder Robin Mustoe and former Wimbledon FC midfielder Robbie Earle.

The games themselves were usually broadcast by names familiar to English audiences, such as Martin Tyler, Peter Drury and Arlo White, with color commentary by former players like Arsenal's Lee Dixon and Chelsea's Graeme Le Saux.

They would have postgame wrapup shows like Premier League Goal Zone. For a while, timing it just right as the Emirati sheiks had bought Man City and poured enough money into the team to start winning trophies, they had Manchester Monday, showing highlights of both Manc teams. (There was no corresponding show for the London teams, of which there were too many; or the Birmingham teams, Aston Villa and Birmingham City; or the Merseyside teams, Liverpool and Everton; or the North-East teams, Newcastle United, Sunderland and Middlesbrough.)

And then, starting in 2014, came Men In Blazers. This was an extension of a podcast done by Michael Davies (and that's pronounced DAY-viss, as if there were no E in there, not DAY-veez), from Southeast London, who abandoned his local team Crystal Palace to support Chelsea; and Roger Bennett, from Liverpool, and an Everton fan. "Davo," who got his start as a TV producer, is the straight man; "Rog," who spent a Summer in Chicago as a teenager, and went back to America as soon as he could and has embraced our country so much he titled his memoir Reborn In the U.S.A., is the funny one.

(Reborn In the U.S.A. is a terrific book, showing just how stark a Liverpool boyhood in the 1970s and '80s, especially for a Jewish kid in a largely Irish-Catholic city, could be. Rog really found himself in America. The weird thing about the book is that he hardly mentions soccer at all, talking more about his love of Chicago's Bears, White Sox and Blackhawks -- but not the Bulls, as Michael Jordan was just getting started.)

Davo and Rog show highlights, make pithy comments, and do interviews with soccer personalities and American celebrities who happen to love one PL team or another. Davo usually doesn't taunt Rog over Chelsea's success and/or Everton's misery. But let the record show that, in 2022 and 2023, Rog celebrated Everton's avoidance of relegation more than Davo has celebrated any of Chelsea's achievements.

Through NBC's coverage, it is no longer unusual to see Americans wearing English team shirts, caps, scarves, jackets, and so on. And as Man City and Leicester City have won League titles and stayed in the League's elite (until Leicester just got relegated in 2023), and Tottenham have improved, while the former Big Four teams have each had bad years (though each of them, except Man United, have since improved), being an American and a fan of a team not in the former Big Four, while still unusual, is no longer a big deal.

NBC has done what previous TV networks, Pelé, David Beckham, and even the U.S. team's performances in the 1994, 2002 and 2010 World Cups couldn't do: It has made Americans embrace soccer, the world's game -- as Pelé put it, "the beautiful game."

Wednesday, August 16, 2023

August 16, 1948: Babe Ruth Dies

The last known photo of Babe Ruth, taken July 29, 1948.
Steve Broidy of Allied Artists movie studio, which had produced
the recent film The Babe Ruth Storypresents Ruth with a check
for the Ruth Foundation for underprivileged children.

August 16, 1948, 75 years ago: Babe Ruth dies at 8:01 PM at Memorial Hospital, now Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, at 1275 York Avenue in the Yorkville section of the Upper East Side of Manhattan. The cause was throat cancer. He lived for 53 years, 6 months and 10 days.

This past June 29 -- the anniversary of my father's death, at 71 -- I surpassed the age that Ruth lived to be.

For the last few years of his life, Ruth lived at 345 West 88th Street, between West End Avenue (11th Avenue below Central Park West) and Riverside Drive. From there, there was a view of General Grant National Memorial, the final resting place of Ulysses S. Grant, the leading Union General of the American Civil War (1861-65), and the 18th President of the United States (1869-77). Grant and Ruth had the same cause of death: Too many cigars led to throat cancer.

In 1946, Ruth began experiencing severe pain over his left eye and had difficulty swallowing. In November, he entered French Hospital in New York for tests, which revealed that he had an inoperable malignant tumor, at the base of his skull and in his neck.

He wasn't told he had cancer, because the doctors and his wife, Claire, didn't want to depress him with what was then considered a sure death sentence. But he wasn't stupid. At one point, he was taken to Memorial Hospital, and he asked his doctor, who was with him, "That's the hospital for cancer, isn't it?" The doctor told him, "Cancer and allied diseases." It was a poor save, and he knew it. (The complex is now Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, or MSK for short.)

His name and fame gave him access to experimental treatments, and he was one of the first cancer patients to receive both drugs and radiation treatment simultaneously. Having lost 80 pounds, he was discharged from the hospital in February 1947, and went to Florida to recuperate. He returned to New York and Yankee Stadium after the season started.

Commissioner Happy Chandler proclaimed April 27, 1947, Babe Ruth Day around the major leagues. The Sporting News noted that the festivities represented only the second time in history that every major-league city simultaneously honored a single player. The 1st player was professional baseball pioneer Harry Wright, honored with preseason exhibition games on April 13, 1896, after he had died on October 3, 1895.

The plan was that the center of the day’s activities would be, fittingly, Yankee Stadium, and that other clubs would hold “appropriate ceremonies.” Japan also honored him that day, in ceremonies in Tokyo and Osaka. This was less than 2 years after Japanese troops, hearing American soldiers yelling, "To Hell with Hirohito!" yelled back, "To Hell with Babe Ruth!" (They had loved "Babu Rusu" on the 1934 MLB players' tour of Japan, and placing him on the same level with their Emperor was a mark of respect."

The most significant observance was at Yankee Stadium. A number of teammates and others spoke in honor of Ruth. Among those who spoke was the Archbishop of New York, Francis Cardinal Spellman. Ruth, who had been Catholic enough to never divorce his 1st wife (Helen Woodford died in a house fire in 1929), but not so Catholic as to never cheat on her, personally asked Spellman to come, as he hadn't wanted to. In his speech, Spellman called Ruth "a manly leader of youths in America."

Ruth briefly addressed the crowd of almost 58,339, addressing the day's sub-subject, the youth of America. But the treatments had left his voice a soft, raspy whisper:

Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen. You know how pained my voice sounds? Well, it feels just as bad.

You know this baseball game of ours comes up from the youth. That means the boys. And after you're a boy and grow up to know how to play ball, then you come to the boys you see representing themselves today in your national pastime, the only real game, I think, in the world: Baseball.

As a rule, some people think if you give them a football, or a baseball, or something like that, naturally, they're athletes right away. But you can't do that in baseball. You've gotta start from way down at the bottom, when you're six or seven years of age. You can't wait until you're fifteen or sixteen. You gotta let it grow up with you. And if you're successful, and you try hard enough, you're bound to come out on top, just like these boys have come to the top now.

There's been so many lovely things said about me, and I'm glad that I've got the opportunity to thank everybody. Thank you.

Around this time, developments in chemotherapy offered some hope for Ruth. They offered to treat him with pterolyl triglutamate (Teropterin), a folic acid derivative, telling him that it was experimental, and that he may have been the first human subject. He thought that if it helped him, it could help others, and so he tried it. He Ruth showed dramatic improvement during the Summer of 1947, so much so that his case was presented by his doctors at a scientific meeting, without using his name.

He was able to travel around the country, doing promotional work for the Ford Motor Company on American Legion Baseball. He appeared again at another day in his honor at Yankee Stadium, on the last day of the regular season, September 28. He was not well enough to pitch in an old-timers game as he had hoped, so he didn't put on a uniform. So, as on April 27, he wore his camel-hair coat, and posed for pictures, including one with Ty Cobb and Tris Speaker, who did appear in uniform. (Ruth was 52 years old, Speaker 59, Cobb 60. That gathering became an annual tradition, and Old-Timers Day at Yankee Stadium was born, although, officially, Lou Gehrig Day in 1939 is considered the first such day.)

The improvement was only a temporary remission, and by the end of the year, Ruth was unable to help with the writing of his autobiography, The Babe Ruth Story, which was almost entirely ghostwritten. In and out of the hospital in Manhattan, he left for Florida in February 1948, doing what activities he could. After 6 weeks, he returned to New York to appear at a book-signing party. He also traveled to California to witness the filming of the movie based on the book.

On June 5, 1948, a "gaunt and hollowed out" Ruth visited Yale University to donate a manuscript of The Babe Ruth Story to its library. There, he met with future President George H.W. Bush, then the Captain of the Yale baseball team. On June 13, Ruth visited Yankee Stadium for the final time in his life, appearing at the 25th-anniversary celebrations of "The House that Ruth Built." Introduced along with his surviving teammates from 1923, Ruth used a bat as a cane.

On July 26, Ruth left Memorial Hospital to attend the premiere of the film The Babe Ruth Story, with William Bendix in the starring role. There have been a few movies about Ruth, who played himself in The Pride of the Yankees, the 1942 tribute starring Gary Cooper as Lou Gehrig. Another movie about Gehrig was made in 1983. As broadcaster Bob Costas put it, there is one place where Gehrig is not in Ruth's shadow: The movies about Gehrig are good, while the movies about Ruth range from mediocre to awful, and The Babe Ruth Story, with Bendix looking nothing like him, is awful.

Shortly thereafter, he returned to the hospital for the final time. He was barely able to speak. Ruth's condition gradually grew worse, and only a few visitors were permitted to see him, one of whom was an old friend, Ford Frick, once a sportswriter, then President of the National League, and from 1955 to 1965 the Commissioner. He said, "Ruth was so thin it was unbelievable. He had been such a big man and his arms were just skinny little bones, and his face was so haggard."

With thousands of New Yorkers, including many children not old enough to have seen him play, standing vigil outside the hospital during his final days, the last person from baseball to see him was Philadelphia Athletics owner-manager Connie Mack. Both he and Ruth had youth baseball organizations named for them. This was on August 15, 1948, and, in what may have been his last words, Ruth told Mack, "The termites have got me." Writing in his memoir, My 66 Years in the Big Leagues, Mack took this to understand that Ruth knew what they weren't telling him: It was cancer.

The next day, at 8:01 p.m., Ruth died in his sleep at the age of 53. His open casket was placed on display in the rotunda of Yankee Stadium, where it remained for two very hot days, and 77,000 people filed past to pay him tribute. Grown men who had been the kids he so loved walked by. Some of them lifted their own kids up to see him, so that they could truthfully say that they saw Babe Ruth.

His Requiem Mass was celebrated by Spellman at St. Patrick's Cathedral. A crowd estimated at 75,000 waited outside -- in pouring rain.

Claire Ruth died in 1976. She was buried next to the Babe at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, Westchester County, New York. Among the other baseball figures buried there are Billy Martin, Mike Tiernan, Ralph Branca, Sal Yvars, and umpire John McSherry. Also laid to rest there, from sports: New York Giants football team founder Tim Mara and his son and heir Wellington Mara, Los Angeles Rams owner Dan Reeves (no relation to the later NFL coach of the same name), and sportswriters Heywood Broun and Bob Considine.

Show business figures buried there: Comedian Fred Allen, actors James Cagney and Sal Mineo, journalist and What's My Line? panelist Dorothy Kilgallen, and novelist Mary Higgins Clark. Political figures: New York Mayors John P. O'Brien and Jimmy Walker, longtime Bronx Borough President James J. Lyons, Postmaster General James Farley, union leader Mike Quill, Congressman Mario Biaggi and Governor Malcolm Wilson. Also, notorious mobster Dutch Schultz.

Next-door to Gate of Heaven, but in the adjoining town of Valhalla, is Kensico Cemetery. Lou Gehrig and his wife Eleanor are buried there. And Yogi Berra and his wife Carmen are buried in a different Gate of Heaven Cemetery, in East Hanover, Morris County, New Jersey.

Babe Ruth died on August 16, 1948. Elvis Presley died on August 16, 1977. Each man had royal nicknames. Each man had a lot of "hits." Each man was considered the greatest ever at what he did. Each man was especially popular among young people. And each man got fat, and each man died as a result of his excesses. And neither man lived to see a 54th birthday.

One significant difference, though: Among people who didn't know him, Elvis' death was a shock. Ruth took nearly 2 years to die, and everyone knew it was coming.

The Babe's only known biological child, Dorothy Ruth Pirone, was the result of an affair with Juanita Jennings, and was adopted by the Babe and his 1st wife, Helen Woodford. Dorothy wrote a book, My Dad, the Babe. She married twice, had 2 sons and 3 daughters, and died in 1989.

Julia Ruth Stevens was Claire's daughter from her previous marriage. She and Dorothy were raised together, and they appear to have gotten along well. She married 3 times, and had 1 son. Between Dorothy and Julia, the Babe had 14 grandchildren, and his genetic line continues today.

In 2008, at the age of 91, Julia was invited to throw out the ceremonial first ball before the last game at the original Yankee Stadium, "The House That Ruth Built." In 2016, the Boston Red Sox, her father's original team, invited her to Fenway Park to throw out the first ball on her 100th birthday. She died in 2019.