Here are some more thoughts about the Cincinnati Civil Rights Weekend. On the roundtable that I participated in (that may air one of these days on the MLB cable TV network), Harold Reynolds, the broadcaster and former All-Star second baseman, shared his vivid memory of watching on TV with his grandmother and some of his seven older siblings as Hank Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s career HR record. Reynolds emphasized that it was especially meaningful that Aaron hit his epochal homer in 1974 as an Atlanta Brave in Georgia! In accepting his Beacon award at the Saturday afternoon luncheon, Aaron emphasized that he “rode the shoulders of a lot of civil rights people” and couldn’t have hit 755 home runs without them. Read More
PRE-BIRTHDAY MUSINGS ON BASEBALL AND CIVIL RIGHTS PLUS MY LIFE AS AN ANTI-YANKEE BASEBALL NUT
June 26, 2009
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BUILDING BRIDGES IN CINCINNATI
June 22, 2009
Until this past weekend I had never spent any significant time in Cincinnati, the Queen City on the Ohio River located virtually in Kentucky. Though the forecast called for a lot of rain and the humidity was midsummer-like in its oppressiveness, the whims of the weather did not disturb Major League Baseball’s first Read More