Sunday, October 28, 2012

Coming Back


Coach Milt Gaudet only said that the Rangers had no excuses for the 47 - 0 debacle in Corpus Christi.

The next week was different. Coming back from last week’s loss, on Saturday night at Highlander Stadium, Jesuit romped over Mt. Carmel 30 -14. The game was marked by stellar performances from Class of 1963 team members. Bill Mokry caught 5 passes for a total 95 yards and 2 TDs; Richard Jackson rushed for 63 yards scoring once. Bob Neuhoff kicked, ran, and once passed to Mokry, for 3 conversions worth five points.

Fifty years later last Friday, the Rangers cam back from a close loss to Lake Highlands to win over Richardson Pearce 45 - 7. The comeback tradition continues.

As an off- year election was looming, politics, almost as much of an obsession as football in Texas, was much in the news. Republicans, with John Tower having captured Vice-President Lyndon Johnson’s Senate seat the previous year, were hopeful that Jack Cox could beat John Connally for the open gubernatorial seat. Texas was to prove it was still a Democratic Party state, however. The GOP would have to wait for a few more elections.

In 1962, we still elected governors for 2 years at a time. In 2012, Rick Perry is in the middle of a 4 year terms, but an open Senate seat is up, and, of course, the President is seeking re-election. Unlike the ‘60s, the national campaign is ignoring Texas as a foregone conclusion. The news reports today indicate that 7 crucial states are 50 - 50 in the polls with 10 days to go. (Don’t usually write so many numbers in a paragraph, but sports are sports.)

Weather in Dallas was cloudy, but a little warmer than the present. Highs in the low 70s, lows in the 50s.

President Kennedy announced a deal with Khrushchev over the Cuban missiles. Many of the behind the scenes details would not be made public until later, but those in the know breathed easier. The country came back from the brink.

Life went on about the same for most of us.

How about this high-tech weather map?
 


 

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Not a Good Weekend.


Well, this weekend wasn’t good for the Jesuit Rangers, now or 50 years ago. Friday, Lake Highlands won 20 - 17 with a record breaking 42 yard field goal with four (4) seconds left in the game. The winning kick came after Jesuit missed a 51 yard FG with 17 seconds on the clock, and Lake Highlands set up the game winner with a 40 yard pass. All in all, it seems to have been a thrilling game.

No so a half-century ago when the Rangers had their derrieres kicked and their collective head handed to them by Corpus Christi Miller: 47 - 0. I recall one of our players then remarking that there is a different brand of football played in Corpus. ‘Nuff said about that.

Today, like the same day was in 1962, is the last day of the State Fair. Big Tex was 10, back then. He made it to 60, and then burnt up, with 2 days to go. Not to worry; he’ll be back – just as big. (Those interested might see the story on my other blog www.bobreagan13.com).

Beneath the surface, the news reported a great deal of activity in Washington was taking place under tight security. "Lights Burn Late in Capital Offices" was the lead headline. The next day, of course, was President Kennedy’s announcement of a naval quarantine of Cuba, citing the presence of Soviet offensive missiles on the island. The Cuban Missile Crisis was under way. Many of the cognoscenti have claimed this was the closest we came to nuclear way with the USSR. I reserve judgment on that, but Secretary of State Dean Rusk’s statement that we were "eyeball to eyeball and the other guy blinked" certain gave a popularity boost to JFK when it was all over.

An interesting recent revelation: It seems like former President Eisenhower told Kennedy that Ike didn’t believe the Soviets would start a nuclear war over a U. S. Invasion of Cuba. That conversation is in a recently released recording of a telephone conversation between the two Presidents. For those interested it is in Listening In: The Secret White House Recordings of John F. Kennedy published 9/25/2012 and includes two audio discs. Ike and JFK’s transcript is on p. 158.

There are some op-ed pieces in today’s (Sunday) Dallas Morning News rehashing theories about what the facts and the spin were regarding the Cuban Missile Crisis from a half-century perspective.

Most of us, me included, were uninterested in politics and foreign affairs at the time. Getting through our senior year, football, and girls, not necessarily in that order, were our concerns. We let leaders in far off capitals ensure we had a senior year to get through.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Red River rivalry still kicking (and passing, and running)


Today is the annual and storied Texas vs. Oklahoma football game at the Cotton Bowl. Rode my bike this morning down the Katy Trail to the American Airlines Center. Even at 7:00 a.m. the Victory Plaza was already being set up for the big screen showing of the game, which as usual was sold out. Lost count of the DART buses poised along the streets supplementing the light rail trains to take fans to Fair Park from the expansive parking lots near the Victory Station. Along the trail, the open-air beer gardens near Routh Street were likewise anticipating a busier than usual Saturday. On my way back while crossing Mockingbird Lane, I had a moment of trepidation when I saw an SUV adorned with red and white flags bearing down on me – wearing an orange shirt! It stopped with considerable room to spare; fortunately my orange wasn’t sufficiently burnt. One event was missing: the raucous "pep rally" that used to be held on Commerce Street the evening before the game in the days of yore has petered out over last several decades and what’s left of it has moved to the West End and Victory areas.

Fifty years ago today, the number one rated Texas Longhorns met the Oklahoma Sooners in the same venue. The men in burnt orange prevailed 9 - 6 for the fifth straight over the Big Red. Off the field, things got somewhat raucous, to wit:


 
In 1962 the Katy Trail was the MKT Railroad’s right-of-way. There was a passenger station just north of Knox Street. My mom tells me that when our family came to Dallas from Ohio in 1951, we arrived by a train that rolled over those tracks. The locations of the American Airlines Center and West End were warehouse and industrial areas. One familiar enterprise from those days located there was the Neuhoff Brothers packing plant. The Baker Hotel (across the street from the Adolphus) was the focal point of the informal "pep rally" mentioned above.
 

While the Longhorns were managing a close victory over OU in Dallas, the Jesuit Rangers were in Tulsa skunking Cascia Hall 14 - 0 for their 6th win. The first TD came when Richard Jackson recovered a fumble at the Cascia 37 to set up a drive that ended with a 21 yard pass to Don Erler. Bob Neuhoff kicked the extra point. Jesuit ran for a second touchdown in the 4th quarter.


In other football news, the AFL Dallas Texans beat the Boston Patriots 27 - 7 in Boston. The Cowboys bested the Philadelphia Eagles 41 - 19 on the overworked turf (natural, not astro-) of the Cotton Bowl.

In other news, tense relations with Castro’s Cuba and the Soviet Union continued.

Today, most only know R. L. Thornton as the name of a freeway.  He was the mayor from 1953 - 1961. The Dallas Morning News editorial page 50 years ago praised him for sticking up for Love Field in the face of FAA Administrator Halaby’s call for a regional airport.

 
Love Field is still here, as busy as ever.

Does anyone know what nation Halaby’s daughter became queen of by marriage? I’ll donate an extra $100 to Jesuit’s current Annual Fund if a ‘63 alum tells me by 6:00 p.m. (CDT) October 14, 2012. (Only one extra donation, I haven’t gotten rich yet.)

Sunday, October 7, 2012

State Fair 1962


Fifty years ago yesterday, the State Fair of Texas opened for a two week run. 1962 was Big Tex’s, and according to my mom, my 10th Fair. Martha and I went again in Friday, it was not my 60th Fair, as I missed the rest of the ‘60s except for 1967 and early ‘70s when away at college and in the military service, and one or two other times.

Many of the details are different. In 1962, it opened on Saturday morning rather than Friday, and remain open for two, not three, weeks. The Comet roller coaster was still there. So was the monorail that ran between automobile building and the Midway – that was supposed to be the transportation of the future. The last proponent of that mode was the late Mad Max Goldblatt, Pleasant Grove hardware store owner and City Councilman in the late 1970s - 1980s.

Nearly all of the cars exhibited were American made. The only foreign cars of note on the streets were of German, British, and occasional Italian and French, make. I believe the Datsun (which I understand Nissan Motors is re-introducing soon) made its debut in ‘62.

The movie State Fair with Pat Boone, Ann-Margret, and Bobby Darin that was based on our State Fair of Texas had its debut in 1962.

One major detail difference: I recall in ‘62 nearly all women of any age wore dresses. This year, I only noticed one (and there was not much to it).

The essence of the Fair is the same. Hope to make it many more years to come..
        

On Friday in Waco, the Rangers won 14 -12 over University High. The big play was when Don Erler caught a 23 yard pass to score in the second quarter. The big defensive players were Gilbert Trevino, Steve Seward, and Richard Jackson.

 
Fast forward 50 years, Jesuit beat Richardson Berkner 52 - 7 at home.

Here’s the weather for the ‘62 Fair.