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38 – мужність

The mortal enemy of the United States on the day I was born was the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

We were in an arms race with the Soviet Union. We were petrified that some nutty leader would attempt to nuke us into oblivion. 

In a few years, there was a space race to go with it. And the Soviets seemed determined to spread their influence around the globe.

But that nutty leader wouldn’t be Joseph Stalin, who died in 1953, the year before I was born. By April 1954, Nikita Khrushchev had assumed the important job of Communist Party Chairman. 

Any hope that Khrushchev would be a kindler, gentler Soviet leader were crushed in 1956, when he sent troops to end an anti-Communist uprising in Hungary, and vanished in 1961 when the Berlin Wall divided the occupied former German capital.

Every U.S. President from Truman to George H.W. Bush stood fast against the Soviets. In the case of John F. Kennedy, that meant taking us to the brink of nuclear war in 1962 when Khrushchev placed nuclear-capable missiles in Cuba, 90 miles from this country.

It was during Bush’s presidency that the USSR crumbled. The Berlin Wall fell, the Soviet bloc states shed their totalitarian ways and there was a sense that the threat had abated. Now, we could focus on nut cases in the Middle East.

A former KGB agent – someone who was a toddler in Leningrad in 1954 – wended his way to power in Moscow. Vladimir Putin was a required to be a member of the Communist Party when he was serving the Soviets from New Zealand and East Germany. 

But, magically, he foreswore Communism for a form of Russian nationalism that included helping oligarchic capitalists and reclaiming territory that the Soviets controlled up until 1991.

And, from 2017 to 2021, it was no longer the United States standing up to the Russians. Putin had a buddy in President Donald Trump and laid the groundwork for further mischief.

There was however, one leader who was determined to stop him. A former comedian who ascended to the presidency of Ukraine – which had been the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1954.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy took office in 2019 – a year in which he had a very uncomfortable meeting with Trump, who was seeking dirt on potential presidential rival Joe Biden. The meeting led to Trump’s first impeachment, in which he was acquitted.

When Putin sought to expand his Russian empire by retaking Ukraine in 2022, Zelenskyy and the bulk of the Ukrainian people weren’t having it. Expected by the world to capitulate in days, the Ukrainians are still standing. Their courage – мужність in Ukrainian – should be an inspiration to all who believe in democracy and freedom.

It would have surprised my parents if you told them, in 1954, that a place supposedly part of the Soviet Union would stand up to the attempt to recreate something like it in the 21st century.

Here’s the part that would have stunned and saddened them – and most other adult Americans: With Ukraine fighting for its life, politicians in the United States – mostly Republicans following the Putin-apologist Trump – would work to stop providing aid to keep Kyiv fighting.

It goes to show that the Cold War was about fighting Communism, not the historically aggressive stance of the land mass that is Russia. When Russia turned to oligarchic capitalism, too many Americans were happy to support it.

My parents would be as angry as I am.

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39 – THE MUDVILLE TEN

If there was anything people in 1954 would be certain about what life would be like 70 years later, it’s the fact that there are nine starting players in a Major League Baseball game.

And they’d be wrong.

After the bewilderment, it would be your opportunity to explain the designated hitter, or DH.

It was instituted in 1973 by the American League to increase the amount of offense in a game. AL attendance – that includes my parents’ beloved New York Yankees – lagged the National League, which seemed to play a more exciting game of baseball. The National League had Willie Mays, Henry Aaron, Billy Williams and a lot of other sluggers, as well as aggressive players such as Pete Rose and Joe Morgan.

The DH was the American League’s answer to that. It took almost a half-century for the National League to follow suit, boosted toward action by the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020.

Diehard baseball fans, like my parents, had issues with the DH. It seemed like it reduced the pitcher to being a one-way player. And it simplified some of baseball’s strategy – do I pinch hit for a pitching who’s got a good game going but is down a run?

Then, in 2008, Yankee pitcher Chien-Ming Wang, off to a fantastic start in his career, needed to run the bases in a game at Houston, which was then part of the National League. At that time, games in NL parks were played without the DH, a disadvantage to AL teams.

Wang tore up his right foot and needed extensive rehabilitation. It derailed his career and hurt the Yankees’ chances in that season.

As my brother says, my mother was more of a Yankee fan than a baseball fan. When Wang got hurt, the DH became a necessity. We argued about it for the final 11 years of her life.

The DH is one of two rule changes that fundamentally changed major sports.

The other came in basketball.

When there were efforts made to challenge the dominance of the National Basketball Association, upstart leagues introduced a 3-point field goal. It was attained by sinking a basket from a long distance.

The idea was to increase scoring and allow smaller players to have as much impact on the game as the big centers were having in the NBA.

The American Basketball Association, which started play in 1967, introduced three-point baskets (and a red, white and blue basketball). Two years after four ABA teams were absorbed into the NBA, the expanded league introduced the 3-point line. A few years later, it made its way into college basketball.

That rule has made comebacks more feasible in games. And it has produced prolific long-range shooters such as Stephen Curry and Caitlin Clark.

Are games with 3-point baskets and DHs more fun to watch? I don’t know what folks in 1954 would have thought.

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40 – SPARE THE ROD

In 1954, conventional wisdom was that if you wanted to raise a spoiled brat, you would never hit your child.

Corporal punishment was considered necessary at home and in school. It was part of the culture – from the Little Rascals to “The Danny Thomas Show.” 

In the musical “Carousel,” when Billy Bigelow comes back to Earth to make amends for his life, he slaps his daughter when she refuses his gift. But then she tells her mother that the slap felt like a kiss, everybody sings “You’ll Never Walk Alone,” and there isn’t a dry eye in the house.

“Spare the rod, spoil the child” was the operative expression. And for some parents, it still is – corporate punishment is not illegal in any American home unless it is excessive. (The problem becomes, of course, what qualifies as “excessive.”)

But starting in the 1950s, attitudes toward corporal punishment began to change.

I don’t have a definitive answer as to why. But I think the one person who might have set off the anti-spanking revolution is Dr. Benjamin Spock.

His watershed 1946 book, “Baby and Child Care,” encouraged parents to cut their kids some slack. He thought affection and treating each child as an individual was a better way to raise them. And though it took a while, parents began to do that.

There were other factors. The kindly ways of children’s show hosts like Fred Rogers and Bob Keeshan, a.k.a. Captain Kangaroo, were at odds with the stern parent image – and may have influenced grownups. And the fact that violence against children – particularly from guns – makes parents more inclined to make their homes a sanctuary rather than a courtroom.

And then there’s science. The American Academy of Pediatrics says corporal punishment leads to a variety of bad outcomes in children – including impaired development, increased aggressiveness and failure to stop bad behavior in the long term.

In 1979, Sweden became the world’s first country to ban corporal punishment in any setting – home or school. Now, 63 nations prohibit it – from Argentina to France to South Korea to South Africa.

In the United States, only four states – Iowa, Maryland, New Jersey and New York – prohibit corporal punishment in all schools. In 27 other states and the District of Columbia, it’s barred in public schools but allowed in private ones. In 19 states – and the Venn diagram of those states and red political states would have a lot of overlap – physical punishment is allowed in public schools.

The idea of hitting someone you love – especially someone virtually defenseless – seems wrong. It seems cruel. 

But hindsight is perfect. Parents of previous generations had the same goal as we do in the 21st century – raising happy, well-adjusted kids. They had a very different way of doing it, because it was all they knew.

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41 – TAKING CARE OF OLD FOLKS

The oldest of my grandparents turned 59 four days before I was born.

He was not far from retirement age – and that was a big problem.

Because, in 1954, most Americans got their health insurance through the Blue Cross and Blue Shield organizations that worked with employers. Otherwise, you paid private insurance companies for care.

Insurance being what it is, based on risk, the premiums for elderly Americans were higher – at a time in life when their income was reduced to what they got in a pension or through Social Security (imagine how horrible it must have been before Social Security!).

A few years before I was born, President Harry Truman proposed legislation to let the government provide health care insurance to those older than 65. It went nowhere – especially in the post-war period when people thought anything that resembled socialism was a step down the path to communism. 

But when President Lyndon Johnson won a landslide in 1964 and brought an overwhelmingly Democratic Congress into office with him, support for Medicare soared. Legislation tying Medicare to Social Security was signed into law in 1965, with Johnson giving the first Medicare cards to Truman and his wife.

Medicare – and the companion Medicaid for those who need help with financial matters – didn’t solve every health care problem for the elderly. Eligible people need to buy a plan to cover the costs Medicare doesn’t. But it was a vast improvement over what existed before – and why ending or privatizing Medicare is a political third rail.

The same thing is happening to the health care coverage mandated by the Affordable Care Act – a.k.a. Obamacare. As its opponents feared, Americans becoming more dependent on getting care for a lot less – or getting care at all when insurers want to deny coverage because of risk – are more supportive of the act.

I imagine my parents and grandparents would be shocked to know that, yes, I’m on Medicare. They’d also be relieved.

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42 – WHO’S “THEY”?

It’s hard enough explaining the pronoun issue of 2024 to people in 2024. 

Imagine trying to explain it to people in 1954.

There was “he” and “she” for as long as people had spoken the English language. There was little thought given to people who didn’t want to be categorized by either or neither of those two gender pronouns.

And it’s not that the idea of being transgender was nonexistent.

Just 16 months before I was born, the New York Daily News reported the news that World War II veteran George Jorgensen had undergone what’s now called sexual reassignment surgery – and was now Christine Jorgensen.

But Jorgensen indicated she wanted to be a she (she also preferred “transgender” to the then commonly used “transsexual.”).

It wasn’t until this century – as taboos and laws about sexuality, and qualifications for jobs by gender were erased or relaxed – that people began questioning how we should identify people. While most people still prefer “he” or “she,” others wanted something less attachable.

Here’s the problem: What became the norm is what is generally regarded as third person plural – “they.”

It is more than a little confusing. It’s especially confusing when you first refer to an individual as “they” and then refer a group of people as “they.”

I get and respect the idea that there are people who don’t think their gender should affect their identification. I just think that there must be a way to come up with a better word than “they.”

It feels lazy – as though society ran out of words and decided to multipurpose one.

Again, this is not a discussion that would make sense in 1954. Whether it makes sense now is a matter of point of view.

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43 – THE UNIFORM MONDAY HOLIDAY ACT OF 1968

Do you know what date Presidents Day fell on in 1954?

That’s a trick question. It didn’t.

In 1954, there was no Presidents Day. There was a holiday on Friday, February 12 to commemorate Abraham Lincoln’s birthday and a holiday on Monday, February 22 to commemorate George Washington’s.

No matter what day of the week those dates fell in a year, that was the holiday. If February 12 was a Wednesday, that was the day off.

What made that problematic is the idea that it’s hard to go away to celebrate a holiday in the middle of the week. Especially for the mammoth federal workforce.

Now, three-day weekends, that’s cool. If holidays always fall on Monday, you can plan a weekend around leaving Friday night and coming back Monday afternoon. That’s three nights of frolic, or whatever.

So, in 1968, Congress passed and President Lyndon Johnson signed a measure moving certain federal holidays to Monday. In the case of the two presidents’ birthdays in February, they were combined into one holiday on the third Monday of the month. It was called…

Washington’s Birthday.

That’s right. Today’s official holiday is not, according to the federal government, Presidents Day, It’s just named for Washington.

Some states and a lot of people thought that gave short shrift to the man generally regarded as the nation’s greatest president, Lincoln. Hence, the name “Presidents Day,” which is generally how the wall calendar you got for the holidays refers to it.

Strangely, Presidents Day never falls on either Lincoln’s or Washington’s actual birthday.

The act also initially affected three other holidays:

— Memorial Day. It was traditionally May 31 every year. But the 1968 law switched that to the final Monday of May – which could be the 31st, but could also be as early as May 25. (This year, it’s May 28.)

— Columbus Day, which had only been a state holiday, got promoted to federal status. It would always be the second Monday in October – which could be the traditional date of the 12th, when Columbus landed in this hemisphere, but can range from the 8th to the 14th. 

(It also could lose its name if the movement to change the day’s name to Indigenous People’s Day, instead of naming it for a man who oppressed them, gains steam.)

— Veterans Day, traditionally November 11, was moved to the fourth Monday in October, between the 22nd and 28th. 

But that didn’t last long – after only a few years, the holiday reverted to November 11 to sync with the celebration of veterans in other nations who fought together in World War I.

When the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday went into effect in 1986, it was celebrated on the third Monday in January. That meant between January 15 – Dr. King’s actual birthday – and the 21st.

Labor Day was always the first Monday in September and remained so. The proponents of the legislation dared not legislate Independence Day, Thanksgiving (the fourth Thursday of November), Christmas and New Year’s. 

Have a nice holiday!

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44 – HILLARY

On the day I was born, my Mom would have smiled if she was told who she voted for President of the United States in 2016.

Of course, she would have also been disappointed by the outcome. A lot.

Hillary Rodham was a 6-year-old girl in Park Ridge, Illinois, in April 1954. What probably would have shocked her that day was if you told this daughter of conservative Republicans that she would become the symbol of liberalism for a time.

The journey will make for an epic movie someday. She married Bill Clinton, a fellow Yale Law School grad. He became governor of Arkansas and then President of the United States, telling people that they were getting “two for the price of one” because of how accomplished she was.

While First Lady, she won a Senate seat from New York. She sought the presidency in 2008, losing the Democratic nomination to Barack Obama, who named her Secretary of State. She ran for president again in 2016 and lost to Vladimir Putin’s pet pooch, in part because Putin hated her guts.

In the process, Hillary Clinton became symbolic of the progress – and the sometimes the lack of – toward women’s equality over the course of the last 70 years. She epitomized America Ferrara’s monologue in “Barbie” – criticized for dumb crap like her hairdo or the fact that she was “too assertive,” something you never hear ascribed to men.

She stood by her husband when he was forced to admit his infidelity for the world to see. And while many thought she would leave him when it was politically advantageous to do so, they’re still together.

My Mom was so proud that day in 2016 when she cast her absentee ballot for Hillary Rodham Clinton. One of her great disappointments was that she never saw a woman become President.

Hopefully, her granddaughter won’t say the same thing.

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45 – RACIAL NOMENCLATURE

On the day I was born, my parents would have respectfully given the same answer to describe the race of Jackie Robinson, Ella Fitzgerald and Nobel Peace Prize winner Dr. Ralph Bunche.

Negroes.

The three people named would likely have said the same thing. That was the preferred word for Black people up until the mid-1960s. If you listen to speeches by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and President John F. Kennedy, two pivotal figures in the push for civil rights, that’s the word they use, too. 

Describing a race of people, particularly in the United States, has been awkward – in part because this country has the awkward problem of having enslaved or discriminated against that race for most of its history.

Why awkward? Consider this: For much of the first years of my life, older people would consider “black” offensive and preferred to be called Negroes.

“Black” came into vogue during the tumultuous years of the 1960s, as many of the more outspoken leaders came to see Negro as somehow submissive.

Among those leading the way on this was someone who would have seemed a surprise to my Italian-American parents: a recently paroled thief from Nebraska who was born Malcolm Little.

Like many Black people disillusioned by bigots’ invocation of Christianity to promote racism, Malcolm X turned to Islam as a source of guidance and a way to defy norms.

But converting to Islam was not new for Black people. Some of the jazz greats of the era – McCoy Tyner and Art Blakey among them – had either briefly or permanently changed religions.

In the ’60s and ’70s, the conversions became more prominent. Heavyweight boxing champ Cassius Clay became Muhammad Ali. Basketball star Lew Alcindor became Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

By the late ’60s, Black was the more acceptable word to describe the race. But Malcolm was also pivotal in the next shift in nomenclature, referring to himself as “Afro-American.” 

The term “African American” became the norm in the ’80s, particularly during the presidential campaigns of the Rev. Jesse Jackson. At the Associated Press, it became the preferred term – although the style was changed to allow a person being written about to be called by the term he or she preferred.

After the 2020 murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer and the subsequent protests across America, the term “Black” came back into more common usage, including the capitalization of the B, which had been missing before.

It all would have been a little head spinning to someone hearing about it in 1954. But the one word that would be the common theme would be respect. 

Respecting others is the first step in getting it all right.

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46 – CHECK, OUT

When was the last time you wrote a check?

In 1954, the answer was “this week,” “last week” or “just now.” 

The only other way at the time to pay your bills or for goods and services was cash – credit cards, something we’ll discuss in the weeks ahead, were not yet in vogue.

As a kid, I was fascinated by check writing. One time, when my Dad fixed a toy of mine, my mother gave me an old blank check that I wrote out to pay him – he had that check into the 21st century.

But the last check I remember writing was at the beginning of last month. The town where I live penalizes homeowners with a surcharge for electronic payments. And given that I pay enough for its lousy delivery of services, I wrote a check and schlepped to Town Hall to put it in a box for property tax collection.

The fact is the way we pay bills today would be a wonder to adults of 1954. On a computer. On your phone. Using Zelle or some other surrogate service. Instantly.

Banks want it that way. Checks are more expensive to process than electronic payments – wading through all that paper is extremely costly just by itself. So they’ve encouraged us to bag the check and find another way to pay.

I don’t especially miss check writing, despite my early interest in it. I’ll describe one reason next Tuesday.

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47 – GOLDEN ARCHES

Sometime in the year I was born, milkshake machine salesman Ray Kroc traveled to San Bernardino, California, to visit a restaurant that had purchased eight devices. 

Kroc was enamored by the place…yada yada yada… billions and billions of burgers served.

It might seem hard to believe that those of us born in 1954 predate McDonald’s – in fact, predate what we know as fast-food places.

But that’s what happened. If you told my parents there was a burger place they could go to anywhere in the United States – in fact, almost anywhere in the world – and get the exact same burger in every one, they would have been surprised.

And it wouldn’t just be McDonald’s, which really didn’t arrive in the New York metropolitan area until the mid-1970s. Chains of burger places sprang up from coast to coast. There were chains of chicken places, chains of sandwich places, chains of fish places, chains of taco places. 

There would be whole strips of highways with fast-food places along both sides. And when parking the car and getting a mostly premade meal wasn’t fast enough for you, you could drive in a special lane alongside the establishment and pick up your food at a window called a drivethru.

None of this existed when I was born. There were White Castles scattered in selected areas, and that’s about it.

Franchised food consisted of sit-down restaurants. Most prominent was Howard Johnson’s, a Boston-based chain famous for its ice cream, its fried clams and its notoriously slow service.

Howard Johnson’s dotted the nation’s service areas. You would pull off the New Jersey Turnpike or some other toll road and stop at HoJo’s to eat. Your kids – that would have been me – would nag you to take them there in order to get the comic book or the menu that turned into a paper hat.

McDonald’s and its fast-food brethren stole all that. They provided what people on a trip wanted more than a peppermint stick ice cream cone – a fast meal that got you back on the road pronto. And the kids kept demanding to go in order to get the toy inside a Happy Meal, often some incarnation of Ronald McDonald and other characters created to sell more burgers.

There certainly has been argument about whether fast food is a blessing – quick, easy and fun – or a curse – fattening, salty, banal. Adults couldn’t imagine those arguments in 1954.

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