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Kitchen Chat and more…
Kitchen Chat and more…
While the film 42 demonstrates the unbelievable courage of Jackie Robinson when he integrated Major League baseball in the 1940s, it doesn’t tell the whole story, which was the achievement of civil rights activists and journalists as well:
As an activist himself, Robinson would likely have been disappointed by a film that ignored the centrality of the broader civil rights struggle.
That story has been told in two outstanding books, Jules Tygiel’s Baseball’s Great Experiment (1983) and Chris Lamb’s Conspiracy of Silence: Sportswriters and the Long Campaign to Desegregate Baseball (2012). As they recount, Rickey’s plan came after more than a decade of effort by black and left-wing journalists and activists to desegregate the national pastime. Beginning in the 1930s, the Negro press, civil rights groups, the Communist Party, progressive white activists, and radical politicians waged a sustained campaign to integrate baseball. It was part of a broader movement to eliminate discrimination in housing, jobs, and other sectors of society. It included protests against segregation within the military, mobilizing for a federal anti-lynching law, marches to open up defense jobs to blacks during World War II, and boycotts against stores that refused to hire African Americans under the banner "don’t shop where you can’t work." The movement accelerated after the war, when returning black veterans expected that America would open up opportunities for African Americans.
Weekend review sessions:
I’ll leave the History hallway door open. Please be on time so we can all begin at the same time.
The most expensive part of any human-piloted space exploration is the return trip. Nobel prize winning physicist Gerard ‘t Hooft proposes sending humans to Mars on a one way trip:
It would not surprise me if it takes Mars One more than 10 years to put the first humans on Mars, and I can imagine it will cost more than the $6 billion currently envisioned. I have always been careful about those claims. If the project fails, my reputation may sustain some damage, but I am pretty sure I will survive that. Younger scientists, with their careers ahead of them, might run a bigger risk in that respect. Then again, I do not see how it could be held against you if you were to take part in technological design studies or in addressing various scientific issues.