Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun
Showing posts with label 1964. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1964. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2014

TAKE A HIKE! A FAST CROWD THROWBACK

THE HIKE
   Take a hike with us on the Morgan Pass Trail in the Muir Wilderness above Rock Creek in the Sierra Nevada. At this point we are at about 9,600 feet.
   It's brisk and there is a growing breeze.
   Warnings were posted about an increase in bear activity.
In previous years we've seen only bear scat.

  As we gain altitude we get better looks at peaks in the eastern Sierra.


  Moving into open meadows the wind begins to gust.


   At this point I'm fascinated by the spire like chalk white peaks on this portion of the range.


   Getting closer to 11 thousand feet Lana puts on gloves, the temperature dips and we see patches of ice on the trail.




 We find a spot that partially blocks the wind so we can take a picnic break.
   Our view is another lake and meadow.
   Down the trail after lunch it's time for a rest. Legs and knees can use a break after a few hours of trail and the stone ledge retains the warmth of the sun.
   When we set out we didn't know we'd need to layer on
vest, over fleece, over shirts, but that's why you fill your packs for any number of eventualities.  One thing you can always count on is the sheer beauty and awesomeness of the mountains.
Photo by Lana
Walking Stick created by Moto Groove
A FAST CROWD THROWBACK
1964 Warren Central High School Track Team.
  Hard as it may be to believe I ran the 100 yard dash, 180 yard low hurdles, a leg on the relay team and was captain of the team. Any guess on who of these lads I am?  My brother John, the high hurdler, is missing from the photo.

  See you down the trail.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

SOMETHING TO REMEMBER

THE DAY OF ARRIVAL
A MOMENT OF HISTORY
       It took three courageous and bloody tries, but on this day in 1965 25,000 marchers reached the state capitol in Montgomery Alabama.  In may ways it was the day that Civil Rights for African Americans, Negroes or Colored people, as were the predominate terms of that age, was made emphatic.
       My father and I made a point to watch the NBC Evening
news everyday during those troubled days of 1964 and 1965 as the US struggled with racism and segregation.  We had
seen police dogs and fire hoses turned on marchers and even the news reporters. We had followed the turbulence and violence, beatings and murders and simply could not understand how those scenes were even possible. Such hatred!  Even though Civil Rights legislation passed in 1964, Alabama, Mississippi and other pockets in the south, refused to grant full rights to people of color.
        Then in March of 1965 the march from Selma to Montgomery ripped into the heart and fabric of America. Twice Alabama troopers and mobs set upon and beat those
who were on their way to the same state capitol building where just two years earlier Governor George Wallace 
said "segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever."
         After the failed second march thousands of other Americans, many of them clergy and church people, Christian, Jew, Quaker and Catholic flocked to Alabama to bolster the efforts.
Copyright unknown. Fair use image of historic moment depicting
John Lewis, an unidentified nun, Ralph Abernathy, Martin Luther King, Jr.Ralph Bunche, Abraham Joshua HeschelFred Shuttlesworth. This is from Selma, the beginning of the third March to Montgomery.

      The other historic intervention came when President 
Lyndon Johnson, outraged by the violence of Alabama during the second march, introduced a Voting Rights act on March 15, 1965. He also provided national troops to ensure the safety of the marchers to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge and 
walk through Montgomery to the capitol building, where 
the confederate president Jefferson Davis had been sworn in.
The symbolism was powerful


FBI Photo-Montgomery Alabama, March 1965
       When, finally, Dr Martin Luther King Jr delivered his
"How Long, Not Long" remarks in Montgomery, the American Republic came to grips with the great evil of racial hatred, 
though as we know, it still haunts and bloodies the American Dream.  Yet, that day was a signal that a Federal government and an American citizenry were committed to justice and equality.  
        In those days of hatred and madness, courage and faith
prevailed. Though, we also note that evening Viola Liuzzo, a volunteer from the north was murdered by the Ku Klux Klan.
       We never really arrive, it seems. The dream requires the 
best and courage from each generation.
DAY BOOK
WHIMSY
The wood sculptures and bird houses are the work
of Cambria artist Richard Lee.

Selling the message.  Point made!
See you down the trail.