Monday, February 22, 2010

Lake Placid

Thirty years ago today the Miracle on Ice in Lake Placid, NY took place when the United States defeated the Soviets in hockey at the 1980 Winter Olympics.

Like many people my memory gets a little clouded over the years. Until just a day or so ago I thought that I had heard the game on the radio and watched the gold medal game on TV. But I realized that it was the other way around. It’s strange how memories can come back because I distinctly remember listening to the US score two goals while walking outside in the sunlight. The gold medal game took place during the day.

I watched the US team beat the Soviets on the 13 inch black and white TV in my apartment in Minneapolis. Two days later I listened to the USA defeated Finland in the gold medal match over a battery powered transistor radio while I was in the library at the University of Minnesota studying for one of the few times in my undergraduate college life.

Maybe it is growing up at the edge of hockey country in western Minnesota that let the game have such an impact on me. I remember going down to the rink at the end of block when it was still half flooded and skating in the dark with no nets, just hacking away at the puck. And just how bad the warming house smelled at the end of the season. And guys coming to school on a Monday with frostbit ears from long, cold weekends spent skating outside. And playing street hockey in a friend’s driveway during the summer with no pads to cushion the falls to the concrete.

It hard for many people today to realize just what a momentous game that was for the country. The United States was in the depths of the Cold War with the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union controlled Eastern Europe which they had essentially occupied since the end of World War 2.

Nuclear war was a real possibility as two massive armies faced off nervously in Europe. Military doctrine at the time was one of massive tank armies battling to see which one could survive long enough to be the winner.

In Iran, a bunch of “students” had taken over the United States Embassy and held the staff and Marine Security detail hostage for several months. The father of one of the guys in my ROTC unit was one of the hostages.

And a lot of people were talking about appeasement with the Soviets.

The Olympics were for amateurs, no professionals were allowed. The Soviet hockey team was almost entirely made up of the Red Army team and all the players were in the Soviet Army. Their duties were to play hockey.

The United States team was made up of a bunch of college students coached by Herb Brooks after he quit coaching the University of Minnesota team. A bunch of amateurs against a bunch of pros. There was a sense of magic about the team. It had been 20 years since the US team had won at the Olympics in another improbable set of circumstances. Those games were also held in Lake Placid.

The game showed us one thing: the Soviets were not unbeatable.

In one way, the victory in Lake Placid marks for me the beginning of the end of an era.

Two years later I stood on the deck of an LHA, the Belleau Wood, in the middle of the Indian Ocean watching two Soviet Bear long range bombers fly overhead and take pictures of the Amphibious Task Force. Less than ten years later, the wall fell in Berlin and the Soviet behemoth cracked, fractured and splintered and I held my infant son in my arms and cried as I told him maybe he wouldn’t have to go and serve.

The world changes and other boogey men and bad guys come and go and in many ways the world is a much more complicated place than it was thirty years ago.

But I still believe in miracles...

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

A Century Turns by William J. Bennett

The subtitle of this book is "New Hopes, New Fears". I haven't read too many history books in the last few years. But this one caught and kept my attention. For one thing, it describes a lot of events that I lived through. For another, it is written in an easily readable form that drew me in.

This book is a follow on to two other books (America: The Last Best Hope) that Mr Bennett has written that have been used in teaching history in colleges and secondary schools. A Century Turns covers the time from the elections in 1988 to the elections in 2008.

Overall A Century Turns enlightens and illuminates a strange and in some ways frightening time in our world. From the fall of the iron curtain to the rise of the Internet to the fall of the Twin Towers to the election of Barak Obama, the two decades covered have been a time of drastic and rapid change.

We tend to get focused on what is going on in our immediate lives on a daily basis. As I read this book I was struck by just how much I missed during this time period. Not the big things, but the little things that influenced the big events in both the United States and the world.

The author was involved in many of the incidents he describes either as a central player with inside access or an ancillary character viewing events from the outside of the power circles. And therein lies my only complaint about the book: I do not always follow some of the conclusions that the author draws. Occasionally it seems that he adds one plus one and gets one and half (in other words, not quite two). But this is a minor complaint and definitely not a fatal flaw.

I recommend A Century Turns, New Hopes, New Fears to anyone interested in discovering the background of the events that are influencing our nation and world today.

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Thomas Nelson Publishers as part of their BookSneeze.com book review bloggers program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 : “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”