Today in History: August 4

Some achievements in sports are noteworthy for being firsts or lasts or mosts, and other achievements are more trivial, are simply items in the news that make people remember something about any given August 4, or perhaps the August 4 that took place in 1982.

Among fans of the New York Mets, Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies, and Montreal Expos, the date August 4, 1982, and the name Joel Youngblood will forever be linked. He awoke that day an outfielder for the Mets and went to bed that night an Expo. Now, many baseball players have been traded mid-season; it is happening right now. Youngblood got a hit for two different teams in two different games in two different cities in one day, however, and he remains the only player to have ever accomplished this.
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Today in History: August 3

What are Standards?
 
Forgotten vaudeville songs and show tunes rescued from the sheer music pile by great singers and the masters of jazz.
 
There is no superior. There is no high and low. The beautiful thing is, you don’t have to choose, you can love it all.
 
Those songs are there to help you when you need them most.
 
You can stumble into them anytime, like the noise and benediction of any basement dive.
—Elvis Costello, Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink, p. 432

Tony Bennett is 90 today. If he has ever penned as poetic a definition of the compositions that comprise music’s Great Songbook, the Standards, as Elvis Costello has above, it does not much matter, as Bennett’s voice is one of the three or four one hears in the jukebox of one’s mind when any number of titles from that Songbook are mentioned.
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Today in History: August 2

PT-109, a Patrol Torpedo boat, was rammed by a Japanese destroyer, the Amagiri, on this date in 1943 in the Pacific Ocean near the Solomon Islands. PT-109 was sliced in two. Two members of its crew were killed and two others badly injured, but eleven survived, including its commander, Lieutenant, junior grade, John F. Kennedy. What followed made Kennedy a wartime hero.

The ship sank. The destroyer motored on to its home base, its crew either oblivious to what the ship had done or celebrating what they thought was a minor triumph in the long war.

The eleven survivors, including Kennedy, swam to a tiny, deserted island, Plum Pudding Island (now called Kennedy Island) some three miles away. That island had no water or coconuts, so they swam to another island. There they survived for several days on coconuts while hiding from passing Japanese ships.
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