Tuesday, August 30, 2022

The fairly recent 65th anniversary of the start of the IGY, and my failed commemoration

July 1, 2022 was the 65th anniversary of the beginning of the IGY on that date in 1957. This was noted in a nice article by  Lauren Lipuma for the National Science Foundation website, wherein she mentions some of the major accomplishments of the IGY. Plus, she included some images of IGY stamps!

I tried to create my own 65th anniversary philatelic cover, but it didn't work out. I wanted to create and send a cover addressed to myself, with sufficient postage including the 1958 3¢ U.S. IGY stamp (Scott 1107) and another IGY-themed stamp, and a cachet I designed myself to mark the event. Then my plan was to get the cover canceled and postmarked in Adamstown, PA (Adam's town), just 45 minutes from Lancaster, since the image on the IGY stamp includes Michelangelo's The Creation of Adam. Unfortunately, I waited until the last minute and could not find a printer that I could do this on.

The design looked like this, without the stamps:


For the postage I would have added one of the 2021 Forever solar activity stamps to the 1958 IGY stamp itself:


I will be trying to make such a cover for another IGY anniversary. Any suggestions?

Sunday, August 21, 2022

A new Mellone first day cover cachet for my IGY collection

I may be forgotten, but not quite gone.

In a previous post, I mentioned that the specialized Mellone catalogs of cachets on first day covers listed a number of known cachets for U.S. IGY first day covers. The Mellone catalog listed 31 such covers for the U.S. IGY stamp. For a long time, years I think, I have had 25 of these. I recently acquired my 26th (coincidentally also cover #26 in the Mellone listings)! But the majority of IGY covers in my collection were not listed by Mellone. I was pretty excited to find this cover on eBay, and the price was quite favorable.

US242 in my IGY cover collection; Mellone #26 for stamp Scott 1107

Note that in the sidebar of this blog, showing a historic event that happened on or about this day during the IGY (www.eventshistory.com/), I listed that on today's date, 21 August, the Soviet Union in 1957 successfully conducted a long-range test flight of the R-7 Semyorka, the first intercontinental ballistic missile. According to Wikipedia, a modified version of that missile carried Sputnik 1 into orbit on 4 October 1957 and Sputnik 2 on 3 November 1957.

Sunday, June 12, 2022

Where have you gone, Joe Dimaggio?

I have been missing in non-action for a month now. I've just kind of lost motivation, at least for now, to keep the blog going using the pace and rubric I've been mostly following for close to a year: summarizing articles from the IGY Bulletin, one by one. And I've just been languishing a bit in general. So I hope to regain forward momentum soon, perhaps using a different rubric. 

I also decided to break my NY Times crossword solving streak at 800+. I realized that although I usually enjoyed doing them and the blog, those activities were sometimes controlling me rather than the other way around. Staring at my computer screen was also starting to make my brain feel congested. Plus, I will need some time in the near future to attend to some other issues, like cleaning out my office at the College, which I am finally vacating this summer. So overall I am trying to change the balance of my activities for now, you might say.

Well, music is a good pick-me-up. The song containing the lyric in this post's title is Mrs. Robinson, by Simon and Garfunkel. You remember ... it goes something like this:


It is from the album Bookends, which was one of my favorites as an undergraduate. It is a concept album about life's journey. I'd best listen to it again, since my location on that route has progressed considerably. I owned the LP for many years, but now I own the CD. For me, the best song on the album was A Hazy Shade of Winter: "Hang on to your hopes my friend. that's an easy thing to say, but if your hopes should pass away simply pretend that you can build them again."

The song was also part of the soundtrack of one of my favorite movies, The Graduate, including the breakout role for Dustin Hoffman. Am I remembering correctly that I saw this in the movie theater with my high school friend Carol? (I guess you wouldn't know.) She was a good person, I wonder what happened to her.

Joe Dimaggio, one of the greatest Yankees and baseball players of all time, finds his way into the title of this post. The years of the IGY, 1957-58, were when I first became aware of professional sports. My family was not into sports, and I gravitated towards the best teams of that era -- the New York Yankees (baseball), Boston Celtics (basketball), and the Baltimore Colts (football) -- rather than the local teams, which weren't very good -- the Washington Senators (baseball) and the Washington football team (there was no regional NBA team). Baseball has always been my favorite sport; I still like the Yankees (and now the Phillies), and am enjoying their amazing run so far this year. I still very casually root for the Celtics, so it is nice to see them in the NBA finals. I'm not even sure where the Colts play any more.

My favorite players from those teams, all hall-of famers, were Johnny Unitas of the Colts,  Bob Cousy and Bill Russell (Celtics), and my favorite athletic "hero" ever, Mickey Mantle of the Yankees.

(I recently read Amy Bloom's In Love, a moving account of her husband's assisted suicide. It took me a while to realize that her husband, Brian Ameche, was the son of another Colts star, running back Alan Ameche, who scored the winning touchdown in sudden death overtime in the 1958 NFL championship game against the NY Giants, sometimes called "the greatest game ever played.")

Mickey Mantle, who replaced Joe Dimaggio as the Yankees' center fielder, was no saint (and why should a ballplayer be one), but he was one of the greatest baseball players ever. As a kid and a fan,  I used to argue that he was the best of the New York center fielders of the IGY years, but now I would have to concede that Willie Mays of the NY Giants had a better career overall. Sorry, Duke Snider of the Brooklyn Dodgers  still comes in third. Mantle was the American League triple crown winner in 1956, the AL most valuable player in 1956 and 1957, an all-star in 1956-1958, World Series champion in 1956 and 1958, and AL champion in 1957. Quite a good run in those IGY years! I started reading Jane Leavy's acclaimed biography of The Mick a couple of years ago. I think I'll go back and finish it!


My figurine of The Mick, with me since 1962 or so