Showing posts with label John F Kennedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John F Kennedy. Show all posts

Friday, November 22, 2013

John F Kennedy -50 Years later




The wave of the future is not the conquest of the world by a single dogmatic creed but the liberation of the diverse energies of free nations and free men
                                  -John Fitzgerald Kennedy


One of my earliest memories is JFK's portrait hanging in our family/TV room (with palm Sunday fronds) in Somerville, Massachusetts. Having a Catholic Irish President was a "big deal" 50 years. New England Catholics were proud to have one of their own in the White House.

His legacy is without par: civil rights, human rights, NAVY Seals, Peace Corps, Space exploration, National Seashore and so much more...

His family keeps his legacy alive through philanthropy and service to this country. In College I met with Sen Ted Kennedy and interviewed him for our College Newspaper the "OWL". 


Forever, he remains, youthful, optimistic sun-drenched and loving the sea. These are things I really can relate to.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Happy Martin Luther King Day

The time is always right to do what is right.
     -Martin Luther King, Jr. 

Its hard to believe how far we've come. Yes, there is still more work to be done for civil rights. In my lifetime things have changed dramatically in this county. In the summer of 1961 (the summer I, and Barack Obama were born), blacks were not allowed to swim at the Las Olas section of  Fort Lauderdale beach.  Yes, the beach that I enjoy and run on virtually every day in the winter. Hard to believe.
Police tell black Americans that they are forbidden to use this section of Ft lauderdale Beach, 1961.

How can you exclude people from enjoying a public beach? On July 4th, 1961 a group of young black men staged a "wade-in" on the beach at Las Olas in Fort Lauderdale. The protest was organized by civil rights activists,  Eula Johnson and Von Mizell. Police officers were called to enforce the segregation laws, and told the young men to leave the beach.

I often wondered how racial discrimination on Americans was justified.
The section of  Fort Lauderdale beach that blacks were prohibited from attending is mere feet away from  the International Swimming Hall of Fame. Is  this good sportsmanship?

Its fitting that we honor Dr King's legacy for non-violent peaceful change. We should also those brave Americans that conducted a "wade-in" into a free public beach.


Dr Kings message is timeless: Freedom. Freedom to vote, freedom from poverty, freedom from racism, and Jim Crow laws. Freedom to be together with the one the one you want.  And freedom to experience the hopes, and dreams that is America.

During the early 1960's it was illegal for people of different races to co-habitate in Florida. It was also illegal for blacks to marry whites in Florida.  Yes, Barack Obama's parents marriage would not be recognized in the state of Florida. And today, many  marriages are still not recognized in Florida and many other states.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

The lure of the shore....


We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch - we are going back from whence we came.


-John F. Kennedy



From my earliest memory the ocean has been part of my life. I've always lived within a couple of minutes of the sea (except for 4 years when I went to college in Western Massachusetts). The ocean comforts me, amazes me, inspires me and humbles me. I love the sound of the crashing waves during a storm. The salt-water air is refreshing. There is something special about the seashore...


One of my favorite excursions is to exit  Ogunquit Beach Inn and go right on to Shore Road. Shore Road weaves and follows the craggy shoreline from Ogunquit,  past Perkins Cove to the villages of Cape Neddick, York Beach, and York Harbor in the town of York.


The drive is enjoyable. A favorite spot to stop is at the Ogunquit Museum of American Art. The museum grounds are spectacular. This is a favorite point on the shore where the early 20th century artists painted. Continue past the Museum and you'll see piles of lobster traps, weathered houses and the rolling green hills of the Cape Neddick Country Club. Shore Road weaves around many small coves, inlets and beaches. Its the quintessential Maine that everyone loves.......

There are many photo opportunities along Shore Road....