Play Ball! Baseball is America s National Pastime

Similar documents
story boarding in photoshop

In It To Win It TEACHER NOTES. About the Lesson. Vocabulary. Teacher Preparation and Notes. Activity Materials

Do sports FANS care too much?

Lesson 2 Pre-Visit Baseball in Popular Music and Memory

Contents. Sample file

Kelly: (Indicating Cally) And who might this lovely lady be?

Author. Jamey Acosta The articles in this book are collected from the TIME For Kids archives.

1954 Boston Red Sox. Record: th Place American League Manager: Lou Boudreau

My Mom started me on my never-ending search for the perfect

Lesson 3 Pre-Visit Take Me Out to the Ballgame The Baseball Anthem

Louis Armstrong Armstrong on a stamp in 1995

Does History Repeat Itself? Book Club Test. Shoeless Joe

SPORTS LESSON PLAN. TITLE/AIM: Help students identify sports with the season the sport is played.

Meeting the Needs of those Living with Autism Across the Lifespan

McGraw-Hill Treasures Grade 4

A Funny Old Ballpark W.M. Akers

2. You re at Bat. Umpire: Stee-rike TWO! All: It s a home run!

Lori Oczkus and Timothy Rasinski. Level 4

Yogi Berra's Greatest Quotes CBS News / May 13, 2015

1957 Boston Red Sox. Record: rd Place American League Manager: Pinky Higgins

Foul Ball by Kelly Hashway

Cultural Activities Toolkit for Host Employers

Sports Cards & Memorabilia Catalog

Double Play System 1.0

Q: What do gardeners pull up by hand? A: Weeds. Q: What is a popular sport played with an oblong ball? A: Football

Tombstone, Arizona The Town Too Tough To Die. This is America

Treasure Island 3. Little bit of rum

ÔN TẬP KIỂM TRA ANH VĂN ĐẦU KHÓA K16 (Đề 4)

How to Help an Endangered Language

Short Story: 'The Open Boat' by Stephen Crane (Part 1)

Baseball. Baseball A Reading A Z Level S Leveled Book Word Count: 1,183 LEVELED BOOK S

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN HARCOURT

Baseball. Baseball A Reading A Z Level J Leveled Book Word Count: 329 LEVELED BOOK J. Connections

2013 Playbook and guidelines

1941 Boston Red Sox. Record: nd Place American League Manager: Joe Cronin

Test Strategy STOP. Writing Prompt. Tip. Directions: Answer the questions. Keep reading. The answer may be in more than one place.

by Vidas Barzdukas illustrated by Keiko Motoyama

강상윤영어카페

Meeting the Needs of those Living with Autism Across the Lifespan

Scotty s Spring Training

Boxer Rau shee Warren Heads to Third Olympics; Mike Tyson Hits Broadway

Costello: Look Abbott, if you're the coach, you must know all the players.

CHEROKEE SONGS. Tune: "Fight Song"

Mark Koenig, the PCL and Ruth s Called Shot

Debbie & Friends Story Songs and Sing-Alongs

"JOHNNY SMILES" Zapryan Tolev

5GRADE Informational/ Explanatory Genre

Christmas 1914 : The Cast

Podcast 48 - Sir Donald Bradman - An Australian Cricket Legend

Jack and the Beanstalk

Level: DRA: Genre: Strategy: Skill: Word Count: Online Leveled Books HOUGHTON MIFFLIN

SPORTS LESSON PLAN. MATERIALS: Pictures of sports figures, playoffs, coach with team PROCEDURES

First Grade Spelling Lists

1. Colour in the picture

READ-ALOUD PLAYS. New York Toronto London Auckland Sydney Mexico City New Delhi Hong Kong Buenos Aires

Typesetting and design Random House Australia

Native Americans Are Essential to the History of the United States

Root For The Home Team: Minor League Baseball's Most Off-the-Wall Team Names And The Stories Behind Them By Bill Ripken, Tim Hagerty

2016 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL ATTENDANCE HIGHLIGHTS

Ernest Hemingway, : He created a New Kind of Writing. He Was Able to Paint in Words What He Saw and Felt.

Sports Lesson Plan PROCEDURES. golf American football tennis swimming

Who Was Jackie Robinson?

1954 All-Star Game Cards for HISTORY MAKER BASEBALL Big League Baseball Game

1960 Washington Senators Ticket Stub vs Baltimore Orioles Harmon Killebrew HR #78 Chuck Stobbs Win #103 - September 5, 1960 PSA 7

The Anderson Monarchs 2012 Barnstorming Tour

Coal Miner's Bargain. Joe finds himself trapped below ground in a coal mine with no way out until he makes a bargain for his freedom.

the little boy 1 a good boy 1 then you give 1 is about me 1 was to come 1 old and new 1 that old man 1 what we know 1 not up here 1 in and out 1

Grade 6 Lesson 1. Lesson Plan Page 2. Guided Practice Handouts. Page 5. Justin Bour Article. Page 7

Repeat After Me Songs and Chants

HERE COMES THE STRIKEOUT. In the spring the birds sing. The grass is green. Bobby plays baseball too. He can run the bases

So Far Away. Dire Straits. Dire Straits: [G] You're so [F] far away from [C] me

GIRLS SOFTBALL LEAGUE RULES COACH S EDITION

Before you get to bat

Guide to the Gene Mack Cartoon Collection, National Baseball Hall of Fame Library

SIDELINE CHEERS. Jam Jam with us You got to, got to, got to Jam with us. Let s go Tigers!

Abbott: French? Costello: Goofè. Abbott: Yes. Abbott: Yes. Abbott: Well I should. Abbott: Yes. Abbott: Who. Abbott: Who. Abbott: Who.

The Lost Dog. (A fictional story)

The Boy Who Didn t Want to Catch

1991 Boston Red Sox. Record: t-2nd Place American League East Manager: Joe Morgan

1 The village party. Read and listen.

Ray Herbert recalls surprise 20-win Sox season in 62

FLORIDA DEPARTMENr OF STATE

Pitching. Politics. Former presidential speechwriter Curt Smith documents the twinned histories of baseball and the presidency. By Kathleen McGarvey

Who was Lou Gehrig, anyway?

The Adventure Of Cubbie Bear: Going Home. By: Kaitlyn Franzone

The Sounds of Baseball

2014 MAJOR LEAGUE LEAGUE BASEBALL ATTENDANCE NOTES

Fiction Assessments. There are three levels of the same text, one for each of the following grades: Grades 3-4 Grades 5-6 Grades 7-8

American Pie Don McLean

Babe Ruth : An American Legend By Soundworks READ ONLINE

SHAFFER: Today is September 8, and, why don't we each identify ourselves. I'm Arthur Shaffer.

An office trailer at a construction site: jackhammers, crane sounds off.

Peachtree City Little League team enjoys a run that won t be forgotten any time soon The Athletic

More Action! More Fun! Baseball for the Young Athlete Pee Wees (4-5 year olds) THE RULES

1969 Boston Red Sox. Record: rd Place American League East Manager: Dick Williams, Eddie Popowski (9/23/69)

3. Why were people afraid to challenge the way black people were treated? 4. Where did the black baseball players sleep when they were on the road?

THE MENTAL GAME OF BASEBALL: A GUIDE TO PEAK PERFORMANCE H.A. DORFMAN AND KARL KUEHL

This Learning Packet has two parts: (1) text to read and (2) questions to answer.

2 At the beach a) CD 3, track 20

Edina Girls Fastpitch Cheers

Transcription:

Play Ball! Baseball is America s National Pastime This Is America Presents a Program of Baseball Songs and Poetry From VOA Learning English, welcome to This Is America. I'm Steve Ember. Baseball is a sport that began in the eastern United States in the 1800s. It became known as the "national pastime," a game that millions of people continue to enjoy each spring and summer. Major league baseball recently opened its new season. So this is a good time to explore the influence of baseball on popular culture, including music and poetry. Many songs and poems have been written about baseball, and today, Shirley Griffith and I will tell you about some of them. Baseball expert Warner Fusselle writes that there are probably more than 1,000 songs about baseball. The most popular is "Take Me Out to the Ball Game." It was written in 1908 by Jack Norworth. He wrote it after seeing a sign about baseball in an underground train in New York City. His friend, Albert Von Tilzer, put the words to music. Mr. Norworth reportedly had never seen a major league baseball game. He did not see one until 33 years after he wrote the song. Seventh Inning Time for Stretching and Singing! People still sing "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" during baseball games. 1 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

[Seventh inning stretch at a Chicago Cubs game] Near the end of the game, people become tired of sitting on the hard seats. So, during a special time in the game, everyone stands up and stretches their arms and legs. This tradition is called "the seventh inning stretch." Everyone sings a song together. Most often, it is "Take Me Out to the Ball Game." Here, it is sung by the National Pastime Orchestra and singers. Nelly Kelly loved baseball games, Knew the players, knew all their names, You could see her there ev'ry day, Shout "Hurray," when they'd play. Her boy friend by the name of Joe Said, "To Coney Isle, dear, let's go," Then Nelly started to fret and pout, And to him I heard her shout. "Take me out to the ball game, Take me out with the crowd. Buy me some peanuts and cracker jack, I don't care if I never get back, Let me root, root, root for the home team, If they don't win it's a shame. For it's one, two, three strikes, you're out, At the old ball game." 2 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

Baseball expert Richard Miller writes that many songs about other subjects - - such as love -- use words and expressions from baseball. For example, in a song written in 1912, a woman tells her boy friend that she will not like him unless he is a good baseball player. The song is called "If You Can't Make a Hit in a Ball Game, You Can't Make a Hit with Me." In 1943, George Moriarty wrote a song designed to support American forces fighting in World War II. Mister Moriarty was a former baseball player and manager for the Detroit Tigers team. His song is called "You're Gonna Win That Ball Game, Uncle Sam." It is performed here by the National Pastime Orchestra and singers. Many songs have been written about America's baseball teams. These include the Brooklyn Dodgers, later the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Philadelphia Phillies and the Chicago Cubs. Other songs have been written about famous baseball players: Babe Ruth, Jackie Robinson and Joe DiMaggio. Hello Joe, whatta you know? We need a hit so here I go. Ball one (Yea!) Ball two (Yea!) Strike one (Booo!) Strike two (Kill that umpire!) A case of Wheaties 3 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

Joltin Joe DiMaggio Gets His Own Song Some people think Joe DiMaggio was the greatest player in the history of baseball. He hit safely in a record 56 games in a row for the New York Yankees in 1941. This record never has been broken. That same year, Les Brown and his band recorded the song "Joltin' Joe DiMaggio." Betty Bonney sings about the way DiMaggio hit the ball very, very hard -- how he jolted it. He started baseball's famous streak That's got us all aglow He's just a man and not a freak, Joltin' Joe DiMaggio. Joe, Joe DiMaggio We want you on our side He tied the mark at forty-four July the 1 st you know Since then he's hit a good twelve more Joltin' Joe DiMaggio Joe, Joe DiMaggio We want you on our side From coast to coast that's all you'll hear Of Joe the one man show He's glorified the horsehide sphere Joltin' Joe DiMaggio 4 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

Joe, Joe DiMaggio We want you on our side In 1955, a popular musical play about baseball opened on Broadway in New York. It was called "Damn Yankees." It was about a middle-aged man who gets a chance to play baseball for his team, the Washington Senators. He plays against the best team in baseball, the New York Yankees. The Senators are not a very good team. Their manager wants them to play better. He urges them to play with all the feeling that is in their hearts. Here the cast of "Damn Yankees" sings "You Gotta Have Heart." You've gotta have heart All you really need is heart When the odds are sayin' you'll never win That's when the grin should start You've gotta have hope Mustn't sit around and mope Nothin's half as bad as it may appear Wait'll next year and hope When your luck is battin' zero Get your chin up off the floor Mister you can be a hero You can open any door, there's nothin' to it but to do it You've gotta have heart 5 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

Mighty Casey has a Bad Day at the Ball Park In addition to the many songs written about baseball, there is a famous poem about the game, too. It is called "Casey at the Bat." A young man named Ernest Thayer wrote the poem in 1888. It was published in the San Francisco Examiner newspaper. The poem still is popular today. "Casey at the Bat" is about a baseball team from a town called Mudville. The team is losing an important game. The game is almost over. Mudville is depending on its best player, Casey, to win the game. The outlook wasn t brilliant for the Mudville nine that day; The score stood four to two with but one inning more to play. And then when Cooney died at first, and Barrows did the same, A sickly silence fell upon the patrons of the game. A straggling few got up to go in deep despair. The rest Clung to that hope which springs eternal in the human breast; They thought if only Casey could but get a whack at that- We d put up even money now with Casey at the bat. To the surprise of the crowd, two players hit the ball well. They reach second and third base. They are ready to score. Then it is Casey's turn at bat. He can win the game if he hits the ball hard enough so that he and the other players can cross home plate. That will give their team more points than their opponent. 6 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

There was an ease in Casey s manner as he stepped into his place; There was pride in Casey s bearing and a smile on Casey s face. And when, responding to the cheers, he lightly doffed his hat, No stranger in the crowd could doubt twas Casey at the bat. Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with dirt; Five thousand tongues applauded when he wiped them on his shirt. Then while the writhing pitcher ground the ball into his hip, Defiance gleamed in Casey s eye, a sneer curled Casey s lip. The opposing pitcher throws the ball. But Casey does not try to hit it. The pitcher throws the ball again. Again, Casey does not try to hit it. There are now two strikes against him. One more strike and he will be out. The game will be over. Will Casey finally hit the ball? Will he win the game? The crowd is sure he will. The sneer is gone from Casey s lip, his teeth are clenched in hate; He pounds with cruel violence his bat upon the plate. And now the pitcher holds the ball, and now he lets it go, And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey s blow. Oh, somewhere in this favored land the sun is shining bright; The band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light, And somewhere men are laughing, and somewhere children shout; But there is no joy in Mudville mighty Casey has struck out. 7 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

[Dave Frishberg sings] Heeney Majeski JohnnyGee Eddie Joost Johnny Pesky Thornton Lee Danny Gardella Van Lingle Mungo Dave Frishberg is a song writer and jazz pianist. And he loves baseball. In fact, he wrote a song in which the words are nothing but the names of famous and, perhaps, some not-so-famous baseball players. Van Lingle Mungo is the name of the song. Augie Bergamo, Sigmund Jakucki, Big Johnny Mize and Barney McCosky Hal Trosky, Augie Galan, and PinkyMay Stan Hack and Frenchie Bordagaray Phil Cavarretta, George McQuinn Howard Pollet and Early Wynn Roy Campanella, Van Lingle Mungo 8 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014

Our program was written by Shelley Gollust. Jim Tedder read portions of the poem Casey at the Bat. I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another This is America from VOA Learning English. Big Johnny Mize and Barney McCosky Hal Trosky, John Antonelli, Ferris Fain Frankie Crosetti, Johnny Sain Harry Brecheen and Lou Boudreau Frankie Gusteen and Claude Passeau Eddie Basinski, Ernie Lombardi Huey Mulcahy, Van Lingle Van Lingle Mungo 9 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America May 5, 2014