Article Archives: Bumps in the Night

Paul is Dead — The Rumor Revisited, Part 1

It has been over half a century since one of the most famous hoaxes in rock n’ roll history began. On Wednesday November 9, 1966 at 5 a.m., Paul McCartney, while working on the album “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band,” stormed out of the studio during a recording session … Read More

The Band — Woodstock Comes To Irvington

You are cordially invited to come over to the Irving Theatre, 5505 E. Washington St. (corner of East Washington and Johnson Ave.) this Saturday, April 13th from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and talk about music. This is the 50th anniversary year of Woodstock, the concert that changed both the … Read More

Coughing up Bullets — A Civil War Tale for the Ages

So you say you have a scratchy throat? Runny nose? Nagging cough? Blaming all those hugs, handshakes and office hours for catching a bug? Well, here’s a reminder that it could be worse. This reminder reaches all the way back to the Civil War and comes with a twist that … Read More

Tito Francona and the Curse of Rocky Colavito, Part 2

During a spring training Cactus League exhibition game on March 26, 1961, Cleveland Indians outfielder Tito Francona hit a 350-foot home run against the Boston Red Sox at Hi Corbett Field in Tucson, Arizona. It’s 349 feet to right field, 366 feet to left field, and 410 feet to dead … Read More

Tito Francona and the Curse of Rocky Colavito

Spring training baseball is back. I am one of those legions of fans who wait every year to hear the five most beautiful words in the English language: “Pitchers and Catchers Report.” As a kid growing up, spring training baseball was always synonymous with Florida. In the mid-1970s, my family … Read More