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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Jasper", sorted by average review score:

The Freemasons: A History of the World's Most Powerful Secret Society
Published in Hardcover by Arcade Publishing (January, 2002)
Author: Jasper Ridley
Average review score:

Left needing more
This is the first book on the subject I have read and to my what this book doesn't do is go into the rituals and dealings of the Freemasons. It literally is, as it claims, a history.
The book seems to concern itself more with taking focal points in history and determining how many freemasons were involved. It came across, therefore, as a general history of the world at the points at which freemasons pop up in, rather than history of freemasonry.
At a purely technical level it comes across as fragmented and this is further echoed in the fact that the book is not singly thematic. It is both chronological, geographical, sociological, and political in its chapters and the reader suffers from lack of consistency. A good example is on page 54 of the hardcover version. It moves abruptly from talking about Maria Theresia to a John Coustos without pausing breath. I had to check several times there weren't missing pages for I could see no link, no chapter end, nothing. This occurs throughout the book and prevents it from having true fluidity. Indeed the history comes across as anecdotal at times (humorously so in the case of Chevalier d'Eon).
Simply put, the book is far too disjointed. Half way through it becomes (on almost a paragraph by paragraph basis) a collection of historical anecdotes, each culminating with who was a freemason and who wasn't.
There was no theory or conjecture as to how much the concepts, doctrines and beliefs of freemasonry dictated those peoples actions and thereby potentially altered history.
What you end up with is purely a chronology of who was and wasn't a freemason at various historical points.
Maybe Ridley was intimating that freemasonry today has arrived at its present perception through a combination of chance and circumstance dictated by others through history. What the book does state quite clearly is that people in power dislike secret societies for fear of fomenting sedition.
So, only 3 stars because if you want to know who was a freemason and who wasn't at major points in history, then this book is for you. What this book doesn't do is show how freemasonry may have influenced the actions of those historical figures.

Debunking Conspiracy Theories
This book is a combination of the history of the Freemasons and the debunking of myths. The Freemasons organization has been accused of many things throughout the world, such as assassinations and revolutions, but Ridley scrutinizes these accusations and explains that most of this is coincidental or that the myth-writer has a different agenda.

The history of the Freemasons covers the beginnings in the British Isles and the creation of lodges in Europe, Asia, and South and North America. He explains how the membership of the lodges has changed through time as well as how the lodge has changed its organization. He does not seek to expose any secrets, but points out that the organization is similar to many others, but prefers to keep it rituals and initiations to itself.

This secrecy, according to Ridley, is the main reason why there are so many conspiracy theories concerning the Freemasons. An example of the theories is that Jack the Ripper was a Freemason, and another is that the Freemasons started the American Revolution. He points out that although some of the American founding fathers were Freemasons, many of them were not. He also points out that less democratic governments tend to fear the lodge and will present any manner of propaganda to suppress it.

This is a good book to read to learn a bit more about the organization. Also, if you are a conspiracy theorist, I would recommend reading this for balance.

An excellent and honest look at Freemasonry over the years.
Ridley takes a critical look at Freemasonry and its place and members in history. To date this has been the best, most honest, and accurate look at Freemasonry throughout history up to the year 2000.

Instead of looking at just the internal history of Freemasonry, Ridley writes about its influence (and it's members) on the world and how the world has influence it throughout history. The books places the craft in a historical context in the fact that the book explains what historical events were occurring and how it effect Freemasonry. Such as the American and French Revolutions.

Meanwhile, Ridley sheds light on the Masons and sweeps away the lies and half truths of others that have come before him and takes an honest look at the craft.
Ridley makes a solid case that in his work that instead of being some secret world wide conspiracy to control events or the world, Masons are often divided on the great issues of the day. However, English and American Masons forbid any political discussion within their lodges. Ridley points out that in every war, Masons supported and fought for their respective countries, which pitted Masons of different sides against each other. Ridley also documents how Freemasons were often the target of oppression and witch hunts started by dictators who have banned the craft and the formation of lodges.

The Freemasons is a great book for it's historical look at the craft and the history surrounding it both inside and outside. It takes a look at who were some of history's most famous Masons. While at the same time, not all Masons were angels.. but in the end showing that Freemasonry has always stood for the ideals of morality and freedom.


The War Magician
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Pub Group (January, 1983)
Author: David Fisher
Average review score:

A fine illuision
This book obviously appealed to some readers which suggests it was at least well written. But as Richard Stokes points out, it is an illusion the hero of the book would be proud of, based on a vainglorious and self-serving memoir rather than fact. Maskelyne was not the 'genius' behind British deception efforts: that was an obscure colonel of Royal Artillery called Dudley Clarke, as a cursory examination of papers at the Public Records Office in Kew reveals. Better to read David Mure's 'Master of Deception' should you be able to track it down,or Jon Latimer's 'Deception in War'.

Master of Make-Believe
Fisher's account is semi-fictional ....
I have actually researched the real background behind Jasper Maskelyne's war-time career and have corresponded with his son, Alistair who lives in Queensland, Australia.
I published a lengthy series of articles in the Australian Geniis Magic Journal in the mid-90's debunking Fisher's fanciful account.
Alas, Maskelyne was not involved in any significant camouflage work in the summer of 1940; his role in the protection of the port of Alexandria('41?) and the Suez Canal ('42) have both been exaggerated. Even his alleged involvement in the deception plan at El Alamein is open to question.
David Fisher has produced a mercenary work of dubious historical value. Readers are welcome to contact me for the alternative version. ....

The Grand Illusion
This book tells about Jasper Maskelyne, the famous British magician, and his efforts during the North African campaign in WW II. It lacks an index and table of contents, but is well written. It takes the technical subject of military camouflage and makes it interesting to the general reader. Magic has been part of warfare since the Trojan Horse. It can explain the Walls of Jericho, and the parting of the Red Sea.

It tells how JM matched tricks with the leader of the Dervishes to get safe passage for British troops. How JM stumbled over the means to get desert camouflage paint. To prevent Alexandria Harbor from being bombed, JM moved it! To avoid an attack, dummy tanks, guns, and troops were created as reinforcements to be seen by enemy air reconnaissance. To protect the Suez Canal he used high-intensity rotating searchlights; this was copied by Britain's air defense.

JM was asked to give lectures on escaping when captured; he became a member of MI9 (which dealt with escape and evasion). His Magic Gang also created dummy submarines to hide the absence of real ones. He traveled to Malta to help hide real airplanes and create dummies to attract and waste bombs. They developed a way to drop a crate of supplies without using scarce parachutes. When his friend survived a plane crash only to die in the fire, JM created a cream that withstood flames for a few minutes to allow people to escape. When testing out in the desert, JM became lost an nearly died from dehydration.

To prepare for the attack from the Alamein Line Gen. Montgomery wanted his forces on the north hidden so the enemy would expect an attack in the south. Since the desert was flat, the camofleurs had an impossible job of deception and misdirection: to put a decoy army in the south and hide a real army in the north. Thousands of tons of supplies had to be hidden in the north while dummy supplies had to be hidden in the south. Pages 278-9 explains how the dummy water pipeline was built. The Battle of El Alamein began as planned. The Magic Gang created a phony sea invasion twenty miles behind enemy lines, which diverted German reserve forces. Chapter 18 tells how German tanks were halted by dummy cardboard tanks and silver painted boards! And the battle ended with Rommell's retreat.

Afterwards JM was sent to Canada to establish Station M, which educated and served the OSS and FBI ("Room 3603" references this). The Gestapo placed him on their "Black List". He invented air to ground communication using infrared waves. After the war he migrated to Kenya, and died there.


The United Nations Exposed
Published in Paperback by John Birch Society (07 April, 2001)
Authors: William F. Jasper, Gary Benoit, Tom G. Gow, and Warren Mass
Average review score:

Talk About Ridiculous
This book is for right-wing nutjobs. Rational individuals save your money.

WORLD PEACE
I found this book to be very one sided. The author is trying to prove his point that the UN is some type of poison being fed to the rest of the world as a form of candy. He accused the UN of wanting to do away with small governments and create a world government. By using examples such as the international criminal court treaty, a treaty in which anyone can be brought to a world trial. Though it did open my eyes to things they don't teach you in high school, i found myself a little uneasy by the time i got to the 2nd chanpter. If all the author is saying is true. well then i think the US needes to make a drastic decision and pull itself right out of the UN. But then again the author could be completely over ananalyzing the world we live in simply trying to unify itself. And i see no harm in doing that.

UN Go Home
T - Total Depravity
U - Unconditional Election
L - Limited Atonement
I - Irresistible Grace
P - Perseverance of the Saints

Rice beans makes good soup!

GOVERNMENT!?!


Blood Oath: The Conspiracy to Murder Nicole Brown Simpson
Published in Paperback by Rainbow Books, Inc. (June, 1996)
Authors: Steven Worth and Carl Jaspers
Average review score:

TRUTH OR HOAX?
Sophisticated frame of O.J. Simpson or clever hoax? That is the question which needs to be answered by examining this detailed and revolting account of the murders culminating in the trial of the century.
The devil is in the details, and there is much to discuss in Skinner's story.
Let's begin with the surveillance of Nicole in January 1994. It is known that Bill Wasz was stalking Nicole, and stole Paula Barbieri's vehicle during this period. Wasz was arrested on January 31, 1994 in possession of Barbieri's vehicle, and a notebook containing info on Nicole's activities. Yet Wasz could not be "The Enforcer" because he was in prison following his arrest. Subsequently, it has been reported that the author has spent considerable time interviewing Wasz in prison.
There is no mention of Nicole's phone conversation with Faye Resnick on the night of her murder, in which Sydney Simpson has said that her mom was fighting and crying with her "best friend" on the phone. Why is this ommitted in Skinner's story?
The most astonishing event of Skinner's story is the witness to the murders that night, Nicole's mysterious lover who arrived at 10:12 PM, and fled out the back gate at 10:41 PM. Skinner says there is "something familiar" about this black man. It could not be Marcus Allen, who left on a flight out of the country at about the same time. My suspicions rest on Ron Shipp, who is believed to have harboured a romantic interest in Nicole, and who may have learned of the murders before they became public knowledge. Dominick Dunne has revealed that one of his confidantes was contacted by Shipp in the pre-dawn hours of June 13, 1994 with knowledge of the murders.
There is one glaring error by the author. On page 294, Worth says that Stephen Singular was contacted by an informant claiming inside knowledge of the crime on April 25, 1995. In fact, Singular was contacted by his informant in the summer of 1994, many months before Skinner broke his silence.
While it is true that Singular's book does corroborate Skinner's story, it is disappointing that neither book has generated much media discussion. Overall, Skinner tells a compelling and convincing account of the murders, but there are still some questions to be resolved.

Chilling account of "execution" of Nicole Simpso/Ron Goldman
"Blood Oath" [The conspiracy to assassinate Nicole Brown Simpson] by Steven Worth and Carl Jaspers The book asserts that an elite team* of white supremacists- neo Nazi's** planned and executed an elaborate "psyop" to assassinate Nicole Simpson, frame O.J., discredit the LAPD and LASD, and generally discredit the American judicial system. The authors are contacted anonymously by one of the conspirators who remains anonymous and is known as "Skinner". All other conspirators get nick names in the story. He then dictates over numerous calls on public phones to Worth over the Summer of '95 how the deed was planned and then done. The book is a compelling and a very scary account that more closely matches the known facts/timelines etc.... The authors (Worth) in a phone interview claimed that the book is all true and was afraid for his life as was his informer "Skinner". * The team is depicted to be made up of former staff level American officers, ex Special forces types, ex- law enforcement , counter insurgency types etc.. ** called the C.A.U.S.E. [Christian Aryan Underground Secret Enforcers


Death Hits the Fan (Kate Jasper Mystery)
Published in Paperback by Penguin USA (Paper) (April, 1999)
Authors: Jacqueline Girdner and Jaqueline Girdner
Average review score:

this book might appeal to a few vegetarians
If you like books in which the amateur detective is an aggressive female, her lover is a whimp with muscles, all the meals are meatless, and an irritating parrot repeats phrases after hearing them once, Death Hits the Fan is just the book for you. In this mystery, a science fiction author is murdered at a small meet-some-authors gathering at a bookstore. The premise is good, but the characters are either boring or irritating. I kept hoping that one of the men in the book would eat a steak, say "shut up" to one of the women, and find a backbone. I also hoped the parrot would fly away, that the female characters would exhibit some common sense, and that the book would end. The book finally ended, but none of my other hopes were realized.

Fun.enjoyable and uplifting
Some people cannot help attracting trouble. However, gag supplier Kate Jaspar goes one step beyond and seems to always find a murder that has just been committed. Kate cannot walk away from homicide until she has solved the case even though she constantly places herself in danger. Her long suffering live-in lover, Wayne Caruso, does not try to stop her anymore. Instead, he assists her on her i nvestigations so he can be near to protect her from harm.

When Wayne and Kate attend a science fiction-mystery authors' book signing, there is one protester who claims that science fiction is demonic poisoning. However, things change for the worse when one of the writers puts a bracelet on her wrist and abruptly dies. The bracelet contained a syringe filled with a poison that was injected when the writer snapped it on her wrist. Kate and Wayne try to determine who left the poisoned bracelet on the table. They soon learn that many of the attendees had the opportunity and the motive.

Anyone in the doldrums should try DEATH HITS THE FAN for a fast uplifting rush. It is difficult to remain sad when one is surrounded by quirky characters who make sense in a crazy kind of way. The secondary sub-plots are humorous, making it impossible not to smile even as the reader tries to solve an interesting mystery. Jacqueline Girdner demonstrates that her talent is at the Mensa level.

Harriet Klausner


Bloody Mary's Martyrs: The Story of England's Terror
Published in Hardcover by Carroll & Graf (09 August, 2001)
Author: Jasper Ridley
Average review score:

Mildly entertaining, but deeply flawed
There is no question that Ridley's book is mildly entertaining to read--any work based upon Foxe's "Book of Martyrs" should contain a certain amount of gripping material. Unfortunately, this book is little more than a rather tepid summary of some of the more salacious portions of Foxe. Ridley's prose occasionally evinces a dry wit, but more often it is simply banal and overly simplistic. It almost seems as though he was writing for a juvenile audience. Moreover, he makes little attempt to analyze the experience of the martyrs, preferring instead simply to repeat the narrative details supplied in Foxe. Most unforgivable, however, are Ridley's continually distorted moral and historical judgments, which render this book a very pale shadow of serious history. Opinions are certainly welcome in the study of history, but surely Ridley could have done better than to repeat some rather tired old cliches.

An unenlightening list
Bloody Mary's executions of Protestants created a deep seated hatred of Catholics in the English soul and cast a long shadow. Understanding what happened in this period of English history is essential to understanding the next 400 years. However this book is primarily a distillation of John Foxe's Book of Martyrs, and provides little more than a list of martyrs with only a limited attempt at understanding the forces at play.

Bloody Mary should be Burnin' Mary
True to the title, Mr. Ridley's account is a listing and play by play of the many men and women who were subjected to the ritual "burning at the stake" for alleged "heretical" behaviour. Ridley seems to delight in the particulars of each event. Some were roasted singularly, and others were grouped together... The author does paint a grisly picture... especially when the wind changes.... As I read the accounts, I could not help but wonder what about the psychological makeup of Mary. I would have been equally interested in Ridley's assessment, based on historical evidence, of her state of mind. I wonder if there have been other accounts that deal with her pathological state of mind rather than the historical tail of her rein...


Murder on the Astral Plane
Published in Hardcover by Prime Crime (April, 1999)
Authors: Jacqueline Girdner and Jaqueline Girdner
Average review score:

Bland at Best
It must be said that I thought Murder on the Astral Plane had a great premise but it just did not keep my interest while I was reading the book itself nor was the killer a big surprise. This was the first book in the Kate Jasper series that I have read so I may have missed something from her previous novels but I just felt that the plot was not really fleshed out much.

The premise is that Kate Jasper's paramour, Wayne, is home bedridden with a severe case of the flu. Her friend and fellow psychic Barbara Chu drags her out to a psychic soiree to get her mind off of Wayne's illness, her ex-husband Craig who keeps professing his love for her and the nagging sense that she is a walking harbinger of death. During this soiree, Silk Sokoloff, an outlandish writer who loves to stir up controversy and anger wherever she goes, is strangled and none of the psychics can figure out who the culprit is so of course Kate and Barbara must put on their sleuth hats and uncover the murderer (as if the police are REALLY as oblivious and stupid as they are made out to be in this book).

While Kate is nosing around another murder occurs and of course the police think Kate is the killer (and who wouldn't because she is always at the death scene and can't even figure out not to leave finger prints...) so to save her good name she must discover who is really behind these deaths.

All in all, this could have been a very good novel but as it was - I felt it was bland and the writing was unimaginative and formulaic. The characters were all stereotypes and most of them were not even filled out enough to make them stand out of the "wacky" cast of characters. Halfway through the book, I realized that I did not even really care who did it - I just thought that the book would possibly have an interesting twist to it, but it disappointed me all around. Let's put it this way, I finished it a day or two ago and when I sat down to write my review of it - I could not even remember the title - to me that says something. If you want to read a really fun psychic mystery series try Martha C. Lawrence's Elizabeth Chase series - it is well rounded and exciting.

Mediums and madness
Kate Jasper is afraid to walk into a room full of people, and rightfully so. You see, in the past, whenever she entered such a room, one of the occupants was murdered. Her friend Barbara Chu hopes to help her by taking her to a meeting of psychics. Surely none of them would be so lacking in foresight as to avoid a murderer. Wrong, the most obnoxious of the group, the famous author Silk Sokolov is murdered with a cat toy. Kate of course, feels responsible and obligated to find the murderer with very little help from her sick sweetie Wayne, and the bizarre members of the Paloma PD.

This is an entertaining quick read and a good addition to the series.

The great Kate Jasper returns in a fresh amateur sleuth tale

Besides worrying about her beloved significant other Wayne Caruso, who is very sick, Kate Jasper fears joining crowds. Feeling karmically impaired; Kate knows that every time she ventures into a group, someone ends up murdered. Her close friend psychic Barbara Chu convinces Kate to accompany her on a visit to the home of Justine Howe and her horde of extrasensory folks.

Reluctantly agreeing, Kate barely survives the harrowing experience of being a passenger in Barbara's car. At Justine's house, Kate meets a crowd of strange beings with varying psychic abilities. However, during a soiree, one of them garrots Silk Sokoloff. In spite of the high degree of cosmic abilities no one can identify the killer. The police arrive and interrogate everyone in Justine's house before allowing anyyone to leave. On the way home accompanied by a cacophony of horns, Barbara informs Kate they will investigate this murder. Just saying no fails and Kate finds herself involved in another sleuthing adventure. MURDER ON THE ASTRAL PLANE, the tenth Kate Jasper amateur sleuth mystery, retains the freshness and humor evident in the previous stories. The great Kate is at her lovable best, especially in her dealings with Barbara. The droll story line contains a fine murder mystery and wonderful, witty characters. Jacqueline Girdner demonstrates her talent with a must read for sub-genre fans.

Harriet Klausner


Mussolini
Published in Hardcover by Vergara Editor S.A. (March, 1999)
Author: Jasper Ridley
Average review score:

SHALLOW AND SUBJECTIVE
This is not a comprehensive biography of Mussolini the man and politician. More a fragmentary story of the life of M. The process of ascension to power, the conversion of the socialist into the fascist, and the politics of the first ten years of consolidation are not really explored in their depth, as is now expected from a Duce's biography.
Moreover there are considerable gaps in the treatment of the pre-war years and the foundation of the Empire. Also, there are many subjective statements and personal appraisals of the author that do not correspond with the objective view of the modern historians about Mussolini. For instance, his position regarding the jewish question and the racial laws, is not objectively assessed, in its historical context. Also, Salo's period and Mussolini's uncomfortable relationship with the germans are not satisfactorily analyzed. For a more balanced and comprehensive one volume approach I would recommend professor Richard Bosworth's Biography of Mussolini. For truly in depth study, Renzo De Felice's books remain unsurpassed.

Second Rate
Jasper Ridley offers the reader a facile biography of the Italian dictator. Though Benito Mussolini's youth and early adulthood as a radical intellectual are adequately explained, the analysis of Mussolini's rise is shallow. An internationalist socialist until just before World War One, he becomes an Italian nationalist with almost little explanation of why he changed other than his serving briefly as a draftee in the pre-1914 Italian Army. Surely, there is more to explain Mussolini's turnabout. The analysis of post-war Italy and it's ungovernability and social breakdown is weak. Was Italian democractic tradition inch-deep, ready to be exploited by an authoritarian? The Fascist economic system is barely mentioned. Mussolini's thoughts on Hitler's big gamble of sending troops to the demilitarized Rhineland in 1935 are not explained. How did Mussolini come to be the weaker of the two European right-wing authoritarians and did he acknowledge that Hitler dominated the political alliance between the two men? Why did the Italian army have problems defeating the primitive Ethiopian army in 1935-36? Or why did the small, woefully armed Greek army defeat the Italian army and chase it across the Albanian frontier? Why was Italy not ready for World War Two? This biography lacks analysis. More muscle is needed to fill out the man who was Benito Mussolini.

A good introduction to the "Duce"
Jasper Ridley's biography of Mussolini does a good job of retelling the life of this ambitious but fatally flawed leader. Mussolini was no Hitler. Even had he desired it, he could never have established totalitarianism in Italy as the temperment of the Italian people simply would not have allowed it. Instead he was sort of like the neighborhood bully elevated to power. Threatening yes, but not truly evil. Had World War Two not happened, his fate probably would have been more similar to Spain's Franco, whose regime died of natural causes with him. The most interesting aspect of Mussolini's life was his transistion from socialism to fascism, but even this can be viewed as opportunism from a man with no real political convictions other than obtaining and maintaining power. Overall, this is a good introdution to the man who in the end got what he deserved from his own people.


Most Likely to Die
Published in Paperback by Berkley Pub Group (April, 1996)
Authors: Jaqueline Girdner and Jacqueline Girdner
Average review score:

Disappointing.
This is the first -- and last -- book I will read by this author. The characters were tiresome and rather pathetic, and the possible motives and methods of committing the crime are a stretch at best. Humor can go a long way toward making a weak plot at least a fun ride. But the attempts at humor fall flat here. I could go on, but this book hardly seems worth the effort.

A fun read
Kate Jasper is the cheif suspect of the murder of a high school friend when he is electrocuted with her pinball machine at a reunion BBQ. Wanting to clear her name, she starts to investigate the other guests. She steps up her pace when another from the group turns up dead.

This is a fun read. If you're looking for more action than interviewing suspects, look elsewhere. However, there are some interesting suspects and subplots here, and it's a fun read. I also enjoyed getting a look at the area I grew up in, being a Santa Rosa native.

A fun story
When at a reunion of her high school friends, one of them falls over dead, the result of an electrocution. Kate is determined to find out who did it and why, especially since she's the top suspect.

If you're looking for action, this book isn't for you. The plot basically revolves around Kate talking to the suspects. However, I found it humorous in spots. I was drawn into this book and could hardly put it down.


The USS Arizona
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (December, 2001)
Authors: Joy Waldron Jasper, James P. Delgado, and Jim Adams
Average review score:

Unique point of view
The combination of the authors' perspectives, the subject matter and its historical perspective, and the eyewitness accounts were
very interesting and moving.

The book has drama, history, and personality......a rare combination!

A True Treasure Found
What a wonderful experience! Reading this book was like being drawn into the living room to sit around the fireplace with the authors and survivors to hear their stories. Crying, feeling, hearing for the first time, learning, and even a laugh or two with my newfound treasury of friends. How refreshing it is to hear the stories told by those who were there as they remember it. I write this as someone who knows nothing about tactics or war and wasn't even a glimmer in my mother's eye at the time, as she was only a few months old at the time. I've tried to read those books with "true historical accuracy" yet got only a distant sterile factual (and boring) understanding. This book has brought the Arizona alive to me. The Arizona is not just a sunken ship. The Arizona is a living breathing bleeding screaming crying brave and courageous part of who we are as Americans. If I may be so bold as to embrace the men and their families as my own. We, Americans, are who we are because these men and their families have deeply empacted their corner of the world, which has become ours. Thank you survivors, authors, publisher, you have awakened an important part of my history in me. Now to live in a way that honors their memory.
review by: The Rev. Pam Feeser

There was a NY Dodgers FOOTBALL team in the NFL in 1941.
One reviewer commented on the accuracy of this book - "I found this book written on a very basic level, with well known facts wrong (i.e. on Dec 7 people were 'watching the Dodgers play the Giants in late season football'. I always thought the Dodgers were a baseball team."

I checked this out, there was also a NY Dodgers FOOTBALL Team in the NFL in the 1930s and early 1940s. On December 7th, 1941, they were playing football against the NY Giants in New York City. There is a famous radio broadcast on CBS of this game as the announcer had to break in to announce that the Japanese had attacked Pearl Harbor.


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