Six Critical Strategies for Increasing HBCU Retention and Graduation Rates

The task that gave me the greatest level of satisfaction at the three institutions where I had the privilege of serving as chancellor was the opportunity to present nearly 12,000 graduates with their degrees. From Indiana University East to University of Michigan Flint to North Carolina Central University, no matter how lengthy the ceremony or the weather conditions, commencement was a special time for graduates and members of their family. Although each of these public universities served students from significantly different economic and ethnic backgrounds, they all had two things in common– an unswerving commitment to providing students with a high quality learning experience and a credential with value in the marketplace. Some of my most prized mementoes include handwritten thank-you notes, cards and graduation photos dating back to more than 20 years. Even now, I receive an occasional career update, via email or Facebook, from one of those graduates of long ago!

The last institution I had the pleasure of serving before retiring from active university leadership will always occupy a special place in my heart in part because it is an HBCU, and like my alma mater, has a phenomenal record of producing successful men and women in nearly every employment sector. Over the course of the past two years, I have had the opportunity to not only reflect on what HBCUs can do potentially do to increase retention and degree attainment levels, but to assist a number of them with implementing a focused set of initiatives to do so. The truth be told, most HBCUs know what they need to do to increase student academic success but for some reasons many appear reluctant to take the appropriate action. In fact, I am convinced that HBCUs have much to teach other universities, including highly selective and well-endowed universities, about how to increase student success generally, not just minority students. Ironically, the September 20, 2014 edition of The Chronicle of Higher Education included an insert containing an insightful compilation of essays that I would encourage all university leaders concerned about student success to read.

So what specifically are the most successful HBCUs doing, or what can they do to increase student retention and graduation? Drawing on a combination of personal education and leadership experiences, observations and research, what follows are a five proven strategies associated with student success.

Strategy #1: Establish High Expectations

Even a cursory review of the history of some of America’s oldest and most revered HBCUs reveals that they did not allow race, racism or economic circumstances to deter them from establishing high expectations relative to the intellectual, social, moral and leadership development of their students. Not only were there high expectations for students, but there were high expectations for administrators, instructional and support staff as well. Although every student did not graduate, doing so was a clear expectation on the part of benefactors, the college community and the families of those fortunate enough to send their child to college. Tuskegee University founder, Booker T. Washington, internationally renowned sociologist, W. E. B. Dubois, along with leading civil rights activists and founder of Bethune-Cookman College, Mary McLeod Bethune, were among the most vocal proponents regarding the need for black colleges to establish and maintain high academic expectations. The importance of this goal is just as significant today as it was in the era of these three social and intellectual giants. Moreover, I am convinced that the enforcement of high academic standards is not in conflict with the commitment of HBCUs to provide access, and that the establishment and pursuit of such standards make HBCUs more competitive and responsive to the educational interests of a wide array of students.
The moral of the academic expectations story is simple: access without excellence is hollow!

Strategy #2: Expect and Reward Excellence in Teaching

Teaching excellence must be the sine qua non for hiring, retaining and promoting faculty members at HBCUs–anything less is unacceptable. Teaching excellence at both public and private HBCUs was one of their defining characteristics long before appreciable numbers of faculty possessed terminal degrees. In fact, it was not until 1965 when Congress approved Part A of Title III, Strengthening Developing Institutions, that a national effort was launched to increase the number of HBCU faculty with PhDs or other terminal degrees. With the evolution of regional accreditation standards requiring faculty to maintain an appropriate balance between teaching, research and service, many HBCUs revised their requirements for promotion and tenure by following those to which comprehensive Predominately White Institutions adhered, often to the detriment of the students they served.

As HBCUs sought to hire faculty to deal with growing enrollments in the 1980s and 1990s and into the early 2000s, they found that prospective black faculty members with a terminal degree had an array of options and often elected to work at PWIs because of higher salaries, lower teaching loads and relatively better prepared students in many instances. Thus, HBCUs, in many instances, increasingly found themselves hiring faculty who lacked an appreciation for their history, mission and commitment to serve first generation and low-wealth students. Often, many of these faculty members viewed their role as one of presenting information and the students’ role as of grasping it. Further, such faculty members are less engaged in the life of the university and are not as likely to mentor students. Students often complain about their inability to understand many of their instructors and of feeling disrespected and discouraged. During my last chancellorship I actually had several international faculty members tell me that they did not feel that students were capable of exceling academically in the disciplines they taught! Needless to say, this made for quite a terse conversation.

While the above referenced scenarios are not universal, they are far more prevalent than many university administrators and faculty members are willing to admit. One obvious strategy for addressing the issues that emanate from ineffective teaching is for HBCUs to invest heavily in faculty professional development to assist faculty in making the shift from teaching content to teaching students. There is a difference!

Strategy #3: Hold Leaders Accountable for Student Success

Contrary to what many may say, college and university leaders, irrespective of institutional type, wealth status or size, are ultimately as responsible for making sure that students succeed academically as they are for ensuring that the institution receives a clean audit, maintains accreditation, has a winning athletic program and is successful in raising much needed private funds. The leadership that fuels and sustains student success is distributed, intentional and focused. It has been my experience that when leaders are held accountable for institutional effectiveness, they are less likely to delegate authority to others without empowering them to do what needs to be done to ensure student success. Likewise, when leaders are held accountable, they are more likely to make certain that financial resources, no matter how scarce, are invested in activities that directly impact student success.

Strategy # 4: Increase the Quality of Services Provided to Students

Poor or inconsistent quality of services provided to students is the most persistent concern shared with me by students and their parents at every university where I have had the opportunity to work or consult. Yet, it is one of the least costly issues to correct. Quality service is based on “old school” values associated with respect, caring, commitment, communications, expectations and accountability. Every HBCU, indeed every university, should receive an “A” for how well they serve students. Administrators, faculty and staff are hired to teach, mentor and serve students. Persons who are not able to do what they were hired to do should be provided with the necessary professional development, held accountable and dismissed if they fail to perform their duties in a professional, passionate and compassionate manner
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Strategy # 5: Embrace Change

The failure of HBCU leaders to embrace and lead comprehensive change is perhaps the greatest threat facing the vast majority of HBCUs in the foreseeable future. Just because a particular course, major or support activity has been funded for extended periods does not mean that it is effective and should be continued. It seems that everyone wants change but few want to change. It’s always the “other” who needs to change, or so it seems! The president and his/her leadership team must be the point people for implementing needed institutional changes in every area of university operations: academic programs, administrative and student affairs, fiscal and facilities management. Every activity and investment must be focused on student success and institutional effectiveness. Determining what needs to change is not rocket science. It begins with an objective and vigorous assessment of every university program or practice to determine its effectiveness in meeting institutional objectives and culminates in a commitment to follow through with needed changes.

The moral of the story is this: Change is the only constant there is and those who refuse to embrace change are destined to be left behind.

Strategy # 6: Focus and Follow-Through

Just because HBCU leaders, or any other leaders, know what works doesn’t mean they’ll do it. The recommendations of researchers and practitioners alike are clear: focusing and following through on a small set of effective and scalable activities is more important than pursuing a litany of activities that have emotional appeal but limited objective data to demonstrate their effectiveness.
The moral of the story is this: It’s not a matter of how many things you do but how well you do those things that yield demonstrable results.

Whether I have identified the right six strategies for increasing HBCU student retention and graduation is a matter of conjecture; but two things are certain. First, HBCUs can and must do a more effective job of increasing degree attainment. Second, HBCU leaders must assume a more direct role in creating, supporting and sustaining a culture that promotes students success.

Let us begin!

Beyond Bendgate: How Apple Continues to Take a Bite Out of the Competition

While there was talk in the industry and among consumers that Apple was losing its “cool factor,” the unveiling of the new iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus proved everyone wrong. Tim Cook’s keynote a few weeks ago demonstrated Apple’s still got it.

Samsung was busy taking epic selfies at the Oscars, but Apple was quietly working on the next really big thing. Apple’s new products, both the iPhone 6 and Apple Watch, gave users much to get excited about. The massive lines comprised of Apple fans at stores camping out to get the new iPhone throughout the country led Apple to a record-breaking win: 10 million phones sold on the first weekend.

Even though this milestone might have been overshadowed by #Bendgate and iOS8 troubles, no one can take away the fact that the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus achieved a record number of preorder sales. The numbers — and the products — speak for themselves.

Cook’s “one more thing” — the Apple Watch — is far more stylish than competing smartwatches, a beautiful timepiece. Of course, the Apple Watch is innovating on what Samsung already introduced to the market, and Apple is betting big on the health angle to take it the extra mile. But why wait until early 2015 to have the watch available to consumers? A big missed opportunity, failing to capture holiday sales.

The innovation continues with Apple’s new pay system. Apple Pay will help boost mobile payments, taking this trend to the next level. With your iPhone in hand or while wearing your Apple Watch, you will never need your debit or credit card again. Apple promises to have Pay in more than 220,000 retailers, including Macy’s, Whole Foods, Walgreens and Sephora, and they even have the two major credit card sponsors, Visa and Mastercard, on board. The possibilities are endless.

Though innovation plays a big part in the success of the company, it’s not necessarily their selling point. The Apple Watch was not the first smartwatch. The iPhone was not the first smartphone.

Apple does not care about being first — they care about being best. This is why they’re breaking records. This is why they have developed such a passionate fan base. The attention to detail, the beautiful design, the simplicity of Apple products… these are all Steve Jobs’ legacy, and factors that will ensure Apple will be around for a long time. I can’t wait to see what they come up with next.

What Love Looks Like

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Sunday, September 21, 2014 will go down in history: the world’s largest march to fight global warming. It goes down in my heart as one of the most moving and powerful days of my life.

Moms Clean Air Force marched, along with many other parent groups. We were there for all of you.

Over 400,000 people marched. We came from all over the world-mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, grandmothers, uncles: the people. Blessed to be alive, joyful to be here. The people: Outraged at the greedy corporate polluters hijacking our world. The people: Demanding that we ramp up the race for clean energy.

At the start, we formed a circle and Peter Yarrow (of Peter, Paul and Mary) led us in singing “This land is your land, this land is my land, From California, to the New York island.” And we felt it: This is our land. We are taking it back. My tears came when we began chanting: “This is What Democracy Looks Like!”

We expected to be marching with parents, with environmentalists and with members of the environmental justice community. But here’s what democracy looks like: Doctors and nurses turned out in force, underscoring how dangerous global warming is to people’s health. Labor unions marched. There were summer camps and congregations, alumni organizations and neighborhood groups. There were artists and politicians, anarchists and CEOs. Teachers joined — with their students from colleges, high schools, from middle schools.

We are going to win this fight. The tide is turning. The Rockefeller family announces it will divest its foundation of fossil fuel holdings. Mayor de Blasio commits NYC to an 80 percent reduction of greenhouse gas pollution by 2050. Texas is a national leader in wind energy, with more turbines and more jobs than any other state. There are more jobs, by tens of thousands, in the solar industry than the coal industry. The list goes on. And will grow on.

We unite against cynical and willful denial, against corporate greed, against polluters who are doing everything they can to overturn our beloved democracy — lying about what they do, sowing confusion and hiding the damage they are inflicting.

We cannot, and will not, stand for this.

And so, we march. We march with love. And love will win.

Photo: Ted Fink Photography

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Wetland: Love Down Under

Wetlands is a story of love, growth, friendship and family – tightly plotted, graphically imaged, unflinchingly pre-occupied with scatology, sex and morbidity. Still, for all the serious themes, the film is filled with rich, unforgettable imagery and humor, both in and above the gutter.

It’s not the Little House on the Prairie landscape that the film’s hero Helen must wade through. Its more like the bathrooms of Berlin. Helen has hemorrhoids and a more than healthy fixation with all her parts south of the equator. Her willingness to share images and her ideas on feminine hygiene may be too much for some audiences. But beyond the toilet tours, the wash of blood and fecal matter, Helen’s story rewards the stalwart viewer with a well told tale of the struggles of youth.

Helen’s parents are split. Her mother dabbles in every spiritual system available, stocks the home with a succession of idiosyncratic lovers and exposes more than her ideas to make a point. Helen’s father is more staid, immersed in his work. Still both evidently love their daughter. Helen works to restore their relationship and her family. Similarly she strongly bonds with best friend Corinna and her boyfriend, drug dealer Michael.

Unencumbered by adult taboos, Helen explores her orifices with no inhibitions and unbridled glee. The sights, smells and taste of her body propel her growh, mediating her social landscape. She professes not to care about hygiene, refusing to wash her smoldering parts. But like the venus fly trap, uses what nature has given her to seduce.

Shot in black and white, the film is dotted with startling imagery – a pizza topped off to the strains of The Blue Danube, toilet seats being personally cleaned and a lilting long shot of Helen skateboarding down a haunted hospital hallway, gown fluttering, gloriously illuminated from behind as she rides from adolescence to growth and the promise of a relationship and renewed family.

Wetlands is based on Charlotte Roche’s 2008 novel of the same name. When the film debuted at the Locarno Film Festival, David Wnendt was nominated for Best Director. Luminescent Carla Juri, as Helen, was nominated Best Actress at Sundance. With Wetlands behind them, we can only hope to see more of Wnendt and Juri.

Transferring From Community College to Top University Can Be Done: Advice From an Adult Learner

As a nontraditional college student, I understand the worries that come with being an adult learner — the concern of being significantly older than the rest of your peers, whether you’ll be able to keep up with the coursework, and the general concern of finding your place in what is traditionally a “younger person’s world.” Although by the time I was 26, I had lived all over Europe and South America, worked in the independent film industry, and had helped to raise three children in my family, I was a bit nervous about pursuing my lifelong dream to earn a college degree.

But, as I prepare in a few weeks to attend Stanford University, where I’ll complete my bachelor’s degree, I realize that a college degree can be within reach for many of my peers. After completing my first two years at community college, I was faced with the fortunate dilemma of having to choose between no fewer than eight of the nation’s top institutions. As I set out on the next journey of my academic career, I wanted to share advice for students like me. As with most anything in life worth having, the journey was not without its own set of obstacles, some of which had taken root far before my actual college experience was to begin. But I’m getting ahead of myself, let’s back up a bit.

When the rest of my high school class was busy filling out college applications, I was facing the stark reality that I would be unable to afford college. I was already working several jobs just to help make ends meet at home. For the next 10 years, I continued to work to help support my family. Despite the time that had elapsed, I never lost my motivation to learn. It was the explosion of awe I felt when opening my first encyclopedia as a boy, or the shortness of breath when looking at the moon through my first telescope that inspired me, and still inspires me even now. Lofty goals will always be met with adversity, and that’s where perseverance comes in.

The reality is, I am not the only highly-motivated student who had to put college dreams on hold as a teenager. College tuition and fees went up 89% between 2002 and 2012, and student debt is now larger nationally than credit card debt. With this in mind, community college was the most obvious and realistic option for me. I decided to enroll in the American Honors Program at Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana. I knew that going back to school would need to be affordable, and that I wanted opportunities to establish myself both academically and socially that set me up for admissions and scholarships at a top four-year school. The honors program could not have been a better personal fit. Aside from being affordable, priced far below university averages, I found great value in challenging coursework, motivated peers, and helpful advising.

My honors advisors made the process personable, providing support for anything from the school transfer selection to essay proofreading, to general problem solving be it academic or personal in nature. The honors-level coursework was designed to challenge and prepare me, and to ensure that more of my classes would transfer for credit at my next institution. Not to mention, the American Honors program has an ever growing network of four-year universities available to its students, making it easier to transfer your credits and save money.

For adults who are considering the same path, here are six lessons I learned in my pursuit:

1. Be diligent: Opt for difficult courses that can challenge you so you are prepared for higher-level coursework when you transfer. Set a high standard for yourself, and aim to consistently perform at or above that level.

2. Show improvement: Despite what you may think, bad high school grades or a few bad college classes do not translate into “GAME OVER.” What most colleges are looking for is improvement: a demonstration of what you learned from your initial experience.

3. Be accountable: Take responsibility for both your actions and their consequences. It’s a waste of time to blame others, and could ultimately cause more harm to yourself than anyone else.

4. Get involved: Colleges are impressed with excellent GPAs and evidence of improvement, but they’re also looking for a demonstration of well-roundedness in their applicants.

5. Ask for help: Advisors and professors want to help you, but you often need to seek that help out. If you have a concern, or a question that needs answering- ask.

6. “Know thyself”: It is this constant willingness to reflect on our past successes and failures, as well as those to come, that will ultimately help us make better choices.

As someone once told me, “failure is okay; complacency is not,” and it’s true. Contentedness is simpler — more comfortable, and often appears in the guise of safety. However it will almost always hinder progress, making it impossible to move forward. My lesson to future adult learners is simple: if we can face the fear of failure rather than run from it, we stand to learn far more.As a nontraditional college student, I understand the worries that come with being an adult learner — the concern of being significantly older than the rest of your peers, whether you’ll be able to keep up with the coursework, and the general concern of finding your place in what is traditionally a “younger person’s world.” Although by the time I was 26, I had lived all over Europe and South America, worked in the independent film industry, and had helped to raise three children in my family, I was a bit nervous about pursuing my lifelong dream to earn a college degree.

I'm With Stupid: Undead Cats and Other Stuff I Don't Get

I accidentally wandered into a story for which my feeble brain was ill-prepared the other day when I saw a link bearing the heading “Brian Cox: ‘Multiverse’ makes sense.” Thinking it might be the name of a new strip club that volatile former Dolphins, Bears, Jets, Patriots and Saints linebacker Brian Cox was thinking of opening, I clicked on the link.

Alas, it was not a story about a new club. It was a story about quantum mechanics. That would have been OK if the Brian Cox I was thinking of was the Brian Cox in question. I think that particular Brian Cox’s musings on the multiverse would be tremendously entertaining. But it wasn’t that Brian Cox. It was some geeky physicist from England.

The very first sentence of the story read, “The presenter and physicist Brian Cox says he supports the idea that many universes can exist at the same time.” That should have been a red flag for me right there. I should have read that, realized I was headed for the deep end of the mental pool and bailed out when I had the chance. But I didn’t. I read on.

That is how, a few paragraphs later, I stumbled upon a reference to Schrodinger’s cat, a feline locked in a box that is supposedly alive and dead at the same time. And then my brain exploded.

Here’s the idea behind Schrodinger’s cat, which stems from a thought experiment proposed by Austrian physicist Erwin Schrodinger: The cat is sealed in a box with a Geiger counter and a tiny bit of radioactive material. Over the course of an hour, one of the radioactive atoms may or may not decay. If it does, it will trigger a reaction that will break open a flask of hydrocyanic acid, which will kill the cat.

If you read this column regularly, you may be aware of my feelings for my own cat, and if you know how I feel about my cat, you’ll understand why I was at least intrigued by the idea of Schrodinger’s cat. I’m not saying it’s OK to poison cats — it’s not; it’s animal cruelty — and I’m not saying I want to poison my cat. I’m just saying I would find it very selfless of him if he were to volunteer for the experiment.

But here’s the thing: There never actually was a Schrodinger’s cat. Apparently, the whole experiment exists only in the mind. Hypothetically, at any given moment, that cat could be alive or dead, but since you can’t observe it, you don’t know which it is. You know that the cat will be dead eventually, but when you open the box an hour later, if an atom hasn’t decayed, you’ll still have a living cat. Surprise!

I have no idea why Schrodinger took that to mean that the cat was dead and alive at the same time. I think even an infant could tell you whether you have a living or deceased feline when you open the box. If the cat is dead, it just means that at some point it died. Before that it was alive; afterward, not so much. But I fail to see how it was alive and dead simultaneously.

I also fail to see how cats in boxes prove that there are multiple universes. I believe there are multiple universes, mind you, and I hope that in some of them I get to be not covered in body hair. But what that has to do with Schrodinger’s idea is beyond me.

Like I said, though, the story was too deep for my limited faculties despite Cox’s assertion that “it’s a simpler version of quantum mechanics. It’s quantum mechanics without wave function collapse.”

No wave function collapse? Well, then any idiot should be able to understand it. Curse this stupid I’m with!

I have a theory that the real genius of smart people lies in saying things that sound so outrageously intelligent that the rest of us nitwits never question them. This is especially true of astrophysicists and quantum physicists, who get to say things that are impossible to disprove, far-fetched as they might seem.

And so it goes with Schrodinger. We can’t disprove his hypothesis because hopefully no one will be so cruel as to subject a real cat to the proposed experiment.

Of course, if someone feels like trying the experiment and they’re very persuasive, they’re welcome to see if they can talk my cat into it.

Todd Hartley, “Schrodinger’s couch potato,” is often alive and dead while watching golf on TV. To read more or leave a comment, please visit zerobudget.net.

Vincent D'Onofrio Confirms That Robert Downey Jr. Hides Food All Over Movie Sets

Fans of 2012’s blockbuster hit “The Avengers” certainly noticed a quirk throughout the film: Robert Downey Jr. was always eating. Rumor had it that Downey was bringing his own food to set, hiding it and eating during scenes. It provided comic relief, so the film’s producers let it be.

In a HuffPost Live interview Friday, Vincent D’Onofrio — set to co-star alongside Downey in the upcoming flick “The Judge” — confirmed that Downey indeed hides food throughout the set. And that’s about all he would say.

“Downey does hide food all over set,” D’Onofrio told host Marc Lamont Hill. “I’m not going to tell you why. But he does. It makes perfect sense.”

“The Judge,” which also stars BIlly Bob Thornton and Robert Duvall, hits theaters Oct. 10.

Watch the rest of the clip above, and catch the full HuffPost Live conversation here.

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Vine update adds needed features for Android

vine-update-iphone-600x337Unlike Hyperlapse, Vine is giving Android some attention. An update rolling in today brings some iOS features with it, like the ability to choose videos from your device, and edit multiple videos down to a six-second clip. All in all, the update should make you want to use Vine much more. The six-second social site is one that has a … Continue reading

Pokemon TCG Online released to iPad (in Canada)

ipadThere’s been a soft launch of Pokemon: The Card Game Online for iPad this afternoon, starting with Canada. Supposing you’ve got access to a friend with an iPad in Canada and they’re willing to … ship it to you … you might be able to play. Otherwise you’re going to have to wait for the USA release, which should be … Continue reading

I Went to My First Major League Game 50 Years Ago — And All Hell Broke Loose

I was 6 years old when I went to my first Major League game on October 2, 1964.

The Philadelphia Phillies beat the Cincinnati Reds, 4-3, at Crosley Field in Cincinnati, Ohio.

There was a triple play that was initiated by an improbable catch by the most improbable of outfielders. There was a come-from-behind win by the Phillies, who, on the verge of clinching the pennant, had lost ten straight games. And, in the Reds’ clubhouse after the game, one teammate charged after another with an ice pick.

Just another day at the ballpark.

The Reds entered the game tied for first place in the National League with the St. Louis Cardinals, who lost that evening to the New York Mets, the worst team in the major leagues.

If the Reds had won, and they should have, they would’ve had a one-game lead with one game left in the season. If the Reds had won the pennant, they would’ve done it for their beloved manager, Fred Hutchinson, who left the team in August and was now dying of lung cancer.

The Reds went ahead 1-0 in the first inning after Frank Robinson doubled in Pete Rose, who was in his second year in the majors.

In the fourth inning, the Reds had Vada Pinson on second and Robinson on first when the team’s first baseman Deron Johnson hit a long fly to left field.

The Phillies left fielder, a rookie named Alex Johnson, who would become one of the worst fielding outfielders of his — or any — day, tripped going after the fly ball. As he was falling, he reached up and caught the ball, doubling Pinson off second and Robinson off first. A triple play.

The Reds led 3-0 in the bottom of the seventh inning when the Phillies pitcher Chris Short hit the Reds all-star shortstop Leo Cardenas with a pitch. Cardenas, with his bat in his hand, charged the mound but was stopped by the Phillies’ catcher, Clay Dalrymple.

“Leo woke up a dead ballclub when he did that,” Reds pitcher Jim O’Toole said.

O’Toole entered the eighth inning with a three-hit shutout. With one out, and runners on first and second base, the Phillies second baseman Tony Taylor hit a soft line drive over Cardenas’s head. But the distracted all-star shortstop made little attempt to catch it, and the ball fell over his head for a single.

The Phillies scored all four of their runs in the eighth inning.

After the game, an irate O’Toole exchanged words with Cardenas in the team’s clubhouse. O’Toole shoved Cardenas, who grabbed an ice pick and charged after O’Toole but was restrained.

All sharp objects had been removed from the Phillies clubhouse.

Two weeks earlier, the Phils led the League by 6½ games with 12 games to go. They were such a lock to win the league that the team began printing World Series tickets.

This was before division play. There were ten teams in each the National League and American league. The winners of the two leagues played one another in the World Series.

With such a big lead, one could’ve blamed the team’s manager Gene Mauch for resting his starting pitchers. Instead, Mauch pitched his best starting pitchers, Short and Jim Bunning, on two days rest.

The team lost ten straight before they beat the Reds on October 2.

St. Louis and Cincinnati entered the last game of the season tied for first. The Phillies were a game behind. The Phillies beat the Reds, 10-0, and the Cardinals beat the Mets, and won the pennant and then the World Series against the New York Yankees.

Fred Hutchinson died on November 12.

Gene Mauch kept his job as manager of the Phillies. He managed in the major leagues for nearly another quarter century and never won a pennant.

Twitter: ChrisLamb58