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 Ballplayers served country on battlegrounds

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PostSubject: Ballplayers served country on battlegrounds   Ballplayers served country on battlegrounds EmptyFri Nov 12, 2010 11:11 am

(CNN) -- In the days before there was an organized baseball draft, there was a military draft.

In September 1940 as the United States braced for prada handbags sale a possible entry into the war, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Selective Training and Service Act into law, requiring all American males ages 21 to 36 to register for military service.

More than 500 Major League players served during World War II; more than 4,000 minor league players also put their careers aside to serve their country.

Four of those players -- Lou Brissie, Yogi Berra, Jerry Coleman and John "Mule" Miles -- recently were honored by the American Veterans Center at Nationals Park in Washington.

"Back in that time, everybody expected to go," said Brissie, a paratrooper and Major League pitcher. "There was a big discussion about shutting down baseball for the duration, but President Roosevelt imposed on us to keep it going."

America's entry into World War I had cut prada handbags short the 1918 baseball season, and many feared the same, or worse, would be true in 1942. That January, baseball Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis sent a letter to Roosevelt, pleading for the continuation of Major League Baseball.

"I honestly feel that it would be best for the country to keep baseball going," the president wrote back the next day.

"I think Roosevelt recognized we were going to ask a lot of the American people: ask women to work, ask people to work double-time," said Robert Ruck, a history professor at the University of Pittsburgh. "They ought to have a chance to watch baseball and unwind."

World War II involved the entire nation, Ruck said.

"Fifteen million Americans served," he said, "and virtually every American family had somebody involved in the war, or they went to work in the defense plants to mount that war."

Before Berra earned 10 World Series championships with the New York Yankees, he volunteered for the U.S. Navy and participated in the D-Day landing at Normandy.

"I enjoyed every minute of it," Berra said. "prada outlet thought it was like the Fourth of July when I made Normandy."

Coleman postponed his professional baseball career to serve in World War II as a Marine Corps aviator. He earned a Distinguished Flying Cross for his service.

"Flying an airplane is a clean war," he said. "I had my roommate blow up in front of me and had other men that were killed on the runway, or disappeared on missions. Air war, of course now you don't see your targets -- they got them on radar, they're 20 miles away and you get 'em. If something happened, you never really saw the blood, the gore, the real desperation and death."

After the war prada shoes on sale joined the Yankees and was voted Rookie of the Year. In May 1953 his baseball career was disrupted again. He was recalled to service in the Korean War, where he earned a second Distinguished Flying Cross.

Coleman is the only former Major League Baseball player to see combat in two wars.

Miles, an original member of the Tuskegee Airmen, entered the military in 1942. His baseball career started in 1946 in the Negro Leagues.

"I didn't make a lot of money, but I had a lot of fun sleeping on the bus, eating on the bus, and dressing on the bus to get out and play a doubleheader, making $300 a month," he said. "And I enjoyed every bit of it. It was a great experience."
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