Showing posts with label Major League Baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Major League Baseball. Show all posts

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Kansas City Public Library and other sights

We left the Giant Eyeball and drove to Kansas City. We had a nice, easy, straight drive, directly West. Somehow, I have no pictures of that trip, so there was either nothing to see or I fell asleep...
 
I was really looking forward to going to Kansas City, though. Someone had, at some point, posted a picture on Facebook of a building that looked like giant books, and so I Google searched it, and found that it was the Kansas City Public Library parking garage! What an amazing idea! What an inspiring piece of art!! How encouraging! In fact, I instantly wanted to read (most) of the books that were represented (or re-read the books represented that I had already read!)
 
First, though, I had to convince Peter that we had to go off the beaten path, pulling a trailer, though the core of Kansas City to take pictures of a building. Which, he agreed to do.
 
Once again, GPS did NOT help!! I typed in Kansas City Public Library and it guided us through narrow streets, the wrong way down a one-way (a big giant truck was coming the other way, but stopped to wait for us to make it through- probably had some choice words about "tourists"), through construction (in which we actually had to run over those orange cones... we finally arrived, and THIS is what we saw:

A beautiful building, A Kansas City Public Library, but not THE Kansas City Public Library... (Apparently this is the Central library - if someone knows otherwise, please let me know!)
 
Somehow, I convinced Peter that, even though we were driving around and around for...way too long...we had to try to find the other one! At that point, really, it was too hot (again, with the "too hot") to do anything else anyway, so we drove around Kansas City. We did find THE Library - I forget how. Maybe we broke down and turned on the roaming on our cell phones, so we could Google..
.
It's a good size city (approximately 460,000 people) and has ALOT to offer/see. For starters, and the most advertised, their sports teams - starting with: Kansas City Chiefs (National Football League)! (Also, Kansas Speedway for Nascar races, of which they host 3 times a year; Kansas City Royals (Major League Baseball); and Sporting Kansas City (Formerly, the Kansas City Wizards of Major League Soccer).
 
One of the best things about the Visit Kansas City website is that under "things to do" they include a category of "quirky attractions". :D
(http://www.visitkc.com/things-to-do/suggested-itineraries/quirky-attractions/index.aspx)
 
When I look back about each of the places we've been, and not just on this trip, but all of them, and I review the things we miss, I remember that each trip is like a "sample platter". Tasty little bits of a few different things ~ see what we like, and come back for those next time, and add a few other tidbits, too!
 
A couple of the things we missed (as per roadsideamerica.com and other websites):
  • The world's largest concrete soccer ball (5801 NE 76th St)
  • The world's largest shuttlecocks (sculpture at 4525 Oak St)
  • Fritz's Railroad Restaurant (diner style, food delivered by model train (east side of Grand Blvd at E. 25th St.)
  • The house in which Jesse James was shot is an hour north, in St. Joseph, and you can visit the house (they've left the hole in the wall, apparently, but it's grown over the years as people continue to take pieces of the wall...)
    (http://www.ci.st-joseph.mo.us/history/jameshome.cfm)
Also listed is The Kansas City Public Library parking garage. Here's the problem: we were pulling a trailer and there was no parking, so Peter just slowed down so I could take pictures out of the window, and they are... not good...in that trees blocked most of the view!! Still, good enough for me, but Google it, to see the full spectrum of the building! It's a great building!
 
 http://www.strangebuildings.com/kansas-city-public-library-parking-garage-kansas-city-usa/
Kansas City has alot of beautiful and/or buildings, and I don't really know what most of them were, so anyone who sees my pictures and happens to know what the building are, please tell me!!

The one that LOOKS like an Opera House IS the Opera House (Muriel Kauffman Theatre), but the rest I don't know...
 
 
Many people think that Kansas City is in Kansas and are surprised to find out that it is, in fact, in Missouri. That's why I was surprised to find out that Kansas city is also in Kansas. Technically, they are separate cities, but we drove from one to the other and didn't notice. There was probably a sign, but we didn't see it.

We drove through the Northeast corner of Kansas, so we could cross it off our list of "states and provinces we still need to visit", and then turned North towards Nebraska. (More on Nebraska on Wednesday.)
 
However, I have another trip planned for Kansas - but I want to go to Liberal, which is, of course, where Dorothy Gale lived, from Wizard of Oz. You know, the Dorothy who said, "Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas any more."
 
We almost made it there a few years ago, when were just South, in Oklahoma, but we couldn't go. I do have my ruby red slippers, though, all ready for that trip!  http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/2815

Sunday, October 28, 2012

"If you build it, they will come"

Annie Kinsella: If you build what, who will come?
Ray Kinsella: He didn’t say.
.......
Ray Kinsella: I think I know what “If you build it, he will come” means.
Annie Kinsella: Ooh… why do I not think this is such a good thing?
Ray Kinsella: I think it means that if I build a baseball field out there that Shoeless Joe Jackson will get to come back and play ball again.
Annie Kinsella: [staring in disbelief] You’re kidding.
Ray Kinsella: Huh-uh.

The “Field of Dreams.” (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0097351/) It’s a fictional story that includes real historical baseball characters (Shoeless Joe Jackson and Moonlight Graham, for example). The book from which Field of Dreams was adapted is called “Shoeless Joe”, written by W.P. Kinsella. (I’m going to read it, now that I know.)
 
Shoeless Joe’s real name was Joseph Jefferson Jackson, and he got his nickname because he once ran bases in his socks, thanks to blisters on his feet.
 
In 1919, a scandal (allegedly accepted a bribe, along with 7 others, to throw the World Series) got him banned from playing Major League Baseball (forever), but many of his records still stand! (Apparently, even Babe Ruth claimed to follow the technique that Shoeless Joe used for hitting). In 1921, Shoeless Joe was acquitted (evidence seems to point to the fact that he was accused without cause), but because of his tarnished name, he still was banned from baseball.. Despite the many, many records that he set, he is still on Major League Baseball’s “ineligible” list and so far, cannot be inducted into Baseball’s Hall of Fame… Sad story…no wonder W.P. Kinsella wanted to give him another chance…
 
After Shoeless Joe left his professional baseball career, he moved to Greenville SC. where he’d lived as a child. As I was reading his story (just now), I was thinking: I wished I had’ve known he was in Greenville sooner – I could’ve gone to see his memorial while I was there visiting my Grampa years ago (my Grampa lived in the neighboring town of Easley)… and then I started thinking… that sounds kind of familiar…so I went through some old pictures, and sure enough! look what I found! (He’s wearing shoes…)
Moonlight Graham’s real name is Dr. Archibald Wright Graham. In the movie, he is also a doctor, and lives outside of the field, but is given the opportunity to come play inside the field, too. In real life, he did play right fielder for the New York Giants, from the bottom of the 8th inning, to the bottom of the 9th inning, one game. He never got to bat. It was his only game in the Major Leagues.
 
He completed his medical degree and became a doctor in Chisholm MN for 50 years. The movie includes this quote:
 
Ray Kinsella: Fifty years ago, for five minutes you came within… y-you came this close. It would KILL some men to get so close to their dream and not touch it. God, they’d consider it a tragedy.
Dr. Archibald “Moonlight” Graham: Son, if I’d only gotten to be a doctor for five minutes… now that would have been a tragedy.
 
I’m not sure if he said anything like that in real life, but I bet he at least felt it! He was an actual Do-Gooder. For example, one expression of his Do-Goodness was that - not only did he serve as a doctor as his career, he also worked free of charge, helping children of the miners come get fitted for glasses (which were donated) on Saturdays.
 
He passed away in 1965 and his buried in Rochester MN. (Wished I had’ve known THAT earlier, since we were just in Rochester -see this past Sunday’s blog – October 28th). His legacy of helping people continues – there is still a scholarship set up in his name in Chisholm.
 
So – the Field! You can actually visit there – it’s a real baseball field – maybe not exactly how the movie portrays it…then again – maybe it is! I’m not the one who’s going to confirm or deny someone’s “dream”, that is for sure. You can go there….and see for yourself. (http://www.fieldofdreamsmoviesite.com/)
While there,
  • you can sit in the bleachers and watch a game;

  • you can play in the game if you want;
 
  • and/or you can “disappear” into the corn, if you want. (For those of you who haven’t seen the movie, this is not a creepy disappearing-into-the-corn like some other movies – it’s not scary.)

    It was ridiculously hot the day we were there, so we opted for walking in the corn and watching other people playing baseball. As it was, it was a long, long way out to the edge of the cornfield, too. (I’m telling you – it was hot! we had to stop 1/2 way across the outfield and give the puppies water!)
  •  
In the movie, Dr. Archibald “Moonlight” Graham says, “We just don’t recognize life’s most significant moments while they’re happening. Back then I thought, “Well, there’ll be other days”. I didn’t realize that that was the only day.”
 


Maybe that’s true. I mean, there’ll be other days- but not another day, just like today. THAT is why it’s important to pull over on the side of the road and look at things we’re passing by! A “stop and smell the roses” sort of thing.

 
 
That is why we went out of our way to go to the Toy Train Barn, and that is why, even though we arrived after they closed, they let us in anyway.  Wednesday – Toy Train Barn.


(In other news - I can't figure out how to put a "follow" button on here, so if anyone could tell me that, that'd be great! Also, I can't figure out how to allow people who aren't members of "blogspot" to comment, either... I'm certain it's an easy fix, but I don't know what it is... In the meantime, I'm also blogging on http://biggestballofstring.wordpress.com, which has a "follow" button right there and anyone can comment...)