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They're Going to Need Festivals

9/15/2023

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It would be interesting to anticipate what the festivals for the American Heartland Theme Park might be, once they get the thing up and running.  I've put together a possible list and general dates for festivals that I see being possible.  To be clear, these are not company proposals; they are merely my on ideas.  Enjoy.
​
  • "Get Your Kicks" Festival (June):  Celebrate America's highway with kitschy characters highlighting the roadside attractions drivers and passengers experience.  Uplifting live music across the park will be sure to draw your attention through the day and into the night.  Be sure to enjoy Car Show days during this festival.
  • American Heartland Teacher Institute (July):  Twenty educators from across the nation are selected by jury to attend the institute for special training and professional development they won't experience anywhere else. During the institute, participants will explore the regions of the United States while also finding opportunities for including STEM, history, writing, reading, and the arts into their own classrooms.  AHTI is sponsored by [to be determined].
  • Music Across America (July):  Regional musicians from across the country are performing daily during the month.  You'll tap your toes to everything from jazz to bluegrass to classical and rock oldies.  Stay for an especially exciting Salute to Freedom, an fireworks-enhanced version of our regular Nighttime Spectacular show from June 14 to July 4.
  • Monarchs and Fireflies (July/August):  By day, we celebrate the monarch butterfly migration with special exhibits.  Plus, sample and enjoy a variety of Oklahoma watermelons and good, old-fashioned ice cream straight from the churn.  By night, you've never seen a theme park like this as thousands and thousands of LED, fiber optic, and projection effects light up the world around you.  American Heartland is a wonder to behold.   Stay to enjoy the Nighttime Spectacular show across the water.
  • Arts Festival (September):  Watch experts at work or try your hand.  We're offering special art and music classes for our guests.  Take a class in pen-and-ink, painting, and even phone photography.  Plus, enjoy our National Gallery, highlighting loaned artwork from the world-class Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas.
  • American Harvest Food Festival (September/October):  Help us celebrate American farmers and ranchers and sample from over 30 unique food experiences featuring the best farm-to-fork dishes available.  Enjoy regional cooking demonstrations in every land at various times throughout the day.
  • The Christmas Experience (November/December):  More than a light show, American Heartland seeks to immerse your family in the spirit of the season.  Look for interactive storytelling, special shows (including a crazy Christmas romp with our pirate stunt show), roaming characters (Watch the family decorate the tree every night on the plains.), and more, making the Christmas Experience one of your most cherished holiday memories.
  • Classical Romance (February):  Plan your romantic evening in one of our full service restaurants (by reservation).  Choose one of the couples packages in our four-star resort.  Be brave and take a quickfire ballroom dancing lesson.  Plus, we always have wedding packages available in the unique destination settings of American Heartland.
  • Celebration of Flora and Fauna (March/April):  As the trees and flowers bud, sit back and enjoy the beauty of the park with colorful natural landscaping.  Enjoy baby animal encounters.  Make and take home a new, stuffed friend from our exclusive line of cute, plush creatures.  The park is alive with new life during this festival.  Enjoy the dogwoods and redwoods when they bloom, and get ready for the azalea blooms which usually occur late in April.  Interested in learning some gardening secrets?  Join classes offered in the Great Plains area of the park.
  • Founder's Day (date to be determined):  Help us celebrate the mastermind of American Heartland, the incomparable Gene Bicknell.  Eat pizza as you screen a Bicknell movie, prefaced by Mansion Animation's award-winning short, Gene's 6th Symphony.  Don't miss the Museum of Vision and Legacy as you discover the life of our founder.

Do any of these unique festivals spark your interest?  Just keep in mind, at American Heartland, we just might surprise you when you least expect it.  Floating mini-festivals will appear in our regions at various times throughout the year, such as:
​
  • Welcome to Oklahoma (spring):  We have special presentations and displays from the best of Oklahoma tourism on display during the spring.  Featured in the Great Plains Show Barn, there will be freebies and lots of literature to celebrate locations in our host state.  Enjoy Watonga Cheese, Prague Kolaches, and other foods from across the great state of Oklahoma.
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Observations Begin

9/14/2023

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We have a good start into the fall '23 semester at Pittsburg State University, and it's time for the first round of observations for student teachers.  It puts me back in the classroom for short periods of time and reminds me of two things:
  • Why I love teaching
  • Why I retired from teaching
Frankly, it took a lot of energy to teach full time, but it resulted, most of the time, in a delightful fatigue at the end of the day.  Now I have time to pass wisdom and insight to the next generation of teachers.
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In the past year, I've been able to visit schools in Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma.  In each, there is something unique.  I can say that in the short time I've been in the supervisor role, I have seen the good, the bad, and the ugly.

​
I observed in one elementary school a terrible school culture, in which teachers did very little to curb poor behavior, and the principal talked out loud (over the students) to visiting parents during an assembly.  On the other hand, I had to brag to another principal about the culture of her school, where students and teachers greeted me in the hallway, and my visit was quite pleasant.
Student teachers fall into each end of the spectrum of schools and can have very different experiences.  The good thing about it is that they can learn in either:  they either learn how to do things effectively or how to not do things effectively.  It's part of my job to help them navigate the learning with whatever situation they find themselves experiencing.  
​
​These days, I can be found everywhere from kindergarten to high school classrooms, listening to lessons in letter writing and letter sounds to menu planning for imaginary restaurants in a FACS class.  Each has something to offer, and I can always find areas to help student teachers improve.  Fortunately, I get to do all of it representing an excellent institution.
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Professional Pet Peeve:  Stop Neglecting History

9/13/2023

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Originally posted September 29, 2021

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Have you seen the state of our world lately?  It's as if we built it on a crumbling foundation.  Unsupported walls are cracking as pieces of society tumble into the abyss of a sinkhole.  Depending on which of many sides people ally themselves, the vision of what is tumbling might differ.  Many cry victimhood or victory without trying to understand anyone else's point of view.  In my day, we called it closed mindedness, and I can't claim to suffer from it, as well... but I'm trying daily to open my mind to opposing views.  Granted, that doesn't mean I will adopt those views as my own, but it should serve me better to understand where others stand, how they got there, and why they believe as they do.

Does someone feel oppressed?  Enslaved?  Beaten?  Why do they feel that way?  Is it a result of their upbringing? Their atmosphere?  Their education?

Does someone act superior?  How did they get there?  Is it because they were taught hatred?  Is it a because they have a lack of diverse experiences?
Do they get their news from biased sources?  Have they heard both sides?  Are their families talking about things without any substance to back up their opinions?  Or have they done their homework?  Do they know the platforms?  Have they applied foundational beliefs to their conversation.

One thing we do know is that humanity is complex...and that's where history comes in handy as a solution.  Before family fails, before education falls, before society becomes antisocial, before civilization is uncivil, our education system must realize the solution.  Outside of religious benevolence and evangelism, history teaches about difficult dilemmas, stumbles, errors, and bad decisions.  History can teach sportsmanship better than team sports, formal grammar better than a writing textbook, comprehension better than a literature course, geometry, probability, statistics, and so much more.  More than anything, the subject of history is where we find civics and citizenship.  It's so much more than dates and dead guys.  It is stories, characters, plotlines, and settings.

The problem with any plea for more history lies with the fact that elementary teachers do not specialize in history. They often feel that they don't know enough (and they would be right).  And that's where we find ourselves - breaking the cycle:  when teachers fail to interest their students in history, the students who grow up to be teachers will also fail to interest their students in history.
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American Heartland:  Mission Statement

9/12/2023

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The mission statement for Mansion Entertainment Group has many interesting aspects.  Since the American Heartland is a part of this group, the mission statement applies to everything that is planned in the new theme park, as well.
Mansion Entertainment Group is on the verge of becoming the most powerful entity in family entertainment, with its unparalleled expertise across film, television, animation, music, theatre, and family immersive entertainment experiences.
 
With a commitment to producing high-quality, wholesome content that the entire family can enjoy, Mansion Entertainment Group has carved a niche for itself in the entertainment industry. Its impressive roster of talents, cutting-edge technology, and innovative storytelling techniques are a testament to its dedication to delivering exceptional entertainment experiences that leave a lasting impact on audiences.
 
As Mansion Entertainment Group continues to expand its reach and diversify its offerings, it is poised to become the go-to destination for families seeking engaging and meaningful entertainment that inspires, educates, and entertains.
There are some big, flourishing statements within the mission:
  • "most powerful entity in family entertainment"
  • "unparalleled expertise across film, television, animation, music, theatre, and family immersive entertainment experiences"
However, beyond those, there are some phrases that catch my attention:
  • "high-quality"
  • "wholesome content that the entire family can enjoy"
  • "go-to destination for families"
  • seeking engaging and meaningful entertainment that inspires, educates, and entertains"
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I am especially impressed that a company in a nation with faltering morals still seeks to present products of such quality while maintaining a foundation of family atmosphere and high character, but at the same time, I admire that the company is willing to do so for that very reason.  It might be time to strike while the iron is hot:  Disney has taken a lot of heat of late because of its stance on a number of character issues and appears to be wilting on the vine.  Pushing an agenda that is counter to conservative Christian values has also pushed many people away, and Disney is hemorrhaging in every branch of its operation.

Hopefully, American Heartland can maintain its theme and its mission in the battle for vacation crowds.
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Quote:  Intentions

9/11/2023

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“Never get so fascinated by the extraordinary
that you miss the ordinary.”
​
(Magdalen Nabb, English novelist)
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Disney's Impossible Vision

9/10/2023

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Originally posted on December 29, 2012
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One of the most famous (and most popular) of Missourians is Walt Disney.  Marceline, Missouri is considered to be Disney's hometown, and his iconic Mickey Mouse was created in Kansas City.  While Walt Disney was born in Chicago, we Missourians don't hold that against him.

I have been to a couple of Disney movies in my lifetime, and I have visited five of the theme parks that bear his name.  Undoubtedly, most of us have heard that Disney parks are "the happiest place on earth", but I suppose that's subjective phrase.

Clearly, Disney and his "imagineers" had a magical vision.  He found ways to make his vision real - even developing "unusable" swamp land in Florida into an unequaled economic empire based on fictional characters, places, and experiences.
​
In a recent blog post, Hillsboro, Missouri, teacher Krissy Venosdale wrote, "It is clear that when Walt Disney said 'Our greatest natural resource is the minds of our children,' he meant it.  He understood kids.  He ‘got’ what engages people. He created an experience that develops wonder, inspires imagination, and instills dreams."

The focus in education has moved dramatically in the last 15 years.  While being a teacher has required a Bachelor of Science degree for several decades now, it has always been recognized that teaching is a balance of Science and Art.  Put in a different way, no one would patronize Disney movies if they were all about cause and effect, character descriptions, set dimensions, or cost analyses and financial projections.  No, we patronize those movies because of the magic - the storylines, the deep character development, and the emotion.  In short, what makes a good Disney movie is the wonder, exploration, and discovery!

In her blog, Mrs. Venosdale, who also created the images that accompany this writing, wrote:
​We’ve spent so much time focusing on tests and collecting worksheets in our schools. I get that. Those are the things we’ve come to associate with learning along the way.  Misguided traditions.  But, it’s time we associate what learning is really about.  More time focusing curiosity, imagination, and dreams.  Teaching kids that ‘impossible’ is fun. Pouring wonder into our schools like it’s oxygen.  Because inside every kid is a vision, just like the one Walt Disney had.  A vision that we’ll never see if we don’t take the time to develop it, listen to it, and embrace it.  A vision bigger than scores, worksheets, and points.  A vision that will add something special to the world.  We’ve just gotta remember where to focus, or we’ll miss it.
I couldn't agree more.  I understand there is a place for ongoing assessment and research-based teaching strategies, but when schools and teachers get bogged down in the mire of data collection and reactionary differentiation among the student body, they sacrifice the personal touch, the close teacher/student relationships, and the "magic" that makes students love learning.  We must remember the art as well the science.  Our children are not merchandise produced in factory assembly lines, evaluated by Inspector #5, and packaged for the masses.
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No, our children are our future.  When it comes to our students, we must have a vision of an invisible future.  Walt Disney saw a swamp and envisioned an amazing and magical kingdom.  What do we see when we look at our students?  More so, are we fostering a climate of vision within those students?  No matter how bright our own vision, the future of the universe rests also on their visions.  I doubt even Walt Disney could imagine some of the leaps forward that have been made in his industries since the time of his death.  Only with our continual passing the vision forward, guided by the clarity of our faith, will society advance.
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American Heartland:  What if?

9/9/2023

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There are skeptics.

There are people with questions.

There are unbelievers who refuse to believe the hype. Mansion Entertainment Group made that bold announcement at the end of July - they are building a destination theme park - and many immediately panned the whole idea.
I have some questions, too.  How will the infrastructure handle such a robust endeavor?  Where will employees come from?  Where will vacationers be housed during their visits?  Who is paying for the park?

What if the park fails?  What if it doesn't get off the ground?

I have to stop myself.  That kind of thinking doesn't seem to support the positive vision that the founder and executives have for the American Heartland Theme Park​ in Vinita, Oklahoma.  And it is a positive vision.

They've said that they are confident in their projections and expectations.  They've said the park is already fully funded.  They've said the park will open in the fall of 2026.  All very ambitious.

But what if it happens?  People can say that it's a bad idea, plopping a Disney-competing theme park "in the middle of nowhere".  First of all, that's just offensive to the people who live in this region.  I realize we live in flyover country, but that does not mean that this is nowhere.  

Then again, that just makes me want American Heartland to succeed.  If Disney can build Disneyland in an orange grove and Disney World on a nasty swamp, why can't these folks make something out of a virtually level piece of cleared farmland in northeast Oklahoma.

What if it does work?  What if it is successful?  The more people scoff, the more I can imagine the powers behind American Heartland feeling satisfied.  Who doesn't love an underdog story!

And the more I would love to be a part of the team.  Almost 40 years ago, I envisioned myself being a part of a theme park.  Working at a place called The Wilds, I was poised to be a part of a theme park from the ground floor. I figured that I would write scripts for attractions and shows, that I would train employees, that I would control adherence to the theme.  Had that endeavor been successful and not have fallen victim to bank failures in the 1980s, I might be a CEO or president there, today.

So why not dream a little more?  I'd love to be a part of the development of such an endeavor.  What if it could happen?
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Music Appreciation:  All Shook Up

9/8/2023

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Students are often called upon to read "chorally".
That is, they read together simultaneously

as a group.

Repeating this practice assists young readers with reading fluency - the speed, accuracy,
​and inflection of  oral reading.


Why not, since it's called "choral" reading anyway, actually read the chorus of a song? ​
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Oklahoma City History

9/7/2023

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As reported previously, I had a hard time finding any history depicted in the signage and displays in the Bricktown area of Oklahoma City, yet I know there is great history to be told.  I wanted to see signs to explain the historic buildings, but as I said, there weren't any to be found.  Off to the side, off the beaten path of the canal, there was finally a statue of a lone Native man with some explanatory markers around him.  The area around him is nice, but why he is hidden off the side is a mystery.
The Jim Thorpe Museum was closed (though it was still early), and by the time I made it around to find the American Banjo Museum, it was after 6pm.  What is there to see in a banjo museum? you ask:  probably banjoes, but I can't really be sure, because it was closed, too.
On one corner between Jim Thorpe and the banjoes was a single historical marker.  Presumably there are more elsewhere, but hey, this is the inner city, and I'm not one to wander alone in a place like this. 

This marker explained something that happened just a couple of months after the great Land Run of 1889 (I'll never understand that method of land distribution; there had to have been a better idea.).  Apparently, new state pride was rampant back then, as well, because when July Fourth came around, the people wanted to celebrate in the biggest way.  They watched horse and wagon races and had all kinds of Independence Day fun, but the grandstand they built wasn't resilient enough to hold the weight of all of those new Oklahoma citizens.  When it collapsed, a boy was killed, and the tragedy put a stop to the celebration.

Of course, there is more history to this area, but they just don't depict it they way they could.  They don't educate people, local residents or out-of-towners, and they should.
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American Heartland:  3D Model

9/6/2023

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I can't imagine the number of hours it must have taken to create the beautiful 3D model of the new American Heartland Theme Park in Vinita, Oklahoma.  The same architecture and layout is here as was shown in the flat, concept art and the CGI fly-through video, but there are some slight differences to find, telling us that the finished park will develop its own look and style as it is constructed over the next three years.

Standing in the photo here are the executives of the park (left) accompanied by three of the local and state public office holders (right) including the mayor of Vinita.

The model is meticulous.  If I were to stand before it in person, I would stare at it for hours, imagining what it will be like when it is life-sized.
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One-of-a-Kind Educational Partnership

9/5/2023

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For my birthday in August, Mr. Culbertson sent me a collection of snapshots from our past.  This was a teaching partnership like no other, and we were a force to be reckoned with.  Mr. C and I have very different interests and personalities, and our complementary style worked like magic with our students.
He brought me out of my shell, and I help him anchored.  He became more creative, and I became more focused. A real friendship was formed and remained through bright and dark moments.  They are fond memories indeed.
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Oklahoma City Riverwalk

9/4/2023

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Taxpayers in Oklahoma City sure paid a lot of money for this feature.  Pundits touted a riverwalk in the city would bring about tourism dollars and be a source of pride for Oklahoma.  They held up San Antonio, Texas, and the historic riverwalk there as a possible model to follow.  So that's what they did.  They successfully put it to a series of votes, and the project became a reality.

After all of these years, I finally made it to an area known as Bricktown to see what all the fuss was about.  Let me just say this:  the Bricktown Canal is not the San Antonio Riverwalk.  While San Antonio has history to show off along with its bars and restaurants, Oklahoma City just has bars and restaurants.  Don't take that the wrong way: there are some pretty spots, but this in no way matches what it was intended to be, and there were only two boats cruises that canal at a time (with only one during the day).  Other boats sat idle, even thought I was there in the dead center of tourism season.
I found some flowers, geese, and a couple of ducks down there, but that meant visitors needed to dodge the droppings on the sidewalk in areas frequented by the fowl.
Seen alongside the canal were also the old brick buildings that are concentrated in this part of the city.  It's been known as Bricktown for as long as I can remember, growing up in the area.  But there is something missing that I'll hit in another article in a few days.  Where are the plaques on the buildings that tell when they were constructed and their original purpose?  Where were the appeals to help passersby understand the urban area and spread a historical understanding of the city?  As far as I could tell, those things are completely absent.
The people say Oklahoma City a lot.  Watch the local news and you'll here Oklahoma this and Oklahoma that. There's a lot of people who will fight you to convince you that they're the nicest people in the world, but there should be more of a foundation laid below that pride.  I see old buildings, a canal for boat tours, and a bunch of bars and arcades, but there should be more reason behind these things.

I guess one of my favorite items was this mural on one building's side wall.  Something about the mural appealed to me.  It was painted in a less-than-modern style, and it looked awfully nostalgic...but it still didn't explain things.  I spent several minutes trying to interpret the image, but without more context, one has to rely on generalities and not specifics.
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I appreciate the efforts it took to make this area into what it is, but I believe it missed the mark in accomplishing what supporters predicted it would be.
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They're Going to Need More Resorts

9/3/2023

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If the American Heartland Theme Park really gets built in Vinita, Oklahoma, and if the crowds pour in, they're going to need more than a 300-room resort hotel to accommodate them all.  I have some ideas.  Since the theme park is based on regions of the U.S., it might be nice to present a couple of areas that aren't represented elsewhere in the park.  These aren't along Route 66, so they have to be located outside the park, but it will be nice to have our last two states represented nonetheless.  To be clear, these are not proposals from the park (no insider information here), but only my ideas.
The Last Frontier Restaurant and Resort
Stay in our rustic lodge with an Alaskan wilderness theme.  Swim in the glacier-themed pool.  Dine in our wildlife hall where you can order exotic foods from the frontier (or just pick up a hamburger).  Your room will have all the amenities you expect from a resort of this caliber.  Ground transportation is available to shuttle you to the theme park and back.

The Kamehameha Resort
Always dreamed of visiting Hawaii, but couldn't afford it?  We've taken care of you with our Polynesian resort.  If a luau with a fiery hula show is what you want, come on down to the beachfront pool and take it all in.  Shuttle to the park in style in our surf-busting boats.
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Professional Pet Peeve:  Stop Rushing

9/2/2023

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Teachers, please stop rushing through your lessons just because the schedule calls for a break.  Stop rushing through your material so you can stick to a pacing guide.  Stop rushing just because you need to get to the next page in the teacher edition by tomorrow.

Slow down.  Take your time.  Better yet, take your students' time, and use that time wisely.  Go deeper into the material.  Check for comprehension.  Reteach.  Reform your teaching.

Take the time to analyze the effectiveness of your lessons.  Decide what worked and what didn't.  Figure out what you will do next time to make it better.  Does that lesson need to be thrown out altogether?  Should it be tweaked?

Did that lesson work perfectly?  If so, make a note of it, and don't forget to include it in next year's lineup.
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Fred Rogers (Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood) discovered that when he slowed down, children listened closer and understood more.  They were able to better process what he said.  Find some Mr. Rogers' episodes on YouTube and study how the man delivered his message.  I'm not saying to copy his voice; I merely suggest that you consider some of those ideas.
Reevaluate how you look at your classroom, and stop tying yourself to the idea that you absolutely must get to the end of all of your material.  Deep is better than shallow.  Diving in is preferable to skipping along the surface.  When you do, your students will be more compelled to engage with the lesson and want more.  They will feel the learning - the growing, the improving - and appreciate it - and you - all the more.
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Oklahoma City Baseball

9/1/2023

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My daughter and I spent some time in downtown Oklahoma City, this summer.  She met friends for a baseball game at the Bricktown Ballpark, home of the Oklahoma City Dodgers, while I got some steps in, walking around outside in the heat.  I grabbed these pictures around the stadium as I strolled around enjoying the city.
There is history here, of course, but not the kind that I usually follow.  With the likes of Johnny Bench, Mickey Mantle, and Whitey Ford, baseball history is well-represented at the park.  Perhaps the most intriguing acknowledgement of local history, however, was depicted in the mosaics on the left and right of the ballpark turnstiles.  I found many familiar places and people represented in these mosaics, but a person who stops to admire them may wonder at what they show.
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    Checks & Balances

    Links to external sites
    on the internet are for convenience only.

    No endorsement or approval of any content, products, or services is intended.

    Opinions on sites are not necessarily shared
    by Mr. Hoggatt
    (In fact, sometimes
    Mr. Hoggatt doesn't agree with anyone.)
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