Archive | Travel RSS feed for this section

Imponderable #90: Miami Beach Florida

19 Apr

April 19, 2013

Kids. They grow up so fast. Sweet little shining apples, chips off the old block, fruit of your looms. There is nothing like when your child, who looks up to you, does something to make you proud.

And then there is this father and son.

pimp1

Aww, how cute. One day those hoes will be his!

I do have to point out, on a serious note, what the State Idiot sorry, Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle had to say: “It’s very much like domestic violence. It’s control. It’s terror. It’s beating. It’s affection- with torture.”

Affection? Affection? Where is the affection? “Violence, control, terror, beating, affection. SERIOUSLY? This is like those abused women who stay with men who break their arms and put out cigarettes on their backs: “but he loves me!” NO, Katherine Fernandez Rundle, there is no affection here. Just abuse and torture.

So this guy was charged in Nevada but not convicted? How is that possible? Is Nevada that messed up that a clear thug like this can get away with his reign of terror?

The question is Imponderable.

Picture Postcard: Judy Johnson Statue

16 Apr

April 16, 2013

I went on a business trip last week to Wilmington Delaware. To get there, I took a train ride through the rustiest part of America. Seriously, I’ll blog about this later on, but I saw more rusty and decaying hulks- trains, bridges, buildings- than I thought existed. I saw abandoned factories for products and companies that have not existed for decades. Problem was, using the camera while on a swiftly moving train, shooting through dingy windows, was not an option. And when I arrived in Wilmington, there was very little worth taking pictures of.

Except this.

100_0031

This statue was in front of a new minor league ballpark for the Blue Rocks, whom I believe are an affiliate of the KC Royals. This is William Julius “Judy” Johnson, one of the stars of the old Negro Leagues.

100_0032

In 1919, Johnson played for a Philadelphia semi-pro team, the Madison Stars. He was acquired by a Negro major league club, the Hilldale Daisies, for $100, and played for Hilldale from 1921 to 1929. During that time, he was nicknamed “Judy” because he resembled Judy Gans, a player for the Chicago American Giants. Future Baseball Hall of Famer John Henry Lloyd became Johnson’s mentor and taught him how to play third base.

In 1924, Johnson had a batting average of .327. Hilldale faced the Kansas City Monarchs that year in the first Negro World Series, and Johnson led all batters with a .364 average in a losing effort. The following year, Johnson batted .392, and Hilldale defeated Kansas City in that season’s Negro World Series. In 1929, Johnson batted .416.

When the Hilldale club folded, Johnson became the player-manager of the Homestead Grays. There, he discovered and became a mentor to future Hall of Famer Josh Gibson. Johnson then ended his career playing for the Pittsburgh Crawfords from 1932 to 1936. He was the team’s captain and helped them win the pennant in 1935. Johnson had a career batting average of .298 in the Negro major leagues.

After his playing career ended, Johnson was a coach and scout for several Major League Baseball teams; he signed Dick Allen. Johnson became the first black coach in the majors when he coached the Philadelphia Phillies in 1954.

100_0034

100_0036

100_0033