Monday, July 23, 2007

Victorian Tea August 11, 2007

The MHA's 5th Annual Victorian Tea is set for Saturday, Aug. 11, from 3:30-5 p.m. at Grace Episcopal Church at Main and Hyde Park in Hutchinson. This is a fundraiser for the MHA and tickets are $20 each.

We're serving a full menu, including all the traditional tea foods such as cucumber sandwiches and scones. Everything is cooked from scratch, using fresh herbs and vegetables from local gardens when possible.

The program this year is by Nan Duncan who will talk about plants you can grow in Kansas with which you can make tea. She will have samples for everyone to try.

The Victorian tea is a great way to spend the afternoon with friends or family - a fabulous mother-daughter outing, and perfect for a group.

Hats and finery are encouraged, but not necessary. Tea is one way to slow down, de-stress and enjoy conversation with those you care about.

Order tickets by mail from:

MHA
PO Box 2021
128 N. Main, Suite F
Hutchinson KS 67504-2021
620-663-7772 or tickets@mhatea.com

See www.mhatea.com for more information.

posted by Patsy Terrell www.patsyterrell.com

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Blues in the Park

As part of this year’s Emancipation Day Celebration events internationally noted Blues and Folk musician Lemuel Sheppard will perform in Hutchinson.

Lem will be performing in beautiful Avenue A Park on Friday, August 3rd, starting about 7:00pm. The concert is FREE and everyone is invited to come around 6:30pm for free hot dogs and lemonade. This event is sponsored by the Emancipation Day Celebration Committee, the Downtown Hutchinson Revitalization Partnership and the Hutchinson/Reno Arts and Humanities Council. For more information call the Hutchinson/Reno Arts and Humanities Council at 620/662-1280.

For over twenty years Sheppard has lived the life of the traveling Bluesman. He has taken his own brand of Blues from his Kansas City roots to Africa, South America, on numerous national tours and even a solo performance at the Kennedy Center.

Lemuel possesses a deep appreciation for a wide range of vocal music he refers to as African-American traditional song. This, combined with his ability to perform many historical and geographical Blues styles has gained him a reputation as an authority on African-American folk music. Despite this recognition for his scholarship Sheppard feels his Cultural Heritage is his greatest asset as a performer.

In addition to his concert work, over the past few years Sheppard has been inducted into the Oklahoma Blues Hall of Fame, composed the Blues soundtrack for the (Emmy nominated) PBS documentary Black, White, and Brown,” and his recent CD Urbanfolk has been featured on the National Public Radio program “Open Mike.”

For more information about Lem Sheppard and to listen to examples of his music access www.lemuelsheppard.com.

posted by Patsy Terrell www.patsyterrell.com

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Friday, July 20, 2007

Walking in Distant Footsteps


Today - in 1969 - kids got out their Apollo toys and play-enacted to the "beep...beep...beep" of NASA audio while history was beamed into their living rooms.



As commemorated in this plaque on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, commander Neil Armstrong, command module pilot Michael Collins and lunar module pilot
Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin successfully got Armstrong and Aldrin onto the lunar surface. Armstrong insists that he actually said "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind" and that the "a" was obscured in the recording. Others believe he simply flubbed it. Personally, I don't care; I was just happy to be allowed to stay up late and hear it on TV with the rest of the country.



One of the fun things about being an adult baby-boomer is that you can visit the icons of your youth. I caught up to the Apollo 11 command module, Columbia in the Milestones of Flight gallery at the National Air and Space Museum at the Smithsonian in Washington DC, back in 1980.



Here's a closer look.



To commemorate the 28th anniversary of the first manned moon landing, we recently paid a visit to the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in Hutchinson, KS.



One of the Cosmosphere's artifacts is this "white room", from which the astronauts transitioned from the gantry to the command modules.



A helpful photo at the Cosmosphere shows how it worked, 320 feet above the ground.



Visitors are allowed inside, and your "inner eight-year-old" can imagine the curved hatch of a command module instead of the view of the floor. This is one of three white rooms, and there is no available record of which rooms were used on which missions, but according to the signage here, this one would have been used for about 1/3 of the Apollo missions.



Outside the white room is this actual console from one of the two original mission control rooms in Houston. This particular one was used by the flight surgeon to monitor astronaut physiological signs on the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs.



The Cosmosphere has some artifacts specific to Apollo 11, like these neoprene gloves, used by Aldrin and Armstrong on the mission. They were worn during their moon walk, but with an outer protective glove. I believe that the Cosmosphere also has at least one of the parachutes that brought the command module to splashdown, but they are not on display in the museum.



A few years ago, it was my pleasure to meet Buzz Aldrin. If my memory serves correctly, he mentioned he was actually urinating in his suit in this photo. The Cosmosphere has a nice display of astronaut...uh...waste management stuff.


As to the records of that historic moon walk, I recently learned that many of the original higher-resolution tapes of the Apollo missions have been misplaced.



To me, the centerpiece of the Cosmosphere's Apollo collection is this Lunar Module. It was built as an engineering test model by Grumman, the company that made the Lunar Modules used on the missions, and was restored by the Cosmosphere using many flight-ready parts. I miss the days when it was displayed in the round, in a previous museum configuration.



It does occasionally cross my mind that while I'm shooting pictures with Ace, security folks are watching.



Outside the building, Ace pays tribute to this statue of astronaut Eugene "Gene" Cernan, seen also in the top photo of this post. Cernan was actually the last man to walk on the moon, on the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.



I'm no car enthusiast, but reader email suggests that lots of you are. So, I should mention that the Cosmosphere currently has Apollo 12 astronaut Alan Bean's gold and black special edition 1969 Corvette Stingray on exhibit. Bean never actually owned the car; three such 'vettes were leased for $1 a year to he and the other two Apollo 12 astronauts. In the early 1970's, the cars were returned to Houston dealer Jim Rathmann, and were sold. Collector Danny Reed bought this one; signs at the Cosmosphere state that the whereabouts of the other two are unknown.



The "LMP" on the custom decal stood for Lunar Module Pilot, Bean's position. Each astronaut had a color and Bean's was blue, hence the placement.



What times we have seen.

posted by Ace Jackalope at www.thelope.com

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Sunday, July 15, 2007

Pretty Prairie Exhibit

The photography of National Geographic photographer and Kansas native, Jim Richardson, will be on display in Pretty Prairie, Kansas from July 16th through July 21st. The exhibit titled The Flint Hills: A Kansas Treasureprovides the viewer with a glimpse of the majesty of this unique Kansas prairie-land.

The exhibit is free and open to the public at the Pretty Prairie Civic Theatre. Interested parties should contact the Pretty Prairie City Offices 620/459-6392 or come to 119 W. Main St. for admittance to the Theater.

This event is sponsored by the Pretty Prairie Civic Theater and Pretty Prairie Boosters Club courtesy of the Hutchinson/Reno Arts and Humanities Council and the help of the Greater Hutchinson Convention and Visitors Bureau.

posted by Patsy Terrell www.patsyterrell.com