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November 10, 2020

Swinging with the Beloit Supper Clubbers?

Build it and they will have supper (Courtesy of the Beloit Snappers.)

The relish tray is Quint Studer’s favorite item at a Wisconsin supper club. That makes sense. Studer is an investor and managing partner in the rebirth of the Beloit (Wis.) Snappers minor league baseball team. He has an appetite for all the seasoning that life can offer.

Studer grew up in Brookfield, a near western suburb of Chicago. He was raised on the Go-Go White Sox. The neighborhood hangout was Joe’s (Butkovich) Saloon on 47th Street. Joe’s sponsored Sunday bus trips to Comiskey Park and Studer would tag along with his parents. Everyone on the [...]

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August 26, 2020

Mary Frances Veeck turns 100

Mary Frances and Bill Veeck on March 10, 1959 when Bill purchased 54 % of the White Sox for $2.7 million. (Photo courtesy of the Veeck family.)

 

Mary Frances Veeck is surrounded by a garden.

She is sitting with her daughter Marya on a mid-August morning in the patio of her Hyde Park retirement home. There are red begonias, sunflowers, and gold daisies. A visitor brings yellow flowers, just as he used to do with his mother. Mary Frances’s life has been a bouquet of joy, dancing, tears, and long summer nights. She was married to Baseball Hall of Famer Bill Veeck from 1950 until he died in 1986.

Mary [...]

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May 19, 2020

Bill Griffin–a vendor for the ages

Bill Griffin, Chicago vendor, 1980. (Courtesy of Lloyd Rutzky)

 

The world has been changing and Bill Griffin likely wanted no part of it.

“Griff” was the gruffest vendor at Wrigley Field and Comiskey Park in Chicago. He was proud to say that no one had worked the ballparks longer than him. His vendor life began in 1952. Bill spoke in an outlaw drawl that came from his native Oklahoma and he had the face of a postage stamp left out in a western rain. Bill died May 16 of COVID-19 at the Astoria Place senior home in Chicago. He was 88 years old.

Bill died the day after they started playing live organ [...]

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May 13, 2019

Grassroots Baseball: Route 66

Hank Aaron’s childhood home, Mobile, Ala: This image shows the reverence coaches and players from four historically African-American high schools have for Hank Aaron. Grassroots photographer  Jean Fruth left Hank’s rocking chair on the porch empty, out of respect. The home is now located next to the Mobile BayBears Ball Park and has become a museum. (Courtesy of Jean Fruth)

 

The road is always a good place to change gears.

When I need to refocus I take my camper van to the Driftless Region of southwest Wisconsin. The summer after covering the 1990-91 NBA champion Bulls for the Chicago [...]

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