Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Changed Lives

Changed Lives
By Tim Kimmel

In 1921 Lewis Lawes became the warden of Sing Sing Prison. No prison was tougher than Sing Sing during that time. But when Warden Lawes retired some 20 years later, that prison had become a humanitarian institution. Those who studied the system said credit for the change belonged to Lawes. But when he was asked about the transformation, here’s what he said: “I owe it all to my wonderful wife, Cattherine, who is buried outside the prison walls.”

Catherine Lawes was a young mother with three small children when her husband became the warden. Everybody warned her from the beginning that she should never set foot inside the prison walls, but that didn’t stop Catherine! When the first prison basketball game was held, she went… walking into the gym with her three beautiful kids and she sat in the stands with the inmates.

Her attitude was: “My husband and I are going to take care of these men and I believe they will take care of me! I don’t have to worry!”

She insisted on getting acquainted with them and their record. She discovered one convicted murderer was blind so she paid him a visit. Holding his hand in hers she said, “Do you read Braille?”

“What’s Braille?” he asked. Then she taught him how to read. Years later he would weep in love for her.

Later, Catherine found a deaf-mute in prison. She went to school to learn how to use sign language. Many said that Catherine Lawes was the body of Jesus that came alive again in Sing Sing from 1921 to 1937.

Then, she was killed in a car accident. The next morning Lewis Lawes didn’t come to work, so the acting warden took his place. It seemed almost instantly that the prison knew something was wrong.

The following day, her body was resting in a casket in her home, three-quarters of a mile from prison. As the acting warden took his early morning walk he was shocked to see a large crowd of the toughest, hardest-looking criminals gathered like a herd of animals at the main gate. He came closer and noted tears of grief and sadness. He knew how much they loved Catherine. He turned and faced the men, “All right, men, you can go. Just be sure and check in tonight!” Then he opened the gate and a parade of criminals walked, without a guard, the three-quarters of a mile to stand in line to pay their final respects to Catherine Lawes. And every one of them checked back in.

Reference: Stories for the Heart, compiled by Alice Gray, pp. 54-55
Questar Publishers, Inc. 1996

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Baseball Spring Training in Arizona

BASEBALL SPRING TRAINING IN ARIZONA

February 28, 2010, by Dennis Ginoza


When I first thought about coming to Arizona to watch the San Diego Padres in their spring training, my knowledge about it was very limited. My! Have I learned a lot.

I learned that the Padres share their Peoria Complex at 83rd Avenue with the Seattle Mariners. That was just the beginning of my learning. There are in total fifteen teams in eleven different sports complexes in Arizona. They are as follows:

Camelback Ranch-Glendale 16101 North 83rd Avenue, Peoria
Los Angeles Dodgers & Chicago White Sox

Goodyear Ball Park, 1933 South Ballpark Way, Goodyear
Cincinnatti Reds & Cleveland Indians

Corbett Field, 3400 East Camino Campestre, Tucson
Colorado Rockies

Hohokam Park 1235 North Center Street, Mesa
Chicago Cubs

Maryvale Baseball Park3600 North 51st Avenue, Phoenix
Milwaukee Brewers

Peoria Sports Complex 16101 North 83rd Avenue, Peoria
San Diego Padres & Seattle Mariners

Phoenix Municipal Stadium 5999 East Van Buren, Phoenix
Oakland Athletics

Scottsdale Stadium 7408 East Osborn Road, Scottsdale
San Francisco Giants

Surprise Stadium15960 North Bullard, Surprise
Kansas City Royals, Texas Rangers

Tempe Diablo Stadium 2200 West Alameda Drive, Tempe
California Angels

Tucson Electric Park 2500 East Ajo Way, Tucson
Arizona Diamond Backs

Each of these sports complexes have multiples fields for training with one stadium for games played in the Cactus League. They are beautiful fields with green grass, large parking areas, athletic sport shops, indoor batting cages, pitching areas, administrative offices, and other facilities.

In the first few days of visiting the Padres, I gained new information. The early players that arrive are pitchers and catchers and coaches. Several days later, the full staff arrive, numbering some 70 plus players, many minor leaguers here for tryouts, to be observed and having the opportunity to train and perform with hopes to move up in the Big League. When the Cactus League begins, the teams will carry a roster of 40 players and when the Major League season begins, the roster will be set at 25 players.

Every day, I encountered someone new, a sports fan who made it to Arizona to follow his or her favorite team. These interactions added to my excitement and to the dynamic of the pre-season preparation. When I walked over to the Mariners spring training, the parking lot was full of cars, fans who support their team in the most enthusiastic way. I asked several people why this is so. I got several answers. “We love our Mariners.” “We come from wet, snow country.” Also, I observed, one Mariner was followed due to his celebrity status. On Ichiro Suzuki, one fan told me, “I love watching him. He has the best work ethic.” There were ten cameras with multiple crews of Japanese media. Whenever Ichiro moved to another part of the complex, the cameras followed him. There were two others: Ken Griffey, Jr., known for his power, son of Cincinnati Reds Ken Griffey and Cliff Lee, a pitcher who helped Philadlphia win the World Series in 2008 and he had just joined the Mariners.

I caught the Mariner excitement. I got me a baseball for $10.00 with the markings, “Seattle Mariners.” I hurried to a gathered crowd waiting to get an autograph. I had kept my Padre baseball in my right pocket, now the Mariner ball in my left hand. It was pitcher Felix Hernandez who was runner up for the Cy Young Award in 2009. I told him, “I am a new Mariner fan from San Diego.” He smiled as he signed his autograph. This was my first day at Arizona Spring Training.

My experience began to move toward different and interesting interactions. People are friendly, they all love baseball, and I found a comfort zone. One lady from Washington state told me about her excitement over a young player who led the Oregon State baseball team to two NCAA championships, in the College World Series held in Omaha, Nebraska.

His name is Mitch Canham, a superb catcher and hitter. He just lost his mother. Mitch caught the fascination of this fan. “Besides,” she told me, “he is good looking.” I later found out, Mitch is with the Padres, not the Mariners. As he walked from the field toward the hitting cages, I got Mitch to sign my Padres Ball. I wished him well.

On the second day, I walked up to the fence where the Padres were batting. I met Luis Fernandez. He told me, “I played in the Little World Series in Williamsport for Venezuela in 1977.” Wow! That was exciting. “It was!” he said. I told him, I wanted to get to Williamsport, but I only got half way. I told him I played on the Pony League Team from Maui, that won the state championship in Hawaii and played in the regional tournament in La Mesa California. We lost there, but I got half way to Williamsport. The love of baseball stays in you for a long time.

Luis is in business where he transports equipment and personal belongings for major league players. One of his clients is Oscar Salazar, infielder from Venezuela now with the Padres. Luis said to me, “If you wait, I’ll introduce you to Oscar.” He did. He said, “Oscar, I want you to meet my friend Dennis.” Oscar shook my hand, signed my Padres baseball and I had my photo taken with him.” What a day! Luis told me, one of his good friends is Luis Aparicio who played for the Chicago Cubs and now resides in Venezuela. Again I was impressed. Luis Rodriguez lives with his family in Florida.

One day, at the Padres complex, I met John B., a staff member working at the gates to keep order and help move the fans. He told me how he used to visit Ebbets Field and watch the Brooklyn Dodgers. That was a conversation all its own as I was a Brooklyn fan as a young boy in Hawaii. I asked John, “How did you get this job?” “I applied for it,” he said. This year they hired thirteen new workers and they work for a month and a half. Sounds like a neat job.

By now, I caught the gist of how things work. I would visit the Mariners and watch them practice. Then I would watch the Padres work out, or vice versa. I found where I needed to be where the players would sign their autographs. I got autographs of manager Bud Black, San Diego Padres, Tony Gwynn Jr. son of Tony Gwynn, one of San Diego’s favorite sons; Jerry Hairston who just joined the Padres from the New York Yankees. He and his brother Scott are now two brothers on the Padres.

On Saturday, it was Fan Fest Day at Peoria Sports Complex. The Mariners took the field for the first two hours, 9:00 to 11:00 a.m., hitting, pitching, fielding as the fans watched from the stands. Hot dogs were not free, but for $5.00, you got the super deal, a hot dog, chips, and a drink. From 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. the Padres took the field and did their batting and routines as well. Ken Griffey and Ichiro Suzuki of the Mariners were knocking the ball out of the park. Then Padres Kyle Blanks was hitting homeruns as was Dusty Ryan, catcher and power hitter who came from Detroit.

At the fence behind home plate I met a young man named Darryl from Georgia. He was not a Braves fan. Surprised, I asked “Why?” When they traded power hitter Dale Murphy, he gave up on the Braves and became a Mets fan. I laughed because that’s what happened to me. I too gave up on the Dodgers when they traded Steve Garvey to the Padres. I became a Padres fan. Baseball can be a funny game. Loyalties change. Darryl told me where I can best be to catch the players for their autographs. I got more autographs including infielder, Chone Figgins, Mariners. From my right pocket I would get my Padres ball and got pitchers Luis Perdomo, Cesar Carillo; and outfielder Milton Bradley now with the Mariners.

If there is a baseball heaven, it’s in Arizona. There’s more baseball here than you have time for. And that’s the point. This is the place for those who love the game, who follow the players, who know what loyalty means. Of all the teams, Chicago draws more fans than any team; the Mariners stand a close second. They come in bus loads. Plus, Chicago's winter is a good reason to spend time in Arizona. At the Cubs field I saw that Greg Maddox is now on the coaching staff.

At the Fan Fest, Sylvia and learned that a college game was to follow at 2:00 p.m. The University of Kansas and Gonzaga were playing. I stuck around. I went over to the left field stands to watch the Kansas players warm up. This led to another interesting encounter.

A woman came by. I asked her, “Are you staff support or a mother?” “My son is in on the team,” she said. “He’s number 5, a first baseman, a sophomore.” Zach Elgie played for a high school in North Dakota. In his senior year, he hit 35 homeruns. The scouts came out to watch him. He was drafted by the Oakland A’s. The agent came to his home, offered him a bonus of $100,000. Zach thought about it. “How long does it take to make it to the majors?" He was told, “Nine years.” He decided to play college ball and enrolled at the University of Kansas, and get his degree first. His mother said, “That was a good decision.” There’s more to this story. In baseball, there is an excitement, but also a reality. It’s a tough business, and as Luis Rodriguez told me earlier, “It is a money business.” Not everyone makes it in this game.

In professional baseball, the beginning salary is $400,000. That is what I discovered with the Mariners and the Padres, in the year 2009. Ichiro Suzuki received $18 million. At the fence, as I talked to Luis from Argentina and Larry Rizzo who played in a traveling team in San Diego, all of us who, at one time shared a dream, and Larry said, “If I could play for two years and earn $400,000 each year, I could retire.” We all laughed as another day at the ball park came to a close.

When Kevin Costner’s Field of Dreams was released, it gave baseball in America a boost. For some, playing in the majors is a dream we all shared at one time, especially as little kids, and for others, it is a game that is still America’s past time.

Let me share another perspective. As I see the game of baseball in the larger perspective of life, especially in fielding faith, it makes me think of the day I was in the living room of Pam Chodola, at her daughter’s graduation lunch. Pam is the daughter of Duke Snider who played for the Dodgers in Brooklyn and in Los Angeles. I was having a conversation with Duke. It came to the topic about faith and serving God. Duke said to me, “Isn’t that what we are all about? Serving God.” Those words have left on me a lasting mark. So as one game ends, a New Game begins.