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St. Louis Magazine - April, 2008
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In This Issue

Features

Flashback - 1964 Because We Know How to Get the Blood Pumping The Provocateur Because We Can Claim These Guys as Our Own The Numbers Game Because Marcus Townsend Won't Let Inner-City Baseball Die Foul Ball Because Without Us, They'd Probably Still Be Playing Barehanded Because We've Got the Best Blog Our Hallowed Ground We Love Baseball The Wal-Mart Effect Neighborhood As Universe The Next Neighborhoods? Greener Acres Road to Recovered Gravity & Grace

Departments

Reflections in Flint Mamas, Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Horsemen Symptom Addict A Kick in the Head A Major League Decision Simon Says Rock Flex Time Upwardly Mobile How Suite It Is The King of String The Fast and the Fearful Q&A: Simon Doonan A Family Affair Things We Love Manhattan Mysteries The Splendid Mr. Douthit The House That Art Built Little Bosnia The Naked Goose Kitchen Q&A - Brendan Noonan Liquid Assets - Gin Goes Back to the Future Frugal Foodie - Zaytoon First Look - Skybox Review - F15teen A Conversation with Zach Smith
2009.11.07 - 5th Annual Holy Trinity Extravaganza
 Join us for dinner! Pasta meal catered by Meyer's Cafe - Beer, Wine and...
2009.11.07 - St. Louis Civic Orchestra
 The St. Louis Civic Orchestra kicks off their 2009-10 season with a Fall...
2009.11.07 - StudioSTL Fall Literary Line-Up! Back in the Day I: Bookmaking
Turn back the pages of history with this two-part workshop designed to...
2009.11.08 - Hispanic Diversity Career & Resource Fair
 The “Hispanic Diversity Career & Resource Fair” will be held on...
2009.11.09 - Carnivorale
A seven-course meat-centric meal at a one-night restaurant.As health...

Flashback - 1964

We Like Mike

Photograph by Ralph D'Oench, courtesy of the Missouri History Museum

To the right, amidst all the tiny blurred faces, the hands holding orange sodas and hot dogs the color of the budweiser sign, you'll see a wee banner that reads Shannon, CBC '57. That, of course, refers to our own Mike Shannon, the guy who told us one fine spring that "the Ozarks are a beautiful place this time of year, with all the animals scurrying around, trying to add to their heritage." On October 15, 1964, he was here in Sportsman's Park and helped the Cards beat the Yankees 9–5 to win the World Series; he'd hit a home run off Whitey Ford in Game 1. In the early '60s, he was part regular guy, part mythological hero. You saw his talc-covered mug on Topps cards in millions of bubble gum packages; he was the last player to hit a home run out of Sportsman's; he was the first to hit one out of Busch. We forget these things when Moon Man Shannon is going on about frosty cold ones, but there's something almost shamanic about him. So when he asserts that "things are not always as they appear to be as"—well, you'd better believe it.