Kansas
City is a lovely city--seems much larger (is) and more cosmopolitan than
Columbus, and much more self-aware. The
architecture is varied and dynamic and they've made a big effort to restore
various areas. The train station which
used to see 250,000 people a day is empty but I think they are looking for a
use for it--maybe a museum. You get the
feeling that KC is your last chance at urban living before hitting the plains,
and maybe it was at one time. The
airport is miles and miles from the city, so although my airfare was pretty
reasonable, a cab ride to the city is $30.
I found two other librarians at the airport, so we shared a ride.
I shared a room with Vicki Kok from Virginia
and Pat Mullen from Oklahoma. Our hotel
(Westin) was part of an 85 acre urban renewal complex maybe 20-25 years old now
with attached shopping mall. It looks
just like Boston and San Antonio and Detroit in that sense. All the stores and the merchandise are just
the same if you stay in a hotel/mall complex.
As a chair of my section, I was invited to the president's reception
which was held at Linda Hall Library, a huge privately endowed public library
that specializes in the sciences. I had
wanted to see it for about 20 years, and was not disappointed. It was fabulous.
Instead of going somewhere, our
"tour" this year was a Missouri extension agent with his otter; “Reintroduction of River Otters in Missouri” by Glenn D. Chambers, Missouri
Department of Conservation and Paddlefoot Productions Incorporated. He and his wife
travel around with their two otters and demonstrate their behavior and talk
about their habitat to school children.
He estimates he has talked to over 250,000 children in the last 4 years. It was a very interesting program--I'd never
seen an otter, and I guess they were almost extinct (fur trappers and draining
swamps about eliminated them) in Missouri at one time, and now have about 800
in the wild. He got two babies and they
"imprinted" to him--he slept with them for the first several
months. He did this because his
"real" job is a photographer, and in order to photograph otters in
the wild he need some who weren't afraid of him. He takes them out in the wild and photographs
them, and then calls them in and they run and jump in their cages. He was really great--drawled like a good 'ol
boy but you knew he was one really smart guy--has done work for National
Geographic and has a movie coming out.
We had another program given by a guy from St. Louis about the Internet, "The Future of Veterinary Medicine on the Internet" by Ken Boschert, American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine, Division of Comparative Medicine, School of Medicine, Washington University.
I already knew most of the stuff he talked about and he was doing 3 presentations that week, so it sounded a little canned. Anyone who talks about computers in a way that I understand--well, I know he's not talking at a very high level, because I really struggle to keep up.
(from a letter to my parents)
We had another program given by a guy from St. Louis about the Internet, "The Future of Veterinary Medicine on the Internet" by Ken Boschert, American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine, Division of Comparative Medicine, School of Medicine, Washington University.
I already knew most of the stuff he talked about and he was doing 3 presentations that week, so it sounded a little canned. Anyone who talks about computers in a way that I understand--well, I know he's not talking at a very high level, because I really struggle to keep up.
(from a letter to my parents)
2 comments:
Interesting story about the otters!
Norma, you should come back to Kansas City now and see Union Station. It's a fabulous place to visit now--plus our new streetcar system that runs from Union Station down to the River Market is a lot of fun. And the fabulous Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts and the KC Symphony bring so many wonderful programs to KC. So interesting to me that you talked about Linda Hall Library. Until they built a new business school building a few years ago, Linda Hall was the view from my office window. The only negative thing I've ever heard about it was from our campus librarians who felt at one time they were shorted on funding for science journals because the budget-givers felt that Linda Hall provided enough.
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