Read More...(COOPERSTOWN, NY) – For every Hall of Fame player, there’s a scout who started him on the road to Cooperstown. Now, those scouts will have their place at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. The Museum will unveil the new interactive exhibit Diamond Mines on May 4 with a cast of baseball luminaries on hand for the celebration. Diamond Mines, made possible with the support of the Scout of the Year Foundation, will begin a scheduled two-year run in the Museum’s second floor ...
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1. DL from MN posted on December 04, 2012 at 01:02 PM # hit 0 | hit 0The thing that is most wrong with this is that crap like that have value. Just digitize it for historians* and burn it.
*) [EDIT] "Cliques of Power: the new paradigm of inter-personal relations and veteran leadership in the pre-integration National League as told by Frick's thank-you notes"
Why is that a bad thing? I can understand not caring about it and I completely agree with the idea of digitizing it to make it more accessible. There is something interesting about seeing an original document in its original form that a number of people find interesting. This is the kind of stuff I'd be spending my money on if I were independently wealthy.
AndrewJ Posted: September 23, 2010 at 04:53 PM (#3646939)
Indeed. Hall of Fame exec director Cliff Kachline helped bring that scandal to public attention, and the HOF board of trustees responded promptly -- they fired Kachline.
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