Kansas City With The Russian Accent

From The Mind of One Russian Jewish American

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  • Old Photos: Chiefs and Chargers 1965

    Kansas City Chiefs 10 at San Diego Chargers 10
    Sunday, September 26, 1965

    Kansas City Chiefs in the dark jerseys, vs. San Diego Chargers in the light jerseys.© Time Inc.Art Rickerby
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  • Old Photos: At The Bottom Of The Tuttle Creek Lake

    In June 1960 the Life Magazine published the following report about the imminent flooding of the Tuttle Creek Reservoir.

    Forlorn End For a Valley.

    In the verdant farmlands of the Blue River valley in northeastern Kansas, where 3,000 people found themselves in the path of progress, only a sorrowful handful still stayed near ghost towns. The reservoir for the Tuttle Creek flood-control dam would inundate 15,000 acres. In many cases it would swallow up the farms and limestone homesteads built up by the owners’ pioneer ancestors.

    The cost of resettling and the beginning of new lives came high. New property usually costs more than the fees awarded for the old. It was a sad wrench, especially for the old people. But the uprooted Kansans have one consolation. They will live near what will eventually be the state’s largest recreation area.

    Bitter sign was built by Men’s Club, believing dam putting town under 75 feet of water unneeded. © Time Inc.Thomas Mcavoy
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  • Know Your Spanish

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  • Behind The Iron Curtain – #1 and #2

    After a nice time in the living room you may be thinking about visiting the restroom because…well, let’s just say you want to. Toilets, restrooms, outhouses, toilet paper, outdoor plumbing and all the related paraphernalia is the next chapter of my “Behind the Iron Curtain” series.

    Toilet paper.

    Toilet paper was hard to find. If it was available you had to stand in line like the one on this picture and then it was probably limited to a certain number of rolls per person. A proud new owner of the precious TP would head home with a bunch of rolls hanging around their neck causing jealous reactions from the not so lucky bystanders. Of course that was not soft, quilted or baby skin toilet paper that American buttocks are so used to. It was more like your printer paper in a roll, maybe a little thinner but still required substantial calluses in certain places. And calluses we had: since the paper was not readily available everything served the purpose. It could be magazines, newspaper, stolen forms from work. I distinctly remember reading an obit for some communist party honcho in the paper before using it for its intended purpose, and the guy died in 1983. In more civilized houses the newspaper was pre-cut into squares, in others you had to rip it yourself. Outdoors people used leaves and whatever else was easy to reach, I myself once split an empty cigarette box with my buddy when nothing else was available.
    Now with toilet paper in hand you are about to discover the facilities.
    To be continued.

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  • Did They Pass This In Kansas…

    …or is it just so people can get used to the idea?

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