• Tebow Steals His Schtick From 1970’s KC Chiefs Player, Remains Unrepentant

    …although I don’t know if Charlie Getty actually prayed on the field. Probably not.

    Published in Kansas City Star, December 1979
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  • Old Photos: St. Benedict’s Abbey

    These photos were taken in 1955 at the St. Benedict’s Abbey, Atchison, KS.

    The Rule of Saint Benedict (Regula Benedicti) is a book of precepts written by St. Benedict of Nursia for monks living communally under the authority of an abbot. Since about the 7th century it has also been adopted by communities of women. During the 1500 years of its existence, it has become the leading guide in Western Christianity for monastic living in community for many Catholic Orders, and in Orthodoxy (since The Great Schism), and the Anglican Church (since the time of the Reformation).
    The spirit of St Benedict’s Rule is summed up in the motto of the Benedictine Confederation: pax (“peace”) and the traditional ora et labora (“pray and work”).

    Praying hands of monk churchman resting on table during mass at St. Benedicts Abbey.
    Praying hands of monk churchman resting on table during mass at St. Benedict's Abbey.
    Holy water is sprinkled on praying monks by Father Theodore, the prior of St. Benedicts Abbey, at the days last service.
    Holy water is sprinkled on praying monks by Father Theodore, the prior of St. Benedict's Abbey, at the day's last service.
    Novices being received into the order at St. Benedict's Abbey where they will prepare to take vows for the priesthood.
    Novices being received into the order at St. Benedict's Abbey where they will prepare to take vows for the priesthood.
    Priest elevating host and performing other functions of mass at St. Benedicts Abbey.
    Priest elevating host and performing other functions of mass at St. Benedict's Abbey.

    Monks outside monastery, at St. Benedict's Abbey.
    Monks outside monastery, at St. Benedict's Abbey.

    Monks praying before meal, at St. Benedict's Abbey.
    Monks praying before meal, at St. Benedict's Abbey.
    Monks cleaning windows of the monastery's sacristy, two young clerics exemplify St. Benedict's ruling that all be employed in the work, and that then are the monks in truth if they live by the work of their hands.
    Monks cleaning windows of the monastery's sacristy, two young clerics exemplify St. Benedict's ruling that all be employed in the work, and that then are the monks in truth if they live by the work of their hands.

    Here is the rest of the set and a more contemporary set.

    Note: I will delete all comments I find offensive so don’t waste your time.

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  • Sitting Down For The Road

    We don’t have many traditions in my family. We don’t sit around the Seder table asking questions; we don’t eat Chinese food on Christmas; we don’t have Taco Tuesdays or Gefilte Fish Fridays. We are pretty ordinary people in that sense. Or every sense.

    There is one tradition that I’d like to keep and pass along to my kid – sitting down for the road.

    A view of Congressman George H. Tinkham’s suitcase after his trip. © Time Inc. David E. Scherman

    Every time we were about to leave on a trip my Dad always said “Let’s sit down for the road” and we would set down our suitcases and sit quietly for a minute. It wasn’t my favorite thing to do – when you are a kid on the way to an exiting destination the last thing you want to do is to be stopped in your tracks and sit around even for a minute. But then again it’s a minute well-spent. You could realize you forgot something, or just look around one last time so a memory of your place will travel with you and eventually make you homesick. You could concentrate, finalize a plan, prepare for the departure, as a pilot might say revving up the engine. Many useful things you can do in a minute. Or you can just not do anything and wait for your Dad to signal that the sitting down for the road is over and open the door to something that awaits outside.

    I’ve done this ever since I can remember. I sat down in places I’ve never returned to; I sat down with people who I never got to see again; I sat down before the trips I remember and many forgotten ones. Now I get to tell my kid to sit down and I like the continuity of it. It’s a real tradition, beautiful in its simplicity and as meaningful as one wants it to be.

    For the road…

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  • Old Photos: Rows And Rows Of Well-Fed Democrats…

    This tagline struck me as being weirdly funny, but I don’t write them, I just copy them. Without further ado – some photos from the William M.Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner conducted in Kansas City in October of 1949. William M.Boyle Jr. was the Chairman of the DNC at that time.

    Banquet of the Century. The home folks of Kansas City were proud of Bill Boyle—none more vociferously than shrewd, elephantine Roy Roberts, Republican president of the Kansas City Star— and they had vowed to give him the banquet of the century. By the time the President entered Kansas City’s vast civic auditorium that night, they had come comfortably close to success.Three thousand men & women in evening dress were sitting at tables on the great floor (at $15 a plate). Among them were virtually all the ranking officers of the Administration and all shades of local politicos, including Democratic Boss Charlie Binaggio, who had just been subpoenaed by a federal grand jury to tell what he knew about the revival of racketeering in Kansas City. Six thousand non-diners watched and applauded from the flag-bedecked balconies. An army of harried waiters served 3,000 tenderloin steaks without allowing more than minor peripheral cooling to set in—no mean achievement since all had come from the kitchen of the Muehlebach Hotel, three full blocks away.

    Rows and rows of well-fed Democrats attending William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner, listening to the speeches.
    Rows and rows of well-fed Democrats attending William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner, listening to the speeches. © Time Inc.George Skadding
    Posting of banners and signs during testimonial dinner for Bill Boyle
    Posting of banners and signs during testimonal dinner for Bill Boyle.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    Cold turkey with all the trimmings, embellishing a big buffet lunch given during Bill Boyles Day celebration.
    Cold turkey with all the trimmings, embellishing a big buffet lunch given during Bill Boyle's Day celebration.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    Steaks consumed during the testimonal dinner for Bill Boyle, requiring 600 attendants to serve dinner.
    Steaks consumed during the testimonal dinner for Bill Boyle, requiring 600 attendants to serve dinner.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    Family and friends attenting the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.
    Family and friends attenting the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    James Pendergast (CL) autographing a menu while attending the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.
    James Pendergast (CL) autographing a menu while attending the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    Charles Binaggio sitting with his wife, while attending the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.
    Charles Binaggio sitting with his wife, while attending the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    Presidential aide Clark Clifford and Major General Harry H. Vaughan, talking with Roy A. Roberts while attenting the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.
    Presidential aide Clark Clifford and Major General Harry H. Vaughan, talking with Roy A. Roberts while attenting the William M. Boyle Jr. testimonial dinner.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    Guest of honor William M. Boyle Jr. (R), looking over a silver service that cost $2,250, given to him at the testimonial dinner by the Democrats.
    Guest of honor William M. Boyle Jr. (R), looking over a silver service that cost $2,250, given to him at the testimonial dinner by the Democrats.© Time Inc.George Skadding
    Time cover: 10-08-1951 of William M. Boyle.
    Time cover: 10-08-1951 of William M. Boyle. © Time Inc.

    Notice the caption: “Democrat Boyle: Bureaucracy Thrived On Bureaucracy“. Also of interest is the price of yearly subscription for the Time – just $6.

    in 1951, (Boyle) was implicated in an influence peddling scandal involving loans made by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. While a Senate investigation found no evidence of wrongdoing by Boyle, he resigned later that year due to “ill health”

    This article in the Time “Boyle’s Law” talks about his rise to prominence, connections to Truman and Pendergast, and shady machinations for which he was investigated. Some passages in the article read like they were written today.

    Some names you might have recognized: Charles Binaggio, Jim Pendergast, Roy A. Roberts.

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  • Old Photos: Kansas Pool Hall

    I want this America back. Mostly for the hats. Hats, and no women in bars. Definitely no women in bars. But mostly for the cool hats.

    Somewhere in Kansas, 1955.

    A scene from a small town pool hall, with people just hanging out and relaxing.©Time Inc.Loomis Dean
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