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  • In the early 1900s, automobiles were just beginning to appear on the scene of rural America, and few people could imagine the changes the ‘horseless carriage’ would be bringing to the high plains. There were probably no cars in the Garden City area until 1906, and for the next ten years people were pretty skeptical about the future of those noisy metal horses. The automobile was thought by many to be a passing fancy, and the new machines were often the brunt of jokes.
  • Ellis Island National Monument. Each set of hands is sharing a different perspective of the American Dream. American Dream seems to be more a romantic notion of the past in this representation, while also leaving room for hope for a new dream to emerge. Where hard work once gave the promise of personal achievement and success, there are many more barriers that exist today.
    English: National Park Service Photo, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
    Hello from Amarillo, TX! This is Lauren Pronger back again with another Radio Readers BookByte about Shing Yin Khor’s graphic novel The American Dream? for the HPPR Radio Readers Book Club. So, we know from my previous BookBytes and the novel’s blurb that Khor undertook a Route 66 road trip to better understand the mythos of America and how they, as a queer immigrant, might fit into it.
  • Wild pork backstraps, ready for the smoker.
    Luke Clayton
    This week, Luke recaps a recent hog hunt where he killed a very tasty young wild porker, which he turned into pulled pork by slow smoking all night in his electric smoker.
  • Tune in to Classical Music Amarillo this week as we prepare for the Amarillo Symphony’s upcoming concert!
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The rapper, who also serves as the official "hype man" for multiple U.S. Olympic teams, invited the female hockey players to Las Vegas for a "real celebration."