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Letters

Readers Respond to the July and August Issues

  • Smithsonian magazine, October 2009

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    • Letters
    • Letters

    There are two tiers of Colorado towns: those for the rich and those for the rest of us. In Telluride ["Out of the Box"], a ski lift ticket costs $100 and the average price of real estate is $1 million. Folks mention the town in the same breath as Aspen. For a taste of mountain life in southwest Colorado that isn't "Aspenized," try Lake City, Creede, Rico or Silverton.
    Adam Sickmiller
    Silverton, Colorado

    Kicking For Khrushchev
    Having danced in the film Can-Can, I read every word of "Nikita in Hollywood" with relish. When we learned we would be dancing for Khrushchev, it generated tremendous excitement. I asked my cousin Alan, who spoke Russian, to teach me a sentence that I might say to the premier. For weeks I practiced "Zdravstvuyte, kak vy pozhivaete?" ("Hello, how are you?") However, at the conclusion of our dancing sequences, there was no hope of meeting the premier. He was busy with Shirley MacLaine, Juliet Prowse, Frank Sinatra, etc. But behind Khrushchev was his wife, Nina Petrovna. I made my way to her, curtsied and uttered my Russian greeting. She took my hand and spoke animatedly in her native tongue. I asked a Secret Service man what she said. "She complimented you on your energy and how well you dance," he related. "She was especially excited so far from home to find dancing in an American film a lovely Russian dancer."
    Barbara Dekovner-Mayer
    Encino, California

    Atlas Lends a Hand
    The article about Charles Atlas ["Muscle Man"] brought to mind fond memories of summers at Point Lookout, Long Island, where my family had a summer home and Atlas was a neighbor. Every summer I ran an athletic program with swimming and running races that included children 6 and older. Atlas assisted me in distributing medals and prizes to the winners. Looking over my archival photographs, I found a picture of myself, Mr. Atlas and a group of youngsters. He was not only a great neighbor, he was wonderful with the children.
    James Nugent
    Southampton, New York

    The Cahaba's Murky Past
    "River of Riches" caught my eye because my grandfather, John Burwell Forbes, knew the Cahaba River all too well. In 1864, John was captured by Southern troops. He was one of several thousand Union soldiers sent to Cahaba Prison, located at the confluence of the Alabama and Cahaba rivers. It has been said that when the rivers flooded, the water on the floor (where prisoners slept) rose up to four feet. Grandfather told his children of clinging for several days to whatever was not washed away and of living in his sodden uniform until it dried on his body. When he was released, he weighed barely 100 pounds and never fully recovered.
    Verna Forbes Willson
    Mogden, Utah

    Another Score for Galileo
    Recent findings suggest that Galileo ["Galileo's Vision"] may have been the first to observe Neptune, 234 years before it was discovered to be a planet. Planets move through the sky relative to the stars. In 1613, as Galileo plotted the moons of Jupiter and surrounding areas in his notebooks, he noted that the "star" we know as Neptune appeared to have moved relative to a nearby star.
    Arthur Haapoja
    Mount Prospect, Illinois

    Corrections:
    "Muscle Man" misstated Charles Atlas' nickname—it was Angie—and the first name of the co-author of Yours in Perfect Manhood. He is Charles Gaines.

    There are two tiers of Colorado towns: those for the rich and those for the rest of us. In Telluride ["Out of the Box"], a ski lift ticket costs $100 and the average price of real estate is $1 million. Folks mention the town in the same breath as Aspen. For a taste of mountain life in southwest Colorado that isn't "Aspenized," try Lake City, Creede, Rico or Silverton.
    Adam Sickmiller
    Silverton, Colorado

    Kicking For Khrushchev
    Having danced in the film Can-Can, I read every word of "Nikita in Hollywood" with relish. When we learned we would be dancing for Khrushchev, it generated tremendous excitement. I asked my cousin Alan, who spoke Russian, to teach me a sentence that I might say to the premier. For weeks I practiced "Zdravstvuyte, kak vy pozhivaete?" ("Hello, how are you?") However, at the conclusion of our dancing sequences, there was no hope of meeting the premier. He was busy with Shirley MacLaine, Juliet Prowse, Frank Sinatra, etc. But behind Khrushchev was his wife, Nina Petrovna. I made my way to her, curtsied and uttered my Russian greeting. She took my hand and spoke animatedly in her native tongue. I asked a Secret Service man what she said. "She complimented you on your energy and how well you dance," he related. "She was especially excited so far from home to find dancing in an American film a lovely Russian dancer."
    Barbara Dekovner-Mayer
    Encino, California

    Atlas Lends a Hand
    The article about Charles Atlas ["Muscle Man"] brought to mind fond memories of summers at Point Lookout, Long Island, where my family had a summer home and Atlas was a neighbor. Every summer I ran an athletic program with swimming and running races that included children 6 and older. Atlas assisted me in distributing medals and prizes to the winners. Looking over my archival photographs, I found a picture of myself, Mr. Atlas and a group of youngsters. He was not only a great neighbor, he was wonderful with the children.
    James Nugent
    Southampton, New York

    The Cahaba's Murky Past
    "River of Riches" caught my eye because my grandfather, John Burwell Forbes, knew the Cahaba River all too well. In 1864, John was captured by Southern troops. He was one of several thousand Union soldiers sent to Cahaba Prison, located at the confluence of the Alabama and Cahaba rivers. It has been said that when the rivers flooded, the water on the floor (where prisoners slept) rose up to four feet. Grandfather told his children of clinging for several days to whatever was not washed away and of living in his sodden uniform until it dried on his body. When he was released, he weighed barely 100 pounds and never fully recovered.
    Verna Forbes Willson
    Mogden, Utah

    Another Score for Galileo
    Recent findings suggest that Galileo ["Galileo's Vision"] may have been the first to observe Neptune, 234 years before it was discovered to be a planet. Planets move through the sky relative to the stars. In 1613, as Galileo plotted the moons of Jupiter and surrounding areas in his notebooks, he noted that the "star" we know as Neptune appeared to have moved relative to a nearby star.
    Arthur Haapoja
    Mount Prospect, Illinois

    Corrections:
    "Muscle Man" misstated Charles Atlas' nickname—it was Angie—and the first name of the co-author of Yours in Perfect Manhood. He is Charles Gaines.

     
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    February 2010 Issue Cover

    February 2010

    • Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx
    • Picture of Prosperity
    • The Venus Flytrap's Lethal Allure
    • Can Auschwitz Be Saved?
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