THE TITANIC - IN KANSAS CITY
Being a landlocked metropolis, you might think that Kansas City would be the last place to have an interest in the one-hundredth anniversary of the sinking of The Titanic.
But some of the passengers on the ill-fated journey were heading for a new life in the Midwest.
Interest is consequently so strong in Kansas City that there's a massive exhibition of recovered Titanic artifacts in the magnificently restored Union Station - the second largest train station in America with a highly decorated 95-foot high ceiling from which hangs three 3,500-pound chandeliers (Americans don't like metric).
Alas, given the US obsession with the car, the station now only sees around four trains passing through each day.
However this means there's plenty of room left for other things, so a large part of the station is now turned over to Titanic photos, early movie footage of its construction in Belfast and the personal belongings of those who did and didn't make it across the Atlantic.
When you enter the exhibition you get a ticket in the name of a particular passenger.
As Americans clearly recognise true breeding, mine was an Upper Class ticket for the wealthy Macy's department store partner, Isidor Straus, who - with his wife,
Ida - was returning to New York in 1912 after a European holiday.
At the end of the exhibition you get to find out what happened to your original ticket holder.
Sadly, Isidor Straus didn't make it.
And neither did Ida.
As a woman, Ida was entitled to get into a lifeboat and nearly did. But she refused to climb aboard when her husband - a mere male - was not allowed.
So after declaring to her husband "Where you go, I go", Ida and Isidor sank together to the bottom of the Atlantic.
Fortunately, a hundred years on, a slightly lighter side is emerging to the tragedy of the Titanic.
This is because the Union Station is also home to the Irish Museum and Culture Centre.
And mindful of the damage the Titanic's sinking might do to the reputation for Irish ship-building, they've made up T-shirts with the iconic four funnels going under.
The caption reads: "She was fine when she left Ireland".
And indeed she was...with the statement fitting neatly into the Michael Dodd communications credo: "Only tell exact truths".
Here below, a perfectly formed world-class male model poses in the T-shirt before a backdrop of the Titanic's grand staircase.
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