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The front cover of the Kansas City Star newspaper, engraved on a copper plate, is displayed on stage during the unveiling ceremony of a 100-year-old time capsule at the National WWI Museum and ...
The National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City on Wednesday showed off an excavated century-old time capsule, revealing a cornucopia of early 20th-century relics, artifacts and documents.
The parade route will follow the same path as the last Super Bowl victory celebration for the Kansas City Chiefs three years ago. Here’s a map of the parade route, details of the Kansas City ...
The Kansas City Chiefs are a professional American football franchise that began play in 1960 as the Dallas Texans. The team was a charter member of the American Football League (AFL), and now play in the National Football League (NFL). The team is not related to the earlier Dallas Texans NFL team that played for only one season in 1952.
Warpaint was a mascot for the Kansas City Chiefs National Football League (NFL) team. Three individual pinto horses have been used for Warpaint. It is associated with the team's glory days at Municipal Stadium, having won two American Football League (AFL) championships. Warpaint led the team's victory parade after winning Super Bowl IV.
The House of Representatives held a moment of silence, led by Kansas City area House congressional members Emanuel Cleaver, Sharice Davids, Mark Alford, and Ann Wagner. [43] The Chiefs and the NFL expressed condolences. [44] [45] Other local teams such as the Kansas City Royals and Kansas City Current also expressed condolences. [46]
The Kansas City Chiefs made a historic back-to-back Super Bowl win on Sunday. ... Fans assemble in front of Union Station prior to the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl victory parade, in Kansas City ...
K. C. Wolf at his house, Arrowhead Stadium, on a four-wheeler K. C. Wolf is the official mascot of the National Football League’s Kansas City Chiefs.He was first introduced in 1989 as a successor to Warpaint, a horse ridden by a man wearing a full Indian chief headdress, from the mid-1960s. [1]