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The Long and Winding Road: His volley on dollies, what folly

Mary Tolan

When the president announced in April that due to his tariffs children should be limited to two dolls (did he say per what: holiday, birthday, lifetime?), I was upset. I knew how that would have landed with my childhood friends who played with their many dolls, from the Raggedy Anns and Andys, to Barbies and Kens, to porcelain babies -- and later for girls and their Cabbage Patch Kids, American Girls and more. If only they had a palace in the sky to keep them all like, say, a luxury Boeing 747 aircraft from Qatar!

Now if our chief dealmaker had said kids could only have two pretend horses, rather than dolls, “upset� was not strong enough a word. I would have been brought to my knees. As a girl I played with herds of wooden, metal and plastic horseys for days at a time. They were my dear, wild friends, galloping on my bedroom floor over chairs (mountains) and under beds (canyons). They kept my imagination on fire and taught me how to create stories. I have a few equine pals on my mantelpiece (pasture) to this day.



Mary Tolan has worked as a community journalist for more than three decades, mostly in Arizona and New Mexico. She taught journalism at Northern Arizona University for 20 years and is the author of the mystery novel "Mars Hill Murder," based in Flagstaff. Tolan grew up in Wisconsin, and has lived in the Southwest for more than 40 years. Her children are grown.



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