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              <text>Joel Gullickson</text>
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              <text>August 3, 1997</text>
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              <text>In this letter, he tells his family he will be stationed in Ushtobe, a city about 4 hours away from the capital, Almaty. He says the utilities in the town are bad: there is no hot water, and electricity and water are only on for a few hours every day. He talks about what he has heard about the school where he will be teaching. He says the school is trying to break out of the soviet ways of educating, and they recently received a grant for a fax machine and some computers. He says the school’s developing technology is why he got stationed there and that he hopes to figure out how to use the computers and get email. He writes about the ethnic diversity of the town: a mix of Russians, Kazakhs, and Koreans. He writes about how the schools are separated by language, and he will be teaching at a Russian school.&#13;
&#13;
Where he is staying, as he writes this letter, Kapchagay, has water and electricity all day, but never hot water. He says that people fill their tubs and barrels with water in case the water shuts off. He says some people warm water for showers with an electric heater, but his host family uses a black barrel that the sun is supposed to warm up. His host family uses both a washing machine and hand-washes the same clothes.&#13;
&#13;
He includes three pictures with the letter: 1) a horse, 2) a Ferris wheel, and 3) him with a crumbling statue of Lenin&#13;
&#13;
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