I don’t have the heart to tell my wife of 26 years that I don’t really care. But she cares, and that’s all that matters.
It’s 9:24pm on Tuesday evening, December 12, 2017. I’m sitting on the bed writing something to the three or four of you. Alexis keeps running up and down the stairs to give me an update of the election for senator of Alabama. Right now, it’s tied at 49.6% apiece. It’s between the alleged pedophile Roy Moore and some liberal Democrat named Doug Jones.
I don’t have the heart to tell my wife of 26 years that I don’t really care. But she cares, and that’s all that matters. Bumblebee
Shrink wrap Apples Kick Rumble-strip I have actually taken a couple of writing courses. It was in the mid-1980s. I couldn’t make up my mind if I wanted to become a writer or a trader. It’s 3:41 on a Wednesday morning in December. It got up to 63 degrees on Monday. Right now, it’s 29 degrees and windy. Welcome to the bottom of Lake Michigan.
We all felt the change in seasons in one day. Yesterday, I hosted the question and answer session at the Lakeshore Chamber of Commerce meeting in Hammond. Jeff Strack was the main speaker. He told the story of how he got back his family’s many grocery stores in the area. We entered a new era for Purdue Northwest yesterday. For years, the university was just the one location in Hammond and was considered a commuter campus. If you were a warm body and you graduated high school, you could get into what was then known as Purdue Calumet.
That’s how it was for about 60 years. Fast forward to 2017. The new chancellor, Tom Keon, a few years ago came into town to make Purdue Calumet and Purdue North Central, which is about 40 miles away near Michigan City, into one big regional university. Purdue president Mitch Daniels may have had something to do with the original idea for this plan. |
I run radio stations and a streaming video network in Hammond, Ind., and write this blog.
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