Monsoon season. I dreaded monsoon season. It came with pounding rain, and I had to drive in it. Since the wiper blades couldn't keep up, everything beyond the windshield just disappeared. White knuckled and eyes peeled, I was just hoping that the next Arizona crossing was not a torrent. The roar of the storm always... Continue Reading →
New York City–Revisited, by Stephen G. Harding
It has been 20 years since 9-11, our contemporary day of infamy. As if watching a B movie on some vintage cable channel, we witnessed commercial airliners disappear into the glass reflections of New York’s twin towers. Amidst chaos, a smothering wave of  debris, and the successive collapse of the two monoliths, the country attempted... Continue Reading →
On the Strip in ’68–
1968--Looking back it was a snapshot in time, a bygone era that you would only really know if you had experienced it yourself. Summer had come. It was after my freshman year in college. I had gone right back to my old ways, hanging on the Strip, being exposed to a whole lot more than... Continue Reading →
1967–Five Years Before, Five Years After – Part II
Come September '64, last year's seniors were nowhere to be found. The standouts, the BMOC’s, the multi-sport four-year varsity lettermen, were gone. So was their cheerleading entourage. Most had beat it out of town three months earlier. Some stayed and even got married. In that year and across the country, they and their 2,145,000 counterparts... Continue Reading →
Practitioner-Scholar– Passes 25,425 Views by 10,000 Visitors from 89 Nations
This site is a reflection of our contemporary and historical selfs. It is a compilation of snap shots of our cultural identity, our political, economic social, and physical enviornments. In part using my own travels as examples, this page points to the underlying importance of the lost art of civic responsibility and compromise, of maturing... Continue Reading →
1967-Five Years Before, Five Years After–A Decade Worth of Change
THE BEFORE YEARS - PART I Some say '63, '64 or even '65. Others think '68. For me, it was '67, the end of adolescence. Commencement was over and we had said our goodbyes. Yearbooks sported both the sincere and the trite, those embarrassing scribbles scanned but not read. Back home, we searched the pages,... Continue Reading →
It Was a Heck of a Week–The City Manager, Instructor, Lobbyist, Presenter, Moderator, Board Member Hat Box Was Full
What a week some ten years ago--The Weather Channel might have described it as the confluence of convergent and divergent air flows, in this case probably hot air colliding. Even with the diligent effort of a more than capable Administrative Assistant, my schedule was put to the test. Â In one week I had to be... Continue Reading →
Looking Back
The Summer of Love It was some two years after. Back then, no one knew about the great getaway, my first solo long-distance road trip. I had convinced myself it was about the music, driving up to the Monterey Pop Festival and all. It was the music, but much more. I was on my own.... Continue Reading →
How to raise a voter: Start with these practical tips for building civic skills–by JENNIFER BREHENY WALLACE for the Washington Post
For me, this article by Jennifer Breheny Wallace really hits home. In 1960 we moved from Colorado to  California. I was eleven.  There still would be a couple more trips riding between Denver and LA on the California Zephyr. Although we lived in Colorado Springs and like my big sister before me, I spent many... Continue Reading →
Turning 70–A Question of Balance
My god I’m 70. How the hell did that happen? It wasn’t like it snuck up on me. I knew it was coming. But my god, here it is two months after the fact and it finally sunk in. I’m fringing 70. Beyond the obvious, being at the top of the immediate family’s old age food... Continue Reading →
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