The Clothesline, Grey Eagle, Mound, Bierut, and Life in the Fast Lane.

This is a wild week for me. Along with my usual work, I am a guest speaker on “Memory and Eye Witness Testimony” for Alita Reque Peterson’s college classes Wednesday at CLC, speaking at the Sartell-St. Stephen Community Center Thursday morning on forensic psychology and Murder Book, testifying as an expert witness on a civil commitment case on Friday in St. Paul, and then speaking at the Westonka Library in Mound at 2:00 on Saturday on Forensic Work and Murder Book. Speaking at the Grey Eagle Library was a blast with a friendly group of people with great questions. Thank you! It was nice to have the Minneapolis Tribune do a great review of Murder Book this week, unbeknownst to me.
I had an old leather jacket that was warm, but very plain, so I took it to The Clothesline in Pierz and asked them to stitch the Guiness harp on the back. The Clothesline is a great store and it turned out perfect. When I wear it out, guys always ask where I bought it.

Class of ’82 had a reunion. Brenda and I enjoyed visiting with a bunch of good people. Kris Kowitz, a classmate of Brenda’s, was in the Marines in Beirut, Lebanon in 1983 when the Marines barracks were bombed and 241 people were killed. As a soldier and member of the Marine band, Kris ended up removing bodies and playing at their funerals. It was the deadliest day for the Marines since the battle of Iwo Jima in World War II and the deadliest day for the military since the Tet Offensive during the Vietnam war. The car bomb was committed by Lebanese terrorists supported by Iran and was the beginning of terrorism by extreme Islamic forces against the U.S. Kris is strong tough person with a lot of great stories. She is now struggling with cancer and will soon begin chemotherapy, so please remember her in your prayers.
On my way home from signing books at the St. Paul Art Crawl I decided to stop at Coborn's in Foley to pick up some fruit. I was tired as I’d been in St. Paul all weekend (during the day) and rolled through the stop sign coming out of parking lot and was pulled over by a police officer. This is a paraphrase of our conversation.
Officer: Do you know why I pulled you over?
Me: Rolling through a stop sign.
Officer: When’s the last time you’ve received a ticket?
Me: This morning I received a ticket for driving 64 in a 55.
Officer: Really? You’ve already got a ticket today? Let me see it.
Me: I know it’s not in the system yet, but I did receive a ticket this morning.
Officer: Okay. Is the rest of your record pretty good?
Me: No. Not particularly. I drive about 35,000 miles a year so I get speeding tickets. Nothing crazy-- 70 miles an hour. Probably every year since I received my license at 16. I don’t have accidents.
At this point the officer started laughing and went back to check my record. He returned, “I appreciate you being honest about so many things that it was to your disadvantage to be honest about. I think I’m going to let you slide on this…”
Life is good…
Quotes:
If money doesn’t grow on trees, why do banks have branches?
A boy asks mom to buy something at the store, to which she responds, “I’m not made of money.” He replies, “Isn’t that what MOM stands for?”
Life is pleasant. Death is peaceful. It's the transition that's troublesome. - Isaac Asimov
Once the game is over, the king and the pawn go back into the same box. -Italian Proverb
Either this man is dead or my watch has stopped. -Groucho Marx
Thanks for listening,
Frank

Published on October 17, 2017 00:00
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