I remember Paul Harvey when I was a kid. I used to work on road crews in the Sandhills of Western Nebraska. At lunch, the men would sit with their lunch pails and a portable radio. We would all listen to the news from Paul Harvey. It wasn't always good news in the 1960's, but he always ended with a very positive and inspiring example of some ordinary person who was doing something special in life. Then we would all go back to work.
In 2002, we fell in love with Alaska and purchased property near Fairbanks. Our Alaska log home was built in 2003 by Bill Kisken of Log Weavers here in Fairbanks. Bill is an artist, who uses the hand scribed Swedish cope system. Notice how tightly the logs fit at the ends, this is very diffucult to achieve. We retired in 2013, and moved our residence to Alaska.
October 20, 2009
Paul Harvey
I've never seen a monument erected to a pessimist. --Paul Harvey
I remember Paul Harvey when I was a kid. I used to work on road crews in the Sandhills of Western Nebraska. At lunch, the men would sit with their lunch pails and a portable radio. We would all listen to the news from Paul Harvey. It wasn't always good news in the 1960's, but he always ended with a very positive and inspiring example of some ordinary person who was doing something special in life. Then we would all go back to work.
I remember Paul Harvey when I was a kid. I used to work on road crews in the Sandhills of Western Nebraska. At lunch, the men would sit with their lunch pails and a portable radio. We would all listen to the news from Paul Harvey. It wasn't always good news in the 1960's, but he always ended with a very positive and inspiring example of some ordinary person who was doing something special in life. Then we would all go back to work.
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