OT Married 39 years

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Never been to Princeton. I was in the Army back in the late 60s at Ft. Monmouth. We would go to a bar in Red Bank that would serve us underage soldiers. I think the bar was connected with the mob. Somewhere around there was a boardwalk with some fabulous vacation homes inhabited by the über wealthy.
I know exactly where you were. In the day, I did a lot of home inspections in Monmouth. Little Silver and Rumson ===East of Red Bank on the peninsula where Fabulously wealthy people had tennis courts and court jesters.
 
I know exactly where you were. In the day, I did a lot of home inspections in Monmouth. Little Silver and Rumson ===East of Red Bank on the peninsula where Fabulously wealthy people had tennis courts and court jesters.
I got a diploma in one and two family building inspection at PCC. Went out on some inspections in Washington County. Even red tagged a concrete job. That took balls. But, hey, my dad was a brick layer so I've been around lots of construction workers while working in construction, myself. That's how I earned my college money the first two years.
 
I got a diploma in one and two family building inspection at PCC. Went out on some inspections in Washington County. Even red tagged a concrete job. That took balls. But, hey, my dad was a brick layer so I've been around lots of construction workers while working in construction, myself. That's how I earned my college money the first two years.
That is hard work. Better to be the inspector. Cracked skin on under finger tips and sore rotator cuffs. I did remember that well.
 
That is hard work. Better to be the inspector. Cracked skin on under finger tips and sore rotator cuffs. I did remember that well.
I got strong as an ox. I once picked up a wheel barrow by the handles that weighed about 1,100 pounds and wheeled it over bulldozered baked Georgia clay about 2,000 feet. That meant I dead lifted 550 lbs. I think I weighed about 150 lbs. at the time. I worked as a hod carrier. Sometimes I had to cut the 'mud' by hand with a mixing box and a concrete hoe.

That is why I worked hard and got a degree in engineering. Well, that and I wanted to honor my deceased father's wish. It didn't hurt that my new found profession involved no interpretation or blood. Strictly science and mathematics. I did get to discuss fluid dynamics with my doctor at one time regarding blood flow through the vessels.
 

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