I cancelled the home delivery of The New York Times after an 8-week experiment. No going back; it was more nuisance than anything else.
And this from someone who before coming to Albuquerque had a daily paper delivered most of my life.
I cancelled the home delivery of The New York Times after an 8-week experiment. No going back; it was more nuisance than anything else.
And this from someone who before coming to Albuquerque had a daily paper delivered most of my life.
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What brought you to Albuquerque, Ken?
My family moved there when I was 9 (in 1970, gah, that was a long time ago) for my dad’s health: apparently someone thought high altitude/low humidity would help with what turned out to be emphysema.
We only stayed 6 months – not much work then during a recession – and we moved on to Houston, but the area stuck in our soul, to the point that my Dad’s ashes are scattered near the La Luz trail off Sandia Peak.
The Department of the Interior moved me here from Washington, D.C., in 1999 to manage a program. Before that I had little more than passed through despite living not too far away in Tucson for more than a decade. I liked it here for various reasons, so I stayed when I retired.