1/29/2025

Affordable Housing For Economic Development Bringing People With Jobs and Money to Illinois

Affordable Housing For Economic Development

Bringing People With Jobs and Money to Illinois


Tired of the high cost of housing in your city? And the long commutes?

Leave the high cost areas shown in red and move to one of the Illinois counties

in the green areas below.  Home purchase costs are much lower than in the expensive

parts of the country and they often have minimal traffic. The map below shows high

cost areas in red and orange, and lower cost areas in green. Most of the central portion

of the USA is green, which equals low cost homes and little traffic.



Source to view the map:

nar.realtor/research-and-statistics/housing-statistics/county-median-home-prices-and-monthly-mortgage-payment


Wages are higher in the high home cost areas.  But if you are retiring or can take your high

paid job with you and do it remotely, the center of the country will permit you to buy a nice

home that fits your budget. And no more rush hour!


Individuals can make this choice, but it could also be a strategy for companies to help their

workers. Companies who are located in very expensive locations could establish satellite

offices where voluntarily relocated employees could afford to buy homes, and enjoy much

lower commute times.  Programs with Universities in college towns could train future

workers.


It can also be an economic development effort led by municipalities and the State of Illinois. 

Bringing people into areas that have lost population and who bring in their retirement

and/or job is wise and profitable.


My daughter, friend, and I recently pursued this strategy. My friend and I retired 15 years

ago and moved to the sunbelt - my friend to Arizona and me to Florida.  We recently

moved back to Illinois - in my case the death of my wife Beth Ruyle. In both cases the

much lower cost of housing was a factor.  And my daughter moved from Seattle. 

We purchased homes for much less than Seattle - Phoenix, and Sarasota.


Click to read more in a rough draft of the paper





1/28/2025

Arabic Numbers Were Invented in India

 Google has quietly changed their search engine.  When I searched for Arabic numerals, the first thing that came up was this Artificial Intelligence article.




Arabic numerals are the symbols 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9, which are used to represent numbers. They are the most common way to write numbers in the world.

Origin:

The numerals originated in India in the 6th or 7th century.

Arab scholars adopted the numerals and introduced them to Europe in the 12th century.

The numerals were developed over thousands of years and benefited from contributions from the Egyptians, Indians, and Arabs.

Uses:

Arabic numerals are used for counting and mathematical operations.

They are used in computers, phones, libraries, and to indicate time.

They are also used to write numbers in other bases, like octal.

They are used to write non-numerical information, such as license plate identifiers and trademarks.

Variations:

Eastern Arabic numerals: Used in Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and other countries in the Eastern part of the Middle East.
Western Arabic numerals: Used in Europe, the Americas, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya.




I read it on the computer, so it must be so.

______________

"What is Octal, you ask"? As everyone who took high school math remembers, Octal is I have no idea!  Luckily Artificial Intelligence (AI) program Chat GPT knows all, written below. I hope this clears it up.

AI Overview

Learn more

The octal numbering system is a base-8 number system, meaning it uses eight digits (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7) to represent numbers, with each place value representing a power of 8; essentially, it's a way to write numbers using only the digits from 0 to 7, where each digit's position determines its value based on a power of 8.

Key points about the octal system:
Base: 8
Digits used: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7
Place value: Each digit's position represents a power of 8

Example:
The octal number "125" would be interpreted as: (1, 8^2) + (2, 8^1) + (5, and 8^0) = 64 + 16 + 5 = 85 in decimal.

Why is octal useful?

Easy conversion to binary:
Since 8 is a power of 2, converting between octal and binary is straightforward by grouping binary digits into sets of three.

Used in some computer systems:

Octal is sometimes used in older computer systems to represent memory addresses due to its easy conversion to binary.

Octal Number System (Definition, Chart, Octal to Binary)
Oct 15, 2020 — Octal Number System has a base of eight and uses the numbers from 0 to 7. The octal numbers, in the number system, are...

BYJU'S

Octal - Wikipedia
Octal is a numeral system with eight as the base. In the decimal system, each place is a power of ten. For example: In the octal s...

Wikipedia

Octal Number System – Definition and Conversion - Vedantu
A number system with its base as 'eight' is known as an Octal number system and uses numbers from 0 to 7 i.e., 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6...

Vedantu

Generative AI is experimental.

Now do you understand?




1/23/2025

Convictions

 

Convictions


Prentiss Granger and Laurel Hollingsworth grew up privileged in the South, met in private school and became best friends. Through the political upheaval of the 1960s, the two young women grapple with their own beliefs as the civil rights and antiwar movements explode around them. Then, in a single irrevocable moment of violence, everything changes. Caught at the wrong place at the wrong time, Prentiss finds herself on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted List and trapped in the political underground. Laurel must balance her own convictions as she struggles to help her lost friend while she moves forward with her own life.

Praise for Convictions

Convictions is brilliant … a beautifully controlled piece of writing, intricately plotted and skillfully paced. It is a novel of substance, a thoughtful portrayal of an important part of American history. And it is entertaining and exciting to read.”
Raleigh News and Observer

“This first novel succeeds admirably in capturing the mood and feel of the sixties. Its narrator is well-developed as a flesh-and-blood, humorous, and self-deprecating commentator.”
Publishers Weekly

“The life of Prentiss Granger is a metaphor, a picture of the soul of the times…. Convictions is well-written and evenly paced, and sometimes very funny.”
—United Press International

“Cannon is at her strongest in evoking the Grand Canyon-wide gap between parents and their rebellious off spring, with a compelling sense of place.”
Los Angeles Times

“Taffy Cannon shows the seething discontent and the ferment in the 1960s that led to fundamental changes in American society.”
Chattanooga Times

"Very interesting way to look at the turbulent sixties.  A page turner. I really enjoyed reading it. Entertaining.Craig Hullinger


Click to read more and to purchase Taffy's books:

taffycannon.com

taffycannon.com/fiction/convictions

​________________

​Reading this book was a trip down memory lane.  It recounts all the big events of the day.  And of course made you think about which events you saw.

The JFK assassination was of course a major memory for all of us, and we all remember when it happened. I was in Doc Watson's chemistry class when Doc confirmed that he died.

The civil rights marches galvanized public opinion and changed many minds. Race relations needed improvement. I did my little bit for a year after high school in 1966 in the inner city of Norfolk. VA. popv.blogspot.com

The cold war was a huge issue. The Communist countries were threatening. The threat of nuclear war was very real.

Vietnam and the antiwar movement were major issues that the book addresses. Each one of us had to decide the correct course of action.

The race riots were also disturbing. I was stationed in Yuma, Arizona, in 1967 and we were preparing for both Vietnam and riot duty.  We were set to go to San Francisco. Our training for riot duty consisted of wearing gas masks and marching in close ranks with our bayonets fixed on our rifles. You could not wear glasses with the gas mask, so I was blind as a bat.  And the tear gas was nasty.  Glad we did not have to do that.

The heroines of the book go to Berkeley in the San Francisco area. You will remember the appeal of the bay area during the days of peace and love.  My friend and I drove from Yuma to San Francisco one long weekend.  We went to the epicenter at Haight-Ashbury. But it was sad.  Many kids strung out.

​The book takes us to the major peace demonstration in 1969 in Washington, DC. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moratorium_to_End_the_War_in_Vietnam#

I went there with three other Marine Lieutenants.  I didn't even know about it - one of the guys said let's go, so four of us did. We did not know what to expect - four very short haired and very fit Marines at a peace demonstration.  But it was a very mellow event. I guess we all wanted peace - with different ideas on how to achieve it.

Vietnam was of course the big issue for all of us, whether we fought it, protested against it or avoided it. 

vietnammphs.blogspot.com

empehiheroes.blogspot.com

empehiveterans.blogspot.com

hullingermarine.blogspot.com

This book is a great read, and reminds you of all the "fun" times of our youth. I highly recommend it.

Craig Hullinger






Coping Strategy

 



1/19/2025

Officer Louis F. Jogmen - Hero - Tinley Park Police


 The person I admire the most is Officer Louis F. Jogmen.

In 1977, he was shot in the head during an armed robbery. He was the first officer to arrive at the scene. As he approached the store, the robber came out holding a woman hostage and pointed a gun at her head.

Officer Jogmen tried to talk to the robber and calm him down, hiding behind cover. At some point, he made the decision to give himself up to save the woman. The robber released the woman, handcuffed Officer Jogmen, took his gun, and started threatening him. He kept jabbing the officer in the head with the gun, asking if he had a family and saying that he would never see them again.

This was no longer just a robbery—it had turned into an attempted murder. But Officer Jogmen stayed calm, trying to distract the robber and buy time for backup to arrive. The robber shot him in the side of the head, then turned and fired at the other officers, who returned fire and struck him.

Even though Officer Jogmen should have died immediately from the gunshot, he survived for 8 more years, dealing with the effects of the brain injury.

We can discuss police tactics and strategies, but to me, Officer Louis F. Jogmen was the bravest person I’ve ever known.


________________


On the evening of July, 12 1977, Officer Jogmen was dispatched to call of "something going on" inside the 7-11 store at 159th Place and 76th Ave. Officer Jogmen was the first officer on the scene. He took up a position of cover to await backup units. Before the backup units arrived, a 20 year old male white subject exited the front of the store with a gun to the head of a pregnant woman he was holding in front of him. While still behind cover, Officer Jogmen ordered the subject to drop the gun and release the woman.
The subject refused, telling Officer Jogmen that unless he came out from behind cover he would kill the woman immediately. Officer Jogmen tried to buy time for the other units to arrive, but he now had the woman's life in his hands. He stepped out from behind cover, and the subject ordered him to drop his gun. Officer Jogmen placed his 357 revolver on the ground, and the subject released the woman.

Holding his gun on Officer Jogmen, the subject approached him, picked up the officer's revolver, then ordered the officer to his knees. The subject handcuffed the officer and began poking him in the head with his revolver. The subject taunted the officer while poking him in the side of the head. "Think you're gonna see your family again, pig? You're gonna die, pig."

Officer Jogmen remained composed and calm during this ordeal, trying to negotiate with the gunman. Responding units were beginning to arrive on the scene and took up positions of cover around the parking lot. The gunman ordered the officers to stay back, then he looked at Officer Jogmen kneeling in front of him, and shot him in the head. An officer on the perimeter then returned fire, striking the subject in the neck.

Paramedics arrived and began performing life saving measures on Officer Jogmen and on the gunman. Officer Jogmen was not expected to survive the trip to the hospital, but he did. He was not expected to survive the emergency brain surgery either, but he did. The surgeon handed one of the detectives and small cup of brain matter, and told him, "The bullet is in there somewhere."

Officer Jogmen was in a coma for months and underwent 9 surgeries. He eventually regained consciousness. He remembered nothing of the circumstances leading to his shooting. We took turns taking care of him and his family (wife and 3 small children)...painting the house, cutting the grass, our wives cooked them dinners and did their laundry. We gave him and his family rides to the hospital for months.

Officer Jogmen would eventually be able to leave the hospital, recover sufficiently so that he was able to drive a car, coach our softball team, and mentor some of us rookies. He would retire with honors from the PD, and take a part-time job with the park district. His sence of humor remained intact.

The gunman also survived, a quadrapalegic. Two years after the shooting he was convicted of numerous felonies, including attempted murder. He died in a state run hospital several years ago.

Officer Jogmen contracted cancer and died 6 years after his shooting. He is remembered as a good friend, and a very brave man. He did not hesitate to put his life on the line for a citizen.


1/18/2025

 


The Tsavo Man-Eaters on display in the Field Museum of Natural History in ChicagoIllinois

The display of the two man eaters in the Field Museum is dramatic. The pair of male lions terrorized workers building the Uganda Railway in Kenya from March to December 1898.  They killed and ate a large number of people.  Lieutenant Colonel John Henry Patterson, the project's chief engineer, led the nine months hunt to eliminate the lions.  Patterson used the lion skins as rugs for twenty five years before selling them to the Field Museum.

Click to listen to the audio book. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mYaSYkSdsMY








1/17/2025

Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam - Documentary Film

 

Click to View https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTnnsnr5zSo


From Wikapedia

Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam is a 1987 American documentary film inspired by the anthology of the same title, directed by Bill Couturié. The film's narration consists of real letters written by American soldiers, which are read by actors, including Robert De Niro and Martin Sheen. The footage includes film from TV news, the U.S. Department of Defense and home movies by the soldiers.

Reception

Both Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune and Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film strong recommendations.[2] Ebert wrote in his review:

"This movie is so powerful precisely because it is so simple. The words are the words of the soldiers themselves, and the images are taken from their own home movies and from TV news footage of the war. There are moments here that cannot be forgotten, and most of them are due to the hard work of the filmmaker, director Bill Couturie, who has not taken just any words and any old footage, but precisely the right words to go with the images. Couturie began with an anthology of letters written home by U.S. soldiers in Vietnam. Then he screened the entire archive of TV news footage shot by NBC-TV from 1967 to 1969 - 2 million feet of film totaling 926 hours. He also gained access to footage from the Defense Department, including previously classified film of action under fire. Much of the footage in this film has never been seen publicly before, and watching it, you know why. What Couturie and his researchers have done is amazing. In many cases, they have matched up individual soldiers with their letters - we see them as we hear their words, and then we discover their fates."[3]

Plot

Using real letters written by American soldiers (which can be read in the book with many more) and archive footage, the film creates a personal experience of the Vietnam War.

Cast

Accolades

The film won the 1988 Special Jury Prize: Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival and two Emmy Awards.[4][5] It was also screened out of competition at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival.[6]