Happy 250th Birthday America! Is a 250th birthday more portentous for a country than a 200th? I was around for America's 200th birthday and I can say with authority that these fifty year increments zip by quickly. In 1976 Gerald Ford was doing his best as president, but the country was not happy. President Nixon had resigned two years earlier to avoid impeachment. Half the country believed he had been unjustly hounded from office and the other half had been delighted to see him go. There's been a vendetta atmosphere in the country ever since. Are things better now in the US or worse? They were pretty good for me back in '76. I had a beautiful wife. We owned a house in Wannaska that we planned to move to as soon as I finished school. We had friends and supportive families. Life was good. Fifty years later it's even better. Most of our sorrows have come from witnessing the sorrows of our friends and family members. It bothers me that half the count...
My late brother-in-law, Clair Baldner, who is survived by his wife Ann Marie Reynolds Baldner, walked on in February this year. A Celebration of Life gathering is to be held on his 5th generation farmstead in Dallas County, Iowa; my daughter Bonny and her family, along with myself, will be attending. I wrote this memory of him, initially in a sympathy card to his family. Clair and Ann Marie got married at The Stover Memorial Church of the Brethren in Des Moines in 1956, when I was five years old. Nonetheless, they pressed me into service as their familial ‘Ring Bearer’ who, as AI describes now is “... often a close relative ... who carries the wedding rings down the aisle on a pillow ...; whose role adds charm and sentimentality to the ceremony; (I nailed that.) Dress them in a mini version of the groomsman’s suit, or suspenders and a bow tie for a cute look; keep the walk short; help them feel special and behave well.” Clair’s niece, Susan, was their ‘F...