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Ryan Stahlhut stopped by the “Stew for Lunch” radio program to discuss the Penn Station East Coast Subs of Munster and Schererville Indiana. Ryan and his team offer fresh food daily and fresh squeezed lemonade. Catering and Box lunch menu is available as well.  My favorite is the Grilled Artichoke with Mushrooms. But visit Penn Station and discover your very own favorite samich.

 

 

Stew for Lunch – Penn Station East Coast Subs – Ryan

 

Munster

328 Ridge Road

SW Corner of Ridge & Manor

219-836-3090

 

Schererville

1620 US 41

NW Corner of US 30 & 41

219-865-3080

www.pschicagoland.com

Here you go gang if you like dogs you will love the people at Canine Affinity.

Canine Affinity on Stew for Lunch

Bozo criminal for today comes from Coos Bay, Oregon, where our unidentified bozo carjacked a vehicle, kicked the driver out of the car and sped away. He didn’t speed very far before noticing that the previous driver had the car running on fumes. So, our bozo pulled into a gas station to fill ‘er up. Unfortunately for him, police looking for the stolen car happened to drive by at the same time. Oops. He’s under arrest.Bozo Criminal for January 12, 2012

BENGALS CHEERLEADER-LAWSUIT

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A Cincinnati Bengals cheerleader can sue a website operator. A federal judge has ruled Sarah Jones can press her defamation case against thedirty.com and its owner. Jones says she had to leave her job as a teacher because of false sexual and offensive comments about her posted on the site. One featured a picture of Jones, along with claims about her sex life as a cheerleader and teacher. Attorneys for the site say the owner isn’t liable for comments posted by others.

BURRITO-DRUG SMUGGLING

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Authorities charge it was one hot jail burrito. But a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy says he’s innocent. Deputy Henry Marin is accused of sneaking drugs hidden in a burrito into a courthouse jail. Prosecutors say Marin entered a not guilty plea yesterday. He’s been relieved of duty without pay and is being held on $25,000 bail.

FREE MARIJUANA-VOTER REGISTRATION

LANSING, Mich. (AP) — High on voting. And now a medical marijuana dispensary owner is off the legal hook in Michigan. A jury has found Shekina Pena innocent on a charge of trying to influence voters. Prosecutors say Pena offered free pot to patients who registered to vote. Pena’s lawyer tells the Lansing State Journal the jurors got it right.

COCAINE SHOES

HOUSTON (AP) — Talk about high heels. Authorities charge a young New York woman had about three pounds of cocaine hidden in her shoes. Brielle Latoi Orridge of the Bronx was indicted yesterday. The 19-year-old was busted at a Houston airport after landing on a flight from Jamaica. Authorities say she was on her way to New York. Customs agents say her luggage was searched after a drug-sniffing dog detected something suspicious.

BUGGY BUILDER

PROVO, Utah (AP) — When Matt Burch restores an antique ride, he’s not working on an old car. The Utah man’s passion is antique wagons. Over the last decade he’s restored 21 wagons, carriages and even horse-drawn hearses. He says the wagons are used in everything from weddings to funerals. Burch tells the Daily Herald newspaper one of the toughest jobs is rebuilding wagon wheels. They might not look that complicated, but Burch says the whole thing falls apart if you’re just a-quarter of an inch off.

LIQUOR PRICES

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Booze will soon cost more in the Keystone state. The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board is lifting an 18-month moratorium on price increases. The price freeze was imposed because of the economic downturn. Hundreds of wine and liquor products in state-owned stores could see higher price tags as early as next month. State officials say producers will be able to pass along their increased costs.

 

Amazon.com: Glock: The Rise of America’s Gun (9780307719935): Paul M. Barrett: Books.

Singer/Songwriter from Indianapolis Sukie Conley was a guest on the Stew for Lunch show December 22, 2011.

Sukie Conley

Jeff Pearlman will be Michael D. “Stew” Stewart for a interview Friday October 7, 2011 12:10pm Chicago Time. Listen in on AM 1230 WJOB Hammond, IN or online at www.wjob1230.com or download the free WJOB app and listen on your I-Phone or Android device.

SWEETNESS

The Enigmatic Life of Walter Payton

By Jeff Pearlman

Many would say Walter Payton was a man among men. A prolific running back, a legend on the football field, a father, a loving son, a role model to millions, and one of the most beloved sports figures in NFL history. And yet Payton kept few close friends, dodged the media and built a wall between his personal life and the rest of the world. Even his own autobiography, Never Die Easy, was rife with inaccuracies.

What was behind the records, that smile, and the legend? Who was the man? These are the guiding questions of Jeff Pearlman’s Sweetness: The Enigmatic Life of Walter Payton on Sale from Gotham Books on October 4th, 2011.

Pearlman, the author of two New York Times best-sellers, first met Payton 12 years ago, when as a young Sports Illustrated writer he was told to go to Chicago and sit down with the cancer-stricken superstar. “Never have I forgotten my 30 minutes with Walter Payton,” Pearlman says. “It was absolutely haunting— I used that experience, the memory of his voice and demeanor, to sort of guide me through this.” Though only 45, Payton—his body ravaged by cancer—looked many years older, and alarmingly frail. “As a boy, I loved and admired Payton,” Pearlman says. “I still do. I loved his style, I loved his approach. Everything. But he always seemed so guarded and mysterious, and when someone is painted as too-good-to-be-true, there is often a riveting persona behind the public image. I wanted to find out who the proverbial man behind the myth was. Payton is a beloved figure, who was complex and complicated. I tried to explore that.”

Twelve years and nearly 700 interviews later, Pearlman’s dogged reporting brings together the complete life of Walter Payton.

Sweetness is packed with news-making revelations. It includes startling details about Payton’s womanizing, his oft-selfish and self-absorbing behavior and his failed marriage. It also reveals his kindness and trust in others; the beautiful way he treated fans, and the impression he left on all who played with him.

Known for his physical prowess and his preternatural agility on the football field, Payton was also an emotional lockbox. His perfect marriage and locker-room prankster antics were fronts to a womanizing, questioning, lonely man. But Sweetness is not a sleazy tell-all. It is instead an intimate look at the man who made women gasp, men marvel, children smile, and a city dance together in a Super Bowl Shuffle.

From Payton’s childhood in segregated Mississippi, where he helped curtail racial strife by becoming the star of his integrated high school’s football team, to his college years and his thirteen-year NFL career, Sweetness brims with stories of all-American heroism—on and off the field. Payton embodied an American dream—he worked hard, he played hard, he gave to the community and he cried when he needed to. Nicknamed Sweetness by teammates in a college all-star team, the moniker personified his dazzling running style, as well as his compassionate and trusting persona. He took pleasure in randomly stopping awe-struck Chicagoans on the street to ask how their day was going; he once entrusted his Super Bowl ring to a high school kid for the weekend.

Payton was a talented but flawed American icon. Arguably the best all-around football player in NFL history, his life was cut short by a rare liver disease and cancer. His death in 1999 shook the city of Chicago and the country. His legacy lives on in the form of foundations, the oft-played “Super Bowl Shuffle” and a litany of stories of his antics, his heart, and the barriers he broke.

Sweetness is the definitive biography of Walter Payton. Through high school, playing college football with his brother, the early days of a ragtag football team called the Bears, the influence of Ditka, the small salaries and the loyalty to an agent and a friend, through the strain of fame and success, the tears at finally getting to play (and the depression after failing to score a touchdown) in a Super Bowl, and his eventual boredom and fear in retirement, Sweetness is the story of a man.

About the Author

Author of the New York Times bestsellers The Bad Guys Won! and Boys Will Be Boys, Jeff Pearlman is a columnist for SI.com and and former senior writer for Sports Illustrated. He lives in New York. For more info go to: www.jeffpearlman.com